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Epigraphy in the Digital Age: Opportunities and Challenges in the Recording, Analysis and Dissemination of Inscriptions [Mīkstie vāki]

Edited by (University of Oviedo), Edited by (Complutense University of Madrid)
  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 258 pages, height x width x depth: 290x205x14 mm, weight: 920 g, 123 figures, 15 tables (colour throughout)
  • Izdošanas datums: 19-Aug-2021
  • Izdevniecība: Archaeopress
  • ISBN-10: 1789699878
  • ISBN-13: 9781789699876
  • Mīkstie vāki
  • Cena: 57,32 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 258 pages, height x width x depth: 290x205x14 mm, weight: 920 g, 123 figures, 15 tables (colour throughout)
  • Izdošanas datums: 19-Aug-2021
  • Izdevniecība: Archaeopress
  • ISBN-10: 1789699878
  • ISBN-13: 9781789699876
Epigraphy in the Digital Age: Opportunities and Challenges in the Recording, Analysis and Dissemination of Inscriptions originates from the International Conference El patrimonio epigrafico en la era digital: Documentacion, analisis y socializacion (Madrid, 20-21 June 2019), organized by the Complutense University of Madrid and the University of Santiago de Compostela. Taking the results of the conference as a starting point, the book presents epigraphic research using digital and computational tools, bringing together and comparing the outcomes of both well-established projects and newer ones, so as to establish a comprehensive view according to the most innovative trends in investigation. 21 contributions have been gathered together, involving 38 scholars, which address issues related to open-access databases, SfM Photogrammetry and Digital Image Modelling applied to textual restoration, EpiDoc (TEI-XML edition), and Linked Open Data. In this manner, the book offers a dialogue based on very different perspectives and previous experiences to generate common research questions, methodologies, practical solutions, and significant results. The outcome is intended more a starting point and platform for future research than as a definitive point of arrival in terms of so-called 'digital epigraphy'.
Contributors iii
Foreword ix
Isabel Velazquez Soriano
David Espinosa Espinosa
Part 1 Preliminary Issues
Chapter 1 Digital Projects in Epigraphy: Research Needs, Technical Possibilities, and Funding Problems
1(8)
Silvia Orlandi
Chapter 2 The Need for an Innovative Approach to the Study of Latin Epigraphic Poetry
9(6)
Conception Fernandez-Martinez
Chapter 3 The Role Played by Epigraphy in Archaeological Divulgation
15(12)
Rosario Cebrian Fernandez
Part 2 Digital Recording and Analysis Techniques in Epigraphy
Chapter 4 Virtual Epigraphy: Virtual Museums and 3D Epigraphy
27(20)
Javier Andreu Pintado
Pablo Serrano Basterra
Chapter 5 Digital Epigraphy: New Technologies and 3D Modelling
47(8)
Aroa Gutierrez Alonso
Mercedes Farjas Abadia
Rocio Gutierrez Gonzalez
Chapter 6 Reconstructing the Texts of Funerary Inscriptions from Augusta Emerita for the CIL II2 Mdrida Project with the Aid of New Technologies
55(16)
Jonathan Edmondson
Chapter 7 Tools Integration for Understanding and Deciphering Inscriptions in the PETRAE Database
71(12)
Florent Comte
Hernan Gonzalez Bordas
Milagros Navarro Caballero
Nathalie Prevot
Chapter 8 A Sample of the Application of Digital Photogrammetry to Latin Epigraphy: The Epitaphs of the Vadinienses in 3D
83(8)
David Martino Garcia
Luis Coya Alaez
Chapter 9 The `Toros de Guisando' in the Digital Age
91(14)
J. Francisco Fabian
Helena Gimeno Pascual
Maria del Rosario Hernando Sobrino
Hugo Pires
Chapter 10 `Rough-and-Ready': 3D Models Rescuing some Roman Inscriptions from Lusitania
105(10)
Joaquin L. Gomez-Pantoja
Ignacio Triguero
Part 3 Computational Epigraphy and Digital Dissemination
Chapter 11 Where Can Our Inscriptions Take Us? Harnessing the Potential of Linked Open Data for Epigraphy
115(14)
Charlotte Tupman
Chapter 12 Linguistic Markup and Dialectal Variants. The Perspective of the Digital Corpus Supplementum Epigraphicum Creticum (e-SEC)
129(10)
Alcorac Alonso Deniz
Chapter 13 Digital Publication of Texts in Palaeo-European Languages and Script. The State-of-the-Art
139(6)
Maria Jose Estaran Tolosa
Chapter 14 Philology and Technology in the Hesperia and AEHTAM Databanks
145(16)
Eduardo Orduna
Eugenio R. Lujan
Isabel Velazquez
Chapter 15 The Epigraphica 3.0 Project: Making Accessible and More Readable the Roman Epigraphy from Ourense Province (Galicia, Spain)
161(16)
David Espinosa Espinosa
Borja Paz Rodriguez
Miguel Carrero Pazos
Chapter 16 Roman Open Data. CEIPAC's Amphora Epigraphy Database
177(8)
Jose Remesal Rodriguez
Guillem Rull Fort
Chapter 17 From CIL XV to the CEIPAC Database: Some Results of Dissemination Data
185(8)
Juan Manuel Bermudez Lorenzo
Chapter 18 M(agistratus) H(ispaniae) R(omanae): A Database of Magistrates from Roman Iberia
193(8)
Silvia Gazzoli
Chapter 19 Doing Epigraphy with Digital Support: Tools for the Study of Lapidary Epigraphy -- The Case of Roman Goldsmiths
201(12)
Jordi Perez Gonzalez
Chapter 20 Inscriptions by Christians in Late Antique Rome. Some Issues and Perspectives for the Epigraphic Database Bari (EDB)
213(12)
Antonio E. Felle
Chapter 21 Epihum, a Database for Renaissance Epigraphy from Portugal and Spain
225
Manuel Blazquez-Ochando
Manuel Ramirez-Sanchez
Isabel Velįzquez Soriano is Professor of Latin Philology in the Department of Classical Philology at the Complutense University of Madrid. She is the principal Investigator of the Research Group Textos epigrįficos antiguos de la Penķnsula Ibérica y el Mediterrįneo griego (TEAPIMeG no. 930750) at the Complutense University of Madrid, Director of the Epigraphic Archive of Hispania, and editor of Hispania Epigraphica series at the same university. Isabel Velįzquez Soriano is a specialist in the study of epigraphic and literary texts from Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages. ;





David Espinosa Espinosa has a PhD in Ancient History from the Complutense University of Madrid. A Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Santiago de Compostela and the University of Vienna, he is now Lecturer in Ancient History at the University of Oviedo. His research focuses on the granting of Latin rights in the western Roman provinces, the Roman civil wars during the Republic, and Roman epigraphy. Director of the digital epigraphic corpus Epigraphica 3.0, he has among his book publications Plinio y los oppida de antiguo Lacio. El proceso de difusión del Latium en Hispania Citerior (2014).