Developing Digital Mappaemundi: An Agile Mode for Annotating Medieval Maps

Digital Mappaemundi (DM) is a resource under development to create open source tools for scholars to edit and annotate image and textual data content as linked data, and for other users to search within this rich content. For the purposes of development, our data have been medieval mappaemundi'...

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Main Authors: Martin Foys, Shannon Bradshaw
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Library of Humanities 2012-02-01
Series:Digital Medievalist
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.digitalmedievalist.org/articles/38
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spelling doaj-aeb6f117e53f408a92d7e2fb95e5b5542020-11-25T02:28:30ZengOpen Library of HumanitiesDigital Medievalist1715-07362012-02-01710.16995/dm.3838Developing Digital Mappaemundi: An Agile Mode for Annotating Medieval MapsMartin Foys0Shannon Bradshaw1Drew UniversityDrew UniversityDigital Mappaemundi (DM) is a resource under development to create open source tools for scholars to edit and annotate image and textual data content as linked data, and for other users to search within this rich content. For the purposes of development, our data have been medieval mappaemundi' ("maps of the world") and transcriptions of their geographical source texts. The second phase of DM's alpha development (2009-10) allows users to work with digital images of maps from medieval manuscripts, mark regions-of-interest within images, and associate textual annotations with those regions and then link one or more sets of digital texts to these regions, or target one or more words within these texts as targets to these regions. Scholars may create markers images with individual points, segmented lines, or custom polygonal shapes. Significantly, a scholar may identify any number of markers on any number of images as the targets for textual annotation and link them to any number of digital texts or locations within these texts. Additionally, a given marker may serve as the target for any number of textual annotations. Scholars may organize their annotations into groups called layers so that different research questions involving a single image may be addressed separately through annotation. Scholars may choose to view a single layer of annotation or view multiple layers of annotation overlaid on one another. A robust search function also allows users to organize the annotated content dynamically. At the time of this publication DM has undergone significant evolution in its phase three beta development, with applications for annotation and linked data beyond the original use case of medieval maps. For current functionality and features of the DM environment, as well as a list of medievalist projects using it, see http://ada.drew.edu/dmproject/https://journal.digitalmedievalist.org/articles/38InteroperabilityAnnotationMapsScholarly PrimitivesManuscripts
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Martin Foys
Shannon Bradshaw
spellingShingle Martin Foys
Shannon Bradshaw
Developing Digital Mappaemundi: An Agile Mode for Annotating Medieval Maps
Digital Medievalist
Interoperability
Annotation
Maps
Scholarly Primitives
Manuscripts
author_facet Martin Foys
Shannon Bradshaw
author_sort Martin Foys
title Developing Digital Mappaemundi: An Agile Mode for Annotating Medieval Maps
title_short Developing Digital Mappaemundi: An Agile Mode for Annotating Medieval Maps
title_full Developing Digital Mappaemundi: An Agile Mode for Annotating Medieval Maps
title_fullStr Developing Digital Mappaemundi: An Agile Mode for Annotating Medieval Maps
title_full_unstemmed Developing Digital Mappaemundi: An Agile Mode for Annotating Medieval Maps
title_sort developing digital mappaemundi: an agile mode for annotating medieval maps
publisher Open Library of Humanities
series Digital Medievalist
issn 1715-0736
publishDate 2012-02-01
description Digital Mappaemundi (DM) is a resource under development to create open source tools for scholars to edit and annotate image and textual data content as linked data, and for other users to search within this rich content. For the purposes of development, our data have been medieval mappaemundi' ("maps of the world") and transcriptions of their geographical source texts. The second phase of DM's alpha development (2009-10) allows users to work with digital images of maps from medieval manuscripts, mark regions-of-interest within images, and associate textual annotations with those regions and then link one or more sets of digital texts to these regions, or target one or more words within these texts as targets to these regions. Scholars may create markers images with individual points, segmented lines, or custom polygonal shapes. Significantly, a scholar may identify any number of markers on any number of images as the targets for textual annotation and link them to any number of digital texts or locations within these texts. Additionally, a given marker may serve as the target for any number of textual annotations. Scholars may organize their annotations into groups called layers so that different research questions involving a single image may be addressed separately through annotation. Scholars may choose to view a single layer of annotation or view multiple layers of annotation overlaid on one another. A robust search function also allows users to organize the annotated content dynamically. At the time of this publication DM has undergone significant evolution in its phase three beta development, with applications for annotation and linked data beyond the original use case of medieval maps. For current functionality and features of the DM environment, as well as a list of medievalist projects using it, see http://ada.drew.edu/dmproject/
topic Interoperability
Annotation
Maps
Scholarly Primitives
Manuscripts
url https://journal.digitalmedievalist.org/articles/38
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