The Historian Flashcards

1
Q

How do we know if something is a primary source?

A

If it is a source from the time of the event; a first hand account of what happened. E.g - diaries, speeches

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2
Q

How do we know if something is a secondary source?

A

If it is a source from a later date, after the time of the event. E.g - documentaries, history books.

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3
Q

What is history?

A

The study of the past

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4
Q

Source

A

Something that gives us information or evidence about a person, place or a thing in the past.

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5
Q

Prehistory is used to speak about..

A

The period of the before writing was used

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6
Q

Archaeology

A

The study of the remains left by people in the past.

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7
Q

Why do we study history?

A

To learn how people lived before us, how past events unfolded, how human experience has shaped our society and the world of today, to help recognise patterns of change, how to avoid the mistakes that were made, to be inspired by the people of the past and to develop an appreciation of the cultural achievements of previous generations.

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8
Q

Historical consciousness

A

Being able to place ourselves in past human experience, linking the past, present and the future.

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9
Q

Historian

A

Someone who is an expert in, or a student of history

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10
Q

Archaeologist

A

Someone who investigates places and objects left by people in the past, including the time before written records were kept.

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11
Q

Cross-checking

A

When more than one source is used to make sure the information is correct

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12
Q

Archive

A

A place that catalogues and stores a collection of written and other sources

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13
Q

Museum

A

A place that collects and displays objects for public education and appreciation

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14
Q

Artefact

A

Any human made object E.g - pottery, a tool or a weapon, such as a spear.

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15
Q

Autobiography

A

An account of a persons life written by the person themselves.

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16
Q

Biography

A

An account of a persons life written by someone else.

17
Q

Census

A

An official survey of a population

18
Q

Handling box

A

Contains replicas (copies) of artefacts, so that anyone can examine them without damaging an original.

19
Q

Accuracy

A

Judging how accurate/correct the information you are using is.

20
Q

Bias

A

When an account is not balanced, but unfairly favours one side.

21
Q

Exaggeration

A

When something is represented as better or worse than it actually was.

22
Q

Propaganda

A

Information that has been designed to influence the attitudes of the general public, often appeals to the emotions (fear, anger, loyalty) and may even be made up.

23
Q

Types of sources

A

Written, visual, aural, oral, tactile.

24
Q

A tactile source

A

One that can be touched, a physical object. E.g - an artefact

24
Q

Chronology

A

Putting events into the sequence in which they happened

25
Q

Decade

A

Ten years

26
Q

Millennium

A

A thousand years

27
Q

Century

A

A hundred years

28
Q

BCE

A

Before the common era, before Christ.

29
Q

CE / AD

A

Common era, Anno Domini, any date since the birth of Christ

30
Q

Reinterpretation

A

To see something in a new or different light

31
Q

Cite

A

To refer to evidence you have gathered or read.

32
Q

Plagiarism

A

Passing off someone else’s work or ideas as your own, without citing the real source.