Language subdomains A separate
Hebrew version of Wikisource (
he.wikisource.org) was created in August 2004. The need for a language-specific
Hebrew website derived from the difficulty of typing and editing Hebrew texts in a
left-to-right environment (Hebrew is written right-to-left). In the ensuing months, contributors in other languages including
German requested their own wikis, but a December vote on the creation of separate language domains was inconclusive. Finally, a
second vote that ended May 12, 2005, supported the adoption of separate language subdomains at Wikisource by a large margin, allowing each language to host its texts on its own wiki. An initial wave of 14 languages was set up on August 23, 2005. The new languages did not include English, but the code en: was temporarily set to redirect to the main website (
wikisource.org). At this point the Wikisource community, through a mass project of manually sorting thousands of pages and categories by language, prepared for a second wave of page imports to local wikis. On September 11, 2005, the wikisource.org wiki was reconfigured to enable the
English version, along with 8 other languages that were created early that morning and late the night before. Three more languages were created on March 29, 2006, and then another large wave of 14 language domains was created on June 2, 2006. Languages without subdomains are locally incubated. , 182 languages are
hosted locally. As of , there are Wikisource subdomains for languages of which are active and are closed. As a language incubator, the wiki currently provides a home for over 30 languages that do not yet have their own language subdomains. Some of these are very active, and have built libraries with hundreds of texts (such as
Volapük). •
To provide direct, ongoing support by a local wiki community for a dynamic multilingual portal at its Main Page, for users who go to http://wikisource.org. The current
Main Page portal was created on August 26, 2005, by
ThomasV, who based it upon the Wikipedia portal. The idea of a project-specific coordination wiki, first realized at Wikisource, also took hold in another Wikimedia project, namely at
Wikiversity's
Beta Wiki. Like wikisource.org, it serves Wikiversity coordination in all languages, and as a language incubator, but unlike Wikisource, its
Main Page does not serve as its multilingual portal. ==Reception==