This article will be permanently flagged as inappropriate and made unaccessible to everyone. Are you certain this article is inappropriate? Excessive Violence Sexual Content Political / Social
Email Address:
Article Id: WHEBN0010601595 Reproduction Date:
The Croatian Encyclopedia (Croatian: Hrvatska enciklopedija) is a Croatian national encyclopedia published by the Miroslav Krleža Lexicographical Institute.[1]
The project began in 1999, and it represents a fifth iteration of the encyclopedic tradition that was established by Mate Ujević's Croatian Encyclopedia, and continued in the Encyclopedia of the Lexicographical Instute, as well as two editions of the General Encyclopedia.[1]
11 volumes have been published in the period 1999-2009, with a new volume appearing every year. Since 2010 Internet edition of encyclopedia was being prepared, updated and enriched with new multimedia content.[2] The free Internet edition of the Croatian Encyclopedia is available since September 2013. Paper volumes will no longer be published and further work will be exclusively done in a form of computer database, which serves as the basis for Internet and other multimedia editions of the encyclopedia.[3]
Printed volumes total 9272 pages and 67,077 articles, with a total of 1,059,000 lines of text.[3] It represents a combined effort of 1070 authors, mainly associates.[3] Individual volumes are a result of collaboration of 20 to 30 workers of the Lexicographic Institute, and 300-400 associate contributors.
Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Romania, European Union
Croatian language, Zagreb, Split, Croatia, Rijeka, Vukovar
Croatia, History of Croatia, Croatian language, Humanism, Culture of Croatia
Zagreb, Linguistics, Sarajevo, Croatia, Croatian language
Information, Linguistics, Encyclopædia Britannica, Statistics, Medicine
Zagreb, World War II, Authority control, Righteous among the Nations, Croats
Croatia, Croatian language, French Sign Language family, Yugoslav Sign Language, Sign language
World War II, Serbia, Nazi Germany, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Dalmatia