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Summer2019 Session8

Monica Berti edited this page May 23, 2019 · 12 revisions

Sunoikisis Digital Classics, Summer 2019

Session 8. Peripleo and Linked Open Data (OAD) for Archaeology

Thursday May 23, 17:00 - 18:15 CEST

Convenor: Chiara Palladino (Furman University)

YouTube link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6pocIE4eYa8

Slides: https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1y-JiK0MTdNbKKVtivseVrv0B7PlnakGXcgj-7w5GdRQ/edit?usp=sharing

Session outline

This session will illustrate an experiment using Linked Open Data to research cultural heritage sites in the classroom. In the course of the semester, we created several student projects focusing on specific sites by collecting data from LOD-based resources in Archaeology and Cultural Heritage in general. We used Peripleo, a Linked Open Data search engine, to navigate into the complexity of several databases and to leverage the difficulty of linking together very different resources. In the first part of the session, we will shortly introduce the essential concepts of Linked Open Data and how Peripleo uses this technology to connect cultural heritage databases compliant to the same standard. We will give insights into four projects of students, focusing on different sites. Finally, we will draw some conclusions on the usefulness of this technology as a way for enhancing student research based on Linked Data, and will focus on some issues in currently available resources.

  • Introduction to Linked Open Data
  • The Pelagios Project
  • Peripleo 2.0: A Linked Open Data search Engine
  • Peripleo and LOD in the classroom: an experiment in Classical Archaeology
  • Student projects: Alexandria in Egypt, Herculaneum, Ostia Antica, Eleusis
  • Conclusions and feedback

Seminar readings

Further reading

Exercise and Essay title

Tell a story with material culture

  1. Look up a site on Peripleo.

Hint: Check out the instructions on How to search Archaeological Objects through Linked Open Data, to help yourself navigate through the various resources.

  1. Choose five objects that represent some historical information about that place, for example:
  • A monument
  • A mosaic or painting
  • A coin (or coins)
  • A colony, or an important nearby settlement
  • An inscription
  • Pottery
  • A sculpture
  • An extensive reference in a Classical text

Remember the chronological information for the objects you selected: not all of them may belong to the same historical period!

  1. Create a schematic card for each item with the essential information about it: you have to include at least:
  • Name or title of the object (name of the author and work for references to Classical texts)
  • Date (or date range)
  • Short description
  • Image or text citation
  • Site of finding
  • Site or museum/archive of preservation
  • Source URL
  1. Write a short paper, explaining how and why each of these objects tells something about the history of that place. Include the item cards.
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