The following is a machine translation of “The TEI Archive” page.
Text Encoding Initiative (TEI)
The TEI Archive
Table of Contents
- Poughkeepsie Principles
- Sponsoring Organizations
1. TEI Committee Documents 1987-1998
- TEI Advisory Committee
- Analysis and Interpretation Committee
- Edited Papers
- Metalanguage and Syntax Issues Committee
- Steering Committee
- Technical Review Committee
- Text Documentation Committee
- Text Representation Committee
2. Previous Versions of the Guidelines
3. Unnumbered Reports, Articles, Presentations, etc.
4. Songs, Photos, and Other Ephemera
- TEI Tite Documents
- Workgroups That Have Completed Their Work
- Preliminary Drafts of Electronic Text Editing (MLA, 2006)
- All Available P5 Releases
This page contains archival materials from the Text Encoding Initiative. Spanning the first ten years from the Poughkeepsie Conference of 1988 to the beginning of the process of establishing the TEI Consortium in 1999, these materials were collected from fragments across various servers and personal collections, though much of it derives from the excellent Listserv archive maintained by Wendy Plotkin in Chicago.
No claim is made that the materials preserved here are in any way complete, but efforts have been made to track down and preserve here the primary documents that constitute the history of the TEI. If you have, or know of someone who has, original TEI documents not available here, please contact: webmaster AT tei-c DOT org.
The 1987-1998 archive section reflects the original TEI working committee structure. Documents are listed by TEI document number, an indexing scheme devised early on by Michael Sperberg-McQueen, which groups documents by origin (a 2-3 letter code indicating the committee or working group) and type (M for minutes, W for working documents, P for proposals, etc.). Numbers are (usually) assigned chronologically within each prefix.
Documents currently in production or currently active are not included here but are linked from the TEI home page.
Note: This area was previously called the “TEI Vault,” hence the URL. If you see references to the Vault elsewhere, they refer to this archive space.