10 unesco heritage modena by f. piccinini
DESCRIPTION
TRANSCRIPT
EXPERIENCES IN THE EXPERIENCES IN THE MANAGEMENT OF THE MANAGEMENT OF THE
UNESCO WORLD UNESCO WORLD HERITAGE SITES HERITAGE SITES
- THE CASE OF MODENA -- THE CASE OF MODENA - Francesca Piccinini
Coordinator of the Steering Committee of the UNESCO World Heritage site of Modena
Bruxelles, September 7, 2011
The World Heritage List
The UNESCO sites in ItalyOf the 47 Italian sites:
• 43 are cultural sites;• 3 are natural sites (the Aeolian
Islands, The Dolomites and Monte San Giorgio);
• 1 is mixed (Cilento and Vallo di Diano National Park with the
Archeological sites of Paestum and Velia, and the Certosa di Padula).
Two more are in the list ofIntangible Cultural Heritage: the Opera dei Pupi (Sicilian Puppet
Theatre) and the Canto a tenore (Sardinian
Pastoral Songs), besides the Mediterranean diet (uniting Greece, Italy, Morocco
and Spain)
Cultural landscape
Portovenere, Cinque Terre, and the Islands (Plamaria, Tino and Tinetto)
Costiera Amalfitana
Val d’Orcia
Serial sitesMantua andSabbioneta
Early Christian Monuments of
Ravenna
Longobards in Italy. Places of the power (568-774 A.D.)
Cross – border sites and archaeological industryPrehistoric Pile dwellings around the Alps (2011)
Monte San Giorgio (2010) Crespi d’Adda (1995)
Rhaetian Railway in the Albula / Berniina
Landscapes (2008)
European cultural routesRoute of Santiago de Compostela1987
Via Francigena – 2004
Via Francigena
Budapest declaration (2002)
Management planThis is why in Italy, since 2002:
1. each request for membership in the World Heritage List must be accompanied by a management plan describing how the exceptional value of the site will be protected;
2. guidelines were developed for the preparation and implementation of management plans;
3. a specific methodology and a model for the implementation of management plans were defined;
4. the debate on management plans, promoted and coordinated by the Italian Ministry of Culture, was accompanied by a series of national conferences (Noto 2003; Paestum 2004, Torino 2005, Firenze 2007)
Management plan
In order to provide a solid help to the sites which are planning to adopt the Management Plan, a law has been published.
It is called “Special measures for protection and fruition of the Italian sites of cultural, scenic and environmental sites part of
the Unesco World Heritage List (n.77/2006) aiming at:
a)encouraging the drafting and the implementation of management plans;
b) raise the awareness of Unesco World Heritage sites, especially within schools;
c) qualify parking areas and mobility systems;
d) strengthen cultural services and reception facilities for the public
Management plan
Among the sites registered in the list after 2002, therefore having a management plan, we find:
• Syracuse and the Rocky Necropolis of Pantalica;• Genoa: Le Strade Nuove and the system of the Palazzi dei
Rolli
Among previously registered sites that produced a management plan we find:
• Rock Drawings in Valcamonica• Archaeological Area of Agrigento
Published on the website www.unesco.beniculturali.it
Modena Cathedral, Torre Civica and Piazza Grande“The joint creation of Lanfranco and Wiligelmo is a masterpiece of human creative genius in which a new dialectical relationship between architecture and sculpture was created in Romanesque art.
The Modena complex bears exceptional witness to the cultural traditions of the 12th century and is
one of the best examples of an architectural complex where religious and civic values are
combined in a medieval Christian town.”
(1997)
CriteriaI. Modena Cathedral, with its extraordinary
sculptural set, is a witness of human genius of creation;
II. At the beginning of the XII Century, Modena was one of the main places
where a new figurative language, destined to affect all of local Romanesque art, was
being created. In a European context, Modena Cathedral represents a special
testimony within the rebirth of stone monumental sculpture;
III. Its construction is one of the most important proofs of the urban society
existing in Northern Italy in the XII and XIII centuries;
IV. The monumental set offers an example of urban development in a tight connection with civic values, particularly through the relationships between economy, religion, as well as the socio-political life of the city
it highlights.
Lanfranco and Wiligelmo
Enoch and Elia supporting the tablet with the inscription recording the foundation of the
Cathedral and the sculptor Wiligelmus(Facade of Modena Cathedral)
Miniatures of manuscript codex Relatio de innovatione ecclesie Sancti Geminiani with architect Lanfrancus ( Capitulary Archive of Modena Cathedral)
Management plan 2008 – 09 / Law n. 77/2006
Maps of different lithotypes employed on the walls of Ghirlandina tower and Cathedral
Management plan 2008 – 09Law n. 77/2006
Ghirlandina tower.
Left: diagnostic tests
Right: restoration works
Management plan 2008 – 09Law n. 77/2006
Guided tours on scaffoldings Quick guide of the Unesco site
Tourist road sign for pedestrians
www.unesco.mo.it
Ideas for the future
Modena Cathedral, Doorway of the Princes Archivolt. Details of a sculptor and a blacksmith
• Virtual tour of the cathedral and the tower• new forms of collaboration at European level
• exchange of experiences among young people coming from different Unesco sites