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Alexander Nikolayevich Lodygin
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A People's History of the United States
Academic degree
Al-Jahiz
Alexander Nikolayevich Lodygin
Ali al-Masudi
American Historical Association
Annals (Tacitus)
Anthropology
Archaeology
Athens
Authority
Battle of Thermopylae
Chinese historiography
Cultural geography
Diplomacy
Economics
Edward Gibbon
Edward Said
Emperor Wu of Han
Eugene D. Genovese
Great man theory
Greeks
Hamdani
Han Dynasty
Heinrich Göbel
Herodotus
Hieroglyphics
High politics
Historian
Historian (disambiguation)
Historical method
Historical revisionism
Historiography
History
History of China
History of the Peloponnesian War
Howard Zinn
Human sexuality
Ibn Abd-el-Hakem
Ibn Khaldun
Incandescent light bulb
Joseph Wilson Swan
Linguistics
List of Russian historians
List of historians
List of historians by area of study
Livy
Louis R. Gottschalk
Main Page
Mediterranean
Middle Ages
Modern Era
Montesquieu
Muqaddimah
Narrative
Oral history
Orientalism (book)
Parallel Lives
People's history
Philosophy
Philosophy of history
Plutarch
Politics
Polybius
Popular culture
Prehistory
Progressivism
Prolegomenon
Protestantism
Psychology
Public history
Records of the Grand Historian
Renaissance
Reportage
Research
Roman historiography
Science
Sima Qian
Sociology
Sociology in medieval Islam
Sparta
Spirit of the Laws
Tacitus
The Histories of Herodotus
The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
Thomas Edison
Thucydides
Twenty-Four Histories
War
Warren De la Rue
Whig history
Wiktionary
Women's history
Yellow Emperor
For other uses, see Historian (disambiguation).
Herodotus (5th century BC), one of the earliest nameable historians whose work survives.
A historian is an individual who studies and writes about history, and is regarded as an authority on it.1 Historians are concerned with the continuous, methodical narrative and research of past events as relating to the human race; as well as the study of all events in time. If the individual is concerned with events preceding written history, the individual is a historian of prehistory. Although "historian" can be used to describe amateur and professional historians alike, it is reserved more recently for those who have acquired graduate degrees in the discipline.2 Some historians, though, are recognized by equivalent training and experience in the field.2 "Historian" became a professional occupation in the late nineteenth century at roughly the same time that physicians also set standards for who could enter the field.
Contents
1 History analysis
1.1 Historiography in Antiquity
1.2 Twentieth-century developments
2 Education and profession
3 See also
4 Notes
5 Bibliography
6 External links
//
History analysis
Main articles: Historical method and Historiography
The process of historical analysis involves investigation and analysis of competing ideas, facts and purported facts to create coherent narratives that explain "what happened" and "why or how it happened". Modern historical analysis usually draws upon other social sciences, including economics, sociology, politics, psychology, anthropology, philosophy and linguistics. While ancient writers do not normally share modern historical practices, their work remains valuable for its insights within the cultural context of the times. An important part of the contribution of many modern historians is the verification or dismissal of earlier historical accounts through reviewing newly discovered sources and recent scholarship or through parallel disciplines like archaeology.
Historiography in Antiquity
Historian studies track of Underground Railroad
A view of the Armistead House in Plymouth, a possible Civil War site used by the Underground Railroad. (Submitted photo courtesy Rev. Hank Burdick) A possible Underground Railroad site in Plymouth, commonly referred to as the Armistead House, will receive a visit from a notable historian Thursday to determine whether the house was a stop on the Underground Railroad.
sentinel Preston Gilderhus as the student advisor Rachel Olson as the chaplain Ashley Foss as the parlimentarian and Noah Engels as the historian This entry was posted on Tuesday May 6th 2008 at 9 04 am and is filed under 09 Community Knowledge and Awareness Uncategorized
http://maddock.communityblogs.us/2008/05/06/new-ffa-officers
List of historians - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For the profession, see Historian. This is a list of historians. The names are grouped by order of the historical period in which they were writing, ...
Traditionally, Herodotus and Thucydides have been regarded as the founders of the discipline of history. Yet that is disputed by many especially with the notable evidence of the Egyptian hieroglyphics.
Concerning Herodotus (5th century BC), one of the earliest nameable historians whose work survives, his recount of strange and unusual tales are gripping but not necessarily representative of the historical record. Despite this, The Histories of Herodotus displays some of the techniques of more modern historians. He interviewed witnesses, evaluated oral histories, studied multiple sources and then pronounced his particular version. Herodotus's works covered what was then the entire known world of the Greeks, or at least the part regarded as worthy of study, i.e., the peoples surrounding the Mediterranean. Herodotus was also known for visiting the various battle sites he wrote about, including the battle of Thermopylae. About 25 years after Herodotus, Thucydides pioneered a different form of history, one much closer to reportage. In his work, History of the Peloponnesian War, Thucydides wrote about a single long conflict that lasted 27 years between Athens and Sparta with its origins and results. But, as it was mainly within living memory and Thucydides himself was alive throughout the conflict and a participant in many of the events, there was less room for myths and tall tales. Moreover, he had the custom of including transcriptions of speeches that were supposedly delivered by historic figures, although, more commonly, they were made up by Thucydides himself according to what he felt those people should have said at the moment they delivered them..
Famed Civil War Historian Speaking Tonight
Columbia University professor Eric Foner will speak about Abraham Lincoln and the world he lived in.
historian: Definition from Answers.com
historian n. A writer, student, or scholar of history. One who writes or compiles a chronological record of events; a
Other noteworthy and famous Greek historians include Plutarch (2nd century AD), who wrote several biographies, the Parallel Lives, in which he wanted to assess the morality of its characters by comparing them in pairs, and Polybius (3nd century BC), who developed Thucydides's method further, becoming one of the most objective historians of classical antiquity. Polybius is also credited for being the first historian to write a History of the World, and to offer argued explanations and interpretations of history facts, and not only a record of them. However, the most important historian of the classical world was Tacitus (late 1st and early 2nd century AD). The foremost Roman historian, he wrote an extremely influential account on Rome in the first century, the Annals. Due to his literary style and the thoroughness of his research—which seemingly included studying roman imperial archives and was heavily influenced by Thucydides—and his apparent rigor—for he tended not to support any character or subject, taking an impartial point of view—he was by far the most read and admired historian during the Middle Ages, the Renaissance and the early Modern Era. Thus, his historian style has been imitated all through the ages, and had a severe impact in Edward Gibbon and Montesquieu, usually considered as the first modern historians.
Sima Qian (145-86 BC), a Prefect of the Grand Scribes (太史令) of the Han Dynasty (202 BC - 220 AD), is regarded as the father of Chinese historiography because of his universal history, the Records of the Grand Historian (史記). It provides an overview of the history of China covering more than two thousand years from the legendary Yellow Emperor to Sima's contemporary Emperor Han Wudi (漢武帝). His work laid the foundation for the Twenty-Four Histories which, unlike Sima's independent endeavor, were government-sponsored works usually commissioned by new dynastic houses after the conquest of the previous dynasty.
Historian, relative to publish facts of woman's 1910 murder - From the Poughkeepsie Journal
MILLBROOK — It really was a dark and stormy night when 26-year-old Sarah Brymer was raped and strangled on the Millbrook estate where she was employed as a nanny 101 years ago.
What does a Historian do? If you're a Historian - what are ...
Well an actual historian is someone who writes history, but that doesn't mean he has any sort of qualifications. If you're asking what a historian ...
Ibn Abd-el-Hakem was an Egyptian who wrote the History of the Conquest of Egypt and North Africa and Spain, which was the earliest Arab account of the Islamic conquests of those countries. Much like Herodotus' works, it mixes facts with legends, and was often quoted by later Islamic historians. Al-Jahiz was a famous Arab scholar and historian. Hamdani, an Arab historian,was the best representatives of Islamic culture during the last effective years of the Abbasid caliphate. Ali al-Masudi was an Arab historian, known as the “Herodotus of the Arabs.” Ibn Khaldun was a famous Arab Muslim historian and was the forefather of historiography and the philosophy of history. He is best known for his Muqaddimah "Prolegomenon".
Much of the groundwork in creating the modern figure of the historian was done by Charles de Secondat, baron de Montesquieu (1689–1755). His wide-ranging Spirit of the Laws (1748) spanned legal, geographical, cultural, economic, political and philosophical studies and was greatly influential in forging the fundamentally interdisciplinary historian. Referred to as "the first modern historian", Edward Gibbon wrote his magnum opus, The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (three vols., 1776–1788). However, some authors such as Christiansen regard ancient Greek author Polybius as the first historian of a modern kind, criticising sources and making unbiased judgements based on presumed neutral analysis; indeed, Livy used him as a source. Polybius, one of the first historians to attempt to present history as a sequence of causes and effects, carefully conducted his research—partly based on what he saw and partly on the communications of eye-witnesses and the participants in the events.
Twentieth-century developments
Historian gives First World War soldiers a voice
The personal touch helped 10 years of research pay off for Tim Cook. The First World War historian at Canadian War Museum in Ottawa penned early works, such as No Place to Run: The Canadian Corps and Gas Warfare in the First World War, with a more scholarly bent.[...]
historian - definition of historian by the Free Online ...
Translations of historian. historian synonyms, historian antonyms. Information about historian in the free online English dictionary and ...
At the dawn of the twentieth century, Western history remained oriented toward the "great man theory" of history concerning war, diplomacy, science and high politics. This point of view was predisposed toward the study of a small number of powerful men within a given socio-economic elite. More often than not, this has been furthered by the traditional whig school of thought, which holds that history is "protestant, progressive... [and] studies the past with reference to the present."3 This has been gradually been replaced with a more critical perspective. For example, it is a common misconception that Thomas Edison alone invented the incandescent light bulb; a traditional history might highlight Edison's invention at the expense of all others. In contrast, a modern history of Edison or the lightbulb mentions Joseph Wilson Swan, Heinrich Göbel, A.N. Lodygin, and Warren De la Rue in order to show that Edison's activities were one part of a group of inventors and rivals in the commercial deployment of the technology.
Since the 1960s, history as an academic discipline has undergone several evolutions. These changes fostered advances in a number of areas previously disregarded in historiography. Formerly neglected topics have become the subject of academic study, such as the history of popular and mass culture, sexuality, cultural geography, and the lives of ordinary people. Starting in the 1960s—and somewho? would say earlier--revisionist historians have attempted to "set the record straight" by redefining the impression society holds of the past.citation needed For instance, in his ground-breaking Roll, Jordan, Roll, historian Eugene D. Genovese focused not on white Southern slaveholders—as more traditional historians have donecitation needed--but on the experiences of African Americans under slavery—hence the subtitle, "The World the Slaves Made". Edward Said's Orientalism is another revisionist classic, in which Said examines how and why Western societies so quickly came to consider non-Western ones as inherently inferior. One of the most popular revisionist workscitation needed is Howard Zinn's 1980 book, A People's History of the United States, where Zinn attempts to discuss all those left out of "great man history": workers, slaves, women, blacks, Hispanics, Asians, and leftist political radicals and activists.
Historian cracks 'Shugborough Code'
GREAT HAYWOOD, England, Feb. 1 (UPI) -- A British researcher says the eight-letter inscription on Shepherd's Monument, which some believe relates to the Holy Grail, is simply 19th century graffiti.
CP Control Technologies offers Historian components that have high performance real time historical information They combine the power and flexibility of a relational database with the speed and compression of a true process historian integrating the control room with the real world processes Creating and implementing a Historian is an important step
http://www.cpcontroltech.com/cms/index.cfm?contentid=11
Historian | Define Historian at Dictionary.com
Historian definition, an expert in history; authority on history. See more.
While revisionist history has resulted in the flowering of new historical approaches and subjects, some historians are divided on just how positive this change is. Most historians are pleased with this proliferation of historical subjects and actors, such as the growth of the history of sexuality and gender analysis—which includes both women's history and the study of masculinity. Scholarship on various ethnic or racial groups has grown, especially in American history: historians now focus on the experience of blacks, Asians, and Hispanics in America, as well as the lives of Irish, Italians, and other Southern or Eastern European immigrants groups. That said, some historians have complained of the fracturing and atomization of the historical field. As historians examine increasingly smaller subjects, few historians are willing (or able) to tackle all of the various historiographies relevant to a broader interpretive or analytic synthesis. Indeed, scholars have been calling for a "new synthesis" in American history for a good decade now.
Education and profession
An undergraduate history degree is often used as a stepping stone to graduate studies in business or law. Many historians are employed at universities and other facilities for post-secondary education.4 In addition, it is normal for colleges and universities to require the PhD degree for new full-time hires, and a Masters degree for part-timers. Publication is increasingly required by smaller schools, so graduate papers become journal articles and PhD dissertations become published monographs. Professional historians typically work in colleges and universities, archival centers, government agencies, museums, and as freelance writers and consultants.5 The job market for new PhDs in history is poor and getting worse, with many relegated to part-time "adjunct" teaching jobs with low pay and no benefits.6
See also
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Historians
Historiography
List of historians
List of historians by area of study
American Historical Association
Public history
List of Russian historians
Notes
^ "[1]" Historian. Wordnet.princeton.edu. Accessed 28 June 2008
^ a b Herman, A. M. (1998). Occupational outlook handbook: 1998-99 edition. Indianapolis: JIST Works. Page 525.
^ Herbert Butterfield, The Whig Interpretation of History (New York: W.W. Norton, 1965), v, 3-4.
^ bls.gov : Social Scientists, Other
^ Anthony Grafton and Robert B. Townsend, "The Parlous Paths of the Profession" Perspectives on History (Sept. 2008) online
^ Robert B. Townsend, "Troubling News on Job Market for History PhDs," AHA Today Jan. 04, 2010 online
Bibliography
Listed by date
Richard B. Todd, ed. (2004). Dictionary of British Classicists, 1500–1960, Bristol: Thoemmes Continuum, 2004 ISBN 1-85506-997-0.
Han, S. (2003) Ancient History and Early Singapore, Secondary 1. Singapore : Pearson Education Pte. Ltd.
Kelly Boyd, ed. (1999). Encyclopedia of Historians and Historical Writing. London [etc.] : Fitzroy Dearborn ISBN 1-884964-33-8
Lateiner, D. (1989). The historical method of Herodotus. Phoenix, 23. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
John Cannon et al., eds. (1988). The Blackwell Dictionary of Historians. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers, 1988 ISBN 0-631-14708-X.
Hartog, F. (1988). The mirror of Herodotus: the representation of the other in the writing of history. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Erik Christiansen (1970). The Last Hundred Years of the Roman Republic, Odense: Andelsbogtrykkeriet
Gottschalk, L. R. (1950). Understanding history; a primer of historical method. New York: Knopf
Barnes, M. S. (1896). Studies in historical method. Heath's pedagogical library. Boston: D.C. Heath & Co.
Taylor, I. (1889). History of the transmission of ancient books to modern times, together with the process of historical proof: or, a concise account of the means by which the genuineness of ancient literature generally, and authenticity of historical works especially, are ascertained, including incidental remarks upon the relative strength of the evidence usually adduced in behalf of the Holy Scriptures. Liverpool: E. Howell.
Herodotus, Rawlinson, G., Rawlinson, H. C., & Wilkinson, J. G. (1862). History of Herodotus. A new English version. London: John Murray.
Véricour, L. R. d. (1850). Historical analysis of Christian civilisation. London: J. Chapman.
Taylor, I. (1828). The process of historical proof. London: Printed for B. J. Holdsworth.
External links
Look up historian in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Selected texts by the most known historians
Watertown's Revels present "Food History Mysteries" at Commander's Mansion
Food historian Sandy Oliver presents “Food History Mysteries” as part of the Revels Salon Series, Friday, Feb. 18, 2011, at The Commander’s Mansion, 440 Talcott Avenue in Watertown.
Wonderware Historian
The Wonderware Historian is a high-performance real-time database for historical information. ... Wonderware Historian is designed to collect a wide variety of plant ...
Historian shares memories of Col Frederic Johnson
A SEDGEMOOR historian has shared her memories of a US war hero who she spent years researching.
American Historical Association (AHA)
"The public work of historians" was the focus of the plenary session at our recent annual meeting. ... And the wiki format allows all historians to contribute. ...
Archives: Historian tampered with Abraham Lincoln pardon document
McLEAN, Va. -- The National Archives says a longtime Abraham Lincoln researcher has been caught telling a big lie about Honest Abe.
List of historians - Definition
This is a list of historians. The names are grouped by order of the ... Fa-Hien, Chinese Buddhist monk and historian, author of A Record of Buddhistic ...
Historian: State capital moved often in early days
Alabama had five Capitol buildings during the first 39 years of its existence, leading more than one citizen to wonder whether they should become portable, historian Leah Rawls Atkins said Saturday.
Roger Mayweather...historian? Can we put Roger on the board ...
Good questions. I wouldn't go as far as the Hall of Fame. It's already littered with fighters who shouldn't be there. He could possibly be a top answerer ...
Historian admits tampering with Lincoln pardon
McLEAN, Virginia - The US National Archives says a long-time Abraham Lincoln researcher has confessed to tampering with a presidential pardon of a Civil War military deserter so he could claim credit for finding a document of historical...



















