Copyright

Document Contents

Copyright

The Clergy of the Church of England Database

Copyright © The Clergy of the Church of England Database Project, 2005

CCEd is committed to maintaining the Database as a resource that is publicly available and that is free at the point of access. All material is made available free of charge for individual, non-commercial use only, provided this publication is acknowledged. Guidance is given below on how this acknowledgment should be cited.

All other use is prohibited without the express written consent of the Project Directors.

Every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the data in relation to the source documents on which it is based.

The following persons assert their moral right to be recognised as author and editor of aspects of this work: Arthur Burns, Kenneth Fincham, Stephen Taylor.

Copyright of the publication system software is vested in King’s College London. The following assert their moral right to be recognised as author and designer of aspects of the computer system on which this publication is based: Zaneta Au, John Bradley, Arianna Ciula, Harold Short, Paul Spence, Paul Vetch, Hafed Walda.

The publication software uses a number of systems and products which must be acknowledged

XML
XML (eXtensible Mark-up Language) is an international standard developed and maintained by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C).
TEI
The Text Encoding Initiative (TEI) Guidelines are an international and interdisciplinary standard that facilitates libraries, museums, publishers, and individual scholars to represent a variety of literary and linguistic texts for online research, teaching, and preservation. The TEI standard is maintained by the Text Encoding Initiative Consortium, which is an international scholarly collaborative organisation.
MySQL
MySQL is an open-source database system. It is a key component of LAMP (Linux, Apache, MySQL, PHP / Perl / Python), an open source enterprise software stack. It is developed and marketed by MySQL AB.
Java
Java technology is a portfolio of products that are based on the power of networks and the idea that the same software should run on many different kinds of systems and devices. It is developed and marketed by Sun Microsystems.
Tomcat
Tomcat is a free, open-source implementation of Java Servlet and JavaServer Pages technologies developed under the Jakarta project at the Apache Software Foundation.
Saxon
Saxon is an open-source XSLT and XQuery processor developed by Michael Kay.
xMod
xMod is a publishing application developed by the Centre for Computing in the Humanities at King’s College London that enables humanities scholars to create information-rich websites based on documents encoded in XML using the Text Encoding Initiative’s Guidelines.
rdb2java
rdb2java is a suite of software components designed to facilitate the development of interfaces between web applications under J2EE servers such as Tomcat and relational databases. It has been developed by members of the Centre for Computing in the Humanities at King’s College London.