Mustafa Mond
New Member
- Joined
- Jul 4, 2004
- Messages
- 24
Hey everybody,
I've been doing some reading on the forums adn it appears that many people are using modern historians in their regular exam responses. I've been primarily using primary sources for all my topics (Sparta, Ramesside Period, Ramesses II, Amenhotep III - Ram II) as the evidence for my essays. And unless I was asked something like "asses ancient and modern interpretations of such adn such" I wouldn't have quoted any modern historians at all. So what's the verdict? are modern historians opinions and historiography neccessary? or are they only really needed for ceratin topics? How much historiography do people do in their essays? (I, for example, usually have some discussion of the unreliabilities/problems with teh primary sources) but not much else. So if anyone can clarify this for me it would be greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance
Mustafa
I've been doing some reading on the forums adn it appears that many people are using modern historians in their regular exam responses. I've been primarily using primary sources for all my topics (Sparta, Ramesside Period, Ramesses II, Amenhotep III - Ram II) as the evidence for my essays. And unless I was asked something like "asses ancient and modern interpretations of such adn such" I wouldn't have quoted any modern historians at all. So what's the verdict? are modern historians opinions and historiography neccessary? or are they only really needed for ceratin topics? How much historiography do people do in their essays? (I, for example, usually have some discussion of the unreliabilities/problems with teh primary sources) but not much else. So if anyone can clarify this for me it would be greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance
Mustafa