High Middle Ages · East Asia · Culture
1135
Kamo no Chomei born
1135
The future author of the Hojoki, one of the most celebrated essays in Japanese literature, was born into a low-ranking Shinto priest's family in Kyoto. He would spend his last years as a hermit in a ten-foot-square hut and write a Buddhist meditation on the transience of the capital. His account of fire, earthquake, famine, and political chaos in Kyoto remains one of the most vivid descriptions of urban disaster in medieval literature.