With the Resource Description Framework (RDF) you can represent Linked Data as subject-predicate-object triples.
But what if you have to represent additional context of those triples?
In this Blog post I will briefly introduce the advanced data management feature “named graphs”
with two examples: different data source named graphs in the BELTRANS project
and different story-contexts for Digital Humanities research.
Furthermore I will graphically illustrate the different ways you can query named graphs with SPARQL!