‘The site visited by Mr. Paderin is shown, by the particulars stated in
that paper, to be sufficiently identified with Karkorum. It is precisely
that which Rmusat indicated, and which bears in the Jesuit maps, as
published by D”Anville, the name of _Talarho Hara Palhassoun_ (i.e. Kar?
Balghsun), standing 4 or 5 miles from the left bank of the Orkhon, in
lat. (by the Jesuit Tables) 47?32″ 24′. It is now known as Kara-Kharam
(Rampart) or Kara Balghasun (city). The remains consist of a quadrangular
rampart of mud and sun-dried brick, of about 500 paces to the side, and
now about 9 feet high, with traces of a higher tower, and of an inner
rampart parallel to the other. But these remains probably appertain to the
city as re-occupied by the descendants of the Yuen in the end of the 14th
century, after their expulsion from China.’
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