One of the biggest discoveries of the past year for me was the trove of documents available online through the activities of Internet Archive: there is a variety of books from the 19th and early 20th century, scanned, converted into pdf, and even into plain text form (after Optical Character Recognition – OCR – was done on them). With text available as txt file, it would seem easy to apply various text mining tools to extract information. This easiness is deceptive: the technology used to recognize text gets in the way. This summer I was working on extracting text printed in the margins of John of Gaunt’s Register. This was part of Gary Shaw‘s project on the travel of bishops in medieval England. Below is a summary of the problems I discovered and the solutions I applied.
Chronography’s Geography: Software & Database Structure
By Jesse W. Torgerson and Ethan Yaro Note: This is the third in a series devoted to the project “Narrative and Geography in the Chronicle of Theophanes the Confessor“. Our first post considered what the question of place in narrative means for historical research, and our second the question of … Continue…