One of the main news items in the Bosnian blogosphere this week has been the addition of the ViÅ¡egrad stone bridge to UNESCO’s World Heritage List. The bridge, named after Mehmed PaÅ¡a Sokolović, one of the most famous Grand Viziers of the Ottoman Empire, born in ViÅ¡egrad in 1505, connects the two banks of the Drina River, which forms most of the border between Bosnia and Serbia. Bosnian writer Ivo Andrić, who received the Nobel Prize for literature in 1961, wrote a book called The Bridge over the Drina River, which described the building of the bridge and life in Bosnia under the Ottoman Empire.
Day and Night, who posted a couple photos of the bridge, describes it as a masterpiece:
Characteristic of the apogee of Ottoman monumental architecture and civil engineering, the bridge has 11 masonry arches with spans of 11m to 15m, and an access ramp at right angles with four arches on the left bank of the river. The 179.5 m long bridge is a representative masterpiece of Sinan, one of the greatest architects and engineers of the classical Ottoman period and a contemporary of the Italian Renaissance, with which his work may be compared. The unique elegance of proportion and monumental nobility of the whole site bear witness to the greatness of this style of architecture.
The Bosnia News blog reports that on March 25th UNESCO Director Koichiro Matsuura presented the Bosnian authorities with a certificate on the listing of the bridge in a ceremony in Sarajevo, recognizing its “outstanding universal value.†However, Bosnia News explains that:
UNESCO Director Koichiro Matsuura’s visit to Visegrad was canceled “for security reasonsâ€. The organizers of the event decided not to hold the ceremony on the bridge after the Bosnian Association of Women Victims of War announced plans to put a plaque on the bridge commemorating genocide victims from Visegrad at a ceremony that was to have coincided with the certificate-awarding ceremony.
Members of this Bosnian association put the plaque on the bridge and read out the names of 3,000 genocide victims from Visegrad.Bosnia & Herzegovina: New UNESCO Heritage Site; New Cross Memorial
by Elia Varela Serra
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