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・ Officious intermeddler
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・ Officium (Ancient Rome)
・ Officium Defunctorum
・ Officium Novum
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・ Official Handbook of Stations
・ Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe
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・ Official Harpist to the Prince of Wales
・ Official Historian of Puerto Rico
Official history
・ Official History of Australia in the War of 1914–1918
・ Official History of Australian Peacekeeping, Humanitarian and Post-Cold War Operations
・ Official History of New Zealand in the Second World War 1939–45
・ Official History of the Canadian Army in the Second World War
・ Official Hot Mess (O.H.M)
・ Official Information Act
・ Official Information Act 1982
・ Official Information Act 2008
・ Official Irish Republican Army
・ Official Journal
・ Official Journal of the European Patent Office
・ Official Journal of the European Union
・ Official Journal of the Federation
・ Official Karate Magazine


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Official history : ウィキペディア英語版
Official history
An official history is a work of history which is sponsored, authorised, or endorsed by its subject. The term is most commonly used for histories which are produced at a government's behest. However, the term may also encompass, for example, company histories, i.e. histories of commercial companies which the company itself has commissioned. An official biography (one written with the permission, cooperation, and perhaps participation of its subject or its subject's heirs) is often known as an authorized biography.
Official histories frequently have the advantage that the author or authors have been given access to archives, interview subjects and other primary sources which would be closed or inaccessible to independent historians. However, because of the necessarily close relationship between author and subject, such works may be (or be perceived to be) partisan in tone, and to lack historical objectivity. In fact, the extent to which official histories are partisan varies considerably: some are indeed little more than exercises in public relations and promotion, whereas in other cases the authors will have retained sufficient independence to be able to express negative as well as positive judgements about their subjects.
==Historical official histories==
There is a long tradition of histories being written or published under official patronage: they include, for example, the ''Anglica Historia'' (drafted by 1513 and published in 1534), a history of England written by Polydore Vergil at the request of King Henry VII; and William Camden's ''Annales Rerum Gestarum Angliae et Hiberniae Regnate Elizabetha'' (1615-1627), a history of the reign of Elizabeth I of England. In early modern Europe, certain royal courts appointed official historians: these included the Rikshistoriograf in Sweden from 1618, the Historiographer Royal in England from 1660, and the Historiographer Royal in Scotland from 1681. The Scottish post is still in existence.
Each book in the ''Twenty-Four Histories'' records the official history of a Chinese dynasty. Sixteen of the histories were written between the 7th and 15th centuries. The first is ''Records of the Grand Historian'', authored by Sima Qian in the Han Dynasty, and the last is ''History of Ming'' in 1735. The official histories were compiled since the Tang Dynasty by a government office for historiography. They were revised and expanded over the course of a dynasty, up until the point that a final edition is published by the succeeding dynasty.

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