The Kerameikos.org scientific committee is pleased to announced that the National Endowment for the Humanities has granted the project about $85,000 to develop the full range of Archaic and Classical Greek pottery concepts and a series of software development features and APIs. This is an 18-month Level II Digital Humanities Advancement Grant project. Below is a portion of our application that briefly describes our primary goals for this phase of the project:
Experience from development and proliferation of Nomisma.org principles suggests that community buy-in of shared vocabularies and technical methodologies can only come when non-technical specialists (in Nomisma’s case: numismatists and archaeologists) are able to see and use functional web applications. In numismatics, broad buy-in therefore only came after the publication of the first phase of Online Coins of the Roman Empire project, with its multilingual interfaces, geographic and quantitative distribution visualizations, and photographs of coins aggregated from several prominent collections. Similar analytical and visualization tools have been built into Kerameikos.org directly, derived from the small subset of Greek vases from the British Museum and the Getty that were ingested in the initial proof-of-concept phase in 2014. It is our hope that the Linked Open Greek Pottery project will foster similar buy-in among archaeologists, art historians, and museum professionals. These specialists will play an integral role in the long-term curation of data and, ultimately, in the expansion of Kerameikos.org beyond its current Archaic and Classical Greek scope. The final products of this 18-month phase fall into three broad categories, culminating in dissemination:
Final Product and Dissemination
Experience from development and proliferation of Nomisma.org principles suggests that community buy-in of shared vocabularies and technical methodologies can only come when non-technical specialists (in Nomisma’s case: numismatists and archaeologists) are able to see and use functional web applications. In numismatics, broad buy-in therefore only came after the publication of the first phase of Online Coins of the Roman Empire project, with its multilingual interfaces, geographic and quantitative distribution visualizations, and photographs of coins aggregated from several prominent collections. Similar analytical and visualization tools have been built into Kerameikos.org directly, derived from the small subset of Greek vases from the British Museum and the Getty that were ingested in the initial proof-of-concept phase in 2014. It is our hope that the Linked Open Greek Pottery project will foster similar buy-in among archaeologists, art historians, and museum professionals. These specialists will play an integral role in the long-term curation of data and, ultimately, in the expansion of Kerameikos.org beyond its current Archaic and Classical Greek scope. The final products of this 18-month phase fall into three broad categories, culminating in dissemination:
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