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  1. Mixed Up by Time and Chance?
    Using Digital Methods to “Re-Orient” the Syriac Religious Literature of Late Antiquity
    Published: 2016

    The British Library’s collection of approximately 1000 Syriac manuscripts is one of the world’s richest collections of materials for the study of Syriac Christianity. These manuscripts were catalogued in the nineteenth century shortly after a large... more

    Index theologicus der Universitätsbibliothek Tübingen
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    The British Library’s collection of approximately 1000 Syriac manuscripts is one of the world’s richest collections of materials for the study of Syriac Christianity. These manuscripts were catalogued in the nineteenth century shortly after a large collection of over 500 manuscripts were acquired by the British from the monastery of Dayr al-Suryān in Egypt. This article examines the intellectual assumptions that guided the nineteenth-century cataloguing efforts and offers a methodological proposal for how a new digital catalogue of the manuscripts could and should differ. New methods of digital representation can permit users to engage the Dayr al-Suryān manuscripts and the whole of the British Library Syriac collection from multiple, varied, and even conflicting perspectives. Several such digital approaches are being implemented in Syriaca.org’s digital catalogue of the British Library Syriac manuscripts. The diversity of such digital approaches promises to open new insights into the history of Christianity in late antiquity and beyond.

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Article (journal)
    Format: Online
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    Parent title: Enthalten in: Journal of religion, media and digital culture; Leiden : Brill, 2012; 5(2016), 1, Seite 136-182; Online-Ressource

    Subjects: British Library; British Museum; Codicology; Digital Humanities; Diverse Knowledges; Graph Databases; History of Christianity; Linked Open Data; Manuscripts; Orientalism; Postcolonial Studies; Syriac; Syriaca.org; Traditional Cultural Expressions
  2. Sprachdatenbasierte Modellierung von Wissensnetzen in der mittelalterlichen Romania (ALMA)
    Projektskizze

    We present ALMA, a new research project aimed at investigating the interaction between language and knowledge practices from AD 1100 to 1500. Our primary question is how Medieval Italian, French, Occitan, Catalan, and Spanish developed into languages... more

    HeiBIB - Die Heidelberger Universitätsbibliographie
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    We present ALMA, a new research project aimed at investigating the interaction between language and knowledge practices from AD 1100 to 1500. Our primary question is how Medieval Italian, French, Occitan, Catalan, and Spanish developed into languages of knowledge and scholarship (German Wissen(schafts)sprachen ) in permanent opposition to and exchange with the predominant Latin (but also with Arab, Greek, and Hebrew). Focusing on two domains, medicine and law, the project combines linguistics, text philology, and the history of science with the Digital Humanities and ontology engineering. ALMA will create two multi-lingual, domain-specific text corpora by integrating text editions of hitherto unedited manuscripts and incunabula, and digitized printed editions. Our corpus-linguistic exploration of the ALMA corpora will provide the basis for lexical-semantic studies that analyze emerging knowledge networks and the depth of their linguistic representations. We hypothesize that language evolution and the development of more complex linguistic structures will allow for measuring the impact of knowledge practices on medieval vernacular languages. We will trace the dissemination of lexical material across languages, language varieties, cultural spaces, and periods. This will enable us to follow specific vernacular communication channels. We will use cutting-edge technologies to compile, publish, and share our findings, and to model them in the form of historicized ontologies and Linked Data. Our onomasiological, ontology-driven approach will result in the creation of domain models that can be re-used within the Semantic Web. This has great potential to be relevant for researchers from different disciplines.

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Article (journal)
    Format: Online
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    Parent title: Enthalten in: Zeitschrift für romanische Philologie; Tübingen [u.a.] : Niemeyer, 1877; 139(2023), 2, Seite 301-332; Online-Ressource

    Subjects: corpus linguistics; lexicography; lexicology; Linked Open Data; Medieval Romance languages; Old French; Old Gascon; Old Italo-Romance; Old Occitan; Onomasiology; ontology engineering; semantics; text edition
    Scope: 32
    Notes:

    Gesehen am 12.12.2023

  3. How to semantically annotate 3D models of non-textual cultural heritage?
    a new FOSS toolchain for the Digital Humanities
    Published: August 1, 2022
    Publisher:  Zenodo, Genève

    This is the extended abstract for a workshop at the Spatial Humanities 2022 conference in Ghent, Belgium, 7th-9th September 2022. This workshop aims to help researchers, digital curators and data managers learn how to make datasets of 3D models... more

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    This is the extended abstract for a workshop at the Spatial Humanities 2022 conference in Ghent, Belgium, 7th-9th September 2022. This workshop aims to help researchers, digital curators and data managers learn how to make datasets of 3D models available as linked open data within a collaborative annotation and presentation-ready environment. Participants will take part in practical demonstrations using an integrated toolchain that connects OpenRefine (for data reconciliation and batch upload), Wikibase (for linked open data storage), and Kompakkt (for rendering and annotating 3D models). This toolchain and associated workflow was developed in the context of NFDI4Culture, a German consortium of research and cultural institutions working towards a shared infrastructure for research data that meets the needs of 21st century data creators, maintainers and end users across the broad spectrum of the cultural heritage field and the Digital Humanities. The workshop will emphasize the possibility to combine geo locations and other geo data drawn from authority records in the LOD cloud to 3D architectural models and reconstructions.

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Book
    Format: Online
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    Subjects: 3D objects; cultural heritage; Kompakkt; Linked Open Data; OpenRefine; semantic annotation; Wikibase
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (2 ungezählte Seiten)
  4. Digital Humanities Day Leipzig (DHDL) 2023
    Contributor: Piontkowitz, Vera (Herausgeber); Kretschmer, Uwe (Herausgeber); Burghardt, Manuel (Herausgeber)
    Published: 2024
    Publisher:  Universitätsbibliothek Leipzig, Leipzig

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    Contributor: Piontkowitz, Vera (Herausgeber); Kretschmer, Uwe (Herausgeber); Burghardt, Manuel (Herausgeber)
    Language: German; English
    Media type: Book
    Format: Online
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    Series: Digital Humanities Day Leipzig
    Other subjects: Digital Humanities Day Leipzig; Digital Humanities; Computational Humanities; Distant Reading; Distant Viewing; Digital Edition; Linked Open Data; FAIR Data; Digital History; Digitale Edition; Forschungsdateninfrastruktur; Digitale Archäologie; Digitale Musikwissenschaft,
    Scope: Online-Ressource
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  5. Holistically Modelling the Medieval Book: Towards a Digital Contribution

    Abstract: The book has long played an important role in medieval and indeed modern culture, being at the same time a carrier of texts and images, a sign potentially of wealth and/or education, a site of enquiry for modern scholarship for literature,... more

     

    Abstract: The book has long played an important role in medieval and indeed modern culture, being at the same time a carrier of texts and images, a sign potentially of wealth and/or education, a site of enquiry for modern scholarship for literature, history, linguistics, palaeography, codicology, art history, and more. The ‘archaeology of the book’ can tell us about its history (or biography) as well as the cultures that produced and used it, right up to its present ownership. This multidimensionality of the object has long been known, but it has also proven a challenge to digital approaches which (like all representations) are by their nature models that involve conscious or unconscious selection of particular aspects, and that have been more successful in some aspects than others. This then raises the question to what degree these different viewpoints can be brought together into something approaching a holistic view, while always allowing for the tension between standardisation and innovation, and while remembering that a ‘complete model’ is a tautology, neither possible nor desirable.

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Article (journal)
    Format: Online
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    Parent title:
    Enthalten in: Anglia; Berlin : de Gruyter, 1878-; 139, Heft 1 (2021), 6-31 (gesamt 26); Online-Ressource
    Other subjects: Digital Humanities; Manuscript Studies; palaeography; codicology; textual criticism; modelling; Linked Open Data; ontologies
    Scope: Online-Ressource