26) He Speaks Of These
"Gasmuls, Whom A Greek Would Call [Greek:
Digeneis], men sprung from Greek
mothers and Italian fathers." Nicephorus Gregoras also relates how Michael
Palaeologus, to oppose the projects of Baldwin for the recovery of his
fortunes, manned 60 galleys, chiefly with the tribe of Gasmuls ([Greek:
genos tou Gasmoulikou]), to whom he assigns the same characteristics as
Pachymeres.
(IV. v. 5, also VI. iii. 3, and XIV. x. 2.) One MS. of Nicetas
Choniates also, in his annals of Manuel Comnenus (see Paris ed. p. 425),
speaks of "the light troops whom we call Basmuls." Thus it would seem
that, as in the analogous case of the Turcopuli, sprung from Turk
fathers and Greek mothers, their name had come to be applied technically
to a class of troops. According to Buchon, the laws of the Venetians in
Candia mention, as different races in that island, the Vasmulo, Latino,
Blaco, and Griego.
Ducange, in one of his notes on Joinville, says: "During the time that the
French possessed Constantinople, they gave the name of Gas-moules to
those who were born of French fathers and Greek mothers; or more probably
Gaste-moules, by way of derision, as if such children by those irregular
marriages ... had in some sort debased the wombs of their mothers!" I have
little doubt (pace tanti viri) that the word is in a Gallicized form the
same with the surviving Italian Guazzabuglio, a hotch-potch, or
mish-mash. In Davanzati's Tacitus, the words "Colluviem illam nationum"
(Annal.
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