The 'Early Modern' period referred to by historians is roughly the period from 1450-1750. This period is so-called as the Early-Modern period because this was the time that the Renaissance occured in Europe, where many new ideas, art forms, scientific discoveries were made that were the foundation stones of the making of the modern world.
British rule
Yes. The 14th century was from 1301 to 1400, and what are probably the commonest dates for the Middle Ages are 476 to 1453. Other dates for the Middle Ages, such as from 1000 to 1492, still put the 14th century in them.
the circumstances surrounding the event
the surrender of the Roman emperor in 476 c.e.
When a historian refers to the historical context of an event they mean that they want you to look at the attitude, conditions and mood of the time of a specific historical event.
The large amounts of Americans moving west
Historians sometimes refer to the late fifteenth century as "new monarchies" or "Renaissance states" because in the renaissance time new discoveries had been affected by the first rulers.The historians usually refer to the monarchies of the late fifteenth century as Renaissance states because of the type of governance in these states.
Yes. The 14th century was from 1301 to 1400, and what are probably the commonest dates for the Middle Ages are 476 to 1453. Other dates for the Middle Ages, such as from 1000 to 1492, still put the 14th century in them.
The period between the end of the middle ages and the present. (APEX)
The period between the end of the middle ages and the present. (APEX)
The period between the end of the middle ages and the present. (APEX)
Many people refer to the the first third of the 19th century as being from 1801 to 1833. There is no agreement on this with historians however.
research
Historians refer to Amenhotep's III reign as "the golden age".
It varies. Technically speaking history is divided into ancient, medieval (or middle) and modern. Modern in that sense would be any point past the 16th century. However sometimes we use it to refer to 'the present generation', and sometimes 'to this decade'. To complicate matters even more we can speak as the point between the start of the Twentieth Century and the 1950s as modern and all points after as Post Modern time.
It varies. Technically speaking history is divided into ancient, medieval (or middle) and modern. Modern in that sense would be any point past the 16th century. However sometimes we use it to refer to 'the present generation', and sometimes 'to this decade'. To complicate matters even more we can speak as the point between the start of the Twentieth Century and the 1950s as modern and all points after as Post Modern time.
Whether one event was responsible for another
Wether one event was responsible for another.