Data copyright © Individual Authors unless otherwise stated
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Year: 2012 Author: terhi Categories: Day of Archaeology 2012
Tags: Digital Humanities Summer School, Cuneiform script, Washington DC, Toronto, Web Science Doctoral Training Centre, Linked Ancient World Data Institute, Oxford, Mesopotamia, Archaeological Computing Research Group, Fertile Crescent, Linked Data, spent touring Philadelphia, Penn Museum, Brad Hafford, Akkadian language, Pennsylvania, New York, Chicago, acm Web Science, Steve Tinney, Institute for the Study of the Ancient World, London, University of Southampton, Philadelphia, King's College, Field Museum, Department of Digital Humanities, Ontology, Akkadian Empire, Virginia, Babylon
terhi (2012): Ontologies and Cuneiform. https://doi.org/10.5284/1079557 | 333 Kb |
The images from the original post have been archived and are also available to download. In certain cases images can not be disseminated if they do not adhere to our sensitive data policy.
A terracotta “squeeze”. On the one side, it is an impression of an earlier, Old Akkadian (3rd millennium BC) inscription, on the other, is an explanation in Neo-Babylonian (from c. 500BC) (doa_image5022.jpg) |
JPG | 677 Kb |