EpiDoc TEI Customization starts with modules tei, core, textstructure and header
to contain apparatus criticus or textual notes
to contain bibliographical information, previous
publications, etc.
to contain all editorial commentary,
historical/prosopographical discussion, etc.
to contain description of the object, text campus, and
lettering; physical commentary (DEPRECATED for
tei:physDesc)
to contain the text of the edition itself; may include
multiple text-parts
to contain links to figures and other media representing
the text-object (to be deprecated for facsimile)
to contain history of the discovery and recording of the
text-object, including findspot/locations (DEPRECATED
for tei:history)
used to divide a div[type=edition] into multiple parts
(fragments, columns, faces, etc.)
to contain a translation of the text into one or more
modern languages
Text completely lost from the surface and
unrecoverable
Traces of text remains on the surface but cannot be
interpreted
Text erroneously omitted from the surface by the
scribe/cutter
Text omitted from the edition by the editor, for whatever
reason (brevity, context, language, etc.)
ancient acute (oxia, tonos) diacritic
ancient asper (rough breathing) diacritic
ancient circumflex (perispomeni) diacritic
ancient diaeresis
ancient grave (varia) diacritic
characters scored or struck through at the mid-line level
character(s) inverted or rotated with respect to the rest of the text
ancient lenis (smooth breathing) diacritic
two (or more) letters ligatured, monogrammed, or therwise joined
characters reversed (backward-facing) with respect to the rest of the line of text
Letter(s) smaller than those around them
characters written lower than the surrounding text
characters written higher than the surrounding text
characters written with a supralinear line above (e.g. for
abbreviation or numerals)
DEPRECATED: use supraline and underline in combination
Letter(s) taller than those around it, e.g. I-longa
text written with solid line beneath
Line-beginning: marks the start of each line of the text, including the
first
this line-beginning should no be taken as a word-break, i.e. word would be
hyphenated in a printed text
Text dated palaeographically
Text dated by nomenclature or onomastics
Text dated by known persons named or implied within it
Text dated by the reign of an emperor or other ruler
Text dated by the use of official titles
Text dated by explicit internal date
Characters supplied from a parallel version of this text, absent from this one
Characters visible to a previous editor, now lost/unclear due to damage
Restoration of text completely lost from the
surface
Supplement of text erroneously omitted from the surface by
the scribe/cutter
Editorial supplement of words subaudible to the native
reader
Editorial explanation of oblique text in original
Text restored (e.g. from earlier witness or alternate
copy) without specification of current state of this
text