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The Heavenly Mandate: How Omens, Portents, and Cosmic Warnings Ruled Imperial China

Par : Kate Macintosh
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  • FormatePub
  • ISBN8233428685
  • EAN9798233428685
  • Date de parution20/02/2026
  • Protection num.pas de protection
  • Infos supplémentairesepub
  • ÉditeurLinda Balsamo

Résumé

For thousands of years, the Chinese world was never silent. Rivers warned. Stars accused. The birth of a white deer near the imperial hunting grounds was not a curiosity of nature but a message from forces older than any dynasty, forces that watched the conduct of kings and responded in the language of events. The Heavenly Mandate: Superstitions and Omens of China explores the complete architecture of one of humanity's most sophisticated and enduring omen traditions.
From the crack divination of the Shang oracle bones to the celestial calculations of imperial astronomers, from the feng shui assessment of dynastic capitals to the domestic taboos governing wedding dates and household mirrors, this book traces the full system through which Chinese civilisation understood the universe as morally ordered, continuously communicative, and deeply responsive to human conduct.
Across twelve domains, the tradition reveals itself not as scattered folklore but as a coherent worldview. The Mandate of Heaven governed the legitimacy of rulers. Court observatories monitored the sky for warnings addressed to the throne. Earthquakes and floods were submitted as moral indictments. Strange births and albino creatures entered official records as dynastic intelligence. The I Ching offered structured access to the logic of transformation.
The imperial calendar made time itself an omen system. Feng shui read the landscape as a living field of force. Numbers, colours, and household taboos carried the grand cosmological framework into daily life. Ghost Month managed the boundary between the living and the dead. Dreams delivered communications from realms the waking mind could not reach. And when dynasties fell, the omen record assembled itself into a verdict that the tradition had seen coming long before the armies moved.
Drawing on official dynastic histories, astronomical treatises, oracle bone inscriptions, classical philosophical texts, geomantic manuals, and dream interpretation literature, this is the story of a civilisation that listened to the world with extraordinary attention, and of the complete tradition it built from what it heard. Kate MacIntosh is a writer from the United Kingdom with a lifelong passion for ancient wisdom traditions and the old ways of the world.