Dom. 1253.
Chap. 1 Introduction
2 Of the Tartars and of their houses
3 Of their beds and of their drinking pots
4 Of their drinkes
5 Of their foode
6 How they make their drinke called Cosmos
7 Of the beastes which they eat, of their garments, and of their
manner of hunting
8 Of the fashion of cutting their haire, and of the attire of their
women
9 Of the Tartarian Women and their marriages
10 Of their execution of justice and judgment, and of their deaths and
burials
11 Of our first entrance among the Tartars
12 Of the court of Scacatai, etc.
13 Howe the Alanians came unto us
14 Of a Saracen which said he would be baptized, etc.
15 Of our afflictions which we sustained, etc.
16 Of the dominion of Sartach
17 Of the court of Sartach
18 How they were given in charge to goe unto Baatu, etc.
19 Howe Sartach, etc., doe reverence unto Christians
20 Of the Russians, Hungarians, and Alanians, etc.
21 Of the court of Baatu, etc.
22 Of our journey towards the court of Mangu Can
23 Of the river of Iagac, and of divers regions
24 Of the miseries which we sustained in our journey
25 How Ban was put to death; and concerning the habitation of the
Dutch men
26 How the Nestorians, etc., are joined together
27 Of their temples and idols, etc.
28 Of divers and sundry nations; and of certaine people which were
wont to eate their owne parents
VOL. III.
I. A briefe treatise of the great Duke of Moscovia, his genealogie, being
taken out of the Moscovites manuscript chronicles, written by a Polacke
II. Ordinances, instructions, etc., for the intended voyage for Cathay,
compiled by Sebastian Cabota, Esquier, in the yere of our Lord God 1553
III. Copy of the letters which Edward the Sixt sent to the kings, etc.,
inhabiting the north east parts of the worlde, in the yeere of Christ
1553
IV. Copy of a note found written in the Speranza, which wintered in Lappia,
where Sir Hugh Willoughby and all his companie died, being frozen to
death. Anno 1,553
Sub-section I.
The names of the ships, their captaines, and mariners
Sub-section II.
The Juramentum, or othe, ministred to the captaine
Sub-section III.
The othe ministred to the maister of the ship
V. The booke of the great and Mighty Emperor of Russia, drawen by Richard
Chancelour
VI. The testimonie of M. Richard Eden [concerning Clement Adams's
NAVIGATION BY THE NORTH EAST]
VII. The newe Navigation and discoverie of the kingdome of Moscovia by the
North East written in Latine by Clement Adams
Sub-section I.
Of Moscovie, which is also called Russia
Sub-section II.
Of Mosco, the chiefe citie of the kingdome, and of the Emperour
thereof
Sub-section III.
Of the discipline of warre among the Russes
Sub-section IV.
Of the ambassadours of the Emperour of Moscovie
Sub-section V.
Novogorode
Sub-section VI.
Jeraslave
Sub-section VII.
Vologda
Sub-section VIII.
Plesco
Sub-section IX.
Colmogro
Sub-section X.
Of Controversies in lawe and how they are ended
Sub-section XI
Of punishments upon thieves
Sub-section XII.
Of their religion
Sub-section XIII.
Of the Moscovites that are idolators, dwelling neere to Tartaria
Sub-section XIV.
Of the forme of their private houses, and of the apparel of the
people
Sub-section XV.
The conclusion to Queen Marie
VIII.