How archives benefit from geocoordinates in Wikidata – Call for Contributions
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How archives benefit from geocoordinates in Wikidata – Call for Contributions
Summary
How archives benefit from geocoordinates in Wikidata – Call for Contributions is a blog post[1].
Key Facts
- How archives benefit from geocoordinates in Wikidata – Call for Contributions authored Jens Bemme[2].
- How archives benefit from geocoordinates in Wikidata – Call for Contributions authored Martin Munke[3].
- How archives benefit from geocoordinates in Wikidata – Call for Contributions's instance of is recorded as blog post[4].
- How archives benefit from geocoordinates in Wikidata – Call for Contributions's instance of is recorded as call for papers[5].
- How archives benefit from geocoordinates in Wikidata – Call for Contributions's copyright license is recorded as Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International[6].
- How archives benefit from geocoordinates in Wikidata – Call for Contributions's DOI is recorded as 10.58079/133FY[7].
- How archives benefit from geocoordinates in Wikidata – Call for Contributions's language of work or name is recorded as German[8].
- How archives benefit from geocoordinates in Wikidata – Call for Contributions's publication date is recorded as +2025-01-16T00:00:00Z[9].
- How archives benefit from geocoordinates in Wikidata – Call for Contributions's main subject is recorded as sector of archives[10].
- How archives benefit from geocoordinates in Wikidata – Call for Contributions's main subject is recorded as Wikidata[11].
- How archives benefit from geocoordinates in Wikidata – Call for Contributions's main subject is recorded as FactGrid[12].
- How archives benefit from geocoordinates in Wikidata – Call for Contributions's main subject is recorded as georeferencing[13].
- How archives benefit from geocoordinates in Wikidata – Call for Contributions's main subject is recorded as Wikidata property to identify organizations[14].
- How archives benefit from geocoordinates in Wikidata – Call for Contributions's work available at URL is recorded as https://saxorum.hypotheses.org/12360[15].
- How archives benefit from geocoordinates in Wikidata – Call for Contributions's catalog is recorded as Regional bibliography of Saxony[16].
- How archives benefit from geocoordinates in Wikidata – Call for Contributions's described at URL is recorded as https://archive20.hypotheses.org/14502[17].
- How archives benefit from geocoordinates in Wikidata – Call for Contributions's described at URL is recorded as https://nearby.hypotheses.org/653[18].
- How archives benefit from geocoordinates in Wikidata – Call for Contributions's described by source is recorded as Call for Edits Nearby: Open Archives Metadata from Saxony[19].
- How archives benefit from geocoordinates in Wikidata – Call for Contributions's published in is recorded as saxorum.hypotheses.org[20].
- How archives benefit from geocoordinates in Wikidata – Call for Contributions's title is recorded as Wie Archive von Geokoordinaten in Wikidata profitieren – Call[21].
- How archives benefit from geocoordinates in Wikidata – Call for Contributions's has effect is recorded as Call for Edits Nearby: Open Archives Metadata from Saxony[22].
- How archives benefit from geocoordinates in Wikidata – Call for Contributions's cites work is recorded as Call for blog posts for the multilingual knowledge of the near surroundings with ‚Nearby‘ queries[23].
- How archives benefit from geocoordinates in Wikidata – Call for Contributions's cites work is recorded as How to edit nearby[24].
- How archives benefit from geocoordinates in Wikidata – Call for Contributions's cites work is recorded as Wikidata: Workshops in the Saxon State Archives[25].
- How archives benefit from geocoordinates in Wikidata – Call for Contributions's cites work is recorded as Project Saxony State Archives Leipzig, 2023[26].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Authored works include Jens Bemme[2], a local historian[27], b. 1978[28], of Germany[29], awarded the Open Science Fellows Program[30], specialised in citizen science[31] and Martin Munke[3], a historian[32], b. 1984[33], of Germany[34], specialised in digital humanities[35].
Publication
How archives benefit from geocoordinates in Wikidata – Call for Contributions's publication date is recorded as +2025-01-16T00:00:00Z[9]. Its language of work or name is recorded as German[8].
Subject and Themes
Main subjects include sector of archives[10], Wikidata[11], FactGrid[12], georeferencing[13], and Wikidata property to identify organizations[14].