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World Heritage Site From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Logo of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) World Heritage Committee A World Heritage Site is a place (such as a building, city, complex, desert, forest, island, lake, monument, or
mountain) that is listed by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) as being of
special cultural or physical significance.[1] The list is maintained by the international World Heritage Programme
administered by the UNESCO World Heritage Committee, composed of 21 UNESCO member states which are elected
by the General Assembly.[2]
The programme catalogues, names, and conserves sites of outstanding cultural or natural importance to the common
heritage of humanity. Under certain conditions, listed sites can obtain funds from the World Heritage Fund. The
program was founded with the Convention Concerning the Protection of the World's Cultural and Natural Heritage,[3]
which was adopted by the General Conference of UNESCO on 16 November 1972. Since then, 191 states parties have
ratified the Convention, making it one of the most adhered to international instruments. Only Liechtenstein, Nauru,
Somalia, South Sudan, Timor-Leste, and Tuvalu are not Parties to the Convention.
As of July 2015, 1031 sites are listed: 802 cultural, 197 natural, and 32 mixed properties, in 163 states parties.[4][5]
According to the sites ranked by country, Italy is home to the greatest number of World Heritage Sites with 51 sites,
followed by China (48), Spain (44), France (41), Germany (40), Mexico (33), and India (32). UNESCO references each
World Heritage Site with an identification number; however, new inscriptions often include previous sites now listed as
part of larger descriptions. Consequently, the identification numbers exceed 1,200, even though there are fewer on the
list.
While each World Heritage Site remains part of the legal territory of the state wherein the site is located, UNESCO
considers it in the interest of the international community to preserve each site.
History See also: World Heritage Committee Convention concerning the Protection of the World's Cultural and Natural Heritage
Signed 16 November 1972
Location Paris, France
Effective 17 December 1975
Condition 20 ratifications
Ratifiers 191 (187 UN member states plus the Cook Islands, the Holy See, Niue and Palestine)
Director‐General of the United Depositary Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization
Arabic, English, French, Russian and Languages
Spanish
In 1954, the government of Egypt decided to build the new Aswan High Dam, whose resulting future reservoir would
eventually inundate a large stretch of the Nile valley containing cultural treasures of ancient Egypt in Nubia. In 1959,
the governments of Egypt and Sudan requested UNESCO to assist their countries to protect and rescue the endangered
monuments and sites. In 1960, the Director-General of UNESCO launched an appeal to the Member States for an
International Campaign to Save the Monuments of Nubia.[6] This appeal resulted in the excavation and recording of
hundreds of sites, the recovery of thousands of objects, as well as the salvage and relocation to higher ground of a
number of important temples, the most famous of which are the temple complexes of Abu Simbel and Philae. The
campaign, ended in 1980, was considered a complete and spectacular success. As tokens of its gratitude to countries
which especially contributed to the campaign's success, Egypt donated four temples: the Temple of Dendur was moved
to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, the Temple of Debod was moved to the Parque del Oeste in
Madrid, the Temple of Taffeh was moved to the Rijksmuseum van Oudheden in the Netherlands, and the Temple of
Ellesyia to Museo Egizio in Turin.[7]
The project cost US$80 million, about $40 million of which was collected from 50 countries. The project's success led
to other safeguarding campaigns: saving Venice and its lagoon in Italy, the ruins of Mohenjo-daro in Pakistan, and the
Borobodur Temple Compounds in Indonesia. UNESCO then initiated, with the International Council on Monuments
and Sites, a draft convention to protect the common cultural heritage of humanity.
Convention and background The United States initiated the idea of cultural conservation with nature conservation. A White House conference in
1965 called for a "World Heritage Trust" to preserve "the world's superb natural and scenic areas and historic sites for
the present and the future of the entire world citizenry". The International Union for Conservation of Nature developed
similar proposals in 1968, and they were presented in 1972 to the United Nations conference on Human Environment in
Stockholm. Under the World Heritage Committee signatory countries are required to produce and submit periodic data
reporting providing the World Heritage Committee with an overview of each participating nation's implementation of
the World Heritage Convention and a "snapshot" of current conditions at World Heritage properties.
A single text was agreed on by all parties, and the "Convention Concerning the Protection of the World Cultural and
Natural Heritage" was adopted by the General Conference of UNESCO on 16 November 1972.
The Convention came into force on 17 December 1975. As of June 2014, it has been ratified by 191 states, including
187 UN member states plus the Cook Islands, the Holy See, Niue, and the Palestinian territories.[8]
Nominating process A country must first inventory its significant ethical and natural properties; the result is called the Tentative List. A
country may not nominate properties that have not been included on the Tentative List. Next, it can place properties
selected from this list into a Nomination File.
The Nomination File is evaluated by the International Council on Monuments and Sites and the World Conservation
Union. These bodies then make their recommendations to the World Heritage Committee. The Committee meets once
per year to determine whether or not to inscribe each nominated property on the World Heritage List and sometimes
defers the decision to request more information from the country which nominated the site. There are ten selection
criteria – a site must meet at least one of them to be included on the list.[citation needed]
Selection criteria Until the end of 2004, there were six criteria for cultural heritage and four criteria for natural heritage. In 2005, this was
modified so that there is only one set of ten criteria. Nominated sites must be of "outstanding universal value" and meet
at least one of the ten criteria.[9]
UNESCO Tentative List (2013)‐ The Venetian Works of defence between 15th and 17th centuries Italy
Date of Submission: 09/10/2013
Criteria: (ii)(iii)(iv)
Category: Cultural
Submitted by:
Permanent Delegation of Italy to UNESCO
Ref.: 5844
Transnational
Other States Parties participating
Croatia
Montenegro
Description
The system composed by the Venetian Works of defence between 15th and 17th centuries is the proposed nomination of
a serial transnational site to the World Heritage List; it is representative of the more complex defensive system,
designed and built by the Serenissima Republic of Venice in order to control its territories and the commercial routes
leading to the East.
The site extends for more than 1.000 km from the Pre Alps of Lombardy to the Eastern coast of the Adriatic, in the area
between the western outpost (Bergamo, Italy) and the Bay of Kotor (Montenegro). Between the Stato di Terra (State of
Land: Lombard-Venetian) and the Stato di Mare (State of Sea: Croatia, Montenegro), this unique and ancient enclave
bears nowadays significant examples of the Venetian fortifications, important testimony of the interaction among
peoples and, more in general, of the culture expressed by Venice in the world.
The components of the nominated property summarize the most representative expression of the defensive system –still
evident at present- conceived as a real network, where any fortified element played a precise role within a wide and
unitary project. The Serenissima Republic of Venice, in fact, tests and completes in a vast territory a new defensive
system – technically recognized as “alla moderna” (“modern style”)- characterizing the period of time between XV and
XVII century.
During the first phase, that can be considered as “transitional”, Venice undertakes a series of interventions and
experiments, revealing the evolution from the medieval warfare techniques to the new and modern defensive systems
(end of XV century). But it is in XVI century that the most advanced Venetian military structures see their maximum
diffusion as they were to resist the newly invented firearms. Finally the XVII century is characterized by the completion
of the previously started works and by the improvement of the defensive techniques, which represent as a whole
outstanding examples of the new military architecture.
The site is composed by a series of complex fortified systems (Bergamo), forts (Fort of Sant’Andrea in Venice), and
fortified cities designed ex novo (Palmanova), or based on the reconstruction of existing structures (Peschiera del
Garda). These structures are still highly connoting the urban and geo-morphological context they are in.
This extraordinary operation conducted by Venice at a such vast territorial scale was carried out thanks to an impressive
circulation of professionals, the fortifications’ architects themselves and of a consistent heritage of treaties; at the same
time, regulations, social models and new type of governance led Venetian culture to merge with the cultures from the
Eastern Adriatic sea and from here, by land, to the East: all territories where numerous and various material and
immaterial evidences of the Venetian centuries-old presence remain.
Because of this variety of aspects, the nomination proposal is representative of a system formed by a series of
components which are interdependent from one another and, at the same time, constitute systems with their own precise
and recognizable connotation.