The Site of Xanadu (China),
the Bassari Country: Bassari and Bedik Cultural Landscapes (Senegal) and the
Historic Town Grand Bassam, the first capital of Côte d’Ivoire have been added
to UNESCO’s World Heritage List.
North of the Great Wall, the Site
of Xanadu encompasses the remains of Kublai Khan’s legendary capital city,
designed by the Mongol ruler’s Chinese advisor Liu Bingzhdong in 1256. Over a
surface area of 25,000 hectares, the site exhibits a unique attempt to
assimilate the nomadic Mongolian and Han Chinese cultures. This was the base
from where Kublai Khan established the Yuan Dynasty that ruled over China over
a century, extending its boundaries across Asia. The religious debate that took
place here resulted in the dissemination of Tibetan Buddhism over northeast Asia,
a cultural and religious tradition still practiced in many areas today. The
site was planned according to the traditional Chinesefeng shui in relation to
the nearby mountains and river. It features the remains of the city, including
temples, palaces, tombs, nomadic encampments and the Tiefan’gang Canal along
with other water works.
Bassari Country: Bassari, and Bedik Cultural
Landscapes is situated in the south east of Senegal. It includes three
geographic areas: the Bassari – Salémata area, the Bedik – Bandafassi area and
the Fula – Dindéfello area, each with its specific morphological traits. The
Bassaris, Fulas and Bediks peoples settled from the 11th to the 19th centuries
and developed specific cultures and habitats symbiotic with their surrounding natural
environment. The Bassari landscape is marked by terraces and rice paddies,
interspersed with villages, hamlets and archaeological sites. The villages of
the Bediks are formed by dense groups of huts with steeped thatched roofs.
Their inhabitants’ cultural expressions are characterized by original traits of
agro-pastoral, social, ritual and spiritual practices, which represent an
original response to environmental constraints and human pressures. The site is
a well preserved multicultural landscape housing original and still vibrant
local cultures.
The first capital of Côte d’Ivoire, the
Historic Town of Grand-Bassam, is an example of a late 19th and early
20th-century colonial town planned with quarters specializing in commerce,
administration, housing for Europeans and housing for Africans. The site
includes the N’zima African fishing village alongside colonial architecture
marked by functional houses with galleries, verandas and gardens. Grand-Bassam
was the most important port, economic and judicial centre of Côte d’Ivoire. It
bears witness to the complex social relations between Europeans and Africans,
and to the subsequent independence movement. As a vibrant centre of the
territory of French trading posts in the Gulf of Guinea, which preceded modern
Côte d’Ivoire, it attracted populations from all parts of Africa, Europe and
the Mediterranean Levant.

Archaeological
Center, National Museum of China -Folk customs - Nomadic life (Site of Xanadu,
China)