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Andrea Nanetti
Nanyang Technological University of Singapore, Singapore, Singapore;
andrea.nanetti@ntu.edu.sg
Engineering Venetian Historiography:
A Case Study towards an Algebra of Highly-Crossed-Linked
Events
and Transformation Processes1
Beginning in the 9
th
century, Venetian historiographical production has left us a corpus of at
least 2,000 manuscripts held in public libraries in Europe and North America (not including the
ones in private collections). Since the 1960s, Italian scholars, inspired and mentored by Agostino
Pertusi and Antonio Carile, have been systematically investigating
these Venetian chronicles
to produce a coherent corpus of material for the study of the relationships between Byzantium
and Venice. This historical and philological endeavour has moved existing scholarship from the
traditional nineteenth-century transcription and translation of single manuscripts of Venetian
chronicles into the development of an understanding of the complex network of the event-related
texts that constitute its hidden structure.
Between 2002 and 2004, the project ‘Virtual Library of Venetian chronicles’, funded by the
Italian Ministry of Culture under the supervision of Antonio Carile,
organised these manuscript
treasures into a new digital platform designed by Andrea Nanetti and developed by Guido Grazioli,
and made this available internationally. In 2004 the project founded a permanent laboratory,
directed first by Antonio Carile and now by Giorgio Vespignani, in the Department of Cultural
Heritage Conservation of the University of Bologna (Ravenna branch), in which a Ph.D. researcher
was assigned a full time position. The results are continually updated and are available on http://
www.cronachevenezianeravennati.it
The long lasting and deep historical and historiographical relationship between Byzantium
and Venice is
not the topic of this session, which has more than one purpose.
1. First, recognising the scholarly process that has created an understanding of the hidden
structure of the Venetian chronicles, seen as a coherent corpus of historical evidence produced
by Venetian society in the reconstruction and consolidation of its historical memory for
the shaping of its own identity as a society, which would assure a
place to its people in the
international arena.
2. Secondly, sharing an understanding of the best practices of the use of Venetian chronicles by
Byzantinists and Medievalists.
3. Thirdly, developing and consolidating the use of the texts of the Venetian chronicles after the
digital development.
1 The research has been funded by NTU Singapore (2014-2016 Start-Up-Grant), the 2014 and 2016 Microsoft
Research Asia Collaborative Research Programs, 2015 and 2016 Microsoft Azure for Research (PI, Andrea Nanetti).
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In Venetian chronicles as in many other
chronicles all over the world, each event (e.g., the
Fourth Crusade, the conquest of Coron and Modon in 1207) needs a special critical edition, because
it has been written collecting materials from different sources. Even when it seems to have a simple
copy of another chronicle, sometimes for a specific event it might not be true.
From a theoretical point of view, the relationship event-facts/evidence-interpretation needs
to be engineered in order to understand it. And the operation
must be done event by event, one by
one, even for events that appear in the same text. Machine learning can help historians proceed in
this quite heavy historical task. Today, we can!
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