Orbis Publishing

From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Orbis Publishing
Company typeLimited
IndustryPublishing
Founded1970; 54 years ago (1970)
Defunct1999 (1999)
FateAcquired by Italian De Agostini group
SuccessorDe Agostini UK Ltd
Headquarters

Orbis Publishing Ltd. was a United Kingdom-based publisher of books and partworks.

Company history

[edit]

Orbis Publishing Limited was founded in 1970. The company was originally registered on 25 November 1969 under the name Reefdell Limited with the company director and secretary named as Stanley Harold Davis, of 3-5 Leonard Street, City Road, London E.C.2. and the office manager named as David Ordish of the same address.[1] On 1 June 1970 the name of the company was changed to Orbis Publishing Limited and the company secretary was at that date named as S. D. Davis.[1]

Orbis employed many writers, researchers, academics, designers, artists and photographers to create the contents for the issues in their various partworks series, including John Gooders, a prolific writer of books on birdlife, who was a consultant editor to Orbis's partwork series The Encyclopaedia of Birds, his work there being so successful as "to merit and entension, requiring Gooders to write a further 12,000 words a week for each of the 26 additional issues".[2]

Partworks publishing was a highly competitive market and for the launch of its partwork series, World of Wildlife in 1971, Orbis Publishing spent "£110,000 for television commercials and another £12,000 for full-page advertisements in the nationals - all crammed into a single message-laden week".[3]

Orbis Publishing was merged into De Agostini UK Ltd in 1999 after being acquired by the Italian De Agostini group.

Partworks

[edit]
  • Scandal
  • Natural Choice
  • One to One
  • The Home Computer Course
  • The Home Computer Advanced Course
  • PC Genius
  • NAM (The Vietnam Experience 1965-75)
  • Unsolved
  • The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Aircraft[4]
  • War in Peace
  • War Machine
  • The Elite: Against All Odds
  • The Blues Collection[5]
  • The Unexplained
  • The British Empire
  • Play it Today
  • All About Science
  • Greenfingers
  • KnowHow
  • The Movie: The Illustrated History of the Cinema, published December 1979 to January 1983 (in 158 chapters)
  • World of Automobiles
  • On Four Wheels (in 165 parts)
  • On Two Wheels (in 121 parts)
  • The Encyclopedia of Super Cars
  • The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Wildlife (in 62 parts)
  • Warplane (in 120 parts)
  • The History of Rock
  • World War II
  • The Classic Collection
  • Wings -The Encyclopedia of Aviation in Weekly Parts (in 166 parts)
  • Dinosaurs! (An Orbis Play and Learn Collection)[6]
  • Bugs (An Orbis Play and Learn Collection)[7]

Albums

[edit]

Some magazine partworks were published accompanied with compilation albums.[8]

  • The History of Rock (40 volume compilation of vinyl records or audio cassettes) 1981-1987[9]
  • The Blues Collection (CD) 1993-1997[10]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b DE AGOSTINI UK LIMITED - Filing History, gov.uk. Retrieved 3 November 2022.
  2. ^ "John Gooders" (obituary), The Daily Telegraph, 19 July 2010, p. 25.
  3. ^ Sheridan, Geoffry (22 October 1971). "World of partworks". The Guardian. p. 9.
  4. ^ UK Aircraft Magazines, aeroflight.co.uk. Retrieved 4 November 2019.
  5. ^ Partworks, publishinghistory.com. Retrieved 4 November 2019.
  6. ^ Dinosaurs - Orbis Play and Learn Collection, ukprintarchive.com. Retrieved 4 November 2019.
  7. ^ Bugs - Orbis Play and Learn Collection, ukprintarchive.com. Retrieved 4 November 2019.
  8. ^ "Orbis". Discogs. Retrieved 2 November 2021.
  9. ^ "The History Of Rock". Discogs. Retrieved 2 November 2021.
  10. ^ "The Blues Collection". Discogs. Retrieved 2 November 2021.
[edit]