6 projects
Digital Lexicon Iconographicum Mythologiae Classicae (Digital LIMC)
Ongoing
Full Open Access

Digital Lexicon Iconographicum Mythologiae Classicae (Digital LIMC)

Digital LIMC contains what we know about the iconography of Greek, Etruscan and Roman mythology, both in ancient Greek, Etruscan and Roman art as well as in neighbouring Mediterranean cultures.

ArchaeologyEgyptEtruria
GLAUBENMACHENLASSEN
Finished
Open Access with Restrictions

GLAUBENMACHENLASSEN

GLAUBENMACHENLASSEN is a visual anthropological and film ethnographic dissertation exploring identity in a cinematographic laboratory. Research period: 2009-2022.

Film as ResearchCinematographic Laboratory
Interactive Historical Atlas of the Disciplines
Finished
Full Open Access

Interactive Historical Atlas of the Disciplines

The Interactive Historical Atlas of the Disciplines aims to map data related to the history of academic disciplines and provides tools to visualize the evolution of disciplinary borders over time.

history of disciplineshistorical atlasdisciplines
Mapping the Scriptures in Western Sephardic Literature
Finished
Full Open Access

Mapping the Scriptures in Western Sephardic Literature

Studies the role of the Bible in Spanish and Portuguese Jewish communities of the Western Sephardic diaspora (1550–1800), combining literary and historical research with digital humanities methods.

Intellectual HistorySpanish StudiesPortuguese Literature
MARK16
Ongoing
Full Open Access

MARK16

MARK16 is a SNSF PRIMA project. It reassesses the diverse endings of the Gospel of Mark through manuscript data, available on its Virtual Research Environment ISSN 2673-9836, https://mark16.sib.swiss.

Gospel of MarkMark endingsNew Testament
WordWeb / IDEM: A new way of representing Intertextuality in Drama of the Early Modern Period
Finished
Full Open Access

WordWeb / IDEM: A new way of representing Intertextuality in Drama of the Early Modern Period

WordWeb/IDEM offers an innovative digital database for representing intertextuality in the drama of Shakespeare’s time.

Digital HumanitiesEarly Modern PeriodElizabethan