Hello Dorothy,
A few thoughts! Maybe somebody else will add some complementary
remarks or a different perspective :-).
A priori banknotes might most naturally be considered the domain of
museums (and thus ontologies such as CIDOC) as opposed to archival
institutions, for example when it comes to cataloguing banknotes which
have been issued through the years. But banknotes do, it seems, crop
up in archives; here is an example.
https://manuscripts.nls.uk/repositories/2/archival_objects/37710
I'm not sure whether this is the kind of thing you are interested in,
but the metadata expressed on this page could be encapsulated by
several entities and properties in RiC. The collection itself would
likely be a Record Set (RiC-E03). The individual letters would each
likely be a Record (RiC-E04), and one would use RiC-R024 'includes or
included' or its inverse to express the fact the letters belong to the
collection. It is a bit unclear from the description, but the two
banknotes might too each be modelled as records belonging to the
record set in the same way, or if they are associated to ('attachments
to' in some sense) a specific letter, one might consider the text of
the letter itself plus the two banknotes together as forming a record,
and all three of these would each be modelled as a Record Part
(RiC-E05), and RiC-R003 'has or had constituent' would be used to
express the relationship between the letter as a record and each of
its record parts. Already we see how RiC helps us a little here,
allowing for greater precision!
There is a whole host of metadata on the page that one could place at
any one or all of the aforementioned levels, for example the
acquisition information might be expressed at Record Set level by 'has
sender' (RiC-R031), which one might well set to 'the offices of Sir
John Erskine, Edinburgh' or some variant, where these offices would be
modelled as an Agent, likely specifically a Corporate Body (RiC-E011),
assuming that these offices had some kind of legal status; if not
Group (RiC-E09) would likely be best. One could presumably use RiC-041
('is or was controller of') to express the relationship of Sir John
Erskine to his offices, and RiC-R075 ('is or was location of') to
express the fact that Sir John Erskine resided in Edinburgh. Similarly
one could bring in the creation dates at Record Set level.
But for the banknotes themselves as records or record parts, one has
for example 'has creator' (RiC-R027) to express the fact the banknotes
were made by French prisoners, who could be modelled as a Group
(RiC-E09); the fact that they are prisoners could be expressed by
RiC-A15 'Demographic Group', as could the fact they are French,
whereas the relationship to Valleyfield could be expressed using
RiC-R075 ('is or was location of') again. The fact that the
records/record parts are bank notes could be expressed using RiC-A17
'Documentary Form Type'. How to express the fact that they are
forgeries is interesting, one has RiC-A03 ('Authenticity note') and
RiC-A39 ('State'), but I would I think be inclined instead to regard
the banknotes as records/record parts which themselves are authentic
(i.e. are authentic records of the forgery), and just more precisely
specify RiC-A17 'Documentary Form Type' to be 'Forged banknote'. One
can also express forgery as an Activity (RiC-E15) and use RiC-R033
'documents' to express the fact that the records are documenting
forgery. Saying more about the currency of the banknote, the expressed
value, etc, would probably be the domain of CIDOC or similar, I'd
think. For the same reason as I wouldn't use RiC-A03 or RiC-A39, I'd
be inclined to stay away from the tempting RiC-R012i 'is copy of', as
again I'd consider the domain of this to be copies of records qua
records, not to say something about the content of the record.
And then there is a raft of things that can be applied to each
banknote as an Instantiation (RiC-E06), i.e. pertaining to the
physical incarnation of the record as opposed to only its intellectual
content (the two being related by RiC-R025 'has or had
instantiation'). E.g. RiC-A05 'Carrier Type' for whatever the
banknotes were made of (paper?), RiC-A33 'Production Technique' could
be appropriate for more details of how they were made, RiC-A31
'Physical characteristics note' could also be useful to say something
about the physical preservation state of the banknotes, RiC-A23
('Instantiation Extent') for the dimensions of the banknotes, etc.
There's more that could be said for certain, but perhaps this is
enough to give some ideas and set some reflections in motion! Hope it
helps!
Best wishes,
Richard
On Fri, May 17, 2024 at 6:06 PM 'Dorothy Carroll' via
Records_in_Contexts_users <
Records_in_C...@googlegroups.com>
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