Only our species is capable of sharing accounts of past events and turning these into stories and histories.
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3. Although many species
note the passing of time,
only our own species,
Homo sapiens, is capable
of sharing accounts, or
memories, of past events
and turning these
into stories or âhistories.â
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4. What is history anyway?
As humans discovered ever more precise ways of keeping track of time,
so we have also developed more accurate ways of keeping records and
recording history.
What exactly is history? We could argue forever about that, but letâs just
agree that it means âa shared knowledge of the past.â
Why is it important to know about the past? How does that help us?
Do animals need history? Did our ancestors have a sense of history in the
Paleolithic era, and how has that sense changed over time?
How do animals and plants
âdoâ history?
All living things carry âmemoriesâ of the past. Animals need to be able to keep
track of the seasons so they know when to hibernate, when to hunt, and
when to have children. Many rodents and birds store nuts and other food in
special hiding places, and they need to remember where they stashed
them so they can find them months later. Wolves leave their marks on the
perimeters of their turf, creating a sort of record that says to other wolf
packs: âThis is owned by the BHP pack. Keep out!â
Even plants seem to record the passing of time. If you slice through a tree,
particularly in a region with lots of seasonal changes, youâll see âgrowth
rings.â Every year a new layer grows just under the bark. There is often a
light part formed early in the year and a darker part that forms later, so each
ring represents one year of growth. Wet seasons typically produce thicker
rings than dry seasons, so dendochronologists â the scientists who study
growth rings â can frequently figure out the exact year in which each layer
was formed. They can also see evidence of climatic events such as droughts
or forest fires.
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The annual growth rings of a tree record information about the climate
But âtracking the pastâ isnât the same as having a âmemoryâ of the past. A
tree ring might record the date of a major fire, but the tree wouldnât respond
if I asked, âDo you remember the great fire of 1730?â Only humans can share
their knowledge of the past because only humans have a communication
system powerful enough to share what they know and learn.
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5. The first histories
History based on memory
We donât really know when humans first began to share their knowledge of
the past. But our understanding of collective learning suggests that they
probably did so early on. If we assume, as we have done in this course, that
even the earliest members of our species were capable of collective learning, then we must assume that they could share ideas not just about where
water holes or lions are, but also about last yearâs bush fire, or that fight
that took place with the people who live beyond the river, or even of earlier
geologic events. All modern foraging societies tell stories about the past,
many focused on ancestors, but also on the creation of whatâs around us.
Indeed, most humans tell âorigin stories,â and origin stories count as history
because they share ideas about the world.
But if there were historians in Blombos Cave, they relied mainly on their
memory for the stories of the past, because there were no written records.
We know from studies of modern foraging societies that people who cannot
write down information rely on such âoral tradition,â and develop powerful
ways of remembering. Ancient storytellers could keep telling stories for
days, and poets had many techniques to help them recall long epic poems
so they could recite them at will. For example, it seems likely that the Greek
poet Homer used similar phrases over and over again, such as âthe winedark sea,â as well as rhymes and regular rhythms, mainly to help him remember his epics.
In the beginning the earth was a bare plain. All was dark. There was
no life, no death. The sun, the moon, and the stars slept beneath the
earth. All the eternal ancestors slept there, too, until at last they woke
themselves out of their own eternity and broke through to the surface.
In ancient Greece, Mnemosyne, or the goddess of memory, was regarded
as the mother of all nine muses â the various goddesses of literature, art,
and science. (The modern word mnemonic, which means âa technique for
This is the beginning of an Australian Aboriginal origin story from recent
times. We donât know if the people who told this story believed it was
literally true, but it provided a way of thinking about how things came to be
as they are. Here is the same origin story recounting the creation of humans:
With their great stone knives, the Ungambikula carved heads, bodies,
legs and arms out of the bundles. They made the faces and the hands
and feet. At last human beings were finished.
Itâs very tempting to believe that at ancient sites like Blombos Cave in
South Africa, where humans lived and worked and made different colored
paints more than 70,000 years ago, they were also telling stories about
the past, passing them on from generation to generation and tribe to tribe,
and perhaps also illustrating and recording them in some way.
A detail from a fifth-century illuminated manuscript of Homerâs Iliad
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6. remembering things,â comes from her name.) And even in societies with
writing, memory remained an admired skill. The Roman philosopher Augustine
of Hippo had a friend who could recite backward the works of the poet
Virgil. In the Muslim world it was commonplace to memorize the entire Koran.
People continued to develop ways of memorizing, such as walking in your
imagination through a large building in which you had placed objects, each
of which helped you remember something special.
History based on written records
Today, though, we expect proper history writing to be based not on the
memory of the historian, but on evidence, and mostly on written evidence.
I think youâd worry if a history teacher said, âWell, I think World War I
began in about 1914 because thatâs what my grandmotherâs dad told her.â
History based on written records appears quite late in human history. The
first written records date back a little more than 5,000 years in Egypt and
ancient Sumer. The earliest Sumerian records were made using reeds cut at
an angle to make wedge-shaped (cuneiform) marks on clay, which was then
baked hard. Many of these clay tablets survive today, and scholars can still
read them. The earliest records look like accounts: lists of property, cattle,
sheep, and wheat. But even that is history of a sort, and itâs pretty important
because it provides details of who owned what.
Within a few centuries, we begin to find elaborate written chronicles, such
as the great Sumerian epic of Gilgamesh, the king of Uruk. We also find
stories of floods, of gods, and of the creation of the world, some of which
made their way into the Jewish scriptures, the Christian Bible, and the Koran.
Wherever writing appeared it was used to write accounts of the past. And
despite most people not being able to read or write, those accounts started
to become the basis for further historical accounts. Written documents
began to be seen as more authoritative than oral stories, because once
something was written down it was much harder to keep changing the story.
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The importance of evidence
As societies became more interconnected and people began to compare
different accounts of the past, they became more concerned with a crucial
question: Which version is truest? Letâs look at a modern portrayal of human
origins: âOur hominine ancestors evolved over several million years. But
during the last million years, species appeared with very large brains, and
our own species, Homo sapiens, probably appeared about 200,000 years
ago. We know this because we have fossil remains of individuals that seem
identical to modern humans, and we begin to find evidence of technological
innovation and symbolic activity.â I wrote that, but it is typical of todayâs
history writing because it is so concerned with evidence. Where there are
competing versions of the past, you have to give evidence for yours if you
want to be taken seriously.
We can already see this growing concern with evidence 2,000 years ago in
the writings of some of the greatest historians of the classical era, such
as Herodotus of Greece and Chinaâs Sima Qian. Both lived in worlds where
different peoples made different claims about the past, so both understood
the need to base their accounts of the past on evidence wherever possible.
Herodotus (c. 484â425 BCE) traveled widely in the eastern Mediterranean
as well as to Olbia, on the northern shores of the Black Sea, where he
met some of the Scythian pastoral nomads about whom he wrote so vividly.
Modern archaeologists have shown that his somewhat gruesome accounts
of Scythian royal burials were very accurate. He also described some
Scythian origin stories, and he did so with all the skepticism of a modern
anthropologist.
About three centuries later, the Chinese historian Sima Qian (c. 145â86 BCE)
provided lengthy descriptions of the nomadic Xiongnu, who lived north of
China, in Mongolia. For example, he wrote that âthey move about in search
of water and pasture and have no walled cities or fixed dwellings, nor do
they engage in any kind of agriculture.â His account was not made up; it was
based on the writings and memories of many Chinese travelers who had
visited Mongolia, including Silk Road adventurer Zhang Qian, who was captured by the Xiongnu in 139 BCE, and lived among them for 10 years.
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7. But it was really from the Enlightenment era, in the 18th century, that the
notion of evidence-based history as the most important form of history
writing became more prominent. Today, all professional historians understand that their first task is to get the history right. That means checking all
the details against hard evidence, and preferably against written documents.
The great 19th-century German historian Leopold von Ranke pioneered the
modern art of writing history on the basis of detailed archival records. And
these days, history based on written documents remains the primary form
of historical scholarship.
But document-based history has some serious limitations. First of all, history
based on written documents often only tells us about the lives of the rich
and powerful. Thatâs because until a century or two ago most other people
could not read or write, so they werenât very well represented in the documents of earlier times. Sometimes, archaeology and anthropology can step
in by helping us use material objects â houses, clothes, bits of pottery or
skeletons â left behind by ordinary people, or by using studies of modern
societies that give us some hints about how ordinary people lived in the past.
Written records have another serious limitation. They only reach back a
few thousand years. When H.G. Wells, just after World War I, tried to write a
history of the entire Universe, he complained that âchronology only begins
to be precise enough to specify the exact year of any event after the
establishment of the eras of the First Olympiad [776 BCE] and the building
of Rome [753 BCE].â
Only in the middle of the 20th century did we start finding accurate ways
of dating events that happened before there were written records. In the
1950s, the American chemist Willard Libby showed how you could use the
breakdown of radioactive materials such as carbon 14 to date objects
such as bones or food remains that contained carbon. Libbyâs work was the
beginning of a âchronometricâ revolution, as a whole series of new techniques emerged for dating events in the distant past, eventually right back
to the Big Bang. Those dates have made it possible for us to write and
teach big history.
An illustration of the Greek historian Herodotus reading his history
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8. Have we gotten better at
studying the past?
Today we have access to better records and more types of evidence about
the past than ever before. It is astonishing to think that we can actually say
something serious about the origins of the Earth or of the Universe, and
we have so much evidence about recent centuries that historians will never
be able to use it all. So in some sense it seems that we must be doing
history better than our ancestors did.
But have there been losses as well as gains in the history of history?
Havenât we lost the vivid, personal sense of engagement with the past that
existed in oral cultures where history was always told as a story? Almost
2,500 years ago, in the Phaedrus, Plato described this sense of loss. In this
dialogue, Socrates tells how the Egyptian god Thoth, who claimed to have
invented writing, bragged that his invention would improve peopleâs memories. King Thamus (also an Egyptian god) replied that this was nonsense:
For this invention will produce forgetfulness in the minds of those who
learn to use it, because they will not practise their memory. Their
trust in writing, produced by external characters which are not part of
themselves, will discourage the use of their own memory within them.
You have invented an elixir not of memory but of reminding; and you
offer your pupils the appearance of wisdom, not true wisdom, for they
will read many things without instruction and will therefore seem
to know many things, when they are for the most part ignorantâŠsince
they are not wise, but only appear wise.
(Plato in Twelve Volumes, sections 275aâ275b)
Can it be that both arguments have merit? That speech and memory have
distinct, perhaps irreplaceable, advantages over writing, but that writing has
both broadened and sharpened our collective memory?
Thoth, the Egyptian god of knowledge
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