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Historic Towns between East and West: ciudades históricas entre Oriente y Occidente

Imagen de portada del libro Historic Towns between East and West

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  • The concept of historic town has been recognized in the West, especially in Europe, since the nineteenth century. Since the emergence of the first significant definitions with the birth of modern town planning, the definition of historic town has generated a diverse range of cultural and political debates in particular following the Second World War.

    The historic town is a monument, a witness of history, of its communitarian development and social and economic culture. Within different cultures of the world the concept of historic town finds different interpretations and definitions. Particularly today, in the West as in the East, the historic town is a point of extensive debate on the possible dialogue between historic architecture and contemporary architecture. Certainly the historic town represents a cultural heritage where the word culture is a heritage of old and new ideas, a multicultural dialogue of large social values establishing a relationship between history and modernity. Under this premise, the main objective of the monograph has been to investigate and explore the different cognitive approaches and methodologies to define the concept of the historic town, to plan its valorisation and most importantly its continuity into the future. The scientific contributions strongly highlight the different cultural approaches between the West and East as made evident through theoretical research, projects and construction.

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