After the return of
Marco Polo in 1295 and the Franciscan friar
Odoricus Mattiuzzi's (1286–1331) visit in 1310, there is no record of Italian traders returning from China until the return of de' Conti by sea in 1439. de Nicolò de' Conti (1414–1439)'' De' Conti first crossed the desert to reach
Baghdad and from there sailed down the
Tigris to
Basra. He then sailed through the
Persian Gulf and went to Iran where he learnt
Persian. He then crossed the
Arabian sea to
Cambay, in
Gujarat. He travelled in India to "Pacamuria", "Helly" and
Vijayanagar, capital of the
Deccan before 1420, perhaps during the reign of
Deva Raya II. It was in India that he coined the phrase 'Italian of the East' to refer to the
Telugu language, which he found had words ending with vowels, similar to Italian. He went to "Maliapur" on the east coast of India (probably modern-day
Mylapore, in
Chennai), where he visited the tomb of
St. Thomas, who in Christian tradition is recorded to have founded a Christian community there. He apparently married an Indian woman. Around 1421, de' Conti crossed to "Pedir" in northern
Sumatra, where he spent a year, gaining local knowledge, particularly on the gold and
spice trade. (This was the period of fairly intensive contact between Sumatra and China, thanks in particular to the voyages of
Zheng He.) He then continued after sailing 16 days to
Tenasserim on the
Malay Peninsula. He then sailed to the mouth of the
Ganges, visited
Sonargaon and
Chittagong (in modern
Bangladesh) and then went overland to
Arakan (now
Rakhine State,
Burma). After traveling through Burma, he left for
Java where he spent nine months, before going to
Champa (in modern
Vietnam). De' Conti described South-East Asia as "exceeding all other regions in wealth, culture and magnificence, and abreast of Italy in civilization". and thence, in company with Pedro, to
Cairo. Throughout his travels, he was accompanied by his family. However his wife, whom he had met in India, and two of his four children died in Egypt during an epidemic. He continued to Italy with his remaining children. de' Conti returned to Venice in 1444, where he remained as a respected merchant. == Account of voyages ==