Index to the Heritage at Risk Editions 2000, 2001/02, 2002/03, 2004/05, 2006/07, and 2008–10
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
NPWS Pocket Guide 3E (South Coast)
SOUTH COAST 60 – South Coast Murramurang National Park. Photo: D Finnegan/OEH South Coast – 61 PARK LOCATIONS 142 140 144 WOLLONGONG 147 132 125 133 157 129 NOWRA 146 151 145 136 135 CANBERRA 156 131 148 ACT 128 153 154 134 137 BATEMANS BAY 139 141 COOMA 150 143 159 127 149 130 158 SYDNEY EDEN 113840 126 NORTH 152 Please note: This map should be used as VIC a basic guide and is not guaranteed to be 155 free from error or omission. 62 – South Coast 125 Barren Grounds Nature Reserve 145 Jerrawangala National Park 126 Ben Boyd National Park 146 Jervis Bay National Park 127 Biamanga National Park 147 Macquarie Pass National Park 128 Bimberamala National Park 148 Meroo National Park 129 Bomaderry Creek Regional Park 149 Mimosa Rocks National Park 130 Bournda National Park 150 Montague Island Nature Reserve 131 Budawang National Park 151 Morton National Park 132 Budderoo National Park 152 Mount Imlay National Park 133 Cambewarra Range Nature Reserve 153 Murramarang Aboriginal Area 134 Clyde River National Park 154 Murramarang National Park 135 Conjola National Park 155 Nadgee Nature Reserve 136 Corramy Regional Park 156 Narrawallee Creek Nature Reserve 137 Cullendulla Creek Nature Reserve 157 Seven Mile Beach National Park 138 Davidson Whaling Station Historic Site 158 South East Forests National Park 139 Deua National Park 159 Wadbilliga National Park 140 Dharawal National Park 141 Eurobodalla National Park 142 Garawarra State Conservation Area 143 Gulaga National Park 144 Illawarra Escarpment State Conservation Area Murramarang National Park. Photo: D Finnegan/OEH South Coast – 63 BARREN GROUNDS BIAMANGA NATIONAL PARK NATURE RESERVE 13,692ha 2,090ha Mumbulla Mountain, at the upper reaches of the Murrah River, is sacred to the Yuin people. -
Cultural Heritage, Reconstruction and National Identity in Kosovo
1 DOI: 10.14324/111.444.amps.2013v3i1.001 Title: Identity and Conflict: Cultural Heritage, Reconstruction and National Identity in Kosovo Author: Anne-Françoise Morel Architecture_media_politics_society. vol. 3, no.1. May 2013 Affiliation: Universiteit Gent Abstract: The year 1989 marked the six hundredth anniversary of the defeat of the Christian Prince of Serbia, Lazard I, at the hands of the Ottoman Empire in the “Valley of the Blackbirds,” Kosovo. On June 28, 1989, the very day of the battle's anniversary, thousands of Serbs gathered on the presumed historic battle field bearing nationalistic symbols and honoring the Serbian martyrs buried in Orthodox churches across the territory. They were there to hear a speech delivered by Slobodan Milosevic in which the then- president of the Socialist Republic of Serbia revived Lazard’s mythic battle and martyrdom. It was a symbolic act aimed at establishing a version of history that saw Kosovo as part of the Serbian nation. It marked the commencement of a violent process of subjugation that culminated in genocide. Fully integrated into the complex web of tragic violence that was to ensue was the targeting and destruction of the region’s architectural and cultural heritage. As with the peoples of the region, this heritage crossed geopolitical “boundaries.” Through the fluctuations of history, Kosovo's heritage had already become subject to divergent temporal, geographical, physical and even symbolical forces. During the war it was to become a focal point of clashes between these forces and, as Anthony D. Smith argues with regard to cultural heritage more generally, it would be seen as “a legacy belonging to the past of ‘the other,’” which, in times of conflict, opponents try “to damage or even deny.” Today, the scars of this conflict, its damage and its denial are still evident. -
Magdalena Sto J an O V a the Cemetery Church of Rožen
MAGDALENA STO J AN O V A THE CEMETERY CHURCH OF ROŽEN MONASTERY Rožen Monastery is situated on a hill between Rožen and Melnik amidst magnificent mountain scenery. Isolated from busy centres and difficult of access—though rich in natural beauty—this position has proved exceptionally favourable for the monastery’s survival up to the present day. Its architecture indicates a relatively early construction date, around the twelfth or thirteenth century1, but the first written source for Rožen Monastery dates only from 15512. Having studied a great number of Greek documents, the architect Alkiviadis Prepis3 has established that the monastery was originally a de pendency with a church dedicated to St George, which was built in the thir teenth century by the Byzantine soldier George Contostephanus Calameas and his wife. According to surviving data from the period up until 1351, in 1309 they presented the dependency to the Georgian Iviron Monastery on Mount Athos, and continued to enrich it4. After this area was conquered by 1. On the basis of the construction and the plan, Assen Vassiliev dates the church to about the twelfth century : A Vassiliev, Ktitorski portreti, Sofia 1960, p. 88. George Trajchev opines that the monastery was built in 1217 (Maitastirite v Makedonija, Sofia 1933, pp. 192- 3). The opinion that the church dates from the fourteenth or fifteenth century is shared by Metropolitan Pimen of Nevrokop ('Roženskija manastir’, Tsarkoven vestnic, 17 (1962) 14) and Professor V. Pandurski ('Tsarcovni starini v Melnik, Ročenskija manastir i Sandanski’, Duhovna cultura, 4 (1964) 16-18). Nichola Mavrodinov suggests an earlier date in: 'Tsarcvi i manastiri v Melnik i Rožen, Godishnik na narodnija musej, vol. -
Accessing Country Last Updated: May 2014
Aboriginal Communities Accessing Country Last updated: May 2014 These Fact Sheets are a guide only and are no substitute for legal advice. To request free initial legal advice on an environmental or planning law issue, please visit our website1 or call our Environmental Law Advice Line. Your request will be allocated to one of our solicitors who will call you back, usually within a few days of your call. Sydney: 02 9262 6989 Northern Rivers: 1800 626 239 Rest of NSW: 1800 626 239 EDO NSW has published a book on environmental Law for Aboriginal communities in NSW. For a more comprehensive guide, read Caring for Country: A guide to environmental law for Aboriginal communities in NSW. Overview Aboriginal people need to be able to access lands and waters to continue their traditions. These traditional practices include fishing, hunting, gathering food, camping, gathering firewood, visiting places with cultural significance, caring for country, caring for burial and other sites, and practising culture. Aboriginal people may always attempt to negotiate access, but the landowner may not always agree. The legal rights of Aboriginal people to access land and water depend on the legal status of the land or waterway. Further information about land dealings may be obtained from the EDO’s series of Fact Sheets and from the NSW Aboriginal Land Council. Access to particular types of land General A Local Aboriginal Land Council (LALC) may negotiate an agreement with any land owner or occupier or person in control of land to permit an Aboriginal group or 1 http://www.edonsw.org.au/legal_advice 2 individual ‘to have access to the land for the purpose of hunting, fishing or gathering on the land’.2 If an agreement cannot be reached, the LALC may request that the Land and Environment Court issue a permit to access the land, or a right of way across the land, for the purpose of hunting, or fishing, or gathering traditional foods for domestic purposes.3 The Native Title Act 1993 (Cth) allows for access agreements to be negotiated. -
Sacral Art of the Serbian Lands in the Middle Ages Byzantine Heritage and Serbian Art Ii Byzantine Heritage and Serbian Art I–Iii
II BYZANTINE HERITAGE AND SERBIAN ART II BYZANTINE HERITAGE AND SERBIAN ART BYZANTINE HERITAGE SACRAL ART OF THE SERBIAN LANDS IN THE MIDDLE AGES BYZANTINE HERITAGE AND SERBIAN ART II BYZANTINE HERITAGE AND SERBIAN ART I–III Editors-in-Chief LJUBOMIR MAKSIMOVIć JELENA TRIVAN Edited by DANICA POPOVić DraGAN VOJVODić Editorial Board VESNA BIKIć LIDIJA MERENIK DANICA POPOVić ZoraN raKIć MIODraG MARKOVić VlADIMIR SIMić IGOR BOROZAN DraGAN VOJVODić Editorial Secretaries MARka TOMić ĐURić MILOš ŽIVKOVIć Reviewed by VALENTINO PACE ElIZABETA DIMITROVA MARKO POPOVić MIROSLAV TIMOTIJEVIć VUJADIN IVANIšEVić The Serbian National Committee of Byzantine Studies P.E. Službeni glasnik Institute for Byzantine Studies, Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts SACRAL ART OF THE SERBIAN LANDS IN THE MIDDLE AGES Editors DraGAN VOJVODić DANICA POPOVić BELGRADE, 2016 PUBLished ON THE OCCasiON OF THE 23RD InternatiOnaL COngress OF Byzantine STUdies This book has been published with the support of the Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development of the Republic of Serbia CONTENTS CULTuraL SPACES AND SACraL FraMEWORKS ON THE BOUNDARY AMONG WORLDS AND CULTURES – THE ESSENCE AND SPACES OF SERBIAN MEDIEVAL ART 13 Dragan Vojvodić BYZANTIUM IN SERBIA – SERBIAN AUTHENTICITY AND BYZANTINE INFLUENCE 41 Bojana Krsmanović Ljubomir Maksimović SERBIA IN BYZANTIUM – THE PATRONAGE OF SERBIAN KTETORS IN THE BYZANTINE EMPIRE 57 Miodrag Marković SERBIAN PATHS OF RHOMAEAN CULTURE – THE RoLE OF SERBIA IN SPREADING BYZANTINE-STYLE ART TOWARDS THE WEST AND NoRTH OF EUROPE 75 Miroslava Kostić Miloš Živković * THE LITURGICAL FraMEwoRK OF SERBIAN AND BYZANTINE RELIGIOUS ART 91 Vladimir Vukašinović PAN-CHRISTIAN SAINTS IN SERBIAN CULT PraCTICE AND ART 103 Dubravka Preradović Ljubomir Milanović A NATIONAL ‘PANTHEON’: SAINTLY CULTS AT THE FoUNDATION OF SERBIAN MEDIEVAL STATE AND CHURCH 119 Danica Popović ‘GoD DWELT EVEN IN THEIR boDIES IN SPIRITUAL WISE’ – RELICS AND RELIQUARIES IN MEDIEVAL SERBIA 133 Danica Popović I. -
NPWS Annual Report 2000-2001 (PDF
Annual report 2000-2001 NPWS mission NSW national Parks & Wildlife service 2 Contents Director-General’s foreword 6 3 Conservation management 43 Working with Aboriginal communities 44 Overview 8 Joint management of national parks 44 Mission statement 8 Performance and future directions 45 Role and functions 8 Outside the reserve system 46 Partners and stakeholders 8 Voluntary conservation agreements 46 Legal basis 8 Biodiversity conservation programs 46 Organisational structure 8 Wildlife management 47 Lands managed for conservation 8 Performance and future directions 48 Organisational chart 10 Ecologically sustainable management Key result areas 12 of NPWS operations 48 Threatened species conservation 48 1 Conservation assessment 13 Southern Regional Forest Agreement 49 NSW Biodiversity Strategy 14 Caring for the environment 49 Regional assessments 14 Waste management 49 Wilderness assessment 16 Performance and future directions 50 Assessment of vacant Crown land in north-east New South Wales 19 Managing our built assets 51 Vegetation surveys and mapping 19 Buildings 51 Wetland and river system survey and research 21 Roads and other access 51 Native fauna surveys and research 22 Other park infrastructure 52 Threat management research 26 Thredbo Coronial Inquiry 53 Cultural heritage research 28 Performance and future directions 54 Conservation research and assessment tools 29 Managing site use in protected areas 54 Performance and future directions 30 Performance and future directions 54 Contributing to communities 55 2 Conservation planning -
Ultimate Travel Company Escorted Tours
TREASURES OF GEORGIA TANIA ILLINGWORTH & DR YAROSLAVA BILINKINA Tbilisi THE ULTIMATE TRAVEL COMPANY ESCORTED TOURS Escorted Tour Treasures of Georgia TREASURES OF GEORGIA WITH TANIA ILLINGWORTH & DR YAROSLAVA BILINKINA Louisa Thompson – Escorted Tours Consultant 020 7386 4682 020 7386 4620 [email protected] Tania Illingworth (nee Tolstoy) is three quarters Russian by birth, all her grandparents having fled the Russian Revolution in 1918. A degree in Russian Language & Literature, with Byzantine Art, reinforced her passionate interest in all aspects of the former Russian Empire. Since the fall of the Berlin Wall and the collapse of Communism, Tania has travelled widely throughout Central, Eastern Europe and Russia. Art Historian and keen musician, Yaroslava is Curator of Georgian Artefacts at the State Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg. Yaroslava is passionate about her subject: Georgian history and culture. She will accompany the tour throughout speaking fluent Russian, Georgian and English. We like to think that our success has been built on a simple formula - to deliver a high standard of service before, during and after each holiday, a duty of care and commitment to you, and value for money. We aim to be totally flexible in our approach, as this allows us to create the holiday that you want and one that is easy and enjoyable to plan. However, if you feel that there are areas in which we could improve our service to you, please do not hesitate to contact either our Managing Director Nick Van Gruisen, or Executive Director Rowan Paterson, on 020 7386 4646. You can also email them: [email protected] [email protected] Contact Louisa Thompson – Escorted Tours Consultant Direct Line 020 7386 4682 Telephone 020 7386 4620 Email [email protected] 2 Escorted Tour Treasures of Georgia DETAILED ITINERARY Tania Illingworth (née Tolstoy) is leading this one-off tour to Georgia next May. -
Heritage at Risk
H @ R 2008 –2010 ICOMOS W ICOMOS HERITAGE O RLD RLD AT RISK R EP O RT 2008RT –2010 –2010 HER ICOMOS WORLD REPORT 2008–2010 I TAGE AT AT TAGE ON MONUMENTS AND SITES IN DANGER Ris K INTERNATIONAL COUNciL ON MONUMENTS AND SiTES CONSEIL INTERNATIONAL DES MONUMENTS ET DES SiTES CONSEJO INTERNAciONAL DE MONUMENTOS Y SiTIOS мЕждународный совЕт по вопросам памятников и достопримЕчатЕльных мЕст HERITAGE AT RISK Patrimoine en Péril / Patrimonio en Peligro ICOMOS WORLD REPORT 2008–2010 ON MONUMENTS AND SITES IN DANGER ICOMOS rapport mondial 2008–2010 sur des monuments et des sites en péril ICOMOS informe mundial 2008–2010 sobre monumentos y sitios en peligro edited by Christoph Machat, Michael Petzet and John Ziesemer Published by hendrik Bäßler verlag · berlin Heritage at Risk edited by ICOMOS PRESIDENT: Gustavo Araoz SECRETARY GENERAL: Bénédicte Selfslagh TREASURER GENERAL: Philippe La Hausse de Lalouvière VICE PRESIDENTS: Kristal Buckley, Alfredo Conti, Guo Zhan Andrew Hall, Wilfried Lipp OFFICE: International Secretariat of ICOMOS 49 –51 rue de la Fédération, 75015 Paris – France Funded by the Federal Government Commissioner for Cultural Affairs and the Media upon a Decision of the German Bundestag EDITORIAL WORK: Christoph Machat, Michael Petzet, John Ziesemer The texts provided for this publication reflect the independent view of each committee and /or the different authors. Photo credits can be found in the captions, otherwise the pictures were provided by the various committees, authors or individual members of ICOMOS. Front and Back Covers: Cambodia, Temple of Preah Vihear (photo: Michael Petzet) Inside Front Cover: Pakistan, Upper Indus Valley, Buddha under the Tree of Enlightenment, Rock Art at Risk (photo: Harald Hauptmann) Inside Back Cover: Georgia, Tower house in Revaz Khojelani ( photo: Christoph Machat) © 2010 ICOMOS – published by hendrik Bäßler verlag · berlin ISBN 978-3-930388-65-3 CONTENTS Foreword by Francesco Bandarin, Assistant Director-General for Culture, UNESCO, Paris .................................. -
Submission to Senate Inquiry Into the Status, Health and Sustainability of Australia's Koala Population
Committee Secretary Senate Standing Committee on Environment and Communications PO Box 6100 Parliament House Canberra ACT 2600 Australia Submission to Senate Inquiry into the status, health and sustainability of Australia’s koala population Submitted online 7th February 2011 The Coastwatchers Association Inc. is the Eurobodalla (New South Wales) environment and climate change group. With a current membership of 125, Coastwatchers has been active in the Eurobodalla Shire for a quarter of a century, conducting research, liaison, advocacy and encouragement for initiatives aimed at protecting the natural environment. In March 2010, Coastwatchers initiated a joint volunteer Eurobodalla Koalas project, aimed at investigating potential remnant populations, potential future habitat and issues related to koalas in Eurobodalla forests, including those on private land, State Forests and National Parks. The project has reached a point where some preliminary observations can be made. A preliminary discussion paper will be released publicly in March 2011. Coastwatchers welcomes the opportunity to provide these observations, and a set of recommendations, to the Senate Inquiry with a particular emphasis on the Eurobodalla. Dr. Keith Joliffe, Treasurer, Coastwatchers, on behalf of Committee of Management Coordinator, Eurobodalla Koalas project The Coastwatchers Association Inc. Page of 161 Contents 1. General Remarks, page 3 2. Recommendations, page 5 3. Local Information, page 6 The Coastwatchers Association Inc. Page of 162 1. General Remarks The National Koala Conservation and Management Strategy 2009 – 2014 provides the appropriate context for any consideration of the status and future of koalas within the boundaries of the Eurobodalla Shire, New South Wales. Local research so far confirms the National Strategy’s observations about koala history, lack of adequate data (historical and contemporary) and the need for conservation actions such as the rehabilitation and establishment of landscape-scale corridors across private and public land. -
Heritage of Religion, Beliefs and Spirituality Patrimoine De La Religion, Des Croyances Et De La Spiritualité
Heritage of religion, beliefs and spirituality Patrimoine de la religion, des croyances et de la spiritualité A bibliography Une bibliographie By ICOMOS Documenta on Centre - October 2014 Par le Centre de Documenta on ICOMOS - Octobre 2014 Updated and edited by Valéria De Almeida Gomes, intern at ICOMOS Documentation Centre, and Lucile Smirnov. This bibliography refers to documents and materials available at ICOMOS Documentation Centre. It does not intend to be a comprehensive list of scientific literature on religions cultural heritage. Any reference can be consulted or scanned, subject to the limits of copyright legislation. Actualisé et mis en page par Valéria De Almeida Gomes et Lucile Smirnov. Cette bibliographie fait référence à des documents et ouvrages disponibles au Centre de documentation de l’ICOMOS. Elle ne prétend pas constituer une bibliographie exhaustive de la littérature scientifique sur e patrimoine culturel des religions. Toutes ces références peuvent être consultées ou scannées dans la limite de la loi sur le copyright. Contact ICOMOS Documentation Centre / Centre de Documentation ICOMOS http://www.icomos.org/en/documentation-center [email protected] © ICOMOS Documentation Centre, October 2014. ICOMOS - International Council on Monuments and sites Conseil International des Monuments et des Sites 11 rue du Séminaire de Conflans 94 220 Charenton-le-Pont France Tel. + 33 (0) 1 41 94 17 59 http://www.icomos.org Cover photographs: Photos de couverture : Hagia Sophia, Istanbul © David Spencer / Flickr; Borobudur near Yogyakarta. ©: Paul Arps/Flickr; Old Jewish Cemetery (Starý židovský hrbitov), Prague (Prag/Praha) © Ulf Liljankoski / Flickr Index Polytheism and early cults ......................................................... 2 African syncretism and traditional religions ................................. -
Yugoslavia 211
Heritage ai Risk 2(X) 1/2002 Yugoslavia 211 YUGOSLAVIA In addition to all the risks present in other countries in transition, cultural heritage in Yugoslavia is exposed to some quite specific threats. On the one hand, they are connected to the extremely acute economic crisis, which marked all the activities of the monu mental heritage protection service during the past decade. Con ditions in which protection institutions operate are still A unfavourable, and to a great extent the chronic lack of funding for planned activities hinders or disables timely, expert, preventive and operative engagement. It equally hinders the determination of mm an adequate protective treatment, including conditions for main taining and using protected heritage. Nevertheless, significant efforts are being made to define a wellconceived conservation -* policy, which would promote longterm conservation plans and •U determine the priority of interventions on the basis of the type and level of endangerment of the heritage. Reestablishment of inter i national professional contacts and cooperation with international Banjska Monastery, south-eastern view ol the church with three-coloured institutions and organisations in the conservation field is aimed at marble facades improving methodology and knowledge in this area. At the same lime, it also creates opportunities for expert consulting on complex professional problems. On the other hand, during the past decade, heritage in the terri tory of Yugoslavia was also exposed to dangers brought about by war operations. This applies especially to the territory of Kosovo and Metohija. where the cultural heritage is still inaccessible to V experts of the protection service. -
Ketevan BEZARASHVILI 72B, Iosebidze Street, Apt. 127 Tbilisi, 0160 Georgia Telephone:+995( 32) 37 78 08 E-Mail:[email protected]
Ketevan BEZARASHVILI 72b, Iosebidze Street, Apt. 127 Tbilisi, 0160 Georgia Telephone:+995( 32) 37 78 08 E-mail:[email protected] Curriculum Vitae Education Ph.D. Philology, 2004: Tbilisi State Univcersity Thesis title: "Theory and Practice of Rhetoric and Translation according to the Translations of the Writings of Gregory the Theologian" Ph.D. Philology, 1990: Tbilisi State University. (Candidate) Thesis title: “The Georgian Version of Gregory of Nazianzus’ Poetry”. B.A. (Honors), 1978: Tbilisi State University, Philology. Employment 2002 June: Visiting Researcher at the Catholic University of Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium. 1998 June-July: Visiting Researcher at the Catholic University of Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium. 1995 February: Visiting Researcher at the Catholic University of Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium. 1993-1995: Lecturer, Tbilisi Theological Academy. Lecturer, Independent Institute of Foreign Languages. 1991: Senior Researcher, Kekelidze Institute of Manuscripts, Tbilisi. 1990 October-November: Visiting Researcher at the Catholic University of Louvain- la-Neuve, Belgium. 1989 December: Visiting Researcher of “Ivan Dujchev” Research Center for Slavonic-Byzantine Studies at the “Clement Okhridski” University of Sofia, Bulgaria. 1 1986-1991: Researcher, Kekelidze Institute of Manuscripts. 1984-1986: Assistant Researcher, Kekelidze Institute of Manuscripts. 1983: Lecturer, Tbilisi State University. Assistant, Kekelidze Institute of Manuscripts. 1979-1982: Post-graduate student of the Faculty of Old Georgian Literature, Tbilisi State University. Subjects Taught: Byzantine Hymnography Byzantine Epistolography Latin Byzantine-Georgian Literary Interrelations Grants 2004 August - 2007 August: INTAS grant 2000March - 2002 March: INTAS grant 1996 January - 1998 December: INTAS grant Personal Born February 8, 1956, Divorced. A List of Main Publications of K. Bezarashvili for the Last 5 Years: Gelati School (prepared for Pravoslavna% +nciklopedi%).