Published Online: 2022-04-12
Published in Print: 2021-09-01
© 2022 Petra Heřmánková et al., published by Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston
Articles in the same Issue
- On pyramids, prisms, and scalable reading
- Digital history of representations: analysing identity and nationalism in the Capuchin Annual periodical (1930-1977)
- The Nameless Crowds: Using Quantitative Data and Digital Tools to Study the Ancient Vocabulary of the Crowd in Tacitus
- Topic-specific corpus building: A step towards a representative newspaper corpus on the topic of return migration using text mining methods
- Inscriptions as data: digital epigraphy in macro-historical perspective
- Twitter and feminist commemoration of the 1916 Easter Rising
Keywords for this article
digital epigraphy;
quantitative research;
FAIR science;
reproducibility;
digitalhistory;
Latin inscriptions;
epigraphic habit
Creative Commons
BY 4.0
Articles in the same Issue
- On pyramids, prisms, and scalable reading
- Digital history of representations: analysing identity and nationalism in the Capuchin Annual periodical (1930-1977)
- The Nameless Crowds: Using Quantitative Data and Digital Tools to Study the Ancient Vocabulary of the Crowd in Tacitus
- Topic-specific corpus building: A step towards a representative newspaper corpus on the topic of return migration using text mining methods
- Inscriptions as data: digital epigraphy in macro-historical perspective
- Twitter and feminist commemoration of the 1916 Easter Rising