Irish sites nominated for World Heritage status

Irish sites nominated for World Heritage status

Three heritage sites on the island of Ireland have been nominated as UNESCO World Heritage sites.

The Neolithic Passage Tomb Landscape of County Sligo, the Transatlantic Cable in Valentia, County Kerry, and the Royal Sites of Ireland is included in the new World Heritage Tentative List for Ireland, moving one step closer to achieving UNESCO World Heritage status.

The Tentative List is an inventory of natural and cultural heritage sites that can demonstrate outstanding universal value and therefore be considered suitable for nomination to UNESCO’s World Heritage List.

The Neolithic Passage Tomb Landscape of County Sligo on Ireland’s Wild Atlantic Way represents the most westerly and one of the most dramatic expressions of the construction of ritual monuments across Europe between five and six millennia ago. The monuments include the famous Queen Maeve’s Cairn, which dominates the mountain of Knocknarea. The huge Neolithic tomb is made up of more than 30,000 tonnes of stone and overlooks Sligo Bay.

The County Kerry project commemorates the 3,000km transatlantic copper cable that transformed global communications in 1858. It was laid between Valentia Island in Ireland and Newfoundland, Canada, connecting Europe to America and reducing communication times from weeks to minutes.

The first message transmitted on 16 August 1858 was a note of congratulations from Queen Victoria to US president James Buchanan. As other technologies replaced the copper cables used to carry information across the Atlantic, the Valentia Cable Station closed its doors in the 1960s. It has since been refurbished and now houses an interactive visitor experience called the Eighth Wonder.

The Royal Sites of Ireland were all sites of major royal inauguration, ceremony and assembly, representing each of the four Irish provinces as well as the region of Meath. The sites are strongly linked to myth and legend and are associated with the transformation of Ireland from paganism to Christianity and St Patrick.

Navan Fort in County Armagh was the royal site for the kings of Ulster, Dún Ailinne in County Kildare for the kings of Leinster, the Rock of Cashel in County Tipperary for the kings of Munster and Rathcroghan in County Roscommon for the kings of Connaught. The Hill of Tara in County Meath was the seat of the Irish high kings. In addition, the Hill of Uisneach in County Westmeath is traditionally the epicentre or navel of Ireland, where the five kingdoms met.

All of the sites were selected because of their potential to show outstanding universal value to humanity. Ireland will now work on its new Tentative List to develop nomination bids for submission to the World Heritage Centre in Paris.

The island of Ireland already has a number of locations on the list of UNESCO World Heritage Sites. These include the Giant’s Causeway in County Antrim, Skellig Michael off the coast of County Kerry and Brú na Bóinne in County Meath. UNESCO Global Geopark status has been awarded to The Burren & Cliffs of Moher Geopark in County Clare, Cuilcagh Lakelands Geopark, which stretches across counties Fermanagh and Cavan, and The Copper Coast Geopark in County Waterford.

In addition, the island boasts three UNESCO cities – Belfast is a UNESCO City of Music; Dublin is a UNESCO City of Literature; and Galway is a UNESCO City of Film, while Ireland’s ancient sport of hurling is listed in the UNESCO Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.

Now the potential for further additions reinforces its profile as a world-class heritage destination.