1735. Bergeron's interesting collection of Mediaeval Travels in Asia,
published in French at the Hague. The Polo is a translation
from Mueller, and hence is (as we have already indicated) at 6th
hand.
1747. In Astley's Collection, IV. 580 seqq., there is an abstract
of Polo's book, with brief notes, which are extremely acute, though
written in a vulgar tone, too characteristic of the time.
1818. Marsden's famous English Edition.
1824. The Publication of the most valuable MS. and most genuine form of
the text, by the Soc. de Geographie of Paris. (See vol. i.) It also
contains the Latin Text (No. 24 in our list of MSS. App. F.).
1827. Baldelli-Boni published the Crusca MS. (No. 40), and republished the
Ramusian Version, with numerous notes, and interesting
dissertations. The 2 volumes are cumbered with 2 volumes more
containing, as a Preliminary, a History of the Mutual Relations of
Europe and Asia, which probably no man ever read. Florence.
1844. Hugh Murray's Edition. It is, like the present one, eclectic as
regards the text, but the Editor has taken large liberties with the
arrangement of the Book.
1845. Buerck's German Version, Leipzig. It is translated from Ramusio, with
copious notes, chiefly derived from Marsden and Ritter. There are
some notes at the end added by the late Karl Friedrich Neumann, but
as a whole these are disappointing.
1847. Lazari's Italian edition was prepared at the expense of the late
Senator T. Pasini, in commemoration of the meeting of the Italian
Scientific Congress at Venice in that year, to the members of which
it was presented.