Corpus of Electronic Texts Edition: E650001-003

Articles for Ballyshannon, Co. Donegal

Author: [unknown]

Background details and bibliographic information

File Description

John T. Gilbert

Funded by University College, Cork and
The HEA via PRTLI4

Electronic edition compiled by Beatrix Färber

1. First draft, revised and corrected.

Extent of text: 1,150 words

Publication

CELT: Corpus of Electronic Texts: a project of the History Department, University College Cork
College Road, Cork, Ireland—http://www.ucc.ie/celt

(2009)

Distributed by CELT online at University College, Cork, Ireland.
Text ID Number: E650001-003

Availability [RESTRICTED]

Available with prior consent of the CELT programme for purposes of academic research and teaching only.

Sources

    Manuscript source
  1. MS. in Library of the Royal Irish Academy, Dublin, p. 44.
    The edition used in the digital edition
  1. John T. Gilbert, Articles for Ballyshannon, Co. Donegal in A Contemporary History of Affairs in Ireland. , Dublin, Irish Archaeological Society (1880) volume 3part 2page 320–221

Encoding

Project Description

CELT: Corpus of Electronic Texts

Sampling Declaration

The present text covers pages 320–321 of the volume as part of the appendix.

Editorial Declaration

Correction

Text has been proof-read twice and parsed using SGMLS.

Normalization

The electronic text represents the edited text. A few obsolete spellings have been regularized within the markup using the reg element. The original is given in the text. Text supplied by the editor is marked sup resp="JTG". Names and dates are tagged. Encoding is subject to revision.

Quotation

There is no direct speech.

Hyphenation

Soft hyphens are silently removed. When a hyphenated word (and subsequent punctuation mark) crosses a page-break, this break is marked after the completion of the word (and punctuation mark).

Segmentation

div0=the articles. Page-breaks are marked pb n="".

Standard Values

Dates are standardized in the ISO form yyyy-mm-dd.

Interpretation

Dates are tagged.

Profile Description

Created: by officers of the English army (May 1652)

Use of language

Language: [EN] The text is in seventeenth-century English.

Revision History