Sunday, November 6, 2016
History form 1
TOPIC ONE
Sources of History
Identify sources of History
Sources of history refers to the avenues that can be used to
get historical information. It requires an inter-disciplinary approach in order
to get the actual historical information. Replying on a single source of
history evidence will not satisfy your curiosity as one source links you to the
other. It is therefore crystal clear that no single source of history can stand
on its own.
Therefore, the following are sources of
history/historical knowledge:
- Oral
traditions
- Historical
sites
- Written
records
- Archives
- Museums
- Archaeology
- Linguistic
studies
- Anthropology
- Ethnographic
sources
The Functions, Advantages and Limitations of the following
Sources of History; Oral Traditions, Historical Sites, Written Records,
Archives
Assess the functions, advantages and limitations of the
following sources of history; oral traditions, historical sites, written
records, archives
Oral traditions
This refers to the history handed down by word of mouth from
one generation to another. It is usually done by talking and listening usually
to elders who are believed to be more knowledgeable about past events. It is
also the study of our past as revealed by what has been handed down by word of
mouth from one generation to another. Its manner of transmission differs from
written sources thus making it a historical source of a special nature. Oral
traditions are widely used in areas where people did not practice the art of
writing.
Types of oral traditions
- Cultural
practices e.g. art, music, religion riddles an jokes
- Proverbs,
superstitions, poems and stories
- Narrations
of past events (primary and secondary sources)
Advantages of oral traditions
Can easily be understood by everyone, oral traditions
does not segregate; it can be understood by everyone. It is therefore
convenient for both the educated and the uneducated as it only requires one to
listen as long as it is in a language that everyone can understand.
It is accessible as in every area narrators are present,; here
the historian is in better position to assess the value and his reliability
source because he is working with the living people. At any time and place the
historians or the person who is searching material can easily access the
information as the information are available
It is cheap or costs less.Generally, elderly people
are are willing to provide information free of charge, this makes the source
cheap. One does not need to pay his/her grandfather/mother in order for them to
tell one a story. In many societies people used to sit beside a fire and the
elders will tell them about whathappened in the past and this was passed over
from one generation to the other.
Helps in the reconstruction of history, it does
require several sources in order to tell a story, oral traditions bridge the gap
as it is provides evidence to written sources or primary source. Many
historical sources including the most ancient ones were based on oral
traditions.
It is two way traffic form of communication. This
means that when someone does not understand questioning is possible, this
therefore makes it a live and interactive source and interesting source of
historical information.
Avails us with unwritten or un documented history. Through
oral tradition it is easy to reveal information which is not documented or
recorded. In African history the major source of information is passed through
oral traditions simply because much of what was taking place was not written
down.
Bridges the gap left by other sources of history. As
artifacts cannot talk it is oral tradition that does the talking there by
filling in the gaps that might have been left by other sources.
First handinformation. Many people who tell
stories through different oral tradition are the primary source or the people
who were present at the scene of the matter. This therefore means that the
historian will be in a position of getting firsthand information from the
respondent.
Disadvantages of oral tradition
Can easily be lost if someone who knows the data dies.In
many societies it is the elderly who have the information which is passed over
from generation to generation, in case the elder dies it means the information
he/she had has disappeared with that person.
Language barrier.As oral tradition involves the
passing down of history by use of the word of mouth, the problem of a language
barrier is a big hindrance. For example, a person who might have valuable
information might be using a language the historian does not understand this
therefore will limit the process of communication.
Cannot stand on its own. Poems, stories, jokes etc.
do not tell history directly they simply contain valuable information of how
people produced and reproduced themselves leaving out the important aspects of
the historical touch. It therefore gives the historian a hard time to
supplement and analyse the given informationcritically.
Their reliability is rather problematic. It is
impossible to judge how much is true history and how much only folklore fiction,
legends and myth. This can be evidenced in the stories that are told to young
children for example stories of the hare, the lion and many others. Therefore,
it is difficult to distinguish what is the fact and what is imaginary.
Conscientiousness of that person. Is he/she transmitting
them the way he heard them or he corrected them for some purpose or other. It
is very difficult to understand if someone is telling you the event as he was
told or is he adding in other information.
Variation in language. In some instances
different languages might have similar words but with differing meanings. This
will therefore result confusion on the side of the historian or researcher as
some of the information might be lost.
Most of narrations are centered on people of status in
society. Kings, chiefs, queens are often talked about in such stories,
there is often little consideration about the masses.
Its preservation in many societies mainly depends on the
power of the memories of successive generations of human beings. All oral
traditions are influenced by the culture of the society that produce them, this
means that the traditions that exist in a given society chiefly depend on the
political organisation of a given society.
Other disadvantages include:
- Can
also pass over immoral cultural acts.
- Translation
might be difficult because some languages have become extinct.
- It
requires too much patience, attention and the power of the memory.
- Usually
is limited to a given locality and to recent information.
- Easily
awakens hatred amongst different societies.
- Full
of biases.
- It can
be time consuming if the narrators are in accessible.
Historical sites
These do contain remains which show humanity's physical
development, activities and the tools they made and used. The major function of
historical sites is to make historical facts more practical.
There are two types of historical sites namely;
- Areas
with physical remains of man and his artifacts.
- Ancient
towns with both ruins of old buildings and old buildings which still
exist.
Examples of historical sites with physical remains of man
and his artifacts include the following:
- Olduvai
Gorge, Isimila, Engaruka and Kondoa Irangi in Tanzania.
- Nsongezi,
Biggo, Ntusi and Magogi in Uganda.
- Olorgesailie
Gilgil and Lake Turkana in Kenya.
- Koobi
for a in Ethiopia.
- Ingombe-Ilede
in Zambia.
- Ishango
in the D.R.C.
On the other hand examples of ancient towns in Africa with
ruins of old buildings and existing old buildings include:
- Timbuktu,
Gao, Jenne and Audaghost in West Africa.
- Bagamoyo,
Zanzibar and Kilwa in Tanzania.
- Lamu
and Mombasa in Kenya.
THrough the study of historical sites we can reveal the
works of art by previous generations for example rock paintings etc. As time
elapses more historical sites are being discovered due to extensive research
being carried out. The remains that are discovered in the historical sites are
worked on by archaeologists.
The major function of historical sites is to represent
actual materials of man’s existence and preserving the material remains of man
for the coming generation, plus acting as symbol of social heritage and
referral point to the society that are concerned.
Advantages of historical sites
As a symbol of social cultural heritage of different
societies. Here the society concerned will be symbolized in the site.
Historical sites do break the boredom that is evidenced
in the theoretical nature of history as a discipline. In this sense
history is given a practical touch as people can see or observe what they were
studying practically for example past human tools, rock paintings and human
remains.
Helps in the building or the reconstruction of history, as
they bridge the gaps that might have been left by other sources.
The sites also act as a source of revenue for both the
government and private individuals.This is achieved when they act as centre
of tourism, and when the tourists visit.
The sites act as avenues for research for archaeologists
and other scientists. People who carry out research in regards to man’s
past will use historical sites as their libraries and laboratories, for example
Dr. Leakey and his wife.
Generally, discoveries from historical sites can be used to
reveal past settlement patterns, levels of technology, economic development and
political organisation reached past societies in different times and
environments.
Disadvantages of historical sites
It brings confusion to interpret the remains found in the
historical sites, for example, rock paintings can bring about different
interpretations between historians.
Historical sites cannot stand on their own to tell
history. This means that historical sites do not fully cater for all
historical information required even for societies without documented history.
History found in the sites cannot be interpreted by
everyone andrequires a qualified personnel to interpret the
information.
Historical sites are located in remote areas which are
not accessible. This makes it time consuming and expensive working on
them. Places where the historical sites are located are often also poorly
developed.
The historical sites maydisappear, as they are often
destroyed by natural hazards and changes in the earth like weathering and
denudation.
Many of the sites are selected on the basis of
probability, for example it is assumed that early man lived in caves where
there was water nearby and plenty of animals to hunt, fish or catch. This
therefore brings in the issue of try and fail that in turn becomes costly in
terms of time and resources.
Examples of historical sites in East Africa include:
- Nsongezi-
western Uganda
- Magosi-
eastern Uganda
- Biggobyamugenyi
(Biggo)- central Uganda
- Lolui,
Mubende in Uganda
- Rusinga
Island- southern Uganda
- Olorgesailie-
Kenya
- Lake
Rudolf- Kenya
- Njoro
in Kenya
- Bagamoyo-
Tanzania coast
- Kilwa-
Tanzania coast
- Isimila-
central Tanzania
- Kondoa-
central Tanzania
- Lake
Eyasi southern Tanzania
- Olduvai
Gorge in Tanzania etc.
Written records
This refers to the history which has been written down or
documented. This is the most common and modern source of history as it cuts
across different boundaries. It is the principle source of materials for
historians in east Africa as they have been valuable for the past 200 years or
less.The written records are grouped into two the primary sources and secondary
sources as for the historians it is better to first deal with the secondary
source and then handle the primary sources.
Written records include: Books, letters, magazines,
newspapers, minutes of meetings, official and private documents, official
publications by the governments and parliaments of the colonial powers, peace
treaties and other agreements concluded by the great powers between one another
and African chiefs, legislative acts, edicts, dispatches of the colonial
administration, documents from African companies and individual merchants,
letters etc.
It also include books written by contemporaries, produced by
aliens, narrative of explores, reminiscences of soldiers, missionaries or
colonial officials, the impressionistic sung of the journalists and the
imaginative reconstruction of the novelists. The written records can easily be
accessed in the libraries, schools, colleges, archives and in some offices.
Functions of written records
Reconstruction of history, history can be
reconstructed through a multidisciplinary approach. The written records play an
important role of constructing history as they do bridge the gaps that might be
left by other sources.
To collect and preserve written historical information,
as this is the modern and most common source of historical information it plays
the function of preserving written records so that those who come in the future
will also be able to use this source of historical information.
Advantages of written records
Covers a wide section of ideas and different views. Different
aspects concerning different views can easily be accessed in one written
material for example a text book can contain historical information concerning
different aspects and areas. Therefore, this simplifies the work of the
historian as he will concentrate on that one source and discover a variety of
given information. Therefore, it’s true to say that written records cover a
wide coverage as different aspects can be commented up on.
It is easily accessible, as almost all areas have
books, written materials are like a stone thrown into a pull causing ripples
that flow out right across its surface.This therefore means that in at least
any place there is at least a written source of something. In addition to that
written records are easy to keep and to retrieve, the accessibility therefore
simplifies the work of the historian as she/he has the material at their
disposal.
Usually well explained and well elaborated. Many
written records for such as textbooks are well researched, explained and
elaborated by the authors. This therefore gives the person using the source
actual and vivid material. Usually contains well-researched and concrete data
which gives confidence to the researcher or historian
Bridges the gap left by other sources . The
written records as a source of historical information play an important role of
bridging or filling in the gaps that have been left by other sources. As it is
well known that no single source of history can stand on its own to tell
history the written records do fill up the gap that other sources might have
left. For example it gives evidences to oral traditions.
Cannot easilydisappear.As in the case of oral
traditions, if the narrator dies the historical information is most likely to
follow him on the deathbed, for written records this is not the case as
material that is written down is very difficult to fade away as it is
documented and usually in many copies.
It is very helpful when carrying outresearch. For
researchpurposes the most helpful source can be found in written records as it
has guidelines, which help theresearcher in his/her research. As the
information in most cases is well researched and elaborative this gives the
researcher ample time in his research.
Easy to get valuable and rare information. It is
mainly from written sources that valuable and rare information can be obtained.
Many written records are very important as they provide evidence were needed.
Easy to make references. If written material is
well organised; many of the written sources act as reference material for the
different needs and written records as a source of reference.
Disadvantages of written records
It is expensive. Written records require a lot
of time and resources to prepare, this makes them expensive to produce as
compared to oral tradition. Also purchasing the written material is very
costly.
Can easily be distorted or misunderstood. As
written records are in most cases written in English which recipients might
easily misunderstand. Also there might be distortion in the sense that writers
might be biased when writing or they might have different approaches on to the
same issue.
Applicable to educated people only. Written
records are limited to a few people in a society. As the people who do not know
how to read and write will not benefit from this source of history as he/she
will not understand what has been written. This therefore makes it limited to a
given section of people.
Based mainly on the writer's opinion. Many
writers are biased in the sense that they write in their favour of example
Eurocentric and Afro centric ideas.
Historians cannot be expected to come to the same
conclusion, thistherefore means that written records are continuously
rewritten and revised Unless the historian is able to sort out relevant
information many written records contain some information that might be
irrelevant to the historian there by wasting a lot of time in a given source.
Generally, it is very difficult to understand history unless you understand the
historian himself first.
Archives
This refers to collections of private and public documents.
This means the place where such documents are kept or found. Archives are
collections of public and private documents.
They includes books, and the written records of early
missionaries, explores, traders and colonialists kept in books or files.
Examples of archives include: Arusha in Tanzania, Entebe national archives in
Uganda. They also contained current records of government, parties and other
organisations. The major function of archives is to collect and preserve
historical information
Advantages of archives
It is the best method of collecting and preserving
historical information. Most written documents which do contain
historical information are preserved in the archives for future use.
It archives a variety of information. It is very
easy to get historical information of different people and issues at a given
time without wasting time and resources.
Getting firsthand information is possible, as the documents
in archives are the extract materials that were written by the people
concerned. For example political parties documents, memories etc.
It is very easy to get and identify the exact date of
historical events, such as the travels of Vasco Da Gama, African
resistance, the scramble for and partition of Africa plus many other important
occurrences.
Understanding the ideas and the literacy level of the
past is very easy. This can be done by analysing the documents in
archives and relating them with what we have at the present time and also
borrowing ideas from them. For example a current government can use a document
of a former government to recognise itself.
Disadvantages of archives
Preserving documents is very expensive. This
therefore makes the source more expensive as compared to other sources. Keeping
the documents in archives requires much attention and care.
This method is also discriminative, as it is only the
literate (educated) that can utilise the information as it is usually written
in a language that someone who is not educated might not understand.
Societies whose information was not documented will not
be represented. Societies with no recorded past will not be
represented.
Retrieving information from the archives is not easy,
as it requires a lot of time and perseverance. This therefore makes it hectic
on the side of the impatient historian.
Archives are not evenly distributed when
compared to other methods like oral tradition. For example, in Tanzania one has
to travel to either Dar es Salaam or Arusha in order to find an archive.
Generally, in the case of societies without history that is
written down the archives is less meaningless as there is not any trace of
their history in that place. This therefore means that such a community will
have it history missing in action.
Museums
Museums are special places created for preserving historical
information. These are places where information about people and past events
are stored.
Specialists in a museum who help explain objects to the
people are called Museum Curators. They date and arrange the remains and
artifacts which demonstrate in the easiest way possible the technological, cultural,
economical and social development of the people.
Museums are created to preserve historical information and
also act as tourist centers. Museums contain a collection of all sorts of items
which show cultural, social, political, technological and economical
developments from the past to the present.
There national, regional, district and local museums of East
Africa. Examples of museum in Tanzania are Kalenga in Iringa, Bujora in Mwanza
and Halwego and Handebezyo in Ukerwe. In Kenya the Hyrax Hill museum site in
Nakuru district, Kawanda in Uganda and many others.
Advantages of museums
They preserve the historical information and material, Itis
in the museum that many of historical remains are preserved for future use and
referral.
They contain a variety of historical items. It
is only in the museum that one can be find a variety of historical remains
ranging from artifacts to written records and oral tradition. Therefore a
museum is relatively important to historical study.
Museums provide objects that give history a practical
touch, as they working as teaching aids. Students of history have the
opportunity to put into practice what they study as they see the objects in
museums.
It is possible to learn about the development of
technology of early man from museums.The curators play an important role in
explaining artifacts to the people and how they were used.
Museums arouse creativity and craftsmanship on the side
of the learner. This comes about as the learner sees more and more
remains and became more eager to discover more.
Note other advantages may include:
- Attracts
tourists.
- Generating
income for the people working in the museums and the government.
- Source
of foreign exchange.
- Provision
of employment for example the museum curators.
- Easy
to identify the social, political and economic developments of a given
society from the museum.
- Many
of the museum act as the major source of information for those carrying
out research for educational purposes.
Disadvantages of museums
They are very expensive to maintain and build. Starting
up and maintaining A museum requires a lot of funds. Obtaining and maintaining
artifacts is also relatively expensive.
Require skilled manpower to operate. Museum
curators should have historical bearings and know about the artifacts in the
museum.
Distortion of historical information, in the museum
is possible when the curator is biased. The curator will therefore distort the
historical information, as he is subjective in the way he interprets the
historical facts.
Attitude of the people affects the museum so much that
some museums have been forced to be closed. People are not visiting
museums due to unknown reasons, a case in point the Hyrax site museum in Kenya
says that it receives only 10-20 customers on a busy weekend which is very
small number compared to the inputs in the museum.
Poor preservation of artifacts, for example the
pieces of cloth, chains if not well handled can distort the information and the
relevance of the historical facts. Due to poor preservation many museums have
lost their historical artifacts to the fires other unforeseen circumstances
costing them dearly.
Archaeology
This refers to the science that deals with the study of past
materials historical remain of man. Or it is a study of artifacts that have
been dug from the earth. Artifacts are the remains of the material culture made
by the people of the past. People who study archaeology are calledarchaeologists.
Archaeologists like Dr. Leaky have concentrated on the
period of early man; others like Dr. Posnansnky have worked on sites relating
to the Chwezi Empire, Chittick and Kirk man have excavated coastal sites of the
12th -16th centuries. How they carry out their
excavations is a long story.
Excavation is a long and laborious process as each piece of
the material found has to be examined carefully and recorded so that the
archaeologists can give a complete reconstruction. A historian studies the
artifacts with the hope of reconstructing patterns of settlement, level of
technology and skills acquired by the inhabitants of the site after excavating
them. Archaeologists removes layer after layer carefully recording all what
they find and in try to explain the relationship between the different objects.
The major function of archaeology is that it reveals
important information about man through the different stages of his
transformation. Not only that but also plays the function of arousing curiosity
of searching past historical information on the side of historian.
Advantages of archaeology
It provides evidence or authenticity on to historical
facts, as the remains are examined thoroughly by the concerned there
by supplementing the other sources which might be lacking evidence.
Knowledge of artifacts is exposed after excavation. For
example pottery, building, rooting plus telling us a great deal about the life
and culture of the people long ago through uncovering the buried objects.
Archaeology simplifies the past as it helps us
to know the past relationships between different people such as in trading
activities immigration, emigration, birth and death plus political relations.
It is probably the only source that can help us in
knowing when and how people lived in a certain place and at what time. This
is attained through the use of carbon dating which is a scientific method of
finding out the age of dating objects and artifacts .
Archaeology helps us to reveal the technology, pastoral
agriculture and commercial activities of the past societies. This is
achieved through cross examining the remains excavated by the archaeologists.
Archaeology is relatively important in supplementing
facts that are given by other sources of history. As no source can
stand on its own to tell history, therefore it can be reconstructed by the use
of archaeology.
Disadvantages of archaeology
Archaeology demands much patience.Many artifacts are
fragile and delicate which calls a lot of care in the handling of for example
fossils.
It involves many processes to obtain data out of remains,.
For example in excavations require radioactive elements and many other
procedures which make the process very expensive.
Archaeology consumes a lot of time.The archaeologists
or researchers take a lot of time during the preparation for excavation,
testing the artifacts and in the interpretation of the data.
The remains that are excavated cannot tell the full
details of a given historical phenomenon. It is therefore clear that one
cannot fully depend on archaeology as the complete source of history.
Generally, the first discovery of an archaeological find or
of an archaeological site is commonly found by an ordinary person who does not
have the techniques of excavating the remains.
During the excavation process remains of less historical
importance for example a richly furnished royal tomb, works of art of great
beauty are not seen as important. Excavation is not a treasure hunt, what they
are seeking for is knowledge, information and data which will enable them fill
up the picture of the past more accurately.
Linguistic studies
This means the study of language. It refers to study and
analysis of languages, their sounds, structure and formation. There is a
relationship between the different and various language groups. It is believed
that people who speak the same language have been in close contact in the past.
Linguistics can suggest approximately when and how the language spoke in East
Africa came into existence.
Languages are never static but constantly changing and
adapting some survive while others die. For proper classification and grouping
the people of East Africa the work done by the linguistics is a principal way.
Many linguists insists that the original language of mankind consisted of a few
short words, possibly not over 200, since many now use only about 300.
Advantages of linguistic study
Linguistic studies are a lubricant of oral tradition,
as it is through oral tradition that given information is acquired from the
different sources. This therefore shows the interconnectedness between
different sources of history.
Through the linguistics it is possible to tell the
possible origin of our languages and how the languages have been distorted. As
languages that we do use need to be understood in order to understand who we
are and where we are going.
Bridging the gaps left by other sources. Linguistic
studies assist in bridging the gaps that are left by other sources. Basing on
the fact that the reconstruction of history requires an interdisciplinary
approach therefore linguistic studies are relatively important like other
sources.
Assists in the development of language. It
assists in the discovery of different links between the people of a given
communities. Through the use of languages it’s possible to say that at one time
the people in the world lived together due to the similarity of some words in
the different languages.
Language barrier is the major factor that is limiting
linguistics. It is clear that not everyone understands all the
different languages. It is therefore possible that useful historical
information might not be understood due to the language problem.
It might result to the omission of some important
information, thereby creating a gap in historical information. In the
process of translating given historical information from one language to
another
It is expensive in terms of time and money, because
is not easy to learn a given language this therefore means that one has to take
a given period of time and resources in terms of finance to learn a given
language.
It can easily be diluted by external influences. Different
languages have been influenced by external forces which causes those languages
to change drastically from their original forms and this therefore disturbs the
historian in his effort to reconstruct history. For example many Swahili words
have been mixed with other languages.
Anthropology
This is concerned with the study of existing social
institutions and their relationships. The scientific study of the origin,
behavior, physical, social and cultural development of humans. The study is
concerned with present day societies but much of it can be used in interpreting
the past especially where we have a good reason to believe on that societies in
certain areas have not altered so much in recent times.
It is no coincidence that anthropology has its roots in the
Renaissance; it is a discipline that is firmly grounded in the modern era, no
longer drawing on metaphysics but instead looking to the here and now of human
existence. Combining philosophical ambitions with physiological and
psychological questions, thus from its beginning, anthropology looked at issues
which are today considered medical, psychological and philosophical as well as
anthropological in the modern sense.
An anthropologist is a person who studies the above aspects
of society; he has to live among those people and learn their culture thereby
enabling him to understand the aspects of life of a certain society and to
determine the truth about that society.
Advantages of anthropology
Helps the historian to find traces of the past in the
present social structures of the society. Therefore using the current
reliable information helps us to understand how the past was.
Helps the historian to reconstruct the past elements of
all cultures. The historian studies the information and research
techniques used by the anthropologist to arrive at a certain conclusion.
Generally, anthropology enables a comparison of social
institutions of various societies which helps the historian in tracing the
original homeland of social features.
Disadvantages of anthropology
A comparison of the social institutions of various societies
over a wide area might indicate the influence of one culture upon another and
the time when these cultures developed and spread which may create
misunderstanding and hatred between the different societies
The works of anthropology are very limited to time and
environment. Inthe present people may be living in a condition far
different from what their ancestors lived; in the long run the anthropologist
will not get the necessary information required in his study.
The knowledge of the anthropologist in this case is very
important as one can easily exaggerate or underestimate or interpret basing on
his knowledge a thing that will affect the whole process of trying to
reconstruct history. This therefore means that objectivity of history does not
mean objectivity of facts but interpretation.
This method is too tiresome. The anthropologist
has to live among the people and learn their culture which enables him to
understand all the different aspects of life of a given society and to
determine whether it is authentic and worth studying.
Ethnographic sources
This is another source of history which is not commonly used
and usually neglected by many scholars however, it is relatively important as
other sources. Ethnographic evidence does involve two aspects the material and
immaterial.
The material things in nature are the artifacts while the
immaterial include culture, custom and beliefs or cultural evidence which is
written down. Under this the historian is mostly interested in cultural
documents because of the unique characteristics as they are timeless
NOTE:As already elaborated no single source of history
can stand on its own to tell history but rather it requires interdisciplinary
approach for successful history reconstruction. This means that no source is
better than the other on the side of the historian carrying out his/her
research in any field of study but rather each supplement the other.
Dating in history
Refers to the assigning of dates or time on given historical
events or facts, to record history properly a good knowledge of dating or
calendar is needed. Historians divide time into seconds, minutes, hours, days,
weeks, months, years, decades, age, periods, centuries, millennia and
generation.
A decade is a period of ten years. A century is a period of
hundred years. Millennium is a period of thousand years. A generation is the
average of time between one groups of period in a family to another group of
family. Period is determined by one continuous event, which is in year.
Age refers to a period based on man’s activities and the
types of tools that are being used. In history there are different ages namely:
- Stone
age
- Iron
age
- Industrial
age
- Nuclear
age
- Copper
age
- Bronze
age
Ways of determining dates
There are two sets of ways to determine dates.
- Local
methods
- Scientific
methods
Local methods are simple methods whereby dates are fixed
through;
- recalling
facts relating events
- tracing
family chronologies
- tracing
the origin of languages
Scientific methods involve experiment in laboratories
whereby material remains are studied through such processes as;
- Radio
Active Dating (Radio metric)
- Radio
Carbon Dating (Radio Carbon 14)
Dividing time is in starting of 0, which is the year when
Jesus Christ was born .A.D. (Anno Domino) is the years after the birth of Jesus
Christ and they are known as years of the Lord. B.C. are years before the birth
of Jesus Christ. (Before Chris)
Muslims start their calendar at Hijra A.H (Al Hijra or after
Hijra) this is when Prophet Muhammad S.A.W fled from Mecca to Medina in order
to spread Islam in the year 622 A.D.He was born in the year 570 A.D. and died
in the year 632 A.D.
Historians use chronological order of events, periods and
ages such as family tree, time lines, time charts and time graphs to tell time.
TABLE SHOWING TIME PERIODS AND THEIR DURATION
1 day
|
24 hours
|
1 week
|
7 days
|
1 year
|
12 month
|
1 month
|
4 weeks
|
1 year
|
365 days
|
1 decade
|
10 years
|
1 century
|
100 years or 10 decades
|
1 millennium
|
1000 years or 10 centuries
|
A generation
|
A group of people born in the same period, or it refers to
the average differences in age between a child and his/her parents.
|
Methods of dating in history
Carbon 14
This is the scientific method of determining dates in
history and it is the most common and modern method of determining dates in
history. The archaeologists commonly use this method after discovering remains.
Radiocarbon dating
During the life time all living animals and vegetable matter
absorbs a minute amount radioactive carbon (carbon 14) from the atmosphere.
After death the level of carbon 14 in the object gradually declines at a
steady, measurable rate. Thus by measuring the amount of carbon 14 in ancient
fragments of the former living matter such as born or charcoal, scientists are
able to calculate the approximate age of the object. The results are never very
accurate but they are an invaluable aid to the archaeologists concerning more
with the chronology than with the very precise dates.
Language dating
Historical events can be dated by the use of language. Here
some word used in a given language can help to understand when a given event
occurred. For example in Kiswahili there are some words that are used that they
do tell when a given events took place for example the use of the word ‘Karafuu’
marks the beginning of the use of cloves in East Africa.
Remembering changes and event dating
Events can help in dating history for example famine,
harvesting period, tsunami, hurricanes etc. By using these changes one is able
to tell what event took place and also reflect the time at which that event
took place.
Order of eventdating
This shows the arrangement of events in series for example
family and clan chronology (family tree), chronological order of events (time
line, time graph and time chart)
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