Activities per year
Abstract
Basic administrative units in geographically and politically stable countries are often seen as temporally and spatially stable. However, this is not the case, as the DigDag project shows in the case of Denmark from c. 1660 to the present.
A huge number of spatial and societal changes still occurs, e.g. boundary changes, name changes as well as changes in administrative structures. Seen over centuries, public and ecclesiastical administration becomes increasingly complex, resulting in ever increasing needs for updates in administrative divisions.
A substantial number of digitised archival registers in Denmark use, among others, geographical/administrative entrances. The entrance is usually a topographical code (e.g. settlement, parish) or local authority jurisdiction (e.g. customs service, police districts). Due to changes in the administrative divisions, most of the geocodes are unique to each archive, or archival system.
The DigDag project establishes a uniform research infrastructure through a webGIS within history, archaeology, place-names, statistics and geography: a digital cartographical skeleton for thematic mapping and analysis which will generate new interdisciplinary research and make existing research more efficient.
A huge number of spatial and societal changes still occurs, e.g. boundary changes, name changes as well as changes in administrative structures. Seen over centuries, public and ecclesiastical administration becomes increasingly complex, resulting in ever increasing needs for updates in administrative divisions.
A substantial number of digitised archival registers in Denmark use, among others, geographical/administrative entrances. The entrance is usually a topographical code (e.g. settlement, parish) or local authority jurisdiction (e.g. customs service, police districts). Due to changes in the administrative divisions, most of the geocodes are unique to each archive, or archival system.
The DigDag project establishes a uniform research infrastructure through a webGIS within history, archaeology, place-names, statistics and geography: a digital cartographical skeleton for thematic mapping and analysis which will generate new interdisciplinary research and make existing research more efficient.
Original language | English |
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Publication date | 2013 |
Number of pages | 1 |
Publication status | Published - 2013 |
Event | XV. International Conference for Historical Geographers - Charles University in Prague, Faculty of Science, Prague, Czech Republic Duration: 6 Aug 2012 → 10 Aug 2012 |
Conference
Conference | XV. International Conference for Historical Geographers |
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Location | Charles University in Prague, Faculty of Science |
Country/Territory | Czech Republic |
City | Prague |
Period | 06/08/2012 → 10/08/2012 |
Activities
- 1 Lecture and oral contribution
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DigDag – A digital atlas of the Danish historical-administrative geography
Bo Nissen Knudsen (Lecturer)
7 Aug 2012Activity: Talk or presentation types › Lecture and oral contribution