Relational Data Warehousing
Structured analytical databases integrating operational data for reporting, planning, forecasting, and governance.
Core metadata
- ID: relational_data_warehousing
- Era: Modern
- First known date: 1983 (decade)
- Region: Global / multiple regions
- Review status: structurally_validated
- Maturity: N/A
Prerequisites
- Databases (Relational DBMS) (databases_relational_dbms)
- Enterprise Resource Planning (enterprise_resource_planning)
Dependents
Fields
- None.
Node sources
- What Is a Data Warehouse? (IBM, 2026, official_agency) • Supports: node
Locator: IBM explains that the data warehouse concept emerged in the 1980s to integrate disparate data into a consistent format for analysis. - Building the Data Warehouse (QED Technical Publishing Group / Google Books, 1992, textbook) • Supports: node
Locator: Bibliographic record for W. H. Inmon's 1992 Building the Data Warehouse, a foundational data warehousing text.
Prerequisite edge evidence
Edge/source evidence summary:
- Prerequisite edges: 2
- Average edge confidence: 68%
- Prerequisite sources: 1
- expert_inference: 2
| Prerequisite | Type | Confidence | Evidence level | Note | Sources |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Databases (Relational DBMS) (databases_relational_dbms) | enabling | 68% | expert_inference | Databases (Relational DBMS) provides a capability that enables this technology without being the only possible path. |
|
| Enterprise Resource Planning (enterprise_resource_planning) | enabling | 68% | expert_inference | Enterprise Resource Planning provides a capability that enables this technology without being the only possible path. | No sources recorded. |
This page is generated from canonical era JSON and is indexable by URL.