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Journal articles on the topic 'Landscape monuments'

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1

Pereira, Edilson. "MONUMENTOS URBANOS E ARTE PÚBLICA: OS OBELISCOS EM ROTAÇÃO / Urban monuments and public art: the obelisks in rotation." Arte e Ensaios 27, no. 41 (2021): 251–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.37235/ae.n41.14.

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Este ensaio aborda uma forma monumental antiga e muito disseminada no mundo – o obelisco e suas variações – para refletir sobre a importância desse artefato estético e sociocultural até o último século, quando passa a interagir com questões oriundas dos debates propostos pela “arte pública”. Considerando os usos históricos e contemporâneos dos monumentos verticais não figurativos, abordo algumas intervenções e instalações artísticas, focalizando monumentos públicos, para mapear as estratégias de subversão das formas e sentidos a eles atribuídos. Demonstro que certos monumentos são objeto de vá
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2

Herasymenko, I., and S. Maksymov. "PROBLEMATIC ISSUES OF CULTURAL HERITAGE VALUATION OF MONUMENTS." Criminalistics and Forensics, no. 65 (May 18, 2020): 477–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.33994/kndise.2020.65.47.

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The article analyzes the current state of the regulatory framework governing the valuation of cultural monuments, in particular, the Monetary Valuation of Monuments approved by the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine dated September 26, 2002 No. 1447. The classification of conservation categories by a monument (national and local significance) and types of monuments (archeology, history, monumental art, architecture and urban planning, landscape gardening art, historical landscape, science and technology) is given. The main problem in determining the value of monuments is to take into account not
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Bates, C. Richard, Martin Bates, Chris Gaffney, Vincent Gaffney, and Timothy D. Raub. "Geophysical Investigation of the Neolithic Calanais Landscape." Remote Sensing 11, no. 24 (2019): 2975. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/rs11242975.

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The northern and western isles of Scotland have proved fertile ground for archaeological investigation over the last 100 years. However, the nature of the landscape with its rugged coastlines and irregular topography, together with rapid peat growth rates, make for challenging surveying. Commonly, an archaeological monument or series of monuments is identified but little is known about the surrounding areas and, in particular, the palaeo-landscapes within which the monuments are located. This situation is exemplified by the standing stones of Calanais in Lewis. Here, surrounding peat bogs have
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Huebner, Thom, and Supakorn Phoocharoensil. "Monument as semiotic landscape." Linguistic Landscape. An international journal 3, no. 2 (2017): 101–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/ll.3.2.01hue.

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Abstract As semiotic spaces, monuments convey messages through multiple information design modes, including language, materiality and emplacement. As research on semiotic landscape has pointed out (e.g., Shohamy and Waksman 2009, Abousnnouga and Machin 2010, Train 2016), these messages are often contested in nature and convey competing discourses inherent in the spaces they occupy. This paper explores those competing discourses manifested in a monument dedicated to the 1976 student protest and violent suppression of it by the Thai military and right-wing paramilitary groups. Working within a p
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Ochiai, Akiko. "From Underrepresentation to “Dual Heritage” and Beyond: Contemporary African American Monument-Building." Soundings: An Interdisciplinary Journal 104, no. 4 (2021): 320–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.5325/soundings.104.4.0320.

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Abstract The years following the Civil Rights Movement witnessed the erection of African American monuments in traditionally white-dominated public spaces, especially in the South. While this terrestrial integration acknowledges the historic centrality of race, their juxtaposition with former Confederate monuments ironically created a parallel “dual heritage.” Around the turn of the twenty-first century, newer types of counter-monuments contest prior memorialization and proffer a more nuanced history. Since the 2015 Charleston church shooting, calls for removal of old Confederate monuments hav
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Sims, Lionel, and David Fisher. "Through the Gloomy Vale: Underworld Alignments at Stonehenge." Culture and Cosmos 21, no. 1 and 2 (2017): 11–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.46472/cc.01221.0203.

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Three recent independently developed models suggest that some Neolithic and Bronze Age monuments exhibit dual design properties in monument complexes by pairing obverse structures. Parker Pearson’s1 materiality model proposes that monuments of wood are paired with monuments of stone, these material metaphors respectively signifying places of rituals for the living with rituals for the dead. Higginbottom’s2 landscape model suggests that many western Scottish megalithic structures are paired in mirror-image landscape locations in which the horizon distance, direction and height of one site is th
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Chapman, Henry P. "Rethinking the ‘Cursus Problem’ – Investigating the Neolithic Landscape Archaeology of Rudston, East Yorkshire, UK, using GIS." Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 71 (2005): 159–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0079497x00000992.

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In terms of their interpretation, cursus monuments remain arguably the most enigmatic class of Neolithic landscape monument. This paper reconsiders this ‘cursus problem’ through the study of the complex of cursuses that surrounds the village of Rudston, East Yorkshire. Using a GIS-based analysis, it is argued that two distinct forms of architecture can be recognised. In the earlier phase it is possible to recognise the importance of somatic experience generated through movement along the interior of the monuments, incorporating elements of visual surprise in addition to constant visual relatio
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Zviriaka, Anna. "Detection and Protection of Landscape Monuments of Ukraine." Bulletin of Kyiv National University of Culture and Arts. Series in Museology and Monumental Studies 1, no. 2 (2018): 34–46. https://doi.org/10.31866/2617-7943.2.2018.164994.

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The article is devoted to the detection and protection of landscape monuments of Ukraine. The relevance of the research is due to the imperfection of regulatory support, the lack of experience in protection and preservation of large landscaped areas, measures that would prevent a negative human impact on them. The aim of the research is to highlight the problematic issues in identifying and protecting valuable landscapes, to analyze the existing methodological support for the protection of landscape monuments, to identify the basic principles for their identification and pr
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9

Howey, Meghan C. L., Michael W. Palace, and Crystal H. McMichael. "Geospatial modeling approach to monument construction using Michigan from A.D. 1000–1600 as a case study." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 113, no. 27 (2016): 7443–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1603450113.

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Building monuments was one way that past societies reconfigured their landscapes in response to shifting social and ecological factors. Understanding the connections between those factors and monument construction is critical, especially when multiple types of monuments were constructed across the same landscape. Geospatial technologies enable past cultural activities and environmental variables to be examined together at large scales. Many geospatial modeling approaches, however, are not designed for presence-only (occurrence) data, which can be limiting given that many archaeological site re
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Ravvin, Norman. "Placed Upon the Landscape, Casting Shadows: Jewish Canadian Monuments and Other Forms of Memory." Canadian Jewish Studies / Études juives canadiennes 31 (May 18, 2021): 104–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.25071/1916-0925.40212.

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This essay explores monuments, including the National Holocaust Monument in Ottawa, and gravestones in Jewish cemeteries in Montreal and Vancouver. Alongside these sites it considers how Canadian Jewish literature presents possibilities for Jewish history and language to mark the Canadian landscape though a consideration of Leonard Cohen and Eli Mandel. A discussion of Canadian monuments is relevant in light of recent demonstrations focused on removing statues and monuments from parks and government buildings. The essay contrasts community-inspired projects like Vancouver’s Holocaust memorial
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Namichev, Petar, Ekaterina Namicheva Todorovska, and Vladica Nikolovska. "The Interaction Between the Isar and the Urban Landscape of Shtip." Journal of Balkan Architecture 1, no. 2 (2025): 1–18. https://doi.org/10.69648/ulkg5287.

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This study explores the relationship between the Memorial Complex to the Fallen Fighters of the Revolution in Shtip, designed by Bogdan Bogdanović, and the topography of Isar Hill. While previous scholarship has examined Bogdanović’s unique approach to memorial architecture, limited attention has been given to how his monuments engage with their immediate landscapes. Addressing this gap, the study analyzes the spatial, material, and experiential dimensions of the Shtip monument, emphasizing its integration with the natural contours of the terrain. Employing a qualitative research methodology,
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PETTERSON, ANNE. "The monumental landscape from below: public statues, popular interaction and nationalism in late nineteenth-century Amsterdam." Urban History 46, no. 04 (2019): 722–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0963926819000154.

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ABSTRACT:Public monuments are considered an important tool in the nineteenth-century nation-building project. Yet while the intended (nationalist) message of the monumental landscape is often clear, the popular perception of the statues and memorials has been little problematized. This contribution analyses the popular interaction with public monuments in late nineteenth-century Amsterdam and questions whether ordinary people understood the nationalist meaning. With the help of visual sources – engravings, lithographs and the novel medium of photography – we become aware of the multilayered me
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Gordeziani, Tengiz, and Salome Elbakidze. "Mapping of historical and religious monuments of the Karelian municipality (Georgia)." InterCarto. InterGIS 30, no. 1 (2024): 397–409. https://doi.org/10.35595/2414-9179-2024-1-30-397-409.

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In the last 30-year period in Georgia one of the priority directions of thematic cartography is atlas mapping of historical and religious monuments of individual regions of Georgia. The purpose of this article is classification by various features and mapping of historical and religious monuments of the Kareli municipality. In the process of work the materials obtained during the field expedition, as well as the available archive materials, were used. Literary and cartographic sources were also used. In the field conditions the clergy was surveyed about historical and religious monuments in th
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Shydlovskyi, Pavlo, Serhii Telizhenko, and Vsevolod Ivakin. "Archaeological Heritage as a Target during War." European Archaeologist 74 (November 3, 2022): 36–43. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7492858.

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The conflict in Ukraine has caused the large-scale destruction of historical landscapes. Thousands of archaeological sites—both those undergoing archaeological investigations as well as ones that had yet to be opened—have been damaged. Currently, cultural heritage protection activities in Ukraine focus mainly on ‘visible’ objects,  such  as  architectural  monuments,  religious  and  historical  buildings  and objects  of monumental art. Monitoring the state of archaeological heritage objects in Ukraine is a challenge. T
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Tóth, Attila, Axel Timpe, Richard Stiles, et al. "Small Sacral Christian Architecture in the Cultural Landscapes of Europe." Acta Horticulturae et Regiotecturae 22, no. 1 (2019): 1–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/ahr-2019-0001.

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Abstract Though often overlooked due to its scale, small sacral Christian architecture has a significant importance in cultural landscapes in Europe and beyond. It represents a shared international cultural heritage and is significant in its diversity, distribution and abundance across cultural landscapes. The tradition of the artistic depiction of the cross in Christianity dates back to the 4th century AD. The first monuments in the form of crosses were placed in open landscapes in Scotland in the 7th century. The most important period for the spread of small sacral architecture of Catholic o
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Baguley, Margaret, Martin Kerby, and Nikki Andersen. "Counter memorials and counter monuments in Australia’s commemorative landscape: A systematic literature review." Historical Encounters: A journal of historical consciousness, historical cultures, and history education 8, no. 3 (2021): 93–120. http://dx.doi.org/10.52289/hej8.308.

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Over the course of the last four decades there has been a growing interest in the development and impact of counter memorials and counter monuments. While counter memorial and monument practices have been explored in Europe and the United States, relatively little research has been conducted in the Australian context. This systematic literature review examines the current state of scholarship by exploring what form counter monuments and memorials have taken and what events they have focussed on. A total of 134 studies met the selection criteria and were included in the final review. The major
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Dickerman, Leah. "Monumental Propaganda." October 165 (August 2018): 178–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/octo_a_00328.

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“Monumental Propaganda” compares the use of monuments by the Soviet Union and supporters of the Southern side in the American Civil War—in particular, the way they claimed ideological territory by proliferating statues of Lenin and Robert E. Lee, respectively. To answer the question of whether an alternative commemorative landscape might be imaginable, the essay turns to The Negro in Virginia (1940), a book devoted to the historical achievements of black citizenry in America. The book's endpapers present an illustrated map of Virginia indicating sites where black Americans played a critical hi
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18

Bayliss, Alex, Fachtna McAvoy, and Alasdair Whittle. "The world recreated: redating Silbury Hill in its monumental landscape." Antiquity 81, no. 311 (2007): 26–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x00094825.

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A classic exposition of the difficulties of dating a major monument and why it matters. Silbury Hill, one of the world's largest prehistoric earth mounds, is too valuable to take apart, so we are reliant on samples taken from tunnels and chance exposures. Presenting a new edition of thirty radiocarbon dates, the authors offer models of short- or long-term construction, and their implications for the ritual landscape of Silbury and Stonehenge. The sequence in which monuments, and bits of monuments, were built gives us the kind and history of societies doing the building. So nothing matters more
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Boado, Felipe Criado, and Victoria Villoch Vázquez. "Monumentalizing landscape: From present perception to the past meaning of Galician megalithism (north-west Iberian Peninsula)." European Journal of Archaeology 3, no. 2 (2000): 188–216. http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/eja.2000.3.2.188.

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The study of landscape as social construction implies considering its economic and territorial dimensions, as much as its symbolic ones. A major topic in such kinds of studies is the reconstruction of the ways in which natural and social space was perceived by past societies. We ought to approach the project of building an archaeology of perception. One of the aims of such a research programme would be the evaluation of the effects of natural and artificial landscape features on past human observers. This paper will argue that a possible strategy for studying these dimensions of past landscape
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20

Khachikyan, Lia. "The Problems of Preserving Zones of Monuments in Urban Structure and Natural Environment in Republic of Armenia." Advanced Materials Research 1020 (October 2014): 817–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amr.1020.817.

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The artistic expressions, constructive techniques, national cultural values of monument buildings, their succession and maintenance problems are especially perceptible and appreciable when observed in their historical environment.Monuments can be observed in two main groups according to their location: natural and urban landscape groups. Naturally, landscape changes over years undergoing construction development and different natural or anthropogenic influences. Of course much more structural problems are notable in urban contexts, since they are much more susceptible to dynamic changes in urb
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Schicchi, Rosario, Claudia Speciale, Filippo Amato, et al. "The Monumental Olive Trees as Biocultural Heritage of Mediterranean Landscapes: The Case Study of Sicily." Sustainability 13, no. 12 (2021): 6767. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su13126767.

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Monumental olive trees, with their longevity and their remarkable size, represent an important information source for the comprehension of the territory where they grow and the human societies that have kept them through time. Across the centuries, olive trees are the only cultivated plants that tell the story of Mediterranean landscapes. The same as stone monuments, these green monuments represent a real Mediterranean natural and cultural heritage. The aim of this paper is to discuss the value of monumental trees as “biocultural heritage” elements and the role they play in the interpretation
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Kolosov, V. A., M. V. Zotova, A. I. Alexandrova, and A. S. Karasev. "Material Elements of the Political Landscape of Moscow as a Capital." Izvestiya Rossiiskoi Akademii Nauk Seriya Geograficheskaya 87, no. 8 (2023): 1190–206. http://dx.doi.org/10.31857/s2587556623080095.

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The urban environment of Moscow is considered through the concept of the political landscape as a complex of environment-shaping, representative objects. The image of the capital is not only the political history of the state, captured in buildings and monuments, but also a mirror of the representations of the national elite about its social support, development prospects, the outside world, and diverse social ideas about space. Official buildings as the focus of the political and administrative functions of the capital and city monuments are shown in the study as the dominant categories of pl
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Perkova, M. V., E. I. Ladik, M. Y. Drebezgova, and N. V. Chernysheva. "Evaluation Criteria for the Memorial Landscape Complex “Green Belt Of Glory” in the Leningrad Region." Housing Construction, no. 4 (June 29, 2025): 3–14. https://doi.org/10.31659/0044-4472-2025-4-3-14.

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There are more than 80000 memorial complexes, monuments and museums dedicated to the Great Patriotic War in Russia. One of the most famous memorial complexes is the Green Belt of Glory. These are unique objects that are a combination of monuments, memorials, parks and alleys located in various cities and towns of the Leningrad region. The relevance of the research is justified by the Instruction of the President of the Russian Federation on the development of a comprehensive modernization of the memorial and landscape complex “Green Belt of Glory”. The article examines the current state of the
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Hogrefe, Jeffrey. "The Abolitionist Landscape Project." Future Anterior: Journal of Historic Preservation History, Theory, and Criticism 20, no. 1-2 (2023): 48–62. https://doi.org/10.1353/fta.2023.a961831.

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Abstract: The "Abolitionist Landscape" is a geographic, geological, and social construction in the uplands of the states of Maryland, West Virginia, Virginia, and Pennsylvania where the events of the Indigenous diaspora and abolition of slavery played out on a big stage in the years leading up to the US Civil War. In this contested border, the US National Park Service maintains two monuments: Harpers Ferry National Monument, the site of John Brown's revolutionary act of 1859; and Antietam National Battlefield, the site of the 1862 battle that led to the Emancipation Proclamation of January 1,
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Petino, Gianni, Gaetano Chinnici, and Donatella Privitera. "Heritage and carob trees: Where the monumental and landscape intersect." AIMS Geosciences 10, no. 3 (2024): 623–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.3934/geosci.2024032.

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<p>We aimed to explore the significance of monumental trees as elements of heritage and their role in interpreting landscapes. Monumental carob trees, characterized by their impressive size and long lifespan, serve as valuable sources of information for understanding the territories they inhabit and the human societies that have preserved them over time. Over the centuries, these carob trees narrate the tale of Mediterranean landscapes, akin to stone monuments, making them authentic natural and cultural treasures of the Mediterranean region. Our findings, based on fields observations in
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Woldemaram, Hirut. "Linguistic Landscape as standing historical testimony of the struggle against colonization in Ethiopia." Linguistic Landscape. An international journal 2, no. 3 (2016): 275–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/ll.2.3.04wol.

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Ethiopia is Africa’s oldest independent country and its second largest in terms of population. Apart from a five-year occupation by Italy, which is considered as a war time, the country has never been colonized. The Linguistic Landscape (LL) of Addis Ababa, the capital city of Ethiopia and the seat of the African Union, prominently depicts that important history. Erected in the main squares of the city, the various monuments serve as standing testimonies of the struggle, victory and important figures pertaining to Italian fascist invasion of Ethiopia. Moreover, there are different institutions
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Pearson, Mike Parker, Ros Cleal, Peter Marshall, et al. "The age of Stonehenge." Antiquity 81, no. 313 (2007): 617–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x00095624.

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Stonehenge is the icon of British prehistory, and continues to inspire ingenious investigations and interpretations. A current campaign of research, being waged by probably the strongest archaeological team ever assembled, is focused not just on the monument, but on its landscape, its hinterland and the monuments within it. The campaign is still in progress, but the story so far is well worth reporting. Revisiting records of 100 years ago the authors demonstrate that the ambiguous dating of the trilithons, the grand centrepiece of Stonehenge, was based on samples taken from the wrong context,
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Bell, Mark. "Two Chimeras in the Landscape." Offa's Dyke Journal 2 (November 25, 2020): 29. http://dx.doi.org/10.23914/odj.v2i0.282.

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This article discusses the history of investigations into British linear earthworks in the twentieth century. The influence of pre-existing beliefs about the environment of Britain, especially the existence of impassable forest cover, deeply influenced the interpretation of linear monuments and had a lasting effect on the study of these monuments. A brief history of the personalities involved is followed by two case studies of monuments that were believed to be post-Roman in date but are now seen as Iron Age monuments. The implications of the change in the relationship to of the dykes to the l
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Millican, Kirsty, Helen Goodchild, and Dorothy Graves McEwan. "MONUMENTS AND LANDSCAPE: INVESTIGATING A PREHISTORIC MONUMENT COMPLEX AT LOCHBROW, DUMFRIES AND GALLOWAY." Antiquaries Journal 97 (September 2017): 27–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003581517000270.

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This paper presents the results of a survey project investigating a complex of prehistoric archaeological sites at Lochbrow, in Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland. An Early Neolithic timber cursus, Late Neolithic or Early Bronze Age timber circles and Bronze Age round barrows were first recorded as cropmarks on aerial photographs in the 1980s and 1990s. The Lochbrow Landscape Project set out to investigate and understand this lesser-known complex of prehistoric sites and their layout in the landscape using non-destructive survey techniques, including geophysical survey, experiential survey and re
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M., Elena Lacruz Alvira, and Ramírez Guedes Juan. "Anti-monumentos. Recordando el futuro a través de los lugares abandonados = Anti-Monuments. Remembering futures through abandoned places." rita_ Revista Indexada de Textos Académicos, no. 7 (April 5, 2017): 86–91. https://doi.org/10.24192/2386-7027(2017)(v7)(05).

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Con la intención de rescatar y revalorizar espacios abandonados y ruinas modernas, repensando la relación entre lugar y memoria, se propone la idea de antimonumento, que intenta responder a la necesidad actual de posicionarse de una manera diferente ante los paisajes de la contemporaneidad. Los anti-monumentos son las “nuevas ruinas”, estructuras abandonadas que quedan obsoletas debido a su disfuncionalidad con el paso del tiempo. La mudanza en los sistemas sociales y de producción y la crisis económica de nuestro tiempo produce la proliferación d
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Molina Palestina, Óscar. "El manantial petrificado. Las metamorfosis del paisaje y sus repercusiones en los monumentos históricos: el caso de la capilla del Pocito en el santuario de la virgen de Guadalupe de la ciudad de México." Revista Grafía- Cuaderno de trabajo de los profesores de la Facultad de Ciencias Humanas. Universidad Autónoma de Colombia 10, no. 1 (2013): 195. http://dx.doi.org/10.26564/16926250.395.

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Resumen:Cuando un edificio obtiene el título de monumento histórico recibe un ‘derecho de permanencia’ que su entorno no tendrá. En el siguiente artículo se presenta una metodología de análisis de los edificios considerados patrimonio histórico a partir de sus relaciones con el paisaje que los rodea, el cual va transformándose a través del tiempo. La propuesta se presenta a partir de la historia de la capilla del Pocito en el Santuario de la Villa de Guadalupe, considerado una de las obras más importantes de la arquitectura barroca novohispana en México.Palabras clave: Patrimonio, Villa de Gua
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Kaczmarczyk, Katarzyna. "Emplacing Narrative. Affect and Performativity in Architectural Narratives." Tekstualia 4, no. 43 (2015): 113–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.5604/01.3001.0013.4249.

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The article focuses on the relations between narrative and landscape architecture and identifi es the characteristics of architecture and landscape architecture which make them distinct narrative media. The article offers analyses of the narrative aspects of two monuments (one built and one at the stage of the design): the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington DC and a project entitled „A Forest”, which won the competition for a monument design to commemorate Poles who rescued Jews during the German occupation. Both monuments present challenges to narrative theory through such characteristic
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Kaczmarczyk, Katarzyna. "Emplacing Narrative: Affect and Performativity in Architectural Narratives." Tekstualia 1, no. 3 (2017): 81–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.5604/01.3001.0013.5931.

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The article focuses on the relations between narrative and landscape architecture and identifi es the characteristics of architecture and landscape architecture which make them distinct narrative media. The article offers analyses of the narrative aspects of two monuments (one built and one at the stage of the design): the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington DC and a project entitled „A Forest”, which won the competition for a monument design to commemorate Poles who rescued Jews during the German occupation. Both monuments present challenges to narrative theory through such characteristics
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Costanzo, Stefano, Filippo Brandolini, Habab Idriss Ahmed, Andrea Zerboni, and Andrea Manzo. "Creating the funerary landscape of Eastern Sudan." PLOS ONE 16, no. 7 (2021): e0253511. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0253511.

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Funerary landscapes are eminent results of the relationship between environments and superstructural human behavior, spanning over wide territories and growing over centuries. The comprehension of such cultural palimpsests needs substantial research efforts in the field of human ecology. The funerary landscape of the semi-arid region of Kassala (Eastern Sudan) represents a solid example. Therein, geoarchaeological surveys and the creation of a desk-based dataset of thousands of diachronic funerary monuments (from early tumuli up to modern Beja people islamic tombs) were achieved by means of fi
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Zabielska, Katarzyna, and Izabela Myszka. "MEMORIALS AND MONUMENTS." Space&FORM 2024, no. 59 (2025): 99–128. https://doi.org/10.21005/pif.2024.59.d-01.

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This article addresses the topic of memorials in landscape. The authors define and characterise these spaces, based on a literature review and an analysis of common examples of places of remembrance and monuments. The research considers location, landscape context, spatial arrangement, form, meaning and social discourse. In memorial spaces, composition, landscaping, layout of communication and greenery, as well as decorative and functional elements are crucial. The aim of this article is to indicate the differences between the various forms of commemoration and to define the moment at which a
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Sukina, Liudmila B. "CHILDREN’S IMAGES AS AN EMOTIONAL ELEMENT OF MODERN MONUMENTS TO RUSSIAN SAINTS." RSUH/RGGU Bulletin. "Literary Theory. Linguistics. Cultural Studies" Series, no. 4 (2024): 137–55. https://doi.org/10.28995/2686-7249-2024-4-137-155.

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Monuments to saints became a characteristic feature of the cultural and religious landscape in Russia and some regions of Belarus in the 21st century became monuments of saints. Their involvement in various social interactions is studied in the latest studies of folklore and urban anthropology. The initiators of monument installation projects and sculptors are trying to find new subjects as well as forms and images that would meet the needs of modern society, in whose worldview religious and secular elements are intricately intertwined. The article considers an issue of using children’s images
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Roughley, Corinne. "The Neolithic Landscape of the Carnac Region, Brittany: New Insights from Digital Approaches." Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 70 (2004): 153–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0079497x00001158.

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The typology and chronology of the Neolithic monuments of the Carnac region of Brittany have been much debated. However, the landscape of which they are a part has been under-researched, in part due to the difficulty of conducting landscape research in the field. Through complimenting fieldwork with digital approaches, this paper demonstrates that the Neolithic monuments were deliberately situated in distinct landscape settings. By investigating the characteristics of the locations of the various types of monuments, new insight can be shed on the ways in which the monuments were experienced an
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Panja, Sheena. "Monuments in a flood zone: “builders” and “recipients” in ancient Varendri, (Eastern India and Bangladesh)." Antiquity 77, no. 297 (2003): 497–504. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x00092553.

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The modern study of ancient landscapes is showing how the landscape and the monuments within it may have been perceived by those alive at the time. The author here broadens the discussion, distinguishing the perceptions of those who built the monuments from those who viewed them. In this example from the area comprising eastern India and Bangladesh where settlements were regularly washed away, the monuments acted as icons of permanence, and continue to impress today. However, they may not have been so appreciated by the riverside dwellers …
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Glebova, Anastasia B., and Igor S. Sergeev. "The landscape indication of archaeological sites in the valleys of the rivers Mugur and Kargy (Southwestern Tuva)." Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. Earth Sciences 69, no. 4 (2024): 695–715. https://doi.org/10.21638/spbu07.2024.405.

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The article examines the placement of archaeological sites located along the valleys of the Mugur and Kargy rivers (South-Western Tuva). For this purpose, a landscape map of the study area was compiled at a scale of 1:50000 based on the authors’ own field research, DEM, high-resolution satellite images and various thematic maps. 33 landscape taxa were identified on the landscape map. The study area contains high-mountain, mid-mountain and mountain-valley landscapes. The coordinates of 629 archaeological sites were also determined during expeditionary research using a GPS navigator. Most of the
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Hájek, T. "Care for monuments in Central Europe regarding the revitalisation of the countryside." Agricultural Economics (Zemědělská ekonomika) 49, No. 7 (2012): 317–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.17221/5404-agricecon.

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The cultural landscape and rural areas are considered to be a key component of the European cultural heritage. The European Landscape Convention, which the Czech Republic signed in the autumn of 2002, was also formulated in this sense. Consequently, the reform of care of monuments cannot be left entirely to official workers, but is becoming an important subject from the standpoint of maintenance of the functional and demographic stability of rural areas. It is necessary to point out that the care for monuments in Central Europe is at a crucial point, that could be described a
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Treib, Marc. "Modern landscape architecture: monuments and icons." Journal of Architecture 9, no. 2 (2004): 199–207. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1360236042000230170.

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Treib, Marc. "Modern landscape architecture: monuments and icons." Journal of Architecture 23, no. 5 (2018): 820–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13602365.2018.1495910.

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Wüstenberg, Jenny. "Berlin's Changing Memory Landscape: New Scholarship in German and English." German Politics and Society 24, no. 2 (2006): 82–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/104503006780681911.

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Claus Leggewie and Erik Meyer, “Ein Ort, an den man gerne geht” Das Holocaust-Mahnmal und die deutsche Geschichtspolitik nach 1989 (Munich: Carl Hanser Verlag, 2005)Karen E. Till, The New Berlin: Memory, Politics, Place (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2005)Peter Carrier, Holocaust Monuments and National Memory Cultures in France and Germany since 1989: The Origins and Political Function of the Vél’ d’Hiv’ in Paris and the Holocaust Monument in Berlin (New York: Berghahn Books, 2005)
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Lemaire, Ton. "Of ‘Little People’ and Ancient Monuments." Archaeological Dialogues 2, no. 1 (1995): 30–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1380203800000295.

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Roymans' article is an original and valuable contribution to an interpretation of the ‘cultural biography’ of the landscape of a specific area by combining archaeological and folkloric evidence. His study concentrates on the sacred places of this landscape, especially the urnfields and barrows, because ‘these are focal points from which local communities order and interpret the surrounding landscape’. The author rightly stresses that funerary monuments not only had a certain significance in the societies that constructed and used them, but that they also had a prominent place in the landscape
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Nowak, Ilhana. "Lost in Time? The Socialist Modernist Monuments of the Former Yugoslavia and Their Shifting Conceptualization." Anglica Wratislaviensia 61, no. 1 (2023): 29–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.19195/0301-7966.61.1.3.

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This paper explores the “lost language” of monuments erected in the former Yugoslavia from the 1960s to the 1980s—more precisely, the 25 national monuments captured by the lens of photographer Jan Kempenaers over the span of three years (2006−2009), and published in the monograph Spomenik [Monument] (2010). By combining the approach of cognitive linguistics and cultural studies, in particular that of Forceville (“Identifi cation”, “Metaphor”, “Agendas”), Kövecses (Culture, Context), Ortiz, and Kirn and Burghardt, this paper aims to explore the conceptual metaphors embedded in these monuments as
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Cummings, Vicki, and Alasdair Whittle. "Tombs with a view: landscape, monuments and trees." Antiquity 77, no. 296 (2003): 255–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x00092255.

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The authors consider the impact that trees would have had on the visibility of the landscape from and around Neolithic monuments. It is suggested that woodland may have been an integral part of the way monuments were experienced.
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Lennon, Jane L. "Lisanne Gibson and Joanna Besley, Monumental Queensland: Signposts on a Cultural Landscape." International Journal of Cultural Property 13, no. 1 (2006): 121–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0940739106000051.

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Lisanne Gibson and Joanna Besley, Monumental Queensland: Signposts on a Cultural Landscape. Pp. 268. $49.95. St Lucia, Queensland: University of Queensland Press, 2004.By surveying and documenting outdoor cultural objects, the authors of this book seek to inform communities about the significance of their public art objects and to provide a starting point for people to value such artworks as expressing what is unique about their experience and understanding of Queensland, Australia (p. 7). However, this begs the question of public value. People in colonial times (nineteenth century) gave priva
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Lobanov, N. V. "Petroglyphs of Karelia in the context of their relationship with surrounding landscape." Heritage and Modern Times 5, no. 4 (2023): 406–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.52883/2619-0214-2022-5-4-406-425.

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Petroglyphs of Karelia are one of the most valuable and largest concentrations of Rock Art monuments of Neolithic hunters-fishermen-gatherers in Northern Europe. The main territory of the monuments is an integral part of the historical and cultural landscapes preserved from antiquity, which have exceptional attractiveness, originality and a certain natural uniqueness. In 2021, petroglyphs of Karelia were included in the UNESCO list, they became the first monument of rock art from Russia.The proposed article is devoted to study of the sacred natural space of Karelian rock carvings. Special emph
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Darvill, Timothy, Christopher Gerrard, and Bill Startin. "Identifying and protecting historic landscapes." Antiquity 67, no. 256 (1993): 563–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x00045762.

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Six years ago, Darvill and colleagues reported (ANTIQUITY 61: 393–408) on the Monuments Protection Programme, a new English initiative to build, from a century of haphazard acts of site protection, a set of balanced judgements and priorities by which to recognize ancient places that are more precious, genuinely of a national importance. The Programme, they tell ANTIQUITY, has now completed the first-stage review of information in local sites and monuments records and is proceeding with the identification of nationally important monuments in every English county. This further paper reports on h
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O’Connor, Liam. "British Normandy Memorial, Ver-sur-Mer, Calvados." Journal of Traditional Building, Architecture and Urbanism, no. 3 (November 8, 2022): 122–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.51303/jtbau.vi3.590.

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In 2021 one of the world’s largest and most important monuments was completed: the British Normandy Memorial honors the sacrifice of 22,442 men and women who lost their lives on some of the most momentous and symbolic days of the twentieth century. French civilian sacrifice is also remembered. Liam O’Connor designed and built an exceptional contemporary classical project within a landscaped masterplan of 20 hectares of unspoiled Norman landscape set in the historic battle space of June 6, 1944. A team of 500 including craftspeople from Europe and the USA contributed to this monument built in s
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