This article focuses on geographic information contained in the body of medieval French texts composed over the period of the eleventh to the fifteenth century. By “geographic information” we mean textual references made to different kinds of place names at different scales within sustained prose or poetic narrative—landmarks, settlements, regions, and countries—real and imaginary. Collecting such geographic information across a large corpus of texts and analyzing it with the digital methods that have become available to scholars in recent years allow us to create new contexts in which we can reexamine a variety of questions in literary history
Explores recent work in the field of medieval literary geographies, including digital mapping, befor...
This volume offers the author’s central articles on the medieval and early modern history of cartogr...
This map series was created for Professor Jessica Harkins, to be used as an educational tool that vi...
This article focuses on geographic information contained in the body of medieval French texts compos...
This article explores a method of looking at both real and imaginary place name occurrences that co-...
Using a group of medieval romances as a case study and building on Lefebvre’s original proposition, ...
The goal of the site is to map all of the place names mentioned in a selection of medieval French-la...
The goal of the site is to map all of the place names mentioned in a selection of medieval French-la...
Geolocation of ancient sources is a challenge to historians and archaeologists who aims to adopt a s...
This volume offers the author\u27s central articles on the medieval and early modern history of cart...
National audienceGeolocation of ancient sources is a challenge to historians and archaeologists who ...
National audienceGeolocation of ancient sources is a challenge to historians and archaeologists who ...
International audienceGeolocation of ancient sources is a challenge to historians and archaeologists...
Refereed abstract for Digital Humanities 2019 Conference Book of Abstracts that was never publishe
The French of Italy TimeMap incorporates textual, geographic, and temporal data to plot the producti...
Explores recent work in the field of medieval literary geographies, including digital mapping, befor...
This volume offers the author’s central articles on the medieval and early modern history of cartogr...
This map series was created for Professor Jessica Harkins, to be used as an educational tool that vi...
This article focuses on geographic information contained in the body of medieval French texts compos...
This article explores a method of looking at both real and imaginary place name occurrences that co-...
Using a group of medieval romances as a case study and building on Lefebvre’s original proposition, ...
The goal of the site is to map all of the place names mentioned in a selection of medieval French-la...
The goal of the site is to map all of the place names mentioned in a selection of medieval French-la...
Geolocation of ancient sources is a challenge to historians and archaeologists who aims to adopt a s...
This volume offers the author\u27s central articles on the medieval and early modern history of cart...
National audienceGeolocation of ancient sources is a challenge to historians and archaeologists who ...
National audienceGeolocation of ancient sources is a challenge to historians and archaeologists who ...
International audienceGeolocation of ancient sources is a challenge to historians and archaeologists...
Refereed abstract for Digital Humanities 2019 Conference Book of Abstracts that was never publishe
The French of Italy TimeMap incorporates textual, geographic, and temporal data to plot the producti...
Explores recent work in the field of medieval literary geographies, including digital mapping, befor...
This volume offers the author’s central articles on the medieval and early modern history of cartogr...
This map series was created for Professor Jessica Harkins, to be used as an educational tool that vi...