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Book No. – 5 (Historiography – History)
Book Name – Historiography
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1. CHINESE HISTORIOGRAPHY
1.1. Confucius (551-479 B.C)
1.2. Szuma Ch”ien (C 145-85 B.C).
2. ARAB HISTORIOGRAPHY
2.1. Ibn Khaldun (1332-1406 A.D)
3. ANCIENT INDIAN HISTORIOGRAPHY
3.1. Bana
3.2. Bilhana
3.3. Kalhana
4. MEDIEVAL INDIAN HISTORIOGRAPHY
4.1. Alberuni (C. 972-1048)
4.2. Amir Khusru (1252-1325)
4.3. Zia-Ud-Din Barani (1286-1359)
4.4. Abdul Quair Badauni (1540-1615)
4.5. Abul Fazal (C.1550-1602)
5. Royal Memoirs
5.1. Babar’s Babar-Nama
5.2. Gul Badan Begam’s Humayun-Nama
6. British Historians
6.1. Robert Orme(1728-1801)
6.2. James Mill (1773-1836)
6.3. James Tod (1782-1835)
6.4. Grant Duff (1789-1858)
6.5. Joseph Davey Cunningham (1812-1891).
6.6. Sir Alexander Cunningham (1814-1893)
6.7. Willium Wilson Hunter
6.8. Vincent Arthur Smith (1848-1920)
6.9. William Harrison Moreland (1868-1938)
7. Nationalist Historians
7.1. Ramakrishna Gopal Bhandarkar
7.2. Jadunath Sarkar
7.3. S. Krishnaswami Aiyangar
7.4. K.A. Nilakanda Sastri (1892-1975)
7.5. Sardar K.M. Panikkar (1895-1963)
7.6. Damodar Dharmananda Kosambi (1907-1966)
8. Marxist Historian
8.1. Prof. R. Sathianathaier
8.2. Bipan Chandra
8.3. Romila Thapar
8.4. Irfan Habib
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Eastern Historians
Historiography
Topic – 3

CHINESE HISTORIOGRAPHY
- The origin of Chinese historiography can be traced to legends, as early historians relied on them.
- Ancient historians narrated the history of China from 3000 B.C..
- Chinese legends claim that the earliest kings reigned for eighteen thousand years each, an incredible assertion.
- Legends often favored imaginary personalities over ideas, attributing the laborious advances of many generations to a few individuals.
- There is no way of verifying the accounts passed down by the early Chinese historians.
- The early Chinese courts had their official scribes, known as court chroniclers.
- These court historians recorded the achievements of their sovereigns and portents of the time.
- The court historians contributed significantly to the mass of historical literature, which is unmatched in length anywhere else in the world.
- The twenty-four official “Dynastic Histories”, published in 1747, spanned 219 large volumes.
Confucius (551-479 B.C)
- Kung-fu-tze, better known as Confucius, was a philosopher and historian of enormous influence.
- He was born at Ch’ufu, in the Kingdom of Lu (now Shantung province).
- Confucius came from the oldest family in existence, in direct line from the great emperor K’ungs.
- As a student, he learned archery and music, and worked after school to support his mother after losing his father at the age of three.
- He married at nineteen and divorced his wife at twenty-three.
- Confucius began his career as a teacher, teaching history, poetry, and propriety.
- Among his pupils were the sons of Mang He, a minister of the Duke of Lu.
- Through them, Confucius was introduced to the Chou Court at Llo-yang.
- Upon returning to Lu, he found the province in chaos and moved to the neighbouring state of T’si, where he advised the Duke.
- Confucius later returned to Lu to teach for fifteen years before being called back to public office as Chief Magistrate of Chung-tu.
- He was later promoted to Superintendent of Public Works and Minister of Crime.
- Due to his popularity and power, neighboring states grew jealous, causing Confucius to fall out of favor with the Duke of Lu.
- Confucius resigned, left Lu, and wandered for thirteen years.
- He refused the offer to lead the Duke of Wei’s government, disapproving of the Duke’s principles.
- In his last five years, Confucius lived in seclusion in Lu, focusing on editing the classics and writing the history of his people.
- Confucius left behind five volumes known as the Five Ching or Canonical Classics:
- LiChi (Record of Rites): contains rules of propriety.
- IChing (Book of Changes): deals with metaphysics.
- She-Ching (Book of Odes): addresses the nature of human life and morality.
- Ch’um Ch’iu (Spring and Autumn Annals): narrates the main events in the history of Lu.
- Shu-Ching (Book of History): focuses on the heroic and unselfish leaders during China’s unified empire.
- Shu-Ching was written or edited by Confucius to inspire his disciples with elevating events of the past.
- Confucius selected events, episodes, and leaders from history that would motivate his disciples, rather than providing an impartial account.
- The book includes imaginary speeches, stories, morals, and wisdom, with an idealized portrayal of the past.
- Shu-Ching is not an impartial history but a compilation meant to inspire.
- Tso-Chuan was a commentary written a century later to illustrate and vivify the Shu-Ching.