Table of Contents
Bayle Public Search Form
The basic model for this project is
that of the book itself: we have created images of each individual page.
The user can "turn" to a specific page by indicating
the desired page number or "look up" an article by typing the headword. From the initial page of the
article (for example, "Adam", volume I, page 72), the user can then browse
through the text going forward or backward. In addition, users can search
the entire text of the "Table du Dictionnaire historique et critique",
which
has been captured in machine-readable form. This 100-page thematic index
contains thousands of references to items in the text, identified by
volume and page number. In the ARTFL version, these references function
as
automatic hypertext links back to the corresponding page image.
When combined, these two procedures--article searches and index
searches--should allow users to locate articles within the
Dictionnaire and to discover new material of related interest.
The ARTFL Project
now provides two ways to access the Bayle page image
database. The first is by searching for article headwords or Volume Page number. The second is to search the full text of the
index, the "Table du Dictionaire historique et critique". References
within the index are configured as automatic links to the page images.
The online version is a copy of the 1740 edition (5th Edition, Amsterdam, Leyde, La Haye, Utrecht; 4 vols. in-folio)
Search for an Article Headword or Volume Page number
Each headword is accompanied
by an automatic link to the page image where the article begins.
Search the "Table du Dictionaire Historique et Critique"
Search the 5158 headwords (vedettes) and full text in a structured
database in Pierre Bayle's DIctionnaire Historique et Critique.
The full-text contains 191,080 words and 19,511 unique words.
Note: The text has not been corrected in any way. Many "f"'s have been captured as "s"'s. We suggest conducting searches accordingly (ex: for "effet", search for both "effet" and "esset").
Further Note: The thematic index was compiled by the editors of one of the eighteenth-century editions. It is prefaced by the following notice:
"L'Auteur n'aiant pu travailler à cette Table, elle a été donnée à faire à une personne très--habile; mais de peur qu'on ne la fît trop longue sans nécessité, on y a mis rarement ce qui apartient aux matieres dans leurs propres Articles: par ex emple, presque tout ce que l'on a marqué de César dans cette Table se trouve ailleurs que dans l' Article de CESAR."Pour l'usage de cette Table il faut remarquer, que le Chifre Romain indique le Tome, & l'Arabe la page. Lorsque le chifre est seul il indique le Texte, & lorsqu'il est suivi de la lettre a, ou b, il indique la prémiere ou la seconde colonne des Remarques; & si l'on y ajoûte la lettre n, on indique quelque Note marginale de la même colonne."
Examples
The following list indicates the values to enter in search form boxes.
headword=word means put word in the Headword box
word=word means put one or more word(s) in the Search articles
for box
Simple headword searches:
The search engine will search for any string of characters entered in the
headword box,
regardless of where that string appears in the headword(s) found.
For example, entering the string vil will find not only words
beginning with this string - e.g. ville, villars, villeroi,
villon, and so on,
- but also words with these letters in the middle,
- e.g. chevillier, droit civil, seville, incivilite, etc.
To limit a search to those words beginning with the string only,
enter the carat (^) before the first letter of the string.
This search will still find all words beginning with this string,
regardless of how they end.
Thus, ^vil will find villars, villaoicentius, ville,
villiers, villon, villes imperiales d'alsace, etc.
The headword search also allows users to search multiple terms at the same
time
using the OR operator: a vertical line (|).
For example: abelard|heloise.
Note that at this time the OR operator is not working.
This is a known problem, and we are working on it.
Accent and multiple form searches:
There are three ways to represent a word with its accent:
word=marque/
word=marqué
word=marquE
The last of these will find instances of both marque and
marqué.
Combined field searches:
These are useful for finding words within one or more given
entries/headwords only.
This is a good way to limit searches on common words, or words with more
than one meaning.
For example, searching fai.* retrieves 700 hits on the
morphological variations of faire.
Full text searches:
Full-text searching works to search across all dictionary entries for
single terms,
or using the AND and OR operators. For example,
word=guerre civile set phrase search;
or, word=guerre troy.*|troi.* set paragraph.
Notes: Keep in mind that, as with all earlier French texts, there may be orthographic variation, or antiquated word forms and spellings. These are not errors, as the f/s problem described above, but may will still require creative searching.