The sourse of history are:- a) drawing b) picture c) events d) oral naration
Their language, culture, traditions and history.
History is the record of happen, events of good things or bad things of natural , political, social affair of human beings. Some History can write and some History can not write or mention as per situation. Unwritten history is not confirmed events. Written History is recorded in wiki.
THE ALLMOUNTAINS CLUB WAS THE FIRST TO RECORD ALL OF THEIER HISTORY
HistoryThe written record of mankind is called history. It is a story, the story written by the winners of wars (those who have lost wars do not get to write their versions).
history is normally written down and oral tradition isn't.
Oral means spoken, so no. But it can be written down later, at which time it is written history, not oral history.
It can be changed as it's told from one person to another. Like the telephone game...it rarely ends the way it started.
Mary M. Flekke has written: 'Oral history' -- subject(s): Bibliography, History, Sources, Oral history
Mark Amodio has written: 'Writing the oral tradition' -- subject(s): English poetry, History, History and criticism, Oral communication, Oral tradition, Oral-formulaic analysis, Written communication
Linda A Barnickel has written: 'Oral history for the family historian' -- subject(s): Genealogy, Local History, Methodology, Oral history
history
Manfred J. Waserman has written: 'Bibliography on oral history' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Oral history
Shona Kennealy has written: 'Oral histories of Wanneroo Wetlands' -- subject(s): Wetlands, Oral history, History
Oral tradition is information passed down through generations by word of mouth, while written sources are recorded information in written form. Oral tradition tends to be more fluid and changeable, influenced by the storyteller, while written sources are usually more fixed and can be referenced repeatedly. Written sources allow for greater precision and detail, while oral tradition relies on memory and interpretation.
That is called oral tradition.
Robert Perks has written: 'The oral history reader'