OpenMethods

OpenMethods

HIGHLIGHTING DIGITAL HUMANITIES METHODS AND TOOLS

Menu
Skip to content
  • Home
  • About
  • Who we are
    • Editorial Team
    • Volunteer Editors
  • Join us
    • Open Call for Volunteers and Editors to join OpenMethods Metablog
  • Submit a content
  • Log in
  • Evaluation criteria
  • Posted on August 24, 2017November 9, 2017
  • by Delphine Montoliu

CBMA (Chartae Burgundiae Medii Aevi)

https://openmethods.dariah.eu/2017/08/24/cbma-chartae-burgundiae-medii-aevi-le-blog-dhuma-num-et-de-ses-consortiums/ OpenMethods introduction to: CBMA (Chartae Burgundiae Medii Aevi) 2017-08-24 11:20:11 Introduction: This post highlights the positive consequences for research due to the massive digitalization of Medieval diplomatic documents from Bourgogne. Delphine Montoliu http://cosme.hypotheses.org/235 Blog post Analysis Archiving Capture Conversion Creation Digital Humanities Dissemination Durable Persistent Media Emulation Enrichment File French Images Imaging Information Retrieval Interpretation Manuscript Meta-Activities Methods Open Archival Information Systems Preservation Preservation Metadata Project Management Publishing Replication Research Activities Research Objects Research Process Research Techniques Scanning Software Spatial Analysis Stilistic Analysis Storage Structural Analysis Technology Preservation Text Theorizing Web development via bookmarklet

Introduction by OpenMethods Editor (Delphine Montoliu): This post highlights the positive consequences for research due to the massive digitalization of Medieval diplomatic documents from Bourgogne.

Le projet de recherche des CBMA (Chartae Burgundiae Medii Aevi – Chartes de la Bourgogne du Moyen Âge) numérise, enregistre et exploite la prolifique documentation diplomatique bourguignonne, parmi laquelle figurent, entre autres, les chartes des emblématiques abbayes de Cluny et de Cîteaux. Les réalisations et les résultats du projet sont mis à la disposition via une plate-forme documentaire et une base de données d’actes diplomatiques librement accessibles sur Internet sous différents formats électroniques. Ce corpus, régulièrement enrichi, comptant actuellement plus de 18000 chartes médiévales, est interrogeable avec le logiciel Philologic (philologic.cbma-project.eu) et constitue un terrain expérimental pour de nouvelles méthodes de recherche.

 

Original publication date: 08/07/2016.

Source: CBMA (Chartae Burgundiae Medii Aevi) – Le blog d’Huma-Num et de ses consortiums

Share this:

  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
Posted in Analysis, Archiving, Capture, Conversion, Creation, Digital Humanities, Dissemination, Durable Persistent Media, Emulation, Enrichment, File, French, Images, Imaging, Information Retrieval, Interpretation, Languages, Manuscript, Meta-Activities, Methods, Open Archival Information Systems, Preservation, Preservation Metadata, Project Management, Publishing, Replication, Research Activities, Research Objects, Research Process, Research Techniques, Scanning, Software, Spatial Analysis, Stilistic Analysis, Storage, Structural Analysis, Technology Preservation, Text, Theorizing, Web developmentTagged via bookmarklet

Post navigation

Prev Livre blanc PARTHENOS sur les objets 3D dans le domaine du patrimoine culturel et les SHS
Next Geo‐referencing of historical maps with QGIS

logo_isidoreIsidore suggestions

    Interested in blogging about your research? The Digital Humanities Tools and Methods blog is for you!

    In cooperation with

    OPERAS

    Categories

    Recent Posts

    • FactGrid – a database for historians
    • Linked Data from TEI (LIFT): A Teaching Tool for TEI to Linked Data Transformation
    • “Creating specialized corpora from digitized historical newspaper archives: An iterative bootstrapping approach”
    • Propyläen: Goethe’s Biographica – between print replacement and “treasure of data”
    • Spanish Paleography Digital Teaching and Learning Tool

    Archives

    Meta

    • Log in
    • Entries feed
    • Comments feed
    • WordPress.org
    OpenMethods © 2017-2018.
    All site content, except where otherwise noted, is licensed under a CC BY license. This is in line with DARIAH’s Open Access Policy
    Privacy Notice
    Hosted by – We use
    HaS received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No. 675570
    Bezel Theme by SimpleFreeThemes ⋅ Powered by WordPress