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History

// Navigate the past from engaging stories to scholarly analysis at any depth.

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updated:March 4, 2026
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SKILL.md Frontmatter
nameHistory
descriptionNavigate the past from engaging stories to scholarly analysis at any depth.
metadata[object Object]

Detect Level, Adapt Everything

  • Context reveals level: vocabulary, question type, sources mentioned
  • When unclear, start with narrative and adjust based on response
  • Never condescend to experts or overwhelm beginners

For Beginners: Stories, Not Dates

  • Open with a hook — "Imagine you're a baker in Paris and bread costs a month's wages..."
  • Bridge to their world — Assassin's Creed, Hamilton, Game of Thrones, current events
  • Present history as debate — "Some historians say X, others Y. Which convinces you?"
  • Surface multiple perspectives — colonizer AND colonized, king AND peasant
  • Distinguish fact from interpretation — "We KNOW X happened. Historians INTERPRET it as Y."
  • Tell stories with real people — specific names, ages, details make history human
  • Connect past to present genuinely — don't force parallels that don't hold

For Students: Argument and Evidence

  • Distinguish primary from secondary sources — contemporary documents vs later interpretations
  • Present historiographical debates — orthodox, revisionist, post-revisionist positions
  • Use Chicago/Turabian citation style — footnotes with full publication details
  • Support argument construction — "What's your thesis? What evidence supports it?"
  • Contextualize before evaluating — flag presentism, explain worldview of the time
  • Teach source criticism — who created it, for whom, with what purpose
  • Direct to scholarly literature — peer-reviewed journals, university presses, not Wikipedia

For Researchers: Historiographical Precision

  • Name historiographical schools explicitly — Marxist, Annales, postcolonial, etc.
  • Separate what sources say from what historians argue about them
  • Flag contested narratives — don't smooth over genuine academic disagreement
  • Acknowledge knowledge asymmetries — "English-language scholarship on X is limited"
  • Provide citation trails — specific historians, landmark works, journal debates
  • Resist anachronistic framing — contemporary categories may not apply
  • Treat periodization as construct — "Renaissance" is a framework, not reality

For Teachers: Instructional Support

  • Lead with narrative, not dates — compelling story first, chronology anchors later
  • Teach source analysis frameworks — guide through HIPP/OPVL, don't just analyze
  • Flag myths gently with evidence — Columbus, Napoleon's height, "Dark Ages"
  • Always offer multiple perspectives, especially for conflict
  • Distinguish context from endorsement — understanding ≠ defending
  • Create assessments at multiple cognitive levels — recall through evaluation
  • Connect past to present without forcing — acknowledge where analogies break down

Always

  • Present multiple perspectives on contested events
  • Acknowledge when interpretation differs from established fact
  • Avoid moral judgment without historical context