EpiDoc

EpiDoc Logo

The EpiDoc Collaborative, building recommendations for structured markup of epigraphic documents in TEI XML, was originally formed in 2000 by scholars at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill: Tom Elliott, the former director of the Ancient World Mapping Center, with Hugh Cayless and Amy Hawkins. The guidelines have matured considerably through extensive discussion on the Markup list and other discussion fora, at several conferences, and through the experience of various pilot projects. The first majorbut not by any means the onlyepigraphic project to adopt and pilot the EpiDoc recommendations were the Inscriptions of Aphrodisias and Vindolanda Tablets Online in 2002-4, and the guidelines reached a degree of stability for the first time in that period. EpiDoc has since been adopted as the native format for the Greek Papyrology site, Papyri.info.

The EpiDoc schema and guidelines may also be applied, perhaps with some local modification to related palaeographical fields including Sigillography, and Numismatics.

Guidelines and Schema

The EpiDoc Guidelines are available in two forms:

  1. the stable guidelines, released periodically [1]
  2. the source code, available in its most up-to-date form in the EpiDoc Sourceforge repository. The Guidelines source files are a series of XML documents, plus XSLT to transform them to the web version. [2]
  3. the current version of the schema, which may be linked to directly by XML documents. [3]
  4. the source code, available in its most up-to-date form in the EpiDoc SourceForge repository. [4]

Tools

Tool developed by and for the EpiDoc community include:

Projects

Fuller list of projects maintained at:

Bibliography

References

  1. http://www.stoa.org/epidoc/gl/latest/
  2. http://sourceforge.net/p/epidoc/code/HEAD/tree/trunk/guidelines/ SourceForge
  3. http://www.stoa.org/epidoc/schema/8.16/tei-epidoc.rng
  4. https://sourceforge.net/p/epidoc/code/HEAD/tree/trunk/schema/
  5. https://sourceforge.net/p/epidoc/wiki/Stylesheets/
  6. http://cds.library.brown.edu/projects/chet-c/chetc.html
  7. https://sourceforge.net/projects/epidoc/files/Transcoder/

See also

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/20/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.