A General History And Collection Of Voyages And Travels - Volume 1 - By Robert Kerr


















































































































 -  The Tartarian chieftains, and their brutishly
savage followers, glutted themselves with the carcasses of the inhabitants,
leaving nothing for the - Page 189
A General History And Collection Of Voyages And Travels - Volume 1 - By Robert Kerr - Page 189 of 810 - First - Home

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The Tartarian Chieftains, And Their Brutishly Savage Followers, Glutted Themselves With The Carcasses Of The Inhabitants, Leaving Nothing For The Vultures But The Bare Bones; And Strange To Tell, The Greedy And Ravenous Vultures Disclaimed To Prey On The Remains Left By The Tartars.

Old and deformed women they gave for daily sustenance to their cannibals:

The young and beautiful they devoured hot, but smothered them shrieking and lamenting under their forced and unnatural ravishments; and cutting off the breasts of tender virgins to present as dainties to their leaders, they fed themselves upon their bodies.

Their spies having descried from the top of a high mountain the Duke of Austria, the King of Bohemia, the Patriarch of Aquileia, the Duke of Carindiia, and as some say, the Earl of Baden, approaching with a mighty power towards them, the accursed crew immediately retired into the distressed and vanquished land of Hungary, departing as suddenly as they had invaded, and astonishing all men by the celerity of their motions. The prince of Dalmatia took eight of the fugitives, one of whom was recognized, by the Duke of Austria as an Englishman, who had been perpetually banished from England for certain crimes. This man had been sent twice as a messenger and interpreter from the most tyrannical king of the Tartars to the king of Hungary, menacing and fortelling those mischiefs which afterwards happened, unless he would submit himself and his kingdom to the yoke of the Tartars. Being urged by our princes to confess, the truth, this man made such oaths and protestations, as I think might have served to make even the devil be trusted.

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