List
Fields
E90 Symbolic Object
E89 Propositional Object
E36 Visual Item
E78 Curated Holding
E21 Person
E28 Conceptual Object
E1 CRM Entity
E24 Physical Human-Made Thing
D1 Digital Object
E7 Activity
E19 Physical Object
E39 Actor
F24 Publication Expression
E4 Period
E13 Attribute Assignment
E72 Legal Object
E18 Physical Thing
E2 Temporal Entity
E74 Group
E53 Place
E70 Thing
Collections
Media
Appraisal
Ranking Event
Production
Members
Description
Depiction
Condition Assessment
Sub Event
Floruit
Digital Creation
Preferred Name
Reference
Temporal Start
Function
Dimension
Temporal Duration
Participant
Type
Curation
Designation Status
Alternative Name
Temporal End
Professional / Commercial Activity
Authorship
Formation
Citation
Object Location
ID Attribution
Social Relations
Current Parthood
Rights
Historical Parthood
Recto/Verso
Use
Substance
Birth
Death
Conservation
Destruction
Dissolution
Coverage
Documentation
Creation
Modification
Institutional Affiliation
Actor Location
Publication
File Location
Provenance
Event Location
Creator
Models
Group
The group reference data model provides a list of standard descriptors (fields) that are typically present in the description of a group or institution in cultural heritage data systems. The intention of this reference model is to provide a consolidated, high-level formal structure comprising the most commonly reused descriptors for a group and, further, to provide for these a set of semantic mapping to the CIDOC CRM. Moreover, each field is marked with respect to its potential functionality with regards to instance matching between overlapping datasets. Builtwork
The built work reference data model provides a list of standard fields that are generally present in the general description of a built work in a national built heritage data register. Built work is taken here in the sense of a - typically - immovable building, or significant individual part thereof, made for some human use-function such as habitation. The fuller documentation of a built work would establish the relation of the physical work to the series of intellectual and social processes related to the production of such works, such as architectural plans, meetings, construction episodes, detailed use and modification history, specific topological relations and so on. This reference model does not intend to cover such specificities but to remain at a more general level, providing a consolidated, high-level reference data model of most commonly used descriptors for a built work and to provide for these, in turn, a set of standard semantic mappings to the CIDOC CRM. This level of modelling is seen as a necessary basic reference point on which to build more complex documentation.Bibliographic Entity
The bibliographic item reference data model provides a list of standard fields that are often found present in the general description of a bibliographic item. The scope of this reference model is the bibliographic item as information object and pointer to real world instances of the publication; this model aims to provide a streamlined list of common descriptors for a bibliographic item and not a complete representation of all aspects of a real bibliographic record. Rather, we are interested here in representing the types of information that are typically gathered by scholars relative to a publication in their creation of bibliographies for use in scholarship and used as the basis for citations. This reference model aims to remain at a general level description, providing a consolidated, high level reference data model of most commonly reused descriptors for a bibliographic item as such and to provide for these in turn a set of standard semantic mappings to the CIDOC CRM. Moreover, each field is marked with regards to its potential functionality with regards to instance matching between overlapping datasets. Event
The event reference data model provides a list of standard fields that are typically present in the general description of an event, taken in the sense of planned public or social occasions, organized towards some purpose. Examples of events would be workshops, meetings, conferences, congresses and so on. The aim of this reference model is to cover basic descriptors that are typically employed in the documentation of an event. This reference model aims to remain at a general level description, providing a consolidated, high-level reference data model of most commonly reused descriptors for an event as such and to provide for these, in turn, a set of standard semantic mappings to the CIDOC CRM. Moreover, each field is marked with regards to its potential functionality with regards to instance matching between overlapping datasets. This level of modelling is seen as a necessary basic reference point on which to build more complex documentation. Place
The place reference data model provides a list of standard fields that are often found present in the general description of a place. Place here is interpreted as a geometric extent used for locating entities relative to a reference space. The scope of entities that this reference model aims to cover are places as typically documented in gazetteers. Examples of places would be Edmonton (the inhabited city), Alberta (the administrative district), Canada (the country). The aim of this reference model is to cover basic descriptors that are typically employed in the documentation of a place, usually by a gazetteer. This reference model aims to remain at a general level description, providing a consolidated, high-level reference data model of most commonly reused descriptors for a place as such and to provide for these, in turn, a set of standard semantic mappings to the CIDOC CRM. Moreover, each field is marked with regards to its potential functionality with regards to instance matching between overlapping datasets. This level of modelling is seen as a necessary basic reference point on which to build more complex documentation. Artwork
The artwork reference data model provides a list of standard fields that are typically present in the general description of an artwork in a cultural heritage data system. The artwork is taken here in the sense of a movable, physical work of some sort such as would be typically inventoried by a museum. Specific documentation of elements of an artwork depends highly upon the kind of artwork it is. This reference model does not intend to cover such specificities but to remain at a general level description, providing a consolidated, high-level reference data model of most commonly reused descriptors for an artwork and to provide for these, in turn, a set of standard semantic mappings to the CIDOC CRM. Moreover, each field is marked with regards to its potential functionality with regards to instance matching between overlapping datasets. Digital Object
The digital object reference data model provides a list of standard fields that are typically present in the general description of a digital object in a cultural heritage data system. A digital object is meant in the sense of a digitally encoded information object represented as bit sequences that have been encoded with a particular format and can be digitally decoded and represented to an end user of a digital information system. Digital objects are often stored as reference or documentation objects relative to cultural heritage items such as textual descriptions stored as PDFs, documentary images, 3D representations and so on. Digital Objects can also form cultural heritage objects in their own right, though this model does not aim to represent this potential aspect of the digital object. Because of the choice to model, the digital object in its role as a secondary documentary resource, the reference data model has been kept as light as possible. This reference model intends to remain at a general level description, providing a consolidated, high-level reference data model of most commonly reused descriptors for a digital object and to provide for these, in turn, a set of standard semantic mappings to the CIDOC CRM. Moreover, each field is marked with regards to its potential functionality with regards to instance matching between overlapping datasets. Archival Unit
Physical Information Carrier
Person
The person reference data model provides a list of standard descriptors (fields) that are typically present in the description of a person in cultural heritage data systems. The intention of this reference model is to provide a consolidated, high-level formal structure comprising the most commonly reused descriptors for a person entity and, further, to provide for these a set of semantic mapping to the CIDOC CRM. Moreover, each field is marked with respect to its potential functionality with regards to instance matching between overlapping datasets.Image
SRDM 1.0
SRDM 1.0
Fields
KeyField | Identifier | Name |
---|---|---|
E90 Symbolic Object
|
E90
|
E90 Symbolic Object |
E89 Propositional Object
|
E89
|
E89 Propositional Object |
E36 Visual Item
|
E36
|
E36 Visual Item |
E78 Curated Holding
|
E78
|
E78 Curated Holding |
E21 Person
|
E21
|
E21 Person |
E28 Conceptual Object
|
E28
|
E28 Conceptual Object |
E1 CRM Entity
|
E1
|
E1 CRM Entity |
E24 Physical Human-Made Thing
|
E24
|
E24 Physical Human-Made Thing |
D1 Digital Object
|
D1
|
D1 Digital Object |
E7 Activity
|
E7
|
E7 Activity |
E19 Physical Object
|
E19
|
E19 Physical Object |
E39 Actor
|
E39
|
E39 Actor |
F24 Publication Expression
|
F24
|
F24 Publication Expression |
E4 Period
|
E4
|
E4 Period |
E13 Attribute Assignment
|
E13
|
E13 Attribute Assignment |
E72 Legal Object
|
E72
|
E72 Legal Object |
E18 Physical Thing
|
E18
|
E18 Physical Thing |
E2 Temporal Entity
|
E2
|
E2 Temporal Entity |
E74 Group
|
E74
|
E74 Group |
E53 Place
|
E53
|
E53 Place |
E70 Thing
|
E70
|
E70 Thing |