ToposText: Difference between revisions

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==Description==
==Description==


From the project author (2019-11-26):
From the project author (2025-11-25):


'''ToposText''' is a website and free mobile application based on a very large (20 million word) collection of ancient texts indexed to a database of more than 7000 mapped places relevant to the history and mythology of the Greco-Roman world. Each place page has an OpenStreetMap mapping, a brief description (borrowed from the Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites and other references, or by the author), and a table of the literary mentions of the place, key-word-in-context, linking to the full text, filterable by author/work or by mention type, sortable by work date or the approximate date of the event in which the place is mentioned.
'''ToposText''' is a website and free mobile application [iOS and Android] allowing at-a-glance research on people and places in the Greco-Roman world, based on a uniquely large (860 works, close to 20 million words) collection of ancient texts in English translation. These texts are indexed against a database of more than 8000 mapped places and 21,000 other proper names relevant to the history and mythology of the Greco-Roman world. Each place page has an OpenStreetMap mapping, a brief description (borrowed from a variety of sources or composed by the author), and a table of the literary mentions of the place, key-word-in-context, linking to the full text.  


The library includes 770 translated Greek and Latin texts in clean digital form, almost all important surviving works of history, mythology, and geography from Homer through the Early Byzantine period, mostly out-of-copyright translations but some open source or CC translations online for the first time, with links to the original Greek or Latin text.
The library includes 850 translated Greek and Latin texts in clean digital form, almost all important surviving works of history, mythology, and geography from Homer through the Early Byzantine period, mostly out-of-copyright translations but some open source or CC translations online for the first time, with links to the original Greek or Latin text. Texts are associated with metadata, including Canonical Text Service (CTS) IDs, Wikidata, LOC, and [[Trismegistos]]. Translations have been modified in many cases to make key ancient terms (e.g. divine epithets) easier to find. Each paragraph is associated with an event date, accurate to the year for some historical texts, very approximate for others. 


The app includes 7600 mapped historic places and archaeological sites from Spain to India, attested by 230,000 ancient references. The level of mapping detail is highest in Greece, and dependent on [[Pleiades]] and the Digital Atlas of the Roman Empire for outlying regions. It documents and geolocates 250 monuments in Athens, a similar number in Rome.  
The app includes 8137 mapped historic places and archaeological sites from Spain to India, attested by 277,000 ancient references. The level of mapping detail is highest in Greece, where ancient towers, acropoleis, and other sites with no literary footprint are included, with coordinates verified via Google Earth or autopsy. Coordinates are more likely to be dependent on [[Pleiades]] and the Digital Atlas of the Roman Empire for outlying regions. ToposText documents and geolocates 250 monuments in Athens, a similar number in Rome. A high percentage of sites are linked to Wikidata as well as Pleiades. Many sites have links to Chronique de Fouilles/Archaeology in Greece.


ToposText also indexes 10,300 proper names – people, gods, festivals, animals – attested by 368000 key-word-in-context ancient references.
ToposText also indexes 21,360 proper names – people, gods, festivals, animals – attested by 430,500 key-word-in-context ancient references. Some 13,800 of these entities, 65%, are matched to a Wikidata item and 7500 to an English Wikipedia article.
 
The large place and person index tables can be by author/work, text type, or mention type, and are sortable by work date or the approximate date of the event in which the place is mentioned.


A proximity search tool on the ToposText.org site allows one to search for any two words or strings (case-insensitive) within 200 characters of each other, using regular expressions. Thus \bHannib AND \belephant will find 34 instances from Plutarch to Eutropius.
A proximity search tool on the ToposText.org site allows one to search for any two words or strings (case-insensitive) within 200 characters of each other, using regular expressions. Thus \bHannib AND \belephant will find 34 instances from Plutarch to Eutropius.


The gazetteer is downloadable as a .kml file or in Pelagios LOD orWorld Historical Gazetteer json-ld format.
Most material on the site is open access, though some works are used in ToposText by permission of the translator. The gazetteer is downloadable as a .kml file, geojson, or in Pelagios LOD orWorld Historical Gazetteer json-ld format. The text library exists as rdf turtles. Pages and paragraphs are directly addressable via the REST API if desired.  


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 14:16, 25 November 2025

Available

Author

  • Brady Kiesling

Description

From the project author (2025-11-25):

ToposText is a website and free mobile application [iOS and Android] allowing at-a-glance research on people and places in the Greco-Roman world, based on a uniquely large (860 works, close to 20 million words) collection of ancient texts in English translation. These texts are indexed against a database of more than 8000 mapped places and 21,000 other proper names relevant to the history and mythology of the Greco-Roman world. Each place page has an OpenStreetMap mapping, a brief description (borrowed from a variety of sources or composed by the author), and a table of the literary mentions of the place, key-word-in-context, linking to the full text.

The library includes 850 translated Greek and Latin texts in clean digital form, almost all important surviving works of history, mythology, and geography from Homer through the Early Byzantine period, mostly out-of-copyright translations but some open source or CC translations online for the first time, with links to the original Greek or Latin text. Texts are associated with metadata, including Canonical Text Service (CTS) IDs, Wikidata, LOC, and Trismegistos. Translations have been modified in many cases to make key ancient terms (e.g. divine epithets) easier to find. Each paragraph is associated with an event date, accurate to the year for some historical texts, very approximate for others.

The app includes 8137 mapped historic places and archaeological sites from Spain to India, attested by 277,000 ancient references. The level of mapping detail is highest in Greece, where ancient towers, acropoleis, and other sites with no literary footprint are included, with coordinates verified via Google Earth or autopsy. Coordinates are more likely to be dependent on Pleiades and the Digital Atlas of the Roman Empire for outlying regions. ToposText documents and geolocates 250 monuments in Athens, a similar number in Rome. A high percentage of sites are linked to Wikidata as well as Pleiades. Many sites have links to Chronique de Fouilles/Archaeology in Greece.

ToposText also indexes 21,360 proper names – people, gods, festivals, animals – attested by 430,500 key-word-in-context ancient references. Some 13,800 of these entities, 65%, are matched to a Wikidata item and 7500 to an English Wikipedia article.

The large place and person index tables can be by author/work, text type, or mention type, and are sortable by work date or the approximate date of the event in which the place is mentioned.

A proximity search tool on the ToposText.org site allows one to search for any two words or strings (case-insensitive) within 200 characters of each other, using regular expressions. Thus \bHannib AND \belephant will find 34 instances from Plutarch to Eutropius.

Most material on the site is open access, though some works are used in ToposText by permission of the translator. The gazetteer is downloadable as a .kml file, geojson, or in Pelagios LOD orWorld Historical Gazetteer json-ld format. The text library exists as rdf turtles. Pages and paragraphs are directly addressable via the REST API if desired.

References