hucit:CanonicalCitation leaf node


URI

http://purl.org/net/hucit#CanonicalCitation

Label

Canonical Citation

Description

Canonical citations are references to ancient texts, usually expressed by abbreviations and referring to "logical" rather than "physical" units of texts.

A citation to the first line of the Iliad, for instance does not refer to the very page of a specific critical edition of the text, but to the first line of the first book of the work (e.g. Hom. Il. 1.1).

Some examples of canonical citations:
* Arist. Poetics 1451a35-b6 and 1459a17-29
* Hom. Il. 1.1
* A. Cicero, DND 1.41

In Hucit a citation is essentially a pointer and not a direct reference to a text. What the citation is pointing to is an element (TextElement) of an abstract structure of the text (TextStructure). If the citation is canonical–as not all citations are necessarily canonical–the citation is pointing to an element of a CanonicalTextStructure.

Usage

Instances of hucit:CanonicalCitation can have the following properties:

PROPERTYTYPEDESCRIPTIONRANGE
From class hucit:Citation
hucit:has_content owl:FunctionalProperty hucit:ConceptualObject
hucit:has_form owl:FunctionalProperty hucit:CitationStyle
From class owl:Thing
dc:creator owl:AnnotationProperty owl:Thing
dc:description owl:AnnotationProperty owl:Thing
hucit:is_canonical_structure_of owl:ObjectProperty owl:Thing
hucit:is_identified_by owl:FunctionalProperty hucit:TextElement
owl:deprecated owl:AnnotationProperty owl:Thing
owl:topObjectProperty owl:ObjectProperty owl:Thing
owl:versionInfo owl:AnnotationProperty owl:Thing
rdfs:comment owl:AnnotationProperty owl:Thing
rdfs:label owl:AnnotationProperty owl:Thing

Implementation

@prefix : <http://purl.org/net/hucit#> .
@prefix owl: <http://www.w3.org/2002/07/owl#> .
@prefix rdfs: <http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#> .

:CanonicalCitation a owl:Class ;
    rdfs:label "Canonical Citation"@en ;
    rdfs:comment """Canonical citations are references to ancient texts, usually  expressed by abbreviations and referring to "logical" rather than "physical" units of texts. 

A citation to the first line of the Iliad, for instance does not refer to the very page of a specific critical edition of the text, but to the first line of the first book of the work (e.g. Hom. Il. 1.1).

Some examples of canonical citations:
* Arist. Poetics 1451a35-b6 and 1459a17-29
* Hom. Il. 1.1
* A. Cicero, DND 1.41

In Hucit a citation is essentially a pointer and not a direct reference to a text. What the citation is pointing to is an element (TextElement) of an abstract structure of the text (TextStructure). If the citation is canonical–as not all citations are necessarily canonical–the citation is pointing to an element of a CanonicalTextStructure."""@en ;
    rdfs:subClassOf :Citation .