VHMML: Difference between revisions

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* http://vhmml.wordpress.com/
==Available==


== Description ==
* https://www.vhmml.org/


vHMML (“virtual” HMML) is an online environment for manuscript studies. An Internet-based extension of the [[Hill Museum and Monastic Library]], vHMML will help open that archive to undergraduates, graduate students, scholars, library professionals, and anyone interested in manuscript studies. vHMML’s coverage of manuscript cultures will be inclusive of both western and non-western manuscripts, reflecting more accurately the complex historical realities that shaped the modern world and that are becoming more normative in current scholarship with its emphasis on comparative studies. The project will be developed through 2014.
==Project Director==


vHMML will consist of six closely-linked, interoperable, and mutually reinforcing online components:
* Columba Stewart


1. School: instructional material in various formats for teaching the paleography and codicology for languages/cultures represented in HMML’s collections (Latin, Syriac, Ge‘ez, Christian Arabic, Armenian);
==Description==


2. Scriptorium: a sophisticated collaborative workspace able to support a variety of manuscript-related projects using manuscript images from HMML’s collection and imported from other sources, and providing tools for studying their form and content;
From vHMML about page (accessed 2018-11-16):


3. Lexicon: a crowd-sourced glossary for manuscript studies inclusive of western and non-western manuscripts;
<blockquote>
<p>'''vHMML''' (Virtual Hill Museum and Manuscript Library) offers resources and tools for the study of manuscripts and currently features manuscript cultures from Europe, Africa, the Middle East, and South Asia. The site houses high-resolution images of manuscripts, many of them digitized as part of HMML’s global mission to preserve and share important, endangered, and inaccessible manuscript collections through digital photography, archiving, and cataloging. It also contains descriptions of manuscripts from HMML's legacy microfilm collection, with scans of some of these films.</p>


4. Folio Collection: thickly-described sample manuscript folios from HMML’s collections, supplemented by images supplied by other institutions or individuals, which will illustrate the chronological and regional development of writing styles;
<h3>History</h3>
<p>vHMML is an initiative of the [[Hill Museum and Manuscript Library]]. The project began as a partnership between HMML staff and developers from the Center for Digital Humanities at Saint Louis University (James Ginther, PI) and the Carolingian Canon Law Project at the University of Kentucky (Abigail Firey, PI), with initial support from a 2012 National Leadership Grant by the Institute of Museum and Library Services, supplemented by the Arcadia Fund.</p>


5. Library: other HMML digital resources supportive of manuscript study such as classic works on paleography, manuscript catalogs, and videos;
<p>vHMML 1.0, with School, Lexicon, Reference and Folio, launched in October 2015. The first three components were developed by Chad LaVigne of Solution Design Group (sdg) in Golden Valley, Minnesota. The team at the University of Kentucky developed Folio using the rich tools of Scriptorium, the digital environment they designed for collaborative research on manuscripts.</p>


6. [http://vhmml.wordpress.com/ Blog]: a central point for communication and feedback gathering about vHMML.
<p>vHMML 2.0 with Reading Room launched in August 2016. Even before the launch of vHMML 1.0, the HMML team was working on a virtual Reading Room that would be the centerpiece of vHMML 2.0. The task required a comprehensive makeover of OLIVER, HMML's online manuscript catalog first developed in the late 1990s. The choice of Mirador, a IIIF-compliant image viewer, and the creation of a new metadata schema to replace OLIVER, put Reading Room at the forefront of developments in manuscript description for digital environments. Reading Room was funded by the Henry Luce Foundation. The new catalog database that replaced OLIVER was funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. Improvements to vHMML 2.0 were released in the spring of 2018 as the initial results of a Digital Humanities Advancement Grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities.</p>
 
<p>vHMML 3.0, a complete reworking of the project with added data-sharing features, was launched in a series of releases between April and September 2018. The new design is optimized for simpler navigation and easier access to search options. Content across the site, including metadata in Reading Room, is now discoverable in web searches as a result of Search Engine Optimization. The new Data Portal and associated vHMML DH site realize HMML's commitment to sharing its metadata with researchers in the most user-friendly manner possible.</p>
</blockquote>
 
=== HMML School ===
 
vHMML includes a series of resources that are designed for teaching manuscript culture, called [https://hmmlschool.org/ HMML School]. As of 2023, it includes modules on Arabic palaeography, Latin palaeography, Syriac palaeography. The Lexicon defines terms related to manuscripts and palaeography. And Folio shows the changes of manuscripts over time.


[[category:projects]]
[[category:projects]]
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[[category:manuscripts]]
[[category:manuscripts]]
[[category:openaccess]]
[[category:openaccess]]
[[category:blogs]]
[[category:Arabic]]
[[Category:Armenian]]
[[Category:Syriac]]
[[category:palaeography]]

Latest revision as of 16:11, 18 October 2023

Available

Project Director

  • Columba Stewart

Description

From vHMML about page (accessed 2018-11-16):

vHMML (Virtual Hill Museum and Manuscript Library) offers resources and tools for the study of manuscripts and currently features manuscript cultures from Europe, Africa, the Middle East, and South Asia. The site houses high-resolution images of manuscripts, many of them digitized as part of HMML’s global mission to preserve and share important, endangered, and inaccessible manuscript collections through digital photography, archiving, and cataloging. It also contains descriptions of manuscripts from HMML's legacy microfilm collection, with scans of some of these films.

History

vHMML is an initiative of the Hill Museum and Manuscript Library. The project began as a partnership between HMML staff and developers from the Center for Digital Humanities at Saint Louis University (James Ginther, PI) and the Carolingian Canon Law Project at the University of Kentucky (Abigail Firey, PI), with initial support from a 2012 National Leadership Grant by the Institute of Museum and Library Services, supplemented by the Arcadia Fund.

vHMML 1.0, with School, Lexicon, Reference and Folio, launched in October 2015. The first three components were developed by Chad LaVigne of Solution Design Group (sdg) in Golden Valley, Minnesota. The team at the University of Kentucky developed Folio using the rich tools of Scriptorium, the digital environment they designed for collaborative research on manuscripts.

vHMML 2.0 with Reading Room launched in August 2016. Even before the launch of vHMML 1.0, the HMML team was working on a virtual Reading Room that would be the centerpiece of vHMML 2.0. The task required a comprehensive makeover of OLIVER, HMML's online manuscript catalog first developed in the late 1990s. The choice of Mirador, a IIIF-compliant image viewer, and the creation of a new metadata schema to replace OLIVER, put Reading Room at the forefront of developments in manuscript description for digital environments. Reading Room was funded by the Henry Luce Foundation. The new catalog database that replaced OLIVER was funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. Improvements to vHMML 2.0 were released in the spring of 2018 as the initial results of a Digital Humanities Advancement Grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities.

vHMML 3.0, a complete reworking of the project with added data-sharing features, was launched in a series of releases between April and September 2018. The new design is optimized for simpler navigation and easier access to search options. Content across the site, including metadata in Reading Room, is now discoverable in web searches as a result of Search Engine Optimization. The new Data Portal and associated vHMML DH site realize HMML's commitment to sharing its metadata with researchers in the most user-friendly manner possible.

HMML School

vHMML includes a series of resources that are designed for teaching manuscript culture, called HMML School. As of 2023, it includes modules on Arabic palaeography, Latin palaeography, Syriac palaeography. The Lexicon defines terms related to manuscripts and palaeography. And Folio shows the changes of manuscripts over time.