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4 - British Conservation Practice in Cyprus, 1878 to 1939: a Case Study

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2014

Keith Emerick
Affiliation:
English Heritage Inspector of Ancient Monuments in York and North Yorkshire; he is also a Research Associate at the University of York.
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Summary

For lack of requisite funds and consequent well-considered attention most of that great inheritance is in dire jeopardy and going to pieces. Is it not time that Great Britain, which has inherited this responsibility with the direct control of the island, should play her part as Italy is doing in Rhodes and Tripoli, and France in Syria, Algeria and Tunis? These may be hard times, but the loss of such priceless treasures of antiquity is likely in the long run to lead to a lack of prestige in the world of culture as irreplaceable as are the treasures themselves if allowed to founder.

(The Times 1935b)

Introduction

This chapter illustrates how British administrators and preservationists behaved in a multicultural environment, away from the constraints of domestic politics and social conditions. It will also illustrate how a particular approach to preservation practice was translated from Britain to another country, echoing similar imperial practice by French, German and Italian preservation rivals. This case study will indicate that conservation practice is flexible (or at least not rigid) and that contemporary issues in Cultural Heritage Management, particularly the issues of multiculturalism, under-represented heritages, ‘use’ of the historic environment and the role of the heritage manager have been explored in other contexts and are worthy of further research. These issues are discussed in this chapter and pursued in Chapters 5, 6 and 7.

Type
Chapter
Information
Conserving and Managing Ancient Monuments
Heritage, Democracy, and Inclusion
, pp. 115 - 148
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2014

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