Heritage with Related Tags
Al Qal'a of Beni Hammad
In the scenic mountainous area, there are the remains of the first capital of the Hamad Emir, built in 1007 and demolished in 1152, a true reflection of a fortified Muslim city. The prayer room of this mosque has 13 aisles and 8 compartments, making it one of the largest mosques in Algeria.
Asmara: A Modernist African City
Asmara, the capital of Eritrea, is located at an altitude of over 2,000 meters. It developed as a military outpost of the Italian colonial regime from the 1890s. After 1935, Asmara underwent a large-scale construction, applying the Italian rationalist style of the time to government buildings, residential and commercial buildings, churches, mosques, synagogues, cinemas, hotels, etc. The site covers urban areas that were planned at different stages between 1893 and 1941, as well as unplanned local communities such as Arbate Asmera and Abbashawel. It is an outstanding example of early modernist urbanization in the early 20th century and its application in an African context.
Colonies of Benevolence
This transnational collection of sites includes the cultural landscapes of four settlements, one in Belgium and three in the Netherlands. Together they bear witness to an experiment in 19th-century social reform, an effort to alleviate urban poverty by establishing agricultural colonies in remote areas. Founded in 1818, Frederikshavn (Netherlands) was the oldest of these colonies and the original headquarters of a charitable association that aimed to reduce poverty at the national level. Other components of the site include the colonies of Wilhelminaoord and Veenhuizen in the Netherlands and the colony of Wortel in Belgium. As the income from the small farms in the colonies was insufficient, the charitable associations sought other sources of income and contracted with the state to house orphans and, soon after, beggars and vagrants, leading to the establishment of “unfree” colonies such as Veenhuizen, which had large dormitory-style buildings and larger centralized farms for them to work under the supervision of guards. The colonies were designed as panoramic settlements along orthogonal lines. They featured residential buildings, farmhouses, churches and other communal facilities. At their peak in the mid-19th century, such colonies in the Netherlands were home to more than 11,000 people. In Belgium, their numbers peaked in 1910 at 6,000.