Croatian Encyclopedia
Croatian print and online encyclopedia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Croatian Encyclopedia (Croatian: Hrvatska enciklopedija) is a Croatian general encyclopedia (with the national component), published in 1999–2009 by the Miroslav Krleža Institute of Lexicography.[1]
| Editors | Dalibor Brozović, August Kovačec, Slaven Ravlić |
|---|---|
| Original title | Hrvatska enciklopedija |
| Language | Croatian |
| Subject | General |
| Genre | Reference encyclopedia |
| Publisher | Miroslav Krleža Institute of Lexicography |
Publication date | 1999–2009 (print), 2013– (online) |
| Publication place | Croatia |
| Media type | 11 volumes (hardbound), online |
| ISBN | 953-6036-31-2 |
| OCLC | 247866724 |
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 Institute, as well as the two editions of its General Encyclopedia.[1] Eleven volumes were published in the period 1999–2009, with a new volume appearing every year.
It is named "Croatian" encyclopedia in the tradition of general-knowledge encyclopedias as Britannica.
Online edition
The free-access online edition of the Croatian Encyclopedia has been available since 2013. Paper volumes are no longer published.[2][3]
Since 2021, the Encyclopedia, available at enciklopedija.hr, has been managed by a new, fourth editor-in-chief, Bruno Kragić, with a team of 14 editors, and updated on a weekly basis.[4]
Volumes
| Volume number | Editor-In-Chief | Year | Pages |
|---|---|---|---|
| I. : A – Bd | Dalibor Brozović | 1999 | 674 |
| II. : Be – Da | 2000 | 723 | |
| III. : Da – Fo | 2001 | 722 | |
| IV. : Fr – Ht | 2002 | 753 | |
| V. : Hu – Km | August Kovačec | 2003 | 725 |
| VI. : Kn – Mak | 2004 | 786 | |
| VII. : Mal – Nj | 2005 | 814 | |
| VIII. : O – Pre | Slaven Ravlić | 2006 | 773 |
| IX. : Pri – Sk | 2007 | 842 | |
| X. : Sl – To | 2008 | 830 | |
| XI. : Tr – Ž | 2009 | 859 |
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]