Willem Van Ruysbroeck (born c. 1215—died c. 1295) was a French Franciscan friar whose eyewitness account of the Mongol realm is generally acknowledged to be the best written by any medieval Christian traveller. A contemporary of the English scientist and philosopher Roger Bacon, he was cited frequently in the geographical section of Bacon’s Opus majus.
Willem was probably from the village of Rubrouck, near Saint-Omer, Fr. In 1253 King Louis IX of France (St. Louis), who was then at Acre, Palestine, dispatched him on an informal mission to the Mongol Empire. Departing from Constantinople on May 7, 1253, he and his party reached the Crimean town of Sudak. There they secured oxen and carts for their long trek across the steppes to the encampment of Batu Khan, the Mongol ruler of the Volga River region. Following their arrival five weeks later, they were ordered to begin a journey of some 5,000 miles to the court of the Great Khan at Karakorum in central Mongolia.
The Christians set off on horseback on Sept. 16, 1253, their route taking them north of the Caspian and Aral seas to the Talas River, to the Cailac Valley, and to the great plains of Mongolia, and came upon the Great Khan’s camp, which lay about 10 days’ journey south of Karakorum.
Willem and his companions were received courteously and remained with the Khan until about July 10, 1254. They followed a more northerly route on their outward journey, reaching Tripoli on Aug. 15, 1255, where they found that King Louis had returned to France in 1254.
Willem wrote about his Mongolian experiences for the French king. His narrative is free from legend and shows him to have been an intelligent and honest observer. Nothing is known about his later life, except that he was alive when Marco Polo returned from the East in 1295. After Bacon’s copious use of the narrative, it was neglected, though five manuscripts survive. One copy was imperfectly reproduced by Richard Hakluyt in 1598 and 1599. A more recent Hakluyt Society edition is The Journey of William of Rubruck to the Eastern Parts of the World, 1253–55 . . . (1900), prepared by W.W. Rockhill.