Latin Library

Latin Library




👉🏻👉🏻👉🏻 ALL INFORMATION CLICK HERE 👈🏻👈🏻👈🏻




















































Our two-fold mission
Publishing and curating critical editions of Latin texts, of all types, from all eras, and facilitating an ongoing scholarly conversation about these texts through open collaboration and annotation.
Facilitating the finding and, where openly available and accessible online, the reading of all texts written in Latin.
Latin texts of all types, of all eras.
We use the word "library" to describe our project because that word's many meanings apply to what we're building: a library of texts and resources, a place where individuals and groups can study and collaborate on projects, a series of volumes published according to a uniform standard, and resources for digital applications.
This space is for highlighting Internet resources for Latinists. The spotlight is currently on Thebarum Fabula: Digital Library of the Theban Myth, "a research project that aims to create an open-access website to serve as an exhaustive repository of resources, standard critical editions and recent translations of Greek and Roman works dealing with the fratricidal struggles of the Terrigenae and the sons of Oedipus, Eteocles and Polynices." Read more ….
Facilitating the finding and reading of all Latin texts.
I apologize for the long delay since my last update on the Digital Latin Library Project. Every time I think I have a moment to spare to write an update, I think, "No, I should really spend that time working on [insert DLL project here]." But if I never write an update, no one will know that the project is still going strong. So, here's a brief update on what we have been up to.
We've been quiet for the past few months because we've been busy on a number of projects. It's time to share some news about the latest developments on the DLL's publishing project, The Library of Digital Latin Texts.
We're doing a "soft launch" of our catalog site over the next several weeks. We've loaded a bunch of author and work authority records, and we'll be adding lots of records of individual items from HathiTrust, the Internet Archive, and other sites in the coming days and weeks.
The Digital Latin Library project announces a workshop on the preparation of critical editions of Latin texts according to the soon-to-be-released encoding guidelines for the Library of Digital Latin Texts (LDLT), a series of new, born-digital editions to be published under the auspices of the So
Check out @wjb_mattingly's new video tutorial on Named Entity Recognition for Classical Latin: https://t.co/Xl9iGokYxK
© Copyright 2020 Digital Latin Library

Although anyone with access to an Internet search engine can search for and find Latin texts, no resources yet exist for assisting users in evaluating the quality of the results or finding related items efficiently and effectively. It is true that many online collections such as Google Books, the Internet Archive, the Hathi Trust, the Digital Public Library of America, and Europeana include myriad Latin works in their databases and offer some faceted search features, but because the long history of Latin texts spans the history of publishing, the sheer number of texts and the variety of their formats necessitate a systematic approach to cataloging and curating the information.
In other words, we want to help people interested in Latin find what they are looking for—and perhaps discover resources they might not have found otherwise.
Accordingly, the mission of the DLL Catalog is to build and implement, in keeping with the accepted standards and practices of library and information science, a curated, systematic resource for finding Latin texts of all types and all kinds.
We have conducted user studies to determine the most useful and desireable features for a specialized library catalog for Latinists. Models for the data and metadata have been established, and the information architecture is in place. The catalog runs on Drupal 7 with a MySQL database and Solr search engine.
The catalog now includes author authority records and work records, spanning the Classical, Medieval, and Neolatin eras. With that framework in place, we're using data scraping techniques to build out the catalog’s item records with content from a variety of sources including the Packard Humanities Institute’s Latin Texts, digilibLT, Biblioteca Italiana, in addition to those already mentioned.
The DLL Catalog is available at https://catalog.digitallatin.org.
Check out @wjb_mattingly's new video tutorial on Named Entity Recognition for Classical Latin: https://t.co/Xl9iGokYxK
© Copyright 2020 Digital Latin Library

Korean Seks Massage
Kinky Mod
Xnxx Stockings Heels
Funny Porn Scene
The Hardest Porn Bondage
The Latin Library
The Classics Page - The Latin Library
Home | Digital Latin Library
The Digital Latin Library | Digital Latin Library
Christian Latin - The Latin Library
The Latin Library - Ancient Texts
Horace - The Latin Library
Latin library – My generation of polyglots
Latin : Books by Language : Free Texts : Free Download ...
Latin Library


Report Page