Version 1.0 of the Eadui font released under the Open Font License

Many thanks to those who tested my Eadui font, which tries to faithfully reproduce the English Caroline Minuscule hand of the eleventh-century Canterbury scribe Eadui Basan. I’ve released version 1.0 under the Open Font License on the Open Font Library website:

http://openfontlibrary.org/files/psb6m/177

Happy summer to all,
Peter Baker

[From the accompanying document (Eadui.pdf):]

EADUI THE FONT IS NAMED FOR A SCRIBE WHO worked at Christ Church, Canterbury, in the first half of the eleventh century and signed himself “Eaduuius cognomento Basan.” This Eadui Basan was a leading practitioner of the scribal hand known to paleographers as style IV English caroline minuscule. Like caroline minuscules generally, this one is notable for its legibility; and Eadui’s work, at its best, possesses a formal beauty that is matched by few scribes of his time.

This font, based on Eadui’s hand, uses OpenType features to emulate the characteristics of written script: numerous ligatures and contextual variants give the script the slightly irregular look of a handmade thing. Eadui works best with applications that make available the OpenType features of fonts. These include Adobe InDesign and XeTeX; many features of Eadui are also accessible in Mellel and iWorks, fewer in word processors like Microsoft Word and OpenOffice.org.

Burghart, Cummings, Ginther, Kato elected to Digital Medievalist Board

The results of the Digital Medievalist election have been tallied. It is our great pleasure to announce that the following have been elected to the Board for a two-year term:

  • Marjorie Burghart,
  • James Cummings,
  • James Ginther,
  • Takako Kato

The Digital Medievalist Board would like to thank all candidates who allowed their names to stand for election. The slate this year was extremely strong and votes were cast by over 10% of the Digital Medievalist membership. Most of the decisions were one or two votes at most.

Posted by: Daniel O’Donnell and Peter Stokes (daniel.odonnell@uleth.ca).

DM Lunch at DH2010, July 7

An announcement for digital medievalists who will be at DH2010, or in London on July 7 2010.

Peter Stokes has reserved a table for Digital Medievalist at the Edgar Wallace (a link to google maps is appended below) at 11:30 am on Wednesday, July 7. I’ll be by the DH registration tables from 11: 15 until 11:25 (the Edgar Wallace is just around the corner). I’ll be the one with the baby.

I’ve already received word from several people who intend to come. If you’d like to add your name please contact me (dot.porter@gmail.com ), but if you find yourself available on the day please feel free to stop by the Edgar Wallace and look for us. I expect we’ll be there for a while.

See you there!

Dot Porter

Posted by: Dot Porter (dot.porter@gmail.com).

Digital Medievalist Elections Open June 24 through July 4, 2010.

Elections for the Digital Medievalist Board are now open. Anybody currently subscribed to Digital Medievalist is eligible to vote in the election (whether you view yourself as a digital medievalist or not).

There are 4 vacancies on the board and eight candidates. Eligible voters may vote for up to four candidates.

Information about Digital Medievalist is available at its website. See especially:

http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/about.html
http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/bylaws.html

Candidate biographies are available at:

http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/election2010/

The ballot is available at:

http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/YFN6TLW

In order to check eligibility, voters will be asked to supply the email address they use for their subscription to dm-l. This information will not be used for any other purpose, and will be discarded after the election.

Posted by: Dan O’Donnell (daniel.odonnell@uleth.ca).

After Prosopography: Data modelling, models of history, and new directions for a scholarly genre

Digital Classicist & Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 2010

Friday June 18th at 16:30
STB9 (Stewart House), Senate House, Malet Street, London, WC1E 7HU

Tim Hill (King’s College London)
After Prosopography: Data modelling, models of history, and new directions for a scholarly genre

ALL WELCOME

Database technology profoundly altered the scope and power of the prosopography; more recently developed technologies have the potential to transform the genre yet again. Advances in the areas of digitised social network analysis, natural language processing, and ontological reasoning have the potential not only to extend the research reach and utility of the prosopography, but also to allow us to ask new questions of the past. The purpose of this paper is to outline these new technologies and tentatively to explore where these new questions might take us.

The seminar will be followed by wine and refreshments.

For more information please contact Gabriel.Bodard@kcl.ac.uk, Stuart.Dunn@kcl.ac.uk, Juan.Garces@bl.uk, S.Mahony@ucl.ac.uk or M.Terras@ucl.ac.uk, or see the seminar website at http://www.digitalclassicist.org/wip/wip2010.html

Posted by: Gabriel Bodard (gabriel.bodard@kcl.ac.uk).