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Wikisource is an online wiki-based digital library of free-content textual sources operated by the Wikimedia Foundation. Wikisource is the name of the project as a whole; it is also the name for each instance of that project, one for each language. The project's aim is to host all forms of free text, in many languages, and translations. Originally conceived as an archive to store useful or important historical texts, it has expanded to become a general-content library. The project officially began on November 24, 2003, under the name Project Sourceberg, a play on Project Gutenberg. The name Wikisource was adopted later that year and it received its own domain name.

Wikisource
image
Screenshot
image
Detail of the Wikisource multilingual portal main page
Type of site
Digital library
Available inMultilingual (79 active sub-domains)
OwnerWikimedia Foundation
Created byUser-generated
URLwikisource.org
CommercialNo
RegistrationOptional
LaunchedNovember 24, 2003; 21 years ago (2003-11-24)
Current statusOnline

The project holds works that are either in the public domain or freely licensed: professionally published works or historical source documents, not vanity products. Verification was initially made offline, or by trusting the reliability of other digital libraries. Now works are supported by online scans via the ProofreadPage extension, which ensures the reliability and accuracy of the project's texts.

Some individual Wikisources, each representing a specific language, now only allow works backed up with scans. While the bulk of its collection are texts, Wikisource as a whole hosts other media, from comics to film to audiobooks. Some Wikisources allow user-generated annotations, subject to the specific policies of the Wikisource in question. The project has come under criticism for lack of reliability but it is also cited by organisations such as the National Archives and Records Administration.

As of May 2025, there are Wikisource subdomains active for 79 languages comprising a total of 6,448,516 articles and 2,638 recently active editors.

History

The original concept for Wikisource was as storage for useful or important historical texts. These texts were intended to support Wikipedia articles, by providing primary evidence and original source texts, and as an archive in its own right. The collection was initially focused on important historical and cultural material, distinguishing it from other digital archives like Project Gutenberg.

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The original Wikisource logo

The project was originally called Project Sourceberg during its planning stages (a play on words for Project Gutenberg).

In 2001, there was a dispute on Wikipedia regarding the addition of primary-source materials, leading to edit wars over their inclusion or deletion. Project Sourceberg was suggested as a solution to this. In describing the proposed project, user The Cunctator said, "It would be to Project Gutenberg what Wikipedia is to Nupedia", soon clarifying the statement with "we don't want to try to duplicate Project Gutenberg's efforts; rather, we want to complement them. Perhaps Project Sourceberg can mainly work as an interface for easily linking from Wikipedia to a Project Gutenberg file, and as an interface for people to easily submit new work to PG." Initial comments were skeptical, with Larry Sanger questioning the need for the project, writing "The hard question, I guess, is why we are reinventing the wheel, when Project Gutenberg already exists? We'd want to complement Project Gutenberg—how, exactly?", and Jimmy Wales adding "like Larry, I'm interested that we think it over to see what we can add to Project Gutenberg. It seems unlikely that primary sources should in general be editable by anyone — I mean, Shakespeare is Shakespeare, unlike our commentary on his work, which is whatever we want it to be."

The project began its activity at ps.wikipedia.org. The contributors understood the "PS" subdomain to mean either "primary sources" or Project Sourceberg. However, this resulted in Project Sourceberg occupying the subdomain of the Pashto Wikipedia (the ISO language code of the Pashto language is "ps").

Project Sourceberg officially launched on November 24, 2003, when it received its own temporary URL, at sources.wikipedia.org, and all texts and discussions hosted on ps.wikipedia.org were moved to the temporary address. A vote on the project's name changed it to Wikisource on December 6, 2003. Despite the change in name, the project did not move to its permanent URL (http://wikisource.org/) until July 23, 2004.

Logo and slogan

Since Wikisource was initially called "Project Sourceberg", its first logo was a picture of an iceberg. Two votes conducted to choose a successor were inconclusive, and the original logo remained until 2006. Finally, for both legal and technical reasons—because the picture's license was inappropriate for a Wikimedia Foundation logo and because a photo cannot scale properly—a stylized vector iceberg inspired by the original picture was mandated to serve as the project's logo.

The first prominent use of Wikisource's slogan—The Free Library—was at the project's multilingual portal, when it was redesigned based upon the Wikipedia portal on August 27, 2005, (historical version). As in the Wikipedia portal the Wikisource slogan appears around the logo in the project's ten largest languages.

Clicking on the portal's central images (the iceberg logo in the center and the "Wikisource" heading at the top of the page) links to a list of translations for Wikisource and The Free Library in 60 languages.

Tools built

image
The ProofreadPage extension in action

A MediaWiki extension called ProofreadPage was developed for Wikisource by developer ThomasV to improve the vetting of transcriptions by the project. This displays pages of scanned works side by side with the text relating to that page, allowing the text to be proofread and its accuracy later verified independently by any other editor. Once a book, or other text, has been scanned, the raw images can be modified with image processing software to correct for page rotations and other problems. The retouched images can then be converted into a PDF or DjVu file and uploaded to either Wikisource or Wikimedia Commons.

This system assists editors in ensuring the accuracy of texts on Wikisource. The original page scans of completed works remain available to any user so that errors may be corrected later and readers may check texts against the originals. ProofreadPage also allows greater participation, since access to a physical copy of the original work is not necessary to be able to contribute to the project once images have been uploaded.[citation needed]

Milestones

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A student doing proof reading during her project at New Law College (Pune) India

Within two weeks of the project's official start at sources.wikipedia.org, over 1,000 pages had been created, with approximately 200 of these being designated as actual articles. On January 4, 2004, Wikisource welcomed its 100th registered user. In early July, 2004 the number of articles exceeded 2,400, and more than 500 users had registered.

On April 30, 2005, there were 2667 registered users (including 18 administrators) and almost 19,000 articles. The project passed its 96,000th edit that same day.[citation needed]

On November 27, 2005, the English Wikisource passed 20,000 text-units in its third month of existence, already holding more texts than did the entire project in April (before the move to language subdomains).

On May 10, 2006, the first Wikisource Portal was created.

On February 14, 2008, the English Wikisource passed 100,000 text-units with Chapter LXXIV of Six Months at the White House, a memoir by painter Francis Bicknell Carpenter.

In November, 2011, 250,000 text-units milestone was passed.

Library contents

image
Wikisource inclusion criteria expressed as a Venn diagram. Green indicates the best possible case, where the work satisfies all three primary requirements. Yellow indicates acceptable but not ideal cases.

Wikisource collects and stores in digital format previously published texts; including novels, non-fiction works, letters, speeches, constitutional and historical documents, laws and a range of other documents. All texts collected are either free of copyright or released under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. Texts in all languages are welcomed, as are translations. In addition to texts, Wikisource hosts material such as comics, films, recordings and spoken-word works. All texts held by Wikisource must have been previously published; the project does not host "vanity press" books or documents produced by its contributors.

A scanned source is preferred on many Wikisources and required on some. Most Wikisources will, however, accept works transcribed from offline sources or acquired from other digital libraries. The requirement for prior publication can also be waived in a small number of cases if the work is a source document of notable historical importance. The legal requirement for works to be licensed or free of copyright remains constant.

Annotations and translations – the difference to Wikibooks

The only original pieces accepted by Wikisource are annotations and translations. Wikisource, and its sister project Wikibooks, has the capacity for annotated editions of texts. On Wikisource, the annotations are supplementary to the original text, which remains the primary objective of the project. By contrast, on Wikibooks the annotations are primary, with the original text as only a reference or supplement, if present at all. Annotated editions are more popular on the German Wikisource. The project also accommodates translations of texts provided by its users. A significant translation on the English Wikisource is the Wiki Bible project, intended to create a new, "laissez-faire translation" of The Bible.

Structure

Language subdomains

A separate Hebrew version of Wikisource (he.wikisource.org) was created in August 2004. The need for a language-specific Hebrew website derived from the difficulty of typing and editing Hebrew texts in a left-to-right environment (Hebrew is written right-to-left). In the ensuing months, contributors in other languages including German requested their own wikis, but a December vote on the creation of separate language domains was inconclusive. Finally, a second vote that ended May 12, 2005, supported the adoption of separate language subdomains at Wikisource by a large margin, allowing each language to host its texts on its own wiki.

An initial wave of 14 languages was set up on August 23, 2005. The new languages did not include English, but the code en: was temporarily set to redirect to the main website (wikisource.org). At this point the Wikisource community, through a mass project of manually sorting thousands of pages and categories by language, prepared for a second wave of page imports to local wikis. On September 11, 2005, the wikisource.org wiki was reconfigured to enable the English version, along with 8 other languages that were created early that morning and late the night before. Three more languages were created on March 29, 2006, and then another large wave of 14 language domains was created on June 2, 2006.

Languages without subdomains are locally incubated. As of September 2020[update], 182 languages are hosted locally.

As of May 2025, there are Wikisource subdomains for 81 languages of which 79 are active and 2 are closed. The active sites have 6,448,516 articles and the closed sites have 13 articles. There are 5,055,580 registered users of which 2,638 are recently active.

The top ten Wikisource language projects by mainspace article count:

No. Language Wiki Good Total Edits Admins Users Active users Files
1 Polish pl 1,204,385 1,243,490 3,819,495 15 39,659 75 127
2 English en 1,084,502 4,630,549 15,087,677 21 3,168,603 443 16,624
3 Russian ru 626,840 1,103,044 5,528,303 5 127,210 97 32,965
4 French fr 610,354 4,476,098 15,133,639 16 154,154 239 3,750
5 German de 592,593 646,297 4,485,304 17 86,653 114 6,923
6 Chinese zh 477,992 1,151,028 2,534,148 8 113,277 154 230
7 Ukrainian uk 316,218 468,898 917,640 6 19,411 71 136
8 Hebrew he 247,280 1,654,675 2,929,056 16 42,438 101 553
9 Italian it 207,933 828,252 3,526,989 9 76,178 99 686
10 Spanish es 85,396 308,903 1,554,295 8 92,761 58 231

For a complete list with totals see Wikimedia Statistics:

wikisource.org

During the move to language subdomains, the community requested that the main wikisource.org website remain a functioning wiki, in order to serve three purposes:

  1. To be a multilingual coordination site for the entire Wikisource project in all languages. In practice, use of the website for multilingual coordination has not been heavy since the conversion to language domains. Nevertheless, there is some policy activity at the Scriptorium, and multilingual updates for news and language milestones at pages such as Wikisource:2007.
  2. To be a home for texts in languages without their own subdomains, each with its own local main page for self-organization. As a language incubator, the wiki currently provides a home for over 30 languages that do not yet have their own language subdomains. Some of these are very active, and have built libraries with hundreds of texts (such as Volapük).
  3. To provide direct, ongoing support by a local wiki community for a dynamic multilingual portal at its Main Page, for users who go to http://wikisource.org. The current Main Page portal was created on August 26, 2005, by ThomasV, who based it upon the Wikipedia portal.

The idea of a project-specific coordination wiki, first realized at Wikisource, also took hold in another Wikimedia project, namely at Wikiversity's Beta Wiki. Like wikisource.org, it serves Wikiversity coordination in all languages, and as a language incubator, but unlike Wikisource, its Main Page does not serve as its multilingual portal.

Reception

Personal explanation of Wikisource from a project participant

Wikipedia co-founder Larry Sanger criticised Wikisource and sister project Wiktionary in 2011, after he left the project, saying that their collaborative nature and technology means that there is no oversight by experts, and alleging that their content is therefore not reliable.

Bart D. Ehrman, a New Testament scholar and professor of religious studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, has criticised the English Wikisource's project to create a user-generated translation of the Bible saying "Democratization isn't necessarily good for scholarship."Richard Elliott Friedman, an Old Testament scholar and professor of Jewish studies at the University of Georgia, identified errors in the translation of the Book of Genesis as of 2008.

In 2010, Wikimedia France signed an agreement with the Bibliothèque nationale de France (National Library of France) to add scans from its own Gallica digital library to French Wikisource. Fourteen hundred public domain French texts were added to the Wikisource library as a result via upload to the Wikimedia Commons. The quality of the transcriptions, previously automatically generated by optical character recognition (OCR), was expected to be improved by Wikisource's human proofreaders.

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Wikisource has original works on the topic: National Archives and Records Administration Collection

In 2011, the English Wikisource received many high-quality scans of documents from the US National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) as part of their efforts "to increase the accessibility and visibility of its holdings." Processing and upload to Commons of these documents, along with many images from the NARA collection, was facilitated by a NARA Wikimedian in residence, Dominic McDevitt-Parks. Many of these documents have been transcribed and proofread by the Wikisource community and are featured as links in the National Archives' own online catalog.

See also

  • Internet Archive – non-profit digital library
  • Open Library – an online database and repository of books, created by the Internet Archive

References

  1. Wikimedia's MediaWiki API:Sitematrix. Retrieved May 2025 from Data:Wikipedia statistics/meta.tab
  2. Ayers, Phoebe; Matthews, Charles; Yates, Ben (2008). How Wikipedia Works. No Starch Press. pp. 435–436. ISBN 978-1-59327-176-3.
  3. "Transcribe | Citizen Archivist". Archived from the original on 31 October 2013. Retrieved 4 October 2013.
  4. Wikimedia's MediaWiki API:Siteinfo. Retrieved May 2025 from Data:Wikipedia statistics/data.tab
  5. The Cunctator (2001-10-16). "Primary sources Pedia, or Project Sourceberg". Wikipedia. Archived from the original on 2016-03-14. Retrieved 2011-07-05.
  6. The Cunctator (2001-10-16). "Primary sources Pedia, or Project Sourceberg". Wikipedia. Archived from the original on 2018-11-20. Retrieved 2012-03-24.
  7. Sanger, Larry (2001-10-17). "Primary sources Pedia, or Project Sourceberg". Wikipedia. Archived from the original on 2022-04-09. Retrieved 2012-03-24.
  8. Wales, Jimmy (2001-10-17). "Primary sources Pedia, or Project Sourceberg". Wikipedia. Archived from the original on 2022-04-09. Retrieved 2012-03-24.
  9. Starling, Tim (2004-07-23). "Scriptorium". Wikisource. Archived from the original on 2013-10-15. Retrieved 2011-07-05.
  10. "Wikisource.org". Wikisource.org. 2005-08-27. Archived from the original on 2013-11-10. Retrieved 2011-07-05.
  11. Bernier, Alex; Burger, Dominique; Marmol, Bruno (2010). "Wiki, a New Way to Produce Accessible Documents". In Miesenberger, Klaus; Klaus, Joachim; Zagler, Wolfgang; Karshmer, Arthur (eds.). Computers Helping People with Special Needs. Springer. pp. 22–24. ISBN 978-3-642-14096-9.
  12. Proofread Page extension at MediaWiki. Retrieved 2011-09-29.
  13. ProofreadPage at Wikisource.org. Retrieved 2011-09-29.
  14. "100K" discussion on Scriptorium. English Wikisource. 14 February 2008. Retrieved 2011-09-29.
  15. "Mission statement". Wikimedia Foundation. Archived from the original on 2008-01-17. Retrieved 2011-07-08.
  16. "Wikisource". Wikimedia.org. Wikimedia Foundation. Archived from the original on 2011-07-13. Retrieved 2011-07-08.
  17. "What is Wikisource?—What do we exclude?". Wikisource.org. Wikisource. Archived from the original on 2011-07-09. Retrieved 2011-07-08.
  18. Boot, Peter (2009). Mesotext. Amsterdam University Press. pp. 34–35. ISBN 978-90-8555-052-5.
  19. Broughton, John (2008). Wikipedia Reader's Guide: The Missing Manual. O'Reilly Media, Inc. p. 23. ISBN 978-0-596-52174-5.
  20. Philips, Matthew (June 14, 2008). "God's Word, According to Wikipedia". Newsweek. Archived from the original on April 16, 2009. Retrieved September 29, 2011.
  21. Server admin log for August 23, 2005; a fifteenth language (sr:) was created on August 25 (above).
  22. See the Server admin log for September 11, 2005, at 01:20 and below (September 10) at 22:49.
  23. "Server Admin Log/Archive 7 - March 29". Wikitech. Archived from the original on 2015-04-02. Retrieved 2011-07-05.
  24. "Server Admin Log/Archive 7 - June 2". Wikitech. Archived from the original on 2015-04-02. Retrieved 2011-07-05.
  25. "Wikisource Statistics". Meta-Wiki. Archived from the original on 13 July 2011. Retrieved 11 September 2020.
  26. For an automatic list of local main pages, see Category:Main Pages; for a formatted list, see the wikisource.org section of the Wikisource portal.
  27. "Wikiversity.org". Wikiversity.org. Archived from the original on 2010-08-12. Retrieved 2011-07-05.
  28. Anderson, Jennifer Joline (2011). Wikipedia: The Company and Its Founders. ABDO. pp. 92–93. ISBN 978-1-61714-812-5.
  29. "La BNF prend un virage collaboratif avec Wikisource" [BNF takes a collaborative turn with Wikisource]. ITespresso (in French). NetMediaEurope. April 8, 2010. Archived from the original on 2011-10-08. Retrieved 2011-09-29.
  30. "Wikimédia France signe un partenariat avec la BnF" [Wikimedia France sign a partnership with the BnF]. Wikimédia France (in French). April 7, 2010. Archived from the original on September 29, 2011. Retrieved 2011-09-29.
  31. "French National Library to cooperate with Wikisource", Wikipedia Signpost. 2010-04-12.
  32. McDevitt-Parks, Dominic; Waldman, Robin (July 25, 2011). "Wikimedia and the new collaborative digital archives". The Text Message. National Archives and Records Administration. Archived from the original on 2011-09-13. Retrieved 2011-09-29.

External links

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Wikimedia Commons has media related to Wikisource.
image
Wikiquote has quotations related to Wikisource.

Wikisource

  • Official website image
  • Wikipedia:List of Wikisources
  • Wikisource:For Wikipedians

About Wikisource

  • Danny Wool on Wikisource (Wikimedia Foundation article).
  • A personal perspective on the history of Wikisource by Angela Beesley
  • Early discussions and plans for the project (Meta)

Author: www.NiNa.Az

Publication date: May 25, 2025 / 08:45

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For linking to or citing Wikisource see Wikipedia Wikisource This article relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources Wikisource news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Wikisource is an online wiki based digital library of free content textual sources operated by the Wikimedia Foundation Wikisource is the name of the project as a whole it is also the name for each instance of that project one for each language The project s aim is to host all forms of free text in many languages and translations Originally conceived as an archive to store useful or important historical texts it has expanded to become a general content library The project officially began on November 24 2003 under the name Project Sourceberg a play on Project Gutenberg The name Wikisource was adopted later that year and it received its own domain name WikisourceScreenshotDetail of the Wikisource multilingual portal main pageType of siteDigital libraryAvailable inMultilingual 79 active sub domains OwnerWikimedia FoundationCreated byUser generatedURLwikisource wbr orgCommercialNoRegistrationOptionalLaunchedNovember 24 2003 21 years ago 2003 11 24 Current statusOnline The project holds works that are either in the public domain or freely licensed professionally published works or historical source documents not vanity products Verification was initially made offline or by trusting the reliability of other digital libraries Now works are supported by online scans via the ProofreadPage extension which ensures the reliability and accuracy of the project s texts Some individual Wikisources each representing a specific language now only allow works backed up with scans While the bulk of its collection are texts Wikisource as a whole hosts other media from comics to film to audiobooks Some Wikisources allow user generated annotations subject to the specific policies of the Wikisource in question The project has come under criticism for lack of reliability but it is also cited by organisations such as the National Archives and Records Administration As of May 2025 there are Wikisource subdomains active for 79 languages comprising a total of 6 448 516 articles and 2 638 recently active editors HistoryThe original concept for Wikisource was as storage for useful or important historical texts These texts were intended to support Wikipedia articles by providing primary evidence and original source texts and as an archive in its own right The collection was initially focused on important historical and cultural material distinguishing it from other digital archives like Project Gutenberg The original Wikisource logo The project was originally called Project Sourceberg during its planning stages a play on words for Project Gutenberg In 2001 there was a dispute on Wikipedia regarding the addition of primary source materials leading to edit wars over their inclusion or deletion Project Sourceberg was suggested as a solution to this In describing the proposed project user The Cunctator said It would be to Project Gutenberg what Wikipedia is to Nupedia soon clarifying the statement with we don t want to try to duplicate Project Gutenberg s efforts rather we want to complement them Perhaps Project Sourceberg can mainly work as an interface for easily linking from Wikipedia to a Project Gutenberg file and as an interface for people to easily submit new work to PG Initial comments were skeptical with Larry Sanger questioning the need for the project writing The hard question I guess is why we are reinventing the wheel when Project Gutenberg already exists We d want to complement Project Gutenberg how exactly and Jimmy Wales adding like Larry I m interested that we think it over to see what we can add to Project Gutenberg It seems unlikely that primary sources should in general be editable by anyone I mean Shakespeare is Shakespeare unlike our commentary on his work which is whatever we want it to be The project began its activity at ps wikipedia org The contributors understood the PS subdomain to mean either primary sources or Project Sourceberg However this resulted in Project Sourceberg occupying the subdomain of the Pashto Wikipedia the ISO language code of the Pashto language is ps Project Sourceberg officially launched on November 24 2003 when it received its own temporary URL at sources wikipedia org and all texts and discussions hosted on ps wikipedia org were moved to the temporary address A vote on the project s name changed it to Wikisource on December 6 2003 Despite the change in name the project did not move to its permanent URL http wikisource org until July 23 2004 Logo and sloganSince Wikisource was initially called Project Sourceberg its first logo was a picture of an iceberg Two votes conducted to choose a successor were inconclusive and the original logo remained until 2006 Finally for both legal and technical reasons because the picture s license was inappropriate for a Wikimedia Foundation logo and because a photo cannot scale properly a stylized vector iceberg inspired by the original picture was mandated to serve as the project s logo The first prominent use of Wikisource s slogan The Free Library was at the project s multilingual portal when it was redesigned based upon the Wikipedia portal on August 27 2005 historical version As in the Wikipedia portal the Wikisource slogan appears around the logo in the project s ten largest languages Clicking on the portal s central images the iceberg logo in the center and the Wikisource heading at the top of the page links to a list of translations for Wikisource and The Free Library in 60 languages Tools builtThe ProofreadPage extension in action A MediaWiki extension called ProofreadPage was developed for Wikisource by developer ThomasV to improve the vetting of transcriptions by the project This displays pages of scanned works side by side with the text relating to that page allowing the text to be proofread and its accuracy later verified independently by any other editor Once a book or other text has been scanned the raw images can be modified with image processing software to correct for page rotations and other problems The retouched images can then be converted into a PDF or DjVu file and uploaded to either Wikisource or Wikimedia Commons This system assists editors in ensuring the accuracy of texts on Wikisource The original page scans of completed works remain available to any user so that errors may be corrected later and readers may check texts against the originals ProofreadPage also allows greater participation since access to a physical copy of the original work is not necessary to be able to contribute to the project once images have been uploaded citation needed MilestonesA student doing proof reading during her project at New Law College Pune India Within two weeks of the project s official start at sources wikipedia org over 1 000 pages had been created with approximately 200 of these being designated as actual articles On January 4 2004 Wikisource welcomed its 100th registered user In early July 2004 the number of articles exceeded 2 400 and more than 500 users had registered On April 30 2005 there were 2667 registered users including 18 administrators and almost 19 000 articles The project passed its 96 000th edit that same day citation needed On November 27 2005 the English Wikisource passed 20 000 text units in its third month of existence already holding more texts than did the entire project in April before the move to language subdomains On May 10 2006 the first Wikisource Portal was created On February 14 2008 the English Wikisource passed 100 000 text units with Chapter LXXIV of Six Months at the White House a memoir by painter Francis Bicknell Carpenter In November 2011 250 000 text units milestone was passed Library contentsWikisource inclusion criteria expressed as a Venn diagram Green indicates the best possible case where the work satisfies all three primary requirements Yellow indicates acceptable but not ideal cases Wikisource collects and stores in digital format previously published texts including novels non fiction works letters speeches constitutional and historical documents laws and a range of other documents All texts collected are either free of copyright or released under the Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike License Texts in all languages are welcomed as are translations In addition to texts Wikisource hosts material such as comics films recordings and spoken word works All texts held by Wikisource must have been previously published the project does not host vanity press books or documents produced by its contributors A scanned source is preferred on many Wikisources and required on some Most Wikisources will however accept works transcribed from offline sources or acquired from other digital libraries The requirement for prior publication can also be waived in a small number of cases if the work is a source document of notable historical importance The legal requirement for works to be licensed or free of copyright remains constant Annotations and translations the difference to Wikibooks The only original pieces accepted by Wikisource are annotations and translations Wikisource and its sister project Wikibooks has the capacity for annotated editions of texts On Wikisource the annotations are supplementary to the original text which remains the primary objective of the project By contrast on Wikibooks the annotations are primary with the original text as only a reference or supplement if present at all Annotated editions are more popular on the German Wikisource The project also accommodates translations of texts provided by its users A significant translation on the English Wikisource is the Wiki Bible project intended to create a new laissez faire translation of The Bible StructureLanguage subdomains A separate Hebrew version of Wikisource he wikisource org was created in August 2004 The need for a language specific Hebrew website derived from the difficulty of typing and editing Hebrew texts in a left to right environment Hebrew is written right to left In the ensuing months contributors in other languages including German requested their own wikis but a December vote on the creation of separate language domains was inconclusive Finally a second vote that ended May 12 2005 supported the adoption of separate language subdomains at Wikisource by a large margin allowing each language to host its texts on its own wiki An initial wave of 14 languages was set up on August 23 2005 The new languages did not include English but the code en was temporarily set to redirect to the main website wikisource org At this point the Wikisource community through a mass project of manually sorting thousands of pages and categories by language prepared for a second wave of page imports to local wikis On September 11 2005 the wikisource org wiki was reconfigured to enable the English version along with 8 other languages that were created early that morning and late the night before Three more languages were created on March 29 2006 and then another large wave of 14 language domains was created on June 2 2006 Languages without subdomains are locally incubated As of September 2020 update 182 languages are hosted locally As of May 2025 there are Wikisource subdomains for 81 languages of which 79 are active and 2 are closed The active sites have 6 448 516 articles and the closed sites have 13 articles There are 5 055 580 registered users of which 2 638 are recently active The top ten Wikisource language projects by mainspace article count No Language Wiki Good Total Edits Admins Users Active users Files1 Polish pl 1 204 385 1 243 490 3 819 495 15 39 659 75 1272 English en 1 084 502 4 630 549 15 087 677 21 3 168 603 443 16 6243 Russian ru 626 840 1 103 044 5 528 303 5 127 210 97 32 9654 French fr 610 354 4 476 098 15 133 639 16 154 154 239 3 7505 German de 592 593 646 297 4 485 304 17 86 653 114 6 9236 Chinese zh 477 992 1 151 028 2 534 148 8 113 277 154 2307 Ukrainian uk 316 218 468 898 917 640 6 19 411 71 1368 Hebrew he 247 280 1 654 675 2 929 056 16 42 438 101 5539 Italian it 207 933 828 252 3 526 989 9 76 178 99 68610 Spanish es 85 396 308 903 1 554 295 8 92 761 58 231 For a complete list with totals see Wikimedia Statistics wikisource org During the move to language subdomains the community requested that the main wikisource org website remain a functioning wiki in order to serve three purposes To be a multilingual coordination site for the entire Wikisource project in all languages In practice use of the website for multilingual coordination has not been heavy since the conversion to language domains Nevertheless there is some policy activity at the Scriptorium and multilingual updates for news and language milestones at pages such as Wikisource 2007 To be a home for texts in languages without their own subdomains each with its own local main page for self organization As a language incubator the wiki currently provides a home for over 30 languages that do not yet have their own language subdomains Some of these are very active and have built libraries with hundreds of texts such as Volapuk To provide direct ongoing support by a local wiki community for a dynamic multilingual portal at its Main Page for users who go to http wikisource org The current Main Page portal was created on August 26 2005 by ThomasV who based it upon the Wikipedia portal The idea of a project specific coordination wiki first realized at Wikisource also took hold in another Wikimedia project namely at Wikiversity s Beta Wiki Like wikisource org it serves Wikiversity coordination in all languages and as a language incubator but unlike Wikisource its Main Page does not serve as its multilingual portal Reception source source source source source source source track track track Personal explanation of Wikisource from a project participant Wikipedia co founder Larry Sanger criticised Wikisource and sister project Wiktionary in 2011 after he left the project saying that their collaborative nature and technology means that there is no oversight by experts and alleging that their content is therefore not reliable Bart D Ehrman a New Testament scholar and professor of religious studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill has criticised the English Wikisource s project to create a user generated translation of the Bible saying Democratization isn t necessarily good for scholarship Richard Elliott Friedman an Old Testament scholar and professor of Jewish studies at the University of Georgia identified errors in the translation of the Book of Genesis as of 2008 In 2010 Wikimedia France signed an agreement with the Bibliotheque nationale de France National Library of France to add scans from its own Gallica digital library to French Wikisource Fourteen hundred public domain French texts were added to the Wikisource library as a result via upload to the Wikimedia Commons The quality of the transcriptions previously automatically generated by optical character recognition OCR was expected to be improved by Wikisource s human proofreaders Wikisource has original works on the topic National Archives and Records Administration Collection In 2011 the English Wikisource received many high quality scans of documents from the US National Archives and Records Administration NARA as part of their efforts to increase the accessibility and visibility of its holdings Processing and upload to Commons of these documents along with many images from the NARA collection was facilitated by a NARA Wikimedian in residence Dominic McDevitt Parks Many of these documents have been transcribed and proofread by the Wikisource community and are featured as links in the National Archives own online catalog See alsoInternet Archive non profit digital library Open Library an online database and repository of books created by the Internet ArchiveReferencesWikimedia s MediaWiki API Sitematrix Retrieved May 2025 from Data Wikipedia statistics meta tab Ayers Phoebe Matthews Charles Yates Ben 2008 How Wikipedia Works No Starch Press pp 435 436 ISBN 978 1 59327 176 3 Transcribe Citizen Archivist Archived from the original on 31 October 2013 Retrieved 4 October 2013 Wikimedia s MediaWiki API Siteinfo Retrieved May 2025 from Data Wikipedia statistics data tab The Cunctator 2001 10 16 Primary sources Pedia or Project Sourceberg Wikipedia Archived from the original on 2016 03 14 Retrieved 2011 07 05 The Cunctator 2001 10 16 Primary sources Pedia or Project Sourceberg Wikipedia Archived from the original on 2018 11 20 Retrieved 2012 03 24 Sanger Larry 2001 10 17 Primary sources Pedia or Project Sourceberg Wikipedia Archived from the original on 2022 04 09 Retrieved 2012 03 24 Wales Jimmy 2001 10 17 Primary sources Pedia or Project Sourceberg Wikipedia Archived from the original on 2022 04 09 Retrieved 2012 03 24 Starling Tim 2004 07 23 Scriptorium Wikisource Archived from the original on 2013 10 15 Retrieved 2011 07 05 Wikisource org Wikisource org 2005 08 27 Archived from the original on 2013 11 10 Retrieved 2011 07 05 Bernier Alex Burger Dominique Marmol Bruno 2010 Wiki a New Way to Produce Accessible Documents In Miesenberger Klaus Klaus Joachim Zagler Wolfgang Karshmer Arthur eds Computers Helping People with Special Needs Springer pp 22 24 ISBN 978 3 642 14096 9 Proofread Page extension at MediaWiki Retrieved 2011 09 29 ProofreadPage at Wikisource org Retrieved 2011 09 29 100K discussion on Scriptorium English Wikisource 14 February 2008 Retrieved 2011 09 29 Mission statement Wikimedia Foundation Archived from the original on 2008 01 17 Retrieved 2011 07 08 Wikisource Wikimedia org Wikimedia Foundation Archived from the original on 2011 07 13 Retrieved 2011 07 08 What is Wikisource What do we exclude Wikisource org Wikisource Archived from the original on 2011 07 09 Retrieved 2011 07 08 Boot Peter 2009 Mesotext Amsterdam University Press pp 34 35 ISBN 978 90 8555 052 5 Broughton John 2008 Wikipedia Reader s Guide The Missing Manual O Reilly Media Inc p 23 ISBN 978 0 596 52174 5 Philips Matthew June 14 2008 God s Word According to Wikipedia Newsweek Archived from the original on April 16 2009 Retrieved September 29 2011 Server admin log for August 23 2005 a fifteenth language sr was created on August 25 above See the Server admin log for September 11 2005 at 01 20 and below September 10 at 22 49 Server Admin Log Archive 7 March 29 Wikitech Archived from the original on 2015 04 02 Retrieved 2011 07 05 Server Admin Log Archive 7 June 2 Wikitech Archived from the original on 2015 04 02 Retrieved 2011 07 05 Wikisource Statistics Meta Wiki Archived from the original on 13 July 2011 Retrieved 11 September 2020 For an automatic list of local main pages see Category Main Pages for a formatted list see the wikisource org section of the Wikisource portal Wikiversity org Wikiversity org Archived from the original on 2010 08 12 Retrieved 2011 07 05 Anderson Jennifer Joline 2011 Wikipedia The Company and Its Founders ABDO pp 92 93 ISBN 978 1 61714 812 5 La BNF prend un virage collaboratif avec Wikisource BNF takes a collaborative turn with Wikisource ITespresso in French NetMediaEurope April 8 2010 Archived from the original on 2011 10 08 Retrieved 2011 09 29 Wikimedia France signe un partenariat avec la BnF Wikimedia France sign a partnership with the BnF Wikimedia France in French April 7 2010 Archived from the original on September 29 2011 Retrieved 2011 09 29 French National Library to cooperate with Wikisource Wikipedia Signpost 2010 04 12 McDevitt Parks Dominic Waldman Robin July 25 2011 Wikimedia and the new collaborative digital archives The Text Message National Archives and Records Administration Archived from the original on 2011 09 13 Retrieved 2011 09 29 External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to Wikisource Wikiquote has quotations related to Wikisource Wikisource Official website Wikipedia List of Wikisources Wikisource For Wikipedians About Wikisource Danny Wool on Wikisource Wikimedia Foundation article A personal perspective on the history of Wikisource by Angela Beesley Early discussions and plans for the project Meta

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