Well, I'm a 3rd year history student, medieval history included in that, and I'd be a damned poor one if I couldn''t help. Just to clarify: You're doing an assignment on the "thrones" as actual physical objects, right? Like, the throne someone sits on, rather than the apstract political concept of "The Throne"?
Firstly: Yes, Wikipedia is bad bad bad. Use it for very vague background indications and pointers only, and never ever cite it. But if you're doing a history paper, you should be relying on books from your library as the backbone - there's no way around that. If you're using the internet as your main source medium, well... urgh.
You will want to add "scone", "stone of scone", "stone of destiny", and "coronation stone" to your search terms. They refer to the "stone" that scottish kings ewere coronated on, and which formed part of the scottish throne.
You will also want to use JSTOR (
www.jstor.org), an online multidisciplinary collection of fulltext scholarly journals, many of which are historical in focus. You SHOULD be able to get access through your uni - most good universities subscribe to JSTOR to provide their students access. In fact, your university SHOULD have an online index of journal and bibliographical databases it subscribes to that you can get access to. But the main thing is, learn to use your university's online library search feature. Go to the advanced search page, if it has one, learn to use booleans.
[/b]
Bookmarks