19 New inscriptions
14 Cultural sites
5 Natural sites
0 Mixed sites
3 Extensions
Fujisan, Sacred Place and Source of Artistic Inspiration (Japan)
The
beauty of the solitary, often snow-capped, stratovolcano, known around
the world as Mount Fuji, rising above villages and tree-fringed sea
and lakes has long inspired artists and poets and been the object of
pilgrimages. Its representation in Japanese art goes back to the 11th
century but 19th century wood block prints have made Fujisan become an
internationally recognized icon of Japan and have had a deep impact
on the development of Western art. The inscribed property consists of
25 sites which reflect the essence of Fujisan’s sacred landscape. In
the 12th century, Fujisan became the centre of training for ascetic
Buddhism, which included Shinto elements. On the upper 1,500-metre
tier of the 3,776m mountain, pilgrim routes and crater shrines have
been inscribed alongside sites around the base of the mountain
including Sengen-jinja shrines, Oshi lodging houses, and natural
volcanic features such as lava tree moulds, lakes, springs and
waterfalls, which are revered as sacred.
The World Heritage
Committee is currently holding its 37th session in Phnom Penh. The
session will close in Angkor on 27 June. Seen whc.unesco.org for more information
Medici Villas and Gardens in Tuscany (Italy)
Twelve
villas and two pleasure gardens spread across the Tuscan country side
make up this site which bears testimony to the influence the Medici
family exerted over modern European culture through its patronage of
the arts. Built between the 15th and 17th centuries, they represent an
innovative system of rural construction in harmony with nature and
dedicated to leisure, the arts and knowledge. The villas embody an
innovative form and function, a new type of princely residence that
differed from both the farms owned by rich Florentines of the period
and from the military might of baronial castles. The Medici villas
form the first example of the connection between habitat, gardens, and
the environment and became an enduring reference for princely
residences throughout Italy and Europe. Their gardens and integration
into the natural environment helped develelop the appreciation of
landscape characteristic Humanism and the Renaissance.
University of Coimbra—Alta and Sofia (Portugal)
Situated
on a hill overlooking the city, the University of Coimbra with its
colleges grew and evolved over more than seven centuries within the old
town. Notable university buildings include the 12th century Cathedral
of Santa Cruz and a number of 16th century colleges, the Royal Palace
of Alcáçova, which has housed the University since 1537, the Joanine
Library with its rich baroque decor, the 18th century Botanical Garden
and University Press, as well as the large “University City” created
during the 1940s. The University’s edifices became a reference in the
development of other institutions of higher education in the
Portuguese-speaking world where it also exerted a major influence on
learning and literature. Coimbra offers an outstanding example of an
integrated university city with a specific urban typology as well as
its own ceremonial and cultural traditions that have been kept alive
through the ages.
Namib Sand Sea (Namibia)
Namib Sand
Sea (Namibia) is the only coastal desert in the world that includes
extensive dune fields influenced by fog. Covering an area of over three
million hectares and a buffer zone of 899,500 hectares, the site is
composed of two dune systems, an ancient semi-consolidated one
overlain by a younger active one. The desert dunes are formed by the
transportation of materials thousands of kilometres from the
hinterland, that are carried by river, ocean current and wind. It
features gravel plains, coastal flats, rocky hills, inselbergs within
the sand sea, a coastal lagoon and ephemeral rivers, resulting in a
landscape of exceptional beauty. Fog is the primary source of water in
the site, accounting for a unique environment in which endemic
invertebrates, reptiles and mammals adapt to an ever-changing variety
of microhabitats and ecological niches.
This is the first natural site in Namibia to be inscribed on the World Heritage List.
Hill Forts of Rajasthan (India)
The
serial site, situated in the state of Rajastahan, includes six majestic
forts in Chittorgarh; Kumbhalgarh; Sawai Madhopur; Jhalawar; Jaipur,
and Jaisalmer. The ecclectic architecture of the forts, some up to 20
kilometres in circumference, bears testimony to the power of the
Rajput princely states that flourished in the region from the 8th to
the 18th centuries. Enclosed within defensive walls are major urban
centres, palaces, trading centres and other buildings including
temples that often predate the fortifications within which developed
an elaborate courtly culture that supported learning, music and the
arts. Some of the urban centres enclosed in the fortifications have
survived, as have many of the site's temples and other sacred
buildings. The forts use the natural defenses offered by the landscape:
hills, deserts, rivers, and dense forests. They also feature extensive
water harvesting structures, largely still in use today.
Mount Etna (Italy)
Mount Etna is an
iconic site encompassing 19,237 uninhabited hectares on the highest
part of Mount Etna, on the eastern coast of Sicily. Mount Etna is the
highest Mediterranean island mountain and the most active stratovolcano
in the world. The eruptive history of the volcano can be traced back
500,000 years and at least 2,700 years of this activity has been
documented. The almost continuous eruptive activity of Mount Etna
continues to influence volcanology, geophysics and other Earth science
disciplines. The volcano also supports important terrestrial
ecosystems including endemic flora and fauna and its activity makes it
a natural laboratory for the study of ecological and biological
processes. The diverse and accessible range of volcanic features such
as summit craters, cinder cones, lava flows and the Valle de Bove
depression have made the site a prime destination for research and
education.
Levuka Historical Port Town (Fiji)
The
town and its low line of buildings set among coconut and mango trees
along the beach front was the first colonial capital of Fiji, ceded to
the British in 1874. It developed from the early 19th century as a
centre of commercial activity by Americans and Europeans who built
warehouses, stores, port facilities, residences, and religious,
educational and social institutions around the villages of the South
Pacific island’s indigenous population. It is a rare example of a late
colonial port town that was influenced in its development by the
indigenous community which continued to outnumber the European
settlers. Thus the town, an outstanding example of late 19th century
Pacific port settlements, reflects the integration of local building
traditions by a supreme naval power, leading to the emergence of a
unique landscape.
Al Zubarah Archaeological Site (Qatar)
The
walled coastal town of Al Zubarah in the Gulf flourished as a pearling
and trading centre in the late 18th century and early 19th centuries,
before it was destroyed in 1811 and abandoned in the early 1900s.
Founded by merchants from Kuwait, Al Zubarah had trading links across
the Indian Ocean, Arabia and Western Asia. A layer of sand blown from
the desert has protected the remains of the site’s palaces, mosques,
streets, courtyard houses, and fishermen’s huts; its harbour and
double defensive walls, a canal, walls, and cemeteries. Excavation has
only taken place over a small part of the site, which offers an
outstanding testimony to an urban trading and pearl-diving tradition
which sustained the region’s major coastal towns and led to the
development of small independent states that flourished outside the
control of the Ottoman, European, and Persian empires and eventually led
to the emergence of modern day Gulf States.
Ancient City of Tauric Chersonese and its Chora (Ukraine)
The
site features the remains of a city founded by Dorian Greeks in the 5th
century BC on the northern shores of the Black Sea. It encompasses
six component sites with urban remains and agricultural lands divided
into several hundreds of chora, rectangular plots of equal size. The
plots supported vineyards whose production was exported by the city
which thrived until the 15th century. The site features several public
building complexes and residential neighbourhoods, as well as early
Christian monuments alongside remains from Stone and Bronze Age
settlements; Roman and medieval tower fortifications and water supply
systems; and exceptionally well-preserved examples of vineyard
planting and dividing walls. In the 3rd century AD, the site was known
as the most productive wine centre of the Black Sea and remained a
hub of exchange between the Greek, Roman and Byzantine Empires and
populations north of the Black Sea. It is an outstanding example of
democratic land organization linked to an ancient polis, reflecting
the city’s social organization.
Golestan Palace (Islamic Republic of Iran)
The
lavish Golestan Palace is a masterpiece of the Qajar era, embodying the
successful integration of earlier Persian crafts and architecture
with Western influences. The walled Palace, one of the oldest groups
of buildings in Teheran, became the seat of government of the Qajar
family, which came into power in 1779 and made Teheran the capital of
the country. Built around a garden featuring pools as well as planted
areas, the Palace’s most characteristic features and rich ornaments
date from the 19th century. It became a centre of Qajari arts and
architecture of which it is an outstanding example and has remained a
source of inspiration for Iranian artists and architects to this day.
It represents a new style incorporating traditional Persian arts and
crafts and elements of 18th century architecture and technology.
Historic Monuments and Sites in Kaesong (Democratic People’s Republic of Korea)
Situated
in Kaesong city, in the south of the country, the site consists of 12
separate components, which together testify to the history and culture
of the Koryo Dynasty from the 10th to 14th centuries. The geomantic
layout of the former capital city of Kaesong, its palaces,
institutions and tomb complex, defensive walls and gates embody the
political, cultural, philosophical and spiritual values of a crucial
era in the region’s history. The monuments inscribed also include an
astronomical and meteorological observatory, two schools (including
one dedicated to educating national officials) and commemorative
steles. The site testifies to the transition from Buddhism to
neo-Confucianism in East Asia and to the assimilation of the cultural
spiritual and political values of the states that existed prior to
Korea’s unification under the Koryo Dynasty. The integration of
Buddhist, Confucian, Taoist and geomantic concepts is manifest in the
planning of the site and the architecture of its monuments.
Mount Kenya-Lewa Wildlife conservancy (Kenya)
Mount
Kenya-Lewa Wildlife conservancy (Kenya), was inscribed as an extension
added to Mount Kenya Natural Park / Natural Forest. The area added to
the Mount Kenya Natural Park consists of a core of nearly 20,000
hectares and a buffer zone of almost 70,000 ha. It is situated between
the Tropical Montane ecosystem and the semi-arid savannah grasslands
and its inscription completes the preservation of the ecological and
biological processes preserved at the Mount Kenya Natural Park, which
was inscribed in 1997. The extension lies within the traditional
migrating route of the African elephant population of the Mount Kenya
Natural Park, world renowned as the location of the second highest
peak in Africa, Mt Kenya, that rises 5,199 m above the sea. The
extinct volcano numbers 12 glaciers that are receding rapidly, and
four secondary peaks overlooking U-shaped glacial valleys. With its
rugged glacier-clad summits and forested middle slopes, Mount Kenya is
one of the most impressive landscapes in East Africa.
Maloti Drakensberg (Lesotho/South Africa)
The
World Heritage Committee has decided to inscribe Lesotho’s
Sehlabathebe National Park as an extension to the uKhahlamba
Drakensberg Park (in South Africa), which is now to be named Maloti
Drakensberg Tranboundary World Heritage Site. The 6,550 hectare
addition to the existing site consists of a spectacularly beautiful
watershed area that hosts flora and fauna of scientific importance.
They include the Maloti Minnow, a critically endangered fish species
only to be found in the Park. Other endangered species include the
Cape Vulture (Gyps coprotheres) and the Bearded Vulture (Gyps
barbatus). Sehlabathebe National Park’s African Alpine tundra
ecosystem with its 250 endemic plant species significantly enhances the
value of uKhahlamba Drakensberg Park. It also features important rock
paintings made by the San people who have been living on the site for
4,000 years.
Bergpark Wilhelmshöhe (Germany)
Descending
a long hill dominated by a giant statue of Hercules, the monumental
water displays of Wilhelmshöhe were begun by Landgrave Carl of
Hesse-Kassel in 1689 around an east-west axis and were developed
further into the 19th century. Reservoirs and channels behind the
Hercules Monument supply water to a complex system of hydro-pneumatic
devices that supply the site’s large Baroque water theatre, grotto,
fountains and 350-metre long Grand Cascade. Beyond this, channels and
waterways wind across the axis, feeding a series of dramatic
waterfalls and wild rapids, the geyser-like Grand Fountain which leaps
50m high, the lake and secluded ponds that enliven the Romantic garden
created in the 18th century by Carl’s great-grandson, Elector Wilhelm
I. The great size of the park and its waterworks along with the
towering Hercules statue constitute an expression of the ideals of
absolutist Monarchy while the ensemble is a remarkable testimony to
the aesthetics of the Baroque and Romantic periods.
El Pinacate and Gran Desierto de Altar Biosphere Reserve (Mexico)
The
714,566 hectare site comprises two distinct parts: the dormant volcanic
Pinacate Shield of black and red lava flows and desert pavements to
the east, and, in the west, the Gran Altar Desert with its ever
changing and varied sand dunes that can reach a height of 200 metres.
This landscape of dramatic contrast notably features linear, star and
dome dunes as well as several arid granite massifs, some as high as
650 metres. The dunes emerge like islands from the sea of sand and
harbour distinct and highly diverse plant and wildlife communities,
including endemic freshwater fish species and the endemic Sonoran
Pronghorn, which is only to be found in northwestern Sonora and in
southwestern Arizona (USA). Ten enormous, deep and almost perfectly
circular craters, believed to have been formed by a combination of
eruptions and collapses, also contribute to the dramatic beauty of the
site whose exceptional combination of features are of great scientific
interest. The site is also a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve.
Historic Centre of Agadez (Niger)
Known
as the gateway to the desert, Agadez, on the southern edge of the
Sahara desert, developed in the 15th and 16th centuries when the
Sultanate of Aïr was established and Touareg tribes were sedentarized
in the city, respecting the boundaries of old encampments, which gave
rise to a street pattern still in place today. The historic centre of
the city, an important crossroads of the caravan trade, is divided
into 11 quarters with irregular shapes. They contains numerous earthen
dwellings and a well-preserved group of palatial and religious
buildings including a 27m high minaret made entirely of mud brick,
the highest such structure in the world. The site is marked by
ancestral cultural, commercial and handicraft traditions still
practiced today and presents exceptional and sophisticated examples of
earthen architecture.
Cultural Landscape of Honghe Hani Rice Terraces (China)
The
Cultural Landscape of Honghe Hani Rice Terraces, China covers
16,603-hectares in Southern Yunnan. It is marked by spectacular terraces
that cascade down the slopes of the towering Ailao Mountains to the
banks of the Hong River. Over the past 1,300 years, the Hani people
have developed a complex system of channels to bring water from the
forested mountaintops to the terraces. They have also created an
integrated farming system that involves buffalos, cattle, ducks, fish
and eel and supports the production of red rice, the area’s primary
crop. The inhabitants worship the sun, moon, mountains, rivers,
forests and other natural phenomena including fire. They live in 82
villages situated between the mountaintop forests and the terraces.
The villages feature traditional thatched “mushroom” houses. The
resilient land management system of the rice terraces demonstrates
extraordinary harmony between people and their environment, both
visually and ecologically, based on exceptional and long-standing
social and religious structures.
Wieliczka and Bochnia Royal Salt Mines (Poland)
Bochnia
Royal Salt Mines (Poland) is an extension to the Polish Wieliczka Salt
Mine, inscribed on the World Heritage List in 1978, which is now to be
known as the Wieliczka and Bochnia Royal Salt Mines. The Wieliczka
Saltworks Castle used for the management of the property was also
added to the site. The rock salt deposit in Wieliczka-Bochnia has been
mined since the 13th century and is the oldest of its type in Europe.
Spread over several levels, it has 300 km of galleries with
underground chapels, storerooms and more. It includes altars and
statues sculpted in the salt, making a fascinating pilgrimage into the
past of a major industrial undertaking that developed over 700 years.
Tajikistan National Park (Mountains of the Pamirs) (Tajikistan)
Tajikistan
National Park (Tajikistan) covers more than 2.5 million hectares in
the east of the country, at the centre of the so-called “Pamir Knot”, a
meeting point of the highest mountain ranges on the Eurasian
continent. It consists of high plateaux in the east and, to the west,
rugged peaks, some of them over 7,000 meters high, and features
extreme seasonal variations of temperature. The longest valley glacier
outside the Polar region is located among the 1,085 glaciers
inventoried in the site, which also numbers 170 rivers and more than
400 lakes. Rich flora species of both the south-western and central
Asian floristic regions grow in the Park which shelters nationally
rare and threatened birds and mammals (Marco Polo Argali sheep, Snow
Leopards and Siberian Ibex and more). Subject to frequent strong
earthquakes, the Park is sparsely inhabited, and virtually unaffected by
agriculture and permanent human settlements. It offers a unique
opportunity for the study of plate tectonics and subduction phenomena.
The site is Tajikistan’s first natural World Heritage site.
Wooden Tserkvas of the Carpathian Region in Poland and Ukraine
Situated
in the eastern fringe of eastern Europe, the transnational property
numbers a selection of 16 tserkvas, churches, built of horizontal wooden
logs between the 16th and 19th centuries by communities of the
Eastern Orthodox and Greek Catholic faiths. They represent the
cultural expression of four ethnographic groups and the formal,
decorative and technical characteristics they developed over time. The
tserkvas bear testimony to a distinct building tradition rooted in
Orthodox ecclesiastic design interwoven with elements of local
tradition, and symbolic references to their communities’ cosmogony.
The tserkvas are built on a tri-partite plan surmounted by open
quadrilateral or octagonal domes and cupolas. They feature wooden bell
towers, iconostasis screens, and interior polychrome decorations as
well as churchyards, gatehouses and graveyards.
Red Bay Basque Whaling Station (Canada)
Red
Bay, established by Basque mariners in the 16th century at the
north-eastern tip of Canada on the shore of the Strait of Belle Isle is
an archaeological site that provides the earliest, most complete and
best preserved testimony of the European whaling tradition. Gran Baya,
as it was called by those who founded the station in 1530s, was used
as a base for coastal hunting, butchering, rendering of whale fat by
heading to produce oil and storage. It became a major source of whale
oil which was shipped to Europe where it was used for lighting. The
site, which was used in the summer months, includes remains of
rendering ovens, cooperages, wharves, temporary living quarters and a
cemetery, together with underwater remains of vessels and whale bone
deposits. The station was used for some 70 years, before the local
whale population was depleted.
Xinjiang Tianshan (China)
Xinjiang
Tianshan (China) comprises four components—Tomur, Kalajun-Kuerdening,
Bayinbukuke and Bogda— that total 606,833 hectares. They are part of the
Tianshan mountain system of Central Asia, one of the largest mountain
ranges in the world. Xinjiang Tianshan presents unique physical
geographic features and scenically beautiful areas including
spectacular snow and snowy mountains glacier-capped peaks, undisturbed
forests and meadows, clear rivers and lakes and red bed canyons.
These landscapes contrast with the vast adjacent desert landscapes,
creating a striking visual contrast between hot and cold environments,
dry and wet, desolate and luxuriant. The landforms and ecosystems of
the site have been preserved since the Pliocene epoch and present an
outstanding example of ongoing biological and ecological evolutionary
processes. The site also extends into the Taklimakan Desert, one of
the world’s largest and highest deserts, known for its large dune
forms and great dust storms. Xinjiang Tianshan is moreover an important
habitat for endemic and relic flora species, some rare and endangered.
The World Heritage Committee is currently holding its 37th
session in Phnom Penh. The session will close in Angkor on 27 June.
Seen whc.unesco.org for more information
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Amazing sites..Wish to visit atleast few
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