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Daoyi Zhilüe

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Daoyi Zhilüe ( simplified Chinese : 岛夷志略 ; traditional Chinese : 島夷誌略 ; pinyin : Dǎo Yí Zhì Lüè ; Wade–Giles : Tao i chih lio ) or Daoyi Zhi ( simplified Chinese : 岛夷志 ; traditional Chinese : 島夷誌 ; pinyin : Dǎo Yí Zhì ; Wade–Giles : Tao i chih ) which may be translated as A Brief Account of Island Barbarians or other similar titles, is a book written c. 1339 (completed c. 1349) by Yuan dynasty Chinese traveller Wang Dayuan recounting his travels to over a hundred places in South Asia, Southeast Asia, and Africa. The book was written in present-day Sri Lanka . It described the weather, products, people, and customs of the places that Wang Dayuan visited.

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4-565: The timeline for Wang Dayuan's life and travels is: The content of the book (known as Dao Yi Zhu ) was originally an appendix in a local gazetteer Qing Yuan Xu Zhi ( 清源续志, A Continuation of the History and Topography of Quanzhou) composed by Wu Jian in 1349. According to the Yuan poet Zhang Zhu , Daoyi Zhilüe was re-published in 1350 as an individual travel account. Andaya and Andaya write that Dao Yi Zhi Lue provides more information on areas east of

8-510: Is currently no full English translation of the book but the Chinese version is available online. Partial translations however are available. This article about a travel book is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Zhang Zhu Zhang Zhu ( Chinese : 張翥 ; pinyin : Zhāng Zhù ; 1287–1368), courtesy name Zhongju (仲舉), was a Yuan Dynasty poet. A native of (?), he brought himself into notice by his poetry, and

12-461: The Malay Peninsula than any other Yuan dynasty source. According to the postscript Wang Dayuan visited all the places described. However, Park notes that 90% of the text is devoted to Southeast Asia and that Wang does not give details of his route and itinerary to West Asia. However, Deng states that Wang Dayuan's account is consistent with later Ming dynasty accounts of Zheng He 's travels. There

16-517: Was subsequently employed upon the histories of the Liao , Later Jin , and Song dynasties, rising to be a Doctor in the Hanlin Academy and holding other high offices. He was the author of a collection of verses (titled 蛻巖詞). His phrase "cataclysm of the red Goat " (红羊劫), is still used in the sense of "great calamity." "In the hexagenary system of calendrical calculation, the years bingwu and dingwei in

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