Description

Computational Historical Semantics co-operative project originally developed by an interdisciplinary team led by Bernhard Jussen and Alexander Mehler at the Goethe University in Frankfurt am Main, and funded by the German Federal Ministry for Education and Research. The project aims to define new methods and tools for historical-semantic analysis associated website: https://lta.bbaw.de/ of the Latin Text Archive (\textsc{lta}), hosted by the Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities corpus: more than 4000 texts spanning from the 2nd to the 15th Century \textsc{ad}, put together thanks to the support of digitalised collections such as the Patrologia Latina Database (http://pld.chadwyck.co.uk/), the Monumenta Germaniae Historica (https://www.mgh.de/), the Corpus Corporum (https://mlat.uzh.ch/) and the Bibliotheca Augustana (http://www.hs-augsburg.de/~harsch/augustana.html) CompHistSem in LiLa We linked a subset of 5 texts from the original corpus: Capitularia Regum Francorum (6th–9th c. AD), various authors, from MGH Capitularia 1 & 2. Total of 10 826 sentences and 18 343 024 tokens (including 53 161 punctuation marks) De ecclesiasticis officiis (9h c. AD) by Amalarius of Metz, from Patrologia Latina vol. 105. Total of 4 279 sentences and 125 475 tokens (including 20 845 punctuation marks) Vita Karoli Imperatoris (9th c. AD) by Eginhard, from mgh Scriptores rerum Germanicarum 25. Total of 247 sentences and 8 393 tokens (including1 224 punctuation marks) Gesta Hludowici imperatoris (9th c. AD) by Thegan of Trier, from mgh Scriptores rerum Germanicarum 64. Total of 451 sentences and 8 355 tokens (including 1 403 punctuation marks) Decretum Gratiani i to iii (treated as distinct documents), also known as Concordia discordantium canonum (12th c. AD) by Gratian, from Corpus Corporum through Patrologia Latina vol. 187. Total of 31 804 sentences and 572 830 tokens (including 124 656 punctuation marks) TOTAL: 47607 sentences for 1058077 tokens (including 201289 punctuation marks), the vast majority of which lemmatised and tagged for parts of speech and morphological features by means of the Frankfurt Latin Lexicon, which uses its own tagset, in line with the grammatical categories traditionally recognised for Latin. All texts but the Decretum Gratiani (Corpus Corporum, transcription under Creative Commons Share-Alike license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/) are retrievable from the Latin Text Archive and are under the Creative Commons license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/. The texts are encoded in the tei-p5 format, so as xml.
Dati resi disponibili12 giu 2023
EditoreZENODO

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