- Author
- Rune Rattenborg, Carolin Johansson, Nils Melin-Kronsell, Seraina Nett, Gustav Ryberg Smidt (UGent) and Jakob Andersson
- Organization
- Abstract
- The Cuneiform Inscriptions Geographial Site (CIGS) index contains a basic set of primary spatial, toponym, attribute, and external link information on close to 600 archaeological locations where texts written in cuneiform and derived scripts have been found. In use across the wider Middle East from c. 3,400 BCE until 100 CE, cuneiform is one of the earliest and most extensively documented ancient scripts in world history. This resource has been prepared by researchers of the Department of Linguistics and Philology of Uppsala University. The index is intended as a tool for students and researchers in cuneiform studies and related areas and as an aid to cultural heritage managers and educators in communicating and safeguarding this unique body of world written heritage. The index remains under development and is regularly updated. The authors will very much appreciate notices of any omissions, errors, or inaccuracies. For any inquiries, please contact Rune Rattenborg (rune.rattenborg@lingfil.uu.se). For further details, see Rattenborg et al. 2021. The version 1.6 index contains a total twenty-six fields, including one primary ID, one integer field for accuracy, twenty-two string fields with toponyms and links, and two spatial data fields. Coordinates given use the WGS 1984 geographic coordinate reference system (EPSG 4326) and have been truncated to four decimal digits. Site locations have been traced from archaeological gazetteers and web mapping services (e.g. Pleiades, GeoNames and OpenStreetMap) and digitally generated from optical recognition using current and legacy satellite imagery datasets in QGIS 3.x. The version 1.6 data set forms the basis for updated archaeological locations included in the Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative table of proveniences (see https://cdli.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de/proveniences), migrated in July 2023. Please see this resource for later updates to individual records.
- Keywords
- Cuneiform, Assyriology, Middle East
- License
- CC-BY-4.0
- Access
- open access
Citation
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication: http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-01HDGD6A7PFQAN40T5FY6Y1GEB
@misc{01HDGD6A7PFQAN40T5FY6Y1GEB, abstract = {{The Cuneiform Inscriptions Geographial Site (CIGS) index contains a basic set of primary spatial, toponym, attribute, and external link information on close to 600 archaeological locations where texts written in cuneiform and derived scripts have been found. In use across the wider Middle East from c. 3,400 BCE until 100 CE, cuneiform is one of the earliest and most extensively documented ancient scripts in world history. This resource has been prepared by researchers of the Department of Linguistics and Philology of Uppsala University. The index is intended as a tool for students and researchers in cuneiform studies and related areas and as an aid to cultural heritage managers and educators in communicating and safeguarding this unique body of world written heritage. The index remains under development and is regularly updated. The authors will very much appreciate notices of any omissions, errors, or inaccuracies. For any inquiries, please contact Rune Rattenborg (rune.rattenborg@lingfil.uu.se). For further details, see Rattenborg et al. 2021. The version 1.6 index contains a total twenty-six fields, including one primary ID, one integer field for accuracy, twenty-two string fields with toponyms and links, and two spatial data fields. Coordinates given use the WGS 1984 geographic coordinate reference system (EPSG 4326) and have been truncated to four decimal digits. Site locations have been traced from archaeological gazetteers and web mapping services (e.g. Pleiades, GeoNames and OpenStreetMap) and digitally generated from optical recognition using current and legacy satellite imagery datasets in QGIS 3.x. The version 1.6 data set forms the basis for updated archaeological locations included in the Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative table of proveniences (see https://cdli.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de/proveniences), migrated in July 2023. Please see this resource for later updates to individual records.}}, author = {{Rattenborg, Rune and Johansson, Carolin and Melin-Kronsell, Nils and Nett, Seraina and Smidt, Gustav Ryberg and Andersson, Jakob}}, keywords = {{Cuneiform,Assyriology,Middle East}}, language = {{eng}}, publisher = {{Zenodo}}, title = {{Cuneiform Inscriptions Geographical Site Index (CIGS)}}, url = {{http://doi.org/10.5281/ZENODO.4960710}}, year = {{2023}}, }
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