Sofia, September 2019 (available)

The school in Sofia has made scholars familiar with special, less known and remote collections like the unique collection of Greek, Arabic and Slavonic manuscripts in Centre Dujčev, the Zographou manuscripts collection, which is not accessible in situ to female researchers; and also with the history of Bulgarian Church and religious literature and the history of the oldest and biggest Bulgarian monastery and its role for preserving the religious identity of the Bulgarian population.
Schools:
DH Courses:
Themes:
ABBYY FinereaderAchaemenid EmpireAge determinationApparatusArchaeological Mission of TanisArchigraphemic ReducerArchiveArmenian ManuscriptsArt-Historical SourcesArtificial IntelligenceAssyriologyAuthority RecordsBiographiesBook BindingBootstrapBrāhmī scriptByzantine ChristianityByzantine StudiesCapuchinsCardinal Johannes WillebrandsCarmeliteChinese EpigraphyChinese style’ estampageChristian HebraismChurch HistoryCivil SocietyClassical Text EditorClavis ClaviumCodicologyCollection DevelopmentComputational AttributionConservationContentContextual Disclosure of Documentary HeritageConverterCosmotoolCreative ImaginationCritical Text EditionCSSCuneiform textsCurationCyrillic ScriptsDariah-DEData managementData modelDatabase DesignDatabasesDead Language ProcessingDiachronic CorpusDiachronic ToolsDictionaryDictionary Entry ConverterDigitalDigital DatabaseDigital EditionDigital encoding of ArabicDigital HumanitiesDigital InfrastructureDigital LibraryDigital Presentation of Bulgarian Medieval Written HeritageDigital ResourcesDigitizationDistance LearningE-medievaliaEarly Indic Inscriptions of Southeast AsiaEarly Modern Correspondence NetworksEcumenismEgyptology ResearchElectronic Historical DictionaryExhibitionFAIRFAIR dataFrench School of Asian StudiesFriary LibraryGeoportostGeoreferencingGephiGlagoliticGrammatical AnnotationGreekGuideGurkha ethnic groupHandwritingHebrew ManuscriptHigh Resolution Image VisualizationHimalayan EthnologyHistorical mapsHistorical Network ResearchHistoryHistory of BooksHistory of Bulgarian LanguangeHistory of ReadingHTMLIIIFImage APIImagingImaging TechniquesIndex ReligiosusIndic scriptIndicesInflectional MorphologyInformation RetrievalInteroperabilityInterreligious DialogueIslamic TheologyJesuiticaJewish StudiesJohn the ExarchJSON ManifestLabat CollectionLatin TextsLemmatizationLibrary ManagementLibrary ReconstructionLibrary ResearchLigatureLingua SacraLow CountriesManuscript CollectionsManuscript FragmentsManuscript StudiesManuscriptsMedievalMedieval Islamic mysticismMendicantsMetadatametatadaMirador ViewerMissionNatural Language ProcessingNepali songsNetwork AnalysisNomocanonOCROld BulgarianOld Church SlavonicOld Slavonic ChurchOmekaOnline corpusOnline Data PoolOnline MaterialsOpen AccessOpen SourceOwnershipOxygenPaleographyPapal lettersParadigmsPatriarch Euthymius of TarnovoPeace TreatiesPhotometric StereoPlatformPortable Light DomePresentation APIProcessing InformationProject ManagementProsopographical AnalysisProvenanceProvenance ResearchPublishing PolicyQianlong EraQur’anic fragmentsRare PrintsReIReS Training ProgrammeRepresenting InformationRestorationRETOPEAReversed DictionaryScience CommunciationScience PopularisationScriptoria in Medieval BulgariaScriptsSearch algorithm for Arabic scriptSearch EngineSearch Engine OptimizationSearch StrategiesSelf BrandingShaykhiyya OrderShiite ArchiveSource ApparatusSpecialized Historical DictionariesSpecialized SoftwareStone tabletsSynchronic and Diachronic Historical DictionariesSyriac ManuscriptTaggerTagsetTeaching-LearningTEITEI XMLTerminologyText ComparisonText CorpusText reuseTextual MarkupTheologyThesauriTibetan CultureToolsTRACERTranslationTranslatologyTransliterationsUnicode FontsUniversal ViewerVatican CollectionVatican IIVector SemanticsVerification MethodsVirtual-KeyboardWeb CrawlerWebsite BuildingWordPressWorkflowZographou-collectionZotero

How to Identify and Analyze Medieval Theological Fragments

Zographou (Zograf) Monastery Digital Resources at Sofia University

The Old Bulgarian (Old Church Slavonic) as a Lingua Sacra of the Orthodox Slavonic World