![]() |
|
| 18. Questions
on alternatives to history i.e
Please can you tell what would have happened if.... ...Elizabeth had never become Queen ...had married ...had borne children ...had lost the Armada ...had died early in her reign I receive many questions of this nature, so thought I would address them under a broad term "alternatives to history". As history is the study of the past, an attempt to understand the actions and experiences of our ancestors as they happened, I usually don't think too much about what could have happened if Elizabeth had died in her youth, or had married, or had lost the Armada. No one could have predicted the course history has taken, and so trying to predict what might have happend had one of the variables been different, is perhaps impossible. Questions like this are sometimes deceptive, and are not directly asking you what would have happened if Elizabeth had died etc. Sometimes they are asking you to think about the reasons for some of the decisions she may have made, or the circumstance in which she found herself, or England found herself. For example: 1. "What would have
happened had Elizabeth married?"
2. "What would have
happened had the Queen lost the Armada?"
3. What would have
happened had the Queen died early in her reign?
Therefore, my advice
to those wanting help with this type of question, is to think hard about
what the question is really asking you. Does your history teacher/tutor
want you to invent your own version of history or for you to understand
better events that
have taken place? In creative writing, alternatives
to history can be stimulating, but in the study of history, questions containing
"what if" usually ask for your understanding of events that have occurred
such as the problems faced by individuals/society, the reasons for
certain courses of action, the problems with certain courses of action,
and historical conflict.
|
|
|
|