会议论文详细信息
3rd World Multidisciplinary Civil Engineering, Architecture, Urban Planning Symposium
Wooden Orthodox Church Architecture in A Country Landscape After World War II - In the Area of the Former Eastern Galicia
土木建筑工程;文学
Kurek, Jan^1
Cracow University of Technology, Faculty of Architecture, Poland^1
关键词: Catholic church;    Cultural environment;    Daily lives;    Foreign influence;    Iconic buildings;    Local community;    UNESCO world heritages;    World war II;   
Others  :  https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1757-899X/471/7/072050/pdf
DOI  :  10.1088/1757-899X/471/7/072050
学科分类:土木及结构工程学
来源: IOP
PDF
【 摘 要 】

For hundreds of years, villages and small towns - dominating in the Polish landscape - were built in wood, with dominant monuments crystallizing in the form of iconic buildings. The attachment to the local tradition was prevailing - opposing foreign influences. Foreign influences usually underwent modification and specific "taming" in the existing cultural environment. Among the wooden temples of south-eastern Poland distinguish Greek Catholic churches, which are characterized by a great variety of architectural forms. Their specificity has its genesis in the place of their formation - it is the borderline of the Latin and Byzantine cultural circle. It was also here that the influences of numerous, ethnically diverse regions of Poland, Russia, Slovakia (Upper Hungary), Bukovina, Moldova, etc., were crossed. Forced displacement of the Rusins (Ukrainian) population from her previous places of residence, has condemned to leave and exterminate nearly 300 wooden temples - not counting many ruined villages. Few valuable wooden churches were surrounded by conservation and restored. Originally wooden churches, usually with roofs and walls covered with shingles, topped with intricately wrought iron crosses, were usually located on small hills, surrounded by old linden trees or oaks. They were accompanied by wooden or stone fences, wooden belfries and picturesque gates. The square of the church, some distance from the center of the village, accompanied the daily life of local communities. It was a constant and "homely" element of a rural or small-town landscape. In renovations or in the construction of a few new church buildings at the turn of the 20th and 21st century, new materials were increasingly sought after - especially using steel sheets to cover roofs and walls. Today, thanks to the support of the conservation authorities, the traditional cover is restored to the church. Some of the churches that survived the turmoil of war, today are deprived of care and only the most valuable objects are undergoing renovations. Thanks to joint efforts of Poland and Ukraine, the group of the most valuable surviving wooden orthodox churches was inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List.

【 预 览 】
附件列表
Files Size Format View
Wooden Orthodox Church Architecture in A Country Landscape After World War II - In the Area of the Former Eastern Galicia 2341KB PDF download
  文献评价指标  
  下载次数:13次 浏览次数:16次