Neo-Paleography: Analysing Ancient Handwritings in the Digital Age Basel 27-29 January 2020
As part of D-scribes project, the International Conference Neo-Paleography: Analysing Ancient Handwritings in the Digital Age will be held in Basel between January 27 and 29, 2020. This conference will gather specialists of Egyptian, Hebrew, Greek, Latin and Coptic Manuscripts and combine traditional paleographic analyses to the most recent computerized approaches.
Please find the program below, also available along with the abstracts on the project website: https://d-scribes.philhist.unibas.ch/en/events-179/neo-paleography-conference/
Presentations will be recorded and made available soon after the conference. To be sure to be informed of the release, do not hesitate to subscribe to d-scribes mailing list: https://d-scribes.philhist.unibas.ch/en/mailing-list/
Entrance is free, for logistic reasons, please notify your interest to attend via email to i.marthot-santaniello@unibas.ch
Looking forward to possibly welcoming you to this event,
All the best
Isabelle Marthot-Santaniello
PI D-scribes project
Neo-Paleography: Analysing Ancient Handwritings in the Digital Age
Basel 27-29 January 2020
Kollegienhaus, Regenzzimmer 111, Petersplatz 1, 4001 Basel
Monday 27 January
14:00 Welcome
14:15 Nachum Dershowitz, Adiel Ben-Shalom in abs., Lior Wolf in abs. (Tel Aviv): Computerized Paleography: Tools for Historical Manuscripts
14:45 Mladen Popović, Lambert Schomaker, Maruf Dhali (Groningen): Digital Palaeography of the Dead Sea Scrolls for Dating Undated Manuscripts
15:15 Gemma Hayes, Maruf Dhali (Groningen): Identifying Dead Sea Scribes: A Digital Palaeographic Approach
15:45 Discussion
16:00 Coffee break
16:30 Vinodh Rajan Sampath (Hamburg): Script Analyzer: A Tool for Quantitative Paleography
17:00 Timo Korkiakangas (Helsinki): Quantifying Medieval Latin handwriting with Script Analyzer
17:30 Elena Nieddu, Serena Ammirati in abs. (Roma): IN CODICE RATIO: a gateway to paleographical thesauri
18:00 Discussion
Tuesday 28 January
9:00 Peter Stokes (Paris): (Still) Describing Handwriting: With Archetype and Beyond
9:30 Simona Stoyanova (Nottingham): The Python in the letterbox – epigraphic palaeography with Archetype
10:00 Lorenzo Sardone (San Marino): For a Palaeography of Demosthenic Papyri
10:30 Discussion
10.45 Coffee break
11:00 Yasmine Amory (Ghent): More than a simple intuition. Towards a categorisation of palaeographical features
11:30 Loreleï Vanderheyden (Heidelberg): How to unmask a digraph scribe? Apollos’ Greek and Coptic styles in the Aphrodito Byzantine Archive
12:00 Discussion
12:30 Lunch
14:00 Anne Boud’hors (Paris): Identifying hands and styles in the Coptic papyri from Edfu (Papas' archive)
14:30 Esther Garel (Strasbourg): The Fayyumic Coptic Documentary Papyri: Issues of Palaeography, Formats and Dating
15:00 Christian Askeland (Cambridge): How to clean up a Papyrustastrophe? Using empirical data and common sense to reconnect shattered fragments
15:30 Discussion
15:45 Coffee break
16:00 Katharina Schröder (Münster): Searching for Relatives: Palaeographical Analysis of Coptic New Testament Manuscripts in the Institute for New Testament Textual Research Münster
16:30 Alin Suciu, Ulrich Schmid in abs. (Göttingen): Digital Support for a Paleographical Assessment of the White Monastery Manuscripts
17:00 Discussion
Wednesday 29 January
9:00 Marie Beurton-Aimar, Cecilia Ostertag in abs. (Bordeaux): Re-assembly Egyptian potteries with handwritten texts
9:30 Vincent Christlein (Nuremberg): Writer identification in historical document images
10:00 Imran Siddiqi (Islamabad): Dating of Historical Manuscripts using Image Analysis & Deep Learning Techniques
10:30 Discussion
10.45 Coffee break
11:00 Tanmoy Mondal (Montpellier): Efficient technique for Binarization, Noise Cleaning and Convolutional Neural Network Based Writer Identification for Papyri Manuscripts
11:30 Andreas Fischer (Fribourg): Recent Advances in Graph-Based Keyword Spotting for Supporting Quantitative Paleography
12:00 Discussion
12:30 Lunch
14:00 Vlad Atanasiu, Peter Fornaro (Basel): On the Utility of Color in Computational Paleography
15:00-17:00 Visit of the Digital Humanities Lab and the papyrus collection in the University Library