# Historical collaborative geocoding

**Authors:** R\'emi Cura, Bertrand Dumenieu, Nathalie Abadie, Benoit Costes, Julien, Perret, Maurizio Gribaudi

arXiv: 1703.07138 · 2018-06-01

## TL;DR

This paper introduces an open-source, extensible geocoding system for historical addresses using gazetteers from historical maps, enabling spatial analysis of historical data despite uncertainties and lack of temporal hierarchy.

## Contribution

It presents a novel approach to historical geocoding based on geohistorical objects and customizable matching criteria, with web interfaces for collaborative editing.

## Key findings

- High return rate in Paris case study
- Fast, interactive geocoding process
- Effective handling of uncertainties in historical data

## Abstract

The latest developments in digital have provided large data sets that can increasingly easily be accessed and used. These data sets often contain indirect localisation information, such as historical addresses. Historical geocoding is the process of transforming the indirect localisation information to direct localisation that can be placed on a map, which enables spatial analysis and cross-referencing. Many efficient geocoders exist for current addresses, but they do not deal with the temporal aspect and are based on a strict hierarchy (..., city, street, house number) that is hard or impossible to use with historical data. Indeed historical data are full of uncertainties (temporal aspect, semantic aspect, spatial precision, confidence in historical source, ...) that can not be resolved, as there is no way to go back in time to check. We propose an open source, open data, extensible solution for geocoding that is based on the building of gazetteers composed of geohistorical objects extracted from historical topographical maps. Once the gazetteers are available, geocoding an historical address is a matter of finding the geohistorical object in the gazetteers that is the best match to the historical address. The matching criteriae are customisable and include several dimensions (fuzzy semantic, fuzzy temporal, scale, spatial precision ...). As the goal is to facilitate historical work, we also propose web-based user interfaces that help geocode (one address or batch mode) and display over current or historical topographical maps, so that they can be checked and collaboratively edited. The system is tested on Paris city for the 19-20th centuries, shows high returns rate and is fast enough to be used interactively.

## Full text

_Full body text omitted from this summary view._ Fetch the complete paper as Markdown: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1703.07138/full.md

## Figures

14 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1703.07138/full.md

## References

49 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1703.07138/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1703.07138