Henri Cordier’s reply, Ibid., Dec., 1905, pp. 686, 687.
16.—Noted Men who have helped China.—II. Marco Polo. By Dr. Gilbert Reid. (North China Herald, April 6, 1906.)
17.—C. Raymond Beazley.—The Dawn of Modern Geography. Vol. III. A History of Exploration and Geographical Science from the Middle of the Thirteenth to the early Years of the Fifteenth Century (c. A.D. 1260–1420). With reproductions of the Principal Maps of the Time. Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1906, 8vo, pp. xvi–638.
Chap. II. The Great Asiatic Travellers, 1260–1420. Part I. The Polos, 1260–1295, pp. 15–160.
18.—Hallberg, Ivar.—L’Extrême Orient dans la Littérature et la Cartographie de l’Occident des XIIIe, XIVe et XVe siècles—Étude sur l’histoire de la géographie.—Göteborg, 1906, 8vo, pp. viii–573.
19.—A. V. Jackson.—The Magi in Marco Polo and the Cities in Persia from which they came to worship the Infant Christ. (Journ. Amer. Orient. Soc., XXVI., I., pp. 79–83.)
—— Persia Past and Present. A Book of Travel and Research with more than two hundred illustrations and a map by A. V. Williams Jackson, Professor of Indo-Iranian Languages, and sometime adjunct Professor of the English Language and Literature in Columbia University. New York, The Macmillan Co., 1906, 8vo, pp. xxxi–471.
20.—Marco Polo’s Journey in Manzi. By John C. Ferguson. (Journal North China Branch R. As. Soc., XXXVII., 1906, pp. 190, 191.)
21.—The Pulse of Asia: A Journey in Central Asia illustrating the Geographic Basis of History, by Ellsworth Huntington. Illustrated. Boston and New York, Houghton, Mifflin and Company, 1907, 8vo, pp. xxi–415.
22.—Bruce, Major Clarence Dalrymple.—In the Footsteps of Marco Polo, Being the Account of a Journey Overland from Simla to Pekin. W. Blackwood, Edinburgh and London, 1907, 8vo, pp. xiv–379, ill., map.