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Historiography
About this book
Historiography is the writing of history and the study of such writing, particularly that based on critically examining sources, choosing specific details from authentic materials within those sources, and finally, amalgamating all these details into a history that can withstand an analytical scrutiny. This pithy volume delves into a thorough examination, beginning with Egypt, where the world's earliest annals were penned. The text then takes the reader through the evolution of historiography, winding through its most important human activities, questions, and understandings. This thought-provoking book also guides readers through the theories and the history of historical writing.
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Yes, you can access Historiography by Zoe Lowery, Heather Moore Niver in PDF and/or ePUB format. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
Publisher
Britannica Educational PublishingYear
2015eBook ISBN
9781622755615CHAPTER ONE
IN THE BEGINNING
In the beginning was the spoken word. Humans lived for tens of thousands of years with language, and thus with tales about the past, but without writing. Oral history is still important in all parts of the world, and successful transmission of stories over many generations suggests that people without writing can have a sophisticated historical sense. The historical record, however, must start with a system of writing and a suitable writing technology. The earliest forms of writing included cuneiform and pictographs, which were inscribed on stone and clay tablets in Egypt and Mesopotamia, as well as Chinese ideograms, which were incised in bronze and on oracle bones (baked oxen bones whose cracks and fissures were thought to foretell the future). People in Egypt, Mesopotamia, and China were the first to make records of their contemporaries, which took the form of lists of kings and ancestors.
EGYPT AND MESOPOTAMIA
In Egypt, the first lists date from about the middle of the 3rd millennium BCE and extend back another 1,000 years to a time when kings were thought to mingle with gods. Entries were made year by year, making these lists among the earliest annals. In addition to the names of kings, events occasionally are mentioned, especially for the later years; but it is hard to understand on what principle they are included. Sandwiched between notations of offerings to the gods are such enigmatic references as âSmiting of the cave dwellers.â Despite their occasional obscurity, these early historians accomplished the considerable task of organizing the past into units of the same size (years) and assigning events to them.

Cuneiform tablet featuring a tally of sheep and goats, from Tello in Mesopotamia (present-day Iraq)
The king-lists of the Sumerians, the oldest civilization in Mesopotamia, not only presented the order of rulers but described shifts in power as various kings were âsmitten with weaponsâ and overthrown. The Sumerians were also capable of weaving events into a narrative. A Sumerian stela, or standing stone slab, dating from about 2,400 BCE records what is probably the worldâs first historical narrative. The Stele of the Vultures was erected by the city of Lagash to commemorate its victory in a boundary war with Umma; it contains depictions of warriors in battle gear and an inscription celebrating the triumph.
Sumerian writers seem to have developed their own interpretation of history. This interpretation is reflected in the preoccupation of the king-lists with the transitory nature of royal power and in the Sumerian belief that natural phenomena (notably the behaviour of the Euphrates River) are determined by the gods. Although Sumerian gods could be bungling and cowardly and sometimes even subject to fate, they retained the power to punish humans who offended them. The vicissitudes of kings and states were thought to demonstrate the godsâ power to influence human affairs.
CHINA
A rich and persistent annalistic tradition and a growing emphasis on history as a repertoire of moral examples characterized the earliest Chinese historiography. The first Chinese historians were apparently temple archivists; as the bureaucratic structure of the Chinese state developed, historians occupied high offices. History gained prestige through the thought of the philosopher Confucius (551â479 BCE), who was traditionallyâthough probably wronglyâcredited with writing the Chunqiu (âSpring and Autumn [Annals]â) and the Shujing (âClassic of Historyâ). As articulated in these works, Chinese historical thought was intensely moralistic: virtue was conceived as following the example of oneâs ancestors. There was consistent interest in the form of governing institutions and frequent emphasis on the doctrine of the Mandate of Heavenâthe idea that a monarch ruled by heavenâs decree, which would be withdrawn if he committed evil.
The foundational text of Chinese historiography is the Shiji (âHistorical Recordsâ), which was compiled by Sima Qian (c. 145âc. 86 BCE). It is an account of the entire history of China from mythical times through the establishment of the Han dynasty in 206 BCE. The story becomes more detailed as Sima Qian approaches his own time and is able to question eyewitnesses of events and make use of abundant official documents. Sima Qian introduced order into the welter of surviving records by organizing them into categories.
The classical Chinese historians made an ideal of objectivity. Although they eschewed interpretation of the historical record, they were often faced with conflicting sources. In such cases they typically chose only one, though they never referred to their sources or explained the choices they made. Historical criticism in China was constrained by propriety because of the high cultural value of ancestors; anything like the contentiousness of the Greeks would have been regarded as most unseemly.
By about 710 CE, however, Liu Zhiji (661â721) had produced the Shitong (âHistorical Perspectivesâ), the first comprehensive work on historical criticism in any language. For him, the writing of history had an exaltedâand very Confucianâmission:
Man lives in his bodily shape between heaven and earth and his life is like the span of the summer fly, like the passing of a white colt glimpsed through a crack in the wall. Yet he is shamed to think that within those years his merit will not be knownâŚthere is truly none who is not tireless in pursuing merit and fame.âŚWhy is this? Because all have their heart set on immortality. And what, then, is immortality? No more than to have oneâs name written in a book.
Liu Zhijiâs view had a lasting influence. Indeed, some of his maxims are still recommended to beginning historians: skepticism about the sources, freedom from deference to established scholars, the necessity of extensive knowledge of the sources before selection can be made, and insistence on arguments supported by extensive evidence.
HEBREW TRADITIONS
The Hebrew Bible (Old Testament) was as fundamental to Western historiography as the dynastic histories were to Chinese historiography. Although the Bible is many things, it is substantially a work of history. Seventeen of its 39 books are historical, and the 5 major and 12 minor prophets also offer moral interpretations of historical events. Furthermore, references in the Hebrew Bible indicate that annals of the Israelite kings once existed, though they have since been lost.
A creation story, an account of a flood that all but destroys humanity, long genealogical lists, a set of laws or commandments, and reflections on the effects of divine wrath on the prosperity of kings and peoples can be found among other Western Asian peoples. Nevertheless, the so-called Yahwist writer (one of the individuals or groups identified as a source of the Torah or Pentateuch, the first five books of the Hebrew Bible) possessed a unique conception of history, and the Hebrews identified themselves as a distinct people only because of that conception. They alone had entered into a covenant with Yahweh, who promised Abraham, the first of the Hebrew patriarchs, that his descendants would be as numerous as the sands of the sea. The Hebrews believed that the hand of Yahweh had led them to escape bondage in Egypt and eventually to subdue the peoples of Palestine in order to occupy the Promised Land.
That land was ill-chosen as a peaceful place to live. The Hebrews faced the constant threat of being squeezed between the great powers of the region. About 722 BCE the northern kingdom of Israel fell to the Assyrians, and about 598 BCE the southern kingdom of Judah was conquered by the Babylonians, who carried many Hebrews off to captivity; the Babylonian Exile lasted until 538 BCE, when the Persian conquerors of Babylonia allowed the Hebrews to return to Jerusalem. The authors of the Hebrew Bible did not, however, think in geopolitical terms; they tried instead to understand why the promise, which seemed to guarantee earthly success, had apparently been abrogated by Yahweh.
Agonizing over this problem led to something hitherto unknown: a widespread reconception of the historical record. The compilers of the Hebrew scriptures had already rejected the sort of vainglorious boasting characteristic of the records of Babylonian kings. The succession story of King David, for example, does not spare details of his discreditable actions. More serious than any individual sin, however, were the sins committed by the Hebrew people as a whole, who are depicted on occasion as turning away from the worship of Yahweh. It was not unusual to see in the disasters that overwhelmed them the avenging hand of Yahweh, but what required historical reflection was the task of reconciling the apostasy and its punishment with the continuing validity of the promise made to Abraham. Eventually the major prophets, especially Isaiah, reinterpreted the story of their people. Despite the sins and sufferings of the people of Yahweh, the promise had not been invalidated and could even be renewed, because the peopleâs destiny had not been world power or even a secure kingdom. Instead they had been chosen to suffer as a servant of all of humanity.
This view was distinctive in being a history not merely of a single king or dynasty but of a people. Furthermore, it was not narrowly nationalistic; it extended back to the beginnings of the human race and showed how Yahweh, the Lord of the whole earth, was working out his divine plan for humanity through his promise to the chosen people. Unlike the historical vision of other Western Asian peoples, which had seldom extended far into the past or beyond their own ethnic group, the view of the Hebrews was in principle universal. Because the promise was capable of redefinition and renewal, there was even a rudimentary notion of history as progressive.
One element of modern historical scholarship that does not appear in the works of Western Asian peoples is criticism of sources. Babylonian records often end with elaborate curses against anyone who would seek to alter them. It was the classical Greek historians who first made a systematic attempt to find out what actually happened, rather than to preserve a traditional record of events.
GREEK HISTORIOGRAPHY
Greek historiography originated in the activities of a group of writers whom the Greeks called logographoi (âlogographersâ). Logography was the prose compilation of oral traditions relating to the origins of towns, peoples, and places. It combined geographical with cultural information and might be seen as an early form of cultural anthropology. Hecataeus of Miletus, the best known of the logographers, defined his task in his Genealogia (c. 490 BCE) as follows: âI write what I consider the truth, for the things the Greeks tell us are in my opinion full of contradictions and worthy to be laughed out of court.â The logographers also served as advocates and speech writers in the courts, and the need to ascertain facts and make arguments clearly influenced their writings.
HERODOTUS
Although the logographers pioneered in the study of history, their influence was eclipsed by Herodotus, who has been called the âfather of history.â His âHistoryâ of the Greco-Persian Wars is the longest extant text in ancient Greek. The fact that it has survived when so many other works written in ancient Greece were lost, including the majority of the plays of the great tragedians (Aeschylus, Euripides, and Sophocles) and much of the corpus of Aristotle), is testimony to the great esteem in which it was held.
Like the logographers, Herodotusâs approach was historical and anthropological. He questioned the priests at Memphis (in Egypt) and those at Heliopolis and Thebes âexpressly to try whether the priests of those places [Heliopolis and Thebes] would agree in their accounts with the priests at Memphis.â He discovered that the Egyptian historical records went much further back than the Greek ones and that Egyptian customs were the reverse of those he knew (which he called âthe common practice of mankindâ). The Egyptians ate no wheat or barley; kneaded dough with their feet but mixed mud or even dung with their hands; lived with animals; and wrote from right to left. Herodotus also observed that âwomen attend the markets and trade, while the men sit at home at the loom.â
Although Herodotus also gave ethnographic details of this kind on the Scythians and the Persians, his âHistoryâ possesses a narrative thread, which he announces in the first paragraph: âThese are the researches of Herodotus of Halicarnassus, which he publishes, in the hope of thereby preserving from decay the remembrance of what men have done, and of preventing the great and wonderful actions of the Greeks and the barbarians from losing their due meed of glory; and withal to put on record what were their grounds of feud.â The âgrounds of feudâ are traced back beyond the Trojan War (12th or 13th century BCE) to a series of abductions of women by both Europeans and Asians. The Greeks made themselves enemies of Persia (which claimed all of Asia) when they led an army to besiege the Anatolian city of Troy to reco...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Introduction
- Chapter One: In the Beginning
- Chapter Two: Medieval and Renaissance Historiography
- Chapter Three: Early Modern, Enlightenment, and Romantic Historiography
- Chapter Four: The Nineteenth Century to the Present
- Chapter Five: Branches of History, Part I: History of the Arts, Culture, and Society
- Chapter Six: Branches of History, Part II: Biography, Psychohistory, and Intellectual History
- Chapter Seven: Branches of History, Part III: Diplomatic, Economic, Military, and Political History
- Chapter Eight: Branches of History, Part IV: History of Science
- Chapter Nine: Methodology of Historiography
- Conclusion
- Glossary
- Bibliography
- Index