Intangible Cultural Heritage in Norway - Wikivoyage, the free collaborative travel and tourism guide - Patrimoine culturel immatériel en Norvège — Wikivoyage, le guide de voyage et de tourisme collaboratif gratuit

This article lists the practices listed in UNESCO intangible cultural heritage in Norway.

Understand

The country only has one practice included in the "register of best practices for safeguarding culture ».

Lists

Representative list

Norway has no representative list practice.

Register of Best Safeguarding Practices

ConvenientYearDomainDescriptionDrawing
Craft techniques and customary practices of cathedral workshops, or Bauhütten, in Europe, know-how, transmission, development of knowledge, innovation
Note

Norway shares this practice withGermany, the Austria, the France and the Swiss.

2020* Knowledge and practices concerning nature and the universe
* Social practices, rituals and festive events
* Know-how related to traditional craftsmanship
Operation in workshops, or Bauhüttenwesen, appeared in the Middle Ages on the construction sites of European cathedrals. Today as then, these workshops welcome different trades working in close collaboration. In German, the term Bauhüttenwesen refers on the one hand to the organization of a network of workshops involved in the construction or restoration of a building, and on the other hand to the workshop itself, as a workplace. Since the end of the Middle Ages, these workshops have formed a supra-regional network that extends beyond national borders. These workshops safeguard the traditional customs and rituals associated with different professions, as well as a wealth of knowledge passed down from generation to generation, both orally and in writing. Confronted with the progressive shortage of technical skills and the growing mechanization associated with a policy of cost optimization, the workshops created or re-established in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries have become institutions dedicated to preservation, transmission and development. traditional techniques and know-how. Their commitment to safeguarding and promoting living heritage, which is reflected in awareness-raising, information and communication measures and in close cooperation with actors from the political world, the Church, and monument conservation. , business and research, can be seen as an example to be adapted and implemented in other contexts around the world. The workshops, by their organization and their training system for in situ practice, can also serve as models for all types of buildings to be constructed and maintained.Default.svg

Emergency backup list

Norway does not have a practice on the Emergency Safeguarding List.

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