King's Digital Lab
- From the website: http://www.kcl.ac.uk/cch/ :
"CCH is an international leader in the application of technology in research in the arts and humanities, and in the social sciences. It is in the School of Humanities, and operates on a collaborative basis across discipline, institutional and national boundaries: it has collaborative relationships across King’s College and with a large number of institutions and bodies in the UK and internationally. CCH has 11 established staff, and more than 20 contract staff working on research projects. It has generated over £13 million in research grants over the past 5 years, and is involved in more than 20 major research projects, with funding from the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC), the Leverhulme Trust and the Andrew W Mellon Foundation. CCH is responsible for the MA programmes in Digital Culture and Technology, and Digital Humanities; it also runs an undergraduate Digital Humanities programme."
Classical projects at CCH
(All links internal to this wiki--do not add an external link: create a page)
- Analytical Onomasticon to the Metamorphoses of Ovid
- Daidalos database of ancient scupture
- Inscriptions of Aphrodisias
- Inscriptions of Roman Cyrenaica
- Integrated Database for Papyrology
- Lactor
- Prosopography of the Byzantine World
- Skenographia
- Theatre of Pompey
- Theatron
Other Digital Humanities Projects at CCH
(For a more complete list, see CCH Projects page)
(Links are external to this wiki)
- Anglo-Saxon Charters
- Chopin’s First Editions Online
- Clergy of the Church of England Database (CCEd)
- Corpus of Romanesque Sculpture in Britain and Ireland (CRSBI)
- Corpus Vitrearum Medii Aevi (CVMA)
- Digital Image Archive of Medieval Music
- Digital Shikshapatri
- Durham Liber Vitae
- Early Modern Spain (EMS)
- Fine Rolls of Henry III
- Greek Bible in Byzantine Judaism
- Hofmeister XIX
- Language of Landscape
- Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition
- Online Chopin Variorum Edition
- Prosopography of Anglo-Saxon England (PASE)
- Sanskrit Knowledge Systems on the Eve of Colonialism