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The Enciclopedia Libre was founded by contributors to the Spanish Wikipedia who decided to start an independent project. Led by Edgar Enyedy, they left Wikipedia on 26 February 2002, and created the new website, provided by the University of Seville for free, with the freely licensed articles of the Spanish Wikipedia.
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Enciclopedia Libre was established by 26 February 2002. Enyedy persuaded most of the Spanish Wikipedians into going to the fork. By the end of 2002, over 10,000 articles were posted on the new site, and the Spanish Wikipedia was inactive for the rest of the year.
The Enciclopedia universal ilustrada europeo-americana (also called Enciclopedia Espasa, or Enciclopedia Espasa-Calpe, after its publisher, founded by José Espasa Anguera) is a Spanish encyclopedia. It comprises 72 volumes (numbered from 1 to 70, with parts 18 and 28 consisting of two volumes each) published from 1908 to 1930 plus a ten-volume ...
Enciclopedia Dantesca: Italian Devoted to Dante Alighieri and his time, by the Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana Treccani: Free The Encyclopedia of Fantasy: English [12] Free Encyclopedia Mythica: English Covers folklore, mythology, and religion. [13] Free Harper's Dictionary of Classical Literature and Antiquities: English
A Barsa encyclopedia set in a library in Juazeiro do Piauí, Brazil. Barsa is a Brazilian encyclopedia, first published in 1964. [1] It was later translated into Spanish and sold across much of Latin America.
List of other free encyclopedias, from Enciclopedia Libre. The concept of a free encyclopedia began with the Interpedia proposal on Usenet in 1993, which outlined an Internet-based online encyclopedia to which anyone could submit content that would be freely accessible. Early projects in this vein included Everything2 and Open Site.