2021-01-07

The ‘Networking Archives’ Team

  • Worked is based on a larger project, thanks to (clockwise from left): Howard Hotson (Principal Investigator), Miranda Lewis, Matthew Wilcoxson, Arno Bosse, Philip Beeley, Ruth Ahnert (Co-Investigator), Sebastian Ahnert (Co-Investigator), Esther van Raamsdonk (http://networkingarchives.org/project-team/)

The Archival and Network Turns

  • The ‘archival turn’:

    • The focus of critical attention on archives themselves
    • Archives are ‘texts’, contain layers of interpretation, at each step (collection, cataloguing, digitisation and so forth)
    • Challenges notion of archives as repositories of historical material and archivists as neutral custodians (Ketalaar 2001)
  • Ahnert et. al The Network Turn (2020) argues that we live in a networked world; this conference is evidence that this is true of historical scholarship.

  • What do we get at the intersection of the two?

Networks and Archives

  • Historical Network Research: letter archives (correspondence data) used to uncover communication practices or make claims about social relations
  • However often the networks reveal as much or more about archival biases and practices as they do these things
  • I suggest we can use networks to talk about archives in their own right
  • What can network analysis tell us about the ‘text’ of archival processes?

Outline of the paper

  • Introduction to the ‘Networking Archives’ project and the archives used

  • Show some of the ways network analysis can be used to understand the shape and process of archives

    • Start with ways of looking for the overall shape
    • Move to more specific: what individual metrics tell us about archives
  • Finish with a more specific example of networks helping to find ‘new’ information in archives

The Archives Used

  • Early Modern Letters Online:
  • A union of c.100 catalogues brought together to study the republic of letters (1500-1800 but focus in 17th century)
  • Based on variety of sources, mostly printed editions but some from manuscript
  • In general catalogues are ‘ego networks:’ built around a static individual at the centre of a network - except the ‘Bodleian card catalogue’.
  • State Papers Online:
  • Digitised Calendars of scans of the State Papers from Britain and Ireland, Tudor and Stuart Periods (1509 - 1714)
  • Individual secretaries often viewed their official documents as ‘private’ and kept them as their possessions on leaving office:e.g. Conway Papers were only returned to the office in the 19th century

The Archives Used

  • When merged they make a large network of approximately 70,000 nodes and 120,000 edges, over 300 years.
  • The result is a ‘hairbrush’ force-directed diagram:
    • Tudor and Stuart connected to each other by a short edge: the ‘handle’ with early 16th century on one end and late 17th on the other.
    • EMLO and Stuart more focused on the 17th century and share more connections.

Using NA to understand the overall shape of the archives

  • Most basic analysis of these archives is to plot the degree distribution
  • Strikingly similar in all cases, despite very different origins of EMLO and SPO.
  • Implications for how we think about the archives: in all cases centred around a few ‘elite’ hubs:
  • Secretaries of State for SPO, and the figures at the centre of catalogues for EMLO

Catalogue Analysis using in and out-degree

In-Degree Out-degree Catalogue
7243 6 Witt, Johan de
4813 3956 Huygens, Constantijn
3506 2356 Vossius, Gerardus Joannes
3407 410 Hartlib, Samuel
3347 2476 Oldenburg, Henry
In-degree Out-Degree Catalogue
3243 4916 Groot, Hugo de
4813 3956 Huygens, Constantijn
16 2483 Graffigny, Françoise de
3347 2476 Oldenburg, Henry
3506 2356 Vossius, Gerardus Joannes



  • High in-degree, low out degree: archives such as Johan de Witt (1625-1672), a personal archive of collected letters: a ‘true’ archive as we might imagine it.
  • High out-degree, low in-degree: for example Françoise de Graffigny (1695–1758), archive of her collected and reassembled correspondence
  • Balance of both: tend to be reassembled collections, often based on printed editions or projects such as Constantijn Huygens (1596-1687) and Henry Oldenburg (1619-1677)

Archives and ‘closeness centrality’

  • Nodes with a high closeness score have a short distance to all other nodes (the inverse of the average distance to all other nodes)
  • In a series of connected archives, can tell which are more ‘embedded’ at the centre, and which at the periphery
  • Closeness is very related to degree: to find outliers, each archive in EMLO was ranked for closeness centrality and plotted against degree rank

Archives and ‘closeness centrality’

Archives and ‘closeness centrality’

  • The results help to describe the catalogues even with very minimal knowledge of their content

    • The ‘centre’ of EMLO is a group of mostly Dutch scholars
    • The archive of Athanasius Kircher is an anomaly: despite high degree, he is ranked lower than expected for closeness.
    • This tallies with our own knowledge: Kircher had a separate (though sometimes connected) network with the Republic of Letters. His inclusion in EMLO is an anomaly, separate to the core of its agenda.
    • On the other hand we have John Aubrey, whose closeness is surprisingly high for his degree: Aubrey was famously well-connected, member of the Royal Society, moved in both Royalist and Republican circles.
    • As new catalogues are added, can help to understand where they are situated, in a glance

Catalogue Analysis

  • Created a network where each catalogue is a node, with an edge between them weighted on how many individuals shared by both
  • Result is a densely connected network which can show how each catalogue relates to each other
  • Three ‘core’ catalogues, State Papers Stuart, State Papers Tudor, Bodleian card catalogue
  • Visualisation shows some surprising connections, such as the strong overlap between Robert Boyle, Constantijn Huygens and the English State Papers.
  • Others on the ‘outside’: Johan de Witt, Athanasius Kircher, despite large collections are ‘separate’ to the ‘core’ of EMLO and State Papers. Different networks.

Catalogue Analysis

Looking for intercepted letters in disconnected components

  • The State Papers have a complicated history:

    • Mostly the personal papers of individual secretaries of state
    • But also includes seized documents, intercepted papers, whole bunches of documents captured from ships (see also the Prize Papers)
    • Some simple tools from network analysis can also help to discover some of these

Disconnected Components

  • Most of the State Papers consists of one ‘giant component’: every node can reach every other
  • However there are some completely ‘disconnected’ components
  • These make interesting starting-points for investigations
  • Many are intercepted or seized documents

Disconnected Components

Disconnected Components

Disconnected Components

  • Letters to Dr. Richard Smith, Roman Catholic Bishop
  • Warrant was issued for Smith’s arrest in 1628
  • He fled England for France, presumably when his letters were found and added to the State Papers







Disconnected Components

  • A secretary or clerk has added ‘Papists’ when filing, indicating these were part of a bundle of suspect communication.









Disconnected Components

Conclusions

  • NA based on historical archives often tells us more about collection than it does about communication practices (e.g a particular centrality might not reflect a node’s position but rather the way that archive has been collected and digitised)
  • If archives are texts, it follows that we can apply ‘distant reading’ to them
  • Network analysis can help us understand what Eric Ketalaar calls the ‘tacit narratives of power and knowledge’ found in archives
  • Help to understand their formation as active objects rather than passive silos of information
  • As more archives are merged this can help to understand differences between them, measure changing centres of gravity, show how they fit in a wider pattern