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History Not to know what took place Not to know what took place before you were born is to remain before you were born is to remain forever a child. forever a child. Cicero Cicero
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History “ Not to know what took place before you were born is to remain forever a child. ” Cicero.

Jan 02, 2016

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Page 1: History “ Not to know what took place before you were born is to remain forever a child. ” Cicero.

History

““Not to know what took place before Not to know what took place before you were born is to remain forever a you were born is to remain forever a

child.child.”” Cicero Cicero

Page 2: History “ Not to know what took place before you were born is to remain forever a child. ” Cicero.

History

• History is a discipline that focuses on the study of change over time.

• The most important question in history is why?– Why did society A change?– Why did society B stay the same?

Page 3: History “ Not to know what took place before you were born is to remain forever a child. ” Cicero.

How do we study history?

• Historiography is, in essence, the history of history.

• How we have studied history in the past is different from how we study it today.

Page 4: History “ Not to know what took place before you were born is to remain forever a child. ” Cicero.

In 1492 Columbus sailed the ocean blue…

• For many years Christopher Columbus was considered a hero for “discovering” the new world.

• In the United States the second Monday in October is “Columbus Day”

Page 5: History “ Not to know what took place before you were born is to remain forever a child. ” Cicero.

and began the decimation of native populations

• In recent years historians have become more interested on the effect that Columbus had on the people who were already living in the ‘new’ world.

Page 6: History “ Not to know what took place before you were born is to remain forever a child. ” Cicero.

Where do Historians get their information?

• In history there are two types of sources:– Secondary sources– Primary sources

• Secondary sources can include books, journals, and film. They are accounts of the past based on research and analysis.

• Primary sources are accounts recorded at the time of an event. They may include diaries, eyewitness accounts, government records, ships’ logs or newspaper articles.

Page 7: History “ Not to know what took place before you were born is to remain forever a child. ” Cicero.

Gathering Archaeological Evidence

• Archaeologists use artifacts as evidence to help understand past societies

• Artifacts can deteriorate with age therefore the method known as radiocarbon dating is used

• This process measures the age of carbon in artifacts and therefore tells how old an artifact is

• Tools, utensils and weapons are all artifacts archaeologists use to learn many things about the way people lived

Page 8: History “ Not to know what took place before you were born is to remain forever a child. ” Cicero.

Bias in History: How to identify

• 1. Selection and Omission: Within a given account of a situation, some details may be ignored while others of equal value may be included. Bias through omission is difficult to detect and requires numerous sources in order to reveal it.

Page 9: History “ Not to know what took place before you were born is to remain forever a child. ” Cicero.

Bias in History: How to identify

• 2. Labels and Expressions: We often use labels and titles to describe people, places, and events. In a labour dispute, the term scab or replacement worker can each reveal a bias.

Page 10: History “ Not to know what took place before you were born is to remain forever a child. ” Cicero.

Bias in History: How to identify

• 3. Manipulation of Statistics: To support a position on an issue, numbers can be altered or exaggerated. “Thousands out of work” can numerically be the same as “only a few plants shut down.” Each expresses a different bias.

Page 11: History “ Not to know what took place before you were born is to remain forever a child. ” Cicero.

Bias in History: How to identify• 4. Considering the Source: To detect bias, one

should consider the source of the information and the source’s connection to the issue. For example, in the event of a war, is the information supplied by a reporter, military personnel from the side that is more or less equipped, the leader of the country being attacked, the United Nations, the stockholder of a munitions manufacturer, or an outsider who has no connection to the story? What is the motivation or reason why the source might have a certain opinion?

Page 12: History “ Not to know what took place before you were born is to remain forever a child. ” Cicero.

Bias in History: How to identify

• 5. Word Choice and Tone: The use of positive or negative words or words with a particular connotation can strongly influence how we view an issue. “Shut down” plants can be the same as “idled” plants. Another example of this is when company’s, “right-size”. This often means employees will be, “cut” .

Page 13: History “ Not to know what took place before you were born is to remain forever a child. ” Cicero.

Bias in History: How to identify

• 6. Generalization and Oversimplification: Intricate and complex facts sometimes become simplified or generalized into more manageable bits of information. Identifying simplifications and generalizations can reveal biases.

Page 14: History “ Not to know what took place before you were born is to remain forever a child. ” Cicero.

Bias Images

• Here are some images that all contain a bias…• Link

Page 15: History “ Not to know what took place before you were born is to remain forever a child. ” Cicero.

Cause and Effect: The Importance of Chronology

• Chronology is the placing of events into the order in which the occurred. This allows us to understand how events in history unfolded.

• For example, two of the most famous images of ancient Egypt are…

Page 16: History “ Not to know what took place before you were born is to remain forever a child. ” Cicero.

The Great Pyramids of Giza

Page 17: History “ Not to know what took place before you were born is to remain forever a child. ” Cicero.

And Tutankhamun

Page 18: History “ Not to know what took place before you were born is to remain forever a child. ” Cicero.

Cause and Effect: The Importance of Chronology

• However, by the time of Tutankhamun’s reign, the Great Pyramid was already 1200 years old.

• Tutankhamun would himself have gazed upon the magnificent pyramid as a wondrous monument of the distant past.

Page 19: History “ Not to know what took place before you were born is to remain forever a child. ” Cicero.

Conflicting Interpretations: The History of History

• Historiography recognizes that all history is the product of historians, their interpretations of the past.

• Two historians, reading the same documents and examining the same artifacts, can arrive at very different views of the same events.

Page 20: History “ Not to know what took place before you were born is to remain forever a child. ” Cicero.

Conflicting Interpretations: The History of History

• In the eighteenth century the writer Voltaire heralded Louis XIV, the absolute ruler of France in the seventeenth century, as the greatest monarch ever to have ruled France.

• During the 1930’s, when dictatorships were threatening to overrun Europe, biographies of Louis were highly critical.

• Where does the truth of Louis XIV lie?

Page 21: History “ Not to know what took place before you were born is to remain forever a child. ” Cicero.

Legends and History

• Unlike myths, which deal with the divine, and humanity’s relationship with the divine, the central characters of legends are human, and the stories usually have a basis in fact.

• Legends can act as signposts to historians and archaeologists by capturing the imagination and preserving the essence of the character, event, or society portrayed.

• From there, the great challenge is to separate fact from fiction.