
History Unplugged Podcast Explorers Who Pushed the Boundary of the Known World, Part 1: Rabban Bar Sauma (1220-1294) – the Reverse Marco Polo
Jun 15, 2021
A medieval monk’s epic overland pilgrimage from East Asia to Western Europe. The spread and influence of Nestorian Christianity along the Silk Road. Diplomatic efforts to forge a Franco-Mongol alliance against the Mamluks. Encounters with Gothic cathedrals, papal audiences, and European kings. The travel memoir that shaped later understandings of cross-cultural diplomacy.
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Reverse Marco Polo East To West Perspective
- Bar Sauma's journey is a mirror-image of Marco Polo: an East-to-West travelogue that made him the first known Chinese visitor to medieval Europe.
- He traveled from near Beijing through Rome to Gascony, offering a rare Asian perspective on post‑Crusade Europe.
Nestorian Christianity Thrived Across Asia
- Nestorian Christianity persisted across Asia and served as a conduit on the Silk Road from the 7th century onward.
- Archaeological evidence in Xi'an (635) and surviving Nestorian texts show an established eastern Christian tradition long before Bar Sauma.
Son Of Wealthy Ongud Becomes Ascetic Monk
- Bar Sauma was the son of wealthy Ongud Turkic parents and became a monk at 25 despite family objections and marriage plans.
- His name means 'son born of fasting' and he received deep education and multilingual training before monastic life.




