Aeneas changes the way historians connect the past

We present the first contextualization model for ancient inscriptions, intended to help historians better interpret, attribute, and recover fragmentary texts.

Writing was everywhere in the Roman world – carved on everything from imperial monuments to everyday objects. From political graffiti, love poems and epitaphs to business transactions, birthday invitations and magical spells, the inscriptions offer modern historians a rich insight into the diversity of everyday life in the Roman world.

Often these texts are fragmentary, faded or deliberately destroyed. They are almost impossible to restore, date and place without contextual information, especially when comparing similar inscriptions.

Today we publish approx paper in Nature introduction Aeneasthe first artificial intelligence (AI) model to contextualize ancient inscriptions.

When working with ancient inscriptions, historians traditionally rely on their knowledge and specialized resources to identify “similarities” – that is, texts that are similar in sound, syntax, standardized formulas, and origin.

Aeneas significantly speeds up this complex and time-consuming work. It analyzes thousands of Latin inscriptions, finding textual and contextual similarities in seconds, allowing historians to interpret and build on the model's findings.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here