The text of the
Relation is almost identical at parts with the
Ystoria Mongalorum, but it is not simply a version of Carpine's text. It differs in tone and purpose. Its portrayal of the Mongols (and the Jews) is far more negative. It also lacks the strategic purpose of the
Ystoria, preferring to describe the Mongols as divine punishment on Christians. Religious references are pervasive. Gregory Werner proposes that the
Relation is "an eschatological reinterpretation of Carpine's account [and] a complement to [it]". The
Relation is dedicated to Boguslaus, "minister of the [Franciscan] friars who live in Bohemia and Poland", and the author claims to be writing in obedience to Boguslaus' authority, suggesting that the text was commissioned. It is an ethnographic report, although it also contains legendary material borrowed from the
mirabilia (wonders) genre, perhaps because, as a non-traveler, de Bridia considered them missing from the accounts of the travelers. It reports the existence of
dog-face people, ox-footed people and other monstrous races typical of the genre. Another people, the Parossits, appear to be the actual
Permians. The
Samoyeds are also mentioned. The magnetic island from the legend of
Sinbad the Sailor is also incorporated. It is called Narayrgen, which is said to come from the Tatar for "Men of the Sun". Compared to the
Ystoria and Benedict's
De itinere, the
Relation lacks information on the friars' travels. It is more focused on Mongol history, customs and plans. For its time, its account of Mongol history, genealogies and methods of warfare are among the most detailed. It covers the
Mongol invasion of Europe from the 1220s through the 1240s, correctly crediting the invasion to
Jochi's command rather than Batu's, as all other western sources do. His account of
Genghis Khan's rise, however, is marred by legendary material, such as his encounter with
Gog and Magog, inspired by the
Alexander Romance. In places, the text of the
Relation uses the correct spelling
Tataros rather than the corrupt form
Tartaros common in Europe. It records that the Mongols called the pope the "great pope throughout the West" (
magnum papam per totum occidentem). Like
Friar Julian and the
Tractatus de ortu Tartarorum, the
Relation portrays the Mongols as operating on three distinct fronts: against the
Sultanate of Egypt, against the
Sultanate of Rum (Anatolia) and against the
Hungarians and Poles. ==Editions==