Greek Literary Topographies in the Roman Imperial World

On 18th April Greta Hawes, Scott Smith, and Ari Toumpas will be giving a talk at a workshop convened by colleagues at Penn State.

The entire event looks excellent and will take place via Zoom: go here to see the schedule and here for information about Jason König’s keynote.

Our contribution will be an introduction to MANTO and exploration of how it can be used to cast new light on geographical relationships, using the stories of Theseus as a case study. We’ve asked all participants to spend some time exploring the public interface, and to watch a brief video (also embedded below) which explains how data is collected and entered into the database.

We’re at a good point to test our progress, get feedback, and think about the next steps for our digital project, which is still a work in progress. Let us know if you have ideas!

Update! Below is our second video, taking you on a brief tour of how to use MANTO’s public interface!

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A dataset of mythical people with stable URIs

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A half-dozen ways to die (in myth)