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EpiDoc online September 2024

Gabriel Bodard edited this page Jul 22, 2024 · 13 revisions

EpiDoc workshop (Online only)

September 9–12, 2024

  • Monday Sep 9, 15:00 BST
  • Wednesday Sep 11, 15:00 BST
  • Thursday Sep 12, 15:00 BST

Tutors: Gabriel Bodard, Marta Fogagnolo, Tamara Kalkhitashvili, Polina Yordanova Booking: https://ics.sas.ac.uk/events/epidoc-training

We invite applications for a three-day online only, flipped training workshop in the use of EpiDoc (http://epidoc.sf.net/), the de facto standard for encoding ancient epigraphic and papyrological editions in TEI XML for online publication and interchange. The workshop will introduce the encoding of ancient texts in XML, and sources of information and support on EpiDoc. No technical knowledge is required, but participants are expected to be familiar with the transcription conventions for inscriptions and papyri (Leiden System and similar) and either Greek, Latin or other ancient languages.

The workshop will involve asynchronous training materials and exercises, and three hours of real-time support and discussion via video call, on the Monday, Wednesday and Thursday.

Instructions:

  • Install the free 30-day demo of the Oxygen XML Editor on your computer.
    • You will need to request and activate the 30-day license to open the software. Best not to do this before you are ready to start working!
  • Watch the required videos before the first session (and each session)
    • NB some are optional; others you may be able to get the gist from the slides if you prefer
  • Download the EpiDoc Template (right-click and “save as”) and save into a new folder. Make a copy of this file for every new EpiDoc file you create.
  • Download the Quick-reference documents: (Transcription) and (Structure) (right-click and “save as”)

We will not be covering publication or display of EpiDoc files in this workshop. If you want to, you may try out by yourself one of the following methods for viewing your EpiDoc files in a browser:

Exercise:

Before Monday

Starting with a copy of the EpiDoc Template for each new document, create EpiDoc files for 2–3 inscriptions, papyri, seals or other text-bearing objects of your choice. You may pick your own texts, or use some of the examples below. Focus in particular on the ancient text field (div type=”edition”) for now. Leave aside any complex features you don’t know how to handle, but make sure that all Leiden brackets ( ) [ ] < > etc. are replaced with EpiDoc tags.

Before Wednesday

Pick another 3–4 texts and focus on the "Manuscript Description" features of the edition. Encode as many of the features of object description, document history, and other metadata as you can find.

Before Thursday

For this exercise it would be particularly useful to use 2–3 of your own texts, or those with which you are most familiar, but feel free to use the sample sites above to find new, complex texts to use. Mark them up as richly as possible. Look for interesting features that you don’t yet know how to encode, and make your best effort at figuring them out. Bring your questions along to the Thursday session so we can try to work them out together.

Videos:

Background (optional)

Introductions—watch before Monday:

Further encoding details—watch before Wednesday

Advanced EpiDoc—watch before Thursday

Optional advanced markup features

Optional publication display tool: