Bibliography
China Sources:
Polo, Marco. "Concerning the City of Cambaluc, and Its Great Traffic and Population." Marco Polo in China (1271-1295). Colombia University, n.d. Web. http://afe.easia.columbia.edu/mongols/pop/menu/class_marco.htm#lifestyle.
Wood, Mike. Legacy - The Orgins of Civilization: China. N.d. Television.
Li Bo. "Drinking Alone Under the Moon." Columbia University, n.d. Web. http://afe.easia.columbia.edu/ps/china/libo_selected.pdf
Western Europe Sources:
The Breviary of Eberhard of Bamberg ed. Zeumer in MG.LL. Sec V, Formulae, p. 650. translated in University of Pennsylvania Translations and Reprints, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1898), Vol 4:, no, 4, pp. 7-9
Africa sources:
"This man [Mansa Musa] flooded Cairo with his benefactions. He left no court emir nor holder of a royal office without the gift of a load of gold. The Cairenes made incalculable profits out of him and his suite in buying and selling and giving and taking. They exchanged gold until they depressed its value in Egypt and caused its price to fall.” …"
Al-Umari cited in Levitzion and Hopkins Corpus of Early Arabic Sources for West African History (Cambridge University Press 1981) pp. 269-273.
Polo, Marco. "Concerning the City of Cambaluc, and Its Great Traffic and Population." Marco Polo in China (1271-1295). Colombia University, n.d. Web. http://afe.easia.columbia.edu/mongols/pop/menu/class_marco.htm#lifestyle.
Wood, Mike. Legacy - The Orgins of Civilization: China. N.d. Television.
Li Bo. "Drinking Alone Under the Moon." Columbia University, n.d. Web. http://afe.easia.columbia.edu/ps/china/libo_selected.pdf
Western Europe Sources:
The Breviary of Eberhard of Bamberg ed. Zeumer in MG.LL. Sec V, Formulae, p. 650. translated in University of Pennsylvania Translations and Reprints, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1898), Vol 4:, no, 4, pp. 7-9
Africa sources:
"This man [Mansa Musa] flooded Cairo with his benefactions. He left no court emir nor holder of a royal office without the gift of a load of gold. The Cairenes made incalculable profits out of him and his suite in buying and selling and giving and taking. They exchanged gold until they depressed its value in Egypt and caused its price to fall.” …"
Al-Umari cited in Levitzion and Hopkins Corpus of Early Arabic Sources for West African History (Cambridge University Press 1981) pp. 269-273.