Sneha Girap (Editor)

Bertrando de Mignanelli

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Died
  
1455 or 1460

Name
  
Bertrando Mignanelli

Ethnicity
  
Italian

Nationality
  
Republic of Siena

Occupation
  
merchant


Notable works
  
“Vita Tamerlani [Life of Tamerlane]" (1416)

Relatives
  
father Leonard de Mignanelli

Bertrando de Mignanelli or Beltramo Mignanelli di Siena (1370 – 1455 or 1460) was an adventurous and multilingual Italian merchant who lived in Damascus at the beginning of the 15th century and wrote the only Latin language primary source about Tamerlane's conquest of Damascus. Bertrando's father Leonard de Mignanelli was a member of the nobility of Siena. At a very young age Mignanelli left Siena and traveled extensively around the Middle East before settling in Damascus and starting his successful trading business.

Contents

Religion

In some sources he is mentioned as a Catholic priest. Although he was a committed Christian his work does not contain much religious bias.

Works

He personally knew Sultan Barquq and spoke Arabic. After he returned to Italy in 1416 he wrote a biography of Barquq and valuable testimony of Timur's capture of the Mamluk region of Syria in 1400—1401. He wrote his works based on what he had heard about the conquest because he fled to Jerusalem during the siege of Damascus and spent the winter of 1400/1401 there. After he heard that Damascus had been destroyed, he joined the retreating Mamluk Egyptian army commanded by Faraj ibn Barquq and went to Cairo and Alexandria with a servant.

In his works he also mentions the Battle of Kosovo because he makes a parallel between the conduct of Stefan Lazarević during the Battle of Angora and his father Prince Lazar of Serbia during the Battle of Kosovo. Like many other early Western sources, Mignanelli believed that the Christian Serbian army was victorious. In his 1416 work Mignanelli asserted that the Ottoman sultan Murad I was killed by Prince Lazar himself.

Mignanelli died in 1460.

References

Bertrando de Mignanelli Wikipedia