• 3-minute read
  • 12th June 2018

Citation Order (Multiple Citations in Footnotes and Endnotes)

If you are writing an essay, you need to back up your arguments with citations. In fact, you can even cite multiple sources to support the same argument! This is when citation order becomes crucial.

Different systems require different formats when citing more than one source in the same place. We have previously looked at how this works with author–date referencing. Here, though, we’re looking at the rules of citation order for referencing systems that use footnotes and endnotes.

Footnote Citation Order

With systems such as MHRA or Chicago referencing, you cite sources by placing source information in footnotes (with full publication information also given in a bibliography at the end of the document).

Generally, each source you reference should be cited in its own footnote. However, if you have several sources that support the same point in one passage of text, you can cite these in a single footnote.

To do this, separate each source in the footnote with a semicolon:

1. Alice Mikkelsen, Fake News and Real Lies (London: Toucan Inc., 2017), 151; Chris Skinner, On the Nature of Truth (New York: Bugle Books, 2012), 11-24.

Here we see a Chicago-style footnote with two sources by different authors. You should check your style guide for exact advice on citation order, though, as this can vary. Chicago referencing, for example, recommends two options for ordering sources in a footnote:

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  1. Alphabetically by author surname (same order as in the bibliography)
  2. In order of importance to the point you’re making

In the citation above, we have used the alphabetical approach, so Mikkelsen comes before Skinner.

Endnote Citation Order

Endnote referencing systems (e.g. IEEE) use a different number for each source. You should number sources in the order they are cited in the text, with full source information given in a bibliography.

Citing multiple sources in one place therefore simply involves giving all relevant source numbers:

Truth values can be codified using various methods [2], [6]–[7], [9].

In this IEEE-style reference, the author is citing the second, sixth, seventh and ninth sources from the reference list. As shown, in IEEE referencing, each source is given in square brackets: non-sequential sources are then separated with commas; sequential sources are indicated with a dash.

The exact presentation here can vary between systems. Some, for instance, may use a different style of brackets or list sequential sources within brackets (e.g. [5–8] instead of [5]–[8]). However, in terms of citation order, all endnote systems cite sources in numerical order.

Comments (4)
Menaka
23rd May 2021 at 08:51
If the author cites references in a non-alphabetical order eg Zappa, Beatles, and Dylan, then should the footnote contain them in this order (Z, B, D) or alphabetically (B, D, Z)?
    Proofed
    24th May 2021 at 09:22
    Hi, Menaka. It will depend on which referencing system you're using (e.g. as noted in the post, Chicago suggests two ways of ordering citations) and how you're using the sources (e.g. whether you're citing them all to support the same point or whether they're effectively separate citations). If you're using a particular style guide, it should be able to offer some advice. Otherwise, though, I'd suggest just using whichever method will be clearest for your reader(s).
waki
24th August 2021 at 14:23
Do you provide all the publication details both in the footnotes and in the bibiography for a citation? I am writing a paper with Chicago syle and the style guide gives different style for footnotes and biblio, which is fine, but do you have to use both detailed ref styles for one and the same ref?
    Proofed
    24th August 2021 at 16:44
    Hi, Waki. The Chicago footnote referencing style doesn't always require a bibliography (e.g. for a short paper with only a few citations, it permits authors to only give references in footnotes and leave out the bibliography). However, the Chicago style guide does say that footnote citations should be 'preferably supplemented by a bibliography', and we would recommend including one in most cases, especially if it is a piece of academic work that will be assessed (e.g. a university essay).




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