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Carmen Rome June 2022
June 21–23, 2022, Rome
Instructors: Elina Boeva (Sofia), Marta Fogagnolo (Bologna), with guest appearances from Gabriel Bodard (London) and Paolo Monella (Roma)
This workshop will give students the opportunity to practice EpiDoc using their own inscriptions from the CARMEN project, or elsewhere, with a series of guided exercises, and live support from the instructors. Rather than tuition in new materials, this event seeks to consolidate previously acquired skills in text encoding and epigraphic markup through hands-on practice, questions and help. Your questions and encoding needs will dictate the content of the workshop.
- Make sure you have the Oxygen XML Editor installed on your laptop, with a valid license (either a 30-day trial license, or if that has already expired, a full license paid for by your project)
- Download the EFES visualisation tool (click on the green "Code" button and then "Download ZIP"), and follow the Installation insstructions to be sure it works on your computer. Pay particular attention to the Java Version step. Please let us know before the workshop if you have any problems with this.
- Have headphones that you can use with your laptop, to watch video tutorials without bothering everyone else.
- You should each bring at least 10–20 of your own inscriptions, whether carmina epigraphica or anything else that you have worked on, to practice with during the workshop
- If you already have questions about EpiDoc, please bring them along to share with the group at the workshop
- If you need to revise basic EpiDoc skills, see the videos section below for some online tutorials
- 10:30 Welcome
- 11:00 Practice and EpiDoc questions
- 12:00 Lunch
- 14:00 Practice EpiDoc
- coffee 15:15–15:45
- 17:00 ends
- 10:00 Practice EpiDoc
- 12:00 Lunch
- 14:00 Encoding pre-modern writing systems (workshop with Paolo Monella)
- coffee 15:15–15:45
- 17:00 ends
- 10:00 Practice EpiDoc and TEI
- 12:00 Lunch
- 14:00 Practice EpiDoc and TEI
- coffee 15:15–15:45
- 15:45 Feedback and discussion
- 16:30 ends
- 17:15–18:45 SunoikisisDC seminar: Natural Language Processing and Historical Maps (online)
- The rules of XML (slides) (Gabriel Bodard) (19 min)
- Semantic markup example (slides) (Irene Vagionakis) (9 min)
- Introduction to the EpiDoc Guidelines (EpiDoc Guidelines) (Irene Vagionakis) (13 min)
- Structure of an EpiDoc edition (slides) (Irene Vagionakis) (18 min)
- Displaying EpiDoc files using EFES (Gabriel Bodard, Irene Vagionakis & Polina Yordanova) (18 min)
- Latin inscription example in Oxygen (Irene Vagionakis) (17 min)
- Abbreviations (slides) (Irene Vagionakis) (8 min)
- Symbols (slides) (Irene Vagionakis) (10 min)
- Complex lacunae (slides) (Gabriel Bodard) (14 min)
- Editorial corrections (slides) (Gabriel Bodard) (13 min)
- Fragments and sections of text (slides) (Gabriel Bodard) (19 min)
- Certainty and precision (slides) (Gabriel Bodard) (17 min)
- Verse inscriptions (slides) (Gabriel Bodard) (13 min)
- Apparatus criticus (slides) (Gabriel Bodard) (26 min)
- Repository and identifier (slides) (Irene Vagionakis) (6 min)
- Description of Object (slides) (Irene Vagionakis) (9 min)
- Description of campus or layout (slides) (Gabriel Bodard) (5 min)
- Description of hands, lettering and scripts (slides) (Gabriel Bodard) (10 min)
- Origin date (slides) (Gabriel Bodard) (18 min)
- Origin and locations of object (slides) (Irene Vagionakis) (12 min)
- Authority lists (slides) (Martina Filosa) (16 min)
- Word and lemmatisation (slides) (Gabriel Bodard) (18 min)
- Places mentioned in the text (slides) (Irene Vagionakis) (5 min)
- Names and persons (slides) (Gabriel Bodard) (15 min)
- Arbitrarily indexable features (slides) (Irene Vagionakis) (6 min)
- Indexing transcription feautures (slides) (Irene Vagionakis) (5 min)
- Bibliography (slides) (Gabriel Bodard) (16 min)
- Including images (slides) (Irene Vagionakis) (6 min)
For all exercises, you are encouraged to use your own texts from your project, or texts that you are interested in and know well. In case you want to use other texts, here you find a selection of inscriptions on which you can work:
- Bernand Inscr. Métr. 121 (Greek)
- Bernand, Inscr. Métr. 165 (Greek)
- IOSPE I 1 (Greek)
- IRT 1076 (Greek)
- IRCyr M.228 (Latin)
- IRT 291 (Latin)
- IRT 1585 (Latin)
- IRT 1588 (Latin)
- RIB 11 (Latin)
- RIB 15 (Latin)
- Bernand, Inscr. Métr. 129 (Greek)
- Bernand, Inscr. Métr. 167 (Greek)
- IOSPE V 6 (Greek)
- IRT 1073 (Greek)
- IRCyr C.221 (Greek)
- IAph 11.55 (Greek - lots of names)
- IRCyr P.138 (Latin)
- IRT 1093 (Latin)
- IRT 413 (Latin)
- IRT 1647 (Latin)
- IRCyr C.146 (Latin)
- Bernand, Inscr. Métr. 169 (Greek)
- IOSPE V 18 (Greek)
- IOSPE I 2 (Greek)
- IRCyr C.416 (Greek)
- IRCyr M.245 (Greek)
- IAph 12.101 (Greek)
- IRT 37 (Latin)
- RIB 1281 (Latin)
- RIB 154 (Latin)
- RIB 92 (Latin)
- RIB 91 (Latin)
- IRCyr A.68 (Greek/Latin bilingual)
- Epigraphic Database Heidelberg (Latin inscriptions)
- PHI Epigraphy (Greek inscriptions)
- Inscriptions of the Northern Black Sea (mostly Greek inscriptions)
- Roman Inscriptions of Britain (Latin inscriptions)
- Collection of Greek Ritual Norms (Greek inscriptions)
- US Epigraphy project (mostly Latin inscriptions)
- Inscriptions of Roman Cyrenaica (mostly Greek inscriptions)
- Inscriptions of Roman Tripolitania (mostly Latin inscriptions)
- Ancient Greek Inscriptions from Bulgaria (Greek inscriptions)