The revelation of a doctoral student came as a surprise: Did Marco Polo have a daughter out of wedlock?

A surprise discovery was made by Marcello Bolognari, a PhD student at Ca ‘Foscari University in Venicewho found documents revealing that Marco Polo he had an illegitimate daughter, Agnese.

According to the Guardian and relayed by the Athens News Agency, he is believed to have been born between 1295, the year the merchant and explorer returned to Venice after two decades in Asia, and in 1298, where he was taken prisoner and imprisoned after the Battle of Korcula.

He spent a year in prison documenting his travels and experiences in a book entitled The Journeys of Marco Polo, which became one of the first bestsellers in the world. When he was released, he returned to Venice, where he married Donata Bandoer, with whom he had three daughters, Fadina, Bellela and Moreta.

The researcher stated that he found evidence of its existence in documents of the Polo family, among them her will, which was written on July 7, 1319. In fact, Anieze had commissioned Polo to hand it over to the priest Pietro Pagano, in Church of San Felice in Venice.

“We do not know if he was married before or if the child was born from a relationship. The fact that Anieze had entrusted her will to Polo proves that she knew of her existence and that they had a “strong relationship of trust”.added Bolognari.

The girl did not name her mother in her will, which, according to Bolognari, may indicate that she had died. He described “a loving family life”. She was married and had two small children.

Source: News Beast

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