Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'The par force hunting landscape in North Zealand' has mentioned 'Hunting' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
The par force hunting landscape in North ZealandUNESCO World Heritage SiteLocationNorth Zealand, DenmarkCriteriaCultural:xc2xa0(ii), (iv)Reference1469Inscription2015 (39th session)Area4,543xc2xa0ha (11,230 acres)Bufferxc2xa0zone1,612.7xc2xa0ha (3,985 acres)Coordinates55xc2xb054xe2x80xb249xe2x80xb3N 12xc2xb021xe2x80xb228xe2x80xb3Exefxbbxbf / xefxbbxbf55.9136xc2xb0N 12.3578xc2xb0Exefxbbxbf / 55.9136; 12.3578Coordinates: 55xc2xb054xe2x80xb249xe2x80xb3N 12xc2xb021xe2x80xb228xe2x80xb3Exefxbbxbf / xefxbbxbf55.9136xc2xb0N 12.3578xc2xb0Exefxbbxbf / 55.9136; 12.3578Location of Par force hunting landscape in North Zealand in ZealandShow map of ZealandPar force hunting landscape in North Zealand (Denmark)Show map of Denmark
The Par force hunting landscape in North Zealand is a collection of hunting grounds and forests north of Copenhagen, inscribed on the UNESCO List of World Heritage Sites on 4 July 2015.
Contents 1 Location 2 Background 3 Danish Museum of Hunting and Forestry 4 See also 5 References 6 Sources
Par force hunting in North Zealand c. 1750, watercolour by Johan Jacob Bruun
The forests and related buildings in three locations to the north of Copenhagen formed parts of a well-preserved Baroque hunting landscape designed in the late 17th and early 18th centuries for the Danish monarchs to participate in par force hunting.
The history of the area for hunting dates back to the Middle Ages when the Danish kings, the church and noblemen had estates and hunting grounds in the peninsula's hilly forests and undulating farmlands.
From 1560, the various estates were merged in order to establish an extensive royal hunting park across the North Zealand peninsula.
In his youth, the king had experienced par force hunting in France's forest of Saint-Germain-en-Laye.
The Jxc3xa6gersborg hunting park contained no star-shaped road networks but was instead based on the presence of a royal hunting lodge, initially known as the Hermitage or Hubertus House.
Danish Museum of Hunting and Forestry[edit]
Much of the preparatory work on the UNESCO nomination was undertaken by Jette Baagxc3xb8e, director of the Danish Museum of Hunting and Forestry in Hxc3xb8rsholm and chair of the steering group which has worked on the nomination since 2010.
On the basis of the significant increase in visitors to Stevns Museum resulting from the inclusion of Stevns Klint as a UNESCO heritage site in 2014, Baagxc3xb8e expects more visitors to the museums of North Zealand, especially to the Museum of Hunting and Forestry where a special exhibition will be devoted to the Par Force Hunting Landscape in October 2015.
The par force hunting landscape in North Zealand series covers the former royal hunting forests of Store Dyrehave and Gribskov, traces of connecting roads between them, and the former royal hunting park of Jxc3xa6gersborg Dyrehave/Jxc3xa6gersborg Hegn.
The components have been selected as they encompass a completeness of attributes illustrating the development of the Baroque par force hunting landscape as an emblematic and functional spatial entity.
Designed and created intentionally by Man, the par force hunting landscape exemplifies a 17th-18th-century landscape created to perform courtly hunts.
The Outstanding Universal Value of the landscape lies in the spatial organisation of the hunting forests, hunting roads, buildings, emblematic markers, numbered stone posts, stone fences, and numerical road names conveying an understanding of the practical application of the design as a means of orientation.
Criterion (ii): The par force hunting landscape in North Zealand exceptionally exemplifies how the interchange of Baroque values in Europe influenced developments in landscape design in the 17th-18th centuries, and particularly bears witness to the influence exerted by French and German designed hunting landscapes.
Criterion (iv): As a landscape of power created by an absolute monarch in the late 17th century, the par force hunting landscape in North Zealand exemplifies a significant stage in European landscape design applied to hunting grounds when the rise of scientific thought took place within the context of absolutist ambitions.
The series comprising the two hunting forests Store Dyrehave and Gribskov, the six partially preserved road traces between them, and the hunting park of Jxc3xa6gersborg Dyrehave and Jxc3xa6gersborg Hegn exhibits all attributes necessary to express the Outstanding Universal Value of the par force hunting landscape in North Zealand.
The preserved forest cover, despite interventions of reforestation, the hunting roads and their mutual situation, the numbered stones, the fences and the emblematic markers altogether give a clear understanding of a spatial plan that focused on nature and developed in line with changes in the practical and emblematic demands of the absolute monarch.
The series gives a clear sense of the spatial development of the par force hunting landscape.
The character of the wider setting contributes to the understanding of the series as the best-preserved elements of a wider historic designed hunting landscape.