Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Open Access Journal: Il Bollettino di Numismatica

Il Bollettino di Numismatica
http://www.numismaticadellostato.it/img/logo_bdn.jpg
Creato nel 1983 per volontà dell’allora Direttore generale dell’Ufficio Centrale per i Beni Ambientali, Architettonici, Archeologici, Artistici e Storici, Guglielmo Triches, da una “costola” del prestigioso Bollettino d’Arte, il Bollettino di Numismatica si articola in tre linee editoriali:

»  La serie ordinaria, a periodicità semestrale (50 numeri)
»  Le monografie (13 Collane)
»  I supplementi (dedicati a temi di attualità) 
Nato per soddisfare l’esigenza di far conoscere e rendere fruibile una categoria di documenti di grandis­sima importanza storica e storico-artistica quali sono le monete, specchio insostituibile della vita economica, sociale ed artistica dei vari Stati nelle diverse epoche, il Bollettino di Numismatica si è rivelato, nel tempo, anche un formidabile strumento di tutela a disposizione degli operatori del settore. L’enorme quantità di ma­teriali dispersi in miriadi di collezioni grandi, medie e piccole, pubbliche e private, unitamente alla ricchezza di un sottosuolo che ancora oggi riesce a parlare a quanti si avvicinano, con attenta professionalità, ai “tesori” di informazioni che esso racchiude necessitava, infatti, di un collettore unico ed ufficialmente riconosciuto nel quale far confluire le informazioni sul patrimonio numismatico del nostro paese. Da qui la decisione di affian­care, alla serie ordinaria prevista con cadenza semestrale e dedicata in via prioritaria alla pubblicazione dei materiali da scavo, anche una più articolata collana di serie monografiche dove far confluire l’enorme quantità di materiali di collezione, di proprietà tanto pubblica quanto privata, con particolare attenzione anche a classi di monete omogenee per epoca ed area di provenienza ma disperse sul territorio in differenti raccolte.
Serie Ordinaria: Volumi Disponibili in PDF Bollettino n. 34-35 - 2000 gennaio-dicembre  - Bollettino n. 54 - 2010
Indici 1989-2007 nn. 1-49 (Tratti dal Bollettino di Numismatica n. 50 - 2000)
Selezionare l'indice da consultare:


Monografie
Volumi Disponibili in PDF

 Monografia n. 8.2.II - SYLLOGE GEMMARVM GNOSTICARVM a cura di A. Mastrocinque  
Vol.II - Contributi di Emanuele M. CIAMPINI, BRUNA NARDELLI, PAOLO VITELLOZZI 

Monografia n. 8.2.I - SYLLOGE GEMMARVM GNOSTICARVM a cura di A. Mastrocinque 
Vol.I - Testi di A. MASTROCINQUE, G. SFAMENI GASPARRO, M.G. LANCELLOTTI. Roma 2003 (2004)

 Monografia n. 13 - FONDAZIONE TORINO MUSEI. MUSEO D'ARTE ANTICA di SERAFINA PENNESTRÌ 
Vol.II - Memorie di Torino. Medaglie, gettoni, distintivi. Tavole.
Vol.I - Memorie di Torino. Medaglie, gettoni, distintivi. 1706-1970.
 
Monografia n. 11 - BANCA D'ITALIA - LE COLLEZIONI NUMISMATICHE a cura di Silvana Balbi de Caro 
Vol.III - Soldi d'oro (S. BALBI DE CARO, M.CATTINI, M DE CECCO)
Supplementi  

Volumi Disponibili in PDF 


Supplemento 48-49 - TUTELA PER I BENI CULTURALI, ASPETTI GIURIDICO-OPERATIVI. 2007 

Supplemento al n. 39 - TÉCHNE, LE FORME DELL'ARTE - Roma 2004 
Vol.I - XI Mostra della Medaglia e Placchetta d'arte. Roma, Soprintendenza Archeologica, Museo Numismatico, Palazzo Massimo alle Terme, 7 aprile-settembre 2004 

Supplemento al n. 37 - MONETE E MEDAGLIE. Scritti di Francesco Panvini Rosati - Roma 2004 a cura di Giuseppina Pisani Sartorio 
Vol.II - Dal tardo antico all'età  moderna 
Vol.I - Età  antica

Supplemento 38 - TRAFFICO ILLECITO DEI REPERTI ARCHEOLOGICI. GLOBALIZZAZIONE DEL FENOMENO E PROBLEMATICHE DI CONTRASTO - Roma 2002

Monday, April 8, 2013

A Day in the Life of the Digital Humanities

I am participating today in A Day in the Life of the Digital Humanities.
A Day in the Life of the Digital Humanities (Day of DH) is an open community publication project that will bring together scholars interested in the digital humanities from around the world to document what they do on one day.  This year, Day of DH will take place on April 8th. The goal of the project is to create a web site that weaves together a picture of the participant’s activities on the day which answers the question, “Just what do digital humanists really do?” Participants  document their day through photographs and text, all of which is published on a community online platform (which, for this year, lives at dayofdh2013.matrix.msu.edu). Both during and after the day, people are encouraged to read and comment on their fellow participant’s posts.  Eventually, all the data will be grouped together, undergo some light semantic editing, and released for others to study. We hope that, beyond the original online publication, the raw data will be of use to those interested in further visualization or digital community ethnographic research.
My contribution, so far is in the participants' blog, musing on AWOL, thinking aloud (in a manner of speaking), or something...

Feel free to comment.

Prosop: a social networking tool for the past

[First posted in AWOL 20 June 2011. Updated 8 April 2013]

Prosop: a social networking tool for the past
In the last decade, historians have renewed their interest in local history, and they have brought computers with them to the archives. This research has produced a great deal of prosopographic data: lists of names. For the most part, however, each local story is told in solitude from the work of other historians. History's local turn has been accompanied by a transnational turn, and here too researchers have not found ways to share and aggregate their data.

This project aims to offer a tool (called Prosop) that will accomplish this goal. Prosop will combine a highly flexible database of names and demographic information with a user friendly, customizable, opensource interface. It will put the best features of social networking applications, collaborative wikis, geotagging, and data search and filtering at the service of social historians. Prosop is designed to meet the disciplinary requirements of professional historians, while remaining attractive to amateur historians and genealogists.

With generous funding from the NEH Office of Digital Humanities, Prosop will convene content creation workshops in 2013; see our call for participants. In the meantime, if you are interested in the project, and/or possess a large database of historical names, please get in touch with the project director, Will Hanley (Florida State University).

CDLI News: The Abbey of Montserrat

From Bertrand Lafont:
The Abbey of Montserrat near Barcelona, Spain, and the Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative (CDLI Los Angeles/Berlin) are delighted to announce the successful digitization of the Montserrat cuneiform collection.
This significant new digital content to CDLI’s web offerings is now available, in Catalan, Spanish, French, and English,
The origins of the Museum of the Montserrat Abbey and its collection of cuneiform artefacts are related to the journeys of Father Bonaventura Ubach who visited Iraq and several excavations and archaeological sites in 1922-23. He was one of the early visitors to Woolley’s excavations in Ur. Important pieces acquired during his travel are on display in the museum, where Ubach and his successors created additional space to exhibit extraordinary text artefacts (visitors should request an appointment to view the holdings).
Ubach managed to collect a substantial number of cuneiform objects, mostly tablets, currently numbering approximately 1150 artifacts, that received constant attention through cataloguing and text publications. The majority of these (778) date to the Ur III period (ca. 2100-2000 BC) and are economic in character. Among these we may mention, for instance, an administrative text still in its envelope and a round bulla whose weathered seal impression and content can be related to a similar object in the John Rylands Library in Manchester, UK, with the same seal impression. A large, relatively well-preserved account dates to the ninth year of the Ur III king Shu-Sîn.
The remaining text artefacts in the collection represent a rather diverse assemblage. Most prominent are 87 copies of a royal inscription of the Early Old Babylonian (ca. 2000-1900 BC) king Sîn-kashid found on both tablets and on small cones. Although always similar in content, these manuscripts make for a valuable addition to the texts edited by Frayne for the “Royal Inscriptions of Mesopotamia” project (RIME 4.4.1.).
The Old Babylonian period is further represented by important objects; the collection contains some manuscripts of Sumerian literature, most notably a relatively well-preserved manuscript of the “Instructions of Shuruppak”, a fragment of “Gilgamesh and Huwawa B”, and an Akkadian-glossed version of the “Ur-Ninurta Instructions. Akkadian literature is represented by fragments containing lines of the Erra epic. For the late periods the collection contains several Neo-Babylonian bricks and tablets, but also important text artefacts until Achaemenid and Seleucid periods. Among these, a Late Babylonian manuscript of the epic Atra-hasis must be highlighted, for it adds additional lines and intriguing variants to other known texts. As well, there are a few fragments of astronomical and medical texts. The collection also includes
fragmentary tablets containing Hittite ritual texts and Elamite royal inscriptions.
The condition of the tablets is rather good. There are also three boxes of fragments that could join to existing texts in the collection. During the process of imaging Wagensonner made five joins that seem to represent new texts, all of them Ur III economic records. The existing fragments (some tens) can to a great extent be dated to this period, but there are also plenty of later bits and pieces. Future work will likely result in more joins.
Extant cuneiform text artefacts in the collection were digitized in the fall of 2012, using the conventional flatbed scanning methods of the CDLI, thanks to the generous hospitality of the Abbey of Montserrat, the support of the French CNRS and a grant of the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation (project “Creating a Sustainable Cuneiform Digital Library”). The imaging was a cooperative effort among three partners: the CNRS in Nanterre (Bertrand Lafont), the CSIC in Madrid (Ignacio Márquez Rowe and María Dolores Casero Chamorro), and the University of Oxford (Klaus Wagensonner). The raw images were processed to CDLI-conformant fatcross representations by Wagensonner.
Following this successful digitization, it may be stressed again that our adherence to the principles of open access serves all the Humanities, in particular those in the fields of dead language research dependent on free access to primary sources and accompanying catalogue data. In granting open access to source material such as the text artefacts kept in the Montserrat Museum, this important collection joins other cultural heritage and research institutions in CDLI’s “extended family” who support efforts to permanently archive, and to make available to the research and the general public digital facsimiles of all artefacts of shared world history that are in their immediate, or indirect care.
Bertrand Lafont, CNRS Paris
Ignacio Márquez Rowe, CSIC Madrid
F. Pius-Ramon Tragan, Abbey of Montserrat

Sunday, April 7, 2013

Open Access Journal: Αρχείον Ευβοϊκών Μελετών

Αρχείον Ευβοϊκών Μελετών
http://www.e-e-s.gr/siteImages/banner.jpg
Στα πλαίσια του προγράμματος «Ψηφιοποίηση, τεκμηρίωση και προβολή πολιτιστικού αποθέματος των Εκδόσεων της Εταιρείας Ευβοϊκών Σπουδών» έγινε ψηφιοποίηση τριών πολιτισμικών αποθεμάτων:
Το πρώτο περιλαμβάνει τμήμα του πολιτιστικού και ιστορικού αποθέματος από εκδόσεις της Εταιρείας Ευβοϊκών Σπουδών από το 1934 έως σήμερα (Αρχείο Ευβοϊκών Μελετών – ΑΕΜ – τόμοι 34).
Το δεύτερο περιλαμβάνει τα παραρτήματα του ΑΕΜ και διάφορες εκδόσεις της Εταιρείας Ευβοϊκών Σπουδών από το 1934 έως σήμερα – τόμοι 12.
Το τρίτο αποτελείται από πρωτογενές αρχειακό και υποστηρικτικό υλικό των εκδόσεων της Εταιρείας Ευβοϊκών Σπουδών από το 1934 έως σήμερα (φωτογραφικό υλικό, σημειώσεις και χειρόγραφα, πρακτικά συνεδριάσεων Διοικητικών Συμβουλίων ιστορικού – ερευνητικού ενδιαφέροντος κλπ).
Για το πολιτισμικό υλικό έγινε καταγραφή, τεκμηρίωση και ηλεκτρονική διαχείριση όλων των μεταδεδομένων (metadata). Στον παρών δικτυακό τόπο γίνεται η διάχυση του πολιτισμικού αποθέματος.

Saturday, April 6, 2013

Open Philology Project Announcement

The Open Philology Project and Humboldt Chair of Digital Humanities at Leipzig

CAA Proceedings Online: Computer Applications & Quantitative Methods in Archaeology

CAA: Computer Applications & Quantitative Methods in Archaeology: Proceedings
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CAA is an international organisation bringing together archaeologists, mathematicians and computer scientists. Its aims are to encourage communication between these disciplines, to provide a survey of present work in the field and to stimulate discussion and future progress. Membership is open to anyone on payment of a nominal fee.

Annual Conference

CAA organises an annual international scientific conference, where practitioners can present their work in paper sessions, and discuss developments with colleagues from all over the world in round tables and workshops. The conference sessions cover a wide range of topics, including data acquisition and recording, conceptual modelling, semantic technologies, data analysis, data management, digital 3D object reconstruction, image visualisation in archaeology, geophysics and GIS. 

Papers presented at CAA conferences are published in the CAA Proceedings , that are peer-reviewed and published within one year of the conference. Conference proceedings have been published since 1973.
Greetings from Perth, CAA 2013! We are happy to announce that CAA proceedings are now available online. At the moment, the collection of proceedings is not complete yet; we expect this to be finished somewhere in the course of 2013.