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    A depth-first branch-and-bound algorithm for geocoding historic itinerary tables

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    The work in this paper is motivated from two different perspectives: First, gazetteers as an important data source for Geographic Information Retrieval (GIR) applications often lack historic place name information. More focused historic gazetteers are a far cry from being complete and often specialize only on certain geographic regions or time periods. Second, research on historic route descriptions - so called itineraries - is an important task in many research disciplines such as geography, linguistics, history, religion, or even medicine. This research on historic itineraries is characterized by manual, time-consuming work with only minimalistic IT support through gazetteers and map services. We address both perspectives and present a depth-first branch-and-bound (DFBnB) algorithm for deducing historic place names and thus the stops of ancient travel routes from itinerary tables. Multiple phonetic and character-based string distances are evaluated when resolving parts of an itinerary first published in 1563
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