China y el Oriente maravilloso de Marco Polo III
DianaUribe.fm
Diana Uribe
4.9 • 1.6K Ratings
🗓️ 2 July 2021
⏱️ 41 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
El último episodio de esta miniserie regresamos por mar hacia Venecia. Partiremos desde Hangzhou con el encargo de escoltar a una princesa hasta la lejana Persia. Pero hay tiempo para que Marco Polo nos hable de Cipango (Japón), un país que describió tan rico en oro que se convirtió en el destino soñado para muchos de los europeos. La travesía nos llevará a bordear la costa de Vietnam y desembarcaremos por provisiones en Java y Sumatra. Allí los venecianos quedarán fascinados con especias, piedras preciosas pero también con rinocerontes y elefantes. En la última parte de la narración, Diana reflexiona sobre cómo los viajes de Marco Polo revivieron en su momento la conexión cultural entre Europa y China y también explica las oportunidades que vienen para China y el mundo con el fortalecimiento de la Ruta de la Seda de nuestros días.
Notas del episodio
- Esta serie fue traída a ustedes gracias a la Embajada de la República Popular China en la República de Colombia
- Nuevamente les dejamos el libro de los Viajes de Marco Polo en edición de "Libro al viento", versión que leímos para estos episodios
- Cipango, la fantástica isla dorada que buscaba Colón
- La verdad detrás de las leyendas del unicornio
- Sri Lanka, la "lágrima de la India", un destino de viaje increible hoy y en los tiempos de Marco Polo
- Rustichello de Pisa ¿el verdadero autor de los Viajes de Marco Polo?
- Los maravillosos viajes de Zheng He y el "Barco del Tesoro"
- Los desafíos, prevenciones y oportunidades que trae la Nueva Ruta de la Seda
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Transcript
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| 0:30.0 | China, and the wonderful origin, is a series of three chapters brought to you with the |
| 0:39.1 | patrocinio in the lower of the popular republic in the Colombian republic, and we thank you |
| 0:45.6 | to them to support this podcast and these fantastic stories that we are telling you. |
| 1:00.0 | Today we are going to do the last of the three chapters about the journey of |
| 1:18.3 | Marco Polo, the return and the beginning of the imagination, because once |
| 1:24.5 | Marco Polo returns and tells what happened, the world will dream of the trips of Marco Polo |
| 1:31.0 | to our current. So we are going to tell the alchemy between the return and the imagination, |
| 1:38.4 | between the history and fiction that makes it possible that the great revolution of the explorations |
| 1:45.6 | that will be given centuries later will have as reference to the trips of Marco Polo and that |
| 1:50.6 | he had done a reference of what is the magic of the |
| 1:50.6 | and the wonderful of the great traveler. Marco Polo will last for 17 years with the |
| 2:01.7 | can. There will become a name of trust, they say, even the can, I didn't want to leave it |
| 2:08.8 | because it was the most parched with it, but I left it to go to the condition that they will listen to a |
| 2:15.1 | princess who was going to marry with a gefemon goal in Persia. That is a very large road. |
| 2:21.2 | So I say, well, you are not well, but if you go, you will have to wait, but once you leave me |
| 2:25.7 | it is very boring there in Persia, which is very far away at that time, and so it is that |
| 2:31.2 | he leaves it, that is like the condition. Marco Polo begins the journey of the return, the journey of |
| 2:37.1 | the return will be by sea, as he wanted it to be, but as I remember, he did not come out |
| 2:42.2 | of the enormous bridge in our territory, let's go back to sea. He will not come to Japan |
| 2:47.1 | properly, but he will reference it, and the reference to the transcendental Japanese, |
| 2:55.1 | because it is the first time someone speaks of Japan for the Westerners, he does not mention |
| 3:02.6 | as a country, he will call it si pango, the Japanese were called nipao, the island called nipao, |
... |
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