Thursday, January 28, 2021

Digital Atlas of the Roman Empire

[First posted in AWOL 17 April 2014, updated 28 January 2022]
 
Digital Atlas of the Roman Empire
Welcome to the new Digital Atlas of the Roman Empire (DARE), hosted and managed by the Centre for Digital Humanities, University of Gothenburg, Sweden.
License
You can use the tiled background map of the Roman Empire in your own web applications. Tiles are available for zoom levels between 4 and 11. Use this link with your Javascript mapping library (Leaflet, OpenLayers, etc.).
https://dh.gu.se/tiles/imperium/{z}/{x}/{y}.png
The map is licenced under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (CC BY 4.0)
Stay tuned on Twitter @johan.ahlfeldt

And on Github

Connected Contests: Ancient Athletes Online

Connected Contests: Ancient Athletes Online
Connected Contests

Connected Contests is an evolving online research tool to facilitate the study of agonistic networks in the ancient, post-classical world. It is part of a wider research project on the history of athletic and other agonistic festivals from 300 BC-AD 300. (see above under about). This website aims to provide an intuitive database of the many contests of the Greek world, and of the athletes, performers and other participants in these contests. 

HOW TO USE THE DATABASE?

The quickest way of consulting the database is by clicking on Search Database (click top right in the menu bar). You may also consult the individual databases (left in the menubar)  which may take some time to load - we are working on that. The search will yield a list of 'events' (i.e. victories or other achievements) that can be sorted in different ways. From there you can refine your search. You can also download a CSV file with the results. A future release will include the possibility to produce geographically or chronologically determined distribution maps.

WHAT IS IN THE DATABASE?

The database is compiled from modern collections and catalogues with the aim of making these specialist data available as an accessible and public tool for further studies and network analyses of athletes and their role in connecting the Mediterranean. At this moment (April 2020) we have entered a selection of the data including inter alia the Isthmionikai - which we have based on  Andrew Farrington's  Isthmionikai : a catalogue of Isthmian victors (2012)as well as the Pythonikai (collected by Jean-Yves Strasser, 2001), Aktionikai, and Capitolionikai (based on Caldelli's L'Agon Capitolinus (1993). We are currently in the process of adding the last of the >1000 Olympionikai (collected by Luigi Moretti in 1957). The Nemeonikai are expected this summer, thus completing all known victors of the periodos

HOW TO CONTRIBUTE?

We aim to make this website available as an evolving open-access tool.  Approved users will be able to edit or add records. Individual users will soon be able to leave comments. We have made agreements for collaboration and data-sharing with international colleagues. We welcome further offers of collaboration. Please contact us via the address below.
If you have questions or comments please let us know at connected.contests@rug.nl

Connected Contests is provided through a grant from the Digital Humanities of the University of Groningen (see About)

Recent Posts

  • New content! Competitors associated with Hellenistic dynasties

    Over the winter we’ve added a miscellany of competitors associated with the royal dynasties of the Hellenistic world. These range from actual royalty (the Ptolemies in particular were very fond of chariot-racing) to Greeks who came to take part in the new contests established by rulers eager for recognition and cultural authority. Particularly notable is Arsinoe II (Person ID 4178) - successively married to two of the most powerful rulers in the Hellenistic world and the first woman in Greek history to be declared a god, she won three races at the same Olympic festival in 272 BC. Also fun is an unnamed actor from Tegea (Person ID 4202). Known for outstanding performances in tragedies, he also managed to win a boxing contest at the newly-founded Ptolemaia festival at Alexandria. It’s still uncertain whether this means that the quality of the new competition was low, or whether he simply got very lucky!

  • Caldelli's Capitolian victors online

    All victors and participants collected by Caldelli (L'Agon Capitolinus. Storia e protagonisti dall'istituzione domizianea al IV secolo, 1993) have been added to the Connected Contests database. Find out all about the strange story of Herakleides, whose dream that he butchered the audience and judges during his performance meant that he would lose - which he did (event ID 30166). Or about the enormously successful Marcus Aurelius Asklepiades (person ID 656), a.k.a. Hermodoros, who quit boxing in his prime (he was 25) because of 'dangers and envious people' in IG XIV 1102. 

  • Spatial Data Support awarded to the Deep-Mapping Sanctuaries project

    Christina Williamson's project 'Deep-Mapping Sanctuaries', a subproject of 'Connecting the Greeks', is the recipient of a competitive call for 5 days of support from the Geo-services at the University of Groningen. As a pilot, this support will focus on mapping the experiences of Aelius Aristides in the Asklepieion in Pergamon. See also: https://deepmappingsanctuaries.wordpress.com/2020/03/30/support-grant-from-the-geodienst/

  • Erfurt students learn about networking with ancient competitors

    Where did the victors in the Isthmian games come from in the Hellenistic period? What about the Roman period? What festivals did Pythokles, son of Aristarchos from Hermione, compete in? These were some of the questions that first-year digital humanity/archaeology students in Erfurt were able to answer after an introduction by Christina Williamson in network theory, ancient festivals, and the Connected Contests database. Students were interested to learn about festival culture in the post-classical world, how it spread and how inscriptions provide great sources of data for analyzing relationships ('Those lists aren't as boring as I thought' was overheard). We also learned that exporting files on csv works much better on a laptop than a tablet or smartphone, certainly if you want to do some geo-networking with Palladio! But they enjoyed the interactive component and working with the database. If you want to try out the practicum yourself, the instructions and files are available at  https://github.com/cgwilliamson1/connectinggreeks_demo

  • New Search Option Available

    We have added more sophisticated search option. Not only can you specify that you want to have a list of persons, rather than events, you also can use Boolean operators AND & OR. The find results are downloadable in CSV format for further processing. For instructions,  click on the search database button.


 

MARC Records for the Getty Publications Virtual Library

MARC Records for the  Getty Publications Virtual Library
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MARC records for the complete collection of digital titles in the Getty Publications Virtual Library are available to download here as an .mrc file: Getty Publications Virtual Library MARC Records.

MARC records for the digital titles are also available in OCLC Connexion. These may be found by searching under the series: Getty Publications virtual library. MARC records for the associated print titles also contain links to the digital copies in the Getty Publications Virtual Library.
- See more at: http://www.getty.edu/publications/virtuallibrary/marc.html#sthash.kdo9G2KL.dpuf

MARC records for the complete collection of digital titles in the Getty Publications Virtual Library are available to download here as an .mrc file: Getty Publications Virtual Library MARC Records.

MARC records for the digital titles are also available in OCLC Connexion. These may be found by searching under the series: Getty Publications virtual library. MARC records for the associated print titles also contain links to the digital copies in the Getty Publications Virtual Library. - See more at: http://www.getty.edu/publications/virtuallibrary/marc.html#sthash.zGAwuCJd.dpuf
MARC records for the complete collection of digital titles in the Getty Publications Virtual Library are available to download here as an .mrc file: Getty Publications Virtual Library MARC Records.

MARC records for the digital titles are also available in OCLC Connexion. These may be found by searching under the series: Getty Publications virtual library. MARC records for the associated print titles also contain links to the digital copies in the Getty Publications Virtual Library. - See more at: http://www.getty.edu/publications/virtuallibrary/marc.html#sthash.zGAwuCJd.dpuf

The Beazley Notebooks Project

The Beazley Notebooks Project
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This page offers online access to 154 digitized notebooks used by Sir John Beazley, mainly in the earlier part of his career, between around 1910 and 1930, as he travelled around the world's collections of Attic vases. Also included is a notebook of Nicolas Plaoutine, documenting nineteenth-century sales of vases. The Beazley Notebooks Project has been made possible by the generosity of donors.


Note: Beazley often included several collections in one notebook. His sequences of page-numbers correspond to the separate collections rather than the individual notebooks themselves. To avoid confusion, the database numbers pages consistently, starting with the front cover of each book and proceeding systematically to the end. As an exact facsimile, it includes blank pages. Note also that Beazley sometimes turned notebooks upside when writing particular sections. To rotate the pages, first zoom in to open the IIP Image viewer. Then press R or SHIFT + R to rotate right/left.

Wednesday, January 27, 2021

Survey about the image and Qualitative Data Analysis Software (QDAS) use in object-based research

My name is Kayla Olson, and I am a graduate student in Library Science at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. I am conducting a research study which seeks to explore how common the use of Qualitative Data Analysis software (QDAS) is among art historians and archaeologists who are, or have been, affiliated with American universities. Participants can be graduate students (MA, PhD) and/or research staff (post-doctoral candidates, lecturers, professors).They do not have to work in an art history or archaeology department! Emerita and independent researchers who use resources from universities in the United States are also welcomed. Participants are also encouraged to share the survey with colleagues who meet these criteria. All responses are valuable, even if participants have no prior experience with QDAS.    

   

The anonymized survey responses may help professionals in academic librarianship and visual resources management assess whether their institution should invest in access and instruction surrounding QDAS for patrons in these disciplines. Responses may also help these professionals better understand how art historians and archaeologists organize images throughout their research. The survey should take no more than 15-20 minutes 


The study also has IRB exempt status (IRB 20-3371) and poses minimal risk to participants. The finalized master’s paper which analyzes the survey may be submitted for publication or a conference presentation.   

   

The survey can be found at this link: https://unc.az1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_6xGMFDcf4jEDXM1   

 

Thank you very much for your time, and please do not hesitate to contact me with questions. If participants have questions or concerns about their rights as a research subjects, they may contact the UNC Institutional Review Board at 919-966-3113 or by email at IRB_subjects@unc.edu.   

   

Best,   


Kayla Olson (she/her/hers) | Second-year CALA research assistant, Sloane Art Library
Master of Science in Library Science, UNC-Chapel Hill class of 2021
Carolina Academic Library Associates

 

CDLI News

From Émilie Pagé-Perron <emilie.page-perron@wolfson.ox.ac.uk>
==============================

As always, we are grateful for ATF contributions from colleagues;
since June, we have received new texts and corrections from or
credited to: Cavigneaux, Cheffings, Cripps, Dahl, Dercksen, Firth,
Foxvog, Gomi, Guidi, Horowitz, Jagersma, Johnson, Lafont, Liu, Ozaki,
Pagé-Perron, Reid, Stol, Szlechter, Wagensonner, Wasserman, and
Woestenburg. We would like to highlight the contributions of Tohru
Ozaki, who continues to send large numbers of important corrections to
transliterations of texts from across the 3rd Millennium BC; CDLI is
dependent on feedback, contributions and corrections from users and we
are grateful for all of these.

## Publications
Since June, two Bulletin articles were published, you can consult them
here: https://cdli.ucla.edu/?q=publications/bulletin

Saber Amiri Parian (2020:01) "A New Edition of the Elamite Version of
the Behistun Inscription (II)"
J. Caleb Howard (2020:02) "Cuneiform Tablets in Collections at the
University of Kansas"

Two CDL Preprints were also published:
https://cdli.ucla.edu/?q=cuneiform-digital-library-preprints
CDLP 19.0 Karlsson, Mattias - Assyrian Royal Titulary in Babylonia
CDLP 20.0 Karlsson, Mattias - The Depictions of the “Other” on the Balawat Gates

Many colleagues have expressed their interest in collaborating on a
memorial volume for Bob Englund. We invite colleagues that would like
to honor Bob's memory to instead consider submitting an article to the
CDLJ or CDLB, mentioning in the article they are doing so in his
memory since Bob founded the journals with the objectives of opening
access to scientific publications in the field and to enhance access
to digital resources.

## New collaborations
We are very pleased to announce the restart of a collaboration to
digitise the Liagre Böhl collection of the University of Leiden,
following fruitful discussions with both the previous and current
directors of NINO, Caroline Waerzeggers and Willemijn Waal. Obviously,
the pandemic means that no work digitising the objects of the
collection can currently take place, but we aim to place the complete
catalog of the collection online later this year.

Through its partner institution the Max Planck Institute for the
History of Science, Berlin, the CDLI has recently concluded a MoU with
the Stiftung Preußischer Kulturbesitz, setting out the framework for a
renewed effort to digitise the cuneiform collections of Berlin’s
Vorderasiatisches Museum. The collections of the VAM were among the
first to be digitised for the CDLI, and the 4th and 3rd millennium
cuneiform collections of the VAM remains among the core files of the
project. We look forward to updating our existing records, and to
collaborate with VAM staff in making the entire collection of the VAM
accessible through the CDLI in the years to come.

We are also happy to announce that images of a majority of the
cuneiform tablets in the collection of Utah Museum of Natural History
of the University of Utah, in Salt Lake City, Utah, USA, is now
available on CDLI, thanks to a successful collaboration between CDLI
staff and Michelle Knoll, former Assistant Curator and NAGPRA Manager
at the Utah Museum of Natural History. A majority of the collection
was published by David Owen in 1997 (ASJ 19), a few tablets remain
unpublished, but now available on CDLI.

On behalf of the CDLI
Jacob L Dahl, Bertrand Lafont, Émilie Pagé-Perron, Jürgen Renn

 

Tuesday, January 26, 2021

The Critical Dictionary of Apocalyptic and Millenarian Movements (CDAMM)

Oskar E. Bernhardt and the Grail Movement

Independent, scholarly, open-access information about apocalyptic and millenarian movements

The Critical Dictionary of Apocalyptic and Millenarian Movements (CDAMM) is an online encyclopedia covering secular and religious expressions of apocalyptic and millenarian thinking throughout history and across cultures. Articles are commissioned to be academically rigorous and non-partisan by the Centre for the Critical Study of Apocalyptic and Millenarian Movements (CenSAMM).

CDAMM was launched in January 2021, and coverage continues to grow as new articles are commissioned and added.

Please see the About link at the top of this page for more information on the project and key definitions