History, asked by reetdhaliwal6154, 11 months ago

Define regional history


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Answered by siya113
13

Answer:

Regional history is one of the more recent branches of history, developed mainly from the second half of the century XX thanks to the all-important Annales school, French school interested in the renewal of the historical methods. As its name implies, the Regional history seeks to study the history of particular regions rather than analyze the great civilizations traditionally studied by common history. In this sense, Regional history emerges as a good supplement that gives specificity to the great historical processes. At the beginning of the 20th century, the mentioned school proposed to study the history of humanity from large social and economic processes rather than through specific dates or the work of great men. However, this historical trend presented some wear around the middle of the 20th century, especially in what makes the specific study of certain realities on which there was too much information or answers. So emerges the Regional history as an academic stream within the same school of Annales, always renewing and advanced. 

According to their most important exponents, Regional history should be interested in the analysis of specific historical realities to regions of small size. This is that throughout its development, the Regional history produced interesting studies on different communities both in Europe and America and other geographical areas. These analyses could be on different historical periods, from the middle ages, the modern age or the contemporary. In some cases, they also had to do with events or specific situations to those regions which had an important meaning in the events of the same. 

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Answered by BrainIyKohinoor
0

Answer:

Regional history is one of the more recent branches of history, developed mainly from the second half of the century XX thanks to the all-important Annales school, French school interested in the renewal of the historical methods

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