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What Belongs in a Gazetteer?. Ruth Mostern University of California, Merced Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Seattle April 13, 2011. Gazetteer Attributes. names. f eature types. locations.
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What Belongs in a Gazetteer? Ruth Mostern University of California, Merced Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Seattle April 13, 2011
Gazetteer Attributes names feature types locations (This is more than digital infrastructure. For a historian or cultural geographer, mapping the globe’s 80 Merceds creates a view of the Spanish world system.) The Alexandria Digital Library, 2004 interface
What Else Can Gazetteers Do? Abolished Established No change Established The spatial history of Song Dynasty China (960-1276) Prefectures Counties
Song Dynasty Spatial Change These findings are based on a place name – feature type – location gazetteer which also includes place-making events and their dates.
What Else Might Gazetteers Do? • Historical network analysis: a map from Janet Abu Lughod’sBefore European Hegemony. World historians use trade and travel maps like this to identify connection points and core-periphery structures, but not yet in a data-rich and digital mode. What if we also include relationships among places (for instance the order in which they appear along an itinerary) and a few more attributes?
OWTRAD (Old World Trade) • Sixty-five temporally and spatially referenced comma-delimited files organized according by travel routes and nodes. • Author Matthew Ciolek created the datasets by hand from published works of scholarship, which he cites. • Thinking about world history as a scholarly field, this is a world history gazetteer. http://www.ciolek.com/owtrad.html
Student Travel Narrative Project The Travels of Benjamin of Tudela (c. 1160s), by Jesus Carillo, student in my spring 2010 History of the Silk Road course.
A traditional gazetteer approach Something new! A GIS approach A hand reconstruction of postal carrier routes, from a 1993 academic article. • Michael Curry, “Toward a Geography of a World Without Maps: Lessons from Ptolemy and Postal Codes.” • Three modes of thinking about the world: • Choros (names and regions) • Topos(travels, itineraries, and relationships) • Geos(mathematically oriented maps of continuous space)
More Attributes to Consider Palestine 1946 • Names: • Their origin, etymology, and semantics may be meaningful and worth including in a database. • What to include? Yi-fu Tuan: “the number of places in the world is infinite.” • Language and politics. Doreen Massey: “history is the meeting up of places.” • Feature types: are domain specific. Integrating them between gazetteers requires some ontology. • Georeferences: Locations can be vague or even mythical, but the places exist in a text and in reference to other places. • Sources: historical gazetteers need to reference historical sources.
Back to the Twelfth Century? From Vision of Britain