Hi, this is a new blog to discuss models and methodologies for representing fragmentary texts, i.e. ancient texts preserved in fragments. On the meaning of “ancient texts” and “fragments”, please see the About page.
Projects
Blogroll
- Aliento
- Corpus der arabischen und syrischen Gnomologien
- Digital Philology's Blog
- eTRACES – Winged words, quotations and our cultural heritage
- Euripides Scholia Demonstration Online Edition
- Gnomologium Vaticanum (GV) – Ars Edendi
- Homer Multitext Project
- HyperHamlet
- Interedition
- Juxta – Collation software for scholars
- Kommentierung der Fragmente der griechische Komödie (KomFrag)
- Perseus Digital Library
- Philomine
- SAWS – King's College
- TEI – Text Encoding Initiative
- Tesserae – Intertextual Phrase Matching
- TextGrid
- The Stoa Consortium
- Wikipedia, s.v. Frammento
- Wikipedia, s.v. Quotation
- Wikipedia, s.v. Saying
- Wikiquote
- Working with Text in a Digital Age
Tags
alexandra trachsel Alexandria Anke Lüdeling Athenaeus Attic comedy Callimachus citation Conferences Deipnosophists Digital Classicist seminars digital humanities EpiDoc EpiDoc Guidelines epigraphy Felix Jacoby FGrHist Fragments Francesco Mambrini Google Greek Greek fragmentary historians Greek historians Gregory Crane Guido Schepens Homer Multitext Project I Frammenti degli Storici Greci Institute of Classical Studies Istrus London Marco Büchler Matteo Romanello Monica Berti NEH Perseus philology Plutarch Publications Quotations Son of SOL TEI TEI XML text reuse Tufts University Virgilio Costa XML

