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19 pages, 387 KB  
Article
“Written upon the Stones”: Of the Cyclops, the Shamir and Other Legends of Origin in Benjamin of Tudela’s Book of Travels
by Nimrod Baratz
Religions 2024, 15(10), 1287; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15101287 - 21 Oct 2024
Viewed by 2102
Abstract
This paper examines legends on the origins (aetiologies) of places and placenames in Benjamin of Tudela’s travel account. Origin stories are prevalent in medieval travelogues, but Hebrew travel accounts employ a unique form that is embedded in placenames. Midrash Shem (מדרש שם), as [...] Read more.
This paper examines legends on the origins (aetiologies) of places and placenames in Benjamin of Tudela’s travel account. Origin stories are prevalent in medieval travelogues, but Hebrew travel accounts employ a unique form that is embedded in placenames. Midrash Shem (מדרש שם), as this form is known in Jewish tradition, is the homiletical interpretation of names, typically characterized in some measure by wordplay. I suggest that these legends and placenames serve Hebrew travel literature both as an evidential tool and as an artistic means of expression, contributing to the construction of “known” and “foreign” lands and peoples, and consequently to the formulation of group identities. En route to the foreign and unknown, yet “own”, holy Eretz Yisrael, Benjamin of Tudela encounters Jewish communities and records a variety of aetiologies throughout the Middle East. In retelling the origins of the travelled landscape, he transmits local mythical, theological and historical content as well as particular Jewish-diasporic socio-political realities. Diversely told origins of Roman architecture, scattered across most of Benjamin’s account, show how these local traditions varied. Some aetiologies fuse traditional with foreign content to affirm a sense of belonging under foreign rule, while others actively undermine established non-Jewish narratives or even oppose competing Jewish narratives. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Religions and Humanities/Philosophies)
18 pages, 3464 KB  
Article
This Ship Prays: The Southern Chinese Religious Seascape through the Handbook of a Maritime Ritual Master
by Ilay Golan
Religions 2024, 15(9), 1096; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15091096 - 10 Sep 2024
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 3914
Abstract
Long kept in the British Library, a liturgical manuscript from the port of Haicheng, Fujian, holds details of the rich system of beliefs that Chinese sailors held. Originally untitled, the text by the shelfmark OR12693/18 is usually referred to as “Libation Ritual (for [...] Read more.
Long kept in the British Library, a liturgical manuscript from the port of Haicheng, Fujian, holds details of the rich system of beliefs that Chinese sailors held. Originally untitled, the text by the shelfmark OR12693/18 is usually referred to as “Libation Ritual (for Ship Safety)” ([An Chuan] Zhuoxian Ke [(安船)酌献科]). Formerly, it was given scholarly attention mostly due to its addended lists of maritime placenames, which follows Qing-era sea routes across China’s coasts and to the South China Sea. Further inquiry into the manuscript’s terminology, deity names, and maritime knowledge confirms its deep relation to sailors’ lore. By tracing this text into a wide range of sources, this paper demonstrates how manuscript OR12693/18 reflects a cohesive maritime system of beliefs and knowledge. Manifested within the prayer are a hierarchical pantheon, ritual practices, and a perceived sacred seascape. Moreover, it is evident that the manuscript belonged to a tradition of sailing ritual masters who were regular members of the crew onboard junks. As such, this paper offers an analysis of a religious-professional tradition with trans-local aspects, shedding new light on seafaring in pre-modern China. Full article
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21 pages, 7696 KB  
Article
Non-Standard Address Parsing in Chinese Based on Integrated CHTopoNER Model and Dynamic Finite State Machine
by Mengwei Zhang, Xingui Liu, Jingzhen Ma, Zheng Zhang, Yue Qiu and Zhipeng Jiang
Appl. Sci. 2023, 13(17), 9855; https://doi.org/10.3390/app13179855 - 31 Aug 2023
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 2662
Abstract
Information in non-standard address texts in Chinese is usually presented with rough content, complex and diverse presentation forms, and inconsistent hierarchical granularity, causing low accuracy in Chinese address parsing. Therefore, we propose a method for parsing non-standard address text in Chinese that integrates [...] Read more.
Information in non-standard address texts in Chinese is usually presented with rough content, complex and diverse presentation forms, and inconsistent hierarchical granularity, causing low accuracy in Chinese address parsing. Therefore, we propose a method for parsing non-standard address text in Chinese that integrates the Chinese Toponym Named Entity Recognition (CHTopoNER) model and a dynamic finite state machine (FSM). First, named entity recognition is performed by the CHTopoNER model. Sets of dynamic FSMs are then constructed based on the address hierarchical characteristics to sort and combine the Chinese address elements, thereby achieving address parsing on the Chinese internet. This method showed excellent accuracy in parsing both standard and non-standard placename addresses. In particular, this method performed better in address parsing for disordered or missing hierarchical elements than traditional methods using an FSM. Specifically, this method achieved accuracies of 96.6% and 96.8% for standard and non-standard placenames, respectively. These accuracies increased by 8.0% and 57.1%, respectively, compared with the integrated CHTopoNER model and traditional FSM, and by 7.4% and 19.8%, respectively, compared with the integrated CHTopoNER model and bidirectional FSM. After analysis, the address-parsing method showed good scalability and adaptability, which could be applied to various types of address-parsing tasks. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Applications of Machine Learning on Earth Sciences)
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11 pages, 2084 KB  
Article
The Burden of History: Kirkjubæjarklaustur and the Biography of Landscape
by Sigrún Hannesdóttir
Religions 2023, 14(5), 665; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14050665 - 16 May 2023
Viewed by 2858
Abstract
The importance of landscape has long been recognized within monastic studies, both as an economic and spiritual resource. This paper focuses on the surrounding landscape of a single monastic site, that is Kirkjubæjarklaustur on Síða (south Iceland), one of the two female monasteries [...] Read more.
The importance of landscape has long been recognized within monastic studies, both as an economic and spiritual resource. This paper focuses on the surrounding landscape of a single monastic site, that is Kirkjubæjarklaustur on Síða (south Iceland), one of the two female monasteries established in Medieval Iceland. Through written sources, legends, and placenames, the aim of this paper is to reconstruct the biography of the landscape from before the founding of the monastery to after the Reformation. In particular, the paper considers how the perceived sacredness of the site of Kirkjubæjarklaustur may have been shaped by stories of Christian settlers prior to the monastic foundation and how the monastic memory informed the way in which the landscape was experienced after the Reformation and beyond. Full article
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20 pages, 3361 KB  
Article
Urbanscape, Land Use Change and Centralization in the Region of Uruk, Southern Mesopotamia from the 2nd to 1st Millennium BCE
by Shmuel Clark, Mark Altaweel and Shai Gordin
Land 2022, 11(11), 1955; https://doi.org/10.3390/land11111955 - 2 Nov 2022
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 5131
Abstract
We produce results that bridge the gap between physical and textual study of the ancient Mesopotamian landscape in the region south and west of the city of Uruk (Biblical Erech, Modern Warka). A brief survey of gazetteers of Mesopotamia, volumes listing place-names drawn [...] Read more.
We produce results that bridge the gap between physical and textual study of the ancient Mesopotamian landscape in the region south and west of the city of Uruk (Biblical Erech, Modern Warka). A brief survey of gazetteers of Mesopotamia, volumes listing place-names drawn from translated and published cuneiform texts from the 2nd and 1st Millennium BCE, are presented. The various gazetteers were reviewed for relevant place-names, and the results were recorded and analyzed. These are described in detail below, as are their implications. The resulting data are then compared to the results of a recently completed archaeological survey of the same region. The synthesis of textual and archaeological surveys indicates a more exacting methodology to add geographic objectivity to textual results, while connecting physical results to the qualitative detail available within the Uruk textual record. More broadly, we demonstrate how long-term historical records align with archaeological data, delineating state-level and local land use efforts around a major Mesopotamian city. In the 2nd millennium BCE, settlements were generally small but more numerous, but in the 1st Millennium BCE there was a shift towards fewer and larger settlements connected to the city of Uruk. These shifts reflect deliberate central, government policy and local responses. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Land Use in Archaeology)
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14 pages, 4060 KB  
Article
The Effect of Twitter App Policy Changes on the Sharing of Spatial Information through Twitter Users
by Jiping Cao, Hartwig H. Hochmair and Fisal Basheeh
Geographies 2022, 2(3), 549-562; https://doi.org/10.3390/geographies2030033 - 5 Sep 2022
Cited by 11 | Viewed by 4799
Abstract
Social media data have been widely used to gain insight into human mobility and activity patterns. Despite their abundance, social media data come with various data biases, such as user selection bias. In addition, a change in the Twitter app functionality may further [...] Read more.
Social media data have been widely used to gain insight into human mobility and activity patterns. Despite their abundance, social media data come with various data biases, such as user selection bias. In addition, a change in the Twitter app functionality may further affect the type of information shared through tweets and hence influence conclusions drawn from the analysis of such data. This study analyzes the effect of three Twitter app policy changes in 2015, 2017, and 2019 on the tweeting behavior of users, using part of London as the study area. The policy changes reviewed relate to a function allowing to attach exact coordinates to tweets by default (2015), the maximum allowable length of tweet posts (2017), and the limitation of sharing exact coordinates to the Twitter photo app (2019). The change in spatial aspects of users’ tweeting behavior caused by changes in user policy and Twitter app functionality, respectively, is quantified through measurement and comparison of six aspects of tweeting behavior between one month before and one month after the respective policy changes, which are: proportion of tweets with exact coordinates, tweet length, the number of placename mentions in tweet text and hashtags per tweet, the proportion of tweets with images among tweets with exact coordinates, and radius of gyration of tweeting locations. The results show, among others, that policy changes in 2015 and 2019 led users to post a smaller proportion of tweets with exact coordinates and that doubling the limit of allowable characters as part of the 2017 policy change increased the number of place names mentioned in tweets. The findings suggest that policy changes lead to a change in user contribution behavior and, in consequence, in the spatial information that can be extracted from tweets. The systematic change in user contribution behavior associated with policy changes should be specifically taken into consideration if jointly analyzing tweets from periods before and after such a policy change. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advanced Technologies in Spatial Data Collection and Analysis)
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25 pages, 2769 KB  
Article
Heritage Tourism and Nation-Building: Politics of the Production of Chinese National Identity at the Mausoleum of Yellow Emperor
by Hongni Wei, Yi Yu and Zhenjie Yuan
Sustainability 2022, 14(14), 8798; https://doi.org/10.3390/su14148798 - 18 Jul 2022
Cited by 14 | Viewed by 6505
Abstract
As an important embodiment and carrier of Chinese traditional culture, the rituals and ceremonies in heritage tourism not only carry profound spiritual and cultural connotations, such as respecting nature and worshiping ancestors, they also enable people to gain a sense of identity. Therefore, [...] Read more.
As an important embodiment and carrier of Chinese traditional culture, the rituals and ceremonies in heritage tourism not only carry profound spiritual and cultural connotations, such as respecting nature and worshiping ancestors, they also enable people to gain a sense of identity. Therefore, this paper aims to explore the relationship between heritage tourism and the politics of identity-building from the perspective of critical toponymy based on the case study of the Mausoleum of the Yellow Emperor. Drawing on five years’ of fieldwork at the Mausoleum of the Yellow Emperor in Shaanxi Province, China, this paper unfolds how heritage tourism has evolved into a certain kind of political agenda and a social engineering of nation-building. Relying on in-depth interviews and R language text analysis, this paper examines how Chinese national identity is produced, performed, and established through landscape naming and ritual performance in heritage tourism. This paper finds that (1) the naming and interpretation of ancestral roots cultural landscapes, as well as ritual performance in heritage tourism, are closely associated with cultural representations and reproductions of national identity. (2) The naming and interpretation of landscapes, as well as the performance of ritual practices in heritage tourism, are closely associated with national history and mythology. The tourists’ behaviors and emotions, as well as their performance and experiences during the ritual practice at the heritage tourism site, help to construct national identity. The cultural production and invention are combined with actions enacted by governments and local residents, as well as visitors from different backgrounds. (3) The mausoleum creates cultural links for Taiwanese tourists to understand their ancestral roots culture and thus to enhance their connection with the mainland. This paper tries to explore the relationship between heritage tourism and identity-building from the perspective of critical toponymy, which has implications for place branding and marketing projects when promoting ancestral roots culture and place-named tourism. This research not only helps the individuals to realize and reappreciate the value of traditional culture and heritage, it also motivates the individuals to rethink their responsibilities in cultural inheritance and the innovative development of culture. It also helps to enhance the consciousness of the people on both sides of the strait as a community of the Chinese nation, as well as to promote the peaceful development of cross-strait relations. Full article
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17 pages, 2922 KB  
Article
Geocoding Freeform Placenames: An Example of Deciphering the Czech National Immigration Database
by Jan Šimbera, Dušan Drbohlav and Přemysl Štych
ISPRS Int. J. Geo-Inf. 2021, 10(5), 335; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi10050335 - 15 May 2021
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 4416
Abstract
The growth of international migration and its societal and political impacts bring a greater need for accurate data to measure, understand and control migration flows. However, in the Czech immigration database, the birthplaces of immigrants are only kept in freeform text fields, a [...] Read more.
The growth of international migration and its societal and political impacts bring a greater need for accurate data to measure, understand and control migration flows. However, in the Czech immigration database, the birthplaces of immigrants are only kept in freeform text fields, a substantial obstacle to their further processing due to numerous errors in transcription and spelling. This study overcomes this obstacle by deploying a custom geocoding engine based on GeoNames, tailored transcription rules and fuzzy matching in order to achieve good accuracy even for noisy data while not depending on third-party services, resulting in lower costs than the comparable approaches. The results are presented on a subnational level for the immigrants coming to Czechia from the USA, Ukraine, Moldova and Vietnam, revealing important spatial patterns that are invisible on the national level. Full article
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20 pages, 3329 KB  
Article
Men and Place: Male Identity and the Meaning of Place in the Nineteenth-Century Scottish Gàidhealtachd
by Elizabeth Ritchie
Genealogy 2020, 4(4), 97; https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy4040097 - 26 Sep 2020
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 6986
Abstract
The perfunctory noting of name, dates, family relationships and a location on gravestones initially suggests that such details are unprofitable sources for evidence of male identity. However the sheer commonplaceness of stating a placename, particularly when it is noticeably associated with men rather [...] Read more.
The perfunctory noting of name, dates, family relationships and a location on gravestones initially suggests that such details are unprofitable sources for evidence of male identity. However the sheer commonplaceness of stating a placename, particularly when it is noticeably associated with men rather than women, and when not all cultures do the same, indicates that it may reveal something of how men thought of themselves and how they felt. Canadian and Australian studies have suggested that recording placenames on a headstone was a marker of Scottish ethnicity, like an image of a thistle. However, in the nineteenth-century Scottish Highlands ethnicity was not a key component of identity. Indications of place, at least in the ‘home’ country, must therefore signify a different element of identity. This article examines headstone inscriptions of men from across the Gaelic-speaking Highlands and Islands of Scotland who died in the nineteenth century. The resulting evidence indicates that place was a significant element of male identity, indicating personal or ancestral connection with a particular location; a regional affiliation; professional success; social status; national and international mobility; an imperial or patriotic mindset; or even geographical dislocation. In short, place was highly significant to nineteenth-century Highland men, and was a key element of their personal identity. Full article
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18 pages, 6514 KB  
Article
An Ontology-Driven Cyberinfrastructure for Intelligent Spatiotemporal Question Answering and Open Knowledge Discovery
by Wenwen Li, Miaomiao Song and Yuanyuan Tian
ISPRS Int. J. Geo-Inf. 2019, 8(11), 496; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi8110496 - 3 Nov 2019
Cited by 21 | Viewed by 4730
Abstract
The proliferation of geospatial data from diverse sources, such as Earth observation satellites, social media, and unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), has created a pressing demand for cross-platform data integration, interoperation, and intelligent data analysis. To address this big data challenge, this paper reports [...] Read more.
The proliferation of geospatial data from diverse sources, such as Earth observation satellites, social media, and unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), has created a pressing demand for cross-platform data integration, interoperation, and intelligent data analysis. To address this big data challenge, this paper reports our research in developing a rule-based, semantic-enabled service chain model to support intelligent question answering for leveraging the abundant data and processing resources available online. Four key techniques were developed to achieve this goal: (1) A spatial and temporal reasoner resolves the spatial and temporal information in a given scientific question and enables place-name disambiguation based on support from a gazetteer; (2) a spatial operation ontology categorizes important spatial analysis operations, data types, and data themes, which will be used in automated chain generation; (3) a language-independent chaining rule defines the template for input, spatial operation, and output as well as rules for embedding multiple spatial operations for solving a complex problem; and (4) a recursive algorithm facilitates the generation of executive workflow metadata according to the chaining rules. We implement this service chain model in a cyberinfrastructure for online and reproducible spatial analysis and question answering. Moving the problem-solving environment from a desktop-based environment onto a geospatial cyberinfrastructure (GeoCI) offers better support to collaborative spatial decision-making and ensures science replicability. We expect this work to contribute significantly to the advancement of a reproducible spatial data science and to building the next-generation open knowledge network. Full article
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18 pages, 3007 KB  
Article
Strengths of Exaggerated Tsunami-Originated Placenames: Disaster Subculture in Sanriku Coast, Japan
by Yuzuru Isoda, Akio Muranaka, Go Tanibata, Kazumasa Hanaoka, Junzo Ohmura and Akihiro Tsukamoto
ISPRS Int. J. Geo-Inf. 2019, 8(10), 429; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi8100429 - 24 Sep 2019
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 5366
Abstract
Disaster-originated placename is a kind of disaster subculture that is used for a practical purpose of identifying a location while reminding the past disaster experience. They are expected to transmit the risks and knowledge of high-risk low-frequency natural hazards, surviving over time and [...] Read more.
Disaster-originated placename is a kind of disaster subculture that is used for a practical purpose of identifying a location while reminding the past disaster experience. They are expected to transmit the risks and knowledge of high-risk low-frequency natural hazards, surviving over time and generations. This paper compares the perceptions to tsunami-originated placenames in local communities having realistic and exaggerated origins in Sanriku Coast, Japan. The reality of tsunami-originated placenames is first assessed by comparing the tsunami run-ups indicated in the origins and that of the tsunami in the Great East Japan Earthquake 2011 using GIS and digital elevation model. Considerable proportions of placenames had exaggerated origins, but the group interviews to local communities revealed that origins indicating unrealistic tsunami run-ups were more believed than that of the more realistic ones. We discuss that accurate hazard information will be discredited if it contradicts to the people’s everyday life and the desire for safety, and even imprecise and ambiguous information can survive if it is embedded to a system of local knowledge that consistently explains the various facts in a local area that requires explanation. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Historical GIS and Digital Humanities)
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648 pages, 5544 KB  
Project Report
Paleolithic Rock Art: A Worldwide Literature Survey Extracted from the Rock Art Studies Bibliographic Database for the Years 1864–2017
by Leigh Marymor
Arts 2018, 7(2), 14; https://doi.org/10.3390/arts7020014 - 3 Apr 2018
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 21707
Abstract
The Rock Art Studies Bibliographic Database is an open access; online resource that fulfills the need for a searchable portal into the world’s rock art literature. Geared to the broadest interests of rock art researchers; students; cultural resource managers; and the general public; [...] Read more.
The Rock Art Studies Bibliographic Database is an open access; online resource that fulfills the need for a searchable portal into the world’s rock art literature. Geared to the broadest interests of rock art researchers; students; cultural resource managers; and the general public; the RAS database makes rock art literature accessible through a simple search interface that facilitates inquiries into multiple data fields; including authors’ names; title and publication; place-name keyword; subject keyword; ISBN/ISSN number and abstract. The results of a data search can further be sorted by any of the data fields; including: authors’ names; date; title; and so forth. An ever increasing number of citations within the database include web links to online versions of the reference cited; and many citations include full author’s abstracts. The data compilation has been undertaken by Leigh Marymor with the year 2018 marking the 25th year of continuous revision and expansion of the data. Over 37,000 citations are currently contained in the database. The RAS database first launched online as a joint project of the Bay Area Rock Art Research Association and University of California’s Bancroft Library. After thirteen years of collaboration; the project found a new home and collaborator at the Anthropology Department at the Museum of Northern Arizona. The Paleolithic Rock Art bibliography results from an export of data from the RAS database and captures a freeze-frame in the state of the rock art literature for the world’s Paleolithic rock art as compiled here in the year 2018. The online version of the RAS Bibliographic Database at the Museum of Northern Arizona is updated annually; and we refer the reader to that resource for up-to-date bibliographic data revisions and additions. Researchers who consult the online database in concert with their reference to the Paleolithic Rock Art bibliography will discover a powerful ally in further refining geographic and thematic inquiries. Full article
(This article belongs to the Collection World Rock Art)
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