![printable history timeline template printable history timeline template](https://images.template.net/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/16094729/Blank-Vertical-Timeline-Template.jpg)
In the meantime, I’m planning to catch up. I have a few years before I’ll give my oldest son his own copy to fill out over the course of his childhood.
PRINTABLE HISTORY TIMELINE TEMPLATE FREE
My kids are still too young to actually make use of this free printable timeline. If I could go back and do it all over again, this blank timeline is the sort of tool I would want to put it all into context and make connections that would allow the knowledge to last in my consciousness, rather than evaporate away into nothingness as soon as humanly possible. However, now that I’m a grown-up and no one is testing me or making me take notes, I’m finally learning to enjoy history. As a result, I remember effectively none of the years and years of history I’ve studied, which is just embarrassing.
![printable history timeline template printable history timeline template](https://images.sampletemplates.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/History-Timeline-Template1.jpg)
I was a good student, but of all my subjects, history was always my least favorite. I hated having to take notes for so long that my hand would cramp (and I actually like taking notes). I hated my textbooks and pop quizzes and exams. I hated all the dates and names and events we needed to memorize. How often do we learn about something and have no idea what’s happening on the other side of the planet at the same time? Was the peak of the ancient Mayan civilization before or after the construction of the Great Wall of China? I honestly don’t know, but using this timeline with little world maps denoting a section for each continent, it will be easy to go back and find out. Granted, this free printable would be over 30 yards if you were to lay it out and no one I know has that much space available, but by using loose-leaf paper, we can hang up sections at a time as we’re learning about them.Īnother feature which I thought might be useful is to divide up the timeline by continent. I liked the idea of having a timeline that could be viewed all at once. The sheets being vertical also is a problem if you wanted the sheets to make one large, consecutive line on the wall. Second, the problem with using a bound book (which was also an issue in other online world history timelines I found) is that there is no way to lay it all out and look at it at once. I didn’t like the idea of putting the information on an arbitrary line when the event might only be known within 100 years or so.
![printable history timeline template printable history timeline template](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/87/4f/15/874f15a1cef54aa92144a00472443f96.png)
First, I didn’t want there to be lined divisions, because so many of the dates in ancient history are approximate. For example, in the Book of Centuries, the pages are vertical and frequently the books are bound (like a composition book where each line represents a 5 year period). However, I had small issues with everything I found available. Since learning about the Charlotte Mason book of centuries, I’ve seen blank timelines sold or as part of homeschooling programs. Since there is such little space and this book needs to last about a decade, the child has to be very discriminating about what they actually put in their book. Each century of human history is weighted equally with one page for writing and one page for pictures. If one follows those guidelines, each child has their own “Book of Centuries” that they keep throughout their whole education (starting maybe around 4th grade). I first heard about the concept of a blank world history timeline in the book More Charlotte Mason Education.