Conference: Diritto romano e scienze antichistiche nell’era digitale

Firenze
Altana di Palazzo Strozzi
Piazza Strozzi
12 e 13 settembre 2011

Convegno conclusivo della ricerca MIUR (PRIN 2007) “BIA-Net: accesso in rete alla Bibliotheca Iuris Antiqui”

Con il patrocinio di:

Fondazione “Rinascimento digitale”

Associazione per l’Informatica Umanistica e la Cultura Digitale

Centro di ricerca sulle Tecnologie Informatiche e Multimediali Applicate al Diritto (TIMAD) – Università di Catania

PROGRAMMA

12 settembre 2011

Ore 9,30 – Registrazione dei partecipanti

Ore 10,30

Saluti – Mario Citroni – direttore dell’Istituto Italiano di Scienze Umane

Il panorama degli studi antichistici nell’era digitale: problemi e prospettive – Nicola Palazzolo, Università di Perugia

Strumenti digitali per la ricerca nella discipline antichistiche: linee di sviluppo – Alessandro Cristofori, Università della Calabria

Tavola Rotonda

Le riviste elettroniche di antichistica

coordina:
Orazio Licandro, Università di Catanzaro
intervengono:
Francesco Sini, Università di Sassari
(direttore di “Diritto & Storia”);
Ferdinando Zuccotti, Università di Torino
(direttore di “Rivista di diritto romano”);
Franco Montanari, Università di Genova
(direttore di “L’Année philologique”);
Paola Moscati, CNR/Roma
(direttore di “Archeologia e Calcolatori”)

Ore 13,30 – Lunch

Ore 15

Lo storico del mondo antico e il computer: la gestione digitale del documento storiografico – Paolo Desideri, Università di Firenze


Il trattamento digitale delle fonti giuridiche di tradizione manoscritta
Gianfranco Purpura, Università di Palermo


Esperienze diverse e complementari nel trattamento digitale delle fonti epigrafiche: il caso di EAGLE ed EpiDoc 
Antonio Enrico Felle, Università di Bari


Edizione e ricostruzione digitale dei testi papiracei
Isabella Andorlini, Università di Parma

13 settembre 2011

Ore 9,30

Da BIA e BD-Rom a BIA-Net: l’integrazione in rete degli archivi dei diritti dell’Antichità – Francesco Arcaria, Patrizia Sciuto, Ignazio Zangara, Università di Catania

L’uso degli standard XML per la gestione in rete dei documenti giuridici romani – Daria Spampinato, CNR/Catania

Tecnologie di web semantico per le scienze umane: thesauri, ontologiee linked data  – Aldo Gangemi, CNR/Roma

Una biblioteca digitale per gli studi antichistici – Anna Maria Tammaro, Università di Parma

Ore 13 Pranzo

Ore 14,30

La filologia del testo assistita da calcolatore – Andrea Bozzi, CNR/Pisa

Filologia latina e testo elettronico. La ricerca dei prototipi letterari in poesia epigrafica – Paolo Mastandrea, Università di Venezia

Metodi quantitativi nell’attribuzione dei testi. Un caso di studio romanistico: Ausonio – Maurizio Lana, Università del Piemonte Orientale

Le integrazioni delle lacune nei testi giuridici romani: il Gaio digitale – Filippo Briguglio, Università di Bologna

Conclusioni – Aldo Schiavone, Istituto Italiano di Scienze Umane

Nei due giorni del convegno saranno presentati in una sala attigua alcuni prodotti informatici di particolare interesse:

BIA-Net: la Bibliotheca Iuris Antiqui in rete
Lorenzo Di Silvestro, Università di Catania

Progetti di Papirologia Digitale in corso
Nicola Reggiani, Università di Parma

Diritto romano e lingua greca. Un lessico della terminologia greca utilizzata nell’amministrazione e nel diritto in età romana
Andrea Raggi, Università di Pisa

Posted by Roberto Rosselli Del Turco

Call for Papers: Volume 7 of the Digital Medievalist Journal

With the publication of volume 6 and a forthcoming special issue on the 2010 MARGOT conference, Digital Medievalist is now accepting papers for volume 7 of its on-line, refereed journal.

We are asking for contributions of original research and scholarship that meet the mission statement of Digital Medievalist. Contributions should concern topics likely to be of interest to medievalists working with digital media, though they need not be exclusively medieval in focus. This includes notes on technological topics (markup and stylesheets, algorithms, tools and software, etc.), commentary pieces discussing developments in the field, bibliographic and review articles, and project reports. All contributions will be reviewed by authorities in humanities computing prior to publication.

Journal submissions or enquiries should be emailed to:
editors@digitalmedievalist.org

Submissions guidelines are available at
http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/journal/1.1/submission/

With this forthcoming volume, we are re-establishing our “rolling issue” policy which means that contributions will be published as soon as they are ready for publication without firm deadlines. To allow inclusion in volume 7, however, submission before end of August 2011 is recommended.

Digital Medievalist is an international web-based Community of Practice for medievalists working with digital media. Established in 2003, the project helps medievalists by providing a network for technical collaboration and instruction, exchange of expertise, and the development of best practice. The project operates an electronic mailing list and discussion forum, on-line refereed journal, news server for announcements and calls for papers, a wiki and FAQ. It also organises conference sessions at international medieval and humanities computing congresses. It is an elected organization and has developed some governing bylaws. The Digital Medievalist Project is overseen by an eight-member executive of medievalists with considerable experience in the use of digital media in the study of medieval topics. See our website at http://www.digitalmedievalist.org for more information.

Malte Rehbein (Editor-In-Chief), Peter A. Stokes and Dan O’Donnell (Associate Editors), Rebecca Welzenbach (Reviews Editor)


Dr. Malte Rehbein

Universität Würzburg
Zentrum für digitale Edition
Philosophiegebäude 8/E/14
Am Hubland
97074 Würzburg

fon     +49.(0)931.31.88773
email   malte.rehbein@uni-wuerzburg.de
web     http://www.denkstaette.de

GRANTS FOR GRADUATE FOREIGN STUDENTS 2011/2012

The Fondazione Museo del Tesoro del Duomo e Archivio Capitolare announces two short-term Library Research Grants for graduate students to promote scholarly use of its important collections. The first one is dedicated to The Memory of mons. Giuseppe Ferraris and the second dedicated to Vercelli Book and Anglo-Saxon Studies.

These Library Research Grants, which have a value of up to € 2.000 each, are meant to help defray expenses incurred in traveling to and residing in Vercelli during the tenure of the grant. The length of the grant will depend on the applicant’s research proposal, but is ordinarily up to one month. Library Research Grants awarded in this year are tenable from May 2011 to April 2012 (except from 18th July to 4th September), and the deadline for applications is 15 April 2011. No applications will be accepted after that date.

Applicants are asked to complete an Application Form (download from www.tesorodelduomovc.it [1]) and submit a Word or PDF file (the latter is the preferred format) containing a Budget Form, a full Curriculum Vitae and a Research Proposal not exceeding one thousand words in length. Application should be sent by postal mail to the Library Research Grants Committee or by Email at the address given below. Applicants must also arrange for two Confidential Letters of Recommendation to be sent directly to the Library Research Grants Committee by postal mail or Email.

The proposal should address specifically the relevance to the proposed research of unique resources found in the Biblioteca and Archivio Capitolare collections or in the Museo del Tesoro del Duomo collection (The Memory of mons. Giuseppe Ferraris Grant) and in the Biblioteca Capitolare collections (Vercelli Book and Anglo-Saxon Studies Grant). Prospective grantees are urged to contact the Curator of Manuscripts and Rare Books for detailed descriptions of the collections. The Fondazione Museo del Tesoro del Duomo e Archivio Capitolare reserves the right to have a copy of the research that the applicant will publish at the end of her or his studies.

A committee consisting of members by University of Piemonte Orientale, Turin, Oxford, Kiel and of the Library Management will award the grants on the basis of the relevance of the proposal to unique holdings of the library and museum, the merits and significance of the project, and the applicant’s scholarly qualifications.

[1] Note that the application form might not be available online at the time of the announcement: please send your application via email to Dr. Timoty Leonardi in that case, email address reported below.

*************************************************

Fondazione Museo del Tesoro del Duomo e Archivio Capitolare
piazza Alessandro D’Angennes, 5
13100, Vercelli – ITALY
www.tesorodelduomovc.it

Dr. Timoty Leonardi
Curator of Manuscripts and Rare Books
timoty.leonardi@tesorodelduomovc.it
Tel. and fax: +39 0161 51650

Posted by: Roberto Rosselli Del Turco (rosselli at ling dot unipi dot it)

Book Announcement: Codicology and Palaeography in the Digital Age 2

Kodikologie und Paläographie im Digitalen Zeitalter 2Codicology and Palaeography in the Digital Age 2. Hrsg. Franz Fischer, Christiane Fritze, Georg Vogeler, unter Mitarbeit von Bernhard Assmann, Malte Rehbein, Patrick Sahle. Schriften des Instituts für Dokumentologie und Editorik 3. Norderstedt: Books on Demand, 2010.

ISBN 978-3-8423-5032-8. Hardcover, 464 pp., incl. numerous illustrations.

[Online version coming out in summer 2011. Further information below and on the IDE website: http://www.i-d-e.de/]

 

INTRODUCTION / EINLEITUNG

Digital technology changes the way scholars work with manuscripts. This volume deepens the questions raised by the first volume on palaeography and codicology in the digital age, published a year ago, particularly questions on digitisation and cataloguing, on character recognition and the analysis of script. Moreover, the focus has been widened to include the fields of computer-aided manuscript research in musicology and history of art, as well as to methodologies applied in computational and natural sciences. Besides Latin, this  volume covers also Greek, Glagolitic, Judeo-Arabic and other scripts. The spatio-temporal frame stretches from ancient Egypt of 1800 BC to Paris of the 20th century.

Der Einsatz digitaler Technik verändert den wissenschaftlichen Umgang mit der handgeschriebenen Überlieferung. Dieser Band vertieft Fragen zu Digitalisierung und Katalogisierung, zu automatischer Schrifterkennung und Schriftanalyse, und er erweitert eine Diskussion, die mit dem im letzten Jahr erschienenen ersten Band zur digitalen Handschriftenforschung angestossen worden ist: Welche Erkenntnisse können etwa naturwissenschaftliche Methoden liefern? Welche musik- und kunsthistorischen Fragestellungen lassen sich mit Hilfe moderner Informationstechnologien beantworten? Wie lassen sich Methoden einer digitalen Auswertung lateinischer Handschriften auf griechische, glagolithische oder ägyptische Texte anwenden? Der raum-zeitliche Rahmen der hier von einer internationalen Autorenschaft zusammengetragenen 22 wissenschaftlichen Beiträge reicht vom alten Ägypten bis ins Paris der Postmoderne.

INHALTSVERZEICHNIS / CONTENTS

Vorwort / Preface

Einleitung / Introduction:

FRANZ FISCHER, PATRICK SAHLE: Into the Wide – Into the Deep: Manuscript
Research in the Digital Age

DIGITALE REPRODUKTION / DIGITAL REPRODUCTION

PÁDRAIG Ó MACHÁIN: Irish Script on Screen: the Growth and Development of a Manuscript Digitisation Project

ARMAND TIF: Kunsthistorische Online-Kurzinventare illuminierter Codices in österreichischen Klosterbibliotheken

ALISON STONES, KEN SOCHATS: Towards a Comparative Approach to Manuscript Study on the Web: the Case of the Lancelot-Grail Romance

MELISSA M. TERRAS: Artefacts and Errors: Acknowledging Issues of Representation in the Digital Imaging of Ancient Texts

DIGITALER KATALOG UND SEMANTIK / DIGITAL CATALOGUE AND SEMANTICS

SILKE SCHÖTTLE, ULRIKE MEHRINGER: Handschriften, Nachlässe, Inkunabeln& Co.: Die Erschließung der deutschen Handschriften und die Bereitstellung von Sonderbeständen in Online-Katalogen an der Universitätsbibliothek Tübingen mit TUSTEP

MARILENA MANIACI, PAOLO ELEUTERI: Das MaGI-Projekt: Elektronische Katalogisierung der griechischen Handschriften Italiens

EZIO ORNATO: La numérisation du patrimoine livresque médiéval : avancée décisive ou miroir aux alouettes ?

TOBY BURROWS: Applying Semantic Web Technologies to Medieval Manuscript Research

ROBERT KUMMER: Semantic Technologies for Manuscript Descriptions — Concepts and Visions

HANDSCHRIFTEN UND NATURWISSENSCHAFTEN / MANUSCRIPTS AND THE SCIENCES

LIOR WOLF, NACHUM DERSHOWITZ, LIZA POTIKHA, TANYA GERMAN, RONI SHWEKA, YAACOV CHOUEKA: Automatic Palaeographic Exploration of Genizah Manuscripts

DANIEL DECKERS, LEIF GLASER:Zum Einsatz von Synchrotronstrahlung bei der
Wiedergewinnung gelöschter Texte in Palimpsesten mittels Röntgenfluoreszenz

TIMOTHY STINSON: Counting Sheep: Potential Applications of DNA Analysis
to the Study of Medieval Parchment Production

PETER MEINLSCHMIDT, CARMEN KÄMMERER, VOLKER MÄRGNER: Thermographie – ein neuartiges Verfahren zur exakten Abnahme, Identifizierung und digitalen Archivierung von Wasserzeichen in mittelalterlichen und frühneuzeitlichen Papierhandschriften, -zeichnungen und –drucken

DIGITALE PALÄOGRAPHIE / DIGITAL PALAEOGRAPHY

PETER A. STOKES: Teaching Manuscripts in the Digital Age

DOMINIQUE STUTZMANN: Paléographie statistique pour décrire, identifier, dater. . . Normaliser pour coopérer et aller plus loin ?

STEPHEN QUIRKE: Agendas for Digital Palaeography in an Archaeological Context: Egypt 1800 BC

MARKUS DIEM, ROBERT SABLATNIG, MELANIE GAU, HEINZ MIKLAS: Recognizing
Degraded Handwritten Characters

JULIA M. CRAIG-MCFEELY: Finding What You Need, and Knowing What You Can Find: Digital Tools for Palaeographers in Musicology and Beyond

TRANSKRIPTION UND TEXTKODIERUNG / TRANSCRIPTION AND TEXT ENCODING

ISABELLE SCHÜRCH, MARTIN RÜESCH: Ad fontes – mit E-Learning zu ersten Editionserfahrungen

CAROLE DORNIER, PIERRE-YVES BUARD: L’édition électronique de cahiers de travail : l’exemple de Mes Pensées de Montesquieu

SAMANTHA SAÏDI, JEAN-FRANÇOIS BERT, PHILIPPE ARTIÈRES: Archives d’un lecteur philosophe. Le traitement numérique des notes de lecture de Michel Foucault

ELENA PIERAZZO, PETER A. STOKES: Putting the Text back into Context: A Codicological Approach to Manuscript Transcription

APPENDICES

Kurzbiographien / Biographical Notes

KPDZ 1 – CPDA 1

Posted by: Roberto Rosselli Del Turco (rosselli at ling dot unipi dot it)

Beyond the Facsimile: Rich Models of Late Medieval and Early Modern Texts

A Digital Humanities Day on Monday 13 December 2010 at Sheffield Hallam University

On 13 December 2010 Sheffield Hallam University, in association with the University of Victoria, will host a one-day symposium entitled “Beyond the Facsimile: Rich Models of Late Medieval and Early Modern Texts”.

It’s concerned with doing more, and doing things better, with our digital surrogates of books and pictures from the 15th to the 17th centuries. We’ve gotten very good at taking pictures of impressed papers, inscribed parchments, and painted canvases, but computer models do not have to be merely pictures.

The symposium will present eight talks from international scholars working in this area, each offering their own perspectives on the future of computerized representations of important documents. Speakers and their titles can be found at http://gabrielegan.com/BTF.

The meeting is open to anyone who wants to hear the papers and coffee and a free lunch will be provided to all who email the organizer, Gabriel Egan (mail@gabrielegan.com), by 13 November. (It is quite acceptable to simply turn up on the day without giving advance notice, but then you can’t have the free lunch.) Exact details of the venue, with maps and transportation advice, will appear on the symposium web-page at the above address.

Programme

(Speakers please note that paper slots are 30 minutes, including questions)

9.30-10am Coffee on arrival

10-10.15am Gabriel Egan (Loughborough University) “Welcome and Aims of the Meeting”

10.15-10.45am Takako Kato (Leicester University) “The Virtues and Challenges of XML: Making a Digital Edition of Malory’s Morte Darthur”

10.45-11.15am Paul Vetch (King’s College London) “A Map for All Seasons: Experimenting with the Gough Map”

11.15-11.30am Coffee

11.30am-12noon James Cummings (University of Oxford) “Interrogating and Accessing Digital Scholarly Editions”

12noon-12.30pm John Bradley and Stephen Pigney (King’s College London) “Images and Text: Towards an Understanding of the Early Modern Illustrated Book”

12.30-1.15pm Lunch

1.15-1.45pm Ari Friedlander (University of Michigan) “Are We Being Digital Yet?”

1.45-2.15pm Shawn Martin (University of Pennsylvania) “Images, Texts, and Records: Tools for Teaching in a Confusing Landscape”

2.15-2.30pm Coffee

2.30-3pm Eugene Giddens (Anglia Ruskin University) “The Death of Digital Editions”

3-3.20pm Ray Siemens (University of Victoria) “Beyond the Facsimile”

3.30-4pm Round Table involving all speakers

________________________________

Description of Topic

For many late medieval and early modern texts researchers have access to rudimentary digital representations. Virtually all books printed in Britain before 1800 are available as digital facsimiles via the databases Early English Books Online (EEBO) and ECCO (Eighteenth Century Collections Online). The former also provides searchable electronic transcriptions for about a quarter of the corpus–via the Text Creation Partnership (TCP)–and the latter is completely searchable, albeit via unreliable ‘dirty’ electronic texts produced by Optical Character Recognition (OCR). For virtually all texts that may be considered literary we also have relatively reliable searchable electronic texts made by double-keyboarding for the Literature Online (LION) project. For a small number of texts of special interest there are digital editions of much higher quality. The Scholarly Digital Editions of Chaucer’s poetry combine high-resolution colour facsimiles of multiple manuscripts with accurate scholarly searchable transcriptions of them, and the Shakespeare Quartos Archive project aims to do the same for early printed editions of his plays and poems that reside in major research libraries. However, with even the best of these enhanced resources, there remain important scholarly questions that cannot be answered without going back to the original documents, which is not an option for most researchers.

Facsimiles are good for seeing the surface image of ink inscribed or impressed onto paper or parchment, but not for taking accurate measurements of the size of the writing nor for examing the deformation of the surface caused by the impressure of the ink. (The only reliable way to tell which side of a sheet was printed first is to look for the bumps made by the type pressing into it.) Electronic transcriptions can accurately reflect the writing’s letters and punctuation marks but not the competing hypotheses about the creation of a document that scholars may want to test using the transcription. For example, a print edition may have been typeset by two compositors, each expressing spelling preferences from which we may distinguish their work-stints. Where two scholars disagree about the division of these stints, an electronic transcription that encodes each hypothesis would allow questions of the kind “if Scholar X is right about the division of the stints, what is Compositor A’s preference in the spelling of the word Lady/Ladie? And what if Scholar Y is right about the stints?”. There remains a lot to be done in digitizing texts for the purposes of scholarly research on them.

This Digital Humanities Day at Sheffield Hallam University is an opportunity for those concerned with the use of advanced digital surrogates (whether as creators or as readers) to discuss the following:

  • The state of the art in the creation of electronic versions of texts used by scholars in the humanities
  • The advantages and disadvantages of particular technologies for going beyond the facsimile, for example 3D modelling of paper/parchment versus advanced textual encoding
  • The kinds of questions that cannot currently be answered by the digital surrogates we have, and how best to produce surrogates that suit our needs
  • Case studies of particular projects, their achievements and the lessons learnt

Those interested in attending or speaking should contact Gabriel Egan: mail@gabrielegan.com.

Posted by: Roberto Rosselli Del Turco (rosselli at ling dot unipi dot it)