I have achived all the objectives established at the beginning of the project.
- Develop of ATRA as an online database. I worked in close conjunction with: ITER–Gateway to Middle Ages and Renaissance, a non-profit partnership based at University of Toronto, dedicated to the advancement of learning in the study and teaching of Middle Ages & Renaissance through the development and distribution of online resources. ATRA acquired the form of an online database according to specific directives given by these institutions. Together with computer scientists at University of Toronto and at Università Ca’ Foscari Venezia (ASIT), I programed, set up and upgraded the database preparing it for public access and use. The online system has been developed by the Digital Humanities research center of Università Ca’ Foscari Venezia. Publication date: 02 April 2020. The database, available at URL www.unive.it/atra.
- Collect and analyze entries, search, collect and analyze published and unpublished letters of European Renaissance scholars, fractioning selectively all antiquarian aspects, cataloguing them according to the research string categories. The collection of entries was implemented along the entire duration of the fellowship, and it will continue afterwards. Current number of entries: ca. 6000. The great variety of manuscript epistolary sources merged into ATRA from various European libraries and archives. This work is still in progress; its real impact will be measured on a 10-year basis.
- Identify core groups of letters, process their content and arrange them for publication in coherent and independent collections. Collections of manuscript letters have been edited and published in several academic context.
- Carry out advanced search forms generated by the database, producing useful structured and unstructured qualitative data that will serve to gain new insight in deep-rooted and first-hand issues. This has developed and will develop further the understanding of antiquarian thought and debates concerning the Renaissance political and civil life in general. Publications on all discoveries and findings took place at this stage. In fact, by analyzing the data stored, I produced new information on the antiquarian debates that took place during the Renaissance – such as ecclesiastical historiography, iconographic sources, translations, numismatics, philological techniques, methods of research. The achievement of this specific object is proven by several academic publications.