"There Is One Church Only [At Kinsay], Belonging To The
Nestorian Christians."
It was one of the seven churches built in China by Mar Sarghis, called Ta
p'u hing sze (Great Temple of Universal Success), or Yang yi Hu-mu-la,
near the Tsien k'iao men.
Cf. Marco Polo, II., p. 177; VISSIERE, Rev.
du Monde Musulman, March, 1913, p. 8.
LXXVI., p. 193.
KINSAY.
Chinese Atlas in the Magliabecchian Library.
The Rev. A.C. Moule has devoted a long note to this Atlas in the Journ.
R. As. Soc., July, 1919, pp. 393-395. He has come to the conclusion that
the Atlas is no more nor less than the Kuang yue t'u, and that it seems
that Camse stands neither for Ching-shih, as Yule thought, nor for Hang
chau as he, Moule, suggested in 1917, but simply for the province of
Kiangsi. (A Note on the Chinese Atlas in the Magliabecchian Library, with
reference to Kinsay in Marco Polo.)
Mr. P. von Tanner, Commissioner of Customs at Hang chau, wrote in 1901 in
the Decennial Reports, 1892-1901, of the Customs, p. 4: "While
Hangchow owes its fame to the lake on the west, it certainly owes its
existence towards the south-west to the construction of the sea wall,
called by the Chinese by the appropriate name of bore wall. The erection
of this sea wall was commenced about the year A.D. 915, by Prince Ts'ien
Wu-su; it extends from Hang Chau to Chuan sha, near the opening of the
Hwang pu.... The present sea wall, in its length of 180 miles, was built.
The wall is a stupendous piece of work, and should take an equal share of
fame with the Grand Canal and the Great Wall of China, as its engineering
difficulties were certainly infinitely greater.... The fact that Marco Polo
does not mention it shows almost conclusively that he never visited Hang
Chau, but got his account from a Native poet.
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