FactGrid:Print publications data model: Difference between revisions

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=== Individual articles published in a collective volume ===
=== Individual articles published in a collective volume ===


You can open Items on each article, advertisement, preface or section of your specific interest. State
You can open Items on any section of a publication that is of specific interest in your research — it might be an article in a journal or an advertisement in a news paper. State:


* [[Property:P2|P2 "instance of"]] — [[Item:Q20|Q20 "Print publication"]]
* [[Property:P2|P2 "instance of"]] — [[Item:Q20|Q20 "Print publication"]]
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* [[Item:Q9199|Letter Johann Adam Weishaupt to Franz Anton von Massenhausen, Eichstätt, 1776-09-12]]
* [[Item:Q9199|Letter Johann Adam Weishaupt to Franz Anton von Massenhausen, Eichstätt, 1776-09-12]]


The two properties to connect the Items and the publications are here again [[Property:P64|P64 "published in"]] to use on the document and [[Property:P254|P254 "publishes"]] on the side of the publication in which this Item made its print appearance.
The two properties to connect the Items and the publications are here again [[Property:P64|P64 "published in"]] and [[Property:P254|P254 "publishes"]] respectively.


== Editions of books ==
== Editions of books ==

Revision as of 08:14, 29 May 2021

The Print Publications data model is the basic instruction for

  • printed materials from single sheets to books
  • multi volume publications
  • periodical publications



Articles, advertisements etc. — published in self standing print publications

Individual articles published in a collective volume

You can open Items on any section of a publication that is of specific interest in your research — it might be an article in a journal or an advertisement in a news paper. State:

Primary documents published in books and journals

The model case ist here:

The two properties to connect the Items and the publications are here again P64 "published in" and P254 "publishes" respectively.

Editions of books

We are looking here at print publications in the totality of an edition with its print run of numerous copies — not at single copies and not at works like "Robinson Crusoe" or "The Bible". A new edition edition of the very same design should make an new Item in this group. Create also just one item if the publication was only sold in a set of several volumes.

Each of these Items should have the following statements:

External identifiers

If you are not interested in given the full load of bibliographic details, as the book is not the object you are studying but merely a thing to refer to, just state an external identifier into a data base that gives all further details Good identifiers for early modern books are the ESTC in the case of English titles, the VD catalogues in the case of German titles, the STCN for Dutch titles etc.

Valuable library identifiers are the PPN numbers of many German libraries, or the ISBN in the case of modern books.

Description, Segmentation, Collation

People involved: Author, Translator, etc.

Content

Books with with various contributions

Model case:

Multi volume publications

There are strictly speaking two sorts of multivolume publications: Those that actually sold in different volumes, which could be bought separately and those that came as a single object which one could only buy in one pack.

  • Treat volumes that could be bought separately as individual publications with an item for each volume.
  • Treat volumes that could only be bought in one set as segments of the publication.

Periodicals and serial publications

Newspapers, journals, term catalogues etc.

  • Q14231 "Periodical" — if the publication promised to appear in set intervals (even if these intervals have changed over the years or only a first issue appeared)
  • Q14233 "Serial publication" — if the publication was just set to be continued without an end in sight (like the "term catalogues" of the book trade)

Individual issues of a periodical

Articles

see above the section Articles, advertisements etc. — published in self standing print publications

Works

Stemmata

Tracking the dispersion of publications

Subscription Schemes

Reconstructing Libraries: Naming the owners of copies