The Catholic Encyclopedia, also referred to today as the Old Catholic Encyclopedia, is an English-language encyclopedia published in 1913 by The Encyclopedia Press. It was designed to give "authoritative information on the entire cycle of Catholic interests, action and doctrine".
On issues that divide Catholicism from other Churches and Protestant ecclesial communities, the text consistently presents matters from the Catholic point of view. Since the encyclopedia was first undertaken in 1913, however, some of its entries are not up-to-date, either with respect to the secular domain or to the Catholic ecclesiastical world. In particular, it predates the Second Vatican Council, which introduced significant changes in Catholic practice.
The editors, all situated in the United States, had their first editorial meeting at the office of The Messenger, in West Sixteenth Street, New York City. The text received a Nihil Obstat ("nothing hinders") from an official censor Remy Lafort on November 1, 1908 and an Imprimatur ("let it be printed") from John Cardinal Farley, who was Archbishop of New York at the time. This review process was presumably accelerated by the reuse of older authorized publications. In addition to frequent informal conferences and constant communication by letters, the editors subsequently held 134 formal meetings to consider the plan, scope and progress of the work, culminating in publication on April 19, 1913. A supplement was published in 1922.
The encyclopedia was later updated under the auspices of The Catholic University of America and a 17-volume New Catholic Encyclopedia was first published in 1967, and then in 2002. The New Catholic Encyclopedia is available online at some libraries.
In 1993, Kevin Knight, a 26-year-old resident of Denver, Colorado, was inspired during the visit of Pope John Paul II to that city for World Youth Day, to launch a project to publish the 1913 edition of the encyclopedia on the internet. Knight founded the website New Advent to house the undertaking. Volunteers from the United States, Canada, France, and Brazil helped in the transcription of the original material. The site went online in 1995, and the transcription was completed in 1997.
The 1922 supplement to the Encyclopedia is also in the public domain, but as of 2005 has not been placed on-line.
1913 books | Online encyclopedias | Public domain encyclopedias | Roman Catholic media
Catholic Encyclopedia | Enciclopedia Católica | Référence:Catholic Encyclopedia | Catholic Encyclopedia | האנציקלופדיה הקתולית | Catholic Encyclopedia | カトリック百科事典 | 天主教百科全書
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Catholic Encyclopedia".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world