I'm wondering about correct boundary between historical questions and primarily opinion-based ones.
Here's an example: What was the original reason for [blah], which quite clearly asks for the original reason, not your opinion about whether [blah] is a good thing, or should have been done differently. As I read it, the goal of the question is to get this kind of informative, unopinionated answer. However, I'm not surprised that the question attracted an answer "almost entirely based on opinions" before it was closed. Questions about Dennis Ritchie's motivation when he made some design choice in Unix in 1975 do attract information-free answers about whether that design choice was right or wrong.
The "primarily opinion-based" close reason suggests to me that this question ought to be closed, even though the good answer is good and answers something I've been curious about. The question will attract opinion-based answers, so close it. The close reason's phrasing doesn't mention whether the question will receive (or has received) a factual, unopinionated answer.
It seems to me that reviewers handle this grey area a little haphazardly.
Could we have some guidance on how to handle questions that are about historical record, but are likely to be answered with irrelevant opinion?