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E-raamat: Modelling the City: Formal Ontology and Spatial Humanities

Edited by (Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland)
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"Modelling the City focuses on European towns and cities, analysing the opportunities and limitations of modelling of urban space. This book examines how urban space from the past is discovered, explained and presented. It discusses the multitude of historical sources mediating the past urban space, and the structural, technical, and epistemological issues raised around building a domain ontology, including continuity, and change within urban forms and functions. Presentation of a formal domain ontology in spatial humanities makes this book unique and worth reading. It is strongly recommended to readers interested in the linked open data approach to research, data standards in Digital Humanities, urban planning, and old maps"--

Modelling the City focuses on European towns and cities, analysing the opportunities and limitations of modelling of urban space.

This book examines how urban space from the past is discovered, explained and presented. It discusses the multitude of historical sources mediating the past urban space, and the structural, technical, and epistemological issues raised around building a domain ontology, including continuity, and change within urban forms and functions.

Presentation of a formal domain ontology in spatial humanities makes this book unique and worth reading. It is strongly recommended to readers interested in the linked open data approach to research, data standards in Digital Humanities, urban planning, and old maps.



This book focuses on European towns and cities, analysing the opportunities and limitations of modelling of urban space. It is strongly recommended to readers interested in the linked open data approach to research, data standards in Digital Humanities, urban planning, and old maps.

I. Introduction How To Build A Solid House, Or About The Historical
Ontology Of The Urban Space Project II. Media, sources, data model
1.
Modelling As A Bridge Between Maps, Spatial Concepts, And The Territory;
2.
An Ontology Of Geographical Places And Their Spatiotemporal, Social Evolution
In The Context Of An Extension Of The CIDOC CRM For The Humanities And Social
Sciences (SDHSS);
3. Naming the parts: identifying key features within the
urban landscapes of Britain circa 1900 III. Investigating urban space
4.
Narrating Szczecin. Creation of urban authenticity through touristic city
trails;
5. How names transform space: The change of street names in Pozna
and Gdynia in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries;
6. Uncertain
information and spatial objects. Examples from works on the HOUSe project and
the European Historic Towns Atlas series, Anna-Lena Schumacher IV. Mapping
objects in urban space
7. Database of Topographic Objects 10k as the basis of
the Historical Ontology of Urban Space ontology construction, verification,
validation;
8. Cartography and the city: Exploring urban ontologies through
historic town-maps;
9. Changes in spatial development of Lviv from the second
half of 18th century to the present day; Index
Wiesawa Duy is Assistant Professor at the Department of Historical Atlas at the Institute of History, Polish Academy of Sciences. She is also part of a project at the Faculty of History, People, Places, and Events of the University of Warsaw, Poland. Her research interests include social history of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, domain ontologies in the Humanities and spatial historical databases.