When was the official french dictionary published
https://www.google.com/search?q=when+was+the+official+french+dictionary+published

1694
The first official French dictionary, the Dictionnaire de l'Académie française, was published on August 24, 1694. It was presented to King Louis XIV by the Académie Française, the council responsible for regulating the French language. 
Later editions of the dictionary include:
The eighth edition, completed in 1935.
The ninth and most recent edition, which was published in volumes between 1992 and 2024.

1612
The official Italian dictionary, the Vocabolario degli Accademici della Crusca, was first published in 1612 by the Accademia della Crusca. This was the first dictionary of the Italian language and served as the model for similar dictionaries in other European languages. 
The academy responsible for it, the Accademia della Crusca, was founded in Florence in 1582–1583. 

1780
The official Spanish dictionary (Diccionario de la lengua española) was first published in 1780 as Diccionario de la lengua castellana by the Real Academia Española. The dictionary has been updated periodically, with the 23rd edition published in 2014. 
First edition: Published in 1780.
Publisher: The Royal Spanish Academy (RAE).
Latest print edition: The 23rd edition was published in 2014.

1854
The Deutsches Wörterbuch (German Dictionary) was started by the Brothers Grimm in 1838, with the first parts published in 1854. The dictionary was not completed by the brothers, and it was eventually finished by other scholars and institutions in 1961. Another significant official dictionary, the Duden, which is the prescriptive source for German spelling, was first published in 1880.

1863
The first "official" Russian dictionary depends on the definition, but a prominent candidate is the Dictionary of the Russian Language edited by Ozhegov, first published in 1949. Other significant dictionaries include the Ushakov Dictionary, published from 1935–1940, and the monumental Explanatory Dictionary of the Live Great Russian language by Dal, with its first edition published in 1863–1866.

1908
The first volume of the Ben-Yehuda Dictionary, the first modern comprehensive historical dictionary of Hebrew, was published in 1908. The complete 17-volume set was finalized in 1959, long after its author Eliezer Ben-Yehuda's death. 
Initial Publication: The first volume was published in 1908.
Completion: The dictionary was completed in 1959, with various volumes edited posthumously by others following Ben-Yehuda's plan.

Ancient Languages
Greek
The concept of a comprehensive dictionary did not exist in ancient Greece in the modern sense; the culture was primarily oral, and people had a strong memory for words and their meanings. However, ancient scholars, particularly during the Hellenistic period, created specialized lexicons and glossaries to help understand older, obscure, or technical vocabulary. 
The first extensive learned collections of Greek "glosses" (explanatory notes on words) were compiled by: 
Philitas of Cos (around the early 3rd century BCE)
Simias of Rhodes (around the early 3rd century BCE) 
Their works only survive in fragments, but they initiated the Greek lexicographical tradition.

Latin
During Roman times, a "dictionary" in the modern sense did not exist. The Romans did, however, create glossaries and lists of words, particularly of obsolete or difficult terms, to help with understanding older texts. 
Key figures and works include:
Marcus Verrius Flaccus: He is credited with creating one of the earliest significant lexicographical works, De verborum significatione (On the Meaning of Words), in the time of Emperor Augustus (late 1st century BC/early 1st century AD). This work was an alphabetical list of archaic Latin words and their meanings.

Arabic
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Khalil_ibn_Ahmad_al-Farahidi (718 - 786)

The concept of "official" Arabic dictionary can refer to different historical and modern works. The first known Arabic dictionary, Kitab al-'Ayn, was compiled in the 8th century by al-Khalil ibn Ahmad al-Farahidi. A later and highly influential work, the Hans Wehr Dictionary of Modern Written Arabic, was first published in its English edition in 1961, though its German version was completed in 1952.
The number of letters used by the dictionary refers to the traditional 28 letters of the Arabic alphabet, which it organized and documented.

Al-Farahidi's manuscript, originally held in a library of the Tahirid dynasty, was returned to Basra in 862, or 863CE, seventy years after his death, when a northeast Persian bookseller sold it for fifty dinars. Some few copies were made available for commercial sale, although the work remained rare through much of the Middle Ages.