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historiography
[ hi-stawr-ee-og-ruh-fee, -stohr- ]
noun
- the body of literature dealing with historical matters; histories collectively.
- the body of techniques, theories, and principles of historical research and presentation; methods of historical scholarship.
- the narrative presentation of history based on a critical examination, evaluation, and selection of material from primary and secondary sources and subject to scholarly criteria.
- an official history:
medieval historiographies.
Other Words From
- his·to·ri·o·graph·ic [hi-stawr-ee-, uh, -, graf, -ik, -stohr-], his·tori·o·graphi·cal adjective
- his·tori·o·graphi·cal·ly adverb
Word History and Origins
Origin of historiography1
Example Sentences
The work of historiography is to locate events in time, in all their contingent specificity.
It was this sense of ethnic superiority that allowed a spurious historiography whereby America was discovered by Vikings.
Official historiography places the origins of Belarus in Soviet ideology.
Some nations have mythology that is more historically accurate than Russian official historiography.
They may well, in fact, be the most discussed questions in 20th century historiography.
I am only very slightly kidding here: this is precisely the stuff of scholarly historiography, as it should be.
But Arafat's take on history, his lies, in effect, fly in the face of 1,400 years of Muslim tradition and historiography.
Moreover the traditions of pragmatical historiography had by no means disappeared.
But historiography cannot permanently evade the questions raised by these theories.
His output is perhaps the greatest of any isolated worker in the whole history of historiography.
For the rest we have in our hands a product of the oldest Hebrew historiography.
All this time, there are no Albanians in the historiography of this cursed land.
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