Periodic Reporting for period 1 - STONE-MASTERS (Masters of the stone: The stonecutters' workshops and the rise of the late antique epigraphical cultures (third-fifth century AD))
Período documentado: 2022-10-01 hasta 2025-03-31
In this project, the PI anticipates that the new face of Roman epigraphy was caused by the dissemination of changes in the elite’s approach to epigraphy through artisans’ workshops. Craftspersons and their ateliers were direct intermediaries between the processes which shaped Roman attitudes to epigraphy, and the very stones which we study today; and it is at this intersection where the PI expects to note the most profound changes.
1. Creation of a research questionnaire for the study of workshop affinities in epigraphy, a controlled vocabulary/ontology for Greek and Latin palaeography of the Roman period with: clear-cut definitions and classification of letters shapes, and their morphological groupings. The achievement was verified through talks at different conferences and feedback was collected.
2. Gathering 34 top-level researchers exploring different aspects of artisans’ workshops in antiquity, and organizing a common platform of the exchange of knowledge during our methodological conference. An edited volume with their contributions, which will certainly prove a major reference work for epigraphy, is now processed by the team and should appear in the first half of 2026 in the series “Studies on Byzantine Epigraphy” (Brepols).
3. Submitting so-far 9 publications with preliminary results of the project and several case studies (major publishing output of the project is designed to take place during the final years). Those with PIDs are already listed in the Continuous Reporting Tool.
4. Creation of the framework of the Digital Atlas of Workshops in Antiquity as an innovative digital analytical tool and data publishing platform.
5. Building a significant visibility of the project through:
a. organizing workshops/conferences, team talks at other conferences, organizing invited talks at seminars at the University of Warsaw, which involved, among others the PIs of several ERC grants;
b. award to the PI of the 2nd level prize of the “Polityka” journal (a major research prize in Poland); the PI also became the supervisor in a successful MSCA application;
c. invitation of the postdocs to join the steering committees of research societies and editorial boards.
The first two years of the project research brought significant breakthroughs in the field of methods of Greek and Latin epigraphy of the Roman period. The creation of the data patterns for collecting information allowing to identify the origin of inscriptions is an unprecedented procedure. No such complex set of guidelines had been offered before and positively underwent tests in a sandbox environment. The adopted form of a spreadsheet questionnaire makes these methods very accessible and easily reusable even by researchers who have no direct access to the project’s atlas or any significant digital resources.
Perhaps, an even more important breakthrough in the discipline of epigraphy is the creation of the palaeographical subset within these guidelines, laying down the foundations of the philosophy, instructions and controlled vocabularies/thesauri for the study of palaeography (letter shapes) in inscriptions. Previously, palaeographical conclusions and the so-called “dating of inscriptions based on palaeography” usually relied on the personal experience and intuition of individual researchers, rather than a systematic research approach. This, of course, led to many false conclusions in establishing the dates of inscriptions, repeated and multiplied in studies based on defective descriptions in the original editions. With the creation of a set and precisely defined controlled vocabulary, the project allows other researchers to embrace an unambiguous and very informative system of the palaeographical description in epigraphy.