Examples include Black Forest; Baltimore, Maryland; and Quartier Latin, Paris. Geographic name parts can be encoded using geogName sub-elements. For greater specificity, however, use district, settlement, region, country, and bloc sub-elements. The name of the list from which a controlled value is taken, such as the Thesaurus of Geographic Names (TGN), may be recorded using the auth attribute.
The model of this element is based on the geogname element of the Encoded Archival Description (EAD).
<elementSpec ident="geogName" module="MEI.namesdates">
<gloss versionDate="2022-05-18" xml:lang="en">geographic name</gloss>
<desc xml:lang="en">The proper noun designation for a place, natural feature, or political
jurisdiction.</desc>
<classes>
<memberOf key="att.common"/>
<memberOf key="att.bibl"/>
<memberOf key="att.edit"/>
<memberOf key="att.facsimile"/>
<memberOf key="att.lang"/>
<memberOf key="att.name"/>
<memberOf key="model.nameLike.geogName"/>
</classes>
<content>
<rng:zeroOrMore>
<rng:choice>
<rng:text/>
<rng:ref name="model.textPhraseLike"/>
<rng:ref name="model.editLike"/>
<rng:ref name="model.transcriptionLike"/>
</rng:choice>
</rng:zeroOrMore>
</content>
<remarks xml:lang="en">
<p>Examples include Black Forest; Baltimore, Maryland; and Quartier Latin, Paris. Geographic
name parts can be encoded using <gi scheme="MEI">geogName</gi> sub-elements. For greater
specificity, however, use <gi scheme="MEI">district</gi>, <gi scheme="MEI">settlement</gi>,
<gi scheme="MEI">region</gi>, <gi scheme="MEI">country</gi>, and <gi scheme="MEI">bloc</gi>
sub-elements. The name of the list from which a controlled value is taken, such as
the
Thesaurus of Geographic Names (TGN), may be recorded using the <att>auth</att>
attribute.</p>
</remarks>
<remarks xml:lang="en">
<p>The model of this element is based on the <ref target="https://www.loc.gov/ead/EAD3taglib/EAD3-TL-eng.html#elem-geogname">geogname</ref> element of the Encoded Archival Description (EAD).</p>
</remarks>
</elementSpec>