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Part I – Only Connect:
Prosopography and Onomastics.
Using
formal structures to create complex relationships: the prosopography
of the Byzantine Empire – a case study.
John BRADLEY, Harold Short (London)
Apprenticeship in prosopography:
the databases of Siena and Perugia professors, 1250-1500.
Paolo RENZI (Siena)
Towards more uniform database structures for prosopographical
research: work in progress in University history – the example
of the Lovanienses
Database.
Bruno BOUTE (Louvain)
Uncovering the networks
of power: the House of Lords, 1660-1832.
Ruth PALEY (London)
Text encoding and
analysis of social relations in the Scandinavian kings’ sagas.
Bente OPHEIM (Bergen)
The woman who was not there: application
of prosopography to the study of marriage contracts.
Laura NAPRAN (Cambridge)
Ancient Greek names in the 21st
century: the device of a database for the analysis of Elean names.
Ina J. HARTMANN (Oxford)
Elis and Rome: a clash of naming systems.
Ina J. HARTMANN (Oxford)
The survival of pre-Greek personal
names on ancient Crete: using
a database.
Richard HITCHMAN (Oxford)
Imperial constitutions,
chronology, and prosopography: towards a new methodology for the
use of the Late Roman law codes.
Altay COSKUN (Oxford)
| Part II – Back to Basics: Sources
and Dating. |
La base de données ‘Cartulaires’ de la section
de diplomatique de l’Institut de recherché
et d’histoire des texts (Orléans) et l’entreprise du Répertoire
des Cartulaires Français.
Paul BERTRAND (Orléans)
La base de données des chartes originales
antérieures à 1121 conservées en France.
Benoît-Michel TOCK (Strasbourg)
Identifying irregularities and establishing
chronology in medieval charters.
Michael GERVERS (Toronto)
Dating charters using
textual evidence.
Amanda SPENCER (Toronto)
Changing legal terminology
in dated private documents in England in the twelfth and thirteenth
centuries: a case study – quitclaims.
Ágnes JUHÁSZ-ORMSBY (Toronto)
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