Asturies-Llión (roleplay): Difference between revisions
→World Heritage Sites
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==Culture==
===World Heritage Sites===
Asturies-Llión has 10 World Heritage Sites. These include the paleolithic cave art of the northern Iberian Peninsula, which is shared with Spain, the Prehistoric Rock Art Sites of the Côa Valley and Siega Verde, which is shared with Portugal and Primeval Beech Forests, shared with other countries of Europe. In addition, Asturies-Llión has also 2 Intangible cultural heritage, or "Human treasures". There are also 7 candidates.
{|class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders"
! Name
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! class="unsortable"| Description
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! scope="row" style="background:#D0E7FF;"|Cave of Altamira and Paleolithic Cave Art of the Northern Iberian Peninsula
|[[File:Altamira-1880.jpg|150px]]
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|The monastery is home of Our Lady of Guadalupi, a shrine to the Virgin Mary found in the 13th century after being buried from Muslim invaders in 714. The Virgin of Guadalupi and the monastery served as important symbols during the Reconquista, culminating in 1492, the same year as Christopher Columbus' discovery of America. The Guadalupi Virgin became an important symbol during the evangelization of America.
|-
! scope="row"
|[[File:Image-Alto del perdon.jpg|150px|Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela]]
|align=center| —
|N/A
|The Route, or the Way of St. James, is a
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! scope="row"|
|[[File:Panorámica de Las Médulas.jpg|150px|Las Médulas]]
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|[[
|The Romans established a gold mine and worked the site for two centuries. They used an early form of
|-
! scope="row" style="background:#D0E7FF;"|Prehistoric Rock-Art Sites in the Côa Valley and Siega Verde
|[[File:Rock Art Foz Coa 01.jpg|150px|Rock art in Côa]]
|align=center| —
|[[
|The original 1998 listing contained examples of
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! scope="row" style="background:#D0E7FF;"|
|align=center
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|[[
| N/A
| Primeval Beech Forests of the Carpathians are used to study the spread of the beech tree (
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|}
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