http://www.lgpn.ox.ac.uk/online/index.html
More information about it from a listserve:
LGPN  began using computers to          store and manipulate its data as far  back as 1975. Alongside the           publication programme, and despite  the electronic upheavals which have          marked the last 30 years,  LGPN has maintained the material from all the          published volumes  in a consistent state in a relational database, which          was  designed in 1984 to reflect the potential research values of all the           fields which make up an LGPN entry i.e. not only names, but  places, dates,          references, relationships, statuses etc.        
This database is the final repository          of material once it has been edited, and from it: 
- the printed volumes are generated and typeset by computer program;
- research questions may be answered, for our own work and for researchers who contact us;
- data are generated for online dissemination: currently, statistics (numbers of people and names, distribution by gender, place), name indexes and bibliographies;
- primary names are output for online analysis in a variety of fonts.
Online facilities based on the current database:
- Online searches: search and analyse over 35,000 published names.
- Files for downloading: bibliographies, forward and and reverse name indexes, from LGPN I-VA;
- addenda and corrigenda.to LGPN II, Attica (1987), with supplementary bibliography, posted by Sean Byrne,
- LGPN IIA: is the completely revised LGPN II, provided to the LGPN database by Sean Byrne. Full data are not yet available on this site, but the forward and reverse name indexes are available as downloadable files, and statistics about persons, names and places, are posted.
- More general statistics - in preparation.
The XML Project
Elaine  Matthews and Sebastian          Rahtz are now working on a major  conversion project using the Text Encoding          Initiative (TEI) and  Extensible Mark-up Language (XML), as the basis for          LGPN's  long-term preservation, online dissemination, and interoperability           with other online resources. Complete data from all published  volumes          (currently I-IV) will be delivered as one integrated  online resource.        
 
 
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