The project aims at a complete collection of all Latin inscriptions of the Roman province of - that is western Lower , Upper Austria, , southern Bavaria, eastern North-Tyrol, East-Tyrol, , northern Slovenia and Styria. After completion of this work all Austrian inscriptions - except the few Raetian documents - will be updated. The last volume of CIL III regarding the inscriptions of Noricum was published in 1902. Since then the number of Norican documents found have doubled. The number of inscriptions of Noricum runs up to about 2500. Knowing from experience we expect an estimated number of unreported cases of about 500 objects. 30% of those have already been included in the "old" CIL, another major part of inscriptions were presented in different publications in the last decades. Some however are still unpublished. A complete presentation of all Norican inscriptions has never been made. Following the rules of the Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum which were set out already by Theodor Mommsen, all original inscriptions will be examined in order to take down the exact reading and to establish all technical facts. The collected material will be sorted according to the Roman civitates Cetium (St. Pölten), Lauriacum (), Ovilava (Wels), Iuvavum (Salzburg), Aguntum (Dölsach), Teurnia (St. Peter im Holz), (im Zollfeld), Celeia (Celje) and Flavia Solva (Wagna) and published in the CIL. The modern CIL is reformed by giving more detailed presentation of the inscriptions with more technical information, descriptions and particulars to circumstances of finding and where the objects are kept today. There will be a short commentary, photographs and if necessary a reconstruction to each finding. Detailed maps of the region and a historical summary will be provided for a better understanding of the documents and their meanings. There will also be a collection of all information of an inscription in form of a file at the Institute of Ancient History of the University of Vienna which can be used by everybody using inscriptions for their work. Within this project the inscriptions will be provided for the Epigraphische Datenbank Heidelberg (EDH) by which the documents will be available on the internet.