Solution 1: Use DNS Cache to recover deleted Chrome browsing history. Follow the next steps to find your deleted Chrome browsing history by using DNS now: 1. Press Windows + R, type cmd and click OK. Or you can also type cmd in Windows search bar. Open Command Prompt, type ipcongif / displaydns and click Enter.
.: Type CTRL + H. Your history will be displayed by time up to three weeks back, by site, by most visited, and by most visited today. If you use Google Chrome on more than one computer or mobile device, you'll see your browsing history from that device included in your search history, a very useful feature.: Type CTRL + H. Your history will be displayed by time up to three weeks back, by site, by most visited, and by most visited today.: Type CTRL + H. Your search history will be displayed by time up to three months ago, by date and site, by site, by most visited, and by last visited. You can also search for a specific site in the Firefox history search box.: Click on the History link located at the top of your browser. You'll see a drop-down menu with your search history displayed for the last few days.: Type Ctrl/Cmd + Shift + H (a little bit more complicated than the other browsers, but that's okay). This allows you access to the Opera Quick Find History Search, from which you can search for the sites you've visited by keyword.
To see your basic search history, type opera:historysearch in your browser address bar.
I would recommend that rather than using a third party extension just browse your activity from.You can use the +Filter by date & product option below Search to filter your history by dates and various Google products (see the screenshot below).In prior versions of Chrome, you could also find a link to this history at the top of your Chrome history saying, Your Google Account may have other forms of browsing history at history.google.com. However, this link has been removed in current versions. I've tried out both the Better History & History Trends Extensions and got good results from both, so you should check them out to see which works better for you. Checking the Chrome store periodically is a good idea since new extensions- most free of charge- arrive frequently. Case in point- the History Trends author created a new extension that goes even further by creating & linking to a local database so you can go around Chrome's 3 month time limit.
Hope you get good results whichever you choose!