This paper sets out to explore how and why digital editions of texts or text-versions could facilitate a truly diachronic study of the Greek language. It points out shortcomings of existing digital infrastructure and argues in favour of a general shift of focus towards linguistic analysis of transmitted texts with the help of electronic...
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Talks
One Era’s Nonsense, Another’s Norm: Diachronic study of Greek and the Computer
Using open source software for CALL
This was a workshop aimed at informing language teaching officers of the MML Faculty of the University of Cambridge on the possibilities that open source software offers for the creation of teaching content.
Some of the slides used in this workshop we links and other information can be found here (some links may be broken...
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Digital Humanities
A one-hour lecture about “Digital Humanities”, part of the CHUCOL course at the
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Neither Ancient, nor Modern: Challenges for the creation of a Digital Infrastructure for Medieval Greek
Epistemic Networks and GRID + Web 2.0 for Arts and Humanities
30-31 January 2008 • Imperial College Internet Centre • Imperial College London
You can download a PDF-file here with the slides of this presentation
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Theodosios Zygomalas’s Thematoepistolae and the transition from Byzantine to Early Modern Greek tradition
Late Antiquity and Byzantine Seminar, University of Oxford, 23.1.2008
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One era’s nonsense, another’s norm. Diachronic study of Greek and the computer
Classics Association Conference 2007, Birmingham
Panel Digital Classicist 2, 13 April 2007
You can find the slides of my presentation here.
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Byzantine texts and databases: case studies
Panel “Technology” at the 21st International Congress of Byzantine Studies, London
This was an overview paper about the use of databases and electronic texts in the field of Byzantine studies, in a panel organized by Michael Jeffreys. The powerpoint presentation is available as PDF-file.
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Register variation and the Grammar of Medieval Greek
Panel “Treasured words” at the 21st International Congress of Byzantine Studies, London
This paper has been submitted for publication to BMGS.
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XML-based transcriptions of medieval Greek manuscripts:Balancing the needs of different end-users.
Digital Classicist Work in progress seminar, Institute for Classical studies, London
This was a paper for a seminar series of Digital Classicist. It was meant for publication for a special issue of the Digital Medievalist but was unfortunately never completed. The manuscript in question is discussed also on my talk on the Thematoepistolae. The...
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The first lexicographer of Early Modern Greek. Martin Crusius and his Alphabetum vulgaris linguae graecae
The Byzantine & Modern Greek seminar, King’s College London
This paper was given as part of the Byzantine & Modern Greek Seminar Series organized by Prof. Roderick Beaton at King’s College London. It reproduces most of the material published in my PhD dissertation. The Powerpoint presentation is available as PDF-file.
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