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How is History Written?

Sources and Evidence. How is History Written?. History is about. Time More than just the hands on a clock. Evidence Is it for real? Prove it.

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How is History Written?

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  1. Sources and Evidence How is History Written?

  2. Historyis about • Time • More than just the hands on a clock • Evidence • Is it for real? Prove it.

  3. Historians use historical evidence to construct a picture of the past. They find the evidence they need to do this in sources. A source is anything which survives from the past or tells us about the past A source becomes evidence if it is used to answer a question about the past Where does evidence come from?

  4. Pictorial Written Oral Artefacts Evidence

  5. Types of source Lead Horse Earthenware Base Armlet jewelry, Majapahit Empire Found in Fort Canning

  6. Artefacts are items that were made and used by people of the past. Examples of artefacts are tools and jewellery Types of Sources

  7. Maps Photographs Paintings/Lithographs Types of sources Old map of Singapore

  8. Pictorial sources Examples of such evidence include paintings, posters, photographs and maps. Types of sources

  9. Books Journals/logs/diaries Newspaper articles Memoirs Eyewitness description by Wang Dayuan in his book Dao Yi ZhiLue: “The list of products exported to Temasik comprised hornbill casques of a very fine quality, as well as lakawood and cotton of moderate quality. While the range is rather limited when compared to the products avaliable at the Malay Peninsula, the quality and type of products were certainly unique. What was significant was the outstanding quality of the hornbill casques, which were not available elsewhere in Malay Peninsula and Sumatra.” Types of sources

  10. Written sources Written sources are anything that has been written down Examples include official records, newspapers, personal letters and diaries, works of literature and folk stories that have been written down, and messages carved in stone. Types of sources

  11. Types of sources • Legends • Myths • Speeches • Records of conversation

  12. Oral sources: This usually refers to the spoken words of eyewitnesses to historical events. It is often recorded on tape and put in writing. Examples may include stories, speeches, songs and conversations Types of Sources

  13. Types of Evidence Looking at the evidence provided: Which are primary sources? Which are secondary sources? Why do we differentiate between primary and secondary sources?

  14. Primary Source • Evidence which is obtained firsthand or directly from the source. They are produced by participants of or eyewitnesses to events • All of the following can be primary sources:

  15. Secondary Source • Usually second hand accounts. Produced later by people who have not experienced the events directly • They act as a useful reference for historians and students who wish to find out more about the history of a period. • All of the following can be secondary sources:

  16. Example Primary Source Secondary Source • Suppose there has been a car accident. The description of the accident which a witness gives to the police is a primary source because it comes from someone actually there at the time. • The story in the newspaper the next day is a secondary source because the reporter who wrote the story did not actually witness it. The reporter is presenting a way of understanding the accident or an interpretation.

  17. Primary sources created at the time of an event, or very soon after created by someone who saw or heard an event themselves often one-of-a-kind, or rare letters, diaries, photos and newspapers (can all be primary sources) Secondary sources created after event; sometimes a long time after something happened often uses primary sources as examples expresses an opinion or an argument about a past event history text books, historical movies and biographies (can all be secondary sources) Checklist

  18. Quiz Time The Mona Lisa - Painted by Leonardo da Vinci in 1506 A piece of the original Magna Carta signed by King John in 1215 A book about the Tudors written in 1999

  19. A mug made in 2003 A cartoon of Napoleon made in 1975 A modern print of a Van Gogh painting Roman Coins made by the Romans in AD45

  20. Question to ASk Primary Source Secondary Source • Is it authentic i.e is it what it really seems to be? • who wrote or drew it? • How reliable is it? • Is the evidence it gives typical? • What source have been used to produce it? • Are the sources on which it is based authentic & reliable • What sources have not been used • Is the historian biased in any way?

  21. Fact versus Opinion McDonald’s makes burgers Statement of fact McDonald’s burgers are the best Statement ofopinion

  22. See if you are able to pick out the factual statements and statements of opinion. Activity

  23. A diary entry of a school boy. 25 Jan 2011 School was terrible today. I overslept and was late for school. Of course the old tyrant Mrs Kwik had to be at the school gate to catch us latecomers. I had to stay in school for detention till 3.30 p.m. The Maths lesson was such a bore. I don’t understand why we have to learn all this algebra. Miss Lim took over our English lesson as Mrs Tan was sick today. That was the only interesting lesson we had the whole day. I think all teachers should be like Miss Lim. She lets us discuss and voice our opinions without criticising us or putting us down. To top off this lousy day, my football team lost the final game. David was just in front of the goalmouth and he missed it by a mile! He needs to get his eyesight checked!

  24. A diary entry of a school boy. 25 Jan 2011 School was terrible today. I overslept and was late for school. Of course the old tyrant Mrs Kwikhad to be at the school gate to catch us latecomers. I had to stay in school for detention till 3.30 p.m. The Maths lesson was such a bore. I don’t understand why we have to learn all this algebra. Miss Lim took over our English lesson as Mrs Tan was sick today. That was the only interesting lesson we had the whole day. I think all teachers should be like Miss Lim. She lets us discuss and voice our opinions without criticising us or putting us down. To top off this lousy day, my football team lost the final game. David was just in front of the goalmouth and he missed it by a mile! He needs to get his eyesight checked!

  25. Problems faced by Historians • Lack of funds • Difficulty in deciphering languages • False and exaggerated information • Misleading information • Lack of evidence • Bias information • Misinterpretation of evidence • Dating problems • Doctored photographs • Forced to withhold evidence – e.g. political • Checking for reliability • Destroyed artefacts

  26. The Historian’s3Cs Credibility - is the source trustworthy? Consistency - are statements consistent? Corroboration - is the evidence supported by other evidence?

  27. Artefacts and evidence These artefacts were found by archaeologists New evidence leads to new interpretations of the past Han dynasty bronze vase Clay model of watchtower

  28. Evidence Fact vs opinion - the truth of what you think Different kinds of evidence - from the mouth to the ground The 3Cs of evaluation - the three tests historians use

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