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Table of contents
Ordered list of the parts of a written work
Ordered list of the parts of a written work

A table of contents (or simply contents, abbreviated as TOC), is a list usually part of the front matter preceding the main text of a book or other written work containing the titles of the text's sections, sometimes with descriptions.
History
Pliny the Elder credits Quintus Valerius Soranus (d. 82 BC) as the first author to provide a table of contents to help readers navigate a lengthy work.
Classical Origins
The Roman writer Quintus Valerius Soranus (d. 82 BCE) is credited as the first to attach a list of contents to a written work, according to the Roman historian Pliny the Elder. In his Natural History, Pliny writes: "Soranus was the first to include a list of his book’s chapters to help the reader understand its content."Pliny's own table of contents for his encyclopedic Historia naturalis ("Natural History") may be viewed online in Latin and in English (following dedication).
In Indian and Chinese Civilizations
In ancient Sanskrit literature, works such as the Sushruta Samhita and the Charaka Samhita (1st century BCE) were systematically divided into books and chapters, which were often listed at the beginning. In China, during the Han to Tang dynasties (206 BCE – 907 CE), classification catalogues began to appear in official records. One example is the Hanshu (Book of Han), which organized works by topic and included early content tables.
Byzantine and Early Christian Contributions
Early Christian tradition employed reference tables known as Canon Tables, compiled by Eusebius of Caesarea in the 4th century CE. These helped readers navigate between the four Gospels and are considered among the earliest tools resembling tables of contents.
In Islamic civilization
With the flourishing of writing and scholarship during the Abbasid era (9th century CE), Muslim scholars began dividing their books into chapters and sections, often listed in the preface or at the beginning of each chapter. Notable examples include works by Avicenna, al-Jahiz, and Ibn al-Nadim in his encyclopedic Al-Fihrist. Taha Hussein referred to this structure as a precursor to the modern table of contents: "Al-Jahiz would often include tentative headings for his chapters, offering readers a glimpse into the discussion—a primitive form of the contents page."
Influence on Europe
The transmission of knowledge during the Islamic Golden Age, particularly through Al-Andalus and Sicily, exposed Latin Europe to Arab methods of organizing texts. Historian George Saliba notes that Europeans not only translated scientific content but also adopted Arab formatting and presentation methods.
Europe After the Printing Press
After the invention of the printing press by Johannes Gutenberg in the 15th century, organizing printed texts with clear tables of contents became increasingly necessary, which then became standard in the following centuries.
As printing technology expanded beyond Europe, the structural organization of books—including the use of tables of contents—was transmitted through colonial, commercial, and intellectual exchanges.
Form
The depth of detail in tables of contents depends on the length, complexity, and type of work. For books and most other large written works, tables of contents come after the title page, copyright page, and if appropriate, dedication and epigraph pages. Although they include everything after it, tables of contents never include anything before it. Depending on the complexity or length of the text, the table of contents will include the parts (groups of chapters), if applicable, chapters or section headings, and sometimes chapter or section subheadings.
Formal reports (ten or more pages and being too long to put into a memo or letter) also have a table of contents. Within an English-language book, the table of contents usually appears after the title page, copyright notices, and, in technical journals, the abstract; and before any lists of tables or figures, the foreword, and the preface.
Printed tables of contents indicate page numbers where each part starts, while digital ones offer links to go to each part. The format and location of the page numbers is a matter of style for the publisher. If the page numbers appear after the heading text, they might be preceded by characters called leaders, usually dots or periods, that run from the chapter or section titles on the opposite side of the page, or the page numbers might remain closer to the titles. In some cases, the page number appears before the text.
In the case of anthologies or other compilations of works by different authors, each section's contributors are usually listed along with the title of the section.
Matter preceding the table of contents is generally not listed there. However, all pages except the outside cover are counted, and the table of contents is often numbered with a lowercase Roman numeral page number.
In electronic documents
Many popular word processors, such as LibreOffice Writer, Microsoft Word and WordPerfect are capable of automatically generating a table of contents if the author of the text uses specific styles for chapters, sections, subsections, etc.
TOCs in digital books and documents can be created using bookmarks.
Examples
Example with leaders: Chapter 1: Getting Started . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Next Steps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Example without leaders: Chapter 1: Getting Started 1 Introduction 2 Next Steps 3
Example with authors:
- Introduction to Biology Arthur C. Smith 1
- Microbiology Susan Jones 10
- Advances in Biotechnology T.C. Chang 24
Example with descriptive text: Chapter 1 3 In which we first meet our hero and heroine, attend a gala feast, and begin an unexpected journey.
Chapter 2 12 The journey takes an unusual turn, and new villains are discovered.
Gallery
File:Table of contents with green leaders.jpg|A table of contents with leaders highlighted in green File:Annalen der Physik ToC June 1905.jpg|The table of contents of the scientific journal Annalen der Physik (Annals of Physics) from June 1905. Albert Einstein's groundbreaking paper on the photoelectric effect is sixth on this list.
Notes
References
Citations
Sources
- The Chicago Manual of Style (15th Edition)
References
- [https://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/Pliny_the_Elder/7*.html Pliny the Elder, Natural History, Book VII]
- [[Pliny the Elder]]. (July 2002). ["[Natural History (Pliny)". Classical Philology.
- Harwit, ''Knowledge Systems in Ancient India'', Journal of Historical Epistemology, 1997.
- Joseph Needham, ''Science and Civilization in China'', Vol. III.
- Michael Cameron, ''Intertextuality in Early Christian Literature'', Oxford, 2001.
- Taha Hussein, ''Hadith al-Arbi'a’'', Vol. 1, p. 122.
- [https://www.caus.org.lb/Home/article/515 George Saliba, Islamic Science and the Making of the European Renaissance, p. 88]
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