The Wooden Tserkvas of the Carpathian Region in Poland and Ukraine (Polish: Drewniane cerkwie regionu karpackiego w Polsce i na Ukrainie; Ukrainian: Дерев'яні церкви карпатського регіону Польщі та України, romanized: derev'yani tserkvy karpatsʹkoho rehionu Polʹshchi i Ukrayiny) are a group of wooden Orthodox (and some Eastern Catholic) churches (in Ukrainian, церкви tserkvy, in Polish cerkiew) located in Poland and Ukraine which were inscribed in 2013 on the UNESCO World Heritage List which explains:
UNESCO World Heritage Site | |
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Location | Carpathian region in Poland and Ukraine |
Includes | 16 wooden churches, eight in each country |
Criteria | Cultural: (iii), (iv) |
Reference | 1424 |
Inscription | 2013 (37th Session) |
Area | 7.03 ha (17.4 acres) |
Buffer zone | 92.73 ha (229.1 acres) |
built of horizontal wooden logs between the 16th and 19th centuries by communities of Orthodox and Greek Catholic faiths. The tserkvas bear testimony to a distinct building tradition rooted in Orthodox ecclesiastic design interwoven with elements of local tradition, and symbolic references to their communities’ cosmogony. — World Heritage Centre [1]
Inscribed Tserkvas
editPoland:
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Ukraine:
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See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Wooden Tserkvas of the Carpathian Region in Poland and Ukraine UNESCO World Heritage Centre 1992-2014. United Nations.