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Tytuł:
Barbarzyńcy w ogrodzie pamięci. Cmentarz rodziny von Lüttwitzów w Sobótce-Górce
Barbarians in the Garden of Memory. The von Lüttwitz family cemetery in Sobótka-Górka
Autorzy:
Marcinek, Roman
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1927134.pdf
Data publikacji:
2019
Wydawca:
Narodowy Instytut Dziedzictwa
Tematy:
cmentarze
dewastacja
krajobraz kulturowy
tożsamość miejsca
Dolny Śląsk
cemeteries
devastation
cultural landscape
identity of the place
Lower Silesia
Opis:
Cmentarze ewangelickie należą do najbardziej zagrożonych grup zabytków rejestrowych. Tylko niewielką ich część objęto na Ziemiach Odzyskanych ochroną prawną. Przez dziesięciolecia przymykano oczy na dewastację, rabunek i niszczenie „poniemieckich” nagrobków czy elementów wyposażenia, na równanie nekropolii z ziemią i łamanie prawa dotyczącego pochówków. Stanu tego nie możemy, niestety, uznać za fazę zamkniętą. Analiza cmentarza rodziny von Lüttwitzów w Sobótce-Górce jest próbą pokazania, że można utrzymać pamięć tam, gdzie cmentarz w dawnej postaci nie istnieje; próbą historycznego „odtworzenia” pochowanych, wyrwania ich z anonimowości, z której wyrastają obojętność i zła wola. Pod skorupą asfaltu leżą kości współzałożyciela uniwersytetów w Berlinie i we Wrocławiu, kilku pruskich generałów, re¬formatora szkolnictwa w Bawarii czy skromnego oberleutnanta, który w 1916 r. poległ nad jeziorem Narocz, kiedy pułki śląskie powstrzymywały rosyjską ofensywę na Wilno. Przywrócenie pamięci, której ochrona jest nieodłącznym elementem ochrony zabytków, to krok w stronę rozwią¬zania problemu – przywrócenia rodowej nekropolii należnego miejsca w zespole pałacowo-parkowym bądź jej likwidacji, ale z szacunkiem dla ludzkich szczątków i obowiązującego prawa.
Evangelical cemeteries belong to the most endangered groups of registered monuments. Only a small part of them was covered by legal protection in the Recovered Territories. For decades, people turned a blind eye to the devastation, robbery and destruction of “post-German” tombstones and pieces of equipment, to the destruction of the necropolis and to the violation of burial laws. Unfortunately, we cannot say this is a finished phase. The analysis of the von Lüttwitz family cemetery in Sobótka-Górka is an attempt to show that one can maintain the memory of a place even if the cemetery does not exist in its previous form; an attempt at a historical “reconstruction” of the buried, bringing them out of anonymity, which gives rise to indifference and bad will. Under the layer of asphalt lie the bones of the co-founder of the universities in Berlin and Wrocław, several Prussian generals, a school reformer in Bavaria or a modest oberleutnant who died on Lake Narach in 1916 when the Silesian regiments stopped the Russian offensive on Vilnius. Restoring the memory, the protection of which is an inseparable element of monument protection, is a step towards solving the problem – restoring the family necropolis to its proper place in the palace and park complex or its liquidation, but with respect for human remains and the applicable law.
Źródło:
Ochrona Zabytków; 2019, 1; 171-204
0029-8247
Pojawia się w:
Ochrona Zabytków
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
W stulecie hekatomby. Cmentarze wojenne z lat 1914-1918 w dawnej Galicji Zachodniej jako unikatowy zespół sepulkralny. Dzieje, twórcy, symbolika, stan zachowania, problemy ochrony
On the hecatomb’s hundredth anniversary. War cemeteries from the years 1914-1918 in former Western Galicia as a unique funerary complex. History, creators, symbolism, state of preservation, protection issues
Autorzy:
Partridge, Agnieszka
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/539702.pdf
Data publikacji:
2015
Wydawca:
Narodowy Instytut Dziedzictwa
Tematy:
I wojna światowa
operacja gorlicka
groby żołnierskie
cmentarze wojenne
symbolika
architektura
dewastacja
ochrona
World War I
the Gorlice operation
soldiers’ graves
war cemeteries
symbolism
architecture
devastation
protection
Opis:
The military operations during World War I in the territory of the former Western Galicia, that is, today’s Małopolska (Lesser Poland), were conducted with interruptions from November 1914 until the beginning of May 1915. It is estimated that over 60 thousand solders died in the fights lasting, with interruptions, six months and other 30 thousand died of wounds before the end of the war. On 3 November 1915, the Austro-Hungarian Ministry of War with a seat in Vienna established nine Troops for War Graves in the territory of the Monarchy, of which three branches were formed in Galicia (Kraków – Western Galicia, Przemyśl – Middle Galicia, Lvov – Western Galicia). Kriegsgräber Abteilung des K.u.K. Militarkommandos Krakau, that is, Troops for War Graves at the Garrison Headquarters in Kraków was led by Captain (later Major) Rudolf Broch, and the conception officers: Captain Ludwig Brixel and Captain Hans Hauptmann cooperated with him. The task of the Troop was not only to tidy up battlefields, but also creating war cemeteries which would serve as an example for other Austro-Hungarian regions where war activities were still pursued, as well as to arrange war burials and commemorate the heroism of fallen soldiers. Within nearly three years, from 1916 to 1918, about 400 military cemeteries were established in the territory of the present-day Małopolska. The places of fights were divided into ten Cemetery Districts: I “Nowy Żmigród” (31 cemeteries), II “Jasło” (31 cemeteries), III “Gorlice” (54 cemeteries), IV “Łużna” (27 cemeteries), V “Pilzno” (26 cemeteries), VI “Tarnów” (62 cemeteries), VII “Dąbrowa Tarnowska” (13 cemeteries), VIII “Brzesko” (52 cemeteries), IX “Bochnia” (46 cemeteries), X “Limanowa” (36 cemeteries) and the Eleventh Cemetery District “Kraków Fortress” (22 cemeteries) which, as it was situated in the place under the command of the Fortess and, at the same time, was subject to the Troop for War Graves, was under a kind of a double superiority. Each of the districts was administered by an officer with technical or artistic education and an artistic administrator. Their duties included examining the area, supervising a selection of the place, a technical design, an artistic concept, ensuring the supply of building materials. In total, there were over people serving at the Troop, including drafters, photographers, various craftsmen, gardeners, as well as carefully selected designers, architects, sculptors. The people employed there were individualists favouring various artistic trends, originating from several important academic centres – Vienna, Munich, Kraków. The most famous of them included: a Slovakian architect Dušan Jurkovič, an Austrian sculptor Heinrich Scholz, Austrian architects: Hans Mayr, Gustav Ludwig, Emil Ladevig, Gustav Rossmann, Polish, Czech and Austrian artists: Wojciech Kossak, Alfons Karpiński, Henryk Uziembło, Adolf Kašpar, Franz Poledne, Leo Perlberger. That international team, designing and building the cemeteries, with a full respect, as well as the respect for the enemies, Russians, ensured a dignified burial of tens of thousands soldiers. The cemeteries created were rich in symbols, of which none is identical with others in spite of using the same architectonic elements. The idea of unification of graves was given up; instead, sophisticated cemetery solutions were employed. On the monuments, plaques with special inscriptions were fixed. Trees and plants with a symbolic meaning were planted around the graves. As a result, a unique cemetery complex was created in our land, which refers to many funerary traditions, with traces of Egyptian, Greek and Roman architecture. Apart from popularizing activities, publishing special series of postcards, stamps and cemetery medals, a special album was published in which all memorials were catalogued and described. It also functioned as a guide which would help the families of the deceased during their visits to the graves of their relatives in Galicia. In addition, special concrete signposts leading to each cemetery were provided. After the end of war activities, the war cemeteries in Galicia went under the administration of the Polish state. In the interwar period, some of the graves were liquidated, thus reducing the number of cemeteries of the complex in Galicia to about 380. Many graves were destroyed and forgotten in the period of People’s Polish Republic. However, since 1989, war cemeteries in Małopolska have been gradually saved and conserved thanks to state funds and the cooperation of local governments with the representatives of Austrian Black Cross, as well as other initiatives. The memory of them is also restored. In the Western and Middle Europe, there are many places of memory and cemeteries from World War I. They mark the lines of former trenches and are a manifestation of cruelty of the global conflict. They differ from the war cemeteries in Małopolska, since they were built after the war, concentrating fallen soldiers, unifying, creating national cemeteries where soldiers from enemy armies are sought in vain. In that context, the war cemeteries situated in present-day Małopolska are unique on the European scale, a testimony of humanism and respect towards the death of both own and enemy soldiers.
Źródło:
Ochrona Zabytków; 2015, 1; 95-129
0029-8247
Pojawia się w:
Ochrona Zabytków
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
    Wyświetlanie 1-2 z 2

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