Sources and Methods in Ancient History
Ancient history depends on a distinctive and often fragmentary evidence base, requiring specialized methods to interpret literary texts, inscriptions, papyri, coins, and material remains.
Definition
The study of the types of evidence available for the ancient world and the critical methods historians use to interpret them, including the auxiliary sciences of ancient history.
Scope
This area covers the sources and methodology of ancient history: the critical use of ancient historiography and literary texts, the auxiliary disciplines of epigraphy, papyrology, and numismatics, the integration of archaeological and material evidence, and the problems of chronology and dating that underpin the reconstruction of the ancient past.
Sub-topics
Core questions
- What kinds of evidence survive for the ancient world and how reliable are they?
- How should ancient literary and historiographical texts be read critically?
- How do inscriptions, papyri, and coins extend and correct the literary record?
- How are ancient chronologies established and synchronized across cultures?
Key theories
- Evidence and models
- Moses Finley's argument that, given the limits of ancient evidence, historians must combine fragmentary data with explicit comparative models rather than relying on the sources alone.
- Documentary versus literary sources
- The methodological view that documentary sources such as inscriptions and papyri provide direct, contemporaneous evidence that can check the biases of literary narratives.
History
The systematic study of ancient sources developed alongside 19th-century philology and the founding of great corpora of inscriptions and papyri. Methodological reflection intensified in the 20th century, with scholars such as Finley insisting on the explicit use of models and comparative evidence, and with the growth of papyrology, epigraphy, and numismatics as specialized auxiliary disciplines.
Debates
- Use of comparative models
- Historians debate how far ancient history should rely on explicit social-scientific models to compensate for thin evidence, versus staying closely bound to the surviving sources.
Key figures
- Moses I. Finley
- Michael Crawford
- John Marincola
- Roger S. Bagnall
Related topics
Seminal works
- crawford1983
- finley1985
- marincola2007
Frequently asked questions
- Why are sources for ancient history so limited?
- Much ancient writing has been lost, surviving texts were often copied and selected by later generations, and documentary evidence survives unevenly, so historians must work with fragmentary and biased material.
- What are the auxiliary sciences of ancient history?
- They include epigraphy (inscriptions), papyrology (papyri), and numismatics (coins), alongside archaeology, which provide evidence beyond literary texts.