5 New UNESCO World Heritage Sites That Exemplify the List |
The Beopjusa Temple is one of seven Sansa Buddhist monasteries located throughout the southern provinces of the Korean Peninsula to be named a World Heritage Site. CIBM/UNESCO |
If you've ever scrolled
through social media and seen a friend posing proudly at Machu Picchu or the
Egyptian pyramids, you've witnessed the majesty of a UNESCO World Heritage
Site. According to National Geographic, the impressive designation is the United
Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO)'s
"stamp of approval that brings prestige, tourist income, public awareness,
and, most important, a commitment to save the irreplaceable."
The tradition started
in November 1972 when the organization, born in the aftermath of World War II
to help establish the "intellectual and moral solidarity of mankind,"
adopted a treaty known as the World Heritage Convention to identify cultural
and natural properties of "outstanding universal value." But the
classification isn't just an honorary award: World Heritage status means a
site's home nation is responsible for protecting it. If a site loses value due
to natural disaster, war, pollution or lack of funds, nations that signed the
treaty are obligated to help out, and set up emergency aid campaigns if
possible.
According to UNESCO's
website, sites "must be of outstanding universal value and meet at least
one out of 10 selection criteria" to be included on the World Heritage
List. That means potential sites better do one or more of the things below:
1. Represent "a
masterpiece of human creative genius";
2. Exhibit "an
important interchange of human values" in areas including architecture,
technology, art, town-planning, or landscape design;
3. Possess a unique
"or at least exceptional" testimony to a past or present cultural
tradition or civilization;
4. Be some kind of
building or landscape that represents a significant stage in human history;
5. Be an outstanding
example of "a traditional human settlement, land-use, or sea-use which is
representative of a culture (or cultures), or human interaction with the
environment;
6. Be linked to
universally significant artistic or literary events, traditions, ideas, or
beliefs;
7. Contain
"superlative natural phenomena or areas of exceptional natural beauty and
aesthetic importance";
8. Be outstanding examples
representing major stages of Earth's history;
9. Be representative of
significant ongoing ecological and biological processes;
10. Contain the most
important and significant natural habitats for "in-situ conservation of
biological diversity."
There are currently
1,092 World Heritage Properties around the globe — 19 of which were added in
early July 2018. Here are five of the newbies we think exemplify what the list
stands for:
Naumburg Cathedral
The ninth-century Cathedral of Naumburg demonstrates medieval art and architecture and a transition from late Romanesque to early Gothic styles.
WWW.BRIDGETDAVEY.COM/GETTYIMAGES
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The German cathedral
located in the eastern part of the Thuringian Basin, was originally built in
1028. Its 13th-century West Choir represents changes in religious practice and
the introduction of science and nature into the arts. The choir and life-size
sculptures of the founders of the cathedral are masterpieces of the workshop
known as the "Naumburg Master."
Hidden Christian Sites in the Nagasaki Region
The 12 components of
this site located in the northwestern part of Kyushu island, Japan, are made up
of 10 villages, Hara Castle and a cathedral, built between the 16th and 19th
centuries. Together they reflect the earliest activities of Christian missionaries
and settlers in Japan, and their unique cultural tradition in the Nagasaki
region during the period of Christian prohibition from the 17th to the 19th
century.
Barberton Makhonjwa Mountains
The Southern African Barberton Makhonjwa Mountains comprise 40 percent of the Barberton Greenstone Belt, one of the world’s oldest geological structures.
TONY FERRAR/UNESCO
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The northeastern South
African site makes up 40 percent of the Barberton Greenstone Belt, one of the
world's oldest geological structures. The area also represents the
best-preserved ecology of volcanic and sedimentary rock dating back 3.6 to 3.25
billion years. That's when the first continents were just beginning to form.
Fanjingshan
Located within the Wuling mountain range in China's Guizhou Province, Fanjingshan is an island of metamorphic rock in a sea of karst.
ZHOU WENQING/UNESCO
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Found in southwest
China's Wuling mountain range in Guizhou Province, this site ranges in altitude
between 1,640 feet (500 meters) and 8,431 feet (2,570 meters) above sea level
and is home to a diverse array of plant and animal species. It is an island of
metamorphic rock, which originated in the Tertiary Period, between 65 million
and 2 million years ago. The site's isolation has created a biodiversity of
endemic species, including the Guizhou snub-nosed monkey (Rhinopithecus
brelichi), and endangered species, such as the Chinese giant salamander
(Andrias davidianus), the Forest Musk Deer (Moschus berezovskii) and Reeve's
pheasant (Syrmaticus reevesii).
Pimachiowin Aki
Pimachiowin Aki ("The Land That Gives Life") is a forest landscape crossed by rivers and studded with lakes, wetlands and boreal forest.
BASTIAN BERTZKY/UNESCO
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The name of this
Canadian site translates to "The Land That Gives Life" and makes up
part of the ancestral home of the indigenous Anishinaabeg people who lived from
fishing, hunting and gathering. The area represents an exceptional example of
the cultural tradition of Ji-ganawendamang Gidakiiminaan ("keeping the
land"), which honors all forms of life and maintains harmonious relations
with others.
source by:
https://adventure.howstuffworks.com/unesco-names-19-new-world-heritage-sites.htm
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