ZAGREB, November 28, 2018 - Međimurska popevka, a folksong from the northwest Croatian region of Međimurje, and the art of dry stone walling, practiced in Croatia, Cyprus, France, Greece, Italy, Slovenia, Spain and Switzerland, were inscribed on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list during an UNESCO meeting in Port Louis, Mauritius.
The folksong called "Međimurska popevka" was in the past "predominantly a soloist vocal genre practised by women. Nowadays, it is performed by individuals and groups, men and women, in vocal, vocal-instrumental, instrumental, monophonic and multipart renditions, as a musical genre or incorporated into the dance. The lyrics are of great importance and establish a basis for the classification into, among others, love, sad-melancholic, humorous and church popevkas," reads the explanation given on the web site of the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage programme.
"There are currently around fifty singers regarded as masters of the art for their transmission of classical merits of the genre and their capacity to imbue it with personal expressions, and women often serve as mentors in transmitting the practice to younger generations".
The nomination of Međimurska popevka folksong was prepared by experts Lidija Bajuk, Nail Ceribašić, Tvrtko Zebec and with the support of local communities in Međimurje, the Croatian Culture Ministry has reported.
The art of dry stone walling ("suhozidna gradnja" in Croatian) "concerns the knowhow related to making stone constructions by stacking stones upon each other, without using any other materials except sometimes dry soil. Dry stone structures are spread across most rural areas – mainly in steep terrains – both inside and outside inhabited spaces, though they are not unknown in urban areas. The stability of the structures is ensured through the careful selection and placement of the stones, and dry-stone structures have shaped numerous, diverse landscapes, forming various modes of dwelling, farming and husbandry."
"Such structures testify to the methods and practices used by people from prehistory to today to organize their living and working space by optimizing local natural and human resources. They play a vital role in preventing landslides, floods and avalanches, and in combating erosion and desertification of the land, enhancing biodiversity and creating adequate microclimatic conditions for agriculture."
The 13th meeting of the Intergovernmental Committee for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage is taking place in Port Louis from Monday to Saturday, and Croatia is represented by Assistant Culture Minister Davor Trupković and the secretary-general of the Croatian commission for UNESCO, Rut Carek.
For more on Croatia and UNESCO, click here.
ZAGREB, May 31, 2018 - Croatia's Culture Minister Nina Obuljen Koržinek formally opened an exhibition on Croatian intangible cultural heritage in Strasbourg on Wednesday, inaugurating Croatian cultural events over the next six months during the country's chairmanship of the Council of Europe, which has its seat in the city.
Another warning from UNESCO to the Pearl of Adriatic on the damage cruise ships are causing to the southern Adriatic gem.
A lot has been written in the past few years about the problems several Croatian famous tourist sites are facing with the ever-increasing number of tourists that have been pouring in - and now again we seem to have come to a deadline!
You've probably climbed it, but did you really know what you were climbing?
Did you know that as European capitals like London bathed in their own filth, Dubrovnik had a fully functioning sewage system?
If you've ever been to Dubrovnik, you'll have certainly walked down it, but how much do you really know about the ground you're walking on?
If you've ever been to Dubrovnik, then you'll have walked down it, but how much do you really know about it?
Dubrovnik is stepping it up a notch in order to ensure order in the UNESCO city's historic core.
Mato Franković met with Kotor's Vladimir Jokić, with whom he talked about the threat of cruise ship tourism and the possibilities of enhancing cooperation between the two UNESCO cities in the fields of tourism and culture.