14 Facts About World history

1.

World history looks for common patterns that emerge across all cultures.

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2.

Jerry H Bentley has observed that "the term world history has never been a clear signifier with a stable referent", and that usage of the term overlaps with universal history, comparative history, global history, big history, macro history, and transnational history, among others.

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3.

However, early forms of world history were not truly global and were limited to only the regions known by the historian.

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4.

World history thought that men are historical entities and that human nature changes over time.

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5.

World history's ideas were out of fashion during the Enlightenment but influenced the Romantic historians after 1800.

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6.

Ferguson's main contribution to the study of world history was his An Essay on the History of Civil Society.

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7.

For him, social World history was the progress humans made towards fulfilling God's plan for humanity.

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8.

World history believed that progress, which could be achieved through individuals pursuing commercial success, would bring us closer to a perfect society; but we would never reach one.

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9.

World history contributed to the development of other studies such as sociology and anthropology.

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10.

Regna Darnell and Frederic Gleach argue that, in the Soviet Union, the Marxian theory of World history was the only accepted orthodoxy, and stifled research into other schools of thought on World history.

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11.

World history became a popular genre in the 20th century with universal history.

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12.

World history's book was a success among intellectuals worldwide as it predicted the disintegration of European and American civilization after a violent "age of Caesarism, " arguing by detailed analogies with other civilizations.

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13.

World history followed Spengler in taking a comparative topical approach to independent civilizations.

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14.

In recent years, the relationship between African and world history has shifted rapidly from one of antipathy to one of engagement and synthesis.

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