Odoric of Pordenone

Odoric of Pordenone

▪ Franciscan friar
born c. 1286, Villanova, near Pordenone, Aquileia [Italy]
died January 14, 1331, Udine

      Franciscan friar and traveler, whose account of his journey to China enjoyed wide popularity and appears to have been plagiarized in the 14th-century English work The Voyage and Travels of Sir John Mandeville, Knight, generally known as Mandeville's Travels.

      After taking his vows at Udine, Odoric was sent to Asia (c. 1316–18), where he remained until 1329. Passing through Asia Minor, he visited Franciscan houses at Trabzon and Erzurum, now in Turkey. He circled through Persia, stopping at the Franciscan house at Tabriz and continuing on to Kashan, Yazd, Persepolis, and Shīrāz before touring the Baghdad region of Mesopotamia. He then went to Hormuz (now in Iran) at the southern end of the Persian Gulf and eventually embarked for India.

      After landing at Thāna, near Bombay, about 1322, Odoric visited many parts of India and possibly Ceylon. He sailed in a junk for the north coast of Sumatra, touching on Java and perhaps Borneo before reaching the south China coast. He traveled extensively in China and visited Hang-chou (Hangzhou), renowned as the greatest city in the world, whose splendour he described in detail. After three years at Beijing, he set out for home, probably by way of Tibet (including Lhasa) and northern Persia. By the time he reached Italy, he had baptized more than 20,000 persons. At Padua the story of his travels was taken down in simple Latin by another friar. Several months later Odoric died while on the way to the papal court at Avignon.

      The story of his journeys seems to have made a greater impression on the laity of Udine than on Odoric's Franciscan brethren. The latter were about to bury him when the chief magistrate (gastaldi) of the city interfered and ordered a public funeral. Popular acclamation made Odoric an object of devotion, and the municipality erected a shrine for his body. Although his fame was widespread before the middle of the 14th century, he was not formally beatified until 1755.

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Universalium. 2010.

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