German Inscriptions of the Middle Ages (DI)
The mission of the research center is to catalog and publish annotated editions of Latin and German-language inscriptions from the Middle Ages and the early modern period up to the year 1650 in Baden-Württemberg. The project is part of a joint initiative of the German academies of sciences and the Austrian Academy of Sciences and Humanities, which was founded in 1935 and, after a hiatus due to World War II, gained new momentum in the 1960s.
Twenty of the 114 volumes of the corpus “Die Deutschen Inschriften” (DI) published to date have appeared in the Heidelberg series; three additional volumes are in preparation. Each volume contains both the original inscriptions and those preserved only in copy form from one or more city or county districts.
Given the threat that environmental factors pose to many inscribed objects, systematic on-site inventorying and photographic documentation—even in regions not yet scheduled for immediate scholarly study—is an urgent task aimed at safeguarding and preserving cultural heritage. The research center conducts basic research for numerous disciplines, including history, philology, art history, and folklore. Of particular note is the paleographic (scriptural) component of the work, which makes an important contribution to the general history of writing.
(as of January 2025)
Inscriptions from the Middle Ages and the Early Modern Period
The goal of this inter-academic project—in which, in addition to the Heidelberg research center, research centers in Bonn, Göttingen, Greifswald, Halle, Leipzig, Jena, Mainz, Munich, and Vienna are also participating—is to compile as complete a collection as possible and to produce an annotated edition of all Latin and German-language inscriptions from the Middle Ages and the Early Modern Period up to the year 1650. As of now, the collection covers Germany and Austria as well as South Tyrol. The results of the collection are published in the DI volumes. A volume contains either the inscriptions of one or more city or county districts (in Austria: political districts) or the inscriptions of individual cities. For cities with a particularly large collection of inscriptions, individual groups are published separately. Both inscriptions that are still extant and those preserved only in copies are included.
The Heidelberg Research Center
- Short Profile (YouTube) -
The Heidelberg Research Center has been in existence since 1935. However, continuous research work only became possible in 1963 with the appointment of a full-time staff member. Initially, the research center was responsible for cataloging inscriptions in Baden, the Rhine Palatinate, the Saarland, southern Hesse, Nassau, and the Prussian Rhine Province, and at times also in Alsace and Lorraine. Following a redistribution of the areas of responsibility among the participating academies in 1971, Heidelberg is now responsible for the inscriptions of the state of Baden-Württemberg. Currently, the editorial work is carried out by three research staff members, in addition to a position dedicated to the professional production of photographs and image processing.
Subject of the thesis
The term "inscriptions" encompasses all written sources that were not produced using the conventional methods of writing schools and chancelleries—that is, those not written on paper or parchment. Printed materials are also not considered inscriptions. To put it positively: Inscriptions are affixed to stone, metal, wood, glass, enamel, wall plaster, textiles, or animal products and produced using a wide variety of techniques: carved, engraved, painted, cast, etched, punched, embossed, molded in stucco, embroidered, woven, incised, cut out, or executed as mosaics. The texts of the inscriptions often possess great historical significance, as they were frequently intended for public spaces and designed to have a lasting impact there. As unique pieces, they are generally firmly tied to the location for which they were created.
Inscriptions on tombstones ensure that the deceased are remembered and remind the living of their own mortality; architectural inscriptions on public and private buildings name the patrons and the year of construction; dedicatory inscriptions on church furnishings commemorate generous benefactors; explanatory or admonitory captions complement pictorial representations in murals, stained-glass windows, and panel paintings; Inscriptions on legal documents secure legal claims by being affixed in a publicly accessible location; stonemasons, woodcarvers, goldsmiths, painters, and foundry workers sign their works with master’s marks; prayers and invocations are “immortalized” through their inscription—for example, on a chalice.
Working Methods
The practical work is based on a card index organized by district for the entire state of Baden-Württemberg. This index includes all inscriptions that can be identified through an analysis of local, regional, and art-historical literature—both those that have survived in their original form and those that have since been lost. This provides an initial overview of the number and locations of the inscriptions, which is essential for the fieldwork. All collected metadata is also managed and linked together via photo, object, and location databases designed specifically for this purpose.
All localities within a district are visited and systematically searched for inscriptions. The surveys focus on the historic town centers, with particular attention to churches and cemeteries. Museum collections are examined, and church bells and liturgical objects are checked for any inscriptions. New discoveries can occasionally expand a district’s collection of inscriptions by up to a third compared to the initial inventory. The staff record all inscriptions found in data sheets, document them in detail, and photograph the objects bearing the inscriptions.
In addition to cataloging extant inscriptions, another important task is identifying copies of lost inscriptions in public and private archives and libraries. Where early systematic handwritten catalogs of inscriptions exist, copies can account for more than half of the total inventory of inscriptions in a given area of study.
German Inscriptions Online
The“German Inscriptions Online”(DIO) project is run as an inter-academic initiative. Technical implementation is handled by a dedicated unit at the Digital Academy in Mainz. The long-term goal is to digitize and make available online all volumes of the DI Inscriptions series.
The Heidelberg Research Center has been participating in the DIO project since 2012. To date, eleven volumes of the Heidelberg series have been made available online through this portal. The online version allows for the publication of significantly more photographs of inscriptions than in the printed volumes.
The first seven volumes of the Heidelberg Series, which were produced according to modified editorial guidelines and are therefore not suitable for publication within the DIO framework, have been made available online as PDF files through the Heidelberg University Library’s Digitization Center.
Work completed to date
At the time the overall project was launched, there was no large-scale, comprehensive, systematic collection of medieval and early modern inscriptions—compiled in accordance with scholarly editorial guidelines—either in Germany or abroad. What had been published in the way of inscriptions had often appeared in widely scattered, hard-to-access regional and local historical writings and rarely met scholarly standards. Furthermore, medieval and early modern epigraphy as a scholarly discipline—one concerned with the recording, editing, and analysis of post-antique inscriptions—had yet to be developed and established. In this context, the Heidelberg research center—initially funded by the DFG and the Baden Ministry of Culture—was assigned the additional task of introducing new staff members from the other academies to the practical work of epigraphy. The guidelines were to be modified and refined over the course of the project in light of the experience gained.
The title “Die Deutschen Inschriften” (DI) was agreed upon for the volumes of inscriptions to be published. They are published in separate series by the participating academies. Since 1990, regular meetings have been held among staff members from all epigraphic centers to ensure a high degree of consistency in editing and publication guidelines. The jointly compiled “Terminology for the Description of Inscriptions” (1999) deserves special mention as an important resource that extends beyond the scope of epigraphic research. International epigraphy conferences are also organized every two to three years.
The volumes of inscriptions compiled so far by the Heidelberg Research Center cover, outside Baden-Württemberg, the cities of Mainz (Rhineland-Palatinate) and Fritzlar (Hesse) and the former district of Miltenberg (Bavaria), as well as, within the state, the districts of Böblingen, Calw, Enzkreis, Freudenstadt, Göppingen, Hohenlohekreis, Karlsruhe, Ludwigsburg, Main-Tauber-Kreis, Neckar-Odenwald-Kreis, Rastatt, Rems-Murr-Kreis, Rhein-Neckar-Kreis, and Schwäbisch Hall, as well as the city districts of Baden-Baden, Heidelberg, Karlsruhe, Mannheim, and Pforzheim. In 2016, the editorial work in the administrative district of Karlsruhe was completed. For the Stuttgart administrative district, more than half of the inscription material has been edited. By the end of the project term (set in 2014) in 2030, the collections of the Esslingen and Heilbronn districts as well as the city district of Heilbronn are to be processed.
By 2030, the remaining DI volumes of the Heidelberg series that are not yet available online are also scheduled to be gradually made available online as part of DIO (see above). A photographic inventory of the inscriptions throughout the state, originally conducted since 1989 as preparatory work for future DI volumes, was completed in 2018, meaning that even for the southern half of the state—which is no longer slated for an edition—the photographic material is now largely complete.
(As of November 2024)
German Inscriptions Online (DIO)
- for volumes DI 20, 22, 25, 30, 37, 41, 54, 57, 73, 78 -
Full-text search (with filtering options)
Search by collection area
German Inscriptions (retrodigitized, Heidelberg University Library)
- for volumes DI 1, 2, 8, 12, 14, 16, 47 -
Full-text search and OCR
(As of October 2024)
- The Inscriptions of the Main and Tauber Valleys in Baden. Wertheim-Tauberbischofsheim, collected and edited by Ernst Cucuel and Hermann Eckert, with a preface to the complete works by Friedrich Panzer (Die Deutschen Inschriften 1), Stuttgart 1942, reprinted 1969.
- The Inscriptions of the City of Mainz from the Early Middle Ages to 1650, collected and edited by Fritz Viktor Arens based on the preliminary work of Konrad F. Bauer (Die Deutschen Inschriften 2), Stuttgart 1958.
- The Inscriptions of the Districts of Mosbach, Buchen, and Miltenberg, based on the preliminary work by Ernst Cucuel, compiled and edited by Heinrich Köllenberger (Die Deutschen Inschriften 8), Stuttgart 1964.
- The Inscriptions of the City and District of Heidelberg, collected and edited by Renate Neumüllers-Klauser (Die Deutschen Inschriften 12), Stuttgart 1970.
- The Inscriptions of the Town of Fritzlar, collected and edited by Theodor Niederquell (Die Deutschen Inschriften 14), Munich 1974.
- The Inscriptions of the Rhine-Neckar District (II). Former Mannheim District, Former Sinsheim District (northern part), collected and edited by Renate Neumüllers-Klauser, with the assistance of Anneliese Seeliger-Zeiss (Die Deutschen Inschriften 16), Munich 1977.
- The Inscriptions of the Greater Karlsruhe Area, collected and edited by Anneliese Seeliger-Zeiss (Die Deutschen Inschriften 20), Munich 1981.
- Inscriptions from the Enz District up to 1650, edited by Renate Neumüllers-Klauser (Die Deutschen Inschriften 22), Munich 1983.
- The Inscriptions of the Ludwigsburg District, collected and edited by Anneliese Seeliger-Zeiss and Hans Ulrich Schäfer (Die Deutschen Inschriften 25), Wiesbaden 1986.
- The Inscriptions of the Calw District, collected and edited by Renate Neumüllers-Klauser (Die Deutschen Inschriften 30), Wiesbaden 1992.
- The Inscriptions of the Rems-Murr District, collected and edited by Harald Drös and Gerhard Fritz, drawing on the preliminary work of Dieter Reichert (Die Deutschen Inschriften 37), Wiesbaden 1994.
- The Inscriptions of the District of Göppingen, collected and edited by Harald Drös (Die Deutschen Inschriften 41), Wiesbaden 1996.
- The Inscriptions of the District of Böblingen, collected and edited by Anneliese Seeliger-Zeiss (Die Deutschen Inschriften 47), Wiesbaden 1999.
- The Inscriptions of the Former District of Mergentheim, collected and edited by Harald Drös (Die Deutschen Inschriften 54), Wiesbaden 2002.
- The Inscriptions of the City of Pforzheim, collected and edited by Anneliese Seeliger-Zeiss (Die Deutschen Inschriften 57), Wiesbaden 2003.
- The Inscriptions of the Hohenlohe District, collected and edited by Harald Drös, 2 vols. (Die Deutschen Inschriften 73), Wiesbaden 2008.
- The Inscriptions of the City of Baden-Baden and the District of Rastatt, collected and edited by Ilas Bartusch (Die Deutschen Inschriften 78), Wiesbaden 2009.
- The Inscriptions of the Schwäbisch Hall District I: The Former Crailsheim District, compiled and edited by Harald Drös (Die Deutschen Inschriften 93), Wiesbaden 2015.
- The Inscriptions of the Freudenstadt District, based on preliminary research on Alpirsbach Abbey conducted by Anneliese Seeliger-Zeiss, compiled and edited by Jan Ilas Bartusch, 2 vols. (Die Deutschen Inschriften 94), Wiesbaden 2016.
- The Inscriptions of the Schwäbisch Hall District II: The Former Schwäbisch Hall and Limpurger Land Districts, collected and edited by Harald Drös, 3 vols. (Die Deutschen Inschriften 112), Wiesbaden 2022.
- The Source Value of Inscriptions. Papers and Reports from the 1990 Esslingen Symposium, ed. by Renate Neumüllers-Klauser (Supplements to the Proceedings of the Heidelberg Academy of Sciences and Humanities, Phil.-hist. Class, 1992, Vol. 7), Heidelberg 1992.
- German Inscriptions. Terminology for the Description of Inscriptions, compiled by the staff of the Inscription Commissions of the Academies of Sciences in Berlin, Düsseldorf, Göttingen, Heidelberg, Leipzig, Mainz, Munich, and the Austrian Academy of Sciences and Humanities Vienna, Wiesbaden 1999.
(As of November 2024)
head of research
Dr. Harald Drös
Employees
Dr. Francisca Feraudi-Gruénais
Sophie Marie Daschner, M.A.
Elke Schneider, photographer
Members of the commission accompanying the project
Prof. Dr. Ronald G. Asch (Freiburg)
Prof. Dr. Michele C. Ferrari (Erlangen)
Prof. Dr. Annette Gerok-Reiter (Tübingen)
Prof. Dr. Volker Himmelein (Karlsruhe)
Prof. Nikolas Jaspert (Heidelberg)
Prof. Dr. Steffen Patzold (Tübingen), Chair
Prof. Dr. Sebastian Scholz (Zurich)
Prof. Dr. Jürgen Wolfrum (Heidelberg)
Prof. Dr. Bernhard Zimmermann (Freiburg), Vice Chair
Brief Profile of the Research Center (YouTube)
German Inscriptions Online (DIO)
Corpus Vitrearum Medii Aevi (CVMA, Germany)
Celtic Inscribed Stones Project (CISP)
Corpus of Inscriptions from Medieval France
in-scription. online journal of epigraphic studies
Inscriptions from Medieval Italy
(As of October 2024)
New cooperation agreement with the Department of History at the University of Zielona Góra (Poland)
In October 2025, Academy of Sciences and Humanities cooperation agreement was signed with the approval and support of the University of Zielona Góra and the Heidelberg Academy of Sciences and Humanities .
This further strengthens the long-standing informal academic exchange between the Department of History at the University of Zielona Góra and the Heidelberg-based research center "Die Deutschen Inschriften," paving the way for expanded cooperation.
Address:
Karlstraße 4 | 69117 Heidelberg
Phone: +49 (0) 6221 / 54 3574 or -3269
Fax: +49 (0) 6221 / 54 3369
Email: hadw
Web editing of this project page
Dr. Francisca Feraudi-Gruénais