History and Terminology
In 1992 the World Heritage Convention became the first international legal instrument to recognise and protect cultural landscapes. The Committee at its 16th session adopted guidelines concerning their inclusion in the World Heritage List.
The Committee acknowledged that cultural landscapes represent the "combined works of nature and of man" designated in Article 1 of the Convention. They are illustrative of the evolution of human society and settlement over time, under the influence of the physical constraints and/or opportunities presented by their natural environment and of successive social, economic and cultural forces, both external and internal.
The term "cultural landscape" embraces a diversity of manifestations of the interaction between humankind and its natural environment. Cultural landscapes often reflect specific techniques of sustainable land-use, considering the characteristics and limits of the natural environment they are established in, and a specific spiritual relation to nature. Protection of cultural landscapes can contribute to modern techniques of sustainable land-use and can maintain or enhance natural values in the landscape. The continued existence of traditional forms of land-use supports biological diversity in many regions of the world. The protection of traditional cultural landscapes is therefore helpful in maintaining biological diversity.
Source: http:/whc.icomos.org/culturallandscape
Cultural landscapes fall into three main categories (Operational
Guidelines 2005, Annex3), namely:
The most easily identifiable is the clearly defined landscape designed and created intentionally by man. This embraces garden and parkland landscapes constructed for aesthetic reasons which are often (but not always) associated with religious or other monumental buildings and ensembles.
The second category is the organically evolved landscape. This results from an initial social, economic, administrative, and/or religious imperative and has developed its present form by association with and in response to its natural environment. Such landscapes reflect that process of evolution in their form and component features.
They fall into two sub-categories:
§ a relict (or fossil) landscape is one in which an evolutionary process came to an end at some time in the past, either abruptly or over a period. Its significant distinguishing features are, however, still visible in material form.
§ continuing landscape is one which retains an active social role in contemporary society closely associated with the traditional way of life, and in which the evolutionary process is still in progress. At the same time it exhibits significant material evidence of its evolution over time.
The final category is the associative cultural landscape. The inclusion of such landscapes on the World Heritage List is justifiable by virtue of the powerful religious, artistic or cultural associations of the natural element rather than material cultural evidence, which may be insignificant or even absent.
World Heritage Regional Thematic Expert Meetings on Cultural Landscapes 1992 - 2005
§ Meeting
of Experts on Cultural Landscapes in the Caribbean: Identification and Safeguarding
Strategies, Santiago de Cuba, November 7-10, 2005
Background
paper ingles Nov 3.doc
Background
paper espańol Nov 3.doc
Santiago
de Cuba Declaration. ENGLISH.FINAL.doc
Declaración
de Santiago de Cuba. espanol.doc
§ World
Heritage Thematic Expert Meeting on Vineyard Cultural Landscapes (Hungary,
July 2001)
whc-01-conf208-inf7e.pdf
§ UNESCO
World Heritage Centre / Agency for Cultural Affairs of Japan / Wakayama Prefectural
Government (ed.): UNESCO Thematic Expert Meeting on Asia-Pacific Sacred Mountains.
5-10 September 2001, Wakayama City, Japan. Final Report.
http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0012/001265/126500e.pdf
§ Expert
Meeting on Desert Landscapes and Oasis Systems (Oasis Kharga, Egypt, 2001)
whc-01-conf208-inf10e.pdf
§ Thematic Expert Meeting in Potential Natural
World Heritage in the Alps (Hallstatt, Austria, 2000)
whc-00-conf204-web2e.pdf
§ Expert
Meeting on the Management Guidelines for Cultural Landscapes (Banska Stiavnica,
Slovakia, June 1999)
whc-99-conf204-inf16e.pdf
§ Von Droste, B., Rössler, M., Titchen, S. (eds.): Linking Nature and Culture. Report on the Global Strategy, Natural and Cultural Heritage Expert Meeting 25 to 29 March 1998, Amsterdam, Netherlands. (E)
§ Expert
Meeting on Routes as Part of the Cultural Heritage (Spain, November 1994)
whc-94-conf003-inf13f.pdf
whc-94-conf003-inf13e.pdf
§ International Expert Meeting on "Cultural Landscapes of Outstanding Universal Value" (Germany, October 1993)
§ Expert Group on Cultural Landscapes (France, October 1992)
Expert Meetings on Cultural Landscapes organized by States Parties
§ Monument - Site - Cultural Landscape Exemplified by the Wachau (Austria, October 1998)
§ Cultural Landscapes: Concept and Implementation (Italy, March 2000)
Books and Proceedings
§ Von
Droste, B., Plachter, H., Rössler, M. (eds.):
Cultural Landscapes of Universal
Value.
Components
of a Global Strategy. Jena: Fischer Verlag 1995. (E)
§ UNESCO
World Heritage Centre:
Heritage
Transportation Canal Corridors.
Proceedings
of the International Meeting of Experts 15 to 19 September 1994.
Ottawa:
Department of Canadian Heritage, 1996. (E/F)
§ Pressouyre,
L.:
The World Heritage Convention, twenty
years later.
Paris, UNESCO Publishing 1996.
§ Barreda,
E.M. (ed.):
Paisajes
Culturales en Los Andes.
Memoria Narrativa, Casos de Estudio, Conclusiones y Recomendaciones de la
Réunion de Expertos, Arequipa y Chivay, Perú, 1998. (Spanish)
§ Committee
on the Preservation, Development and Utilization of Cultural Landscapes Associated
with Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries; Monuments and Site Division, Cultural
Properties Department, Agency for Cultural Affairs, Japan:
The
Report of the Study on the Protection of Cultural Landscapes Associated with
Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries.
12.
June 2003, Japan
§ Conseil
de l’Europe :
Mémoire du patrimoine.
Naturopa no 99 / 2003 (French/English)
§ Deutsche
UNESCO-Kommission e.V., Brandenburgische Technische Universität Cottbus (ed.):
Natur und Kultur.
Ambivalente
Dimensionen unseres Erbes. Perspektivenwechsel. Deutsche UNESCO Kommission
e.V. 2002 (German/English)
§ Fowler,
P.J.: World Heritage Cultural Landscapes 1992 – 2002.
World
Heritage Papers 6.
UNESCO World Heritage Centre 2003.
(E)
§ Hungarian
World Heritage Committee, UNESCO World Heritage Centre (ed.):
Proceedings
of the World Heritage Expert Meeting on Vineyard Cultural Landscapes.
11 – 14 Juny, Tokaj, Hungary. Nemzeti Kulturális Örökség Minisztériuma,
2002. (English) Short version
§ Lee,
C, Schaaf, T. (eds.):
International
Workshop on the Importance of Sacred Natural Sites for the Biodiversity Conservation.
Kunming and Xishuangbanna Biosphere Reserve. People’s Republic of China, 17
– 20 February 2003. Proceedings. UNESCO, Division of Ecological Sciences 2003
(E)
§ Michalowski,
A. et al. (eds.):
Studia
I Materialy. The Regional Expert Meeting on the Cultural Landscapes in Eastern
Europe.
Bialystok, Poland 29 September – 3 October 1999. Osrodek Ochrony Zabytkowego
Krajobrazu Narodowa Instytucja Kultury, Warszawa 2000. (E)
§ Rěos,
M., Rössler, M., Lepeigné-Cobo, A. M. (ed.):
Paisajes Culturales en Mesoamérica.
Reunión de Expertos, Memoria. 27 al 30 de septiembre de 2000. UNESCO 2000
(Spanish)
§ Rössler,
M., Saouma-Forero, G.:
The
World Heritage Convention and cultural landscapes in Africa.
Expert Meeting – Tiwi, Kenya 9/14 March 1999. UNESCO 2000, CRATerre See also
§ UNESCO
World Heritage Centre, IUCN (eds.):
Vision and reality. The World Heritage Convention in action. World
Conservation Number 2 2001.
The IUCN Bulletin.
§ UNESCO
World Heritage Centre / Agency for Cultural Affairs of Japan / Wakayama Prefectural
Government (ed.):
UNESCO
Thematic Expert Meeting on Asia-Pacific Sacred Mountains.
5-10 September 2001, Wakayama City, Japan. Final Report.
§ UNESCO
World Heritage Centre:
Cultural
Landscapes: the Challenges of Conservation.
Proceedings of the conference: World Heritage 2002, Shared Legacy, Common
Responsibility, 11 – 12 November 2002 Ferrara, Italy. World Heritage Papers
7, 2002 (F)
§ UNESCO:
Natural
Sacred Sites.
Cultural Diversity and Biological Diversity. International Symposium, Paris
1998
§ Von
Droste, B., Rössler, M., Titchen, S. (eds.):
Linking Nature and Culture.
Report on the Global Strategy, Natural and Cultural Heritage Expert Meeting
25 to 29 March 1998, Amsterdam, Netherlands. (E)
Articles
§ Bequette,
F.:
Gardens of the Far East.
In: The UNESCO courier: a window open on the world; 50, 5. Publ: 1997; p.
44-46
§ Bergeret,
Y.:
Reading the landscape.
In: The UNESCO courier: a window open on the world; 50, 5. Publ: 1997; p.
10-15
§ Boukhari,
S.:
Beyond the monuments: a living heritage.
In: UNESCO sources; 80. Publ: 1996; p. 7-16 (E, F)
http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0010/001033/103365e.pdf
http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0010/001033/103365f.pdf
§ Cleere,
H.:
World heritage vineyard landscapes.
In: World Heritage Review; 35 Publ: 2004; p. 4-19 (E, F)
§ De
Marco, L.; Stovel, H.:
Cinque Terre: a landscape carved
from stone.
In: World Heritage Review; 33 Publ: 2003; p. 54-65 (E, F)
§ Díaz
F., José M.:
Quebrada de Humahuaca.
In: World Heritage Review; 35. Publ: 2004; p. 68-79
§ Jonathan,
P.:
From garden to landscape in Suzhou.
In: World Heritage Review; 13, Publ: 1999; p. 4-15
§ Lowenthal,
D.:
Cultural landscapes.
In: The UNESCO courier: a window open on the world; 50, 9, Publ: 1997; p.
18-20
§ Lu
W.:
The Soul of Suzhou's gardens.
In: The UNESCO courier; 53, 12. Publ: 2000; p. 20-22
http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0012/001213/121326e.pdf#121333
http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0012/001213/121326f.pdf#121333
http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0012/001213/121326s.pdf#121333
§ Molstad,
A.:
The Nordic road map for world heritage
conservation.
In: World Heritage Review; 33. Publ: 2003; p. 20-23
§ Novák,
Z.:
Lednice-Valtice.
In: World Heritage Review; 9, Publ: 1998; p. 24-35
§ Quilitzsch,
U.:
The Garden kingdom of Dessau-Wörlitz.
In: World Heritage Review; 25, Publ: 2002; p. 70-79
§ Roberts,
J.:
Moghal gardens: paradise and conservation.
In: World Heritage Review; 7, Publ: 1998; p. 20-31
§ Titchen,
S.
M.:
Protecting cultural
landscapes in the Asian Pacific region.
In:
World Heritage Review; 2. Publ: 1996; p. 34-39 Landscape with figures: the
dialogue between people and places.
In: The UNESCO courier: a window open on the world;
50, 5, Publ: 1997 (E, F, S)
Charters and Other Instruments
ICOMOS
§ International Charter for the Conservation and Restoration of Monuments and Sites (The Venice Charter)
§ The Florence Charter (Historic gardens and landscapes)
§ Charter for the Protection and Management of the Archaeological Heritage
§ International Charter on Cultural Tourism
§ The Nara Document on Authenticity
§ The Australia ICOMOS Charter for the Conservation of Places of Cultural Significance (The Burra Charter)
UNESCO
§
Convention
For the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage
Paris, 17 October 2003 More
§
Convention
for the Protection of the World Cultural and Natural Heritage
Paris, 16 November 1972 More
§
Recommendation
concerning the Protection, at National Level, of the Cultural and Natural
Heritage
16 November 1972 More
§
Recommendation
concerning the Safeguarding of Beauty and Character of Landscapes and Sites
11 December 1962 More
Council of Europe
§ Council of Europe www.coe.int/
§ The European Institute of Cultural Routes