Guiscard wrote:ignotus wrote:I found his comparative approach (which he almost founded in historiography) and his great knowledge of simple facts fascinating. Furthermore i think he influenced other great historians like Braudel and other historians who later followed Annales School of historiography.

Ahh so definitely a fan... The problem I have is that I'm primarily a crusader historian, and so we work from a fairly finite number of sources (William of Tyre et al.). That leads to a very Rankean approach where the fact is sacrosanct. If its in an account it is entirely applicable. Everything else is too subjective. (Thats not entirely true, but you get the idea...)
The Annales school undoubtedly had a masive historiograohical impact.
But impacts, to paraphrase Baldwin, can be a terrible thing!
OK thats harsh. But ultimately i tink you have to confine Bloch, LeFebvre, Braudel, Ladurie et. al to the dustbin. Not unlike Freudianism, "Total" historians, in their attempt to describe evrything, end up explaining very little.
Braudels seminal "Mediterreanean" a case in point. After you waded through the first wo books on the geolgy and then then the "social" you get to his brief poloitcal analysis of Philip II- which is entirely standard, and uncontraversial!
I actually find the whole socio-economic approach to very misleading.
But see Isiah Berlin for a better explanation!