Reliable publications include established newspapers, academic journals and books, textbooks, and other published sources with reputations for accuracy and fact-checking.
Unreliable sources include blog posts and other self-published works, press releases, and social media posts.
In order for a source to be considered verifiable, other editors should be able to consult the source.
Is the source independent of the subject?
Is the source connected in any way to the subject? This is especially important when writing biographies or about organizations.
For example, if you were writing a biography, sources like the person's webpage or personal blog would not be considered independent.
Is the source primary or secondary?
Primary sources include first-hand accounts, autobiographies, and other original content.
Wikipedia allows limited use of primary sources, but typically only for straightforward, descriptive statements of facts, and only if they are published and verifiable without requiring specialized knowledge.
Secondary sources should be the main basis for a biography on Wikipedia.
If you're working on a topic related to medicine or psychology, ensure that your sources follow these special guidelines.
If you're creating a new article, consider the following:
Ensure that your topic meets Wikipedia's notability guidelines.
In order for a topic to meet the notability requirement, you must be able to identify 2-3 sources that are reliable, verifiable, and independent of the subject you're writing about.
Finding sufficient sources to establish notability can be especially hard when writing about people or organizations.
Sources that are not independent of the subject might be useful additions, but don't count towards the notability requirement.
Wikipedia has developed special guidelines for writing about living persons. Please follow these carefully.
Wikipedia has a series of guidelines for writing about different categories of people, such as academics and artists. If you're trying to create a new entry about a living person, please look at these carefully.
If you're not sure whether a source is reliable, ask a librarian! If you have questions about Wikipedia's sourcing rules, you can use the Get Help button below to contact your Wikipedia Expert.
This is where you will compile the bibliography for your Wikipedia assignment.
Betancourt, Pl. 2013. "The Larnakes from the Hagios Charalambos Ossuary." In Amilla : The Quest for Excellence. Studies Presented to Guenter Kopcke in Celebration of His 75th Birthday, edited by Robert B. Koehl. Havertown: Institute for Aegean Prehistory Press.
Cavanagh, William; Mee, Christopher (1998). A Private Place: Death in Prehistoric Greece. Josered: Paul Åströms Förlag.
Hägg, R. and F. Sieurin. “On the Origin of the Wooden Coffin in Late Bronze Age Greece.” Annual of the British School in Athens Vol. 77 (1982): 175-186.
Kramer-Hajos, Margaretha. 2015. "Mourning on the Larnakes at Tanagra: Gender and Agency in Late Bronze Age Greece." Hesperia 84(4): 627-667
Mavriyannaki, Caterina. RECHERCHES SUR LES LARNAKES MINOENNES DE LA CRETE OCCIDENTALE(Incunabula Graeca LIV). Rome: Edizioni Dell’Ateneo, 1972.
Morgan, L. “A Minoan Larnax from Knossos.” Annual of the British School at Athens Vol. 82 (1987): 171-200.
Preston, L. 2004. “Contextualising the Larnax: Tradition, Innovation and Regionalism in Coffin Use on Late Minoan II–IIIB Crete,” OJA 23: 177–197.
Rutkowski, B. 1968. “The Origin of the Minoan Coffin,” BSA 63: 219–227.
Vermeule, E. D. T.. “Painted Mycenaean Larnakes.” Journal of Hellenic Studies Vol. 85 (1965): 123-148.
Watrous, L. Vance. “The Origin and Iconography of the Late Minoan Painted Larnax.” Hesperia Vol. 60, No. 3 (Jul.-Sep. 1991): 285-307.