Wikiquote
Wikiquote is a multilingual online open-content compendium of sourced quotations from notable people and creative works in every language, including translations of non-English quotes.[1][2] Launched on July 10, 2003, as the Wikimedia Foundation's sixth official project, it originated from discussions on the Wikipedia mailing list and initially operated under the subdomain quote.wikipedia.org before gaining its own domain.[3][4] The project emphasizes verifiability, requiring all quotations to be attributed to reliable sources, and excludes copyrighted material without fair use justification.[1] Wikiquote is structured thematically by authors, works, topics, and proverbs, with articles often linking to corresponding Wikipedia entries for additional context.[1] It operates under free licenses such as Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike and GNU Free Documentation License for non-copyrighted content, allowing global reuse and editing by volunteers.[1] As of November 2025, Wikiquote hosts 362,669 content pages across 76 language editions, with the English version comprising 62,044 articles and over 3.8 million edits; Wikiquote has more than 4.3 million registered users across all editions.[5] The project's development has included milestones such as reaching 2,500 articles across six languages by June 2004 and ongoing efforts to improve sourcing and multilingual coverage.[6] Wikiquote serves researchers, educators, and the public as a reliable repository for inspirational and historical quotes, fostering a collaborative community similar to its sister projects like Wikipedia and Wikimedia Commons.[2]Overview
Purpose and Scope
Wikiquote is a free, collaboratively edited, wiki-based compendium of quotations launched and hosted by the Wikimedia Foundation, with a focus on collecting verifiable quotes while emphasizing their brevity, accuracy, and contextual relevance.[7] The project serves as a dedicated repository where volunteers curate short excerpts from diverse sources, ensuring each entry provides meaningful insight without unnecessary elaboration.[8] The scope of Wikiquote is narrowly defined to include only sourced quotations drawn from literature, speeches, films, historical documents, proverbs, and notable figures, while strictly excluding any original compositions, unsourced attributions, or extended prose that could belong elsewhere.[9] This limitation ensures the project's utility as a concise reference tool, prioritizing quotable material that captures essential ideas or expressions from established works and individuals.[10] Unlike related Wikimedia projects such as Wikisource, which hosts full public-domain texts and primary sources, or Wikipedia, which compiles encyclopedic articles with integrated summaries and analysis, Wikiquote carves out a unique niche by isolating and thematically organizing individual quotations for easy reference and thematic exploration.[7] This specialization allows users to quickly access curated collections on specific topics or authors, fostering a focused resource for inspiration, research, and citation. At its core, Wikiquote operates under principles of neutrality to avoid bias in selection or presentation, verifiability requiring every quote to be traceable to a reliable source, and compliance with public domain standards or fair use doctrines to respect copyright while promoting open access.[11] These guidelines align with the broader Wikimedia ecosystem's commitment to free knowledge, enabling seamless cross-referencing with sister projects like Wikipedia for deeper context.[12]Key Statistics
As of November 2025, Wikiquote operates 76 active language editions out of a total of 99 editions, with 23 having been closed. Across these active sites, the project hosts a total of 362,639 articles. The English edition, the largest by volume, contains 62,051 articles.[13] The top languages by article count are English with 62,051 articles, followed by Italian with 53,970 articles; other major editions include Polish (31,455 articles) and Russian (17,553 articles), contributing significantly to the project's multilingual scope.[5] In terms of community engagement, Wikiquote has 3,200 active editors and 4,386,396 registered users across all editions. Recent growth highlights include the English edition surpassing 60,000 articles on September 19, 2025, and the launch of a new Malay edition on September 18, 2025.[1] Regarding content quality, Wikiquote emphasizes verifiable citations for all quotations, supported by Wikimedia statistics showing steady edit frequency—averaging hundreds of daily contributions across editions—and editor retention rates that sustain ongoing development.[14]Historical Development
Founding and Early Years
Wikiquote originated from a proposal by Wikimedia user Fonzy (real name Daniel Alston) on June 4, 2003, envisioning a dedicated wiki for compiling sourced quotations as a sister project to Wikipedia.[1] The concept aimed to create a collaborative repository of notable quotes from literature, historical figures, and creative works, emphasizing verification to distinguish verifiable statements from unattributed ones. This initiative built on the growing ecosystem of Wikimedia projects, with the proposal quickly gaining traction among early contributors who recognized the need for a focused space beyond Wikipedia's encyclopedic scope. The project officially launched on July 10, 2003, initially hosted on Wikipedia's servers under the subdomain quote.wikipedia.org.[1] Brion Vibber, a lead MediaWiki developer, implemented the site following Fonzy's direct request, enabling immediate editing and content addition.[15] Jimmy Wales, who had co-founded Wikipedia and established the Wikimedia Foundation on June 20, 2003, endorsed the expansion to sister projects like Wikiquote, viewing it as an extension of open-access knowledge dissemination. Early volunteers, including Fonzy and other active editors, established foundational norms for quote verification, requiring sources for all entries to maintain reliability and avoid misinformation. The initial content centered on quotations from literature and philosophy, such as works by Shakespeare and Plato, with the first article created about The Wizard of Oz, reflecting the project's roots in humanistic and intellectual traditions.[16] A key milestone came on August 25, 2003, when the dedicated domain wikiquote.org was assigned, allowing the project to operate independently while sharing Wikimedia's infrastructure.[1] Growth accelerated in the following year, with the English edition surpassing 2,000 pages by November 2004 and the project expanding to 24 languages, including German, Spanish, and Japanese editions that adapted the sourcing model to local contexts.[1] Despite this progress, early challenges emerged regarding content compliance; in March 2006, the French edition was temporarily closed to editing due to copyright infringements from unsourced quotations, prompting a database overhaul and reinforcing global verification standards before its restart in December.[17] These events underscored the volunteers' ongoing efforts to balance rapid multilingual expansion with legal and qualitative rigor.Growth and Milestones
Wikiquote experienced significant expansion following its early years, reaching a total of 100,000 articles across all language editions in February 2010.[1] This milestone reflected growing contributions from a diversifying editor base and the establishment of more robust multilingual support. By May 2016, the project had doubled to 200,000 articles, driven by increased activity in major editions like English and Italian, as well as incremental growth in smaller ones.[1] As of November 2025, the total stood at 362,230 content pages, demonstrating steady accumulation amid broader Wikimedia ecosystem enhancements.[5] Language expansions post-2010 further bolstered Wikiquote's global reach, with numerous new editions launched to include underrepresented languages, contributing to a total of 76 active editions by late 2025.[5] On the technical front, Wikiquote benefited from periodic migrations to updated versions of the MediaWiki software, such as upgrades to 1.35 in 2021 and subsequent releases, which improved performance and security across all Wikimedia sites.[18] Additionally, deeper integration with Wikimedia Commons enabled the embedding of multimedia elements, like audio clips and images, to contextualize quotes without direct uploads on Wikiquote itself.[19] Efforts to address content gaps post-2018 included enhancements to mobile accessibility in 2020, aligning with Wikimedia's broader rollout of responsive design updates that facilitated editing and browsing on smartphones. These developments helped mitigate earlier challenges, such as edit wars over controversial quotes in the 2010s, where disputes on pages like those for political figures led to repeated reverts; recovery involved refined community guidelines for dispute resolution, including formalized talk page mediation and administrator interventions.[20]Operations and Features
Content Structure and Organization
Wikiquote organizes its content into individual pages dedicated to specific people, literary or artistic works, or thematic topics, allowing users to navigate quotations systematically. For instance, a page like "Abraham Lincoln" features sourced quotes grouped into sections such as those by topic (e.g., politics, slavery) or chronology in the Quotes section; misattributed quotes in a dedicated Misattributed section; disputed quotes marked using templates within relevant sections; and unsourced quotes moved to the article's talk page to maintain verifiability.[21] [22] Similarly, pages for works like films or books structure quotes by character, dialogue, or chapter, while theme pages compile related sayings without tying them to a single source.[23] This modular approach ensures focused exploration, often incorporating interwiki links to corresponding Wikipedia articles for biographical or contextual background.[24] Categorization enhances discoverability through portals and categories, such as "Living people" for contemporary figures, "Films" for cinematic quotes, or "Proverbs" for traditional expressions. These groupings facilitate browsing by type or subject, with broader collections like "Humor" aggregating witty remarks across sources and "Politics" focusing on governance-related statements.[25] Quotes follow a standardized format to ensure clarity and attribution: the text appears without quotation marks, followed by a tilde (~) for the speaker or author, then the source details (e.g., publication title, date, and page number), all presented in a bulleted list for readability.[21] For example: "Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent, a new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal." ~ Abraham Lincoln, Gettysburg Address (1863). Multilingual quotes are supported on dedicated language edition pages, where original text is preserved alongside translations if applicable.[26] Special features include the "Quote of the Day," a rotating selection displayed on the main page to highlight notable quotations, often tied to historical events or themes, with archives dating back to 2003.[27] Unlike full-text repositories, Wikiquote emphasizes concise excerpts under fair use principles, limiting quotations to memorable, significant passages to avoid copyright infringement while prioritizing quality over quantity.[28][29]Editing Policies and Sourcing
Wikiquote's editing policies emphasize verifiability as a core principle, requiring that every quotation added to the project be supported by a reliable, published source to ensure accuracy and allow readers to confirm the information independently.[9] This policy aligns with the broader Wikimedia commitment to no original research, prohibiting editors from introducing unsourced claims, personal interpretations, or material derived from primary analysis rather than established publications.[30] Unsourced quotations are typically moved to the article's talk page for discussion or verification, and pages consisting solely of unsourced content may be tagged for deletion or proposed for removal to maintain the project's quality standards.[9] Editing guidelines encourage collaborative improvement through structured processes, such as using talk pages to resolve disputes over content accuracy, attribution, or placement, where editors discuss proposed changes and seek consensus before implementing revisions.[30] Vandalism, including the addition of fabricated quotes or disruptive edits, is addressed by community monitoring of recent changes, with experienced editors reverting such alterations promptly to preserve content integrity.[30] For controversial topics, a neutral point of view is mandated, ensuring that quotations are selected and presented without bias, representing diverse perspectives proportionally as they appear in reliable sources rather than promoting any particular interpretation.[30] Sourcing specifics prioritize primary and authoritative materials to attribute quotes reliably, with preferred sources including published books, official transcripts of speeches, recorded interviews, and reputable news articles that provide direct evidence of the statement.[9] Citations must detail the exact location of the quote, such as page numbers for books or timestamps for audio recordings, and editors are encouraged to use standardized formats like the Harvard style—e.g., (Author Year)—or footnotes for clarity.[31] For books, inclusion of the ISBN, publisher, edition, and year is standard, while online sources require URLs with access dates and archival links via tools like the Internet Archive to prevent link rot; templates such as {{cite web}} or direct ISBN links facilitate this process.[31] Speeches and interviews should reference published versions or verifiable recordings, avoiding personal transcriptions unless corroborated by a secondary reliable source.[9] Community enforcement relies on volunteer editors and a small group of administrators who protect pages from persistent issues, such as repeated vandalism or edit wars, by applying semi-protection or blocking disruptive accounts as needed.[30] Administrators do not act as central gatekeepers but facilitate technical and moderation tasks, while broader maintenance occurs through consensus-driven discussions on the Village Pump forum, ensuring policies evolve based on community input without a single authoritative overseer.[30]Multilingual Aspects
Language Editions
Wikiquote operates in 76 active language editions as of November 2025, spanning major world languages to minority ones, with a total of 99 editions created historically. These editions vary widely in scale and scope, from the expansive English version to nascent projects in less-resourced languages.[5] Content across editions reflects linguistic and cultural priorities, with the English edition emphasizing quotations from global historical figures, political leaders, and international literature.[32] In contrast, non-English editions often highlight local literary traditions and thinkers; for instance, the French edition prominently features existentialist philosophers such as Jean-Paul Sartre and Albert Camus, alongside regional proverbs and poetry. Similarly, editions in languages like Italian prioritize national authors and cultural icons, fostering a more regionally attuned collection of sourced quotes. Activity levels differ significantly, underscoring the project's uneven global participation. The Italian edition ranks as the second-largest, with 53,970 articles and 177 active users contributing regularly.[5] Smaller editions in less-resourced languages maintain under 100 articles, supported by sporadic community efforts amid limited editor engagement. Forty-five editions exceed 1,000 articles, while 73 surpass 100, illustrating a concentration of development in well-established languages.[5] Maintaining these editions presents challenges, including the closure of 23 inactive projects due to insufficient activity. Revival initiatives, often funded through Wikimedia Foundation grants and campaigns like Wiki Loves Women, aim to bolster dormant or small editions by training editors and focusing on underrepresented topics.[33] A notable recent addition is the Malay edition, launched on September 7, 2025, which has grown to 194 articles with an early emphasis on regional proverbs and Southeast Asian cultural expressions.[1][34]Interlanguage Collaboration
Wikiquote facilitates interlanguage collaboration through mechanisms such as interwiki links, which enable editors to cross-reference quotes across different language editions by connecting corresponding pages, such as linking an English quote page to its German counterpart using syntax like[[q:de:Beispiel]].[35] These links appear at the edges of pages, promoting navigation and content discovery among multilingual contributors. Additionally, shared templates are utilized via Wikimedia's global namespace on Meta-Wiki, allowing templates with interlanguage links to be transcluded across projects while using <noinclude> tags to prevent unintended propagation, thus supporting consistent formatting for quotes in multiple languages.[36]
Collaborative initiatives include the use of Translatewiki.net for localizing the MediaWiki interface, which has enabled the addition of new Wikiquote language editions by ensuring translated user interfaces for editors in languages like Tyap and Twi, fostering broader participation since the platform's integration with Wikimedia projects.[37] Another example is the SheSaid campaign, launched to expand quotes by women across Wikiquote editions, involving multilingual editing drives that encourage creation and improvement of entries on influential female figures.[38]
Joint efforts often focus on universal themes, such as human rights, where editors from multiple language editions contribute sourced quotes— for instance, the English Wikiquote page on human rights includes interlanguage links to versions in French, Spanish, and other languages, allowing shared sourcing and translation of key declarations like the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.[39]
Wikiquote integrates with Wikimedia's Translatewiki for interface support and benefits from broader tools like the Content Translation tool, though primarily adapted for Wikipedia; however, community portals in languages like Welsh discuss its potential for quote pages.[40] In 2024, Wikimedia Community Fund grants supported general multilingual content growth across projects, indirectly aiding Wikiquote's sourcing of diverse quotes through regional initiatives.[41]
These efforts have led to improved coverage of non-Western figures in the 2020s, with collaborations helping to mitigate Eurocentric biases by expanding entries on global thinkers, as seen in the growth of non-English editions from under 50 in 2010 to over 80 by 2025.[32]