Periodic Reporting for period 1 - FEMIber (Digitizing Women of Medieval Iberian Historiography)
Periodo di rendicontazione: 2023-03-01 al 2025-08-31
This interdisciplinary project intentionally reframed the male-centered narrative to shed light on various digital ways medieval women from the Iberian culture should be studied. The corpus consists of the Crónica de Castilla (ca. 1300, Kingdom of Castile-León) and the Portuguese genealogical work Livro de Linhagens do Deão (ca. 1343). The first work is one of the most widely disseminated chronicles of the Iberian Peninsula, and the latter belongs to the three great Portuguese genealogies written before 1350. While there are important studies on women in both of these works, they are usually limited to a few documented individuals and/or studied intertextually. This project is the first one to explore women and gender-based aspects in both works via digital humanities methods and tools.
By shifting the spotlight on underexplored aspects via digital approaches, the project looked for transparent and sustainable ways of advancing research. Moreover, considering the limited presence of medieval women in our modern-day cultural expressions and curricula, another aim of the project was to place its output in the context of cultural heritage and use it for educational purposes in a number of ways.
In the following phase of the project, a different computation approach was chosen for the Livro de Linhagens do Deão to avoid methodological repetition. Despite its title, this genealogical work is not based on male ancestry, and its bilateral model confirms women’s relevance in most lineages. Following a training in social network analysis, a database that focused on kinship ties was designed. The data model was based and tested on representative samples, and the Nodegoat environment proved to be a suitable tool due to the possibility to combine spatial aspects with social network analysis. This non-linear way of “reading” of the work further pointed to the frequency and distribution of certain elements linked to people (for example, titles, childlessness, offices, etc. – all recorded as their attributes), whose exploration is currently in preparation.
Numerous challenges of these data-driven approaches, their analytical potential, and the generated graphs were discussed in a series of conference papers, seminars, and talks, an open access article from 2025, as well as in other outreach, mostly digital, formats. The modified data sets were also used in teaching and communication outreach activities, including two open workshops on digital literacy. The project’s quality and impact were further enhanced via discussions and exchanges during the two secondments (Fordham and Brown) and the non-academic placement at the Ignacio Larramendi Foundation.
While the project operated against the background of traditional philology, the digital framework served as a proof of concept to expand the current scholarship and contribute to the internationalization and visibility of the Iberian medieval heritage. The heterogenous corpus – a Castilian chronicle and a Portuguese genealogical work – facilitated critical reflections on database design, data categorization, and tool suitability beyond the area of medieval Iberia, while the online storage of the database and its guidelines ensured transparency and reusability.
Further research paths have successfully been identified, and the project’s digital component has contributed to the competitiveness of the Humanities and its specific notion of ‘data’. However, the project’s potential is not limited to academic circles: The online materials and in-person activities have been used to discuss various topics and biases, such as marginalization, underrepresentation, and discrimination, whether identified in the past or still engrained in our societies. Finally, the project’s commercial feasibility still needs to be studied in detail.