ICT:Data Model Entity definitions
Data Model – Entity Definitions
This page defines the principal conceptual entities of the project.
Its purpose is to establish a shared and explicit understanding of what each entity represents before any technical implementation is undertaken.
These definitions are conceptual. They describe meaning and responsibility, not database tables, Cargo structures, or software mechanics.
Scope
These definitions apply to:
- Conceptual ER modeling
- Cargo or database schemas
- Page Schemas and forms
- Editorial workflows
- Interpretation of diagrams and documentation
If an entity definition is unclear or disputed, implementation must be postponed.
Conceptual overview
The model distinguishes clearly between:
- Storage → Files
- Interpretation of files → DigitalAssets
- Subjects of research → HeritageObjects, Persons, Organizations
- Narrative structure → ResearchChapters
The fundamental semantic flow is:
File → DigitalAsset → Research Entity
DigitalAssets provide meaning to files. Research entities provide historical meaning to DigitalAssets.
Core Research Entities
HeritageObject (HO)
Definition
A HeritageObject (HO) represents a historical, conceptual, or material entity that is the subject of study.
It answers the question:
- “What is the thing we are studying?”
Examples
- A sanatorium
- A building
- A historically meaningful place
- A document or register
- A functional or conceptual part of a larger entity (e.g. “Medical practice”)
What a HeritageObject is not
A HeritageObject is:
- Not a digital file
- Not a person
- Not an organization
- Not a research chapter
- Not a technical database record
Structural behavior
HeritageObjects are recursive.
Each HeritageObject may:
- Have zero or one parent HeritageObject
- Have zero or more child HeritageObjects
This supports conceptual decomposition.
Example:
- Sanatorium
- Architecture
- Equipment
- Medical practice
Relationships
A HeritageObject may:
- Be documented by multiple DigitalAssets
- Be linked to Persons with roles
- Be linked to Organizations with roles
- Have Persons or Organizations as holders
- Be included in multiple ResearchChapters
- Be tagged with Keywords
Purpose
HeritageObjects are the primary conceptual anchors of the research.
Person
Definition
A Person represents a historical individual with agency.
It answers the question:
- “Who was involved historically?”
Examples
- Sister Maria
- A director
- An architect
- A patient
- A shareholder
What a Person is not
A Person is:
- Not a MediaWiki user
- Not a HeritageObject
- Not an organization
Relationships
A Person may:
- Play roles in relation to HeritageObjects
- Play roles in relation to Organizations
- Be documented by DigitalAssets (photos, documents, biographies)
- Act as a holder of HeritageObjects
Roles belong to relationships, not to the Person entity itself.
Purpose
Persons model historical agency, responsibility, and participation.
Organization
Definition
An Organization represents a historical collective actor with institutional continuity.
It answers the question:
- “Which collective body acted or was responsible?”
Examples
- Religious congregations
- Companies
- Institutions
- Associations
- Managing bodies
What an Organization is not
An Organization is:
- Not a person
- Not a HeritageObject
- Not a MediaWiki user group
Relationships
An Organization may:
- Play roles in relation to HeritageObjects
- Have Persons playing roles within it
- Be documented by DigitalAssets (articles, reports, archival documents)
- Act as a holder of HeritageObjects
Purpose
Organizations model collective responsibility and institutional continuity.
Digital Representation
DigitalAsset (DA)
Definition
A DigitalAsset (DA) represents the research interpretation and extended metadata of exactly one digital file.
It answers the question:
- “How do we interpret and describe this specific digital file as a source?”
A DigitalAsset is the human, research-oriented layer that gives meaning to a file.
Core principle
One DigitalAsset corresponds to exactly one File.
There is never a grouping of multiple files inside one DigitalAsset.
Each file that requires interpretation has its own DigitalAsset.
Examples
- A photograph and its description
- A scanned document
- An OCR transcription
- A cropped or processed derivative
- A newspaper article scan
- A portrait of a person
Relationship to Files
A DigitalAsset:
- Always references exactly one File
- Does not manage storage
- Does not replace MediaWiki file handling
Files are storage. DigitalAssets are interpretation.
Recursive behavior
DigitalAssets are recursive.
A DigitalAsset may:
- Derive from another DigitalAsset (parent)
- Have multiple derived children
This models:
- variants
- processing steps
- derivatives
- provenance chains
Relationship to research entities
A DigitalAsset may document one or more:
- HeritageObjects
- Persons
- Organizations
DigitalAssets represent sources about research subjects.
What a DigitalAsset is not
A DigitalAsset is:
- Not a file
- Not a container of files
- Not a historical object itself
- Not merely technical metadata
Purpose
DigitalAssets exist to:
- Separate meaning from storage
- Provide rich research metadata
- Record provenance
- Link sources to research subjects
File (External System Entity)
Definition
A File is a physical digital object managed by MediaWiki.
Examples include:
- images
- scans
- PDFs
- audio or video files
Modeling status
Files are:
- Outside the conceptual research domain
- Managed entirely by MediaWiki
- Included only as external reference entities
Files provide storage only. They gain research meaning only through a DigitalAsset.
Research Structure
ResearchChapter
Definition
A ResearchChapter represents a conceptual or narrative unit of interpretation.
It answers the question:
- “Where does this belong in the research story?”
Characteristics
A ResearchChapter:
- structures interpretation
- is not merely a date range
- may be thematic or chronological
Structural behavior
ResearchChapters are recursive.
A Chapter may contain subchapters.
Top levels often represent time slices. Lower levels often represent themes.
Time is descriptive, not defining.
Relationships
- A Chapter may include multiple HeritageObjects
- A HeritageObject may belong to multiple Chapters
Purpose
ResearchChapters organize interpretation rather than historical reality itself.
Supporting Concepts
Keywords
Keywords provide flexible thematic tagging.
They support discovery but do not define structure.
Roles
Roles qualify relationships between entities.
Examples:
- creator
- owner
- restorer
- shareholder
- board member
- holder
Roles are attributes of relationships, not of entities themselves.
Certainty (future extension)
Certainty expresses confidence in an assertion.
It qualifies statements such as:
- roles
- attributions
- dates
- interpretations
Certainty is attached to relationships or claims, never to entities.
This concept is reserved for later implementation.
Status
This document defines the agreed conceptual meaning of the entities – Version 3.1.
All ER diagrams, DBML definitions, and technical implementations must conform to these definitions.