Americas
and Pacific
The moai monoliths were carved between 1250 and 1500 CE on Rapa Nui, a Chilean island also called Isla de Pascua or Easter Island, at
the southeasternmost point of the Polynesian Triangle. Of the almost 900 of
these massive head and torso statues, 45%
have been moved and positioned, 10% were dropped along the route from the
quarry and 45%, including the largest which is 12 metres in length and weighs
75 tons, remain in the quarry.
The Historic Centre of Tallinn, Estonia dates back to the 13th century, when a castle was built there by the returned knights of the Teutonic Order. It developed as a very wealthy major centre of the Hanseatic League, and now contains some prime examples of Northern European Medieval architecture.
The Bahla
Fort at Nizwa, Oman is an outstanding example of a fortified oasis settlement
of the Medieval Islamic period. The walls and towers of this immense structure
are made of unbaked brick on a stone foundation, and the compound is watered by an extensive falaj system.
The picturesque
village of Shirakawa-go in Japan, known for the cultivation of mulberry trees
and sericulture (silkworm farming), is located in a mountainous region that was
cut off from the rest of the country. A steeply-roofed, thatched multi-level Gassho-style
architecture, well suited to heavy snowfall, evolved. The area was settled for
hundreds of years BCE, but the name ‘Shirakawa-go’ did not appear clearly in
history until the 12th century.