Dear digital medievalists,
We are pleased to announce the publication of five articles in the current issue of the Digital Medievalist journal on riddles, robbery, relationships, sparql, IIIF and Damoiselle Sapience. A perfect Sunday read.
“Illumination Detection in IIIF Medieval Manuscripts Using Deep Learning”,
by Fouad Aouinti, Victoria Eyharabide, Xavier Fresquet, and Frédéric Billiet
https://doi.org/10.16995/dm.8073
“Dealing with the Heterogeneity of Interpersonal Relationships in the Middle Ages. A Multi-Layer Network Approach”,
by Sébastien De Valeriola, Nicolas Ruffini-Ronzani, and Étienne Cuvelier
https://doi.org/10.16995/dm.8070
“Transcribing "Le Pèlerinage de Damoiselle Sapience": Scholarly Editing Covid19-Style”,
by Laura Morreale, Gerardo Sánchez Argüelles, Toby Baldwin et al.
https://doi.org/10.16995/dm.8071
“Medieval Manuscripts and Their Migrations: Using SPARQL to Investigate the Research Potential of an Aggregated Knowledge Graph”,
by Toby Burrows, Laura Cleaver, Doug Emery, Eero Hyvönen, Mikko Koho, Lynn Ransom, Emma Thomson, Hanno Wijsman
https://doi.org/10.16995/dm.8064
“'A Certain Enemy Robbed Me of My Life': Medieval Riddles, Digital Transformations, and Pandemic Pedagogy”,
by Alexandra Bolintineanu, C. E. M. Henderson, Ana Algarvio Alves Wong, Dionysus Cho, Robyn Jane Carino, Kathy Du
As always all articles underwent peer review and are published open access under a CC BY 4.0 licence.
Thank you to authors, reviewers, editorial team and publisher.
Franz Fischer, Editor-in-Chief
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