Copyright held by
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Further details of licences are available from our
Licences page. For more
information, contact the project director,
Derived from original info/news.xml page which is now obsolete.
Most MoEML documents, or significant fragments with mol:
prefix and accessed through the web application
with their id + .xml
.
The molagas prefix points to the shape representation of a location on MoEML’s OpenLayers3-based rendering of the Agas Map.
Links to page-images in the Chadwyck-Healey
Links to page-images in the
The mdt (MoEML Document Type) prefix used on
The mdtlist (MoEML Document Type listing) prefix used in linking attributes points to a listings page constructed from a category in the central MDT taxonomy in the includes file. There are two variants, one with the plain _subcategories
, meaning all subcategories of the category.
The molgls (MoEML gloss) prefix used on
This molvariant prefix is used on
This molajax prefix is used on
The molstow prefix is used on
The molshows prefix is used on
The sb prefix is used on
Our editorial and encoding practices are documented in detail in the Praxis section of our website.
Where is MoEML going next? Find out here.
You can also get the latest MoEML news by liking our Facebook page or following us on Twitter.
Read MoEML’s
MoEML Director,
She also made a classroom visit to our first encoding partner,
After Alabama, Janelle headed to her old alma mater, Queen’s University in
Kingston, as a Return of the Alumni Triumphant
speaker and as
part of their Demystifying DH
speaker series. She gave two
papers, Research-Based Learning and DH Projects: MoEML’s Pedagogical
Partnership
and What’s in a Placename? Building a Digital
Gazetteer of Shakespeare’s London
, the latter reprising her Alabama
talk. She was introduced in the morning by Emily Murphy, graduate of the
University of Victoria and a well known figure at DHSI, and in the afternoon by her former dissertation supervisor,
Elizabeth Hanson. Janelle enjoyed her trip down memory lane and over snowbanks
in wintery Kingston. Check out the blogpost written by Queen’s PhD student, Erin Weinberg, in which she
explains that Janelle’s talk made her think about NPR’s smash-hit investigative
journalism podcast,