Beyond 2022: Building the Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland (June 2022)

Your video will begin in 10
Skip ad (5)
Launch it! Create your course and sell it for up to $997 in the next 7 days

Thanks! Share it with your friends!

You disliked this video. Thanks for the feedback!

Added by admin
122 Views
How do you rebuild a destroyed archive?
Over the past three years, an interdisciplinary team of postdoctoral researchers in Dublin, Belfast and London have been working to virtually recreate the archival collections, and the premises, of the Public Record Office of Ireland destroyed in the opening engagement of the Irish Civil War in June 1922.
Combining ground-breaking research in Computer Science and History, and in close collaboration with experts in Archival Studies and conservation, they have produced the Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland.
This research showcase will give each of the researchers an opportunity to describe their work, the challenges the team faced, and how their decisions have shaped the Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland
Limited availability for in-person attendance.
Speakers:
Dr Elizabeth Biggs, Beyond 2022 Medieval Exchequer Research Fellow, TNA (UK)
Dr David Brown, Archival Discovery Lead, Automated Handwritten Text Recognition
Dr Brian Gurrin, Beyond 2022 Research Fellow, Census and related material
Dr Sarah Hendriks, Beyond 2022 Research Fellow, The National Archives (UK)
Dr Lynn Kilgallon, Medieval Exchequer records and Knowledge Graph (Humanities)
Dr Gary Munnelly, ADAPT Centre, Technical lead,
Dr Tim Murtagh, Beyond 2022 Research Fellow, Public Record Office of Northern Ireland
Dr Fabrizio Orlandi, ADAPT Centre, Knowledge Graph (Computer Science)
Dr Emer Gilmartin, Researcher in Spoken Dialog Technology at ADAPT Centre

The Trinity Long Room Hub is the public humanities partner for Beyond 2022.

Partnership initiatives to date include the Out of the Ashes multiannual lecture series 2018-21. This series is examining how societies deal with cultural trauma through reconstruction and commemoration, and how the international community should respond to cultural loss.
Category
STOCKINGS

Post your comment

Sign in or sign up to post comments.

Comments

Be the first to comment