Byzantine Sigillography, Linked Open Data, and the Structured Assertion Record
- Author(s)
- Tara L. Andrews
- Abstract
One of the major challenges in the creation of a digital dataset for cultural heritage objects is the question of how to capture the differing interpretations and the changing state of our knowledge about the objects we are seeking to document and preserve. This article discusses a case in point, namely the thousands of Byzantine lead seals that survive in museums and private collections today. The seals are an important source of information and insight into a society whose copious administrative records we have by and large lost; their correct decipherment and interpretation, however, requires a particular expertise that few in the field possess, and the need for a more or less central source of information about these seals has been acknowledged for many years now. As part of the Prosopography of the Byzantine World (PBW) project, a database was created that aimed for as complete a coverage as possible of all seals dated to the eleventh and twelfth centuries, including an innovative organization of the seals according to the boulloterion (die) from which a particular seal was struck and a link between the boulloterion and its owner. The strength of this database is that it is a rich collection of sigillographic data unparalleled elsewhere; the weakness is one shared with almost every digital database in the historical sciences, specifically, that it presents a single interpretation of the data when multiple interpretations are possible.The aim of the RELEVEN project has been to re-think how databases of historical information are structured; its central innovation is the “structured assertion record” (STAR) model, which is a Linked Open Data model based on the CIDOC-CRM standard. Here we discuss how the STAR model has been applied to the PBW seals database to express the information in a CIDOC-CRM-conformant way, and also to preserve information in all cases about who has made a particular interpretation of the data and what source material was used for the interpretation.
- Organisation(s)
- Department of History
- Journal
- Digital Medievalist
- ISSN
- 1715-0736
- DOI
- https://doi.org/10.16995/dm.16708
- Publication date
- 01-2025
- Peer reviewed
- Yes
- Austrian Fields of Science 2012
- 605007 Digital humanities, 601012 Medieval history
- Portal url
- https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/en/publications/bed62950-b25c-47c0-b868-8b50d2975fe1