Encoding Textual Variants of the Early Modern Slovenian Poetic Texts in TEI

The paper deals with the problem of encoding the verses and textual variants in the critical edition of Foglar’s Manuscript, a Styrian Baroque hymn book from the mid-eighteenth century. We first show the diplomatic transcript of the verse in selected problematic cases, after which we present the method applied to produce a critical apparatus for approaching textual variants. The base text, i.e. Foglar’s Manuscript, is compared with versions in eight other manuscripts and prints from the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Variants are encoded with XML elements according to the TEI Guidelines as units of the critical apparatus. We highlight some examples of the detailed encoding of rhymes, feet, verse replacements, and textual variants on the spelling , vocabulary and lexical levels of the language. To conclude, we present a number of possibilities for the online display of the electronic diplomatic transcript. The need for the adaptability of these tools to the Slovenian literary tradition is evident.


Introduction
The texts that have been passed down to us over time via manuscript culture were transcribed from witness to witness over a long period of time. In this kind of textual transmission (Textüberlieferung), many textual variations appear in the text, which are called (variant) readings (Lesarten) or variants (Überlieferungsvarianten). Variant readings can be merely scribal mistakes or "errors", but even these can range from using the wrong letter to the omission of an entire line. Variants, however, can also be the scribe's intentional modifications of the text, including anything from orthographic differences and various word forms to major interventions in the text, such as additions, omissions, word order changes, transpositions of whole paragraphs or stanzas, etc. Textual variance also occurs in printed texts in general, that is, in the culture of the printed book: as soon as the same text is published again, variant readings start to appear, albeit not quite as extensively as in the handwritten tradition. Since very few medieval manuscript texts are preserved in the Slovenian language, the problem of textual variation in Slovenian only appears in the early modern age, especially in the Baroque era. Among the most common examples of the Slovenian transcription tradition are those of the Baroque texts of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Among prose texts, for example, the Črnovrški Manuscript, 1 the manuscripts on the Antikrist 2 and the Poljane Manuscript 3 are mentioned in the present paper, while handwritten hymn books were particularly popular among the common people. These hymn books were preserved through the textual transmission in all of the regional varieties of the Slovenian standard language 4 existing in the Slovenian ethnic territories until the unification of the Slovenian standard language in the mid-nineteenth century. They were either copied by scribes from earlier printed or handwritten hymn books, flyers for special occasions (e.g., pilgrimage, church consecration), lectionaries, catechisms and prayer books, or were written from memory, or dictation.
It is precisely by supplying scholarly evidence and an explanation of its textual tradition that the critical edition should provide us with the most authentic and complete version of a literary work's text: "When a text is transmitted through more than one witness, a critical edition will generally take a strong interest in recording the variant readings of some or all of those manuscripts or editions" (Burghart 2017).
Therefore, in addition to the original text, the critical edition should also hand down a textual tradition of witnesses, which exists in the form of transcripts, fragments, drafts, proof sheets, etc. in order to clarify the process of the text's transformation and genesis: "The apparatus is a set of notes designed to foster in the reader an awareness of the historical and editorial processes that resulted in the text he or she is reading and to give the reader what he or she needs to evaluate the editor's decisions" (Damon 2017, 202). In principle, digital editions offer more possibilities than printed versions to present the text in its various formats, as they allow for the juxtaposition of different forms of text (for example, a digital facsimile and a diplomatic transcript) in a selected size category and in precisely selected places, at the level of the paragraph, the stanza or the verse (Ogrin 2005, 9-10).
In the present paper, taking as an example the diplomatic transcript of a selected hymnal manuscript, we present the question of encoding the variant readings of the text as reflected in its handwritten and printed versions according to the TEI Guidelines from 2019. These can be used to produce a variety of digital texts, from simple reading editions to scholarly critical editions, dictionaries and language corpora. The digital markup means that the structural elements of the text (e.g., verses, stanzas, notes) are encoded with TEI-defined tags that the computer can then recognise. The TEI recommendations consist of descriptions of the tags rendered in the XML markup language, which can be defined as an open encoding standard focused not on the display but on the structure and internal relations of the data. We can use these tags to mark in the electronic encoding the desired structure and other characteristics of the text Ogrin 2005, 14;Hockey 2000, 24). In this way, we have, since 2004, prepared nine editions of the eZISS library -Digital Scholarly Editions of Slovenian Literature .
In the following paragraphs, we present Foglar's Manuscript, the selected base text, in a diplomatic transcript, along with its variant readings in the preserved versions of the hymns in other manuscripts and prints. The diplomatic transcript is important not only for locating the original version of the text, but also for comparing versions on all levels of the language. By using suitable web tools, we can also study the stanza forms, verse and metre. In addition to a presentation of selected tools, we were interested in the different kinds of display of the digital diplomatic text in the HTML layout.

The Text Corpus
Foglar's hymn book (1757-1762) is a Slovenian Baroque manuscript containing twenty-four hymns. It originates in the area of the then Austrian province of Styria in the parish of Kamnica near Maribor. The manuscript is named after Lovrenc Foglar, one of its authors (cf. Ditmajer 2017), and contains the following hymn texts: the oldest Slovenian hymns celebrating the pilgrimage to Mariazell in Upper Styria; four hymns dedicated to saints; a festive hymn dedicated to the Holy Trinity; two hymns with eschatological content; one worshipping Jesus' name; one of repentance for the fasting period; and another praising the love of God. During the examination of preserved Slovenian religious hymns known to date, as well as other witnesses containing hymn texts, a number of hymns were discovered that could have served as a base text for Foglar's Manuscript, or vice versa.

The Diplomatic Transcript of the Base Text and Its Variations
In early Slovenian hymn books, one graphic line does not always correspond to a single metric verse. Frequently, due to a lack of paper space, scribes would write the next word or phrase on a second graphic line. In the diplomatic transcript, we used the TEI element label to number stanzas; verse lines encoded with an l (line) are embedded in an lg (line group) element following label; the refrain is nested in the parent stanza (i.e., lg)with an assigned @type attribute; and the break of the verse line is simply marked with an lb (line break) element, as shown in the encoding example of the first stanza of Pesmi od Svete trojce: <label>1</label> <lg> <l>Sve Ti tro ÿ zi zhem moi <lb/>Le ben da ti</l> <l>Sam ſe be jioi kenimo offri <lb/>Spra ffti</l> <l>Tiſto zhem zha ſti ti</l> <l>Hvalo niei ſtu ri ti</l> <lg type="refrain"> <l>Sahva le na do vei ko ma</l> <l>Bo di sve ta troÿ za</l> </lg> </lg> Difficulties are caused above all by hymn texts in which the author has disregarded the verse line, rendering the hymn in prose form. In view of this, hymns with a second verse line continuing in the same graphic line where the first verse line begins were encoded with the ab (anonymous block) element, while the @type attribute was used to mark the stanza, with line breaks indicated as shown in the following example: <ab type="lg"><label>1.</label> <lb/>Vsak Brat inu Sestra <lb/>Serze Posdigni, Iesusa <lb/>Mario Josepha hvali: <lb/>Klizi Jesus Maria mojo <lb/>Serze moj glas, ô Jo-<lb/>seph moj varih sdajna <lb/>Posledni zhass.</ab> In addition to verse lines, stanzas and refrains, rhyme and foot can be specifically encoded in a machine readable format. However, this markup in our scholarly edition have not yet been taken into account. The rhyme patterns can be documented with the @rhyme attribute, while the @label attribute is used to specify which parts of a rhyme scheme a given set of rhyming words represent. The value of this attribute is usually one of the letters of the rhyme pattern. <lg type="poem" rhyme="aabbcc"> <l>Sve Ti tro ÿ zi zhem moi <lb/>Le ben <rhyme label="a">da ti</rhyme></l> <l>Sam ſe be jioi kenimo offri <lb/><rhyme label="a">Spra ffti</rhyme></l> <l>Tiſto zhem <rhyme label="b">zha ſti ti</rhyme></l> <l>Hvalo niei <rhyme label="b">ſtu ri ti</rhyme></l> <lg type="refrain"> <l>Sahva le na do <rhyme label="c">vei ko ma</rhyme></l> <l>Bo di sve ta <rhyme label="c">troÿ za</rhyme></l> </lg> </lg> In the second example the @met attribute indicates the metrical structure, where the symbol | marks the foot boundaries. If some lines divert from the metrical scheme documented in the @met attribute, the deviation is documented with the @real attribute: <lg met="u-|u-|u-|u-/"> <l>Po ſluſhai kai ti jaſ povem</l> <l real="-u|-u|-u|-u/">Kai ti ozhem osnani ti</l> <l>Nesna nu le tu do vſih mo<unclear>u</unclear></l> <l>No tt burgo zhem zha ſti ti</l> <l>No tt Burga je Tÿ Rolarza</l> <l>S nto lar ſke Do li ne</l> <l>Poſhtenih pur garskih ludi</l> <l>Prav ſrezhne korenine</l> </lg> For a scholarly critical edition of a manuscript, especially one from an early period, it is essential to look for textual variants, as they facilitate the detection of errors in the overall text and aid the search for the base text. In the described critical edition, all of the preserved textual transmissions (traditions) are displayed and organised so as to be subordinate to the base text, that is, Foglar's text. Our first attempt at encoding textual variance in poetic texts was the preparation of the digital critical edition of Anton Martin Slomšek's poems, which was devised in the period 2006-2011 and is still in progress. The diplomatic transcript of Foglar's hymn book was treated with the same apparatus criticus, applying the same parallel segmentation method 5 and displaying the variant readings using the app element. The latter contains the base text (the lemma), and one or more variant readings encoded with the rdg (reading) element, each with a reference to the appropriate version via the @witt (witness) attribute: <l> <app> <lem wit="#F">MAri ia Magda lena</lem> <rdg wit="#M">An Bart Magdalena</rdg> <rdg wit="#POD">Enkrat Madalena</rdg> </app> </l> The @wit attribute value refers to the identifier of the description of manuscripts and prints with the aforementioned versions of hymnal texts, such as the value "M" for Maurerjeve pesmarice, or "POD" denoting the Manuskript iz Podmelca, as shown in the list of sources in the preceding section. The critical edition includes 988 units of the critical apparatus app, which contain 988 lem elements and 1072 rdg elements. Only pure textual variants were included as units of the critical apparatus, excluding the identification of the verse-stanza structure of the variant text.
Particularly problematic are hymns whose entire stanzas, or simply the verses of a single stanza, are switched, such as in Pesem od vernih duš. Such switches can be more explicitly marked using the @xml:id (identifier) and @corresp (corresponds) attributes: <l> <app> <lem wit="#F" xml:id="verse5">Dol vo gen ſo sako pa ne</lem> <rdg wit="#P" corresp="#verse9">Vshgala ga je ta praviza</rdg> </app> </l> <l> <app> <lem wit=«#F« xml:id=«verse9«>Vuishgalagaje praviza</lem> <rdg wit=«#P« corresp=«#verse5«><del>Uſse</del> U' tem ogniu sede sakopane</rdg> </app> </l> In textual criticism, we distinguish two major groups of variant readings: substantive and accidental (Greg 1950). The latter include those changes that do not significantly affect the meaning, such as orthographic variants, although in some cases even these cause meaning-related dilemmas. The Baroque text of Foglar's Manuscript is substantively marked by the non-standard use of spelling and the regional phonetic variation in various branches of the textual transmission. The scope of the critical apparatus and the degree of its granularity have been the subject of discussion in philology since the beginning of critical edition production, especially regarding the distinction between the level of purely orthographic differences, or so-called accidentals, and the level of more meaning-related differences, or so-called substantives, which go back to Greg's theory of copy-text and beyond into the history of philology. 6 In order to provide a better visual representation of the various types of modification when applying tools for the display and analysis of texts, we need to classify these modifications more precisely and introduce more units of the critical apparatus within one verse line. In the eighteenth century -due to the lack of Slovenian textbooks on spelling and grammar, and of Slovenian books in general, as well as to the fact that school instruction was carried out in a foreign language (only elementary instruction was conducted in Slovenian) and that the education of copyists varied -the use of graphic characters for certain sounds varied significantly (marked in the critical edition with the @type attribute value): <l> <app> <lem wit="#F">Bres</lem> <rdg wit="#G" type="orthographic">Breſs</rdg> </app> <app> <lem wit="#F">Madesha</lem> <rdg wit="#G" type="orthographic">Madeſha</rdg> </app> <app> <lem wit="#F">spozheta</lem> <rdg wit="#G" type="orthographic">ſpozheta</rdg> </app> </l> Until the mid-nineteenth century, the Slovenian ethnic territories were characterised by the coexistence of regional varieties of the Slovenian standard language. We therefore encounter many phonological and morphological variant readings in this critical edition, which, like spelling variants, do not affect the meaning of a particular word. <app> <lem wit="#F">vun</lem> <rdg wit="#P" type="vocalic''>ven</rdg> </app> Lexical substitutions are of more importance, but in the manuscript texts included in the critical edition it is generally a case of synonyms: <l> <app> <lem wit="#F">dela fairont</lem> <rdg wit="#P" type="lexical">Della pust</rdg> </app> </l>

Tools for Text Analysis and Display
The XML-TEI encoding of textual variation shown above conveys the logical and semantic structure of the variant readings in the hymns, on the basis of which the editor of the critical edition is able to formulate his or her textological and philological analysis of the textual tradition of a given hymn in a machine readable format. However, this format is not intended for the reading public of the digital edition, that is, for actual reading from the screen. For this purpose, it has to be converted into a reader-friendly display format, such as HTML, where the meaning structure of the text is converted into the appropriate graphic design of the text.
To show textual variance in the textual transmission of Foglar's Manuscript, we used (or tested) three tools that have very different sets of functionalities for converting XML-TEI elements to the HTML format of display, and that are derived from very different concepts of the graphic representation of textual variants. Apart from these, Versioning Machine (VM) 7 is the tool that probably has the longest history. Although it boasts plentiful functionalities, we did not opt for it in this case because we would have had to extensively adapt the XML format in order for the VM to display it well. The tools were evaluated according to how the relevant files, prepared in strict agreement with the TEI Guidelines, were converted without special adjustments.

XSLT Conversion
During the preparation of the digital scholarly edition of Foglar's hymn book, XSLT conversion was predominantly used, having been developed as a working tool for the emerging critical edition of the poems by A. M. Slomšek. A web-based tool 8 supporting this conversion enables the conversion of documents from Word (.docx) into TEI and/or the conversion of TEI documents into HTML. For each conversion, a folder is created that is accessible online and contains both the source file and its converted TEI encoding, as well as the HTML file generated from it. The conversion works so that the general conversion of the TEI encoding (provided and continuously developed by the TEI Consortium) into its HTML version is enriched with local changes that the user can activate by selecting the appropriate profile. For our purposes, we developed a ZRC profile that upgrades the general conversion by placing the variant in braces {}, inside which first a lemma, then a variant reading are listed, separated by a vertical slash |. The name of the version referred to by wit/@witness is displayed when a user places a mouse hover over it.
The aforementioned issue of granularity of the critical apparatus, i.e., how detailed the information about individual variant readings should be (based either on words or larger sections), is clearly shown in Figures 3 and 4. First, Figure 3 shows the solution where the lem element contains the entire verse of Foglar's text, followed by the rdg element containing the whole verse from the manuscript by Mihail Paglovec. In this case, the critical apparatus unit contains and defines the entire verse line as a variant reading. Figure 4, on the other hand, shows the same verse lines as Figure 3, but encoded in a way that each word is represented by its own unit, so each element containing a single word from Foglar's text has a corresponding rdg element containing a single word from Paglovec's text. Thus, all of the orthographic and substantive variants are likely to be more clearly shown, with the exception of the spaces between the syllables, which, although not so important for the analysis, does make reading somewhat more difficult. This tool, whose generic conversion according to the TEI Guidelines has been upgraded with a synoptic display of the critical apparatus in a main text line, is intended for a simple but philologically accurate presentation of textual variance in a digital scholarly edition. Its use is conditioned by the consistent adoption of the parallel segmentation method in TEI. Although not providing the reader with the greatest flexibility of display (for example, the ability to hide or display a specific version of the text), it is a valuable tool because it is available as an online service 9 and can easily be installed on any computer, enabling it to be run at any time during the editorial process. It is ideal for displaying texts in which only two or three, perhaps four, versions are compared in each unit of the apparatus, which seems to be entirely appropriate for the actual range of textual variance established in the earlier Slovenian literary tradition.

TEI CAT
The TEI Critical Apparatus Toolbox (TEI CAT) is a web service 10 developed by a group led by Marjorie Burghart. It is explicitly intended for critical editors preparing digital scholarly editions with the parallel segmentation method under the TEI Guidelines. It therefore serves as a work aid enabling editors to check and visualise meaning components in the course of the preparation of their scholarly editions. Many functionalities are provided for this purpose, including those for checking errors and inconsistencies that emerge in the encoding process (Burghart 2016). We will focus on the functionalities that are the most relevant to our textual analyses.
The user sends an XML file to the online service to verify the correctness of the tagging. If the results are positive, the main text or the so-called critical text of the edition will be displayed for viewing. Beside each unit of the critical apparatus, an arrow appears on screen, which can be clicked to open a window with the content of the unit in a classic form based on the use of the right square bracket: everything to the left of the square bracket represents the lemma, while to the right is the variant reading marked with the abbreviation of the variation.
In addition, we are free to select a number of controls, such as whether the system should display page breaks or colour the units of the apparatus that do not contain all of the versions, or, conversely, whether it should colour only those units of the apparatus that contain a specific version, etc.
The most important functionality offered by TEI CAT is a parallel view of all of the versions generated by the tool from the units of the critical apparatus. Regardless of the fact that, according to the TEI Guidelines, the recommended place for the list of versions listWit is in the so-called teiHeader metadata element, the CAT system will locate the listWit anywhere in the TEI document (in our case, it is placed in back), logically sorting its information with respect to the abbreviations. The user can then choose to view all of the versions in a parallel display, or, by ticking only the selected abbreviations, have individual versions displayed in parallel for comparison: The disadvantage of the parallel display in the TEI CAT tool is that, in longer texts, columns match only at the beginning of the file, while in the continuation the relationship can be broken, resulting in the reader losing reference for comparison. The tool cannot (yet) be downloaded to the user's computer and run locally. It is in fact not primarily intended for preparing an edition as a publication for the general readership, but rather serves to allow verifications in the course of the editorial process. However, in addition to its being very practical for displaying the apparatus and several other functionalities, its greatest advantage is the basic statistical analysis that it produces of the document, not just of the TEI tags used, but also of the texts themselves: it generates a simple but informative frequency list of the words occurring in the edition, with any spelling variant being considered as a new word form, of course.

EVT
Open source EVT -Edition Visualization Technology -is designed to produce and publish digital scholarly editions in TEI. As with TEI CAT, the encoding of the critical apparatus with the parallel segmentation method is required. 11 A group led by Roberto Rosselli del Turco conceived EVT with the explicit aim of bridging the gap between the TEI Guidelines as a first-rate standard for the production of complex philological works, such as critical editions, and the problems that philologists face when they want their editions encoded in TEI visualised and published online (Rosselli del Turco 2015). Whether locally or online, EVT is opened and used as a web page in the selected browser. The tool is designed as a dynamic environment, with Javascript being used to upgrade HTML options. It offers a range of options for displaying critical texts and their variants, including a parallel version and various details about the particular units of the apparatus, which can be freely selected by switching between and generating various displays in real time (see Figure 6). Among the options that would be welcome for the type of editions contained in the eZISS library are support for the dynamic display of digital facsimiles, support for the designated entities and their lists, such as place and personal names, etc. (clearly, these must be appropriately encoded in TEI), and a high level of adaptability to specific project needs.
The conception of the EVT tool is determined by the common conceptual world of Western European philology, whereby the critical editor normally choses to present the text of one selected manuscript accompanied by a smaller or larger number of versions of the same text presented in the form of a critical apparatus. This concept is based on a rich textual tradition composed of thousands of medieval manuscripts both in Latin and in various vernaculars. For example, the digital edition of Chaucer's Canterbury Tales prepared by Peter Robinson is based on a transcription of these stories in around 80 preserved manuscripts and incunabula. The Slovenian textual tradition is much less extensive: texts have been preserved in several versions only since the early modern era, while it is only from the eighteenth century onwards that the Slovenian literary tradition offers a significant increase in textual variance. Another large area extremely rich in variation is Slovenian folk poetry, which is not discussed here; nonetheless, EVT might be an ideal tool for studying the exceptional variation of Slovenian folk poetry.
For the Slovenian manuscript culture to which Foglar's Manuscript belongs, it is very often the case that only a single manuscript has survived of several witnesses of the text. In such situations, the rich textual tradition has only been passed down to us as one surviving manuscript, the so-called codex unicus. This becomes the sole object of a critical edition, which requires a meticulous and detailed presentation, in particular by distinguishing between its diplomatic and critical transcript, which is typical of a philology such as Slovenian philology. In the light of the above, the design of a quality and complex tool, such as EVT, should be appropriately adjusted to optimise the display of a parallel representation of a diplomatic and critical transcript of the same text (in some cases, it will involve critical apparatus, but unless at least two versions of the text have been preserved, the apparatus cannot be compiled). From this perspective, Foglar's hymn book is a particularly demanding example. On the one hand, with eight previously recorded versions of textual transmission or tradition, it requires a classical Western European type of scholarly edition; on the other hand, a Slovenian philological type of scholarly edition is determined by the contrasting method involving the diplomatic and the critical transcript of the main text. In the future, this need should also be met by adjustments made to its reading display solutions.

Conclusion
The article presents the method adopted to compile a critical apparatus of variant readings in the digital scholarly edition of Foglar's Manuscript, a Slovenian Baroque hymn book from the mid-eighteenth century. The editor compared Foglar's text with its versions in eight other manuscripts and old prints. The variant readings identified in the collation process were encoded with XML elements according to the TEI Guidelines as units of the critical apparatus. The problem of the variation of older poetic texts raises the problem that various tools embody various functionalities but no tool satisfies the needs of all researchers. This opens up (not entirely new) horizons, where the value of the canonical record of our edition in TEI is further increased, as it can be processed with various, ever evolving tools and according to various needs of presentation and research. Therefore, the first question that arose was how to label a maximum number of analytical findings about the variants using the TEI markup: how to indicate whether the differences are on the level of spelling, vocabulary, lexis, semantics, etc. The second question was how to best display variants of such diversity in the HTML format designed for reading from the screen. Taking into account the requirements of this critical edition, we tested and evaluated three tools for visualising the critical apparatus. In addition to technology-related differences and the diverse functionalities of these tools, their dependence on individual philological and manuscript traditions has also been shown. As well as the critical apparatus of variant readings, the Slovenian handwritten tradition requires support for the parallel presentation of a diplomatic transcript (with the apparatus) and a critical transcript intended for the wider reading public due to the significant orthographic differences between early and modern Slovenian. In further work we will continue to attempt to further bring the Slovene text tradition ever closer to an ideal method of displaying and publishing texts.

SUMMARY
In the process of textual transmission (Textüberlieferung), many textual variations appear in the text, which are called (variant) readings (Lesarten) or variants (Überlieferungsvarianten). The problem of textual variation in Slovenian literary history, which is particularly evident in numerous handwritten and printed hymn books, only appears in the early modern age, especially in the Baroque era. Hymnal texts were transmitted among the people both through oral and written traditions. In the present paper, taking as an example the diplomatic transcript of Foglar's hymn book, we present the question of encoding the variant readings of this hymnal text as reflected in its handwritten and printed versions according to the TEI Guidelines from 2019. The TEI recommendations consist of descriptions of the tags rendered in the currently most widely used XML markup language. We present Foglar's Manuscript, the selected base text, whose diplomatic transcript contains a critical apparatus of its variant readings located in the other eight preserved hymn books originating in the four historical Slovenian regions. We first highlight examples of the diplomatic transcript of verse lines, differentiating between the graphic and the verse line. Various elements and attributes can be added for the machine analysis of the text, such as an analysis of stanzas and feet. We then present ways of encoding variant readings, using the parallel segmentation method and focusing on verse line switches within stanzas and on substantive and accidental variants. Considering the fact that Slovenian literary texts were significantly marked by the regional varieties of the standard language prior to its unification in the mid-nineteenth century, including by an orthographic heterogeneity, we decided to introduce a number of units of the critical apparatus within a verse line and assign each variant reading an @type attribute value. In the final section, we present three tools for text analysis and display: our own XSLT conversion tool, the TEI Critical Apparatus Toolbox and the open source Edition Visualization Technology tool. For the critical edition in question, XSLT conversion, which generates a static web site with a visually separate display of the variant readings in a line, turned out to be reasonably appropriate. The TEI CAT tool provides a very useful parallel display of the variants, but is not intended for final publication.
Generally distinguished by powerful functionalities, the EVT tool should be slightly adjusted for the Slovenian textual tradition, in which the diplomatic and critical transcripts of the same text play the major role. Future technological solutions for digital scholarly editions will have to take into account, in particular, the diverse, complex differences in the structure of both transcripts: the diplomatic transcript, for example, with its specific problems is encoded and shown as a paragraph in which several interventions have taken place; the critical transcript, on the other hand, can display the same text in linguistically regularised forms, as a stanza of rhymed verse with a marked metric structure, etc. The parallel representation of the digital facsimile and two methodologically completely different transcriptions (and possibly even a classical critical apparatus) potentially represents a significant technological problem; however, only such an ecdotic (text-critical) conception of the scholarly critical edition can reveal all of the semantic wealth of early modern Slovenian texts.