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Delhi out of Unesco's heritage city tag race; eyes on Nalanda in 2016

The City Of Delhi Being Pulled Out Of The Race For The UNESCO Heritage List Was One Of The Biggest Dampeners In The Field Of Art And Culture In 2015, While The Ruins Of Ancient Nalanda University Vying For The Coveted Tag This Year Will Bring Some Cheer To Heritage Lovers Looking Forward To A Hopeful 2016.

PTI | Updated on: 03 Jan 2016, 08:33:29 PM

New Delhi:

The city of Delhi being pulled out of the race for the UNESCO Heritage List was one of the biggest dampeners in the field of art and culture in 2015, while the ruins of ancient Nalanda University vying for the coveted tag this year will bring some cheer to heritage lovers looking forward to a hopeful 2016.

The Centre earlier last year had decided to “pull out” the nomination of Delhi as the World Heritage City, saying the prestigious tag, if granted, will put “lot of restrictions” on carrying out infrastructure works in the national capital.

The two areas listed in the dossier sent to UNESCO were—

Shahjahanabad in old Delhi which has Mughal-era heritage and Lutyens’ Bungalow Zone (LBZ) in New Delhi, part of the new imperial capital designed by Sir Edwin Landseer Lutyens and Sir Herbert Baker after the 1911 Delhi Durbar.

A team from INTACH’s city chapter had prepared the “voluminous” nomination dossier sent by the Centre in January 2014. The Union Ministry of Culture had sent the initial nomination to the UNESCO in 2012.

A team from the world body had visited the city in October to examine the heritage sites mentioned in the dossier.

The decision to pull out Delhi barely a few months before its fate was to be decided at the 39th Session of the World Heritage Committee in Bonn, had left heritage experts and lovers disheartened.

But with the ancient ruins of Nalanda in Bihar up for consideration of the tag this year, the news has brought some cheers post-Delhi gloom.

Nalanda is the 2015 entry from the country for the UNESCO World Heritage City tag in the cultural heritage segment in pursuance of which the Ministry of Culture through the Archaeological Survey of India had sent an over 200-page-long nomination dossier on January 23 last year.

The university’s construction began in 6th century AD and it flourished under the Gupta Empire. Its end came in 12th century when it was ransacked, looted and burnt in 1193 AD by the invading Turk Army led by its commander Bakhtiar Khilji.

An expert from Paris-based International Council of Monuments and Sites also visited the ruins of the university, situated in Nalanda district, about 90 km from Patna, to evaluate India’s bid in pursuance of the coveted tag.

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First Published : 03 Jan 2016, 08:30:00 PM

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