Encyclopædia Britannica - Digital Reference, Encyclopedia, Knowledge (2024)

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Written by

Michael Levy,

Donald E. Stewart Former managing editor, Encyclopædia Britannica.

Donald E. StewartAll

Fact-checked by

The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica's editors oversee subject areas in which they have extensive knowledge, whether from years of experience gained by working on that content or via study for an advanced degree. They write new content and verify and edit content received from contributors.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica

Last Updated: Article History

Technological changes, beginning in the 1980s with the development and spread of the personal computer and disc technology and quickening in the 1990s and 2000s through the Internet and widespread diffusion of broadband access, radically altered the publishing world generally and the encyclopaedia business in particular. In 1981, under an agreement with Mead Data Central, the first digital version of the Encyclopædia Britannica was created for the LexisNexis service. In the early 1990s Britannica was made available for electronic delivery on a number of CD-ROM-based products, including the Britannica Electronic Index and the Britannica CD (providing text and a dictionary, along with proprietary retrieval software, on a single disc). A two-disc CD was released in 1995, featuring illustrations and photos; multimedia, including videos, animations, and audio, was added in 1997. At first the cost of those electronic products was comparable to the cost of the print encyclopaedia, resulting in relatively tepid sales; over the years, however, the price of the CD-ROM products and later DVD versions, which first appeared in 1999, fell dramatically.

Also during the early 1990s, under the editorial direction of Robert McHenry, editor in chief, the company developed Britannica Online, an extended electronic reference service for delivery over the Internet. In 1994 Britannica debuted the first Internet-based encyclopaedia. Users paid a fee to access the information, which was located at http://www.eb.com.

In 1996 Britannica was sold to financier Jacob E. Safra, under whose leadership the company began a major restructuring. With declining sales of the print encyclopaedia, the company’s vaunted sales force was disbanded, and in 1999 the company launched Britannica.com, a free site featuring an Internet search engine, subject channels, current events, and essays, as well as the complete text of the encyclopaedia; it was so popular that when it was launched it crashed several times from too much traffic (the free model was subsequently abandoned). In effect, Britannica’s online distribution was split into two avenues: one, Britannica.com, aimed at consumers and supported by advertisem*nts and subscription fees (from subscribers who wanted an ad-free experience), and the other, at the eb.com domain, for institutions such as schools and libraries.

As print products came to be first supplemented by electronic ones and then overtaken by them, Britannica made the transition to digital publishing while still maintaining its print lineup. The expansion into digital products, however, was to have enormous effects on the editorial program, as the expectations of users of an electronic or online product were often vastly different from those of print products.

During the first part of the 1990s, particularly while annual printings were central to the company’s profits, the online encyclopaedia developed but was largely ancillary to the print, and revisions were based on the rhythm of print deadlines. As digital products came to supplant print ones, however, the focus of the editorial staff shifted to the electronic product, and in 1999, under editor in chief Dale Hoiberg, the editorial division began a massive multiyear review and revision of the encyclopaedia’s database. Scholars from around the world reviewed the content, making revisions to or suggesting major rewriting of existing content and recommending new articles on subjects not covered. At the same time, Britannica hired new editors, many with doctorates, to process the large quantities of material produced. As a result of this effort during the first decade of the 21st century, the company built a strong foundation for ongoing editorial growth and innovation and reiterated its commitment to the quality of its content both through the expertise of its internal editors and by continuing to attract the foremost scholars and experts in their fields.

A selection of articles written by prominent contributors in the early 21st century is provided in the table.

Selected recent contributors to the Encyclopædia Britannica
author article(s)
Mostafa El-Abbadi Library of Alexandria
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar New York Rens
William Alford Chinese law; legal education; legal ethics; legal profession
Steve Allen Steve Allen on The Tonight Show ; Television in the United States: Introduction
Óscar Arias Sánchez Lessons of the 20th Century
Sister Wendy Beckett The Art of Looking at Art
Peter Bergen September 11 attacks
David Bevington William Shakespeare and articles on all of Shakespeare’s plays
James Hadley Billington Library of Congress
James Burke invention
Nicholas Carr cloud computing
Clayborne Carson civil rights movement; Martin Luther King, Jr.
Jimmy Carter Camp David Accords
Robert Christgau John Lennon
Steven Chu spectroscopy
Bill Clinton Dayton Accords
Dalai Lama XIV A Call to Compassion
Karl Deisseroth optogenetics
Philip Dimitrov Bulgaria
Gerald Early Motown; Afrocentrism
Joseph Ellis John Adams; Founding Fathers; “Tom and Sally”: The Jefferson-Hemings Paternity Debate; Thomas Jefferson
Chris Evert U.S. Open (tennis)
Clifton Fadiman children’s literature
Nuruddin Farah Somalia at the Turn of the 21st Century
Eric Foner Reconstruction
Simon Frith rock; Europop; novelty song; pop ballad
Andrew Graham-Dixon Caravaggio
Brian Greene string theory
Scott Hamilton figure skating; Scott Hamilton: Training for Olympic Gold
Tony Hawk skateboarding
Lee Iacocca Walter P. Chrysler; Chrysler
Donald C. Johanson hom*o naledi
Sir John Keegan Normandy Invasion
Donald Keene Chikamatsu Monzaemon; Japanese literature; Japanese mythology
Sir Harold W. Kroto fullerene in part
Donald Burton Kuspit art criticism
Máiread Maguire Peace People
James M. McPherson Translating Thought into Action: Grant’s Personal Memoirs
Walter Mischel psychology
Colin Montgomerie British Open
Jack Nicklaus United States Open Championship
Arnold Palmer Masters Tournament
Mike Parker Pearson Stonehenge
Ian Rankin Edinburgh: A City of Stories
Adam Riess dark energy; dark matter
Kermit Roosevelt III judicial activism; judicial restraint
Burt Rutan SpaceShipOne (SS1)
John Sayles John Ford
Peter Singer ethics; the problem of moral responsibility
Valerie Steele fashion industry
Bruce Sterling science fiction
Ronald Grigor Suny Armenian Genocide
John Szarkowski Ansel Adams; Eugene Atget; Walker Evans; Edward Steichen; Alfred Stieglitz; Edward Weston
Twyla Tharp On Technology and Dance
Ted Turner United Nations Foundation
Desmond Tutu Truth and Reconciliation Commission, South Africa (TRC)
Stephen Venables Mount Everest
Eugene Volokh First Amendment
Sean Wilentz John McCain
Jody Williams International Campaign to Ban Landmines (ICBL)
Gordon S. Wood Benjamin Franklin

Britannica adhered to rigorous and meticulous methods and fact-checking standards, but it became clear that digital publishing required continual revision—not the annual printings of the 20th century but daily (at minimum) updates. As a result, in the early 21st century the staffing and procedures across editorial, technology, and product groups were changed to enable continual and rapid publication of vetted, fact-checked articles.

The online delivery method enabled Britannica to integrate the work of the various editorial departments into a cohesive reading and browsing experience. Free of the constraints of the printed page and with users expecting more media of all types, Britannica significantly expanded the number of photographs and other illustrations in its articles and added audio, video, infographics, and other media. In the 15th edition (from 1985) the index was contained in two separate print volumes, but that index, maintained by Britannica’s information specialists, was integrated into the online articles in what was called a “topic map.” Readers of an article on China, for example, not only would be able to read Britannica’s extensive article on the country but also would be directed toward related discussions in other articles as well as to Britannica’s coverage of related people, places, and events and to useful external Web sites vetted by Britannica’s Internet Guide team. Content from the Britannica Book of the Year (generally branded the Britannica Year in Review online) became available online beginning with the 1994 edition (which described the events of 1993). For readers unfamiliar with particular words included in the text, a dictionary and thesaurus from Merriam-Webster (a subsidiary of Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.) was also integrated, enabling users to double-click on a word to bring up its definition. The licensing of material from other content providers gave readers access to e-books and magazine articles. For some subjects, such as Shakespeare, D-Day, Black history, Hispanic heritage, and women’s history, special features were created by Britannica’s editorial and media staff that organized the content into visually rich presentations.

As both the consumer and institutional Web sites developed, research tools were added that enabled users to view Britannica’s content databases in various ways, such as through biography, subject, quotations, and this-day-in-history browses, a world atlas, and country comparison and statistics features (powered by Britannica’s World Data department). Additionally, while contributors to Britannica’s articles were indicated in print only by initials at the end of articles (or at the end of sections of longer entries), the names of primary contributors to articles were also moved onscreen to the beginning of entries to provide readers with quick information about the people responsible for the content and their credentials.

Particularly since the 20th century, Britannica has maintained constant contact with its readers and customers and encouraged feedback on its content. In the early 21st century the company developed a community feedback system integrated into Britannica.com both to encourage readers to submit suggested changes (including new articles on topics not yet covered) and to submit their own media to Britannica to be evaluated for inclusion in the online encyclopaedia. After fact-checking and editing, the contributions that met Britannica’s editorial standards would be integrated into Britannica’s articles and published, often on the same day. With the frequent updating of content, it became essential to document the changes, and in the first decade of the 21st century a feature showing an article’s editorial history was added to the consumer and academic (university) sites, which listed the changes to articles and identified both the external contributor and the editor responsible for each change.

In 2006 the company debuted the Britannica Blog, which provided discussion of encyclopaedic topics often in a non-encyclopaedic way and was a forum for debate on various subjects in the arts, geography, history, and science. Smartphones and tablets provided another avenue for the dissemination of Britannica content; in 2008 a mobile site was introduced, and in 2010 the first Britannica apps were released.

The 21st century was also a time of significant expansion of Britannica’s digital educational products: in 2001 Britannica Digital Learning introduced specialized Web sites for schools and universities, and it continued to innovate during subsequent years with new products such as ImageQuest, a database of millions of images for use by educators; LaunchPacks, a classroom learning platform; and LumieLabs, a video storytelling platform for students. In 2018 Britannica celebrated its first Curiosity Day and released Britannica Insights, a Chrome browser extension. As Britannica reached the 250th anniversary of the first edition of its encyclopaedia, the company was working with a range of technology, education, and government partners around the world to fight misinformation, expand its use of artificial intelligence, and develop new learning solutions.

Michael Levy The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Encyclopædia Britannica - Digital Reference, Encyclopedia, Knowledge (2024)

FAQs

Can you trust Encyclopædia Britannica? ›

With contributions from Nobel laureates, historians, curators, professors and other notable experts, Britannica Academic provides trusted information with balanced, global perspectives and insights that users will not find anywhere else.

Is Encyclopædia Britannica reliable? ›

The articles in Britannica are written by expert authors who are both identifiable and credible. Many articles provide references to books and other sources about the topic covered.

Is it okay to cite the Encyclopedia Britannica? ›

Authors of articles in general encyclopedias, or encyclopedias that cover all subject areas (such as the Encyclopedia Britannica), are not always listed. There are few situations in which you would list an entire encyclopedia in your references; you will need to list the individual article(s) that you consulted.

Has anyone ever read the entire Encyclopedia Britannica? ›

The Know-It-All: One Man's Humble Quest to Become the Smartest Person in the World is a book by Esquire editor A. J. Jacobs, published in 2004. It recounts his experience of reading the entire Encyclopædia Britannica; all 32 volumes of the 2002 edition, extending to over 33,000 pages with some 44 million words.

Are old encyclopedias Britannica worth anything? ›

Unfortunately the only really collectible Britannica sets are the the 9th and 11th editions. Full sets of the 15th, like yours, are readily available from retail resellers from $150 to $200. These prices closely reflect actual completed sales of these volumes.

Is Britannica more credible than Wikipedia? ›

Encyclopædia Britannica also argued that a breakdown of the errors indicated that the mistakes in Wikipedia were more often the inclusion of incorrect facts, while the mistakes in Britannica were "errors of omission", making "Britannica far more accurate than Wikipedia, according to the figures".

Is Encyclopedia Britannica Online worth it? ›

Encyclopaedia Britannica is one of the most comprehensive, authoritative information sources on the Internet.

Is Encyclopedia Britannica an actual encyclopedia? ›

As the Britannica is a general encyclopaedia, it does not seek to compete with specialized encyclopaedias such as the Encyclopaedia of Mathematics or the Dictionary of the Middle Ages, which can devote much more space to their chosen topics.

Is Encyclopædia Britannica an organization? ›

Company Overview

Britannica is a part of the Britannica Group (Encyclopaedia Britannica®, Britannica® Digital Learning, Merriam-Webster®, and Melingo®), a global knowledge leader whose flagship products inspire curiosity and the joy of learning on multiple platforms and devices.

Can I use Britannica as a source in university? ›

Can I copy or reuse content in my own work? All Britannica content is royalty-free and cleared for copyright on the condition that it is being used for an educational, non-commercial purpose. You may not remove or alter any copyright, trademark, service mark or other legends or proprietary notices.

Can I cite Britannica in my thesis? ›

A scholar can cite a published encyclopedia as a published, edited, and often peer-reviewed publication. However, to properly use the information it should be verified with other sources, especially recent ones.

Is Britannica a secondary source? ›

No, the Encyclopedia Britannica is generally a tertiary source. An encyclopedia references information without any analysis or opinion; therefore, it is a tertiary source.

Did Elon Musk read Britannica? ›

Since his childhood, books have played a crucial role in fueling Musk's ambitions. It's said that he read the entire Encyclopedia Britannica at age nine and would pore through science fiction novels for more than 10 hours a day.

Why was Encyclopedia Britannica discontinued? ›

"The print edition became more difficult to maintain and wasn't the best physical element to deliver the quality of our database and the quality of our editorial," Jorge Cauz, president of Encyclopedia Britannica, Inc., told Reuters.

Can Encyclopedia Britannica be trusted? ›

The online version of the Encyclopedia Britannica is a trusted source used by more than 4,755 universities worldwide, including Yale, Harvard and Oxford.

Is the encyclopedia a reliable source? ›

Therefore, encyclopedias are reliable sources of information because they have been edited by experts in various fields. There are two types of encyclopedias: general and specialized subject encyclopedias. General encyclopedias, such as World Book, provide concise overviews on a wide variety of topics.

Is the Encyclopedia Britannica peer-reviewed? ›

Britannica is an English peer-reviewed proprietary general encyclopedia with some content freely available online.

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