GE 2 - UNIT-VII-Lesson-Proper
GE 2 - UNIT-VII-Lesson-Proper
GE 2 - UNIT-VII-Lesson-Proper
Overview
This unit gives you a better understanding of our cultural heritage. In addition, world
heritage sites listed by UNESCO are presented in this unit. This will help you to distinguish
tangible heritage to intangible heritage.
Learning Objectives:
Lesson Proper
• Cultural Heritage, according to Republic Act 10066, or the National Cultural Heritage
Act Of 2009, referred to "the totality of cultural property preserved and developed
through time and passed on to posterity."
• The World Heritage Commission explains that "heritage is our legacy from the past,
what we live with today, and what we pass on to future generations."
1. Tangible Heritage
• Environment (natural landscapes and coastal and inland water sources)
• Flora and fauna
• Man-made structures
(Images credit to: Frontlearners)
2. Intangible Heritage
• Culture (traditions, customs, values, trades, and skills).
(Images credit to: Frontlearners)
• According to Republic Act 10066 Article 1, Policies and Principles, Sec. 2 of the National
Cultural Heritage Act of 2009 declares that the State shall foster the preservation,
enrichment, and dynamic evolution of a Filipino culture based on the principle and unity
in diversity in a climate of free artistic and intellectual expression.
• According to the Heritage Conservation Society, "conservation" entails "all the processes
and measures of maintaining the cultural significance of a cultural property, including,
but not limited to, preservation, reconstruction, protection, adaptation, or any
combination thereof."
Puerto Princesa Subterranean River National Park lies near the Saint Paul Mountain
Range, 81 kilometers from the heart of Puerto Princesa City, but is still within the
boundaries of the city.
The Park is a wide known natural wonder.
Its geological features are extraordinary, and the Subterranean River is said to be among
the longest in the world measuring up to 8.2 kilometers.
High within the farther ranges of the Philippine Cordillera mountain range, researchers
accept, slants have been terraced and planted with rice as distant back as 2,000 a long
time.
Mountains terraced into paddies that were still existing in changing states of conservation
are spread over most of the 20,000 square-kilometer arrive that's within the Northern
Luzon areas of Kalinga-Apayao, Abra, Benguet and Ifugao.
The far-fetched location is found at elevations shifting from 700 to 1,500 meters over the
ocean level, where porches are cut into mountain inclines with forms that rise steeply.
During the height of the Spanish colonial era in the 18th and 19th centuries, Vigan or
Ciudad Fernandina de Vigan was the third most important city after Manila and Cebu.
It was the main point of Spanish colonial power in the northern Luzon. The range of
structures along the plazas and streets narrates the story of the town.
The town is a testament to the Spanish colonialization, a place that exerts a strong cultural
influence on the modern Philippine nation.
Four Baroque churches in the country that were built during the Spanish period and all
of them were inscribed to the UNESCO World Heritage Site list.
These baroque churches are all named as national treasures for their historical and
cultural significance.
The four Baroque churches included in this list are Paoay Church in Ilocos Norte,
Santa Maria Church in Ilocos Sur, San Agustin Church in Manila and Miagao Church in
Iloilo.
The Tubbataha Reefs Natural Park lies at the heart of the Sulu Sea, which is located near
Palawan.
This natural park is a protected part of the Philippines -all 97,030 hectares of it. These
islands belong to the Tubbataha Reefs Natural Park are uninhabited.
It also a home for nesting site for marine turtles and various species of birds. Meanwhile,
it is best known for its pristine coral reef system.