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history
(redirected from Histoire)

   Also found in: Medical, Legal, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.01 sec.
history, in its broadest sense, is the story of humanity's past. It also refers to the recording of that past. The diverse sources of history include books, newspapers, printed documents, personal papers, and other archival records, artifacts, and oral accounts. Historians use this material to form coherent narratives and uncover linked sequences and patterns in past events. Most histories are concerned with causality, that is, why certain outcomes happened as they did, and how they are linked to earlier events.

Origins of Historical Writing

In preliterate societies, the accounts of the past are related orally, and many cultures have produced intricate and sophisticated oral histories. African peoples have long relied on oral histories to learn about their past. Starting with the medieval Islamic kingdoms of Africa some of these oral chronicles were recorded in Arabic, and sub-Saharan Africa developed its own written histories. In the 1550s the Popol Vuh Popol Vuh (pōpōl` v
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, an elaborate account of the history and mythology of the Quiché people in Mexico, was recorded in Spanish.

In the older civilizations, as in Egypt, Mesopotamia, and China, historical records appear immediately after the appearance of writing, for conquering kings wished to record their triumphs for all posterity. There was also some interest in the remote past, particularly genealogical interest in the glorification of royal ancestors and their achievements. There appears early, too, a strain of religious interest in showing the lessons of history, religious and ethical. Thus the early historical sections of the Bible are concerned with the manifestation of God's will in the events of human existence, while they show the same genealogical interests as the king lists of other peoples.

Western Historiography

Greek and Roman Historiography

It was not until the time of the Greeks that historiography, the writing of organic history, emerged. The compilations of the logographoi in the 6th cent. B.C. were organized records. It is with some justice, however, that Herodotus Herodotus (hērŏd`ətəs), 484?–425? B.C., Greek historian, called the Father of History, b. Halicarnassus, Asia Minor.
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 is considered the first historian, because in his work appears the conscious desire to record all the significant and noteworthy circumstances surrounding a set of events and motivating the actions of people in those events. Herodotus was remarkable, too, for the scope of his interests; he recorded myths, described customs, and made speculations. He used much unverified information, however, and failed to differentiate clearly between fact and fable.

The second great Greek historian, Thucydides Thucydides (thsĭd`ĭdēz), c.460–c.400 B.C.
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, was of a different stamp. In writing the history of the Peloponnesian War he limited himself to matters of state and war; he tried to establish chronology and facts with some exactitude, avoiding the digressions of Herodotus; though his attempt at writing a factual and impartial history was not entirely successful, he wrote a grave work, conveying the lessons he drew from his story. The third of the great Greek historians, Xenophon Xenophon (zĕn`əfən), c.430 B.C.–c.355 B.C., Greek historian, b. Athens.
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, was more devoted to the purely storytelling aspects of history.

The influence of Thucydides was early in the ascendant, and the two important Greek historians of the Roman period, Polybius Polybius (pōlĭ`bēəs), 203? B.C.–c.120 B.C., Greek historian, b. Megalopolis.
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 and Dio Cassius Dio Cassius (Cassius Dio Cocceianus) (dīo kăsh`əs), c.155–235?, Roman historian and administrator, b. Nicaea in Bithynia.
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, more or less modeled themselves on that master. The Roman historian Livy Livy (Titus Livius) (lĭv`ē), 59 B.C.–A.D. 17, Roman historian, b. Patavium (Padua), probably of noble family.
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 was more of a teller of tales, and he invoked the intervention of the gods to explain cause and effect. The great commentaries of Julius Caesar Caesar, Julius (Caius Julius Caesar), 100? B.C.–44 B.C., Roman statesman and general.

Rise to Power



Although he was born into the Julian gens, one of the oldest patrician families in Rome, Caesar was always a member of the democratic or popular
..... Click the link for more information.  were more like inspired reporting than pure history writing, and the personal element in them was strong. Tacitus Tacitus (Cornelius Tacitus), c.A.D. 55–c.A.D. 117, Roman historian. Little is known for certain of his life. He was a friend of Pliny the Younger and married the daughter of Cnaeus Julius Agricola. In A.D.
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 followed more or less the pattern of Thucydides but with a brooding moral interest in the decay of Roman society.

Medieval Historiography

The concern with separating fact from fiction and legend often disappeared in medieval historiography. Medieval works tended to divide into two types of histories. One was the universal history, which found some inspiration in St. Augustine's City of God; it was outstandingly illustrated by Paulus Orosius Orosius, Paulus (ōrō`shēəs), c.385–420, Iberian priest, theologian, and historian, b.
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 and continued by such lesser men as Isidore of Seville Isidore of Seville, Saint (ĭz`ədôr'), c.
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. The other was the chronicle, ranging from the crude and simple annals of local monasteries to more orderly and organized accounts such as those of Saxo Grammaticus Saxo Grammaticus (săk`sō grəmăt`ĭkəs), c.1150–c.1220, the first important Danish historian.
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, Otto of Freising Otto of Freising (frī`zĭng), b. after 1111, d. 1158, German chronicler, bishop of Freising.
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, Roger of Wendover Roger of Wendover, d. c.1236, English chronicler, a monk of St. Albans. As historiographer of St. Albans, he began the Flores historiarum (see Matthew of Westminster ), a general chronicle starting with the creation.
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, and Matthew of Paris Matthew of Paris or Matthew Paris, d. 1259, English historian, a monk of St. Albans. He became the historiographer of the convent after the death (c.1236) of Roger of Wendover .
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. The two forms were not infrequently mixed. Attempts at broader histories of peoples, such as the history of the Goths by Cassiodorus Cassiodorus (Flavius Magnus Aurelius Cassiodorus Senator) (kăshōdō`rəs), c.485–c.585, Roman statesman and author.
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 (preserved only in the compendium of Jordanes Jordanes (jôrdā`nēz), fl. 6th cent., historian of the Ostrogoths, b. in the lower Danube region.
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) and the history of the Franks by Gregory of Tours Gregory of Tours, Saint, 538–94, French historian, bishop of Tours (from 573), b. Clermont-Ferrand, of a prominent family. He had a distinguished and successful career as bishop.
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, were early and had few successors. The chronicles tended to be parochial. Since learning was restricted to the church, the chroniclers were generally biased in favor of the church, and often they were little concerned with politics and secular rule. Among the better medieval histories was Bede's Ecclesiastical History, an early model in a branch of historiography that has been of great importance. The biographical or semibiographical accounts of knightly deeds in the Crusades gave rise to the critical history of William of Tyre William of Tyre (tī`ər), b. c.1130, d. before 1185, historian and churchman.
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.

Contact with Byzantines and Muslims broadened history writing by showing the Westerners other points of view. Byzantine historians had also early fallen into the writing of chronicles, although the greater unity of the Byzantine Empire and the persistence of a unified culture gave somewhat more literary quality to the Byzantine works, from Procopius Procopius (prōkō`pēəs), d. 565?, Byzantine historian, b. Caesarea in Palestine.
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 through Anna Comnena Anna Comnena (än`nə kŏmnē`nə), b. 1083, d.
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 to the 13th-century writings of George Acropolita and the Acominatus brothers. Medieval Islamic historians such as al-Tabari and al-Masudi wrote histories of great scope, often employing sophisticated methods to separate fact from fable. But by far the greatest medieval Arabic historian was Ibn Khaldun, who created an early version of sociological history to account for the rise and decline of cities and civilizations. In 12th-century Europe secular history writing emerged, shown in the work of Geoffroi de Villehardouin Villehardouin, Geoffroi de, c.1160–c.1212, French historian and Crusader. As marshal of Champagne, he was a leader of the Fourth Crusade (see Crusades ), which resulted in the conquest (1204) of Constantinople and the creation of the Latin Empire of
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, and the chronicles of Jean, sire de Joinville Joinville, Jean, sire de (zhäN sēr də zhwăNvēl`)
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, Jean Froissart Froissart, Jean (zhäN frəwäsär`), c.1337–1410?, French chronicler, poet, and courtier, b. Valenciennes.
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, and Philippe de Comines Comines, Philippe de (fēlēp` də kōmēn`), c.1447–c.1511, French historian, courtier, and diplomat.
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 in successive centuries.

Renaissance Historiography

The humanism of the Renaissance revolutionized historiography, for it placed emphasis on textual criticism and on a critical attitude toward documents and sources. Men such as Petrarch Petrarch (pē`trärk) or Francesco Petrarca
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, Lorenzo Valla Valla, Lorenzo (lōrān`tsō väl`lä), c.1407–57, Italian humanist.
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, Marsilius of Padua Marsilius of Padua (märsĭl`ēəs, pă`dyə), d. c.
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, and Juan Luis Vives Vives, Juan Luis (hwän l
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 did much to produce a more critical attitude toward the past. Revival of classical learning immediately affected historians, and in one sense Niccolò Machiavelli Machiavelli, Niccolò (nēk-kōlô` mäkyävĕl`lē)
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 and Francesco Guicciardini Guicciardini, Francesco (fränchās`kō gwēt-chärdē`nē), 1483–1540, Italian historian and statesman.
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 followed in the steps of Greek and Roman historians, although their work was original and immediate. Both the Reformation and the Catholic Reformation furthered historical scholarship, as both sides used the past to support their religious views. Critical methods in history were forwarded in the 16th and 17th cent. by the writings of Jean Bodin Bodin, Jean (zhäN bôdăN`), 1530?–1596, French social and political philosopher.
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 and Jean Mabillon Mabillon, Jean (zhäN mäbēyôN`), 1623–1707, French scholar, a Benedictine monk.
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, and great critical collections of sources were begun (e.g., the Acta sanctorum), while antiquaries everywhere discovered, questioned, and emended old texts. The way was prepared for the beginning of modern history.

History in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries

The historians of the Enlightenment wrote broad accounts of social and cultural epochs. Voltaire Voltaire, François Marie Arouet de (fräNswä` märē` ärwā` də vôltĕr`)
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 cultivated the wider, universal view of history, stressing its social and moral aspects. The attempt to get back to the fundamental natural bases of human development was implicit in the Esprit des lois of Montesquieu Montesquieu, Charles Louis de Secondat, baron de la Brède et de
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. The 18th cent. saw, too, the great attempt made by Giovanni Battista Vico Vico, Giovanni Battista (jōvän`nē bät-tē`stä vē`kō)
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 to synchronize history into meaningful general patterns. From England came the masterful work of Edward Gibbon Gibbon, Edward, 1737–94, English historian, author of The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. His childhood was sickly, and he had little formal education but read enormously and omnivorously.
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, combining erudition with the philosophical concerns of the 18th cent. on the rise and decline of civilization.

The end of the century also brought the budding of archaeology out of antiquarianism and of philology out of classical scholarship. These two sciences were essential to the development, in the 19th cent., of critical objective history as an academic discipline. The father of the new objective school was the great Leopold von Ranke Ranke, Leopold von (lā`ōpôlt fən räng`kə)
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. His efforts and those of his successors, notably Theodor Mommsen Mommsen, Theodor (tā`ōdōr môm`sən), 1817–1903, German historian.
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, Johann Gustav Droysen Droysen, Johann Gustav (yōhän` g
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, and Heinrich von Treitschke Treitschke, Heinrich von (hīn`rĭkh fən trīch`kə), 1834–96, German historian.
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, established canons of criticism and historical methods. This German school made history writing into a profession and founded the formal academic study of history, though they fell short of their ideal of writing about the past "as it actually happened." In France, modern academic history began with Numa Denis Fustel de Coulanges Fustel de Coulanges, Numa Denis (nümä` dənē` füstĕl` də k
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. It was continued by such men as Ernest Lavisse Lavisse, Ernest (ĕrnĕst` lävēs`), 1842–1922, French historian. He was for many years a professor at the Sorbonne.
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, Charles Seignobos Seignobos, Charles (shärl` sānyōbō`), 1854–1942, French historian. He taught at the Univ.
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, and Achille Luchaire Luchaire, Achille (äshēl` lüshĕr`), 1846–1908, French historian.
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, who were among those who turned history into a wide study.

In the 19th cent. the history of the nation state became the dominant form of history writing. Among the more prominent romantic national historians were Thomas B. Macaulay Macaulay, Thomas Babington, 1st Baron, 1800–1859, English historian and author, b. Leicestershire, educated at Cambridge. After the success of his essay on Milton in the Edinburgh Review (Aug.
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 in England, and Jules Michelet Michelet, Jules (zhül mēshəlā`), 1798–1874, French writer, the greatest historian of the romantic school.
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 in France. In the United States, romantic historians, such as George Bancroft Bancroft, George, 1800–1891, American historian and public official, b. Worcester, Mass. He taught briefly at Harvard and then at the Round Hill School in Northampton, Mass., of which he was a founder and proprietor. He then turned definitively to writing.
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, William H. Prescott Prescott, William Hickling, 1796–1859, American historian, b. Salem, Mass. He entered his father's law office, but was compelled by a serious eye injury to abandon law.
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, John L. Motley Motley, John Lothrop, 1814–77, American historian and diplomat, b. Dorchester, Mass. Author of two novels concerning Thomas Morton (1839 and 1849), as well as a number of articles for the North American Review.
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, and Francis Parkman Parkman, Francis, 1823–93, American historian, b. Boston. In 1846, Parkman started a journey along the Oregon Trail to improve his health and study the Native Americans. On his return to Boston he collapsed physically and moved to Brattleboro, Vt.
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 were followed by such brilliant and questioning men as Henry Adams Adams, Henry, 1838–1918, American writer and historian, b. Boston; son of Charles Francis Adams (1807–86). He was secretary (1861–68) to his father, then U.S. minister to Great Britain.
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.

The broader interest in the philosophy of history had not died, and the philosophy of Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich (gā`ôrkh vĭl`hĕlm frē`drĭkh hā`gəl)
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 had created a school of idealistic historians. Other philosophical views were reflected in general theories, some of the later figures being Oswald Spengler Spengler, Oswald (spĕng`glər, Ger. ôs`vält shpĕng`glər), 1880–1936, German historian and philosopher.
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, Benedetto Croce Croce, Benedetto (bānādĕt`tō krô`chā), 1866–1952, Italian philosopher, historian, and critic.
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, and Arnold Toynbee Toynbee, Arnold (toin`bē), 1852–83, English economic historian, philosopher, and reformer.
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. The theories of Karl Marx Marx, Karl, 1818–83, German social philosopher, the chief theorist of modern socialism and communism .

Early Life



Marx's father, a lawyer, converted from Judaism to Lutheranism in 1824.
..... Click the link for more information.  not only set in motion a continuing series of interpretations of history from the Marxist economic point of view but also affected historians of all other schools. The progressive school of U.S. historians, such as Frederick J. Turner Turner, Frederick Jackson, 1861–1932, American historian, b. Portage, Wis. He taught at the Univ. of Wisconsin from 1885 to 1910 except for a year spent in graduate study at Johns Hopkins Univ.
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, emphasized social and economic factors in explaining historical development, as did the "new history" of James Harvey Robinson Robinson, James Harvey, 1863–1936, American historian, b. Bloomington, Ill. He taught history at the Univ. of Pennsylvania (1891–95) and Columbia (1895–1919), becoming a full professor in 1895.
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 and Charles A. Beard Mary Ritter Beard, 1876–1958. This panoramic work is an example of the broad historical view that Beard championed; the great store of fact is laid open with easy and graceful literary style.
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. The trend was toward broader social and economic history.

History in the Twentieth Century

The trend toward broader social and economic history continued in the 20th cent. Anthropology and sociology contributed new ideas to history and opened the way to the history of cultures in the round (related to, but different from, such theories of spiritual cultural history as that of Karl Lamprecht Lamprecht, Karl (kärl läm`prĕkht), 1856–1915, German historian.
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). Modern psychology also began to be applied to the interpretation of history, and the growth of technological society stimulated some historians' concern with the development of science. The constant growth of the body of critical professional historiography led in the 20th cent. to historical research in extraordinary detail, stimulated by the techniques of Sir Lewis Namier Namier, Sir Lewis Bernstein (nām`yər), 1888–1960, English historian, b. Poland.
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. Perhaps in reaction to this increasing emphasis, G. M. Trevelyan Trevelyan, George Macaulay, 1876–1962, English historian; son of Sir George Otto Trevelyan. Educated at Cambridge, he became professor of modern history there in 1927 and was master of Trinity College from 1940 to 1951.
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 reasserted the principle of history as an art as well as a scientific study.

The adherents of the "new social history" sought to replace the previous emphasis of most historians on political history with a range of social and economic concerns. The most influential social historians have been members of the French Annales school, such as Marc Bloch and Fernand Braudel, who focused primarily on medieval and early modern European history. Another influential group of historians, including Eric Hobsbawm, E. P. Thompson, and Herbert Gutman, who were influenced by Marxist class analysis, wrote histories of working people and the popular classes. Other social historians have explored the history of those who formerly were largely ignored, such as women and minorities. The study of social history was also reinforced by the development of computer analysis of historical materials. The quantitative analysis made possible by computers seemed to allow detailed study of far broader areas than had been possible for the historian using traditional methods. In recent years some of the most successful and popular historians—such as Eric Foner, Simon Schama, and Jonathan Spence—have found innovative ways of integrating the older concerns of national political histories with the new methods of social history.

Eastern Historiography

In Asia the writing of history was concerned with the recording of events, chiefly as chronicles, annals, or archives.

China

In China by the middle of the Chou dynasty, histories of the royal house and of the various states (notably the Shu Ching, or Document of History, and the Annals of Lu by Confucius Confucius (kənfy
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) were being compiled. Ssu-ma Chien (d. c.87 B.C.) wrote the first general history of China; his work was the model for later dynastic histories. He was followed in the 1st cent. A.D. by Pan Ku, compiler of the History of the Former Han. Under the T'ang dynasty, imperial commissions completed or compiled eight standard histories to fill in the period from the Three Kingdoms. A pioneer collection of early inscriptions was made, and Ssu-ma Kuang wrote (1066–84) an integrated history of China from 403 B.C. to A.D. 959. The Manchu rulers were noted for fraudulent histories glorifying their past. Critical treatment of Chinese history was forwarded in the late 19th and early 20th cent. with the work of Kang Youwei, Wang Xian Qian, and Wang Guowei.

Japan

Japan's early tradition of historiography was derived from China. About the 3d cent. A.D. the Japanese began to keep imperial archives, and an accurate chronology was developed by the early 6th cent. The Kojiki (early 8th cent.) purported to be a history of the royal line since mythological times. It was supplemented by the more detailed Nihonshiki, which was continued to the end of the 9th cent. by five official histories. In the 17th cent. Tokugawa Mitsukuni (1628–1701) started to compile a history of Japan modeled on the Chinese dynastic histories; supplements appeared until 1906. Motoori Norinaga (1730–1801) was the leading figure in a movement to revive Shinto and imperial prestige; his commentary on the Kojiki was completed in 1798.

India

Surviving Indian records date from the 6th cent. B.C., when anthologies were being made from older collections. Genealogies of native rulers appeared in the Puranas. However, the writing of history was not highly developed in India; the principal products were the artha, or handbooks on politics and practical life. In the 7th cent. the work of Hsüan-tsang Hsüan-tsang (shüän-dzäng), 605?–664, Chinese Buddhist scholar and translator.
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 gave much valuable information about India. Arab works on India, notably that of Alberuni of Khiva, began to appear in the 10th cent.; notable later Muslim historians were Firishta Firishta or Ferishta (both: fĭrĭshtă`), c.1560–c.1620, Indian Muslim historian.
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 and Khafi Khan.

Bibliography

See London Univ. School of Oriental and African Studies, Historical Writing on the Peoples of Asia (4 vol., 1961–62); M. A. Fitzsimons et al., ed., The Development of Historiography (1954, repr. 1967); M. Bloch, The Historian's Craft (tr. 1964); F. Rosenthal, A History of Muslim Historiography (2d ed. 1968); R. F. Berkhofer, A Behavioral Approach to Historical Analysis (1969); S. W. Halperin, ed., Essays in Modern European Historiography (1970); J. H. Hexter, The History Primer (1971); B. B. Wolman, ed., The Psychoanalytic Interpretation of History (1971); P. Gay et al., ed., Historians at Work (4 vol., 1972–75); J. Vansina, Oral Tradition as History (1985); G. B. Himmelfarb, The New History and the Old (1987); P. Novick, That Noble Dream (1988); J. Clive, Not by Fact Alone (1989); P. Burke, The French Historical Revolution (1990).


history

A user's input and keystrokes entered within the current session. A history feature keeps track of user commands and/or retrieved items so that they can be quickly reused or reviewed. Web browsers maintain a list of downloaded pages in the current session so that you can quickly review everything that you have retrieved. See DOS Doskey.


history
1. 
a. a record or account, often chronological in approach, of past events, developments, etc.
b. (as modifier): a history book
2. all that is preserved or remembered of the past, esp in written form
3. the discipline of recording and interpreting past events involving human beings
4. past events, esp when considered as an aggregate
5. a play that depicts or is based on historical events
6. a narrative relating the events of a character's life
www.hyperhistory.com
www.historychannel.com

1.(operating system)history - A record of previous user inputs (e.g. to a command interpreter) which can be re-entered without re-typing them. The major improvement of the C shell (csh) over the Bourne shell (sh) was the addition of a command history. This was still inferior to the history mechanism on VMS which allowed you to recall previous commands as the current input line. You could then edit the command using cursor motion, insert and delete. These sort of history editing facilities are available under tcsh and GNU Emacs.
2.(history)history - The history of computing.
3.history - See Usenet newsgroups news:soc.history and news:alt.history for discussion of the history of the world.


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