We use the Getty Thesaurus of Geographic Names for coding place names in our 
museum and archival cataloguing systems. We're currently struggling with the 
best way to display and make these terms searchable in our online database.
 
Currently we're just displaying the term itself, which is flawed, because just 
seeing "Springfield" or "Florence" doesn't give the user enough information to 
figure out where something was really made.
 
But we're finding that the number of variant place types in TGN makes it hard 
to figure out a concise way of indiciating a more detailed place name that will 
work consistently across all entries in the thesaurus.
 
For example, the full hierarchy for Florence (the one in Italy) is 
 
Florence (inhabited place), Firenze (province), Tuscany (region), Italy 
(nation), Europe (continent), World (facet)
 
Neigborhoods and other local subdivisions can be even more of a mouthfull:
 
Notting Hill (neighborhood), Kensington and Chelsea (borough), London 
(inhabited place), Greater London (metropolitan area), England (country), 
United Kindom (nation), Europe (continent), World (facet)
 
Ideally I'd probably like to show the above as  "Florence, Italy" and "Notting 
Hill, London, England"
 
But I'm having trouble coming up with an algorithm that can consistently spit 
these out in the form we'd want to display given the data available in TGN.
 
Would welcome any ideas or feedback on this.
 
Thanks,

David
 
 
__________
 
David Dwiggins
Systems Librarian/Archivist, Historic New England
141 Cambridge Street, Boston, MA 02114
(617) 994-5948
ddwiggins at historicnewengland.org
http://www.historicnewengland.org

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