Kings College London skip to  content
Text only   Current students   Staff  
Contact   Feedback  
Search
Kings College London
Screen decoration graphics

News archive 2008

First for King’s and NYU

09 Apr 2008, PR 63/08

An epigraphic inscription from AphrodisiasA collaborative project between the Centre for Computing in the Humanities at King’s and New York University, is among the first to receive a new Transatlantic Digitization Collaboration Grant awarded by the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Joint Information Systems Committee.

Press release from New York University

The Institute for the Study of the Ancient World (ISAW) at New York University has announced it is among the first to receive a new Transatlantic Digitization Collaboration Grant awarded by the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) and the Joint Information Systems Committee (JISC), a British advisory body promoting information technology in higher education. ISAW was one of five U.S. institutions working on shared projects with scholars in the U.K. to receive grants. In collaboration with the Centre for Computing in the Humanities at King’s College, London, ISAW will use the $129,828 grant to develop a searching and mapping system for online Humanities collections.

ISAW and the Centre for Computing in the Humanities have established a pilot project named Concordia. The project is under the joint direction of Roger Bagnall, director of ISAW, and Charlotte Roueché, Professor of Classics at King’s College London.

‘We are delighted to be among the first to receive this important grant in digital humanities,’ said Roger Bagnall, director of ISAW. ‘Concordia will span institutional and national boundaries using new mechanisms to bring together digitally three existing and respected humanities collections from North Africa during the Greek and Roman period. The result will be a blueprint that can be used by all as an affordable and public tool for assembling arbitrary collections of humanities content anywhere on the web.’

‘We are very grateful to the funding bodies for their imaginative partnership,’
said Professor Charlotte Roueché. ‘This gives us a welcome opportunity to demonstrate how much can be achieved by international collaboration, with results which should benefit scholars, students, and the public in countries across the world.’

The Concordia pilot project unites an array of separately produced and hosted collections of historic documents with a unique geographic reference work to provide search and analysis presently available only in a few special-purpose, closed systems. The content of the participating collections (including 50,000 papyrological and 3,000 epigraphic texts) will be brought together with open-source software and newly digitized content (an additional 950 epigraphic texts plus complete topographic and toponymic records for over 3,000 historical geographic features) to create an unparalleled research resource for Greek and Roman Libya and Egypt, and beyond.

Concordia will employ the new Object Reuse and Exchange (ORE) specification, promulgated by the Open Archives Initiative, to underpin open-access web services across these collections. ORE links to the Pleiades project (http://pleiades.stoa.org) will facilitate automated geographic correlation and dynamic mapping, alongside more traditional search modes. When Concordia is complete, it will be possible to map the findspots of texts in the individual collections and to browse from one text to others found nearby.

The other participating collections include:
The Duke Databank of Documentary Papyri
The Inscriptions of Aphrodisias 2007 (http://insaph.kcl.ac.uk/iaph2007/index.html)
The Inscriptions of Roman Cyrenaica (http://ircyr.kcl.ac.uk/)
The Inscriptions of Roman Tripolitania

Bruce Cole, chairman of NEH, in announcing the first grants, said, ‘The JISC/NEH grant program encourages international collaboration on humanities projects of value to scholars worldwide. Award recipients in the U.S. and U.K. are working together to create digital archives, centralize holdings, and develop tools to improve humanities research online. These projects embody the best of the digital humanities and advance the mission of the Endowment.’

The JISC/NEH Transatlantic Digitization Collaboration Grant program, inaugurated last year as part of the NEH’s Digital Humanities Initiative, is supported by both the NEH and the Higher Education Funding Council for England acting through JISC. The grants provide combined funding of up to $240,000 for one year of development in the following areas: new digitization projects and pilot projects, the addition of important materials to existing digitization projects, or the development of infrastructure (either technical “middleware,” tools, or knowledge-sharing) to support U.S.-England digitization work. Each project is sponsored by both an American and an English institution, whose activities will be funded by NEH and JISC respectively.

This project is supported jointly by the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Higher Education Funding Council for England of the United Kingdom acting through the Joint Information Systems Committee.

Notes to editors


The Joint Information Systems Committee is an independent advisory body in the United Kingdom that works with further and higher education by providing strategic guidance, advice, and opportunities to use Information and Communication Technologies to support learning, teaching, research, and administration.

The National Endowment for the Humanities is an independent grant-making agency of the United States government dedicated to supporting research, education, preservation, and public programs in the humanities.

Notes to editors

King's College London
King's College London is one of the top 25 universities in the world (Times Higher 2007) and the fourth oldest in England. A research-led university based in the heart of London, King's has 19,300 students from more than 130 countries, and 5,000 employees. King's has an outstanding reputation for providing world-class teaching and cutting-edge research. The College is in the top group of UK universities for research earnings and has an annual income of approximately £400 million. An investment of £500 million has been made in the redevelopment of its estate.

King's has a particularly distinguished reputation in the humanities, law, social sciences, the health sciences, natural sciences and engineering, and has played a major role in many of the advances that have shaped modern life, such as the discovery of the structure of DNA. It is the largest centre for the education of healthcare professionals in Europe and is home to five Medical Research Council Centres – more than any other university.



Further information
Melanie Gardner, Senior Public Relations Officer, Public Relations Department, King’s College London. Tel: 020 7848 3073; email melanie.gardner@kcl.ac.uk

Next:
Review of the King's year
King’s shows way for London Leaders
2008 RAE results
£1.5m to study symmetries of the universe
Honorary recognition for King’s

Previous:
Major investment at King’s for heart research
King’s academics top NHS research list
New treatment to detect and fight breast cancer
Health minister presents UNICEF UK award
Virtual tube ride 'paranoia hope'


This information is provided by the Public Relations Department
Tel: 020-7848 3202  Fax: 020-7848 3739  Email: pr@kcl.ac.uk
Accessibility  |   Terms and Conditions  |   Last Modified
© 2005 King's College London, Strand, London WC2R 2LS, England, United Kingdom. Tel:+44(0) 20 7836 5454