The Encyclopædia Edinensis was a six-volume general encyclopedia published in Edinburgh in 1827, and intended for a popular audience. It was edited by James Millar, who died just before it was complete.[1]
Editorial staff
- James Millar, principal editor
 - Jeremiah Kirby and Richard Poole, main editors and contributors.[2] Poole wrote articles on "Mental Diseases".[3]
 - John Sommers, minister at Falkirk, was proprietor and also editor for the last three volumes.[4]
 
Work began on the Encyclopædia in 1816.[5] Millar edited the fourth and parted of the fifth editions of the Encyclopædia Britannica and had contributed extensively to both. His goal with the Edinensis was to create a more popular work. However, his use of a large quarto format, reminiscent of the Britannica hampered the project as duodecimal, miniature formats were then in vogue.[6]
Phrenology
The editorial line was quite sympathetic to phrenology. According to the Phrenological Journal, Sommers approved the inclusion of the uncritical article "Phrenology".[7] Poole in 1819 wrote for the encyclopedia an article on education, an early treatment from the point of phrenology.[8]
Other contributors
- John Adamson of Newton
 - Alexander Anderson, Polar Expeditions etc.
 - George Buchanan, Astronomy and Dialling
 - James Couper
 - John Dick M.D., Midwifery
 - Alexander Duncan, Miracle etc.
 - James Flint
 - William Galbraith, Navigation
 - Patrick Gibson, design
 - Rev. David Liston, Calcutta, Mechanics
 - Henry Liston, Music
 - Robert Macmillan
 - Lockhart Muirhead
 - Rev. Thomas Nelson, Religion
 - Alexander Peterkin
 - Rev. Dr. Russel of Leith, Magnetism and Meteorology
 - John Sommers
 - Walter Tod, Theology etc.
 - John Wallace
 - Robert Wallace.[2]
 
References
- ↑ David Philip Miller (2004). Discovering Water: James Watt, Henry Cavendish, and the Nineteenth Century 'Water Controversy'. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. p. 72. ISBN 978-0-7546-3177-4. Retrieved 19 May 2012.
 - 1 2 James Millar, Encyclopedia Edinensis; or, Dictionary of arts, sciences, and literature vol. 1 (1827), p. vi; archive.org.
 - ↑ The Journal of psychological medicine and mental pathology. Churchill. 1851. p. 157. Retrieved 19 May 2012.
 - ↑ Scotland; Society for the Benefit of the Sons and Daughters of the Clergy (1845). The new statistical account of Scotland. W. Blackwood and Sons. p. 369. Retrieved 20 May 2012.
 - ↑ S. Padraig Walsh Anglo-American general encyclopedias 1703-1967 New York and London; R.R. Bowser Company 1968 p.55
 - ↑ Robert Collison Encyclopedias: their history throughout the ages 2nd ed. New York and London; Haffner Publishing Company 1966 p.178
 - ↑ The phrenological journal and miscellany. s.n. 1824. pp. 641–3. Retrieved 20 May 2012.
 - ↑ The Phrenological journal and miscellany. Printed for the Proprietors. 1826. p. 171. Retrieved 20 May 2012.
 
External links
- Encyclopedia Edinensis; or, Dictionary of arts, sciences, and literature Vol. 1
 - Encyclopedia Edinensis; or, Dictionary of arts, sciences, and literature Vol. 2
 - Encyclopedia Edinensis; or, Dictionary of arts, sciences, and literature Vol. 4
 - Encyclopedia Edinensis; or, Dictionary of arts, sciences, and literature Vol. 5