ENAlgirdas Julien Greimas’s position in twentieth-century linguistic theory of history deserves of its own right an ample monograph. This paper intends to be a first approach. I will employ my heuristic model called Semiotic Triangle of History (Fernández 2012: vi-xxv), whose vertices are the past, the thought that historians elaborate about it, and the narrative in which they write their conclusions. Within this framework, we analyze Greimas’s view on history, and his place in French structural “Cliosemiotics” (a shorthand for “semiotic study of historical knowledge”).1.