974 resultados para Funerary Monuments
Resumo:
Inside the stones of its most famous buildings, Évora keeps mysteries and secrets which constitute the most hidden side of its cultural identity. A World Heritage site, this town seems to preserve, in its medieval walls, a precious knowledge of the most universal and ancient human emotion: fear. Trying to transcend many of its past and future fears, some of its historical monuments in Gothic style were erected against the fear of death, the most terrible of all fears, which the famous inscription, in the Bones Chapel of the Church of São Francisco, insistently reminds us, through the most disturbing words: “Nós ossos que aqui estamos pelos vossos esperamos”. If the first inquisitors worked in central Europe (Germany, northern Italy, eastern France), later the centres of the Inquisition were established in the Mediterranean regions, especially southern France, Italy, Portugal, and Spain. Consequently, the roots of fear in Évora are common to other towns, where the Inquisition developed a culture of fear, through which we can penetrate into the dark side of the Mediterranean, where people were subjected to the same terrifying methods of persecution and torture. This common geographical and historical context was not ignored by one of the most famous masters of American gothic fiction, Edgar Allan Poe. Through the pages of The Pit and the Pendulum, readers get precise images of the fearful instruments of terror that were able to produce the legend that has made the first grand inquisitor, Tomas de Torquemada, a symbol of ultimate cruelty, bigotry, intolerance, and religious fanaticism, which unfortunately are still the source of our present fears in a time when religious beliefs can be used again as a motif of war and destruction. As Krishnamurti once suggested, only a fundamental realization of the root of all fear can free our minds.
Resumo:
Este trabalho pretende contribuir para a reabilitação do Mosteiro de S. Salvador de Paço de Sousa assente na interpretação espacial do complexo monástico desde a fundação à extinção da comunidade religiosa, com particular nota para a intervenção efetuada pela DGEMN - Direção Geral dos Edifícios e Monumentos Nacionais, no segundo quartel do século XX. Procura trazer pela primeira vez à luz uma representação dos seus espaços, usos e funções ao longo do tempo com recurso a desenhos, esquemas e imagens para permitir a apreensão do conjunto em determinadas fases da história e por consequência fundamentar uma eventual intervenção. O estudo fundamenta-se na recolhe de dados escritos que permitam aferir a vivência dos espaços, sua simbologia e utilidade, nomeadamente através de referências históricas e de carater simbólico e documentação gráfica que permita avaliar e comparar o assunto de estudo com outros exemplos e situações análogas. O cruzamento de dados analisados resulta na sua simbolização gráfica, de forma a veicular o entendimento espacial e simbólico, que remete o real conhecimento da arquitetura do Mosteiro de S. Salvador de Paço de Sousa e, por comparação, viabiliza um ponto de partida para futuras intervenções, seja deste mosteiro, seja de edifícios de características semelhantes.
Resumo:
Throughout the lengthy duration of this extremely violent slavery phenomenon where man's cruelty is made evident, it gave rise to places of memory: monuments, toponyms, ethnonymns, stories, legends and myths. Collective memory has constantly recycled this basic fabric. The aim of this Catalogue, dedicated to acknowledging the memory of places in the Portuguese-speaking African countries, is to identify, list, map and give information about the different sites of memory: those that can be seen and touched, without however forgetting those which have re-enacted the creative process thanks to oral tradition.
Resumo:
Uma associação é estabelecida pelos presentes Estatutos sob o nome do Conselho Internacional de Monumentos e Sítios [International Council on Monuments and Sites], designada pelas iniciais ICOMOS. A Sede do ICOMOS localiza-se em Paris. Essa localização pode ser alterada por decisão da Assembleia Geral.
Resumo:
Conclusões da conferência, 1931 A Conferência ouviu a exposição dos princípios gerais e das doutrinas respeitantes à protecção dos Monumentos. Apesar da diversidade dos casos específicos em que poderá haver uma solução para cada tipo, constatou-se que nos diferentes Estados representados predomina uma tendência geral para abandonar as restituições integrais e para evitar os riscos pelo estabelecimento da manutenção regular e permanente adequada à conservação dos edifícios. No caso de uma restauração ser indispensável em consequência de degradação ou destruição, é recomendado o respeito pela obra histórica e artística do passado, sem proscrever o estilo de nenhuma época. A Conferência recomenda que se mantenha a ocupação dos monumentos que assegura a continuidade da sua sobrevivência devendo, no entanto, ser utilizados de modo a que se respeite o seu teor histórico ou artístico.
Resumo:
Os monumentos de um povo, portadores de uma mensagem do passado, são um testemunho vivo das suas tradições seculares. A humanidade tem vindo progressivamente a tomar maior consciência da unidade dos valores humanos e a considerar os monumentos antigos como uma herança comum, assumindo colectivamente a responsabilidade da sua salvaguarda para as gerações futuras e aspirando a transmiti-los com toda a sua riqueza e autenticidade. É essencial que os princípios orientadores da conservação e do restauro de edifícios antigos sejam elaborados e acordados a nível internacional, ficando cada país responsável pela sua aplicação no âmbito específico do seu contexto cultural e das suas tradições.
Resumo:
Em resultado de um desenvolvimento mais ou menos espontâneo ou de um projecto deliberado, todas as cidades do mundo são a expressão material da diversidade das sociedades através da história, sendo, por esse facto, históricas. A presente carta diz respeito, mais precisamente, às cidades grandes ou pequenas e aos centros ou bairros históricos, com o seu ambiente natural ou edificado, que, para além da sua qualidade como documento histórico, expressam os valores próprios das civilizações urbanas tradicionais. Ora, estas estão ameaçadas pela degradação, desestruturação ou destruição, consequência de um tipo de urbanismo nascido na industrialização e que atinge hoje universalmente todas as sociedades.
Resumo:
O património cultural português é constituído por todos os bens materiais e imateriais que pelo seu reconhecido valor próprio, devam ser considerados como de interesse relevante para a permanência e identidade da cultura portuguesa através do tempo.
Resumo:
The ship is the dominant element in the visual culture of the South Scandinavian Bronze Age, appearing in several different media, including rock carvings, decorated metalwork and above-ground monuments. Discussion has divided between those scholars who interpret this imagery in terms of long-distance exchange networks and those who emphasize its more local significance, including its deployment in mortuary ritual. A strikingly similar system is identified in Southeast Asia and part of Melanesia and can be interpreted through archaeological and ethnographic sources, but in this case there is no need to distinguish between 'practical' and 'symbolic' interpretations of the depictions of ships. This paper summarizes the evidence from this region and suggests that it can offer a fruitful source of comparison for archaeologists working in northern Europe.
Resumo:
This article, which is based on the fourteenth McDonald Lecture, considers two tensions in contemporary archaeology. one is between interpretations of specific structures, monuments and deposits as the result of either 'ritual' 'practical' activities in the past, and the other is between an archaeology that focuses on subsistence and adaptation and one that emphasizes cognition, meaning, and agency. It suggests that these tensions arise from an inadequate conception of ritual itself. Drawing on recent studies of ritualization, it suggests that it might be more helpful to consider how aspects of domestic life took on special qualities in later prehistoric Europe. The discussion is based mainly on Neolithic enclosures and other monuments, Bronze Age and Iron Age settlement sites and the Viereckschanzen of central Europe. it may have implications for field archaeology as well as social archaeology, and also for those who study the formation of the archaeological record.
Resumo:
In 1977 Grahame Clark suggested that the siting of megalithic tombs along the west coast of Scandinavia reflected the distribution of productive fishing grounds. Unlike the situation in other parts of Europe, these monuments were not associated with agriculture. Opinions have varied over the last quarter century, but enough is now known about changes of sea-level for his interpretation to be investigated on the ground. There seems to have been considerable diversity. On the large island of Örust some of the tombs located near to the sea appear to be associated with small natural enclosures defined by rock outcrops and may have been associated with grazing land. On the neighbouring island of Tjörn, however, the tombs were associated with small islands and important sea channels. During the Bronze Age the same areas included carvings of ships. Recent fieldwork in western Norway suggests that such locations were especially important in a maritime economy.
Resumo:
The Neolithic chambered tombs of Bohuslan on the west coast of Sweden were built out of locally occurring raw materials. These exhibit a wide variety of colours, textures and mineral inclusions, and all were used to contrive a series of striking visual effects. Certain of these would have been apparent to the casual observer but others would only have been apparent to someone inside the passage or the burial chamber. There is no evidence that the materials were organized according to a single scheme. Rather, they permitted a series of improvisations, so that no two monuments were exactly alike. The effects that they created are compared with those found in megalithic art where the design elements were painted or carved, but in Bohuslan all the designs were created using the natural properties of the rock.
Resumo:
The Perthshire stone circle of Croft Moraig was excavated 40 years ago and is usually taken to illustrate the classic sequence at such monuments in Britain. A timber setting, accompanied by a shallow ditch, was replaced by two successive stone settings. The pottery associated with the earliest construction was dated to the Neolithic period. A new analysis of the excavated material suggests that, in fact, the ceramics are Middle or Late Bronze Age. They provide a terminus post quem for at least one of the stone settings on the site. Further study of the evidence suggests an alternative sequence of construction at Croft Moraig, involving a change in the axis of the monument. It seems possible that other stone and timber circles were equally late in date and that their period of use in Britain and Ireland may have been longer than is generally supposed.
Resumo:
The recent explosion of interest in the archaeology of warfare is examined, and some possible reasons behind this trend are explored. Characteristics in the archaeology of warfare are identified in relation to prehistoric and historical archaeology and their contrasting sources of evidence. The androcentric tendency of the archaeology of warfare is discussed, and the major themes of the volume are introduced, including memorial landscapes, commemorative monuments and their conflicting meanings, and the social context of warfare.