Introduction
3
intellectuals,”
The Great Mirror
’s new approach to historiography, which
I call “cosmological history,” inspired a half-dozen similarly ambitious
successors.
7
Their authors, including Tadachika, sought to narrate events
in a way that made change sensible. And in so doing, they created a par-
ticular genre to engage with and order the past, one in which no matter
what turn things might take, there was a potentially comforting cosmo-
logical regulation to historical events that a reliable informant was in a
position to reveal.
This
book will show that
The Great Mirror
and
its successors form a
body of texts that suggest specific interpretive strategies for coping with
the past; that time and time again they offer a cosmological key to ques-
tions of the fate of the world. The result is a new, more complicated under-
standing of the medieval historiographic landscape—a
landscape that
has been eclipsed in part for reasons that will be discussed below
—
in
which cosmological histories form a powerful, though today underrec-
ognized, option for early medieval writers attempting to order the world
around them.
addressed in the relevant chapters. Throughout this book, I use the terms “cosmology”
and “cosmological” to refer to the notion of a supermundane system that regulates the
universe. The texts under discussion in this book often refer to the world as subject to
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