historians?
babes
they were called chroniclers
conhightig somaleleel
Many early civilizations' history has been passed from generation to generation by verbal means in order to explain events of the past. This is often referred to as "oral history".
The history of trains dates back more than two hundred years ago. The very first steam train rolled over the railways of industrial England in the early 1800s.
There have been many witch-hunts in history. Obvious examples include: * The witch-hunts in Crowellian England in the 1640s and in Massachusetts in the early 1690s. * Joseph McCarthy's obsession with 'red under beds', c. 1947-54. * The persecution of the Templars in the early 1300s.
R D. Richards has written: 'The early history of banking in England'
SANDRA LOGAN has written: 'TEXT/EVENTS IN EARLY MODERN ENGLAND: POETICS OF HISTORY'
Markku Peltonen has written: 'The Duel in Early Modern England' 'Rhetoric, politics, and popularity in pre-revolutionary England' -- subject(s): POLITICAL SCIENCE / History & Theory, Rhetoric, Communication in politics, History
Edward Forbes Robinson has written: 'The early history of coffee houses in England' -- subject(s): Coffeehouses
George Claude Baker has written: 'An introduction into the history of early New England Methodism, 1789-1839'
James A. Knapp has written: 'Illustrating the past in early modern England' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Early printed books, Historiography, History, Illustrated books
Basically because we can only as go far as history tells us. And the records of the early people were written in tablets.
Yes, Bede wrote "The Ecclesiastical History of the English People," which is a major source of information about early Anglo-Saxon England. It covers the history of England from the Roman occupation to Bede's own time in the early 8th century.
Geoff Baker has written: 'Reading and politics in early modern England' -- subject(s): Politics and government, Catholics, History
Millot has written: 'Abbed Millots verdens-historie' -- subject(s): World history 'Elemens d'histoire generale' -- subject(s): World history, Early works to 1800 'Elements of the history of England'
Paul Hentzner has written: 'A journey into England' -- subject(s): Early works to 1800, History, Description and travel, Court and courtiers 'A journey into England' -- subject(s): Early works to 1800, Description and travel, Court and courtiers
Adam Smyth has written: 'Autobiography in early modern England' -- subject(s): English Almanacs, Autobiography, English literature, Autobiography in literature, Authorship, History and criticism, History