Overview: The Corpus of Erasmus‘ Correspondence Data Capture and Model(ing) Common Approaches to Analysis and Visualization o Statistical Representations o Spatial Representations o Network Representations Extended and Multifaceted Data Outlook: Intersecting Networks
c. 3150 letters: c. 2000 written BY and c. 1150 written TO Erasmus o 202 Individual locations from which Erasmus and his correspondents wrote letters o 730 correspondents (incl. Erasmus): individuals, groups and institutions Relevance as Historical Source o major source for all modern biographies of Erasmus o major source for research on all aspects of the „Northern Renaissance“ and the Reformation
Spreadsheet era_letters_id cwe_ep_no cwe_volume sender_id recipient_id label_cwe send_date_annotation_cwe source_city_annotatio n_cwe era_cwe_142 142 2 Willem HERMANS Servatius ROGERUS Letter From Willem Hermans to Servatius Rogerus 1501? January 6 Haarlem era_cwe_143 143 2 Erasmus Antoon (I) van BERGEN Letter From Erasmus of Rotterdam To Antoon van Bergen 1501, January 14 Paris era_cwe_144 144 2 Erasmus Nicholas de BURGUNDY Letter From Erasmus of Rotterdam To Nicholas of Burgundy 1501, January 26 Paris era_cwe_145 145 2 Erasmus Anna van BORSSELE Letter From Erasmus of Rotterdam To Anna van Borssele 1501, January 27 Paris era_cwe_146 146 2 Erasmus Jacob BATT Letter From Erasmus of Rotterdam To Jacob Batt Paris 1501, January 27 Paris era_cwe_147 147 2 Erasmus ANTONIUS of Luxembourg Letter From Erasmus of Rotterdam To Antonius of Luxembourg 1501, January 27 Paris era_cwe_148 148 2 Erasmus ANTONIUS of Luxembourg Letter From Erasmus of Rotterdam To Antonius of Luxembourg 1501, February Paris era_cwe_149 149 2 Erasmus Antoon (I) van BERGEN Letter From Erasmus of Rotterdam To Antoon van Bergen 1501, March 16? Paris? era_cwe_150 150 2 Erasmus ANTONIUS of Luxembourg Letter From Erasmus of Rotterdam To Antonius of Luxembourg 1501, March 16 Paris era_cwe_151 151 2 Erasmus Jacob BATT Letter From Erasmus of Rotterdam To Jacob Batt 1501, April 5 Paris
of letters in general o Uncertainty/ambiguity relative to the date of dispatch source/target location sender/recipient o Letters can have multiple senders o Letters can have multiple recipients = Obstacles for computation Pitfalls concerning the capturing of the Erasmus corpus o Merging of two major editions (ALLEN and CWE) is necessary
relative to: o Date of dispatch Introduction of a time frame for the date of dispatch: start/end = terminus post/ante quem o Source/target location Introduction of region specific URI‘s for locations: e.g. unknown_nl or unknown_gb Introduction of boolean operators, i.e. source location certain = y/n o Sender/recipient Introduction of boolean operators, i.e. sender/recipient certain = y/n One workaround for letters with multiple senders/recipients Splitting of those letters into multiple letters with one sender/recipient and one unique letter ID but with the same letter_no
of correspondents correspondents_id type gender viaf_id name_in_coe cochlæus_johannes_viaf_4969350 individual male 4969350 Johannes COCHLAEUS cock_ludolf_viaf_unknown individual male unknown Ludolf COCK louvain_collegium_trilingue body male NULL [Collegium Trilingue] colet_john_viaf_34454805 individual male 34454805 John COLET cologne_nuns_of group male NULL [Nuns of Cologne] colster_abel_van_viaf_unknown individual male unknown Abel van COLSTER conti_prime_de'_viaf_unknown individual male unknown Primo de' CONTI copus_guilielmus_viaf_22249056 individual male 22249056 Guillaume COP coppin_nicolas_viaf_unknown individual male unknown Nicolas COPPIN cordus_euricius_viaf_122063278 individual male 122063278 Euricius CORDUS cornarius_janus_viaf_71422380 individual male 71422380 Janus CORNARIUS cornelis_of_bergen_viaf_unknown individual male unknown CORNELIS of Bergen (Ep 1562 of 26 March 1525) cornelissen_van_mierop_vincent_viaf_unknown individual male unknown Vincent CORNELISSEN van Mierop coronel_ludovicus_viaf_349420 individual male 349420 Luis Núñez CORONEL de_corte_pierre_viaf_14805099 individual male 14805099 Pieter de CORTE cortehoeven_dirk_viaf_8201663 individual male 8201663 Theodericus CORTEHOEVIUS
of the correspondents o Pseudonyms/ name variations have to be resolved E.g. Jan Robijns (Vol. 5 CWE) = Jan Robyns (Vol. 10 CWE) o ‚Status enhancements‘ have to be resolved E.g. Giovanni de‘ Medici = future Pope Leo X E.g. Prince Henry = future King Henry VIII
per year (in total) o per location (in total / per year) o per correspondent (in total / per location / per year) o etc Geospatial Representation • per location • per correspondent • etc Network Representations o static o dynamic
connections of Erasmus to his correspondents o No of letters = edge weight Usage of SNA Metric? o At this stage not constructive Capturing of the whole network? o Not feasible within a fixed timeframe o Disparate historical tradition
evolution of correspondence networks in time and space Example Question concerning time: How did the network evolve within certain time-frames with regard to (1) the no of correspondents involved? (2) the frequency of epistolary exchange? (3) the quantity of letters exchanged in total / per individual exchange?
space: (1) Which geographical space does the correspondence network encompass within certain time frames with regard to the individual locations from which Erasmus sends and/or recieves letters? (1) How did a change of residency by Erasmus impact the composition of his correspondence network within a certain time frame?
In Numbers: 99 letters in total concerning the proper correspondence (85 by Erasmus and 14 to Erasmus) 5 letters E‘s correspondents exchangend with one another Erasmus wrote from 7 different locations – he recieved letters from 3 different locations
6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 1484 1485 1486 1487 1488 1489 1490 1491 1492 1493 1494 1495 1496 1497 1498 1499 No of letters sent BY Erasmus No of letters sent TO Erasmus
15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 Antwerpen Brussels Gouda Halsterne Paris Steyn Tournehem Lopsen No of letters written BY Erasmus No of letters written to Erasmus
data about the correspondents, e.g. o kinship o teacher—pupil relationships o Professional/mercantile relationships o patronage o personal encounters o etc Capturing additional attribute data (essentially prosopographic), e.g. o education o academic degrees o ecclesiastical status o social Origin/Standing o socio-professional role o etc
data can be connected to temporal and spatial data: o Example: A personal encounter takes place at 1-n location(s), involves 2-n individuals and is situated at a specific point in time / within a time frame. This also applies to additional attribute data o Example: The education of an individual takes place at 1-n locations (usually within an institution located there) and is situated at a specific point in time / within a time frame. Why we need such dynamic data: o Example: A static classification of the socio-professional role of Giovanni de‘ Medici as ‚pope‘ can be misleading and distort computations under specific circumstances. o Antoon van Bergen, one of Erasmus correspondents, writes in 1501 a letter to G. de‘ Medici whose socio-professional role at this point is not yet ‚pope‘ but ‚cardinal‘. If we were to compute the socio-professional stratification of the correspondents then the underlying data has to reflect the attributes for a given point in time / within a time frame.
be answered through the inclusion of dynamic data: o When did two correspondents reside in the same location? o What places did individual correspondents visit during travels? o How were correspondents related to one another? o Which correspondents had a teacher—pupil relationship to one another? o When did a specific socio-professional group first engage in epistolary exchange with Erasmus or vice versa? o Was there a specific time frame in which a socio-professional group was dominant?
on the content of the individual letters, i.e.: o Mentioned Persons o Mentioned Institutions o Mentioned Works o [Mentioned Events] Research Advantages: o To understand not only who ‚talked‘ to whom, but also ABOUT WHAT Example Questions: o With whom did Erasmus discuss his work „Institutio Principis Christiani“? o Which other persons or works got mentioned during this discussion? o In which timeframe did this discussion take place?
Reverse engineering of Indices: mentioned_works sub_keyword allen_letter_id allen_volume_and_page Institutio Principis Christiani, 1st ed., Basle, Froben, 1516 393, 853 I. 19(24), 39, 44, 65; III. 77n., 79, 161n., 491n.; V. 504 E. on his audacity in II. 254 given (?) to Antony of Bergen jun. III. 197 Colet on II. 257 Cop has not yet seen II. 449, 483 and Ferdinand of Austria III. 352, 536; IV. 57 Froben requests copy for reprinting III. 255 German II. 416n. in press II. 236, 240 printing complete II. 250 in progress II. 78, 93 (but see II. 205n.) on point of publication II. 248 purpose II. 93 reprinted III. 424