- •Approaches to studying history
- •Передмова
- •I. Look through the words and expressions and learn them:
- •II. Read and translate the text: history
- •What historians study
- •III. Find English equivalents of those expressions in the text:
- •IV. Say whether these statements correspond to the information of the text:
- •V. Answer the questions to the text:
- •VI. Finish the sentences according the information of the text:
- •VII. Insert necessary words and expressions using those from the box:
- •Unit II
- •II. Read and translate the text: history and prehistory
- •III. Particular studies and fields
- •IV. Study the given below lexical units and provide their Ukrainian variants:
- •V. Interpret the following in English:
- •VI. Find English equivalents for the following:
- •VII. Give synonyms to the underlined words:
- •VIII. Look through the text and write out the key historical terms.
- •IX. Answer the following questions:
- •Unit III
- •I. Look through the words and expressions and learn them:
- •II. Read and translate the text: theories of history
- •The development of historical writing
- •III. Find English equivalents in the text:
- •IV. Define the key sentences of the text.
- •V. Interpret the following in English:
- •VI. Arrange the following in pairs of synonyms:
- •VII. Error correction. Define false statements and give their right versions:
- •VIII. Answer the questions trying not to give a one-word answer, add some information to develop the idea:
- •IX. Give the summary of the text.
- •X. Render the text close to its original variant.
- •XI. Translate the following passage in written form; entitle it; put 5 questions (of different types):
- •XII. Write an essay on the following topics:
- •Unit IV
- •I. Look through the words and expressions and learn them:
- •II. Read and translate the text: historical methods
- •III. Study the given bellow lexical units and provide their Ukrainian variant:
- •IV. Define the key sentences of the text.
- •V. Complete the following statements to develop the idea:
- •II. Read and translate the text: historycal analysis
- •III. Study the given below lexical units (provide Ukrainian variant):
- •IV. Find English equivalents for the following:
- •V. Interpret the following in English:
- •VII. Find synonyms in the text for the following words and word combinations:
- •VIII. Look through the text and write out the key historical terms.
- •IX. Gap filling:
- •X. Answer the following questions:
- •Unit VI
- •II. Read and translate the text. Periodization
- •III. Give synonyms to the underlined words:
- •IV. Find English equivalents for the following:
- •V. Study the given below lexical units (provide the Ukrainian variant):
- •VI. Explain the expressions in other words:
- •VII. Look through the text and write out the key historical terms.
- •VIII. – Match the historical terms listed up in column a with the definitions provided in column b.
- •IX. Complete the following statements to develop the idea:
- •X. Answer the questions on the text:
- •XI. Insert prepositions in the gaps and translate the text.
- •Origins of periodization
- •XII. Put the following words in their correct place in the passage below.
- •Periodization of origins
- •XIII. Give the summary of the text.
- •XIV. Render the text close to its original variant. Unit VII
- •I. Look through the words and expressions and learn them:
- •II. Read and translate the text: history of science
- •III. Find English equivalents for the following:
- •IX. Fill in the blanks using the information from the text:
- •X. Questions to be answered:
- •XI. Give the summary of the text.
- •XII. Render the text close to its original variant.
- •XIII. Make a written translation of the following passage: The origins of the discipline
- •Unit VIII
- •I. Look through the words and expressions and learn them:
- •II. Read and translate the text: the methods of doing history of science
- •III. Match the words with their definitions:
- •IX. Answer the following questions:
- •Unit IX
- •II. Read and translate the text: chronology
- •III. Give synonyms to the underlined words:
- •IV. Explain the expressions in other words:
- •V. Study the given below lexical units (provide the Ukrainian variants):
- •VI. Look through the text and write out the key historical terms
- •VII. Find English equivalents for the following:
- •VIII. - Find the following adjectives and nouns from the text (column a and column b):
- •IX. Scan the gapped sentences and fill in the blanks:
- •X. Answer the questions on the text:
- •XI. Give the summary of the text.
- •XII. Render the text close to its original variant.
- •XIII. Make a written translation of the text. Entitle and retell it. Put all types of questions covering the plot of the text.
- •Chronological subjects
- •Anno Domini
- •I. Look through the words and expressions and learn them:
- •II. Read and translate the text: chronicle
- •III. Find English equivalents for the following:
- •VIII. Look through the text and write out the key historical terms.
- •IX. Select endings for the given statements to develop the idea:
- •X. Check how well you remember the text:
- •Unit XI
- •II. Read and translate the text: historiography
- •III. Give synonyms to the underlined words:
- •X. Say whether these statements correspond to the information of the text:
- •XI. Give the summary of the text.
- •XII. Render the text close to its original variant.
- •XIII. Make a written translation of the following passage. Put all types of questions. Modern historiography
- •XIV*. Use the sources available to find some additional information on the issue. Present your reports in the class. Unit XII
- •I. Look through the words and expressions and learn them:
- •II. Read and translate the text: ancient historiography
- •Greek historiography
- •Roman historiography
- •VII. Interpret the expressions in other words:
- •VIII. - Find the following adjectives and nouns from the text (column a and column b):
- •IX. Read the gapped statements and fill in the blanks using the knowledge of the text:
- •X. Answer the questions on the text:
- •XI. Give the summary of the text.
- •XII. Render the text close to its original variant. Unit XIII
- •I. Look through the words and expressions and learn them:
- •II. Read and translate the text: eastern historiography Chinese historiography
- •Muslim historiography
- •III. Give synonyms to the underlined words:
- •IV. Find English equivalents for the following:
- •V. Study the given below lexical units (provide the Ukrainian variants):
- •VI. Look through the text and write out the key historical terms.
- •VII. Explain the expressions and sentences in other words:
- •VIII. - Find the following adjectives and nouns from the text (column a and column b):
- •IX. Fill in the gaps:
- •X. Check how well you remember the text:
- •XI. Give the general idea of the text.
- •XII. Render the text close to its original variant. Unit XIV
- •I. Look through the words and expressions and learn them:
- •II. Read and translate the text: antropology
- •IX Answer the questions on the text:
- •X. Gap filling:
- •XI. Give the summary of the text.
- •XII. Render the text close to its original variant. Unit XV
- •I. Look through the words and expressions and learn them:
- •II. Read and translate the text: the "four field" approach
- •III. Match the words with their definitions:
- •IV. Look through these words and expressions and provide their Ukrainian equivalents:
- •X. Give the summary of the text.
- •XI. Render the text close to its original variant.
- •XII. Make a written translation of the text. Entitle and retell it. Put all types of questions covering the plot of the text.
- •Unit XVI
- •I. Look through these words and expressions and learn them:
- •II. Read and translate the text: archaeology
- •III. Match the words with their definitions:
- •VIII. Questions to be answered:
- •IX. Insert prepositions in the gaps and translate the text:
- •Goals of archaeology
- •X. Give the summary of the text.
- •XI. Render the text using additional information on the issue.
- •Importance and applicability of Archaeology
- •Unit XVII
- •I. Look through the words and expressions and learn them:
- •II. Read and translate the text: history of archaeology
- •III. Look through these words and expressions and provide their Ukrainian equivalents:
- •V. Find English equivalents for the following:
- •VI. Explain the expressions in other words.
- •VII. Look through the text and define the key historical terms of the text.
- •VIII. Say whether these statements correspond to the information of the text:
- •IX. Answer the questions on the text:
- •X. Make up a plan of the text in the form of statements.
- •XI. Give the general idea of this text.
- •XII. Render the text using additional information on the issue.
- •Excavation
- •XIII. Sum up the contents of the texts from units XVI, XVII under discussion. Unit XVIII
- •I. Look through the words and expressions and learn them:
- •II. Read and translate the text ethnography
- •Ethnohistory
- •III. Give synonyms to the underlined words:
- •IV. Study the given below lexical units (provide the Ukrainian variant):
- •V. Find English equivalents for the following:
- •VI. Look through the text and write out the key historical terms.
- •VII. – Find the following adjectives and nouns from the text (column a and column b):
- •VIII. Select endings for the given statements to develop the idea:
- •IX. Explain the expressions in other words:
- •XI. Give extensive answers:
- •XII. Give the summary of the text.
- •XIII. Render the text close to its original variant.
- •XIV. Make a written translation of the text. Retell it. Put all types of questions covering the plot of the text.
- •XV. Give a brief presentation of ethnography, ethnohistory and ethnology and explain difference among them. Unit XIX
- •I. Look through the words and expressions and learn them:
- •II. Read and translate the text: folkloristics
- •III. Find English equivalents for:
- •IV. Give Ukrainian equivalents of those expressions in the text:
- •V. Interpret the following in English:
- •VI. Match the words with their definitions:
- •VII. Choose the facts from the text to characterize:
- •VIII. Answer the fact-finding questions trying not to give a short answer, add some information to develop the idea:
- •IX. Choose the most significant points of the text for you to give the general idea.
- •X. Put the following words in their correct place in the passage below.
- •XI. Read the text to yourself and write the annotation.
- •And ‘Native Faith’ in Contemporary Ukraine”
- •Unit XX
- •I. Look through the words and expressions and learn them:
- •II. Read and translate the text: museology
- •III. Study the given below lexical units and provide their Ukrainian variant:
- •IV. Find English equivalents for:
- •V. Give synonyms to the underlined words:
- •VI. Contradict the following statements:
- •VII. Answer the following questions:
- •VIII. Divide the text into logical parts and make up an outline of the text.
- •IX. Speak on the major points of the text in accordance with your plan.
- •X. Read the text and make its written translation.
- •XI. You are suggested the following points for discussion:
- •XII. Combine 2 texts and distinguish the main characteristic features of discipline “museum studies”. Unit XXI
- •I. Look through the words and expressions and learn them:
- •II. Read and translate the text: arhival science
- •III. Find English equivalents of those expressions in the text:
- •IV.Arrange the following words in pairs of antonyms:
- •V. Study the given below lexical units and provide their Ukrainian variant:
- •VI. Arrange the following words in pairs of synonyms:
- •VII. Try to explain the following notions connecting with the discipline “Archival studies”. Pay attention to the different meaning of the words “storage” and “preservation”:
- •VIII. Select the endings for the given statements to develop the idea:
- •IX. Check how well you remember the text:
- •X. Divide the text into logical parts and make up an outline of the text.
- •XI. Review the text.
- •XII. Read the text to yourself and write the annotation.
- •XIII. Can you enumerate all the duties and abilities the archivists must have?
- •Unit XXII
- •I. Look through the words and expressions and learn them:
- •II. Read and translate the text: oriental studies
- •III. Find English equivalents of those expressions in the text:
- •IV. Look through these words and expressions and provide their Ukrainian equivalents:
- •V. Give the synonyms to the underlined words:
- •VI. Give the antonyms to the underlined words:
- •VII. Explain the meaning of the following words and word combinations in your own words:
- •VIII. Contradict the following statements:
- •IX. Answer the fact-finding questions trying not to give a short answer, add some information to develop the idea:
- •X. Insert necessary words and expressions using those from the box:
- •XI. Give the general idea of this text.
- •XII. Render the text using your plan.
- •XIII. Read the text to yourself and write the annotation: From "Oriental Studies" to "Asian Studies"
- •Unit XXIII
- •I. Look through the words and expressions and learn them:
- •II. Read and translate the text: egyptology
- •III. Find English equivalents of those expressions in the text:
- •IV. Look through these words and expressions and provide their Ukrainian equivalents:
- •V. Arrange the following words in pairs of antonyms:
- •VI. Arrange the following words in pairs of synonyms:
- •VII. Explain the following notions, which constitute the range of Ancient Egyptian cultures:
- •VIII. Error correction. Define false statements and give their right versions:
- •IX. Answer the fact-finding questions trying not to give a short answer:
- •X. Present the general idea of the text.
- •XI. Review the text.
- •Some sentences have been extracted from the text and given below. Decide where they suit the best. Assyriology
- •Some expressions are underlined in the text. Try to explain how you understand them. Unit XXIV
- •I. Look through the words and expressions and learn them:
- •II. Read and translate the text: political history
- •III. Find English equivalents for the following:
- •IV. Study the given below lexical units and provide their Ukrainian variants:
- •V. Give synonyms to the underlined words:
- •VI. Explain the expressions and sentences in other words:
- •VII. Look through the text and write out the key historical terms.
- •VIII. – Find the following adjectives and nouns from the text (column a and column b):
- •IX. Gap filling. Read through sentences and think about missing information:
- •X. Answer the questions on the text:
- •Unit XXV
- •II. Read and translate the text: universal history
- •VII. Select endings for the given statements to develop the idea:
- •VIII. – Match the historical terms listed up in column a with the definitions provided in column b.
- •IX. Look through the text and write out the key historical terms.
- •X. Give extensive answers:
- •XI. Choose the most significant points of the text for you to give the general idea.
- •XII. Render the text close to its original variant. Unit XXVI
- •I. Look through the words and expressions and learn them:
- •II. Read and translate the text: world history
- •Big history
- •III. Look through the text and write out the key historical terms.
- •IV. Find English equivalents of those expressions in the text:
- •V. Give Ukrainian equivalents of those expressions in the text:
- •VI. Give synonyms to the underlined words:
- •VII. Interpret the following in English:
- •VIII. Find in the text a word or phrase that means:
- •IX. Agree or disagree with the following statements:
- •X. Questions to be answered:
- •Unit XXVII
- •II. Read and translate the text:
- •Intellectual history
- •III. Look through these words and expressions and provide their Ukrainian equivalents:
- •IX. Choose the facts from the text that may help you characterize:
- •X. Answer the fact-finding questions trying not to give a short answer, add some information to develop the idea:
- •Unit XXVIII
- •II. Read and translate the text: cultural history
- •VII. Look through the text and write out the key historical terms.
- •VIII. – Match the terms listed up in column a with the definitions provided in column b.
- •IX. Complete the following statements to develop the idea:
- •X. Scan the gapped sentences and fill in the blanks using the knowledge of the text.
- •XI. Check how well you remember the text:
- •Unit XXIX
- •II. Read and translate the text: cultural heritage
- •III. Find English equivalents for the following:
- •IV. Study the given below lexical units and provide their Ukrainian variants:
- •V. Look through the text and write out the key historical terms.
- •VI. Give synonyms to the underlined words:
- •VII. Explain the expressions and sentences in other words:
- •VIII. Select the endings to the given statements to develop the idea:
- •X. Fill in the gaps using the knowledge of the text:
- •XI. Answer the fact-finding questions trying not to give a short answer, add some information to develop the idea:
- •Unit XXX
- •II. Read and translate the text: genealogy
- •III. Find English equivalents for:
- •VIII. Try to explain the words and expressions in other words:
- •IX. Error correction. Define false statements and give their right version:
- •X. Check if you remember the text:
- •XI. Present the general idea of the text.
- •XII. Review the text.
- •XIII. Read the text to yourself and write the annotation. Ethnic group
- •XIV. According to the written information answer the question:
- •Unit XXXI
- •I. Look through the words and expressions and learn them:
- •II. Read and translate the text social history
- •Natural history
- •III. Find English equivalents for the following:
- •IV. Study the given below lexical units and provide their Ukrainian variants:
- •X. Gap filling. Read through the gapped statements. Think about what information might be missing:
- •XI. Answer the following questions:
- •Unit XXXII
- •II. Read and translate the text: futurology
- •III. Find English equivalents for the following:
- •IV. Study the given below lexical units (provide the Ukrainian variant):
- •V. Give synonyms to the underlined words:
- •VI. Explain the words and expressions in other words (give the Ukrainian translation):
- •VII. Look through the text and write out the key historical terms.
- •VIII. Finish up the statements to develop the idea:
- •X. Answer the fact-finding questions trying not to give a one-word answer:
- •XI. Scan the gapped statements think about missing information:
- •XII. Present the main idea of the text.
- •XIII. Render the text close to its original variant.
- •XIV. Make a written translation of the text. Put all types of questions covering the plot of the text. Retell it.
- •Unit XXXIII
- •I. Look through the words and expressions and learn them:
- •II. Read and translate the text: psychohistory
- •III. Study the given below lexical units (provide the Ukrainian variants):
- •IV. Find English equivalents for the following:
- •IX. Select the endings to the following statements:
- •X. Questions to be answered:
- •Unit XXXIV
- •II. Read and translate the text:
- •Military history
- •III. Find English equivalents for the following:
- •IV. Study the given below lexical units (provide the Ukrainian variant):
- •V. Give synonyms to the underlined words:
- •VII. Look through the text and write out the key historical terms.
- •VIII. – Find the following adjectives and nouns from the text:
- •IX. Finish up the statements:
- •X. Give the extensive answers:
- •XI. Present the general idea of the text.
- •XII. Review the text. Unit XXXV
- •I. Look through the words and expressions and learn them:
- •II. Read and translate the text:
- •Military history
- •III. Find English equivalents for the following:
- •IV. Give Ukrainian equivalents of those expressions in the text:
- •V. Give synonyms to the underlined words:
- •VI. Find in the text historical terms that mean:
- •VII. – Find the following adjectives and nouns from the text:
- •VIII. Choose the facts from the text that may help you characterize:
- •IX. Complete the following statements to develop the idea:
- •X. Answer the questions on the text:
- •History in faces Historian
- •Historical analysis
- •Historiography in Antiquity
- •Twentieth-century developments
- •Education and profession
- •In popular culture
- •Herodotus
- •Thucydides
- •Thucydides versus Herodotus
- •Sima Qian
- •Rashid al-Din
- •Ibn Khaldun
- •Dionysius Exiguus
- •Joseph Justus Scaliger
- •Edward Gibbon
- •Leopold von Ranke
- •Lewis Bernstein Namier
- •Geoffrey Elton
- •Vikentij Khvoika
- •Panteleimon Kulish
- •Dmytro Yavornytsky
- •Dmytro Doroshenko
- •Nataliia Polonska-Vasylenko
- •Ivan Krypiakevych
- •Omeljan Pritsak
- •Orest Subtelny
- •Supplementary texts Copper Age
- •Bronze Age
- •Iron Age
- •The History of Ukraine”
- •East Slavs
- •Six ages of the world
- •Way to Wisdom”
- •Iranian Studies
- •Indology
- •Ethnicity and nation
- •Ethno-national conflict
- •Definitions
Leopold von Ranke
Leopold von Ranke (December 21, 1795 – May 23, 1886) was one of the greatest German historians of the 19th century, and is frequently considered one of the founders of modern source-based history. Ranke set the tone for much of later historical writing, introducing such ideas as reliance on primary sources, an emphasis on narrative history and especially international politics and a commitment to writing history "as it essentially [was]" in his own words: "[…] not the duty to judge the past, nor to instruct one's contemporaries with an eye to the future, but rather merely to show how it actually was".
Ranke was born in Wiehe, then part of the Kingdom of Prussia. He was educated partly at home and partly in the Gymnasium. His early years engendered a life-long love of ancient Greek and Latin and of the Lutheran Church. In 1814, Ranke entered the University of Leipzig, where his subjects were Classics and Lutheran theology. At Leipzig, Ranke became an expert in Philology and translation of the ancient authors into German. As a student, Ranke's favorite authors were Thucydides, Livy, I. Kant, F. Schelling, and F. Schlegel. Ranke showed little interest in the work of modern history because of his dissatisfaction with what he regarded as history books that were merely a collection of facts lumped together by modern historians.
In 1817-1825 Ranke worked as a Classics teacher at the Gymnasium in Frankfurt. During this time, Ranke became interested in History in part because of his desire to be involved in the developing field of a more professionalized history and in part because of his desire to find the hand of God in the workings of history.
Beginning with his first book in 1824, History of the Latin and Teutonic Nations from 1494 to 1514, Ranke used an unusually wide variety of sources for a historian of the age, including "memoirs, diaries, personal and formal missives, government documents, diplomatic dispatches and first-hand accounts of eye-witnesses." He emphasized mundane documents instead of old and exotic literature.
Ranke began his book with the statement that he would show the unity of the experiences of the "Teutonic" nations of Scandinavia, England and Germany and the "Latin" nations of Italy, Spain and France through the great "respirations" of the great migration, the Crusades and colonization bound all of the nations together to produce modern European civilization. The book is best remembered for Ranke's comment that "History has had assigned to it the office of judging the past and of instructing the account for the benefit of future ages. To show high offices the present work does not presume: it seeks only to show what actually happened". Ranke's statement that history should embrace the principle of "show what actually happened" is taken by many historians as their guiding principle. Ranke went on to write that the historian must seek for the "Holy hieroglyph" that is God's hand in history by keeping an "eye for the universal" whilst taking "joy in the particular".
Following the success of Geschichte History of the Latin and Teutonic Nations from 1494 to 1514, Ranke was given a position in the University of Berlin. At the university, Ranke supported the professor Friedrich Carl von Savigny who emphasized the varieties of different periods of history Also during his time, Ranke became the first historian to utilize the forty-seven volumes that comprised the diplomatic archives of 16th - 17th c. Ranke came to prefer dealing with primary sources as opposed to secondary sources during this time.
Starting in 1831, Ranke founded and edited the Historisch-Politische Zeitschrift journal, in which he claimed that every state is given a special moral character from God and individuals should strive to best fulfill the "idea" of their state. Thus, Ranke urged his readers to stay loyal to the Prussian state and reject the ideas of the French Revolution, which he claimed were meant for France, not Prussia.
In 1834-1836 Ranke produced the multi-volume History of the Popes, their Church and State. As a Protestant, Ranke was barred from viewing the Vatican archives, but on the basis of private papers, Ranke was able to explain the history of the Papacy in the 16th c. In this book, Ranke coined the term the Counter Reformation and offered colorful portrayals of Popes Paul IV and Pius V. Ranke has been generally praised by historians for placing the situation of the Catholic Church in the context of the 16th c. and for his treatment of the complex interaction of the political and religious issues in the 16th c. He followed this book up with multi-volume History of the Reformation in Germany in 1845-1847. Ranke used the ninety-six volumes from ambassadors to explain the Reformation in Germany as the result of both politics and religion. In 1849, Ranke published History of the Latin and Teutonic Nations from 1494 to 1514, where Ranke examined the state from the Middle Ages to the reign of Frederick the Great. Many Prussian nationalists were offended by Ranke's portrayal of Prussia as a typical German medium-sized state rather as a Great Power.
In a series of lectures, Ranke argued that "every age is next to God," by which he meant that every period of history is unique and must be understood in its own context. Ranke rejected the teleological approach to history where every period is inferior to the period that follows. In Ranke's view, the historian had to understand a period on its own terms, and seek to find only the general ideas which animated every period of history. For Ranke, history was not to be an account of man's "progress" because, "After Plato, there can be no more Plato." Moreover, for Ranke Christianity was morally most superior and could not be improved upon. Ultimately, "History is no criminal court."
In 1871, Ranke continued to write on a variety of subjects relating to German history. Starting in 1880, Ranke began a huge six-volume work on World History, which began with ancient Egypt and the Israelites. By the time of Ranke's death in Berlin (1886), he had only reached the 12th century. Subsequently his assistants used his notes to take the series up to 1453.
At the core of his method, Ranke did not believe that general theories could cut across time and space. He made statements about the time using quotations from primary sources. He said, "My understanding of 'leading ideas' is simply that they are the dominant tendencies in each century. These tendencies, however, can only be described; they can not, in the last resort, be summed up in a concept." In the 19th century, Ranke's work was very popular and his ideas about how an historian should operate were much copied.