<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<TEI.2 id="paper_118_walda">
   <teiHeader>
      <fileDesc>
         <titleStmt>
            <title>Databases and Prosopographies:The Prosopography of Anglo-Saxon England (PASE) a Case Study</title>
            <author>
               <name reg="Walda, Hafed">Hafed Walda</name>
            </author>
            <author>
               <name reg="Burghart, Alex">Alex Burghart</name>
            </author>
            <respStmt>
               <resp>Marked up by </resp>
               <name reg="Holmes, Martin">Martin Holmes</name>
               <lb/>
               <name reg="Baer, Patricia">Patricia Baer</name>
            </respStmt>
         </titleStmt>
         <publicationStmt>
            <p>Marked up to be included in the ACH/ALLC 2005 Conference Abstracts book.</p>
         </publicationStmt>
         <sourceDesc>
            <p>None</p>
         </sourceDesc>
      </fileDesc>
      <profileDesc>
         <textClass>
            <classCode>paper</classCode>
            <keywords>
               <list>
                  <item>prosopography</item>
                  <item>Anglo-Saxon</item>
                  <item>database</item>
               </list>
            </keywords>
         </textClass>
      </profileDesc>
      <revisionDesc>
         <list>
            <item>MDH: Created from John Bradley's XML <date value="2005-03">March 2005</date>
            </item>
            <item>MDH: Initial markup <date value="2005-03-21">21 March 2005</date>
            </item>
            <item>MDH: Proofed by RS: recommended removal of "Author A" and "Author B"; commented them out <date value="2005-05-25">25 May 2005</date>
            </item>
            <item>MDH: Entered one proofing correction from PGL<date value="2005-05-27">27 May 2005</date>
            </item>
            <item>MDH: Entered more corrections from PGL<date value="2005-05-27">27 May 2005</date>
            </item>
         </list>
      </revisionDesc>
   </teiHeader>
   <text>
      <front>
         <docTitle n="Databases and Prosopographies:  The Prosopography of Anglo-Saxon England (PASE) a Case Study">
            <titlePart>Databases and Prosopographies: <title level="m">The Prosopography of Anglo-Saxon England</title> (<title level="m">PASE</title>) a Case Study</titlePart>
         </docTitle>
         <docAuthor>
            <name reg="Walda, Hafed">Hafed Walda</name>
            <address>
               <addrLine>hafed.walda@kcl.ac.uk</addrLine>
            </address>
         </docAuthor>
         <titlePart type="affil">King's College London</titlePart>
         <docAuthor>
            <name reg="Burghart, Alex">Alex Burghart</name>
            <address>
               <addrLine>alex.burghart@kcl.ac.uk</addrLine>
            </address>
         </docAuthor>
         <titlePart type="affil">King's College London</titlePart>
      </front>
      <body>
         <div0>
            <head>Summary</head>
            <head>Dr Hafed Walda</head>
            <div1>
               <head>Definition</head>
               <p>David Pelteret, of the <title level="m">Prosopography of Anglo-Saxon England</title>, wrote that: <cit>
                     <q>in essence prosopography can be interpreted as the study of identifiable persons and their connections with others for the purpose of enabling the modern student to discern patterns of relationships.</q>
                     <bibl>Peltertet 13</bibl>
                  </cit>.</p>
               <p>The Prosopography of <title level="m">Anglo-Saxon England Project</title> (<title level="m">PASE</title>) is based in the department of History, the Centre for Computing in the Humanities at King's College London and in the Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse, and Celtic at the University of Cambridge. The aim of the <title level="m">PASE Project</title> is to record everything that is known about all Anglo-Saxon individuals mentioned in any source written between 597 and 1042. This will create a comprehensive register of the recorded inhabitants of the period. <title level="m">PASE</title> will be accessible in the form of a freely available, searchable on-line database.</p>
               <p>The past two decades have witnessed enormous growth in the number and importance of Prosopographies such as <title level="m">PASE</title>. Following this period of rapid growth will the academic community find a common technological ground for all these Prosopographies? This paper explores the issues surrounding the search for this common ground.</p>
            </div1>
            <div1>
               <head>Historical overview</head>
               <p>The father of prosopographies is the <title level="m">Corpus Inscriptionem Latinarum</title> (<title level="m">CIL</title>) edited by Christian Matthias in 1858. After the publication of the CIL, Mommsen worked on the original <title level="m">Prosopographicum Inscriptionem Romanorum</title> (<title level="m">PIR</title>) until 1877. In that he made use of his considerable experience with <title level="m">CIL</title>, hence his first work mimicked the <title level="m">Inscriptions</title> but was supplemented by literary sources and papyrology. After a long delay Professor A.H.M. Jones continued Mommsen's work with the help of his two pupils John Morris and John Martindale in the 1950s. The continuation of Mommsen's work became an international affair. The huge task was divided between the French (under the direction of H.-I. Marrou) and the British (under A.H.M. Jones).</p>
               <p>A.H.M. Jones died before the first volume of the <title level="m">Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire</title> (<title level="m">PLRE</title>), covering the years AD 260-395, was published in 1971. He did however manage to read through and edit the final draft. The British Academy ensured the survival of the project by providing financial aid from 1970. John Morris and John Martindale continued to work on the project, volume two (covering the years AD 395-527) being published just after the death of John Morris in 1980. John Martindale was left to edit the third volume, eventually published in 1992 in two volumes covering AD 527-64, before he retired in 2000.</p>
               <p>The French <title level="m">Prosopographie Chrétienne</title> was divided on a regional as well as chronological basis. Marrou and Mandouze produced the volumes for Africa (AD 303-533) in 1982. Another two volumes covering Italy (AD 313-604) were published in 1999, under the direction of Charles and Luce Pietri. </p>
            </div1>
            <div1>
               <head>Data and development issues</head>
               <p>With the development of scholarship through the increased availability of written sources, the publication of new editions, and through the publication of Inscriptions, coins and seals, the research materials have also increased. New methods using searchable databases were developed to deal with the sheer quantity of material available in various formats.</p>
               <p>In the past two decades, computer based methods of recording and manipulating data have offered historians in a variety fields new opportunities of data manipulation that go beyond what was formerly feasible for scholars using traditional research methods geared for paper publication. This was hailed as an ideal way of converting data into information by processing and presenting them for human interpretation.</p>
               <p>The database approach to the development of Prosopographies has been found attractive to scholars in Anglo-Saxon studies (<title level="m">PASE</title>), <title level="m">Clergy of the Church of England</title> (<title level="m">CCE</title>) and <title level="m">Prosopography of the Byzantine World</title> (<title level="m">PBW</title>). All these Prosopographies are based in King's College London and developed in collaboration with the Centre for Computing in the Humanities (CCH). The role of CCH involves a whole range of activities, including data analysis, system design, the application of computing tools, and technical advice and long-term support.</p>
               <p>These Prosopographies have benefited hugely from the technical and academic knowledge that has been accumulated at King's College London.</p>
               <p>In this paper I will draw a comparison between the various methods of collecting and displaying prosopographical data in different formats from the earlier book-based to electronic editions, and will analyze the advantages of each method. The comparison will involve using actual historical records.</p>
               <p>I will be looking closely at the advantages, costs and risks of using the Relational Database model to drive the data and the use of web browsers as interfaces to display the information. The Prosopography of Anglo-Saxon England database will be used as an example of a database driven prosopography.</p>
            </div1>
         </div0>
         <div0>
            <head>The Prosopography of Anglo-Saxon England, 597-1042</head>
            <head>Alex Burghart</head>
            <p>This section will demonstrate the research possibilities made available by <title level="m">PASE</title>. It will give a live presentation of how data from sources has been entered, collated and reconciled.</p>
            <p>A wide range of source types survive from Anglo-Saxon England, these include chronicles, letters, biographies, and legal texts. Sources such as Bede's <title level="m">Ecclesiastical History</title> and the <title level="m">Anglo-Saxon Chronicle</title> have generated a prodigious amount of secondary literature and probably an uncountable number of editions in a wide variety of vernacular languages. Yet these editions could not, on their own, answer such basic questions as, how many Anglo-Saxons held a certain office; or establish the links between people and overall groupings with systematic and accessible structure.</p>
            <p>Perhaps the most substantial advance that <title level="m">PASE</title> has made on standard prosopography is that it records not only data concerning individuals (their status, what they owned, to whom they were related, what they ate for breakfast &amp;c.) but also information about how individuals were connected with each other. This has been embodied in the database by the creation of <hi rend="code">EVENT</hi> in which is recorded all meetings / relations between one or more people. This is a significant step in understanding Anglo-Saxon history because for the first time historians will be able to search the whole corpus of Anglo-Saxon sources for associations between people. This lies at the heart of what prosopography should be.</p>
            <p>The major source of associations in Anglo-Saxon history is that of the charters. The term <soCalled>Anglo-Saxon charter</soCalled> covers a multitude of documents ranging in kind from the royal diplomas issued in the names of Anglo-Saxon kings between the last quarter of the seventh century and the Norman Conquest, which are generally in Latin, to the wills of prominent churchmen, laymen, and women, which are generally in the vernacular. A large proportion of the surviving corpus of about 1500 charters is made up of records of grants of land or privileges by a king to a religious house, or to a lay beneficiary. The corpus also includes records of settlements of disputes over land or privileges, leases of episcopal property, and records of bequests of land and other property. Its importance for <title level="m">PASE</title> lies in what they tell us about individuals. Most charters include invaluable information about ownership and status, but, as legal documents, they also frequently include lists of people who gave their agreement to the settlement described in the charter. These names give us an insight into the workings of royal and local courts and communities which we would have otherwise been denied. In collating these names and relating them to other source material, <title level="m">PASE</title> grants the researcher the ability to reveal something of the lives which hide behind them.</p>
            <p>Anglo-Saxon charters are the best represented corpus of medieval documents on the internet. The completion of <title level="m">PASE</title> will confirm and bolster this position.</p>
         </div0>
      </body>
      <back>
         <div type="Bibliography">
            <head>Bibliography</head>
            <listBibl>
               <biblStruct>
                  <monogr>
                     <title level="m" type="WWW document">
                        <name reg="Prosopography of Anglo-Saxon England">The Prosopography of Anglo-Saxon England</name>
                     </title>
                     <imprint>
                        <publisher>King's College London</publisher>
                     </imprint>
                  </monogr>
                  <note>
                     <xptr crdate="2005-03-21" to="http://www.kcl.ac.uk/humanities/cch/pase/"/>; database site <xptr to="http://maple.cc.kcl.ac.uk:8080/pase/index.jsp"/> (not publicly launched).</note>
               </biblStruct>
               <biblStruct>
                  <monogr>
                     <author>
                        <name reg="Klebs, E.">E. Klebs</name>
                     </author>
                     <author>
                        <name reg="von Rohden, P.">P. von Rohden</name>
                     </author>
                     <author>
                        <name reg="Dessau, H.">H. Dessau</name>
                     </author>
                     <title level="m">Prosopographia Imperii Romani</title>
                     <imprint>
                        <publisher>Walter de Gruyter</publisher>
                        <pubPlace>Berlin</pubPlace>
                        <date value="1956">1956</date>
                     </imprint>
                     <extent>3 vols</extent>
                  </monogr>
                  <note>A new second edition was published in 1998.</note>
               </biblStruct>
               <biblStruct>
                  <monogr>
                     <author>
                        <name reg="Jones, A.H.M.">A.H.M. Jones</name>
                     </author>
                     <author>
                        <name reg="Martindale, J.R.">J. R. Martindale</name>
                     </author>
                     <author>
                        <name reg="Morris, J.">J. Morris</name>
                     </author>
                     <title level="m">The Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire</title>
                     <imprint>
                        <publisher>Cambridge University Press</publisher>
                        <pubPlace>Cambridge</pubPlace>
                        <date value="1971">1971</date>
                     </imprint>
                  </monogr>
               </biblStruct>
               <biblStruct>
                  <analytic>
                     <author>
                        <name reg="Peltertet, David">David Peltertet</name>
                     </author>
                     <title level="a">[Title not provided]</title>
                  </analytic>
                  <monogr>
                     <title level="j">History and Computing</title>
                     <imprint>
                        <biblScope type="vol">12.1</biblScope>
                        <biblScope type="pages">13</biblScope>
                        <date value="2002">2002</date>
                     </imprint>
                  </monogr>
               </biblStruct>
               <biblStruct>
                  <monogr>
                     <editor>
                        <name reg="Martindale, John Robert">John Robert Martindale</name>
                     </editor>
                     <title level="m">Prosopography of the Byzantine Empire I (641-867): The CD of the First Period</title>
                     <imprint>
                        <publisher>King's College London</publisher>
                        <date value="2002">2002</date>
                     </imprint>
                  </monogr>
               </biblStruct>
               <biblStruct>
                  <monogr>
                     <editor>
                        <name reg="Cameron, Averill">Averill Cameron</name>
                     </editor>
                     <title level="m">Fifty Years Of Prosopography: The Later Roman Empire, Byzantium and Beyond</title>
                     <title level="s">Proceedings of the British Academy, number 118</title>
                     <imprint>
                        <publisher>Oxford University Press, for the British Academy</publisher>
                        <pubPlace>New York</pubPlace>
                        <date value="2003">2003</date>
                     </imprint>
                  </monogr>
               </biblStruct>
               <biblStruct>
                  <analytic>
                     <author>
                        <name reg="Bradley, John">John Bradley</name>
                     </author>
                     <author>
                        <name reg="Short, Harold">Harold Short</name>
                     </author>
                     <title level="a">Texts into databases: The Evolving Field of New-style Prosopography</title>
                  </analytic>
                  <monogr>
                     <title level="u">Paper delivered at the ACH/ALLC Conference, University of Georgia, Athens Georgia</title>
                     <imprint>
                        <date value="2003">Summer 2003</date>
                     </imprint>
                  </monogr>
               </biblStruct>
               <biblStruct>
                  <monogr>
                     <title level="m" type="WWW document">
                        <name reg="Prosopograhy Centre">Prosopograhy Centre</name>
                     </title>
                     <imprint>
                        <publisher>Modern History Research Unit, University of Oxford</publisher>
                     </imprint>
                  </monogr>
                  <note>
                     <xptr crdate="2005-03-21" to="http://users.ox.ac.uk/~prosop/"/>
                  </note>
               </biblStruct>
               <biblStruct>
                  <monogr>
                     <title level="m" type="WWW document">
                        <name reg="Clergy of the Church of England">Clergy of the Church of England</name>
                     </title>
                     <imprint>
                        <publisher>King's College London</publisher>
                     </imprint>
                  </monogr>
                  <note>
                     <xptr crdate="2005-03-21"
                           to="http://maple.cc.kcl.ac.uk:8080/cce/rochester/index.html"/> (Not yet launched.)</note>
               </biblStruct>
            </listBibl>
         </div>
      </back>
   </text>
</TEI.2>