Diplomata Belgica. The diplomatic sources from the medieval southern Low Countries

Diplomata Belgica. Les sources diplomatiques des Pays Bas méridionaux au Moyen Âge
Start - End 
2013 - 2017 (ongoing)
Department(s) 
Department of History
Research Focus 

Tabgroup

Abstract

Diplomata Belgica offers a critical survey of all the diplomatic sources, edited or still unpublished, and issued by both natural persons and legal bodies from the medieval southern Low Countries. Diplomata Belgica covers present day Belgium as well as those areas which belonged historically to the Southern Low Countries but are part now of France, the Netherlands, the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg, or Germany. At this stage, Diplomata Belgica contains metadata about almost 35,000 charters and deeds in Latin, Old-French, Middle Dutch and Middle High German, almost 19,000 full text transcriptions and almost 5,000 photographs of original charters. The database aims at exhaustivity for the period before 1250 and will, in the future, also include late medieval diplomatic materials without striving after completeness.

The Diplomata Belgica-project originated in the mid-1980s, when the Belgian Royal Historical Commission proposed a complete and computerised revision of the well-known Table chronologique des chartes et diplômes imprimés concernant l’histoire de la Belgique, published in eleven volumes between 1866 and 1971 under the original editorship of Alphonse Wauters. The project led to a close collaboration with the Comité nationale du dictionnaire du latin médiéval and with the former Cetedoc (Centre de Traitement électronique des Documents) at the University of Louvain-la-Neuve. In 1997 it resulted in the publication of the CD-Rom Thesaurus Diplomaticus, distributed by Brepols Publishers. This CD-ROM offers an analytical survey of all diplomatic sources written (in Latin) between circa 640 and 1200.

After 1997, the Royal Historical Commission continued to collect new data in order to improve and to supplement the dataset covering the period 640-1200 and to extend the collection to the subsequent decades between 1200 and 1250. For the conception of a new data structure and for the development of a new relational database system, the Commission started a collaboration with Ghent University in the framework of the project “Sources from the Medieval Low Countries”, funded by the Hercules Foundation (2010-2014) and the Henri Pirenne Institute for Medieval Studies. Compared with the former Thesaurus Diplomaticus, Diplomata Belgica did not only become an open access database. It also offers a threefold of the original data and contains many new information fields and features such as extensive hyperlinking and geolocation.

People

Supervisor(s)

Researcher(s)

External(s)

Walter Prevenier

Jean-Louis Kupper

Publications