Josh Rhodes
@joshrhodes.bsky.social
170 followers 160 following 22 posts
Lecturer in Digital History at UCL. All things census related + agrarian/industrial development of Britain 16th-19th centuries.
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joshrhodes.bsky.social
So pleased my article on geo-coding addresses of 121 million + people in British censuses 1851-1911 is now out with Historical Methods! #openaccess

- map any census info (ages, occupations, birthplaces etc) by address

- link census to other spatial datasets

Get the code and data 👇
Map of London in 1901 showing percentage of people born overseas by street.
Reposted by Josh Rhodes
bucksarchives.bsky.social
If you've ever wondered what life in an archive is like, we've discovered this 2005 mobile phone box we've somehow got that's a completely accurate depiction.
A colour photograph of a hand holding a water damaged Nokia box. On it are three men in business attire playing football.
Reposted by Josh Rhodes
pietersender.bsky.social
I’m no expert but I would’ve got a person to do it.
A BBC news headline which says “Penguin says it did “all necessary due diligence” with The Salt Path
joshrhodes.bsky.social
Excited to try this out! 👇
Just pushed the button on running the Egerton model for the last time before we make it public. We hit 1.1 million words in the training data and 126,000 in the verification set. This has been three years in the making, but it's a great model and really accurate. @transkribus.bsky.social
Reposted by Josh Rhodes
lsangha.bsky.social
Wow - so many people already signed up for our Wills Project Transcribathon later this month! 🙏

If you drop by you can transcribe some lines & help make 25,000 English wills more accessible for all.

In person & online, join us here: willstranscribathon.eventbrite.com

#EarlyModern 🗃️ #Palaeography
A poster advertising the 'Wills Project Transcribathon' on Thursday 24 July, 1-4pm BST, in the Digital Humanities Lab at the University of Exeter, and on zoom. The poster features black text on green and yellow backgrounds, and three images - a box of folded will manuscripts, an unfolded will manuscript, and the painting Thomas Braithwaite of Ambleside making his will, Abbot Hall, 1607. Photo: Lakeland Arts.
Reposted by Josh Rhodes
lsangha.bsky.social
📢WILLS TRANSCRIBATHON KLAXON📢

Join us on Thursday 24 July to transcribe wills and go behind the scenes of the wills project!

In person and on Zoom - full details & registration here: willstranscribathon.eventbrite.com

#EarlyModern 🗃️ #transcription @leverhulme.ac.uk @uniofexeterhass.bsky.social
Promotional image advertising 'Wills Project Transcribathon, Thursday 24 July, 1-4pm BST, Digital Humanities Lab University of Exeter and on Zoom. The image also features a portrait of a man making his will, a photo of a box of wills and a page of a will.
Reposted by Josh Rhodes
bengtssonz.bsky.social
📢 new paper klaxon 📢

@felixkersting.bsky.social and I reconsider agrarian inequality in German and Swedish history and the role played (or not played) by landlordism in the road to fascism in Germany and democracy in Sweden. I’m very happy about this one!

journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/...
Reposted by Josh Rhodes
joshrhodes.bsky.social
Very proud to see @charmianmansell.bsky.social on this shortlist!
royalhistsoc.org
The shortlist for the Society's 2025 First Book Prize for early career historians is now available bit.ly/4kkm4lW

Eight titles have been selected, following an open call for submissions of books published in 2024. Two winners of the 2025 prize will be announced in July.

#Skystorians
Image of the eight titles shortlisted for the Royal Historical Society's First Book Prize for early career historians, 2025.

Royal Justice and the Making of the Tudor Commonwealth, 1485-1547, by Laura Flannigan (Cambridge University Press)

Intimate Subjects: Touch and Tangibility in Britain’s Cerebral Age, by Simeon Koole (University of Chicago Press)

Female Servants in Early Modern England, by Charmian Mansell (British Academy / Oxford University Press)

The Capital Market of Manila and the Pacific Trade, 1668-1838: Institutions and Trade during the First Globalization, by Juan Jose Rivas Moreno (Palgrave MacMillan)

Segregated Species: Pests, Knowledge, and Boundaries in South Africa, 1910–1948, by Jules Skotnes-Brown (Johns Hopkins University Press)

The Quislings. The Trials of Norwegian Wartime Collaborators, 1941–1964, by Anika Seemann (Cambridge University Press)

Pistols in St Paul’s: Science, Music, and Architecture in the Twentieth Century, by Fiona Smyth (Manchester University Press)

Desire and Disunity: Christian Communities and Sexual Norms in the Late Antique West, by Ulriika Vihervalli (Liverpool University Press)
Reposted by Josh Rhodes
louisefalcini.bsky.social
I have finished posting the 420,000 words in Thomas Turner's diary of 18thC rural life ( as transcribed by Dean K Worcester). This is significantly more than the published edition (Vaisey, 1984). www.thomasturner.org.uk It's a work in progress. #18c
Thomas Turner – The Diary, 1754–1765
www.thomasturner.org.uk
Reposted by Josh Rhodes
danravenellison.bsky.social
Just finished a day with the #SlowWays team in #Birmingham, charting big plans for a giant extension of our people-powered walking network.

Can't wait to share more.

❤️⭐🐌⚡
A map of part of the Slow Ways network, covering Wales and the middle of England. We can see all towns and cities connected by straight lines, revealing the structure of the walking network.
joshrhodes.bsky.social
Are there any UK based academics out there who've successfully claimed back withheld tax from a US fellowship? I'm trying to claim tax back from a Huntington Library fellowship and have no clue if I'm filling in the right forms! 🤔
joshrhodes.bsky.social
Let me know if this makes sense! If not, happy to arrange a call.
joshrhodes.bsky.social
4. Repeat this process for the osopenroads files (since some addresses are linked to only gb1900 and some only to osopenroads).
joshrhodes.bsky.social
3. The scot_1851_gb1900_recidlkup.tsv file provides a bridge between the recids in the I-CeM file you've downloaded to the gb1900 map data in the scot_1851_gb1900.tsv. Once linked, you can map any of your variables in the downloaded I-CeM file using the geometry data in the scot_1851_gb1900.tsv file
joshrhodes.bsky.social
2. Link the 'recid' field in your Govan I-CeM data to the 'recid' field in the scot_1851_gb1900_recidlkup.tsv file. Then link the 'gb1900_uid' in the scot_1851_gb1900_recidlkup.tsv file to the 'gb1900_uid' field in the scot_1851_gb1900.tsv file.
joshrhodes.bsky.social
Hi Isaac, Great that AddressGB might be of use to you! I might be misunderstanding what you're saying but it sounds like you're trying to geo-code the AddressGB dataset, which is itself already geo-coded? If you're interested in mapping the 1851 census data for Govan, here's what you'd have to do 1/
Reposted by Josh Rhodes
benecarnaghi.bsky.social
Here's the schedule for 'Laughter as a Political Coping Mechanism', a conference that
@drhelenroche.bsky.social and I are organizing on March 28-29 for @durhamhistory.bsky.social. We'll spark fresh conversations about resistance to power—and have a few laughs too! Please join us!
Laughter as a Political Coping Mechanism schedule Laughter as a Political Coping Mechanism schedule Laughter as a Political Coping Mechanism schedule Laughter as a Political Coping Mechanism schedule
Reposted by Josh Rhodes
thorntonsbooks.bsky.social
Big news! The digital edition of Alice Thornton's four Books is now complete and online. There are 1,019 pages (c. 270,000 words) of Thornton’s life-writings in both modernised and semi-diplomatic versions and they are fully searchable.
#EarlyModern 🗃️ 📚 📜
thornton.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/posts/news/2...
Full and Final Edition Now Available
News article - 24 February 2025
thornton.kdl.kcl.ac.uk