Book contents
- Medieval Historical Writing
- Medieval Historical Writing
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Notes on Contributors
- Abbreviations
- General Introduction
- Part I Time
- Part II Place
- Part III Practice
- Part IV Genre
- Chapter 22 Chronicle and Romance
- Chapter 23 Forgery as Historiography
- Chapter 24 Hagiography
- Chapter 25 Writing in the Tragic Mode
- Chapter 26 Crisis and Nation in Fourteenth-Century English Chronicles
- Chapter 27 Polemical History and the Wars of the Roses
- Bibliography
- Index
Chapter 25 - Writing in the Tragic Mode
from Part IV - Genre
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 December 2019
- Medieval Historical Writing
- Medieval Historical Writing
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Notes on Contributors
- Abbreviations
- General Introduction
- Part I Time
- Part II Place
- Part III Practice
- Part IV Genre
- Chapter 22 Chronicle and Romance
- Chapter 23 Forgery as Historiography
- Chapter 24 Hagiography
- Chapter 25 Writing in the Tragic Mode
- Chapter 26 Crisis and Nation in Fourteenth-Century English Chronicles
- Chapter 27 Polemical History and the Wars of the Roses
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
In its most concise medieval rendering “history is a narration of things done” (historia est narratio rei gestae) as Isidore of Seville claimed. And histories, he further claimed, “are true matters that happened” (sunt res verae quae factae sunt). Yet in the narration of historical events, the writer imposes form on the events he is narrating. And in narrating tragic history, the writer is under pressure to adapt form in order to convey that tragic events have meaning because to say that they lack meaning would make a mockery of God’s providence. At the same time, the temptation to impose form on history in order to provide meaning risks fictionalizing history and rendering the narration of history untrue. This essay examines how medieval chroniclers from Rufinus of Aquileia (fourth and fifth centuries) to Thomas Walsingham (fourteenth century) grappled with this problem—often to quite different ends.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Medieval Historical WritingBritain and Ireland, 500–1500, pp. 437 - 449Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019