>I think the problem is that (capital H) History is a narrative
>The historian always starts with facts.
History is inquiry. The word is Greek, we encounter it first in Herodotus. Facts--let's say documents and other evidence--form the raw material for that inquiry, but that is no more history than molecules are chemistry. History is a discipline. The past is what historians study.
Narratives are one thing historians produce but is not the only thing. Sometimes all we produce is a critical edition of a manuscript, or proper dating of a document. Explaining Roman indictions isn't a narrative or an interpretation, it's an explanation.
>spotty and largely undependable
Spotty is not a synonym for undependable. In a sense, all collections of documents are spotty, compared to the total volume of documents (and other artifacts) produced by a given culture in a given year.
As for undependable, that doesn't render the historian helpless. As I said above, history is inquiry, so the inquiry can always be made. For a very long time we thought Homer's account of the Trojan War was entirely fictional. It had gods in it, after all! But it turns out there really was a Troy and it was found--and by an amateur, no less. The most recent account of the life of Alexander of Macedon we have dates from about 300 years after he died. That means neither that is it unreliable nor that it is reliable. It's a document, subject to the same inquiries historians make all the time.
It's easy to talk about prejudice and propaganda when the subject is empires and revolutions and such, but many historians work in other fields. Carlo Ginsburg wrote about the beliefs of an Italian miller. Marc Bloch wrote a wonderful essay about the various ways in which the word servus was used in the early Middle Ages. Miriam Chrisman wrote a book on book publishers in Strassburg. In each of those one can find interpretation. In subsequent works one can find discussions and re-interpretations. That's called the scholarly dialogue, and it's vital to the discipline.
The same line runs through all of it: history is inquiry.
BTW, to return to the OP, a really fine bit of historiography can be found in Walter K. Ferguson's The Renaissance in Historical Thought. There have been excellent books on the topic since then (it's quite old), but none that were better written.
>The historian always starts with facts.
History is inquiry. The word is Greek, we encounter it first in Herodotus. Facts--let's say documents and other evidence--form the raw material for that inquiry, but that is no more history than molecules are chemistry. History is a discipline. The past is what historians study.
Narratives are one thing historians produce but is not the only thing. Sometimes all we produce is a critical edition of a manuscript, or proper dating of a document. Explaining Roman indictions isn't a narrative or an interpretation, it's an explanation.
>spotty and largely undependable
Spotty is not a synonym for undependable. In a sense, all collections of documents are spotty, compared to the total volume of documents (and other artifacts) produced by a given culture in a given year.
As for undependable, that doesn't render the historian helpless. As I said above, history is inquiry, so the inquiry can always be made. For a very long time we thought Homer's account of the Trojan War was entirely fictional. It had gods in it, after all! But it turns out there really was a Troy and it was found--and by an amateur, no less. The most recent account of the life of Alexander of Macedon we have dates from about 300 years after he died. That means neither that is it unreliable nor that it is reliable. It's a document, subject to the same inquiries historians make all the time.
It's easy to talk about prejudice and propaganda when the subject is empires and revolutions and such, but many historians work in other fields. Carlo Ginsburg wrote about the beliefs of an Italian miller. Marc Bloch wrote a wonderful essay about the various ways in which the word servus was used in the early Middle Ages. Miriam Chrisman wrote a book on book publishers in Strassburg. In each of those one can find interpretation. In subsequent works one can find discussions and re-interpretations. That's called the scholarly dialogue, and it's vital to the discipline.
The same line runs through all of it: history is inquiry.
BTW, to return to the OP, a really fine bit of historiography can be found in Walter K. Ferguson's The Renaissance in Historical Thought. There have been excellent books on the topic since then (it's quite old), but none that were better written.