Difference between revisions of "Category:UNESCO World Heritage Sites in Slovenia"

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In [[established::1986]] the [[Škocjan Caves World Heritage Site|Škocjan Caves]] became the first Slovene landmark inscribed onto a UNESCO World Heritage Site list. The remains of two prehistoric pile-dwellings from the Ljubljansko Barje marshlands are a part of transnational heritage site "Prehistoric Pile-Dwellings in the Alpine Area", which comprises a selection of 111 archaeological sites in six countries around the Alps (Switzerland, Austria, France, Germany, Italy and Slovenia). In June 2011, the pile-dwellings were accepted to the UNESCO World Heritage List. The latest addition is the [[Idrija Mine Museum#UNESCO World Heritage List|Heritage of Mercury. Almadén and Idrija]], listed in 2012.
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In [[established::1986]] the [[Škocjan Caves World Heritage Site|Škocjan Caves]] became the first Slovene landmark inscribed onto a UNESCO World Heritage Site list. The remains of two prehistoric pile-dwellings from the Ljubljansko Barje marshlands are a part of transnational heritage site "Prehistoric Pile-Dwellings in the Alpine Area", which comprises a selection of 111 archaeological sites in six countries around the Alps. In June 2011, the pile-dwellings were accepted to the UNESCO World Heritage List. The latest addition is the [[Idrija Mine Museum#UNESCO World Heritage List|Heritage of Mercury. Almadén and Idrija]], listed in 2012.
  
 
==Sites on the tentative list==
 
==Sites on the tentative list==

Revision as of 15:06, 23 March 2016

In 1986 the Škocjan Caves became the first Slovene landmark inscribed onto a UNESCO World Heritage Site list. The remains of two prehistoric pile-dwellings from the Ljubljansko Barje marshlands are a part of transnational heritage site "Prehistoric Pile-Dwellings in the Alpine Area", which comprises a selection of 111 archaeological sites in six countries around the Alps. In June 2011, the pile-dwellings were accepted to the UNESCO World Heritage List. The latest addition is the Heritage of Mercury. Almadén and Idrija, listed in 2012.

Sites on the tentative list

  • The Fužina Hills in Bohinj (added in 1994), are part of Triglav National Park and are unique for alpine herding on high pastures with special farm structures primarily hayracks named Kozolec in Slovene and also types of pasture cottages where milk and diary products are made. People's customs and festivities are of ethnological importance and are connected with high mountain herding.
  • The Classic Karst (added in 2015), region in western Slovenia named Kras where the term Karst originated. It is limestone plateau known for various karst phenomena such as caves, abysses, sinkholes and intermittent lakes.
  • The Franja Partisan Hospital (added in 2000) is Second World War hospital comprised of 13 wooden buildings. Complex was set up in the period from December 1943 to May 1945 and was among the best equipped clandestine partisan hospitals with an operating room, X-ray apparatus, an invalid care facility, and a small electric plant.
  • The beech forests in the Notranjska region as an outstanding example of undisturbed, complex temperate forests, are an extension to the Joint World Heritage Property Primeval Beech Forests of the Carpathians (Slovak Republic and Ukraine) and Ancient Beech Forest of Germany, added in January 2015.

See also

Media in category "UNESCO World Heritage Sites in Slovenia"

The following 17 files are in this category, out of 17 total.