AS History Revision
Your AS History revision shouldn’t just be about memorising dates. You need to brush up on your source analysis and interrogation skills. From British political history and international relations to revolution and reform, AS History examiners are looking for answers that analyse and evaluate. Our teacher-written revision notes, and past papers and mark schemes are here to help you build the essay technique that earns marks. There’s no need to go anywhere else. Teaching AS History? Our board-specific resources take the prep work off your plate, so lesson time goes where it matters most - building the analytical and essay skills that decide grades.
AS History Revision Resources
AS History Exam Boards
Edexcel AS History: Route E: Communist states in the twentieth century
Edexcel History resources by exam board
AS History Topics
Why use Save My Exams?

Exam-Aligned
Our revision resources are aligned to the most up-to-date exam specifications. This means you'll only revise what you need to know, and nothing you don't. Your revision will be more efficient and effective, saving you time and improving your grades.

Teacher-Written
Teachers and examiners know exactly what's needed to achieve the highest grades in your exam. That's why we only trust subject specialists to write and review everything we publish at Save My Exams.

Improves Grades
97% of students who use Save My Exams report getting better grades. In fact, students improve by 2.6 grades on average, which could be the boost you need to get into your dream university or career.
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AS History Grade Boundaries
AS History Specifications
Frequently Asked Questions
How do you write a good AS History essay?
A good AS History essay focuses on argument. Every paragraph should make a point, support it with specific evidence, and connect it directly back to the question. Examiners reward your ability to evaluate significance, cause, and consequence. Plan before you write: a clear line of argument set out in your introduction shapes everything that follows. Avoid saving your actual judgement for the conclusion - the best essays argue from the first paragraph. t's a habit worth building early.