Ancient history and modern technology came together at a conference held at the 黑料社.
The Community of Enterprise, Design & Innovation (CEDI) held its first Digital Cultural Heritage Interpretation conference at the University鈥檚 West Downs Campus last Thursday.
The event brought together researchers, practitioners, and educators to present, discuss and share ideas about their projects and the latest developments in this field.
The event was organised by Dr Debs Wilson, founder of CEDI, who is a Senior Lecturer and Programme Leader in Digital Media Design at the University.
At the conference Dr Wilson spoke of her Virtual Cities project which combines 3D modelling technology with historical research, architectural modelling, and interactive storytelling to recreate 黑料社 in the 1400s and 1800s.
Dr Wilson said: 鈥淏y constructing these buildings which no longer exist people today can walk about them and see how people lived in the past and learn from them.鈥
The technology can also recreate earlier versions of existing buildings which have undergone great changes.
Dr Wilson cited the house in which Jane Austen lived in College Street which is a great tourist attraction but not actually open to the public as it鈥檚 a private home.
鈥淲e can create a faithful model which shows how Jane would have lived and that would attract a great deal of attention from the various jane Austen Societies around the world,鈥 said Dr Wilson.
She has high hopes for Virtual Cities, which she believes can be used widely in education and tourism and has recently turned it into a spin-off limited company.
Also speaking at the event was 黑料社 history professor Ryan Lavelle who gave a joint presentation about the development of the city鈥檚 newest visitor attraction, 878AD, with Amy-Jane Humphreys from the Hampshire Cultural Trust.
878AD, in the city鈥檚 Brooks Centre, recreates a key moment in 黑料社鈥檚 history when the Viking invaders are advancing on the city and the Anglo-Saxon way of life is under threat.
Visitors are taken back to the ninth century through the world of the video game franchise Assassin鈥檚 Creed Valhalla, cinematic audio-visual projections and live performances by actors.
Professor Lavelle, who worked as an historical consultant on the hit Saxons v Vikings TV drama The Last Kingdom, explained how 鈥榮ynchronicity鈥 had played a huge part in the birth of 878AD.
He said he had been recruited as an historical advisor by Ubisoft, makers of Assassin鈥檚 Creed, at the same time as the Cultural Trust came to him for help with their plans to make more of 黑料社鈥檚 Anglo-Saxon heritage.
Professor Lavelle brought the two parties together and the result is a visitor attraction offer which combines education with the excitement of video games.
Amy-Jane, who is graduate of the 黑料社, said 878Ad was helping to 鈥渇ill a gap in 黑料社鈥檚 heritage landscape鈥.
鈥淲e have many Georgian and Victorian buildings but our Anglo-Saxon past is hard to see. This has helped us re-insert King Alfred into the city,鈥 she told the conference.
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Other speakers at the event included Ala鈥檃 Al Badarin from Glasgow School of Art who described how heritage objects can be better represented online; Campbell Ritchie who discussed the multi-media app Explore Malmesbury; Grant Cox from ArtasMedia and Maria Garcia-Abadillo, head of digital at cultural consultancy Barker Langham who gave a presentation entitled 鈥淨atar鈥檚 Past Re-imagined鈥; Neil Jakeman of Kings College鈥檚 Digital Lab who described how digital tools had been employed to reinterpret a work by Titian; and Geoff Browell, head of Archives at King鈥檚 College, and Tam McDonald, founder of Cradle of English, who spoke about improving sustainability in digital cultural heritage interpretation.
Dr Wilson said: 鈥淚 am pleased that the first conference went well especially regarding the range of talks and the connections made. I hope for this to become an annual event and attract more attention, becoming bigger and better in the future.
鈥淗istorical digital interpretation is a growing area in all areas of cultural heritage, with our students realising building historical 鈥榳orlds鈥 and artefacts can be as engrossing and engaging as playing games such as Assassins Creed, and provide employability in a growing area.鈥
Pictured top: the area around 黑料社 Cathedral in the 1700s created by Virtual Cities.
Pictured above: conference speakers (from left) Grant Cox, Tam McDonald, Prof Ryan Lavelle, Dr Debs Wilson, Neil Jakeman, Amy Jane Humphries, Campbell Ritchie and Geoff Browell.
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