Kulturdenkmal

Kulturdenkmal is the official term to describe National Heritage Sites listed by law[1] in German-speaking areas of Europe, to protect and spread awareness of cultural heritage.

Pillar outside the Council of the German Speaking Community of Belgium, which is housed in a Kulturdenkmal, marked with the emblem of the Hague Convention of 1954 with text "Geschütztes Denkmal", used to mark protected buildings and other structures in the German Speaking Community of Belgium.

Austria

In Austria, the Bundesdenkmalamt (BDA), the institution in charge of the National Heritage Sites, administers the list of Kulturdenkmal objects, which it formally refers to as Denkmalgeschützte Objekte.

Belgium

The Institut du Patrimoine is the institution in charge of the National Heritage Sites of Wallonia, which includes the National Heritage Sites of the German-speaking Community of Belgium. Various local websites with public information are maintained, and various initiatives are undertaken to assist owners of protected properties and to increase public awareness, most notably the European Heritage Days, which are called "Tage des offenen Denkmals".

Germany

As cultural matters lie largely within the responsibility not of the national government, but of the 16 states (Bundesländer), the 16 respective heritage protection authorities (Landesdenkmalämter) survey and list official monuments.

Switzerland

The Kulturgüterschutz is the institution in charge of the National Heritage Sites of the German-speaking areas of Switzerland. They maintain the inventory of protected objects and also organize the European Heritage Days, which are called Europäischer Tag des Denkmals.

Emblems

gollark: Like my enchanted books/chases for printing, the private key, sort of thing.
gollark: Anyway, all the particularly secret/sensitive/valuable stuff is stored elsewhere.
gollark: Have *you* tried using Urn?
gollark: Have you tried using Urn?
gollark: There's a laser turtle underneath it which shoots the storage cube to pieces when access is needed.

References

  1. According to international law, the English term is Cultural property, but can also be called Protected monument.
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