@ANSEL When I search for people, the side lists a collection of names and its relationships. And if I have found a person, it shows the relationship with events. Its description says "SnipView – the illustrated magazine anybody can edit". The collection is (like the idea behind) good but it seems the most content is quoted by Wikipedia. It doesnt mean Wikipedia is bad or the "SnipView"-Page with its sub-chapters like "British military personel of the War of the Spanish Succession" are an equal content. My personal opinion is, that the divisions and columns become a little bit confusing when you scroll down the events around a person. Too fast change the content to not theme-based one. But thats for the most people no problem so far. SnipView lists theme-based the content better than Wikipedia.
BUT:
All these open websides in the "great" WWW does have one thing in common: All of them share close to the same content and in result, this circumstance unify the knowledge of mostly pupils in smaller classes or just interested people. This doesnt mean that its bad! The easy access of free sources in the WWW only have close to the same content.
When you workout a very detailed treatise, becomes "high quality sources" very important, where you must left the path of "standard-sources". By far, many things (specially Pictures) you can easy use under the free common licence from Wikipedia!
But for information: At first its need to buy books. Theme-based ones. Mostly single theme books with the highest standard of knowledge in its content. But my books (~3000EUR) was not enougth because I didnt find all informations I need. The reworking of a part in history needs to enlighten all relationships of involved people and here becomes biographys important. In the beginning of my elaboration, I have had as result of this circumstance an account at Oxford Dictionary National Biography and a subscription at Oxford University Press. In this month I have written down all for me in this time important things. But it wasnt. Peoples- and organisations- relationships are like a weavers nest. At first I wont go so deep but in a time with so many changes... it becomes need to take a look in every direction because one sentence in one mans biography can solve a secret of another part.
What I want to say: Universitys or books based on many licensed sources and sometimes deep research in peoples past. The result is a collection of all possible informations. This feature, common open sources cant have. Many content based on personal sources from familys historys in privat property and this you cant quote when you try to edit a Wikipedia-Entry. Although open sources like Wikipedia are free, you cant enter informations you only can have from those rare sources. Thats the reason why the most content in open sources is free and nearly the same. But again: For the most common things around a person or an Event its more then enougth! There are many pictures and other visual entrys too and this is a great advantage under fee common licence.
@Talisman Thank you very much again!!! I will read trough the content and hope to find closer informations about the Job of Albert Borgard in the Drawing Room from 1716. Its a very hard nut around his first year and its circumstances.
Field Marshal François de La Rochefoucauld, Marquis de Montandre, also known as Francis de La Rochefoucauld (September 1672 - 11 August 1739), was a french refugee. I forget this. Sorry. Oxford lists only important English people and his timespan as General of the Ordnance was too short I think. I have maybe something in my books.