Category:Projects: Difference between revisions

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==Description==
==Description==
These pages are intended to provide concise information on projects applying computing technologies to Classical/Ancient Historical research. Should you know of any relevant project, please feel free to create a page with the title, URL, and a brief description, and give it the category tag <nowiki>[[category:projects]]</nowiki> which will cause it to be indexed on this page.
 
The '''Census of Antique Works of Art and Architecture Known in the Renaissance''' is a research infrastructure dedicated to the study of the reception of antiquity in the Renaissance. It began in 1946 and has developed ever since as an international collaboration supported by the Warburg Institute, New York University, the Getty, the Bibliotheca Hertziana, and the Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin. Now based at the Institut für Kunst- und Bildgeschichte at the Humboldt-Universität, it provides an open-access database documenting ancient monuments (including sculpture, architecture, coins, and inscriptions) alongside the early modern visual and textual sources that record their rediscovery, interpretation, and transmission.  
 
The database integrates tens of thousands of records and is continuously expanded, offering tools for exploring relationships between artworks, historical documents, and scholarly traditions. Recent developments focus on Linked Open Data and semantic interoperability, with the aim of connecting Census data to research resources in art history, archaeology, and the digital humanities.
 
* URL: https://www.census.de/home/
* Database: https://database.census.de 
* Blog (Verso): https://verso.hypotheses.org 
 
[[Category:projects]]

Revision as of 08:44, 10 April 2026

Description

The Census of Antique Works of Art and Architecture Known in the Renaissance is a research infrastructure dedicated to the study of the reception of antiquity in the Renaissance. It began in 1946 and has developed ever since as an international collaboration supported by the Warburg Institute, New York University, the Getty, the Bibliotheca Hertziana, and the Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin. Now based at the Institut für Kunst- und Bildgeschichte at the Humboldt-Universität, it provides an open-access database documenting ancient monuments (including sculpture, architecture, coins, and inscriptions) alongside the early modern visual and textual sources that record their rediscovery, interpretation, and transmission.

The database integrates tens of thousands of records and is continuously expanded, offering tools for exploring relationships between artworks, historical documents, and scholarly traditions. Recent developments focus on Linked Open Data and semantic interoperability, with the aim of connecting Census data to research resources in art history, archaeology, and the digital humanities.

Pages in category "Projects"

The following 200 pages are in this category, out of 665 total.

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