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In 1165, copies of a strange letter began to circulate throughout Western Europe.
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It spoke of a fantastical realm,
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containing the Tower of Babel and the Fountain of Youth—
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all ruled over by the letter’s mysterious author: Prester John.
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Today, we know that this extraordinary king never existed.
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But the legend of this mythical kingdom and its powerful ruler
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would impact the decisions of European leaders for the next 400 years.
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Prester John’s myth would propel the age of exploration,
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inspire intercontinental diplomacy, and indirectly begin a civil war.
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When Prester John’s letter appeared, Europe was embroiled in the Crusades.
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In this series of religious wars,
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Europeans campaigned to seize what they regarded as the Christian Holy Land.
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The Church vilified any faith outside of Christianity,
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including that of the Jewish and Muslim communities populating the region.
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Crusaders were eager to find Christian kingdoms to serve as allies in their war.
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And they were particularly interested in rumors of a powerful Christian king
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who had defeated an enormous Muslim army in the Far East.
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In fact, it was a Mongol horde including converted Christian tribes
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that had routed the army.
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But news of this victory traveled unreliably.
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Merchants and emissaries filled gaps in the story
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with epic poems and Biblical fragments.
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By the time the story reached Europe,
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the Mongol horde had been replaced with a great Christian army,
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commanded by a king who shared the Crusader’s vision
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of marching on Jerusalem.
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And when a letter allegedly written by this so-called “Prester John” appeared,
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European rulers were thrilled.
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While the letter’s actual author remains unknown,
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its stereotypes about the East and alignment with European goals
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indicate it was a Western forgery.
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But despite the letter’s obvious origins as European propaganda,
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the appeal of Prester John’s myth was too great for the Crusaders to ignore.
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Before long,
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European mapmakers were guessing the location of his mythical kingdom.
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In the 13th and 14th centuries, European missionaries went East,
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along the newly revived Silk Road.
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They weren’t searching for the letter’s author,
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who would have been over a century old; but rather, for his descendants.
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The title of Prester John was briefly identified
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with several Central Asian rulers,
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but it soon became clear that the Mongols were largely non-Christian.
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And as their Empire began to decline,
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Europeans began pursuing alternate routes to the Far East,
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and new clues to Prester John’s location.
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At the same time these explorers went south,
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Ethiopian pilgrims began traveling north.
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In Rome, these visitors quickly attracted the interest
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of European scholars and cartographers.
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Since Ethiopia had been converted to Christianity in the 4th century,
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the stories of their African homeland fit perfectly into Prester John’s legend.
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Portuguese explorers scoured Africa for the kingdom,
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until a mix of confusion and diplomacy finally turned myth into reality.
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The Ethiopians graciously received their European guests,
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who were eager to do business with the ruler
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they believed to be Prester John.
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Though the Ethiopians were initially confused by the Portuguese’s
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unusual name for their Emperor,
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they were savvy enough to recognize the diplomatic capital it afforded them.
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The Ethiopian diplomats played the part of Prester John’s subjects,
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and the Portuguese triumphantly announced an alliance with the fabled sovereign—
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over 350 years after the European letter had begun the search.
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But this long-awaited partnership was quickly tested.
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A decade later, the Sultanate of Adal,
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a regional power supported by the Ottoman Empire, invaded Ethiopia.
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The Portuguese sent troops that helped Ethiopians win this conflict.
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But by this time,
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it was clear that Ethiopia was not the powerful ally Europe had hoped.
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Worse still, the increasingly intolerant Roman Catholic Church
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now deemed the Ethiopian sect of Christianity heretical.
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Their subsequent attempts to convert the people
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they once revered as ideal Christians
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would eventually spark a civil war,
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and in the 1630s, Ethiopia cut ties with Europe.
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Over the next two centuries,
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the legend of Prester John slowly faded into oblivion—
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ending the reign of a king who made history despite having never existed.