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The Canadian Encyclopedia

The Canadian Encyclopedia (TCE; French: L'Encyclopédie canadienne) is the national encyclopedia of Canada, published online by the Toronto-based historical organization Historica Canada, with the support of Canadian Heritage.

The Canadian Encyclopedia
First edition, print (1985)
Editor in chief
Managing editorEli Yarhi
CategoriesCanadian history and Canadiana
Format
  • Print (1985–95)
  • CD-ROM (1995–2001)
  • Online (1999–)
Publisher
CompanyHistorica Canada
CountryCanada
LanguageEnglish and French
Websitethecanadianencyclopedia.ca

Available for free online in both English and French, The Canadian Encyclopedia includes more than 19,500 articles in both languages[1][2] on numerous subjects including history, popular culture, events, people, places, politics, arts, First Nations, sports and science.

The website also provides access to the Encyclopedia of Music in Canada, the Canadian Encyclopedia Junior Edition, Maclean's magazine articles, and Timelines of Canadian History.

As of 2013, over 700,000 volumes of the print version of TCE have been sold and over 6 million people visit TCE's website yearly.[3][4]

History

Background

While attempts had been made to compile encyclopedic material on aspects of Canada, Canada: An Encyclopaedia of the Country (1898–1900), edited by J. Castell Hopkins, was the first attempt to produce an encyclopedic work entirely on the subject of Canada. This was followed by W. Stewart Wallace's The Encyclopedia of Canada (Macmillan, 1935–37), which was then sold to an American publisher, the Grolier Society, providing the core of John Everett Robbins' Encyclopedia Canadiana (1957).[5]

More common, however, were encyclopedic works focused on particular qualities of Canada. For instance, in 1911, Arthur Doughty and L.J. Burpee compiled the Index and Dictionary of Canadian History as a companion to the Makers of Canada series; Doughty and Adam Shortt edited the 23-volume Canada and Its Provinces (1913–17); Norah Story's The Oxford Companion to Canadian History and Literature was published in 1967; the comprehensive Encyclopedia of Music in Canada was published in 1981 and revised in 1992; and a new Oxford Companion to Canadian Literature, edited by William Toye, was published in 1983.[5]

Creating The Canadian Encyclopedia

By the 1970s, Canada had been without a national encyclopedia since Robbins' 1957 work, which by that time was terribly outdated.

With this in mind, Edmonton-based Canadian nationalist and publisher Mel Hurtig was left unimpressed with the lack of Canadian reference works as well as with the various omissions and blatant errors (e.g., Brian Mulroney was described as a Liberal rather than Conservative) found in existing encyclopedias with Canadian entries. In response, Hurtig launched a project in the 1970s to create a wholly new Canadian encyclopedia.[5]

In 1978, around the Province of Alberta's 75th anniversary, Hurtig approached the Alberta government with the idea of supporting Hurtig's idea of an encyclopedia as Alberta's "gift to Canada," which gained the support of Alberta Premier Peter Lougheed. On 15 November 1979, the Alberta Legislature announced that the provincial government would underwrite the development costs of the encyclopedia with CA$3.4 million and would donate a further $600,000 towards the delivery of a free copy to every school and library in Canada. (This was done on the condition that no other funding would be able to obscure the gesture of the Alberta Government.)[5]

Taking on this publishing 'megaproject', Hurtig would spend the next few years raising funds from banks for printing and marketing. The concern of a French-language edition was put aside with a guarantee by Hurtig that the rights would be donated free to a publisher in Quebec.[5]

Hurtig held a nationwide search for an editor-in-chief, including with an advertisement in the Globe and Mail. Soon after, James Harley Marsh was hired as editor-in-chief in 1980.[5] Marsh recruited more than 3,000 authors to write for the encyclopedia. They made index cards for every fact in the encyclopedia, signed off by the researcher, utilized three sources, and had every article read by three outside readers. Then, the entire encyclopedia was proofread by an independent source.[6] Over 3,000 people contributed to the content and accuracy of the encyclopedia's entries.[7]

In 1981, the Encyclopedia of Music in Canada was published.[7]

First editions

 
Printed edition 1985, cover

By May 1984, Hurtig Publishers had received over 105,000 in pre-sale orders for the first edition of The Canadian Encyclopedia,[5] which was finally published in 1985 (ISBN 0-88830-269-X). Carrying nearly 3 million words within three separate volumes, it featured over 2,500 contributors and included more than 9,000 articles.[2] Costing $125 per set, this first edition sold out within days of publication and became a Canadian bestseller; nearly 150,000 sets sold in six months.[7]

Two years later, Alain Stanké of Montreal published the first French edition of the encyclopedia, Encyclopédie canadienne, in three volumes.[5][8]

A revised and expanded edition of TCE was released in 1988 (ISBN 0-88830-326-2), selling out just as the first. This edition would add a fourth volume and around 500,000 new words.[5] Encoded in a markup language precursor of HTML, this edition would be the first encyclopedia in the world to use a computer to help compile, typeset, design, and print it.[6]

1990s

In September 1990, Hurtig published The Junior Encyclopedia of Canada (ISBN 0-88830-334-3), illustrated with over 3000 photos, drawings, and maps.[2] This five-volume encyclopedia was funded by the federal Department of Communications and a grant from the CRB Foundation of Montreal.[5] It would be the first encyclopedia for young Canadians.[2]

In May 1991, Hurtig sold his publishing company to McClelland & Stewart (M&S), and the encyclopedia along with it.[9] Soon, a vice president at M&S would be the first to usher in the first real electronic version of the encyclopedia in 1995: The Canadian Encyclopedia Plus, published as a digital CD-ROM (ISBN 0-7710-2041-4), with searching capability, hot links to related articles, and multimedia.[5][7] This digital format would also eventually incorporate the Gage Canadian Dictionary and Roget's Thesaurus with the text of TCE, as well as incorporating the Columbia Encyclopedia.[5]

The first edition of the encyclopedia on CD-ROM was released in 1993; the second, in 1995.[10]

The 1998-99 Canadian Encyclopedia on CD-ROM came in three separate versions:

  1. an updated World Edition with a new interactive quiz called Canucklehead
  2. a new Student Edition with the updated and revised text of the Junior Encyclopedia of Canada
  3. a Deluxe version, which included all the material on “World” and 5 additional disks

The Canadian Encyclopedia was able to become fully bilingual through a grant from Heritage Canada, which helped to complete the project of translating the over-4-million pieces of text into French. By 2000, the electronic encyclopedia included a fourth version: "National."[5]

In 1999, McClelland & Stewart published the year-2000 edition, incorporating all four previous volumes in a single book (ISBN 0-77102-099-6), followed by Stanké's French edition the next year. Also in 1999, Avie Bennett, the Chair of McClelland & Stewart, transferred the ownership of the encyclopedia to the Historica Foundation.[7] Later that year, the Historica Foundation made a full version of The Canadian Encyclopedia available online.[7]

Online

Launching in Edmonton in October 2001, the real online version of TCE was programmed by NetCentrics in Edmonton and its interface designed by 7th Floor Media in Vancouver.[5] In 2002/2003, an online version of the Encyclopedia of Music in Canada, including around 3,000 articles and 500 illustrations, was incorporated into TCE.[2]

On March 31, 2013, Marsh stepped down as editor-in-chief of TCE in retirement.[3][4]

The enhanced interactive format that TCE currently uses online was first released in October 2013.[2] Today, The Canadian Encyclopedia is available entirely online.[citation needed] The TCE's current editor-in-chief is Bronwyn Graves.[11]

Organization

As the President and CEO of Historica Canada since 2012, Anthony Wilson-Smith is also the publisher of the encyclopedia. As of 2021, the encyclopedia has 5,040 authors.[2]

TCE is funded by SOCAN as well as the federal Department of Canadian Heritage. Its partners include the Canadian Children's Book Centre, Musée des grands Québécois, the Robert McLaughlin Gallery, and Maclean's.[2]

TCE claims to be "non-partisan and apolitical." and that they are "not affiliated with any government or political party."[12]

See also

References

  1. ^ "The Canadian Encyclopedia". Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. Corporate Site. Retrieved 2021-04-18.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h "About | The Canadian Encyclopedia". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2021-01-16.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  3. ^ a b . The Globe and Mail. 2013-03-28. Archived from the original on 2017-02-11. Retrieved 2021-07-01.
  4. ^ a b "James Marsh, Editor-in-Chief of The Canadian Encyclopedia, Retires | Historica Canada". Historica Canada. 2013-03-27. Retrieved 2021-07-01.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n . 2020-05-29. Archived from the original on 2020-05-29. Retrieved 2021-01-16.
  6. ^ a b Kennedy, Paul (June 28, 2012). "Citizen Mel, Parts 1 & 2". Ideas. Retrieved 11 February 2018.
  7. ^ a b c d e f James, H. Marsh (2009-03-30). "Encyclopedia". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2018-12-07.
  8. ^ Sabourin, Diane. March 20, 2012. "Alain Stanké." The Canadian Encyclopedia. Historica Canada (last updated December 14, 2013).
  9. ^ "Mel Hurtig". The Canadian Encyclopedia.
  10. ^ Tuominen, Liisa (December 17, 1995). "Canadian Encyclopedia gets it right the second time around on CD-ROM". The Ottawa Citizen. p. 29 – via newspapers.com.
  11. ^ "Bronwyn Graves". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2021-07-01.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  12. ^ "Help". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2021-04-18.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)

External links

canadian, encyclopedia, this, article, relies, excessively, references, primary, sources, please, improve, this, article, adding, secondary, tertiary, sources, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, 2021, learn, when, remove, this, template, m. This article relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources The Canadian Encyclopedia news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Canadian Encyclopedia TCE French L Encyclopedie canadienne is the national encyclopedia of Canada published online by the Toronto based historical organization Historica Canada with the support of Canadian Heritage The Canadian EncyclopediaFirst edition print 1985 Editor in chiefJames Harley Marsh 1985 2013 Bronwyn Graves 2013 Managing editorEli YarhiCategoriesCanadian history and CanadianaFormatPrint 1985 95 CD ROM 1995 2001 Online 1999 PublisherHurtig Publishing 1985 1991 Anthony Wilson Smith 2012 CompanyHistorica CanadaCountryCanadaLanguageEnglish and FrenchWebsitethecanadianencyclopedia caAvailable for free online in both English and French The Canadian Encyclopedia includes more than 19 500 articles in both languages 1 2 on numerous subjects including history popular culture events people places politics arts First Nations sports and science The website also provides access to the Encyclopedia of Music in Canada the Canadian Encyclopedia Junior Edition Maclean s magazine articles and Timelines of Canadian History As of 2013 update over 700 000 volumes of the print version of TCE have been sold and over 6 million people visit TCE s website yearly 3 4 Contents 1 History 1 1 Background 1 2 Creating The Canadian Encyclopedia 1 3 First editions 1 4 1990s 1 5 Online 2 Organization 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksHistory EditBackground Edit While attempts had been made to compile encyclopedic material on aspects of Canada Canada An Encyclopaedia of the Country 1898 1900 edited by J Castell Hopkins was the first attempt to produce an encyclopedic work entirely on the subject of Canada This was followed by W Stewart Wallace s The Encyclopedia of Canada Macmillan 1935 37 which was then sold to an American publisher the Grolier Society providing the core of John Everett Robbins Encyclopedia Canadiana 1957 5 More common however were encyclopedic works focused on particular qualities of Canada For instance in 1911 Arthur Doughty and L J Burpee compiled the Index and Dictionary of Canadian History as a companion to the Makers of Canada series Doughty and Adam Shortt edited the 23 volume Canada and Its Provinces 1913 17 Norah Story s The Oxford Companion to Canadian History and Literature was published in 1967 the comprehensive Encyclopedia of Music in Canada was published in 1981 and revised in 1992 and a new Oxford Companion to Canadian Literature edited by William Toye was published in 1983 5 Creating The Canadian Encyclopedia Edit By the 1970s Canada had been without a national encyclopedia since Robbins 1957 work which by that time was terribly outdated With this in mind Edmonton based Canadian nationalist and publisher Mel Hurtig was left unimpressed with the lack of Canadian reference works as well as with the various omissions and blatant errors e g Brian Mulroney was described as a Liberal rather than Conservative found in existing encyclopedias with Canadian entries In response Hurtig launched a project in the 1970s to create a wholly new Canadian encyclopedia 5 In 1978 around the Province of Alberta s 75th anniversary Hurtig approached the Alberta government with the idea of supporting Hurtig s idea of an encyclopedia as Alberta s gift to Canada which gained the support of Alberta Premier Peter Lougheed On 15 November 1979 the Alberta Legislature announced that the provincial government would underwrite the development costs of the encyclopedia with CA 3 4 million and would donate a further 600 000 towards the delivery of a free copy to every school and library in Canada This was done on the condition that no other funding would be able to obscure the gesture of the Alberta Government 5 Taking on this publishing megaproject Hurtig would spend the next few years raising funds from banks for printing and marketing The concern of a French language edition was put aside with a guarantee by Hurtig that the rights would be donated free to a publisher in Quebec 5 Hurtig held a nationwide search for an editor in chief including with an advertisement in the Globe and Mail Soon after James Harley Marsh was hired as editor in chief in 1980 5 Marsh recruited more than 3 000 authors to write for the encyclopedia They made index cards for every fact in the encyclopedia signed off by the researcher utilized three sources and had every article read by three outside readers Then the entire encyclopedia was proofread by an independent source 6 Over 3 000 people contributed to the content and accuracy of the encyclopedia s entries 7 In 1981 the Encyclopedia of Music in Canada was published 7 First editions Edit Printed edition 1985 coverBy May 1984 Hurtig Publishers had received over 105 000 in pre sale orders for the first edition of The Canadian Encyclopedia 5 which was finally published in 1985 ISBN 0 88830 269 X Carrying nearly 3 million words within three separate volumes it featured over 2 500 contributors and included more than 9 000 articles 2 Costing 125 per set this first edition sold out within days of publication and became a Canadian bestseller nearly 150 000 sets sold in six months 7 Two years later Alain Stanke of Montreal published the first French edition of the encyclopedia Encyclopedie canadienne in three volumes 5 8 A revised and expanded edition of TCE was released in 1988 ISBN 0 88830 326 2 selling out just as the first This edition would add a fourth volume and around 500 000 new words 5 Encoded in a markup language precursor of HTML this edition would be the first encyclopedia in the world to use a computer to help compile typeset design and print it 6 1990s Edit In September 1990 Hurtig published The Junior Encyclopedia of Canada ISBN 0 88830 334 3 illustrated with over 3000 photos drawings and maps 2 This five volume encyclopedia was funded by the federal Department of Communications and a grant from the CRB Foundation of Montreal 5 It would be the first encyclopedia for young Canadians 2 In May 1991 Hurtig sold his publishing company to McClelland amp Stewart M amp S and the encyclopedia along with it 9 Soon a vice president at M amp S would be the first to usher in the first real electronic version of the encyclopedia in 1995 The Canadian Encyclopedia Plus published as a digital CD ROM ISBN 0 7710 2041 4 with searching capability hot links to related articles and multimedia 5 7 This digital format would also eventually incorporate the Gage Canadian Dictionary and Roget s Thesaurus with the text of TCE as well as incorporating the Columbia Encyclopedia 5 The first edition of the encyclopedia on CD ROM was released in 1993 the second in 1995 10 The 1998 99 Canadian Encyclopedia on CD ROM came in three separate versions an updated World Edition with a new interactive quiz called Canucklehead a new Student Edition with the updated and revised text of the Junior Encyclopedia of Canada a Deluxe version which included all the material on World and 5 additional disksThe Canadian Encyclopedia was able to become fully bilingual through a grant from Heritage Canada which helped to complete the project of translating the over 4 million pieces of text into French By 2000 the electronic encyclopedia included a fourth version National 5 In 1999 McClelland amp Stewart published the year 2000 edition incorporating all four previous volumes in a single book ISBN 0 77102 099 6 followed by Stanke s French edition the next year Also in 1999 Avie Bennett the Chair of McClelland amp Stewart transferred the ownership of the encyclopedia to the Historica Foundation 7 Later that year the Historica Foundation made a full version of The Canadian Encyclopedia available online 7 Online Edit Launching in Edmonton in October 2001 the real online version of TCE was programmed by NetCentrics in Edmonton and its interface designed by 7th Floor Media in Vancouver 5 In 2002 2003 an online version of the Encyclopedia of Music in Canada including around 3 000 articles and 500 illustrations was incorporated into TCE 2 On March 31 2013 Marsh stepped down as editor in chief of TCE in retirement 3 4 The enhanced interactive format that TCE currently uses online was first released in October 2013 2 Today The Canadian Encyclopedia is available entirely online citation needed The TCE s current editor in chief is Bronwyn Graves 11 Organization EditAs the President and CEO of Historica Canada since 2012 Anthony Wilson Smith is also the publisher of the encyclopedia As of 2021 the encyclopedia has 5 040 authors 2 TCE is funded by SOCAN as well as the federal Department of Canadian Heritage Its partners include the Canadian Children s Book Centre Musee des grands Quebecois the Robert McLaughlin Gallery and Maclean s 2 TCE claims to be non partisan and apolitical and that they are not affiliated with any government or political party 12 See also Edit Canada portalList of online encyclopedias Encyclopedia of Canadian BiographyReferences Edit The Canadian Encyclopedia Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc Corporate Site Retrieved 2021 04 18 a b c d e f g h About The Canadian Encyclopedia The Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved 2021 01 16 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b Two Canadians who changed the world The Globe and Mail 2013 03 28 Archived from the original on 2017 02 11 Retrieved 2021 07 01 a b James Marsh Editor in Chief of The Canadian Encyclopedia Retires Historica Canada Historica Canada 2013 03 27 Retrieved 2021 07 01 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Brief History of The Canadian Encyclopedia James H Marsh 2020 05 29 Archived from the original on 2020 05 29 Retrieved 2021 01 16 a b Kennedy Paul June 28 2012 Citizen Mel Parts 1 amp 2 Ideas Retrieved 11 February 2018 a b c d e f James H Marsh 2009 03 30 Encyclopedia The Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved 2018 12 07 Sabourin Diane March 20 2012 Alain Stanke The Canadian Encyclopedia Historica Canada last updated December 14 2013 Mel Hurtig The Canadian Encyclopedia Tuominen Liisa December 17 1995 Canadian Encyclopedia gets it right the second time around on CD ROM The Ottawa Citizen p 29 via newspapers com Bronwyn Graves The Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved 2021 07 01 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Help The Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved 2021 04 18 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link External links EditOfficial website Digitized 2nd edition Marsh James H 2000 The Canadian Encyclopedia 2nd ed Toronto Historica Canada ISBN 978 0 7710 2099 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Canadian Encyclopedia amp oldid 1140956833, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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