{"html":"<iframe src=\"https://hatenablog-parts.com/embed?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.elegantiv.com%2Fentry%2F2024%2F10%2F31%2F094401\" title=\"\u25bc&quot;The Early Britannica&quot; Frank A. Kafker, Jeff Loveland [ed.] - Elegan_TIV\" class=\"embed-card embed-blogcard\" scrolling=\"no\" frameborder=\"0\" style=\"display: block; width: 100%; height: 190px; max-width: 500px; margin: 10px 0px;\"></iframe>","image_url":"https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/41ZgPriqMbL._SL500_.jpg","version":"1.0","author_name":"Elegan_TIV","width":"100%","type":"rich","blog_title":"Elegan_TIV","provider_name":"Hatena Blog","provider_url":"https://hatena.blog","categories":["Books(\u81ea\u7136\u30fb\u79d1\u5b66)"],"author_url":"https://blog.hatena.ne.jp/Elegan_TIV/","title":"\u25bc\"The Early Britannica\" Frank A. Kafker, Jeff Loveland [ed.]","url":"https://www.elegantiv.com/entry/2024/10/31/094401","published":"2024-10-31 09:44:01","blog_url":"https://www.elegantiv.com/","description":"The Encyclopaedia britannica is a familiar cultural icon, but what do we know about the early editions that helped shape it into the longest continuously published encyclopedia still in existence? This first examination of the three eighteenth-century editions traces the Britannica's extraordinary d\u2026","height":"190"}