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How I Research History (Without a PhD)

How I Research History (Without a PhD) — Writing article by Steve Ysreal Monas
How to research history without a PhD. The framework I used to write a book about ancient Mesopotamia with zero formal t

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"How did you research a book about ancient Mesopotamia without being a historian?" The assumption: you need academic credentials to write history. The reality: you need curiosity, skepticism, and a good research process.

Why I Started

I wasn't trying to write a history book. I was researching the origins of entrepreneurship for a business book. Every path led back to the same place: Mesopotamia, 3000 BCE.

The first written contracts? Mesopotamia. The first business partnerships? Mesopotamia. The first insurance agreements? Mesopotamia.

So I went deeper. And that became a book.

The Research Framework

Step 1: Start Wide, Then Narrow

Mistake beginners make: Diving into academic papers immediately.

What works: Start with the 30,000-foot view, then zoom in.

My process:

  1. General encyclopedias (Wikipedia, Britannica) — Purpose: Get the timeline, key figures, major events
  2. Popular history books (not academic) — Purpose: Understand the narrative, find interesting angles
  3. Academic surveys (textbooks, overviews) — Purpose: Understand scholarly consensus
  4. Primary sources & specialist papers — Purpose: Get specific details, verify claims

The key: Each level builds context for the next. Don't skip the basics.

Step 2: Build a Research Database

I used Notion (could be Obsidian, Roam, Google Docs—doesn't matter).

Every fact I found went into the database with: Source, Date, Category, Reliability

Why this matters: When writing, I could quickly find relevant notes organized by topic.

Step 3: The Reliability Ladder

Not all sources are equal. I created a simple system:

  • Tier 1: Primary Sources — Original clay tablets, archaeological findings, contemporary inscriptions
  • Tier 2: Academic Consensus — Peer-reviewed papers, university press books, specialist encyclopedias
  • Tier 3: Popular History — Trade books by credentialed authors (use carefully)
  • Tier 4: Questionable — Wikipedia, blogs (verify before using)
  • Tier 5: Avoid — Ancient aliens theories, conspiracy websites

My rule: Every major claim needed at least one Tier 1 or Tier 2 source. Preferably both.

Step 4: Cross-Reference Everything

When I found a cool fact, I'd search for: Who else says this? What's the original source? Are there alternate interpretations? What do skeptics say?

The test: If only one source claims it, I didn't use it. If sources contradict, I noted the debate.

Step 5: Follow the Footnotes

The best research hack: Read the bibliography.

When I found a good academic paper, I'd look at their sources. Then I'd track those down. One great paper would lead to 10 more sources.

Pro tip: Google Scholar's "Cited by" feature shows you which newer papers reference the one you're reading.

Step 6: Reach Out to Experts

I emailed professors. Most ignored me. A few responded.

What worked: Specific questions showing I'd done homework, genuine curiosity (not asking them to write my book).

3 out of 20 professors replied. Those 3 conversations clarified major points and pointed me to obscure sources I'd never have found.

Step 7: Organize by Narrative, Not Chronology

My research was chronological. My book wasn't.

I organized chapters by theme: Innovation, Systems, Networks, Resilience.

Research = gather everything
Writing = curate what matters

Tools I Actually Used

Free Resources:

  • Google Scholar — Academic papers (abstracts free)
  • JSTOR — Academic journals (limited free access)
  • Archive.org — Out-of-copyright books
  • Wikipedia — Starting point only
  • YouTube — Context, not facts

Paid Resources:

  • Amazon Kindle Unlimited ($10/month) — Academic books available
  • Library access — Online databases (free with library card)

Common Research Mistakes I Made

Mistake #1: Reading Too Much Before Writing

I read for 6 months before writing a word.

Better approach: Read for 2-3 weeks, start writing, research as you go. Writing reveals what you don't know.

Mistake #2: Copying Quotes Without Context

Fix: Always save quote + source + date + page number + reliability tier.

Mistake #3: Trusting Popular History Books Completely

Fix: Use them for story flow, verify facts with academic sources.

Mistake #4: Ignoring Contradictions

Better: Acknowledge the debate. "Scholars disagree on whether..." builds credibility.

Mistake #5: Not Tracking Where I Found Things

Fix: Citation info from the start. Every. Single. Time.

How to Know When You're Done Researching

You're never "done." But you can ship.

Signs you have enough:

  • ✅ You can answer the central question of your book
  • ✅ You've hit diminishing returns
  • ✅ Your sources start repeating the same points
  • ✅ You have backup evidence for major claims
  • ✅ You can explain the topic clearly to a non-expert

The test: Can you write a coherent chapter? If yes, write it. Research will reveal what's missing.

The "Good Enough" Standard

Academic historians spend decades on narrow topics. I'm not competing with them. I'm writing for general readers who want accessible history.

My standard: Accurate within scholarly consensus, transparent about uncertainty, properly sourced, engaging to read.

Know your lane. I'm a translator of academic work for popular audiences, not a primary researcher.

What This Process Produced

Research timeline: 10 months (alongside full-time work)

Sources consulted:

  • 50+ academic papers
  • 15+ books (academic + popular)
  • 10+ museum resources
  • 5+ expert consultations

Result: Forgotten Geniuses of Mesopotamia—a book that's historically grounded, accessibly written, and actually got positive reviews from actual historians.

Not because I'm a historian. Because I respected the research process.

Your Turn

Want to research a historical topic?

  1. Start broad (Wikipedia → popular books → academic surveys)
  2. Build a database (organize notes by theme + source)
  3. Use the reliability ladder (verify with academic sources)
  4. Cross-reference everything (one source isn't enough)
  5. Follow footnotes (bibliographies are goldmines)
  6. Email experts (specific questions only)
  7. Write early (reveals gaps)
  8. Track sources religiously (citation nightmare otherwise)
  9. Know when "good enough" is good enough

You don't need a PhD. You need curiosity, discipline, and respect for the work.

The information is out there. Go find it.


Want to see the research in action?

Check out Forgotten Geniuses of Mesopotamia—10 months of research distilled into accessible history about humanity's first entrepreneurs and innovators.

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