The Ms "Grand Rus" Schedule in the Navigation 2019

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Ms THE MS "GRAND RUS" SCHEDULE IN THE NAVIGATION 2019 www.flotrusich.ru LOWER MAIN DECK MIDDLE DECK BOAT DECK DECK 8-800-100-81-75 triple- semi-luxe semi-luxe Route name, departure date, route. double- double- double-berth/(two beds) berth double-berth (two single- double- single- *double- single- single- double-berth single- berth single- single-berth + MS "Grand Rus" project РЕГК.002 class - МПР-2.5 "river-sea" berth (two portholes)/without (three beds) berth berth berth berth berth berth (standard) berth (two berth (*double-berth) (2 beds) windows beds) with one window (one bed) (double (double (two beds) (one bed) beds) DECK UPPER EARLY BOOKING PRICE IS VALID UNTIL 02.09.2019 (porthole) bed) bed) THE RUSSIAN NORTH Moscow - Uglich - Kuzino - Goritsy - Kizhi - the Solovetsky Islands 26.08.2019 $ 1 270 $ 1 270 $ 640 $ 1 330 $ 1 410 $ 2 660 $ 1 670 $ 840 $ 1 820 $ 910 $ 2 900 $ 2 310 $ 2 310 $ 3 230 $ 1 960 $ 1 830 $ 2 920 $ 2 500 $ 1 250 $ 2 310 $ 2 620 (2 days, Anzersky Island, Kuzova Archipelago, Bolshoi Zayatsky Island) – Arkhangelsk (2 days, Severodvinsk, Kholmogory, Malye Korely) - 14 13 08.09.2019 Belomorsk - Sosnowiec - Povenets (Medvezhyegorsk) – Myshkin - € 1 100 € 1 100 € 550 € 1 150 € 1 220 € 2 300 € 1 440 € 720 € 1 570 € 790 € 2 510 € 2 000 € 2 000 € 2 800 € 1 700 € 1 580 € 2 520 € 2 160 € 1 080 € 2 000 € 2 270 Moscow OH, WONDERFUL ISLAND VALAAM 09.09.2019 Moscow – Uglich – Goritsy – Petrozavodsk (Kivach Falls) – Kizhi – $ 820 $ 980 $ 490 $ 860 $ 920 $ 1 720 $ 1 010 $ 540 $ 1 180 $ 590 $ 1 880 $ 1 490 $ 1 490 $ 2 070 $ 1 260 $ 1 180 $ 1 870 $ 1 610 $ 810 $ 1 490 $ 1 700 Valaam – St. Petersburg – Oreshek Fortress - Staraya Ladoga 12 11 20.09.2019 (Tikhvin, Veliky Novgorod) – Svirstroy – Myshkin - Moscow € 710 € 850 € 430 € 750 € 790 € 1 490 € 880 € 470 € 1 020 € 510 € 1 630 € 1 290 € 1 290 € 1 790 € 1 090 € 1 020 € 1 620 € 1 390 € 700 € 1 290 € 1 470 KAZAN - THE HEART OF TATARSTAN Moscow - Kalyazin (Solba) - Uglich - Yaroslavl (Rostov, 21.09.2019 Pereslavl-Zalessky) - Gorodets (Semyonov) - Nizhny $ 630 $ 720 $ 440 $ 670 $ 690 $ 1 140 $ 780 $ 480 $ 810 $ 490 $ 1 150 $ 940 $ 940 $ 1 270 $ 860 $ 810 $ 1 190 $ 1 040 $ 610 $ 980 $ 1 100 Novgorod - Kazan (Sviyazhsk, the Raifskiy Monastery, 10 9 Bolgar) - Cheboksary (Yoshkar-Ola) - Nizhny Novgorod 30.09.2019 (Diveyevo) - Chkalovsk - Plyos - Kostroma (Palekh, € 550 € 620 € 380 € 580 € 600 € 990 € 670 € 410 € 700 € 420 € 1 000 € 820 € 820 € 1 100 € 750 € 700 € 1 030 € 910 € 530 € 850 € 950 Nerekhta) - Yaroslavl - (transfer) Moscow Cruise prices for foreign groups (10 people and more) Sales offices: full board Perm, 25 October Street 21 (342)204-13-17 accommodation in selected cabin St. Petersburg, Naberezhnaya obvodnogo kanala, 92, office 308, 3rd floor (812)380-95-01 onboard entertainment Moscow, Maroseyka Street 9/2 (495)204-27-48 insurance of civil liability of the carrier for any damage to life, health and property of passangers Samara, Krasnoarmeyskaya Street 63а, office 2 (846)332-30-28 a child voucher for children under the age of 3, without berth, without meals - free Nizhniy Novgorod, Varvarskaya Street 32, 5th floor, оffice 516 (831)283-51-48 a child voucher for children aged 3-5 years, without berth - 1500 rubles per day Rostov-on-Don, Turgenevskaya St. 78 A, room 103 (863)309-00-13 Volgograd, Volgodonskaya St. 7, office A-2, room 103 (844)245-94-43.
Recommended publications
  • 2018 FIFA WORLD CUP RUSSIA'n' WATERWAYS
    - The 2018 FIFA World Cup will be the 21st FIFA World Cup, a quadrennial international football tournament contested by the men's national teams of the member associations of FIFA. It is scheduled to take place in Russia from 14 June to 15 July 2018,[2] 2018 FIFA WORLD CUP RUSSIA’n’WATERWAYS after the country was awarded the hosting rights on 2 December 2010. This will be the rst World Cup held in Europe since 2006; all but one of the stadium venues are in European Russia, west of the Ural Mountains to keep travel time manageable. - The nal tournament will involve 32 national teams, which include 31 teams determined through qualifying competitions and Routes from the Five Seas 14 June - 15 July 2018 the automatically quali ed host team. A total of 64 matches will be played in 12 venues located in 11 cities. The nal will take place on 15 July in Moscow at the Luzhniki Stadium. - The general visa policy of Russia will not apply to the World Cup participants and fans, who will be able to visit Russia without a visa right before and during the competition regardless of their citizenship [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2018_FIFA_World_Cup]. IDWWS SECTION: Rybinsk – Moscow (433 km) Barents Sea WATERWAYS: Volga River, Rybinskoye, Ughlichskoye, Ivan’kovskoye Reservoirs, Moscow Electronic Navigation Charts for Russian Inland Waterways (RIWW) Canal, Ikshinskoye, Pestovskoye, Klyaz’minskoye Reservoirs, Moskva River 600 MOSCOW Luzhniki Arena Stadium (81.000), Spartak Arena Stadium (45.000) White Sea Finland Belomorsk [White Sea] Belomorsk – Petrozavodsk (402 km) Historic towns: Rybinsk, Ughlich, Kimry, Dubna, Dmitrov Baltic Sea Lock 13,2 White Sea – Baltic Canal, Onega Lake Small rivers: Medveditsa, Dubna, Yukhot’, Nerl’, Kimrka, 3 Helsinki 8 4,0 Shosha, Mologa, Sutka 400 402 Arkhangel’sk Towns: Seghezha, Medvezh’yegorsk, Povenets Lock 12,2 Vyborg Lakes: Vygozero, Segozero, Volozero (>60.000 lakes) 4 19 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 30 1 2 3 6 7 10 14 15 4,0 MOSCOW, Group stage 1/8 1/4 1/2 3 1 Estonia Petrozavodsk IDWWS SECTION: [Baltic Sea] St.
    [Show full text]
  • WIDER RESEARCH for ACTION the Restructuring of Peripheral
    UNU World Institute for Development Economics Research (UNU/WIDER) Research for Action The Restructuring of Peripheral Villages in Northwestern Russia Eira Varis This study has been prepared within the UNU/WIDER Special Finnish Project Fund with the financial support of the Ministry for Foreign Affairs of Finland. UNU World Institute for Development Economics Research (UNU/WIDER) A research and training centre of the United Nations University The Board of UNU/WIDER Sylvia Ostry Maria de Lourdes Pintasilgo, Chairperson Antti Tanskanen George Vassiliou Ruben Yevstigneyev Masaru Yoshitomi Ex Officio Heitor Gurgulino de Souza, Rector of UNU Giovanni Andrea Cornia, Director of UNU/WIDER UNU World Institute for Development Economics Research (UNU/WIDER) was established by the United Nations University as its first research and training centre and started work in Helsinki, Finland, in 1985. The principal purpose of the Institute is policy-oriented research on the main strategic issues of development and international cooperation, as well as on the interaction between domestic and global changes. Its work is carried out by staff researchers and visiting scholars in Helsinki and through networks of collaborating institutions and scholars around the world. UNU World Institute for Development Economics Research (UNU/WIDER) Katajanokanlaituri 6 B 00160 Helsinki, Finland Copyright © UNU World Institute for Development Economics Research (UNU/WIDER) Camera-ready typescript prepared by Liisa Roponen at UNU/WIDER Printed at Hakapaino Oy, 1996 The views
    [Show full text]
  • روشک [Fa] Russian Federation Fishery Products [FA] SECTION
    [fa] Validity date from fa] Russian Federation] روشک 21/07/2021 00438 [FA] SECTION Fishery products [fa] Date of publication 28/07/2007 [fa] List in force fa] Regions [fa] Activities [fa] Remark [fa] Date of request] رهش مان دییات هرامش 01A Sevryba-1, ("Virma"Ltd) Arkhangelsk Arkhangel'skaya Oblast' [fa] FV 18/07/2013 01H Pilenga (JSC Pilenga) Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk Sakhalinskaya Oblast' [fa] ZV 01K JSC Russian Sea Noginsk Moskovskaya Oblast' [fa] PP 01L "La Maree", LLC Moscow Moscow [fa] PP 01Q Nikolay Solodchuk (Sea Lion, LLC) Petropavlovsk-Kamchatskiy Kamchatskiy Kray [fa] FV 10/01/2017 01R Petropavlovsk (PJSC ''NBAMR '' Public Joint Stock Company Nakhodka Primorskiy Kray [fa] FV 12/09/2019 "Nakhodka Active Marine Fishery Base") 01S Ymir (LLC Nevod) v. Nevodskoe Sakhalinskaya Oblast' [fa] FV 15/10/2019 02G Salacgriva ('North-West Fishing Company-Murmansk' Ltd) Murmansk Murmanskaya Oblast' [fa] FV 02H Samson-Plus Ltd Yeisk Kransnodarskiy Kray [fa] PP 07/10/2016 02N BELOMORYE (Arctic Shipping LLC) Saint-Petersburg Saint-Petersburg [fa] RV 07/11/2017 02P RTF 'Diana' LLC Kaduy Vologodskaya Oblast' [fa] PP 07/05/2015 02R JSC "SORK" Fish -processing Base Grossevichi Khabarovskiy Kray [fa] PP 17/08/2018 02S Frio Arkhangelsk (Ulysses Reefers LLC) Saint-Petersburg Saint-Petersburg [fa] RV 12/09/2019 03M Kapitan Kolesnikov PJSC "Preobrazhenskaya Base Of Trawling v. Preobrazhenie Primorskiy Kray [fa] ZV 24/01/2012 Fleet" 1 / 38 [fa] List in force fa] Regions [fa] Activities [fa] Remark [fa] Date of request] رهش مان دییات هرامش 03P Proekt-1 ('Gela' Ltd) Village Molochniy Murmanskaya Oblast' [fa] FV 07/05/2015 03Q Vostokinvest Co., Ltd.
    [Show full text]
  • Foraging in Boreal Forest: Wild Food Plants of the Republic of Karelia, NW Russia
    foods Article Foraging in Boreal Forest: Wild Food Plants of the Republic of Karelia, NW Russia Valeria Kolosova 1,2, Olga Belichenko 1,* , Alexandra Rodionova 3 , Denis Melnikov 4 and Renata Sõukand 1,* 1 Department of Environmental Sciences, Informatics and Statistics, Ca’ Foscari University of Venice, Via Torino 155, 30172 Venice, Italy; [email protected] 2 Institute for Linguistic Studies, Russian Academy of Sciences, Tuchkov pereulok 9, 199004 St Petersburg, Russia 3 Institute of Linguistics, Literature and History of the Karelian Research Centre, Russian Academy of Sciences, Pushkinskaya St. 11, 185910 Petrozavodsk, Russia; [email protected] 4 Komarov Botanical Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, Professor Popov St. 2, 197376 St Petersburg, Russia; [email protected] * Correspondence: [email protected] (O.B.); [email protected] (R.S.) Received: 4 July 2020; Accepted: 27 July 2020; Published: 29 July 2020 Abstract: While the current consumption of wild food plants in the taiga of the American continent is a relatively well-researched phenomenon, the European taiga area is heavily underrepresented in the scientific literature. The region is important due to its distinctive ecological conditions with restricted seasonal availability of wild plants. During an ethnobotanical field study conducted in 2018–2019, 73 people from ten settlements in the Republic of Karelia were interviewed. In addition, we conducted historical data analysis and ethnographical source analysis. The most widely consumed wild food plants are forest berries (three Vaccinium species, and Rubus chamaemorus), sap-yielding Betula and acidic Rumex. While throughout the lifetime of the interviewees the list of used plants did not change considerably, the ways in which they are processed and stored underwent several stages in function of centrally available goods, people’s welfare, technical progress, and ideas about the harm and benefit of various products and technological processes.
    [Show full text]
  • Entries in the Barents Encyclopedia (By Topic Category)
    Entries in the Barents Encyclopedia (by topic category) The list is divided into the following six sections: A. 118 submitted articles (as of 20 April 2011) (p. 4) B. 169 entries for which we have contracted authors (p. 18) C. 67 entries for which we have suggested or invited (but not contracted) authors (p. 39) D. 55 entries for which we have no suggested authors (p. 51) E. 113 suggested entries that might be included if space allows (p. 57) F. 158 suggested entries that are not likely to be included (p. 67) Note: As of April 20, 2011, we have 409 entries/articles to be included in the Barents Encyclopedia! Thus, we do not need any more new entry suggestions unless this is required for reasons of “balance” or serious omissions! Column contents In column “S” the status of the entry word is indicated (for labels, see top of p. 4). In column “E” the suggested entry word is stated. In column “Enc” the a cronym for the encyclopedia where the entry was found (see listing below) or the name of the person suggesting the entry is listed. In column “T” the “topics category” to which the suggested entry belongs (see category codes 1–12 below); In column “T alt” an alternative topic classification is given. In column “L” the suggested Length of entry is stated. (For labels of the different types of entries identified, see table below!) In column “A” the name (and affiliation/email address) of the suggested author is listed. In column “C” you may enter comments about the suggested entry.
    [Show full text]
  • Soviet Karelia in the Letters & Memoirs Of
    LIFE MOVING FORWARD: SOVIET KARELIA IN THE LETTERS & MEMOIRS OF FINNISH NORTH AMERICANS SAMIRA S. SARAMO A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF GRADUATE STUDIES IN PARTIAL FULFILMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY GRADUATE PROGRAM IN HISTORY YORK UNIVERSITY TORONTO, CANADA SEPTEMBER 2014 © SAMIRA SARAMO, 2014 Abstract In the first years of the 1930s, some 6500 Finnish Canadians and Finnish Americans moved to Soviet Karelia, motivated by the economic depression and the dream of participating in the building of a Finnish-led workers’ society, with employment, education, and healthcare for all. Their recruitment as “foreign specialists” who would modernize the Karelian economy secured for them preferential access to food, housing, and work postings, but life in Karelia was very different than what the immigrants had previously known. Despite difficulties and a heavy return migration, those who stayed threw themselves into the building of socialism. However, by 1936, the Stalinist regime viewed ethnic minorities and foreigners as threats to the Soviet order, and the Finnish leadership in Karelia was ousted and a violent attack on ethnic Finns and Finnish culture took over the region, shattering the dream of the ‘Red Finn Haven.’ This dissertation examines letters written by Finnish North Americans in Karelia to friends and family remaining in Canada and the United States, as well as memoirs and retrospective letter collections that look back on life in Karelia in the 1930s. These sources, brought together under the umbrella of life writing, are analysed in two ways. They are used to construct a history of the immigrants’ everyday life, with chapters exploring topics such as travel and first impressions, housing, food, health and hygiene, clothing, children’s experiences, formal labour, political participation, celebrations, popular culture, sociability, and repression.
    [Show full text]
  • Hot Spots Report
    Assessment of Describing the state of the Barents 42 original Barents Hot Spot Report environmental ‘hot spots’ AZAROVA N NA NA I IR Assessment of the Barents Environmental Hot Spots Report Assessment of the Barents Hot Spot Report describing the state of 42 original Barents environmental "hot spots". Part I – Analysis. Akvaplan-niva Report. NEFCO/BHSF, 2013. 119 p. Authors: Alexei Bambulyak, Akvaplan-niva, Norway Svetlana Golubeva, System Development Agency, Russia Vladimir Savinov, Akvaplan-niva, Norway Front page figure: map with the Barents environmental "hot spots". Source: barentsinfo.fi The assessment was carried out and the report produced on behalf of NEFCO/BHSF. 2 Assessment of the Barents Environmental Hot Spots Report Contents Foreword ............................................................................................................................................5 1. Summary .............................................................................................................................6 2. Introduction .........................................................................................................................9 3. The Barents environmental hot spot process ..................................................................... 11 3.1 The first NEFCO/AMAP report of 1995. Initiative, goals and outcome ................................. 13 3.2 The second NEFCO/AMAP report of 2003 on Updating the Environmental "Hot Spot" List. Goals and outcome – 42 "hot spots" .................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Human Capital of the Karelian Arctic in the Implementation of the Special Economic Regime of the Region
    E3S Web of Conferences 217, 07028 (2020) https://doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/202021707028 ERSME-2020 Human capital of the Karelian Arctic in the implementation of the special economic regime of the region Aleksander Volkov1,* 1The institute of Economics of the Karelian Scientific Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences, RAS, 50 A. Nevsky Ave., 185030, Petrozavodsk, Republic of Karelia, Russia Abstract. This article presents the results of a field study of the state and development of the human capital in the Karelian Arctic as a factor in sustainable development of the region during the transition to a new economic and legal regime. The focus of the scientific research is the assessment by the citizens of the level of their well-being and the ability to meet various family needs, personal income planning possibilities, correspondence of the current place of work to the training received in an educational institution. Brief conclusions are made on the indicated aspects of the development of the human capital in the Karelian Arctic region. Data were obtained and an analysis of the situation was made both for the Karelian Arctic as a whole, and for individual municipal districts included in this region. Further research activities to deepen scientific knowledge about the state and trends in the development of the human capital in Arctic Karelia and the Arctic zone of Russia as a whole have been identified. The issues under study are one of the key ones in determining the parameters of the created special economic and legal regime, which applies to Arctic Karelia. 1 Introduction The development and adoption of strategic documents for the development of the Arctic zone of the Russian Federation (hereinafter the AZRF), the updating of the management tools for regional development in the context of the implementation of a new special economic and legal regime and the entry of new territories into the AZRF require updating and improving knowledge about the socio-economic processes in the Russian Arctic.
    [Show full text]
  • Karelia a Perfect Fit for Your Investment
    KARELIA A PERFECT FIT FOR YOUR INVESTMENT 2019 KARELIAINVEST.RU INVEST IN RUSSIA CONTENT Infrastructure for business. Development indicators ............................. 4 Key industries: Forestry .......................................................................................................... 24 Fishery ........................................................................................................... 28 Mining ............................................................................................................ 34 Tourism and recreation ............................................................................... 38 Success stories. Foreign investors in Karelia .......................................... 44 Support of investment activities ................................................................ 54 INFRASTRUCTURE FOR BUSINESS. I DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS GEOGRAPHIC LOCATION Murmansk region SWEDEN Kostomuksha Stockholm 1300 km FINLAND Republic Kem of Karelia Belomorsk Segezha The Baltic Sea Helsinki 740 km Sortavala Kondopoga Tallinn 800 km Petrozavodsk Saint-Petersburg 412 km Riga ESTONIA 990 km Leningrad region LITHANIA LATVIA Vologda region Pskov Novgorod 710 km 510 km Vologda Vilnius Novgorod km 990 km 930 region Pskov Tver region Yaroslavl region region BELARUS Yaroslavl Moscow Tver 1100 kmкм km Minsk 1000 850 km 1300 km OVER 45 MLN. PEOPLE INFRASTRUCTURE FOR BUSINESS live within a 1000 km radius from Petrozavodsk • total area: 180,5 thousand square kilometers; • population: 618,1 thousand people; •
    [Show full text]
  • The Soviet Plans for the North Western Theatre of Operations in 1939-1944
    FINNISH DEFENCE STUDIES THE SOVIET PLANS FOR THE NORTH WESTERN THEATRE OF OPERATIONS IN 1939-1944 Ohto Manninen National Defence College Helsinki 2004 Finnish Defence Studies is published under the auspices of the National Defence College, and the contributions reflect the fields of research and teaching of the College. Finnish Defence Studies will occasionally feature documentation on Finnish Security Policy. Views expressed are those of the authors and do not necessarily imply endorsement by the National Defence College. Editor: Pekka Sivonen Editorial Assistant: Harri Valtonen Editorial Board: Chairman Prof. Mikko Viitasalo, National Defence College Prof. Ohto Manninen, National Defence College Col. Erkki Nordberg, Defence Staff Dr. Kalevi Ruhala Dr. Col. (ret.) PekkaVisuri, Finnish Institute of International Affairs Dr. Matti Vuorio, Scientific Committee for National Defence Published by NATIONAL DEFENCE COLLEGE P.O. Box 7 SF-00861 Helsinki FINLAND FINNISH DEFENCE STUDIES 16 The Soviet Plans for the North Western Theatre of Operations in 1939-1944 Ohto Manninen National Defence College Helsinki 2004 ISBN 951-25-1476-1 ISSN 0788 5571 Edita Prima Oy Helsinki 2004 FOREWORD In this study my intention has been to analyse the operation plans made by the Red Army for the Finnish theatre of war in the eve of and during the Second World War. During my visits in Russia to research in the former Soviet archives it was not possible to see the origi- nal plans for operations. It was pointed out to me that the "ground level vegetation" is still the same in the border areas of Russia and Finland. This, of course, was a friendly way of saying to me that the legislation still forbids of giving those materials for researchers.
    [Show full text]
  • RUSSIAN KARELIA from Archangel to St Petersburg 24 May to 7 June 2017 Russian Karelia
    RUSSIAN KARELIA from Archangel to St Petersburg 24 May to 7 June 2017 Russian Karelia The history of this area which reaches up to the White Sea is intertwined with that of Finland, sharing a landscape, a mythical heritage and a language. It became part of Russia after WWII. The area has attracted monastic communities and builders of wooden churches. The petroglyphs indicate that the area has been occupied for a very long time, and there are enigmatic labyrinths which hint at something mysterious. Our journey takes us from the port of Archangel, where it sits on the banks of the Northern Dvina River, to the remarkable Solovetsky Islands. Their history describes in miniature some of the tribulations of the last century. Happily the monastic com- munity has returned and the islands have become once again a remarkable retreat. One of the notable features of this area is the use of wood for architecture. We plan to see some remarkable wooden churches at a number of places including at Kondopogo, and on Kizhi Island at the north- ern end of Onego Lake. We will also visit the monastery on Valaam Island on Lake Ladoga. Trav- elling at this time of year ensures that we experience ‘The White Nights’ of 24 hour daylight! The tour will use trains, boats and planes as well as minibuses to travel around, before we spend our last few days seeing something of the magnificent glories of St Petersburg. HIGHLIGHTS Archangel Open-air Museum of Wooden Architecture, Malye Korely The Solovetsky Islands, in the White Sea The wooden church at Kondopoga Petrozavodsk, capital of Russian Karelia Zizhi Island, Onego Lake Valaam Island, Ladago Lake St Petersburg Led by Rufus Reade JOURNEY DETAILS The Itinerary Location: Northwestern 24 May Your Russia flight flight to St Peters- Dates: 24 May to 7 June burg for an overnight.
    [Show full text]
  • Our Ref. GB/AA/1654 Add. Info Charenton-Le-Pont, 6 October 2020
    Our Ref. GB/AA/1654_Add. Info Charenton-le-Pont, 6 October 2020 H. E. Mr Alexander Kouznetsov Permanent Delegation of the Russian Federation to UNESCO 8, rue de Prony 75017 Paris World Heritage List 2021 Petroglyphs of the Lake Onega and the White Sea (Russian Federation) Dear Ambassador, ICOMOS is currently assessing the nomination of “Petroglyphs of the Lake Onega and the White Sea” as a World Heritage site and an ICOMOS evaluation mission shall visit the property, if current sanitary conditions allow it, to consider matters related to protection, management and conservation, as well as issues related to integrity and authenticity. In order to help with our overall evaluation process, we would be grateful to receive further information to augment what has already been submitted in the nomination dossier. Therefore, we would be pleased if the State Party could consider the following points and kindly provide additional information: Description of the nominated property ICOMOS notes that, in the history and development section of the nomination dossier, mention is made of how sites were documented and researched but there is no information on the history of the petroglyphs themselves. Brief information is included in the management plan (p. 23 and 25), however, a detailed history depicting how the cultural groups settled, evolved and migrated, including a description of the context in which the petroglyphs were created as at the current state of research, would be beneficial to the understanding of the nominated property. It would be important to provide a history of the development including settlements and migrations of the Neolithic cultures at the Lake Onega and the White Sea as well as in the wider region (evolution, settlement, trade routes and communication, migration, believes and traditions etc.
    [Show full text]