Application/tool
output
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Past Lives in Estonian Cultural Data – Developing Interactive Exhibits with 19th Century Parish Court Records and Bibliographical Data
The workflow addresses how 19th-century Estonian parish court records and bibliographical data can be transformed into interactive digital exhibits for the general public. Although these datasets contain rich historical and cultural elements, they are not immediately accessible to non-specialist audiences in their original structured forms. The workflow therefore explores how cultural heritage data can be cleaned, extracted, linked, and redesigned as interactive applications....
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Interactive map of Building Designs in Tartu
This workflow was created during the HUM Hackathon and focuses on building an interactive map application based on the Tartu Building Designs database. The main purpose of this project was to visualise building projects in Tartu between 1870 and 1920. The workflow describes data processing and creating a map application.
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Tunes of the World map: Exploring Estonian and Ukrainian Folk Song Heritage
The project aims to create an interactive digital map for exploring Estonian and Ukrainian folk-song traditions through geographical, thematic, emotional, and structural perspectives. Developed during the HUM Hackathon 2026. The current prototype focuses primarily on Ukrainian folk-song materials, while future versions will integrate Estonian datasets and enable cross-cultural comparison. The workflow combines digital humanities methods, natural language processing, cultural heritage data management, and interactive visualisation. Two large folk-song corpora 85,550 Estonian songs and 56,726 Ukrainian songs were prepared, harmonised, analysed, and transformed into a searchable map interface. Users can navigate from ethnographic regions to individual singers and complete song texts, explore emotional and thematic patterns, and investigate the geographical distribution of oral traditions.
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Spatial and Temporal Patterns of the Photograph Collection of the EFA
The aim of this workflow is to study the spatial and temporal patterns of the photograph collection of the Estonian Folklore Archives (EFA) and to make a large and difficult-to-grasp dataset easier to explore through an interactive visualisation tool. The project focuses on the first 10,000 black-and-white photographs from the EFA photograph collection, which contains approximately 88,000 photographs in total, together with their metadata. On the basis of this material, the distribution of photographs is analysed across time, space, keywords, collection projects, persons, and photographers.
