All Thinkers

Thinkers Timeline

Key thinkers across history — grouped by era, colour-coded by discipline. Click any card to explore ideas, quotations, and classroom contexts.

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Medieval — 500 to 1500
Murasaki Shikibu c. 973-c. 1014 · Japan
Murasaki Shikibu was a Japanese writer and lady of the imperial court. She is the author of The Tale of Genji, often called the world's first novel. She was born around the year 973 in Heian-kyō, the capital of Japan (modern Kyoto). Her real name is unknown. 'Murasaki' was probably a nickname taken from a character in her novel. 'Shikibu' refers to her father's position at the Bureau of Ceremonies. She came from a lesser branch of the powerful Fujiwara family. Her father was a scholar of Chinese. He recognised her talent and taught her things normally taught only to boys, including Chinese classical literature. This education would later shape her writing in important ways. She married a much older distant cousin, Fujiwara no Nobutaka, around her mid to late twenties. They had a daughter. Her husband died of an epidemic in 1001, only two years after the marriage. Murasaki was now a young widow with a young child. She probably began writing The Tale of Genji in the years just after her husband's death. Around 1005, her writing had attracted the attention of the powerful Fujiwara no Michinaga. He brought her to court as a lady-in-waiting to Empress Shōshi, the young wife of Emperor Ichijō. Murasaki served at court for years, kept a diary, wrote poems, and continued her novel. The exact year of her death is uncertain. Most scholars accept around 1014, when she would have been about 41. Some think she may have lived later, perhaps until 1025.
"At the court of an emperor (he lived it matters not when), there was among the many gentlewomen of the Wardrobe and of the Bedchamber one, who though she was not of very high rank was favoured far beyond all the rest."
Early Modern — 1500 to 1800
Matsuo Bashō 1644-1694 · Japan
Matsuo Bashō was a Japanese poet of the Edo period, widely regarded as the greatest master of haiku and one of the foundational figures in all of Japanese literature. He transformed haiku from a witty social pastime into a refined literary art form capable of profound spiritual and aesthetic depth. He was born Matsuo Kinsaku in 1644 near Ueno in Iga Province (modern western Mie Prefecture). His father was a low-ranking samurai serving a local lord. Bashō later took the name Matsuo Chūemon Munefusa. As a young man he entered the service of Tōdō Yoshitada, son of the local lord. Yoshitada shared his passion for poetry, and the two studied haikai together. Yoshitada died suddenly in 1666 when Bashō was about twenty-two. The grief-stricken Bashō left his samurai position and eventually made his way to Edo (modern Tokyo), the seat of the Tokugawa shogunate. There he immersed himself in literary circles and by the 1670s had become a respected poet and teacher. In 1680 he withdrew from urban Edo to a small hut by a banana tree (bashō in Japanese), from which he took the poetic name by which he is now known. He took up the study of Zen Buddhism under the priest Butchō and adopted an increasingly ascetic life. From 1684 he began a series of long walking journeys across Japan, recorded in travel diaries that combined prose and haiku: Nozarashi Kikō (Records of a Weather-Exposed Skeleton, 1684), Kashima Kikō (1687), Oi no Kobumi (Records of a Travel-Worn Satchel, 1688), Sarashina Kikō (1688), and his masterpiece Oku no Hosomichi (The Narrow Road to the Deep North, completed 1694). The last documented a 2,400-kilometre journey through northern Honshu in 1689 with his disciple Kawai Sora. He returned to Edo in 1691, set out again in 1694 for Kyushu, fell ill on the way, and died in Osaka on 28 November 1694. He was 50.
"An old pond— / a frog jumps in: / the sound of water."