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List of dubious historical resources

The following is a canon of historical resources (often cited as though they were completely historically accurate) which may well be open to a considerable degree of question and must be used with the greatest of care: \nThe following could be included on the list, but is rather more of a humorous book than a historical resource, containing deliberately mangled history.\n* 1066 and All That: A Memorable History of England Be aware also that many martial arts have fanciful oral histories, some of which have been published as fact. While some material is certainly accurate and factual, there is a great deal of dubious history concerning martial arts. Citing textual sources is particularly important, as it allows readers to judge for themselves the reliability of the claims. Also in citing historical resources keep in mind that what may generally regarded as truth by one generation of historians, may become extremely controversial by the next generation, who may not only have more complete facts, but may also be looking at the situation with a different set of historical biases. Case in point, lots of things that have been written about the History of China, in particular the post-Song "decline", anything about Zheng He, the 1911 revolution, the interaction between China and Europe in the 19th century, the interaction between China and Europe before the 19th century. See historical revisionism for more discussion of the revision of historical opinion.

See also

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Pseudohistory. Category:Dubious historical resources

"Give me a museum and I'll fill it." - Pablo Picasso (1881-1973)