The analysis and interpretation of prosopographical networks is an interdisciplinary field of study in
social studies and
humanities. This field emerged from
philology, history, genealogical studies, and sociology and
social network analysis. The term "prosopography" comes from the word
prosopoeia, a figure in classical
rhetoric in which an imagined person is figured and represented as if present.
Claude Nicolet defined the main of prosopography as the history of groups as elements in political and social history, achieved by isolating series of persons having certain political or social characteristics in common and then analyzing each series in terms of multiple criteria, in order both to obtain information specific to individuals and to identify the constants and the variables among the data for whole groups. According to British historian
Lawrence Stone, prosopography had become a two-fold tool for historical research: 1) it helps to unveil interests and connections hidden or unclear in the narrative (i.e.
rhetoric,
historiography, etc.), and 2) it allows analysing the shifting roles in a community and the changing composition of society though
genealogy, legal-institutional position, and inter-personal relations. For both uses, understanding connections and studying the evolution of a group, network analysis presents a helpful and feasible methodological framework for measuring quantities and interpreting data. By applying the methods of
social network analysis, the approaches of prosopography can be quantified, graphed, and assessed. Together with other
complex systems studies, prosopographical networks form part of the field of
network science. In the field of historical studies, the term network has been used in a metaphorical sense alone for a long time. The sociological focus, despite the vast spectrum of tools and methods at its disposal, does not deal with limited extraction of relational data from fragmentary and even contradictory sources. Along with the paucity of sources, this hampers the comprehensive, valid and meaningful application of methods drawn from
social network analysis. Despite these obstacles, the relational perspective of network analysis has helped historical research and prosopography to gain an entirely new methodological vantage point. Social network theory may be able to overcome conceptual and epistemological difficulties presented by historical objects of study and historical sources. Constructing a prosopographical network can offer an alternative, more fluid interpretation of communities in the past, which allows us to take account of coexisting, sometimes overlapping, networks of different sources and geographical delimitations. == Pioneer works ==