Wednesday, February 3, 2010
© Copyright 2013
Gwinnett Daily Post
BELFAST, Northern Ireland -- Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc. apologized Wednesday for mangling the history of the Irish Civil War, a longtime screw-up detected only this year when an Internet version of the reference book was supplied to Ireland's 4,000 schools.
''We do respond very quickly and our editors have been up all night looking at this,'' said Ian Grant, managing director of the company that publishes the world's oldest encyclopedia. ''It's important to get this thing right.''
A concise version of the Britannica first published seven years ago and used initially on hand-held devices has falsely described Ireland's 1922-23 civil war as a fight between the Catholic south and Protestant north.
In reality, the civil war took place entirely south of the border, between two groups of Irish Catholic nationalists. The opposing sides were the fledgling army of the newly formed Irish Free State, which supported the Anglo-Irish treaty that created the state, and rebels who rejected it for failing to deliver full-fledged independence. The Irish Free State evolved over decades into today's Republic of Ireland.
Students quickly spotted the glaring error after the Irish Department of Education struck a deal to provide the Britannica's online version to all schools in the state. The contract costs a reported $625,000 a year for annual access to the encyclopedia and the publisher's other online references.
''This screwy version of events is a gross insult to our people and our history. That it is being used to educate our children is even more ridiculous,'' Irish Sen. Fidelma Healy Eames told the Irish Independent. The Dublin newspaper first reported the story Wednesday.
The civil war -- in which Michael Collins' pro-treaty army defeated the rebels backed by future Prime Minister and President Eamon de Valera -- has cast a profound shadow over Irish political life for decades.
Collins, slain in an ambush, is still mourned by many as Ireland's ''lost leader.''
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