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home > news archive > from the media december 2011 version française
News from the media: December 2011
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Stop Press

A compilation of media articles on heritage topics. Obviously, these all reflect the viewpoints of the authors.

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18 December

  • Free art in Shanghai
    BBC, United Kingdom
    In a nationwide attempt to enhance China’s cultural status, the Chinese government has been rolling out a series of measures to make all government-owned libraries and museums free of charge by the end of 2012.

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17 December

  • Art Conservation Centre inaugurated
    The Malta Independent Online
    The Art Conservation Centre, where innovative technology meets the preservation of some of Malta’s heritage, was yesterday officially inaugurated during a visit paid by Prime Minister Lawrence Gonzi.

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15 December

  • Protecting Peru's ancient past
    BBC, United Kingdom
    The return to Peru of the bones of 177 people taken a century ago from the Inca city of Machu Picchu has marked another important milestone in the repatriation of Peruvian antiquities.

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13 December

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12 December

  • Christchurch’s heritage faces demolition
    The Art Newspaper
    Conservation societies are up in arms over the widespread, and in many cases unnecessary, demolition of historic buildings in Christchurch, New Zealand, following a series of earthquakes in the region.

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10 December

  • Lisbon gunning for Cultural Heritage status
    The Portugal News Online
    Lisbon Town Hall has said it will be re-entering its Baixa Pombalina for a UNESCO granted distinction that will classify the area as being of World Heritage.

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9 December

  • UNESCO experts voice concern over flooded Ayutthaya World Heritage Site
    MCOT, Thailand
    International experts of the United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) expressed concern about the stability of the monuments, foundations and decorative works at Thailand’s historic city of Ayutthaya after it was hit by the country’s most disastrous flooding in decades.

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8 December

  • 1700-year-old UNESCO heritage nears collapse
    Tuoitrenews, Viet Nam
    My Son Sanctuary in Quang Nam, which was recognized as UNESCO’s World Cultural Heritage in 1999 is falling apart at a rapid speed, Phap Luat Newspaper reported Thursday.

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7 December

  • Methods for Finding a Lost Fresco by Leonardo Lead to a Protest
    New York Times, United States
    More than 300 scholars have signed a petition to Florence’s mayor and that city’s top art authority to stop a project that hopes to find a Leonardo da Vinci masterpiece behind a fresco by Giorgio Vasari in the Palazzo Vecchio, now city hall.

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6 December

  • Looted Korean royal texts return home
    The Korea Herald, Republic of Korea
    Korea celebrated the return of nearly 1,200 ancient documents looted by the Japanese during its 1910-1945 colonial rule, with welcoming ceremonies at Incheon International Airport on Tuesday.

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3 December

  • 'Cowboy builders' blamed for Rome's crumbling Colosseum
    The Independent, United Kingdom
    An ambitious attempt to save Rome's Colosseum from collapse is being undermined by the authorities' cost-cutting decision to employ ordinary builders rather than specialists to perform the delicate overhaul, restoration experts have claimed.

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2 December

  • 'Lost' Rembrandt self-portrait revealed
    BBC, United Kingdom
    An unfinished self-portrait by the Dutch master Rembrandt has been discovered under another painting using advanced scientific techniques.

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1 December

  • Much of nation’s cultural heritage awaits UNESCO recognition
    Jakarta Post, Indonesia
    UNESCO has recognized several Indonesian contributions to the world’s intangible cultural heritage, including wayang shadow puppets and kris daggers in 2008, batik in 2009, the Sundanese angklung musical instrument in 2010 and Aceh’s saman dance this year.
  • Museums enjoy 10 years of freedom
    BBC, United Kingdom
    Exactly 10 years ago, museums and galleries - including the Victoria and Albert Museum and the Natural History Museum - scrapped entrance fees as part of a government plan to widen access to the nation's culture and heritage.

 

updated on: 3 January, 2012

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