Sneha Girap (Editor)

Dictionary of New Zealand Biography

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Language
  
English, Maori

Name
  
Dictionary New

Editors
  
Claudia Orange

Publication date
  
1990–2000

Country
  
New Zealand

Publisher
  
various

Genres
  
Encyclopedia

Subject
  
New Zealand biography

Originally published
  
1990


Dictionary of New Zealand Biography t2gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcQxvcYMzJDOZgor

Media type
  
5 volumes; also available on-line

Role
  
Book by Claudia Orange and W. H. Oliver

Authors
  
Claudia Orange, W. H. Oliver

Similar
  
Looking for the phoenix, Prophets and millennialists, The story of a treaty, An illustrated history of

The Dictionary of New Zealand Biography (DNZB) is an encyclopedia or biographical dictionary containing biographies of over 3,000 deceased New Zealanders. It was first published as a series of print volumes from 1990 to 2000, and then on a website from 2002. The dictionary superseded An Encyclopaedia of New Zealand of 1966, which had 900 biographies. The dictionary is managed by the Ministry for Culture and Heritage of the Government of New Zealand. An earlier work of the same name in two volumes, published in 1940 by Guy Scholefield with government assistance, is unrelated.

Contents

Overview

Work on the current version of the DNZB was started in 1983 under the editorship of W. H. Oliver. The first volume covered the period 1769–1869 and was published in 1990. The four subsequent volumes were all edited by Claudia Orange, and they were published in 1993 (1879–1900), 1996 (1901–1920), 1998 (1920–1940), and 2000 (1941–1960).

These later volumes made a conscious effort to move away from the male and Pākehā-dominated coverage of early works to a more representative view of New Zealand. Women who had done well in male-dominated fields (Sybil Audrey Marie Lupp, Amy Isabella Johnston, Mary Jane Innes, Alice Woodward Horsley, Nora Mary Crawford, etc.) were included, as were Māori, a range of ordinary people (Joseph Zillwood, etc.) and criminals (Edward Raymond Horton, Jessie Finnie, etc.). Many of these people were included because detailed accounts of their lives were readily available, in archives, academic studies and official histories. Others were prolific diarists (Catherine Fulton, Sarah Louise Mathew, Alexander Whisker, James Cox, etc.).

Helen Clark as Minister of Arts, Culture and Heritage launched the online version of the DNZB on 19 February 2002. The online version was first promoted by Judith Tizard, a graduate in history from the University of Auckland, which was supported by Clark, who had also graduated in history from the same university, and endorsed by Michael Cullen, who had been a history lecturer at the University of Otago.

The dictionary was integrated into Te Ara: The Encyclopedia of New Zealand in December 2010.

Representative entries

A number of entries were added to make the dictionary more representative of population covered, boosting the numbers of women, Maori, and other minority groups. A number of these are not based on secondary sources, as encyclopaedias traditionally are, but instead on primary sources, because no secondary sources exist for these individuals.

Barbara Weldon

Weldon (1829–1882) was a prostitute and character. She was born in County Limerick, Ireland in about 1829.

Jessie Finnie

Finnie (c.1822–?) was a prostitute. She was born in Scotland in circa 1822.

Accolades

  • In 1991, the first print volume won the 1991 Goodman Fielder Wattie Book Awards.
  • In 2002, Yahoo users in New Zealand and Australia voted the Dictionary of New Zealand Biography website "site of the year".
  • References

    Dictionary of New Zealand Biography Wikipedia