大英百科全书_线上中文版

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大英百科全书线上繁体中文版

大英百科全书线上繁体中文版

大英百科全書線上繁體中文版開始歡迎來到大英百科全書線上繁體中文版﹐這裡可讓您查到百科全書裡的資訊。

檢索檢索可以讓您更快地找到百科全書裡的條目。

在每個頁面上都會有一個檢索框,請將檢索詞輸入檢索框。

點按「Go」以確認檢索。

檢索結果將顯示在新的頁面上。

如果您檢索的是百科全書﹐檢索結果將包括檢索到的條目名稱、條目開頭的部分內容﹐以及與該條目相關的其他內容﹐如旗幟、圖像和地圖等。

如果發現了您想要看的條目﹐點按該條目名稱﹐條目內容就會顯示。

如果您還需要更多的幫助,可繼續查看檢索方法提示(Search Tips)中的有關說明。

檢索方法提示這裡有一些辦法可用來改善或修正您的檢索結果。

模糊檢索如果您想檢索一個條目﹐但對詞語的拼法無把握﹐可以使用模糊檢索選項。

選擇此一選項後﹐您會看到同詢問詞對應的一些檢索結果﹐以及同詢問詞具有相似拼法的其他字詞。

同音字檢索如果您想檢索一個條目但不知道其中某個字的準確寫法﹐那就使用同音字檢索選項。

當您選擇這個選項後﹐將會看到對應於您的詢問詞的一些結果﹐以及有相同發音的字詞。

例如﹐檢索「安德生」的結果裡也許會出現「安得生」。

分類檢索如果您想檢索與某個主題有關的一些條目﹐可使用分類檢索選項。

當您從下拉式功能表中選擇了一個類別後﹐將會看到與所選的主題有關﹐與您的詢問詞對應的一些結果。

例如﹐在「音樂」類別上檢索「亞洲」﹐結果顯示的只是與亞洲有關的音樂條目。

在「哺乳動物」類別上檢索「象」﹐結果顯示的是陸地上最大的哺乳動物﹐而若在「遊戲」類別來檢索「象」﹐則得出中國象棋的結果。

用英文檢索條目名稱用中、英兩種文字顯示。

如果您檢索某個特定條目名稱﹐可以用它的中文或英文名稱來檢索。

例如﹐檢索「Internet」將會顯示出「網際網路」的結果。

邏輯檢索您還可以運用如下一些邏輯關條符來改進您的檢索:•如果您希望檢索的條目中同時包含兩個詞組,可以使用“&”(或“and”)符號,比如:法國 & 戰爭;法國 and 戰爭。

大英百科全书 中文

大英百科全书 中文

大英百科全书中文
《大英百科全书》是一部权威的百科全书,最早由英国出版,后来逐渐发展成为全球性的百科全书,涵盖了广泛的学科和知识领域。

它包括了历史、科学、文学、艺术、地理、哲学等各个领域的内容,为读者提供了丰富的知识和信息。

《大英百科全书》以其权威性和全面性而闻名,它的内容经过了严格的审查和编辑,确保了信息的准确性和可靠性。

这部百科全书不仅提供了基本的知识,还包括了许多前沿的研究成果和学术观点,使读者能够了解到最新的学术进展和知识动态。

《大英百科全书》的中文版也是备受推崇的,它为中国读者提供了丰富的国际化视野和知识资源。

无论是对于学术研究还是日常阅读,这部百科全书都为读者提供了宝贵的参考资料和学习资源。

总的来说,《大英百科全书》中文版是一部不可或缺的知识宝库,它帮助读者拓宽视野,增长知识,了解世界各个领域的最新动态和发展趋势。

它对于教育、学术研究和个人知识储备都具有重要意义,是一部不可多得的学习工具。

《大英百科全书》

《大英百科全书》
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浏览信息
• 世界地图浏览(World Atlas):浏览世 界各国的地图和有关文章、人口等。
• 字顺浏览(A-Z Article Browse):选择 一个关键词,即按关键词的英文字母的 排列顺序浏览相关内容。
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浏览信息
• 年鉴浏览(Year in Review Browse): 浏览世界上近期发生的重要事物与 人 物等。
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检索技巧
1)查询字词的拼写、含义和在写作中选 择词汇可使用“Merriam-Webster词典” 检索。双击任何页面上的任何词语,就 可以进入词典的该条目。也可以将其移 到主页词典或词库检索框内进行检索。 查询中所用词汇可以是单数,也可以是 复数,但在使用词典进行查询时则应该 用单数。
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内容介绍
7、收录世界地图、国家、国旗及统计数据 等资料
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索引
字顺浏览 主题浏览 地图浏览 年鉴浏览 大事记年表
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索引部分
A-Z Browse
• 该索引将百科全书 中的条目及词条按 字顺排列,组成字 顺词表,读者通过 字顺浏览查看所需 要的内容。
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Subject browse
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检索技巧
4)检查拼音,如果你不能确定一个词或一个名字的拼法,点 击检索框下的“拼写不确定”(not sure of the spelling)。 这就是告知不列颠百科去寻找与你键入的词类似的词。例 如键入helcopter 而不是helicopter,可能查不出结果。点击 not sure of the spelling, 然后点击go就可以得到helicopter的 结果。
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《不列颠百科全书》网络版

《不列颠百科全书》网络版

百科全书一词含义的演变
百科全书在西方学术界2,000年的历史中,其含 义几经变化。起初的意思是学习系统(知识环), 即全面教育。法国作家拉布雷Rabelais在使用这 的字时也是指教育。德国作家和编辑 IPaul Scalich,首次将它用为书名 :百科全书,或学科 知识世界,不仅是宗教的,而且是世俗的 Encyclopaedia; or Knowledge of the World of Disciplines, Not Only Sacred but Profane . . . ”)该书于1559年在巴塞尔(Basel) 出版。
网上工具书的特点
1)内容更丰富。虽然许多网络版工具书是以相应的印刷版为基 础,但它们不拘泥于印刷版的内容,而是在此基础上增加了 许多新的内容,如增加新条目;综合多种类型工具书的内容; 建立同Internet网上站点的链接;普遍使用多媒体等。 2)使用更方便。这主要体现在两个方面。其一是读者可以随时 随地的联网使用,并且可以实现多个用户的共享;其二是除 了保留印刷型工具书原有的检索途径外,网络版工具书往往 会利用先进的检索技术增加许多新的检索功能和检索入口, 从而方便各类读者都能够瞬间找到所需资源。 3)数据更新颖。网络版工具书的更新速度都比印刷版快。一般 网络版工具书是按天、按周、按月或按季度更新的,因此在 新颖性方面占有更大的优势。 因此,网络型工具书一经问世,立刻受到了用户的普遍 欢迎,并且随着用户需求的拉动,在品种上和数量上都有着 大幅度的提高。
网上工具书的特点
工具书品种繁多,根据内容和功用的不同,可为参考 工具书和检索工具书。前者直接提供用户所需的参考资 料,如辞书、百科全书、年鉴、手册、地图、名录等; 后者只提供所需信息线索,需依据线索再去寻找原始资 料,如书目、索引、文摘等。 工具书因其参考性、易检性、知识性、权威性等众多 的优点而成为人们学习和研究不可缺少的助手,但传统 印刷型工具书又因其体积大、利用相对困难等缺点,难 以充分发挥它的作用。随着Internet的发展,网上涌现 出越来越多的各种类型的网络版工具书,如数据库、百 科全书、地图、年鉴、词典等。与传统的印刷型工具书 相比,它们具有许多优点:

大英百科全书(britannica)简介以及使用方法

大英百科全书(britannica)简介以及使用方法

大英百科全书(britannica)简介以及使用方法大英百科全书(Britannica)简介及使用方法概述:大英百科全书(Britannica)是一部重要的英语百科全书,被誉为世界上最经典、最权威的百科全书之一。

该百科全书以其广泛的内容、精确的信息和优秀的学术质量闻名于世。

本文将介绍大英百科全书的历史背景,内容特点以及使用方法,旨在帮助读者更好地利用该百科全书。

第一节:历史背景大英百科全书的历史可以追溯到1768年,当时该百科全书的首个版本被出版。

自那时以来,它经历了多次修订和扩充,不断更新和增加各个领域的知识。

如今,该百科全书已有数卷,涵盖了各个学科领域的知识,并在全球范围内享有盛誉。

第二节:内容特点大英百科全书以其丰富而广泛的内容而闻名。

它包含了人类知识的方方面面,涵盖了自然科学、人文科学、社会科学等各个领域。

该百科全书详细叙述了世界历史、文化、科学、艺术、地理等各个领域的重要知识,让读者能够获取全面而准确的信息。

大英百科全书还以其精确的信息而备受推崇。

它的编辑团队由一些学术界的著名专家组成,他们对所写内容进行严格的审核和核实,确保了百科全书中的信息的可靠性和准确性。

此外,大英百科全书还具有卓越的学术质量。

它在撰写和编辑过程中遵循严格的学术标准,确保了文字的规范性、一致性和权威性。

因此,该百科全书成为了众多学者、研究人员和学生们的重要参考资料。

第三节:使用方法使用大英百科全书可以帮助读者获得全面而准确的知识。

以下是几种使用方法:1. 主题搜索:读者可以首先确定自己感兴趣的主题,然后在百科全书中进行相关的搜索。

通过主题搜索,读者可以找到相关的文章、定义、人物传记等内容,深入了解特定领域的知识。

2. 交叉引用:大英百科全书内的条目之间经常存在交叉引用。

读者可以通过查看相关条目,获得深入的了解和更全面的视角。

这也有助于拓展知识范围并建立知识之间的关联。

3. 更新订阅:大英百科全书不断更新和修订其内容,以保持知识的时效性。

网上参考工具(百科全书、字典辞典、统计资料、人名、地名、地图、单位名录、手册、标准等的在线检索)

网上参考工具(百科全书、字典辞典、统计资料、人名、地名、地图、单位名录、手册、标准等的在线检索)

网上参考工具(百科全书、字典辞典、统计资料、人名、地名、地图、单位名录、手册、标准等的在线检索)说明:这里提供了一些网上参考工具,如百科全书、字典辞典、统计资料、人名、地名、地图、单位名录、手册、标准等的在线检索,所列资源大多数为网上免费资源,非校园网用户可以使用,但也有部分资源仅教科网用户可用,还有少量资源仅校园网用户才能使用。

如发现出现死链接请及时与图书馆联系。

•百科全书•Encyclopedia Britannica Online/大英百科全书网络版。

•Canadian Encyclopedia Online/加拿大百科全书电子版•Columbia Encyclopedia, 6 Ed/65/哥伦比亚百科全书第六版•The Free Dictionary by FARLEX/多种字典和百科全书•Country Reports/世界各国百科全书网络版,可查世界各国的商业、旅游、求学等信息•Encyclopaedia of the Orient/e.o/东方百科全书,北非和中东国家的网络百科全书。

•World Book Encyclopedia/世界图书百科全书网络版•Encyclopedia of Astronomy and Astrophysics/eaasearch.asp天文学和天体物理学百科全书•Encyclopedia of Life Science/elssearch.asp生命科学百科全书•维基百科/wiki/%e9%a6%96%e9%a1%b5基于 Wiki 技术的内容开放的知识库•计算机科学技术百科全书/计算机科学理论、计算机组织与体系结构、软件、硬件、人工智能等•Literary Encyclopedia/文学百科全书,包括传记、文学作品、文学术语等•统计和咨讯•国家统计信息网/国家统计局的各种数据•中国科技统计/可检索有关科技统计数据•中国资讯行/提供实时财经新闻、统计数据、权威机构经贸报告、法律法规、商业数据及证券消息等•中国证券市场数据库/datalink/中国经济研究服务中心提供的有关数据•道琼斯中国指数/gb/today-data.asp相关数据检索•Statistical Abstract of the United States/compendia/statab/美国统计摘要•法律法规•中国法网/法律数据库,收集法律法规、部门规章、地方法规、背景案例等免费全文数据库•中国法律大全/t1.htm法律数据库,可阅读全文•英国法律在线/英国和欧盟的法律、官方和商业方面的法律,免费全文•美国国际法学会/index.html其主要数据库有:“美国国际法学会出版物数据库”和“国际经济法基础文献数据库”。

大英百科全书学术版使用指南说明书

大英百科全书学术版使用指南说明书

您的⼤英百科学术版Bri t annica Academic ⼊⻔指南。

使⽤指南您可以轻松访问备受赞誉的《⼤英百科全书》和⻙⽒⼤词典以及许多其他研究⼯具所提供的⼤量⽂章和多媒体。

欢迎academic .eb .com欢迎订阅⼤英百科学术版Bri t annica Academic⼤英百科学术版为进⾏全⾯的跨学科研究提供了所有必要条件。

在不同领域的诺⻉尔奖获得者,历史学家,专业顾问,教授和其他著名专家的贡献下,⼤英百科学术版以客观公正的国际化视⻆和洞察⼒提供⽆可⽐拟的可靠信息。

⾸⻚搜索栏⽬在搜索栏⽬在输⼊关键词进⾏搜索。

M y Research轻松地编辑,整理,保存和共享您喜欢的资料内容。

EBSCO 杂志/刊物点击查询数千则杂志和学术期刊⽂章。

⻙⽒⾼校⼤辞典Merriam-Webs t er’sCollegia t e Dic t ionar y全美最⼤,最全⾯的权威英语词典。

“世界地图集”(World A t las) 使您可以浏览世界各国的统计数据和相关内容。

使⽤“⽐较国家”(Compare Co u n t ries ) 来发现任何两个国家之间的异同。

“全球数据集”(World Fac t book ) 提供了区域性的统计和分析数据。

访问内容使⽤⽂章和媒体浏览按类别浏览内容。

研究⼯具原始⽂献通过单击访问推荐的原始⽂献,包括信件,演讲,历史⽂档和其他原始材料的数字记录。

通过权威媒体的每⽇新闻源,随时关注全球头条新闻。

新闻⾸⻚浏览⽂章和媒体在主⻚点击⽂章浏览(Ar t icle Bro w se)或媒体浏览(Media Bro w se)可让您按主题和⼦主题深⼊探索Bri t annica Academic的内容。

⼈物传记点击“传记”(Biographies)标签,按性别,时代,国籍及其专业领域搜索和浏览名⼈传记。

您还可以通过主⻚上的“传记”(Biographies)链接进⼊。

"全球数据集" (The World Fac t book ) 涵括了250多个单独的国家/地区的数据⻚⾯。

大英百科全书(britannica)简介以及使用方法

大英百科全书(britannica)简介以及使用方法

大英百科全书(britannica)简介以及使用方法大英百科全书(Britannica)简介和使用方法大英百科全书(Encyclopedia Britannica)是一部全面且权威的英语百科全书,涵盖了广泛的主题,包括历史、科学、技术、文学、艺术、人物传记等。

该百科全书由伊利诺伊州芝加哥的大英百科全书公司出版,是世界上最古老、最长久的百科全书之一。

1.历史概述大英百科全书最早于1768年在苏格兰爱丁堡开始出版,最初以第一版英国全书称为《芝加哥手册》(Edinburgh Encyclopædia),后来在1801年改名为《唐宁手册》(Duncan's Annotations)。

随着时间的推移,该百科全书经历了多次重大改版和重印,不断增加新的条目和内容,以适应不断发展的知识和学术领域。

2.内容结构大英百科全书的内容结构非常细化,涵盖了多个主要科学和人文学科。

其中的主要章节包括:2.1 人文学科- 历史:包括全球历史、地区历史和具体事件等。

- 文学:包括世界文学、文学运动和作家传记等。

- 艺术:包括绘画、雕塑、音乐、戏剧等艺术领域的介绍和评论。

- 哲学:涵盖哲学思想、学派和重要哲学家的介绍。

- 宗教:包括世界主要宗教的介绍和宗教历史。

- 语言学:包括语言学基础知识、语言分类和语言学家的介绍。

- 社会学:涵盖社会学理论和研究方法,以及社会学家的介绍。

- 民族学:包括世界各地区的民族和文化群体的介绍。

2.2 科学学科- 物理学:包括基本物理学原理、实验和重要物理学家的介绍。

- 化学:介绍化学基础理论、化学元素和化学反应等。

- 生物学:涵盖生命科学的不同方面,包括动物学、植物学和人类生物学等。

- 天文学:介绍天文学基础知识、星系和宇宙的结构等。

- 地球科学:包括地质学、气象学和地球物理学等。

- 数学:涵盖基本数学知识、数学定理和数学家的介绍。

- 计算机科学:介绍计算机科学原理、编程和网络技术等。

大英百科全书文档doc

大英百科全书文档doc

1 1054, Schism ofalso called East–West Schismevent that precipitated the final separation between the Eastern Christian churches (led by the patriarch of Constantinople, Michael Cerularius) and the Western Church (led by Pope Leo IX). The mutual excommunications by the Pope and the Patriarch that year became a watershed in church history. The excommunications were not lifted until 1965, when Pope Paul VI and Patriarch Athenagoras, following their historic meeting in Jerusalem in 1964, presided over simultaneous ceremonies that revoked the excommunication decrees.The relation of the Byzantine Church to the Roman may be described as one of growing estrangement from the 5th to the 11th century. In the early church three bishops stood forth prominently, principally from the political eminence of the cities in which they ruled—the bishops of Rome, Alexandria, and Antioch. The transfer of the seat of empire from Rome to Constantinople and the later eclipse of Alexandria andAntioch as battlegrounds of Islam and Christianity promoted the importance of Constantinople. Concurrently, the theological calmness of the West, in contrast to the often violent theological disputes that troubled the Eastern patriarchates, strengthened the position of the Roman popes, who made increasing claims to preeminence. But this preeminence, or rather the Roman idea of what was involved in it, was never acknowledged in the East. To press it upon the Eastern patriarchs was to prepare the way for separation; to insist upon it in times of irritation was to cause a schism.The theological genius of the East was different from that of the West. The Eastern theology had its roots in Greek philosophy, whereas a great deal of Western theology was based on Roman law. This gave rise to misunderstandings and at last led to two widely separate ways of regarding and defining one important doctrine—the procession of the Holy Spirit from the Father or from the Father and the Son—with the Roman churches, without consulting the East, incorporating the Son into their creed. The Eastern churches alsoresented the Roman enforcement of clerical celibacy, the limitation of the right of confirmation to the bishop, and the use of unleavened bread in the Eucharist.Political jealousies and interests intensified the disputes; and at last, after many premonitory symptoms, the final break came in 1054, when Pope Leo IX struck at Michael Cerularius and his followers with an excommunication and when the Patriarch retaliated with a similar excommunication. There had been mutual excommunications before, but they had not resulted in permanent schisms. At the time there seemed possibilities of reconciliation, but the rift grew wider; in particular, the Greeks were bitterly antagonized by such events as the Latin capture of Constantinople in 1204. Western pleas for reunion (on Western terms), such as those at the Council of Lyon (1274) or the Council of Ferrara-Florence (1439), were rejected by the Byzantines. The schism has never been healed.2 12-tone musiclarge body of music, written roughly since World War I, that uses the so-called 12-tone method or technique of composition. The Austrian-born composer Arnold Schoenberg is credited with the invention of this technique, although other composers (e.g., the American composer Charles Ives and the Austrian Josef Hauer) anticipated Schoenberg's invention by writing music that in a few respects was similar technically to his 12-tone music.Between 1912 and 1922 Schoenberg came to realize that he was searching for a new method of composition that would provide a new basis for musical structure to replace the old basis of tonality, which he felt was being stretched and distorted too much to remain a unifying structural principle. Instead of using 1 or 2 tones as main points of focus for an entire composition (as key centres in tonal music), Schoenberg suggested using all 12 tones “related only to one another.” In such a system, unlike tonality, no notes would predominate as focal points, nor would any hierarchy of importance be assigned to the individual tones.The new unifying principle in composition would then arise from the particular order given to a collection of the 12 tones, an order that would be different for each composition. The basic order for any one composition came to be known as its basic set, its 12-tone row, or its 12-tone series, all of which terms are synonymous. The basic set for Schoenberg's Wind Quintet (1924) is E–G–A–B–C–C–B–D–E–F–A –F; for his String Quartet No. 4 (1936) it is D–C –A–B–F–E–E–C–A–G–F–B.The basic set is not a theme, for it has no specific shape, rhythm, or loudness. It is a backbone, a musical idea that permeates the composition in which it is used. Because of the various principles of composing and manipulating the basic set recognized by Schoenberg and others, it is not often possible nor even desirable to hear the basic set when the composition is performed. This situation has led many people to attack Schoenberg's method as unmusical and as mathematical madness. Such views seem unjustifiable, because, as Schoenberg pointed out, his method specifies only a tiny fraction of the total nature of acomposition—certainly no more than composing with tonality specifies.Schoenberg's best-known pupils were the Austrian composers Anton von Webern and Alban Berg, each of whom wrote 12-tone music. Neither used the idea of the basic set in the same manner as Schoenberg did, and their music differs greatly in many respects from each other's and from Schoenberg's. Other important composers include the Russian-born Igor Stravinsky, the American Roger Sessions, the Austrian-born Ernst Krenek, the Italian Luigi Dallapiccola, and the German Hans Werner Henze. Many, such as Stravinsky (who had earlier criticized the approach severely) and Sessions, began writing 12-tone music after composing muchnon-12-tone music.Some composers also have used some of the notions behind the basic set while simultaneously writing tonal music; among them are Schoenberg himself, the Austrian-born Ernst Toch, the American Walter Piston, and the Russian Dmitry Shostakovich. The American composer Benjamin Johnston combined principles of 12-tone music withmicrotonality (use of intervals smaller than whole tones or semitones). There are no sufficient analytic techniques used by musicians in understanding 12-tone music, which is partly why it remains not very well understood as a total musical phenomenon by composers, performers, and listeners alike. Twelve-tone music is an example of serialism (q.v.) in music.3 1763, Proclamation ofproclamation declared by the British crown at the end of the French and Indian War in North America, mainly intended to conciliate the Indians by checking the encroachment of white settlers on their lands. After Indian grievances had resulted in the start of Pontiac's War (1763–64), British authorities determined to subdue intercolonial rivalries and abuses by dealing with Indian problems as a whole. To this end, the proclamation organized new British territories in America—the provinces of Quebec, East and West Florida, and Grenada (in the Windward Islands)—and a vast British-administered Indian reservation west of the Appalachians, from south of Hudson Bay to north of the Floridas. It forbade all white settlement on Indian territory, ordered those settlers already there to withdraw, and strictly limited future settlement. For the first time in the history of European colonization in the New World, the proclamation formalized the concept of Indian land titles, prohibiting issuance of patents to any lands claimed by a tribe unless the Indian title had first been extinguished by purchase or treaty.Although not intended to alter western boundaries, the proclamation was nevertheless offensive to the colonies as undue interference in their affairs. Treaties following Pontiac's War drew a more acceptable line of settlement (see Fort Stanwix, Treaties of), and the balance of territory north of the Ohio River was added to Quebec in 1774. The proclamation, however, failed to stem the westward movement of pioneers, whose disregard of its provisions evoked decades of continued Indian warfare throughout the area.4 1801, Concordat ofagreement reached on July 15, 1801, between Napoleon Bonaparte and papal and clerical representatives in both Rome and Paris, defining the status of the Roman Catholic Church in France and ending the breach caused by the church reforms and confiscations enacted during the French Revolution. The Concordat was formally promulgated on Easter day, 1802.In the agreement the First Consul (Napoleon) was given the right to nominate bishops; the bishoprics and parishes were redistributed; and the erection of seminaries was allowed. The Pope (Pius VII) condoned the actions of those who had acquired church property, and by way of compensation the government engaged to give the bishops and curés suitable salaries. The government added to it unilateral provisions of Gallican tendencies, which were known as the Organic Articles. After having been the law of the church of France for a century, it was denounced by the French government in 1905, when by the “Separation Law” church and state were sundered.5 1812, War ofIntroductionBattle between the frigates HMS Shannon and USS Chesapeake off Boston during the War …Theatre map for the War of 1812. Click on one hyperlink for a detailed map of the major battles in …(June 18, 1812–Feb. 17, 1815), conflict fought between the United States and Great Britain over British violations of U.S. maritime rights. It ended with the exchange of ratifications of the Treaty of Ghent.Major causes of the warThe tensions that caused the War of 1812 arose from the French revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars (1792–1815). During this nearly constant conflict between France and Britain, American interests were injured by each of the two countries' endeavours to block the United States from trading with the other.American shipping initially prospered from trade with the French and Spanish empires, although the British countered the U.S. claim that “free ships make free goods” with the belated enforcement of the so-called Rule of 1756 (trade not permitted in peacetime would not be allowed in wartime). The Royal Navy did enforce the act from 1793 to 1794, especially in the Caribbean Sea, before the signing of the Jay Treaty(Nov. 19, 1794). Under the primary terms of the treaty, American maritime commerce was given trading privileges in England and the British East Indies, Britain agreed to evacuate forts still held in the Northwest Territory by June 1, 1796, and the Mississippi River was declared freely open to both countries. Although the treaty was ratified by both countries, it was highly unpopular in the United States and was one of the rallying points used by the pro-French Republicans, led by Thomas Jefferson and James Madison, in wresting power from the pro-British Federalists, led by George Washington and John Adams.After Jefferson became president in 1801, relations with Britain slowly deteriorated, and systematic enforcement of the Rule of 1756 resumed after 1805. Compounding this troubling development, the decisive British naval victory at the Battle of Trafalgar (Oct. 21, 1805) and efforts by the British to blockade French ports prompted the French emperor, Napoleon, to cut off Britain from European and American trade. The Berlin Decree (Nov. 21, 1806) established Napoleon's Continental System, which impinged on U.S. neutral rights by designating ships that visited British ports as enemy vessels. The British responded with Orders in Council(Nov. 11, 1807) that required neutral ships to obtain licenses at English ports before trading with France or French colonies. In turn, France announced the Milan Decree (Dec. 17, 1807), which strengthened the Berlin Decreeby authorizing the capture of any neutral vessel that had submitted to search by the British. Consequently, American ships that obeyed Britain faced capture by the French in European ports, and if they complied with Napoleon's Continental System, they could fall prey to the Royal Navy.The Royal Navy's use of impressment to keep its ships fully crewed also provoked Americans. The British accosted American merchant ships to seize alleged Royal Navy deserters, carrying off thousands of U.S. citizens into the British navy. In 1807 the frigate H.M.S. Leopard fired on the U.S. Navy frigate Chesapeake and seized four sailors, three of them U.S. citizens. London eventually apologized for this incident, but it came close to causing war at the time. Jefferson, however, chose to exert economic pressure against Britain and France by pushing Congress in December 1807 to pass the Embargo Act, which forbade all export shipping from U.S. ports and most imports from Britain.The Embargo Act hurt Americans more than the British or French, however, causing many Americans to defy it. Just before Jefferson left office in 1809, Congress replaced the Embargo Act with the Non-Intercourse Act, which exclusively forbade trade with Great Britain and France. This measure also proved ineffective, and it was replaced by Macon's Bill No.2 (May 1, 1810) that resumed trade with all nations but stipulated that if either Britain or France dropped commercial restrictions, the United States would revive nonintercourse against the other. In August, Napoleon insinuated that he would exempt American shipping from the Berlin and Milan decrees. Although the British demonstrated that French restrictions continued, U.S. Pres. James Madison reinstated nonintercourse against Britain in November 1810, thereby moving one step closer to war.Britain's refusal to yield on neutral rights derived from more than the emergency of the European war. British manufacturing and shipping interests demanded that the Royal Navy promote and sustain British trade against Yankee competitors. The policy born of that attitude convinced many Americans that they were being consigned to a de facto colonial status. Britons, on the other hand, denounced American actions that effectively made the United States a participant in Napoleon's Continental System.Events on the U.S. northwestern frontier fostered additional friction. Indian fears over American encroachment coincidentally became conspicuous as Anglo-American tensions grew. Shawnee brothers Tecumseh and Tenskwatawa (The Prophet) attracted followers arising from this discontent and attempted to form an Indian confederation to counteract American expansion. Although Maj. Gen. Isaac Brock, the British commander of Upper Canada (modern Ontario), had orders to avoid worsening American frontier problems, American settlers blamed British intrigue forheightened tensions with Indians in the Northwest Territory. As war loomed, Brock sought to augment his meagre regular and Canadian militia forces with Indian allies, which was enough to confirm the worst fears of American settlers. Brock's efforts were aided in the fall of 1811, when Indiana territorial governor William Henry Harrison fought the Battle of Tippecanoe and destroyed the Indian settlement at Prophet's Town (near modern Battle Ground, Ind.). Harrison's foray convinced most Indians in the Northwest Territory that their only hope of stemming further encroachments by American settlers lay with the British. American settlers, in turn, believed that Britain's removal from Canada would end their Indian problems. Meanwhile, Canadians suspected that American expansionists were using Indian unrest as an excuse for a war of conquest.Under increasing pressure, Madison summoned the U.S. Congress into session in November 1811. Pro-war western and southern Republicans (War Hawks) assumed a vocal role, especially after Kentucky War Hawk Henry Clay was elected speaker of the House of Representatives. Madison sent a war message to the U.S. Congress on June 1, 1812, and signed the declaration of war on June 18, 1812. The vote seriously divided the House (79–49) and was gravely close in the Senate (19–13). Because seafaring New Englanders opposed the war, while westerners and southerners supported it, Federalists accused war advocates of expansionism under the ruse of protecting American maritime rights. Expansionism, however, was not as much a motive as was the desire to defend American honour. The United States attacked Canada because it was British, but no widespread aspiration existed to incorporate the region. The prospect of taking East and West Florida from Spain encouraged southern support for the war, but southerners, like westerners, were sensitive about the United States's reputation in the world. Furthermore, British commercial restrictions hurt American farmers by barring their produce from Europe. Regions seemingly removed from maritime concerns held a material interest in protecting neutral shipping. “Free trade and sailors' rights” was not an empty phrase for those Americans.The onset of war both surprised and chagrined the British government, especially because it was preoccupied with the fight against France. In addition, political changes in Britain had already moved the government to assume a conciliatory posture toward the United States. Prime Minister Spencer Perceval's assassination on May 11, 1812, brought to power a more moderate Tory government under Lord Liverpool. British West Indies planters had been complaining for years about the interdiction of U.S. trade, and their growing influence, along with a deepening recession in Great Britain, convinced the Liverpool ministry that the Orders in Councilwere averse to British interests. On June 16, two days before the United States declared war, the Orders were suspended.Some have viewed the timing of this concession as a lost opportunity for peace because slow transatlantic communication meant a month's delay in delivering the news to Washington. Yet, because Britain's impressment policy remained in place and frontier Indian wars continued, in all likelihood the repeal of the Orders alone would not have prevented war.WarNeither the British in Canada nor the United States were prepared for war. Americans were inordinately optimistic in 1812. William Eustis, the U.S. secretary of war, stated, “We can take the Canadas without soldiers, we have only to send officers into the province and the people…will rally round our standard.” Henry Clay said that “the militia of Kentucky are alone competent to place Montreal and Upper Canada at your feet.” And Thomas Jefferson famously wroteThe acquisition of Canada this year, as far as the neighborhood of Quebec, will be a mere matter of marching, and will give us experience for the attack of Halifax the next, and the final expulsion of England from the American continent.The death of British commander Isaac Brock at the Battle of Queenston Heights (Oct. 13, 1812), …The British government, preoccupied with the European conflict, saw American hostilities as a bothersome distraction, resulting in a paucity of resources in men, supplies, and naval presence until late in the event. As the British in Canada conducted operations under the shadow of scarcity, their only consolation was an American military malaise. Michigan territorial governor William Hull led U.S. forces into Canada from Detroit, but Isaac Brock and Tecumseh's warriors chased Hull back across the border and frightened him into surrendering Detroit on Aug. 16, 1812, without firing a shot—behaviour that Americans and even Brock's officers found disgraceful. The Northwest subsequently fell prey to Indian raids and British incursions led by Maj. Gen. Henry Procter. Hull's replacement, William Henry Harrison, could barely defend a few scattered outposts. On the northeastern border, U.S. Brig. Gen. Henry Dearborn could not attack Montreal because ofuncooperative New England militias. U.S. forces under Stephen van Rensselaer crossed the Niagara River to attack Queenston on Oct. 13, 1812, but ultimately were defeated by a stiff British defense organized by Brock, who was killed during the fight. U.S. Gen. Alexander Smyth's subsequent invasion attempts on the Niagara were abortive fiascoes.In 1813, Madison replaced Dearborn with Maj. Gens. James Wilkinson and Wade Hampton, an awkward arrangement made worse by a complicated invasion plan against Montreal. The generals refused to coordinate their efforts, and neither came close to Montreal. To the west, however, American Oliver Hazard Perry's Lake Erie squadron won a great victory off Put-in-Bay on Sept. 10, 1813, against Capt. Robert Barclay. The battle opened the way for Harrison to retake Detroit and defeat Procter's British and Indian forces at the Battle of the Thames (Oct. 5). Tecumseh was killed during the battle, shattering his confederation and the Anglo-Indian alliance. Indian anger continued elsewhere, however, especially in the southeast where the Creek War erupted in 1813 between Creek Indian nativists (known as Red Sticks) and U.S. forces. The war also took an ugly turn late in the year, when U.S. forces evacuating the Niagara Peninsula razed the Canadian village of Newark, prompting the British commander, Gordon Drummond, to retaliate along the New York frontier, leaving communities such as Buffalo in smoldering ruins.Early in the war, the small U.S. navy boosted sagging American morale as officers such as Isaac Hull, Stephen Decatur, and William Bainbridge commanded heavy frigates in impressive single-ship actions. The British Admiralty responded by instructing captains to avoid individual contests with Americans, and within a year the Royal Navy had blockaded important American ports, bottling up U.S. frigates. British Adm. George Cockburn also conducted raids on the shores of Chesapeake Bay. In 1814, Britain extended its blockade from New England to Georgia, and forces under John Sherbrooke occupied parts of Maine.By 1814, capable American officers, such as Jacob Brown, Winfield Scott, and Andrew Jackson, had replaced ineffective veterans from the American Revolution. On March 27, 1814, Jackson defeated the Red Stick Creeks at the Battle of Horseshoe Bend in Alabama, ending the Creek War. That spring, after Brown crossed the Niagara River and took Fort Erie, Brig. Gen. Phineas Riall advanced to challenge the American invasion, but American regulars commanded by Scott repulsed him at the Battle of Chippewa(July 5, 1814). In turn, Brown retreated when Commodore Isaac Chauncey's Lake Ontario squadron failed to rendezvous with the army, and during this retrograde the war's costliest engagement occurred at the Battle of Lundy's Lane (July 25). Riall, reinforced by Drummond, fought the Americans to a bloody stalemate in which each side suffered more than 800 casualties before Brown's army withdrew to Fort Erie.∙Battle of Plattsburgh Bay, Sept. 11, 1814, in which a British squadron under George Downie was …∙G. Thompson's wood engraving of ―The Burning of the City of Washington‖ during the War …In 1814, Napoleon's defeat allowed sizable British forces to come to America. That summer, veterans under Canadian governor-general George Prevost marched south along the shores of Lake Champlain into New York, but they returned to Canada after Thomas Macdonough defeated a British squadron under Capt. George Downie at the Battle of Plattsburgh Bay (see Plattsburgh), N.Y. (Sept. 11, 1814). British raids in Chesapeake Bay directed by Adm. Alexander Cochrane were more successful. British Gen. Robert Ross captured Washington (August 24) and burned government buildings, including the United States Capitol and the Executive Mansion (now known as the White House). The British justified this action as retaliation for the American destruction of York (modern Toronto), the capital of Upper Canada, the previous year. The British assault on Baltimore (September 12–14) foundered when Americans fended off an attack at Northpoint and withstood the naval bombardment of Fort McHenry, an action that inspired Francis Scott Key's "Star-Spangled Banner." Ross was killed at Baltimore, and the British left Chesapeake Bay to plan an offensive against New Orleans.Meanwhile, New England Federalists, angry about the war's effect on commerce, gathered at Hartford, Conn., to propose ways of redressing their grievances. Convening from Dec. 15, 1814 to Jan. 5, 1815, the Hartford Convention adopted moderate resolutions, but its mere existence prompted other parts of the country to question New England's patriotism and Federalist loyalty, spelling eventual doom to the party.Final stages of the war and the aftermathImmediately after the war started, the tsar of Russia offered to mediate. London refused, but early British efforts for an armistice revealed a willingness to negotiate so that Britain could turn its full attention to Napoleon. Talks began at Ghent (in modern Belgium) in August 1814, but, with France defeated, the British stalled while waiting for news of a decisive victory in America. Most Britons were angry that the United States had become an unwitting ally of Napoleon, but even that sentiment was half-hearted among a people who had been at war in Europe for more than 20 years. Consequently, after learning of Plattsburgh and Baltimore and upon the advice of the Duke of Wellington, commander of the British army at the Battle of Waterloo, the British government moved to make peace. Americans abandoned demands about ending impressment (the end of the European war meant its cessation anyway), and the British dropped attempts to change the Canadian boundary and establish an Indian barrier state in the Northwest. The commissioners signed a treaty on Dec. 24, 1814. Based on the status quo antebellum (the situation before the war), the Treaty of Ghent did not resolve the issues that had caused the war, but at that point Britain was too weary to win it, and the U.S. government deemed not losing it a tolerable substitute for victory. Nevertheless, many Americans became convinced that they had won the contest.Unaware of the treaty, British forces under Edward Pakenham assaulted New Orleans on Jan. 8, 1815, and were soundly defeated by Andrew Jackson's ragtag army, an event that contributed to the notion of a U.S. triumph. The unanimous ratification by the U.S. Senate of the Treaty of Ghent and the celebrations that followed cloaked the fact that the United States had achieved none of its objectives.Contention in the United States had hobbled the war effort, and domestic disaffection had menaced the Union, but after the war a surge of patriotism inspired Americans to pursue national goals. Contrary to American expectations, Canada remained British and eventually developed its own national identity, partly from pride over repulsing U.S. invasions. Meanwhile, Britain's influence among the northwestern Indians was forever ended, and American expansion in that region proceeded unchecked. In the South, the Creek War opened a large part of that region for settlement and led to the events that persuaded Spain to cede Florida to the United States in 1821.The most enduring international consequence of the war was in the arbitration clauses of Ghent, perhaps the treaty's most important feature. Its arrangements to settle outstanding disagreements established methodsthat could adapt to changing U.S. administrations, British ministries, and world events. There lay the seeds of an Anglo-American comity that would weather future disagreements to sustain the longest unfortified border in the world.David S. HeidlerJeanne T. HeidlerAdditional ReadingDavid S. Heidler and Jeanne T. Heidler, The War of 1812 (2002), contains essays that examine the causes of the war, the diplomatic ramifications, and the military conduct of the conflict. David S. Heidler and Jeanne T. Heidler(eds.), Encyclopedia of the War of 1812(1997, reissued 2004), is the only all-inclusive reference work on the war that examines its causes as well as the social, military, political, and diplomatic facets of the war.Donald R. Hickey, The War of 1812: A Forgotten Conflict (1989, reissued 1995), is a good one-volume narrative of the war that emphasizes the politics of the clash. J.C.A. Stagg, Mr. Madison's War: Politics, Diplomacy, and Warfare in the Early American Republic, 1783–1830(1983), is an exemplary examination of the civil-military relations in the United States during the war.Richard V. Barbuto, Niagara 1814: America Invades Canada (2000), offers an excellent analysis of this pivotal theatre of the war. J. Mackay Hitsman, The Incredible War of 1812: A Military History, rev. ed. updated by Donald E. Graves (1999), examines the war on the border from the Canadian viewpoint.Pierre Berton, Flames Across the Border: The Canadian-American Tragedy, 1813–1814(1981, reissued 2001), views the beginning of Canadian national identity as originating in the war on the border.Robert Gardner (ed.), The Naval War of 1812 (1998), provides some of the latest scholarship on the naval war. C. Edward Skeen, Citizen Soldiers in the War of 1812 (1999), examines the role of militia in the war.Sandy Antal, A Wampum Denied: Procter's War of 1812(1997), is an interesting revisionist examination of Britain's war in the Northwest that sees British efforts there as largely successful.。

不列颠百科全书

不列颠百科全书

【内容简介】本书又称《大英百科全书》,第一版于1768-1771年创始于苏格兰爱丁堡。

20世纪初该书版权归美国人所有,现由总部设在美国芝加哥的不列颠百科全书出版公司。

该书素以学术性强、权威性高著称,也侵泄 督缱钍煜さ挠⑽陌倏迫 椤8檬榈?5版于1974年问世,共30卷,1985年增至32卷,分为4个部分:《索引》2卷;《百科类目》1卷,是全书知识分类目录;《百科简编》12卷,有短条目80000余条,又是一部可供单独使用的简明百科全书;《百科详编》17卷,有长条目670余条,系统地介绍各学科知识、重要人物、历史、地理等。

该书每年增补和修改部分条目,出一新版,同时出版《年鉴》1卷。

不列颠百科全书》国际中文版是中国大百科全书出版和美国不列颠百科全书公司最新合作的新版本。

这是一部大型的综合性参考工具书。

全书共20卷,1-18卷为条目正文,19-20卷为索引;共收条目81600余条,附有图片15300余幅,地图250幅;总字数约4300万字。

前言:《不列颠百科全书》国际中文版是中国大百科全书出版社和美国不列颠百科全书公司最新合作的新版本。

这是一部大型的综合性参考工具书。

全书共20卷,1~18卷为条目正文,19~20卷为索引;共收条目81600余条,附有图片15300余幅,地图250幅;总字数约4300万字。

《不列颠百科全书》又称《大英百科全书》,第一版于1768~1771年创始于苏格兰爱丁堡。

20世纪初该书版权归美国人所有,现由总部设在美国芝加哥的不列颠百科全书公司出版。

该书素以学术性强、权威性高著称,也是中国知识界最熟悉的英文百科全书。

该书第15版于1974年问世,共30卷,1985年增至32卷,分为4个部分:《索引》2卷;《百科类目》1卷,是全书知识分类目录;《百科简编》12卷,有短条目80000 余条,又是一部可供单独使用的简明百科全书;《百科详编》17卷,有长条目670余条,系统地介绍各学科知识、重要人物、历史、地理等。

大英百科全书 中文

大英百科全书 中文

大英百科全书中文
【最新版】
目录
1.大英百科全书的概述
2.大英百科全书的内容特点
3.大英百科全书在我国的影响和应用
正文
大英百科全书,全名《不列颠百科全书》,是英语世界中最具权威性和影响力的百科全书之一。

该书始于 1768 年,至今已经发行了多个版本,成为了全球最著名的大型百科全书之一。

大英百科全书的内容特点在于其全面性和权威性。

全书收录了各个学科领域的知识,内容涵盖了自然科学、社会科学、人文科学等各个领域,同时也关注历史和当代的重大事件。

它的作者队伍包括了各个领域的专家和学者,每一篇文章都经过了严格的审稿和修订,以确保其内容的准确性和可靠性。

在我国,大英百科全书的影响和应用非常广泛。

它被视为一部重要的参考工具书,被广泛应用于学术研究、教育培训、图书馆藏等领域。

许多学者和研究人员都依赖于大英百科全书来获取权威和可靠的信息。

同时,大英百科全书也是一部重要的文化传承工具,可以帮助读者了解全球各地的文化和历史。

第1页共1页。

大不列颠百科全书网络学术版

大不列颠百科全书网络学术版

互动工具栏上的每一篇文章提供了访问所有相关的资源: “其他参考”
© 2013 Encyclopæ dia Britannica, Inc.
June 2013 | Peer – enhanced learning
The interactive tool bar on every article provides access to all related resources : “Related Articles” 每一篇文章互动工具栏 提供相关文章的衔接
© 2013 Encyclopæ dia Britannica, Inc.
June 2013 | Peer – enhanced learning
Y ou can edit any encyclopedia article as the basis for your research 读者可以任何百科全书文章为研究基础进行编 辑,
© 2013 Encyclopæ dia Britannica, Inc.
June 2013 | Confident teachers, Confident students, Confident societies
Search results gives you both the “Did Y ou Mean” results as well as all results where your query appears in the text 检索结果也包括了与查询主题相关的内容
© 2013 Encyclopæ dia Britannica, Inc.
June 2013 | Peer – enhanced learning
Recent Contributors

大英百科全书线上繁体中文版

大英百科全书线上繁体中文版

Case 2
• Social members experience various modes of control exerted over them. “Where human beings live or work in compact groups, in which they are personally known and to which they are tied by feeling of personal loyalty (the kind that sociologists call primary groups), very potent and simultaneously very subtle mechanisms of control are constantly brought to bear upon the actual or potential deviant.” (Penguin, 1991. p. 87) These are the mechanisms of persuasion, ridicule, gossip and opprobrium.
What is plagiarism?
• “Using any words or ideas without giving credit to the source” (Harris, 2001: p. 26)
• Plagiarism (剽竊*) ≠ Copying (抄襲)
*大英百科全書線上繁體中文版 (/)
turnitin
/static/plagiarism.html
• The CU Way: CUPIDE
.hk/example/
When to reference?

大不列颠百科全书网络版

大不列颠百科全书网络版
21
GOOGLE MAPS技術加持
BOL的世界地图(World Atlas)持續以Google Maps技術提供使用者更好用的互动 地图與百科內容。
更多详细的资料
22
高解析度影像局部放大功能 利用高解析度影像局部放大工具觀看影像細部內容,提供讀者進階
影像使用的需求。
23
首页介绍
24
检索列
研究工具列 研究工具列 热门主题精选
Encyclopedia Britannica Online Academic Edition (BOL)
大不列颠百科全书网络版1来自• 不列颠百科全书的历史 • 不列颠百科全书数据库的发展和内容 • 不列颠百科全书网络版使用介绍
2
传统百科全书: – 源于古希腊文enkyklios paideia,原意是「全面的教育」 或「完整的知识系统」 。网罗人类全部知识以做为教 育学习之用的意思。
2007年编辑群们替读者开启一扇通往动物世界的大门。以爱 护动物、关怀动物为出发点,展开多面向的议题探讨。
20
• 新詞條的加入與文章修改(New and Revised Articles) • 隨著時代性的新詞出現,BOL持續加入新詞條的介紹,如skype。
對舊內容亦依適切性等因素考量做出不同的修改與更正。
不列颠精选网站 (The Web's Best Sites)
– 超过166,000专家编辑群精选推荐网站
韦氏字典&辞典 (Merriam‐Webster’s Dictionary and Thesaurus)
– 超过225,000个词条,及340,000种词类变化
19
经典文献(Ebooks & Primary Sources)

《大英百科全书》(简编)将出版中译本

《大英百科全书》(简编)将出版中译本

《大英百科全书》(简编)将出版中译本

【期刊名称】《辞书研究》
【年(卷),期】1981(000)004
【摘要】<正> 美国大英百科全书出版公司和中国大百科全书出版社的代表已商定:《大英百科全书》(简编)中译本即将编译出版,编译工作将在由中美学者共同组成的联合编辑委员会的指导下进行。

《大英百科全书》(简编)中译本分成八卷,约八百万字。

其特点是条目简
【总页数】1页(P111-111)
【作者】家
【作者单位】
【正文语种】中文
【中图分类】H0
【相关文献】
1.瓦尔加对于当前资本主义世界经济若干问题的解答——介绍瓦尔加著“帝国主义经济与政治基本问题”第二版(1957年版)中译本,1958年10月人民出版社出版,599页。

[J], 吴半农
2.台湾停止翻译出版《大英百科全书》 [J], 温姗
3.台湾正在翻译出版大英百科全书 [J], 无
4.侵蚀与抵抗:数字时代传统出版社的突围——以大英百科全书为例 [J], 孙忠
5.《剑桥中华民国史》(中译本)由社科出版社出版 [J], 文一
因版权原因,仅展示原文概要,查看原文内容请购买。

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大英百科全書線上中文版
• 知識庫內容 世界口碑第一百科全書,2百多年來首度發表中文線上版 全世界詞條最多、內容最精確的綜合性百科全書 七萬多個詞條、四千多萬中文字、一萬多幅圖表 二百個影音檔、三百多幅地圖 六種檢索方式:全文檢索、模糊檢索、同音字檢索、分類 檢索、筆劃檢索、地圖檢索、外文標題檢索
大英百科全書線上中文版
• 六種主要瀏覽方式
1.分類瀏覽:百科全書裡的詞條目都有各自的知識領域 分類,使用者可以瀏覽這些分類來找出相關詞條。第 一層最大的分類共有九類:生命科學、自然科學、社 會科學、工程技術、歷史、地理、哲學與宗教、人文 藝術、運動與休閒娛樂。
大英百科全書線上中文版
• 六種主要瀏覽方式
大英百科全書的歷史2
◆由於法國百科全書的出版,激發了歐洲各國紛紛跟進, 其中最為成功、最為著名的就是青出於藍的「大英百 科全書」(Encyclopedia Britannica)。大英的第一版 在1768年的愛丁堡誕生,全書到1771年即已全部出齊, 共有三冊,一上市就銷售一空。隨著每個時代的專家 學者的加入,一版一版的改寫、修訂與擴充,其地位 與價值也逐漸提高。
進入本知識庫之後,您將看到下列主畫面:
本週最哈 檢索區 分類瀏覽
其它瀏覽方式
更新詞條 字典服務 台灣歷史人物
上網操作介紹
大英百科全書/線上中文版
Encyclopedia Bri◆西元1751年到1780年,法國大學者狄德羅 (Denis Diderot 1713-1784),網羅了當時啟蒙時代的184位學者 專家以三十年時間編印完成的「科學藝術及專業知識百 科全書」,是全世界第一套「現代百科全書」。
大英百科全書的歷史3
◆ 1901年美國出版商買下大英百科全書的版權,之後的 出版與編輯工作逐步轉移到美國,並投入大量人力物 力,邀集近140個國家和地區的4000位學者專家參與撰 述,大量收入歐洲以外地區的資料,終於由「國家地 域性的百科全書」躍昇為「世界性的百科全書」,確 立了它在百科全書界中最為崇高,最具權威的地位。
大英百科全書線上中文版
• 產品源起1 –大英百科編輯部,自2000年開始使用數位化的百科全 書編輯系統(commission system),以一個最大的核 心資料庫為中心,核心資料庫又區分為各個知識領域 的資料庫。
–每個知識領域都有一組編輯人,與世界各地共4000名 專家學者以online方式進行詞條撰寫及審訂
大英百科全書線上中文版
• 產品源起2 –編輯工作主要分為二種: creating updating (中文版亦每季固定更新)
–遠流集團智慧藏公司,獨家取得大英百科全書出版 社授權為台灣地區internet中文版的總代理,並設 置中文資料庫主機於智慧藏公司。
大英百科全書線上中文版
• 七種主要檢索方式 全文檢索 同音字檢索 分類檢索 筆劃檢索 地圖檢索 外文標題檢索 注音檢索
2.按筆畫瀏覽:使用者可依照每個詞條第一個中文字 的筆劃來瀏覽相關的百科全書詞條。 3.按英文字首瀏覽:使用者可依照每個詞條第一個英 文字的字首來瀏覽相關的百科全書詞條。 4.按注音瀏覽:使用者可依照每個詞條第一個中文字 的注音來瀏覽相關的百科全書詞條。
大英百科全書線上中文版
• 六種主要瀏覽方式
5.按世界地圖瀏覽:使用者可從世界地圖上,一層一層 瀏覽到想看的國家地圖及其相關詞條。 6.按多媒體瀏覽:使用者可直接進入多媒體索引,依 照各學科分類瀏覽其多媒體檔案(圖像、影片、或動 畫)。
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