2015
DOI: 10.1002/bult.2015.1720410206
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The design and implementation of ORBIS: The Stanford geospatial network model of the Roman world

Abstract: Elijah Meeks is the lead developer at the Center for Interdisciplinary Digital Research in the Stanford University Library and can be reached at emeeksstanford.edu.C reating a network model of the Roman world presented an exciting opportunity to implement techniques for the study of the past that had only previously been seen in computational geography departments and as interactive toy demos. Such a visualization would allow scholars the capacity to explore how the Roman world may appear differently from … Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…This optimal period of fair weather and regular winds, in this high seas maritime route between Rome and Seville, mostly corresponds to the months of May, June, and July. 33 A direct seagoing voyage from Rome to Hispalis would have taken about 16 days, and the return journey would have taken about 14 to 19 days between April and September (Arnaud, 2005;Meeks et al, 2016). That is slightly more than a month of sailing, in total, for a return trip.…”
Section: Flat-bottomed Riverboats and Seagoing Freightersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This optimal period of fair weather and regular winds, in this high seas maritime route between Rome and Seville, mostly corresponds to the months of May, June, and July. 33 A direct seagoing voyage from Rome to Hispalis would have taken about 16 days, and the return journey would have taken about 14 to 19 days between April and September (Arnaud, 2005;Meeks et al, 2016). That is slightly more than a month of sailing, in total, for a return trip.…”
Section: Flat-bottomed Riverboats and Seagoing Freightersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As transport infrastructure exists within spatial networks in real space, it readily lends itself towards reproduction in network graphs, where each edge represents a section of the route (such as a road, river, or sea-lane) and each node a junction between them. Network modelling has been applied extensively to the study of Roman transport at a variety of levels, ranging from the entirety of the Roman Empire, in the case of the Stamford ORBIS model (Meeks (2015); Scheidel (2014)), to that of a single city (Livarda and Orengo, 2015). Modelling has been used to identify the configuration of transport networks, highlighting important routes and junctions within the network alongside mapping areas of high and low connectivity.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“… 8 Scheidel 2013; Scheidel 2014; and relevant discussion at Meeks 2015: 20. See the topic ‘Research’ at for additional working papers.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%