Skip navigation
Title: 

Medieval Manuscripts and the Computational Humanities Big Data, Scribes, and the “Paris Bible”

Authors: Wrisley, David Joseph
Guéville, Estelle
Keywords: handwritten text recognition (HTR);medieval Latin bibles;scribal modeling;digital humanities;computational humanities;medieval studies
Issue Date: Feb-2026
Publisher: ARC Humanities
Abstract: This book examines the transformations in medieval studies—and the humanities more broadly—enabled by decades of digitization and advances in computational methods. Centring on the Paris Bible, a widely copied thirteenth- and fourteenth-century manuscript genre, we demonstrate how automated transcription produces scribal data at a scale once inaccessible, and how automation can support new approaches to localizing, dating, and contextualizing manuscripts. We argue that bringing machine learning and artificial intelligence to medieval studies not only requires re-centring expert human intelligence within computational systems, but also raises the question of the infrastructures needed for equitable, collaborative scholarship across the field. The book models how medieval studies might rethink interpretation, highlighting both the promise and risks of computational methods in manuscript research.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2451/75614
https://uplopen.com/books/m/10.1515/9781802704488
ISBN: 9781802704488
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1515/9781802704488
Rights: CC NC ND 4.0 International
Appears in Collections:David Wrisley's Collection

Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat 
MedievalManuscriptsCompHum.pdfMMCH book47.77 MBAdobe PDFView/Open


Items in FDA are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.