Rune Rattenborg’s research while affiliated with Uppsala University and other places

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Publications (4)


The Cuneiform Corpus in its Geographical Setting:: Preliminary Results of the Project Geomapping Landscapes of Writing
  • Chapter

June 2024

Seraina Nett

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Rune Rattenborg

Point distribution of c. 600 locations of cuneiform finds included in the Cuneiform Inscriptions Geographical Site (CIGS) index version 1.6 (1 July 2023). Map prepared by Rune Rattenborg.
Locational accuracy distribution of archaeological sites with cuneiform finds according to select modern countries (n = 477). Data derived from CIGS version 1.6 (1 July 2023).
Comparison of data coverage in the CIGS-AE index and the Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative (CDLI) catalogue. The first (a) shows the distribution of 597 locations and the spatial density of 429,398 inscriptions. The second (b) shows the distribution of 219 find locations and the density distribution of 260,861 geolocatable inscriptions retrieved from the CDLI catalogue (as of August 2020). Maps prepared by Carolin Johansson.
Number of locations with cuneiform finds by modern country or administrative territory (n = 589). Data derived from CIGS v. 1.6 (1 July 2023).
Number of cuneiform finds by modern country or administrative territory (n = 429,351). Data derived from CIGS v. 1.6 (1 July 2023) and CIGS-AE v. 1.0 (1 July 2023).

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The Archaeological Distribution of the Cuneiform Corpus
  • Article
  • Full-text available

December 2023

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245 Reads

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1 Citation

Altorientalische Forschungen

Rune Rattenborg

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Seraina Nett

The present study offers a first comprehensive, quantifiable overview of the geographical extent and scale of the cuneiform corpus. Though one of the oldest and longest-lived scripts in history, the sheer size of this corpus, being among the largest discrete bodies of written source material from the pre-modern world, is seldom properly appreciated. We review and evaluate past quantitative assessments of the corpus and current levels of catalogue digitisation and integration, pointing to gaps in general catalogues and principal issues relating to the quantification and interrogation of textual sources at the corpus-level. Combining a newly developed open access spatial index of c. 600 locations from across Europe, Asia, and Africa where cuneiform texts have been found with a quantitative survey of reported finds from scholarly literature, we then proceed to discuss the formation of the cuneiform corpus as an archaeological artefact. Aided by an extremely broad diachronic and diatopic outlook on a uniquely large body of written source material, this study offers an innovative and novel perspective on written corpora as archaeological artefacts.

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Citations (1)


... Despite their durability, clay tablets can deteriorate if not properly conserved, making restoration challenging [8]. Spanning from the fourth to the first millennium BCE and written in at least a dozen languages, these tablets offer crucial insights into ancient societies across regions from Iran to Egypt, the Levant, and Anatolia [9,10,11]. These cuneiform inscriptions, encompassing various genres, serve as a window into ancient societies, their politics, history, law, and sciences [1]. ...

Reference:

Shaping History: Advanced Machine Learning Techniques for the Analysis and Dating of Cuneiform Tablets over Three Millennia
The Archaeological Distribution of the Cuneiform Corpus

Altorientalische Forschungen