Chapter 1 RPH
Chapter 1 RPH
Introduction to History
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Archaeology Anthropology
Archaeology is Anthropology is the study
of human beings and their
scientific study of
ancestors through time and
material remains of space and in relation to
past human life and physical character,
activities environmental and social
relations, and culture.
SOURCES OF
HISTORY
SOURCES OF HISTORY
Historians study the sources that the past has left behind. No
statement about the past can carry conviction unless it can
be supported by reference to the historical sources, the
evidence upon which historians base their ideas and
interpretations. Historians inevitably spend a lot of time
reading each other’s writings, but the real historical work is
done – and the real enjoyment is to be had – in studying the
sources, the actual ‘stuff ’ of history. (University of
Cambridge website)
SOURCES OF HISTORY
Tertiary Sources
Tertiary sources contain information
that has been compiled from primary
and secondary sources.
TYPES OF HISTORICAL
SOURCES
TYPES OF HISTORICAL
SOURCES
• Archival Material
• Manuscripts and archives are primary sources, including
business and personal correspondence, diaries and journals,
legal and financial documents, photographs, maps,
architectural drawings, objects, oral histories, computer
tapes, and video and audio cassettes. Some archival
materials are published and available in print or online.
TYPES OF HISTORICAL
SOURCES
• Government Documents
• Government documents provide evidence of activities, functions,
and policies at all government levels. For research that relates to
the workings of government, government documents are primary
sources.
• These documents include hearings and debates of legislative
bodies; the official text of laws, regulations and treaties; records
of government expenditures and finances; and statistical
compilations of economic, demographic, and scientific data.
TYPES OF HISTORICAL
SOURCES
• Serials
• Journals, magazines, and newspapers are serial publications that
are published on an ongoing basis.
• Serials may also include book reviews, editorials, and review
articles. Review articles summarize research on a particular topic,
but they do not present any new findings; therefore, they are
considered secondary sources. Their bibliographies, however, can
be used to identify primary sources.
TYPES OF HISTORICAL
SOURCES
• Books
• Most books are secondary sources,
where authors reference primary
source materials and add their own
analysis.
TYPES OF HISTORICAL
SOURCES
• External Criticism
a) Authorship
b) Date and Place of Publication
c) Textual Errors
d) Meanings of Words Used
• Internal Criticism
HISTORICAL CRITICISM
• a.) AUTHORSHIP
• No manuscript for Sa Aking Mga Kabatà written in Rizal's
handwriting exists. The poem supposedly wrote in 1869
where he was only 8 years old then.
• b.)DATE AND PLACE OF PUBLICATION
• The poem was first published in 1906, a decade after his
death, in a book authored by the poet Hermenigildo Cruz.
SA AKING MGA KABATA
• c. TEXTUAL ERRORS
• In Rizal’s childhood they spelled words with a “c” rather than “k.”
Further, the word “kalayaan” (freedom) is used twice.(No manuscript
EXIST)
• d.)MEANINGS OF WORDS USED
• Kalayaan was not a common word in 1869 and there is irrefutable
evidence that Jose Rizal himself did not learn the word until he was 25
years old. Rizal first encountered the word atleast by 1872 the years
after the execution of GOMBURZA
CODE OF KALANTIAW