Defining Landscapes, and Their Importance for National Identity—A Case Study from Slovenia
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Research Background
- To redefine the concept of national landscape identity areas and renew the methodology for their designation;
- To elaborate guidelines for management of these landscapes; and
- To provide recommendations for applying the methodology on the regional and local levels.
2.2. Step 1—Drafting the Methodology for Assessing National Landscape Identity Areas
2.3. Step 2—Performing an Online Questionnaire on the Relevance of Existing National Identity Areas and Redrafting the Methodology
- Do you know this area? (yes/no)
- Do you consider this area important for national identity (yes/no) and (in case the answer is yes) which criteria have influenced your decision?
2.4. Step 3—Developing a Detailed Methodology for Identifying National Landscape Identity Areas, Performing Evaluation on Selected Case Study Areas, and Preparing Guidelines for Landscape Planning and Management
3. Results
3.1. Redefinition of the Concept of National Landscape Identity Areas
- Landscape features and landscape patterns that either represent a generic Slovenian landscape (e.g., a church on a hilltop) or a certain region (e. g. hayracks, different types of agricultural terraces) and that are considered relevant for landscape identity;
- Landscape identity areas that are unique and outstanding and therefore important for national identity.
3.1.1. Identity Value of Existing National Landscape Identity Areas
- The mountains and valleys of the Julian Alps with Triglav, the highest Slovenian mountain, as the most frequently mentioned (13 times) and Triglav National Park.
- Coastal areas with special emphasis on the Sečovlje salt pans (13-times) and coastal towns (especially Piran).
- The river Soča (Isonzo) and the landscape along the river with special mentioning of the towns of Bovec and Kobarid.
3.1.2. Evaluation Criteria and Pilot Areas for Evaluating Landscape Identity
- Representativeness—the area is important for national landscape identity because of its uniqueness (Bled, Bohinj) or for being a representative of a certain landscape type (Bitnje)—see Figure 2.
- Coherence and preservation/authenticity of landscape features and patterns:
- Coherence among natural and cultural features/characteristics—e.g., cultural terraces that only slightly adapt to topography (Dolenjska, Notranjska)—see Figure 3;
- Picturesqueness, visual attraction;
- Landscape heterogeneity.
- Cultural and scientific value:
- Historical and symbolic meaning—places and landscapes have a strong associative (e.g., the Savica waterfall), symbolic (e.g., Triglav) and/or historical value (e.g., the WW1 remains along the Soča/Isonzo river battlefield)—see Figure 3;
- Identity value—places and landscapes that the majority of citizens identify with (e.g., Planica, Bled);
- Continuity—places and landscapes with preserved settlement patterns, field division systems, etc. (e.g., Bitnje, Velika Planina, Zajamniki)—see Figure 4;
- Scientific and research value—landscapes that are important for studying natural phenomena (e.g., Karst) and/or historical landscape development.
- N—the area is considered of national importance for landscape identity;
- R—the area is of regional importance for landscape identity;
- L—the area is of local importance for landscape identity; and
- 0—the area has no importance for landscape identity.
- Pilot areas should be distributed within all five landscape regions of Slovenia.
- Pilot areas that are already enlisted among national landscape identity areas were selected within all three groups from the questionnaire (areas of high, medium, and low importance):
- Ljubljansko barje;
- Jezersko;
- Zgornja Savinjska dolina (Logarska dolina);
- Jeruzalemske gorice;
- Radensko polje;
- Mirnska dolina;
- Bitnje; and
- Gorjanci.
- i.
- Obala;
- j.
- Posočje; and
- k.
- Kraški rob.
- l.
- Triglav and the surrounding area (the highest mountain peak in Slovenia);
- m.
- Bohinj (glacier lake and mountain pastures);
- n.
- Pokljuka (high forest plateau);
- o.
- Planica (alpine valley with contemporary ski jumping facilities); and
- p.
- Trenta (alpine river valley with surrounding slopes and plateaus).
3.2. Guidelines for Managing National Landscape Identity Areas
- Preserving existing land use, landscape features, and patterns that contribute to landscape identity.
- Preserving the traditional land division system, settlement patterns, and architectural typology.
- Promoting agricultural activities to prevent land abandonment and overgrowing, especially in marginal agricultural areas (e.g., mountain pastures). Besides, food production and agriculture in these areas has an important role in preserving landscape features and patterns with identity value; therefore, agricultural management technologies should adapt to that.
- Management and monitoring of landscape heterogeneity.
- Protection of natural landscape features (e.g., natural streams, hedges, individual trees, etc.).
- All development activities (e.g., housing, agriculture, etc.) should adapt to the environment’s carrying capacity. New developments should be planned considering the existing landscape character.
- Massive tourism should be prevented, and touristic development should be planned within the environment’s carrying capacity.
- Touristic infrastructure should be unified and minimized to avoid visual pollution.
- The inclusion of landscape identity into expertises and planning acts.
- Educational activities for relevant stakeholders and the general public.
- The inclusion of recommendations into sectoral policies and management plans.
3.3. Recommendations for the Method’s Application on Regional and Local Levels
- Further research should investigate the principles of regional/local identity and the differences between these two compared to national identity.
- The suggested criteria as well as the thresholds should be reconsidered and adapted to specific regional/local contexts.
- Additional criteria and characteristic landscape features could be added.
- Regional/local experts should perform the evaluation.
3.4. The Evaluation of Jezersko—An Example of a Case Study
3.4.1. Area Description and Conservation Regimes
- The area has a unique and well-preserved character, but, because of its remoteness and inacessibility, it was not considered as important for identity among interviewees.
- Despite the (so far) moderate touristic development, which did not negatively affect the landscape character and identity, uncontrolled future development could lead toward landscape degradation.
3.4.2. Characteristic Landscape Features
4. Discussion
4.1. Redefinition of the Concept of National Landscape Identity Areas
4.2. Guidelines for Managing National Landscape Identity Areas
4.3. Recommendations for the Method’s Application on Regional and Local Levels
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Importance for national identity | |||||
High | Medium | Low | |||
≥90% ** | 50–89% ** | <50% ** | |||
Recognition of landscape among interviewees | High | ≥75% * | 8 | 19 | 2 |
Medium | 50–74% * | 1 | 11 | 10 | |
Low | <50% * | 0 | 2 | 9 | |
* Percentage of the interviewees who know the area | |||||
** Percentage of the interviewees who consider the area important for national identity among those who know the area | |||||
8 areas | Green: Areas that should be directly listed among national landscape identity areas | ||||
19 + 11 + 1 = 31 areas | Yellow: Areas that should be further evaluated according to proposed methodology | ||||
2 + 10 + 2 + 9 = 23 areas | Pink: Areas that were excluded from further evaluation on national level |
Types of Landscape Features (General List for Slovenia); Landscape Features that Appear in the Alpine Region Are Written in Bold. | |||
---|---|---|---|
Geomorphological and relief | Vegetation | Water | Structures |
Mountain peaks | Riparian vegetation | Torrents | Hayracks (and other structures upon which fodder for animals is dried) |
Ridges | Hedges | Watercourses | Stables |
Sheer rocks and cliffs | Tree avenues | Sinking stream/sinking river | Herdsmen huts |
Limestone pavements/plateaus | Fallow land on field borders | Backwater | Barns and other farmsteads |
Cliff/rock formation | Green windbreaks | Mill streams | Bee houses |
Scree slopes | Solitude trees | Artificial cannals | Mills and sawmills |
Moraine | Reeds | Reclamation ditches | Individual farms |
Boulders | Extensive orchards | Waterfalls | Salt-pan houses |
Mogul meadows | Groups of trees and shrubs | Springs and ponors | Chapels and plague crosses (columns) |
River beds and kanyons | Forest patches | Water cachements | Churches and bell towers |
Cascades | Park/park plantation/park complex | Ponds | Castles and forts |
Swallow holes, boiling springs, and estavelles | Fern and birches/litter raking forest | Headwaters | (Visible) archeological remains |
Gravel plains and dunes | Lakes | War remains and borders (bunkers and trenches) | |
River terraces | Accumulation lakes | Water barriers | |
Alluvial fans | Intermittent lakes | Monuments (memorials) | |
Solitary hills (on carst poljes) | Gravel pits | Wooden footbridges | |
Special geomorphological features: needles, natural windows, karrens, rillenkarrens, and other karst features | (Peat) bogs | ||
Collapse dolines | Marshes | ||
Dolines | Glaciers | ||
Shafts (ice pits) | Sea | ||
Bare surface | Salt pans | ||
Drystone walls | |||
Supported terraces | |||
Cultural terraces | |||
Flood embankments | |||
Cliffs | |||
Cirques | |||
Depressions and sinkholes | |||
Gorges | |||
Passes | |||
Mountain ranges |
Criteria and Sub-Criteria | Evaluation | Comment—Field Observations |
---|---|---|
Representativeness | ||
N | The area is important for identity but less important than the most prominent landscape areas (e.g., Bled, Bohinj). Clustered settlement in hills. | |
Coherence and preservation/authenticity of landscape features and patterns | ||
Coherence among natural and cultural features/characteristics | N | Settlements on the edges and sunny slopes due to the harsh climate. Pollarded ash hedges on the parcel boundaries. Meadows in the valley bottom, forest on the steep slopes, and pastures and hayfields on the plateaus. |
Clearly defined spatial order | N | Ash hedges planted along the parcel boundaries in the valley bottom. Well-preserved architecture, houses with vegetable gardens, lime trees at isolated farms, and orchards on sunny slopes. |
Picturesqueness and visual attraction | N | Picturesque, visually attractive landscape. The best observation locations are from slightly elevated points. Surrounded by forested slopes and ridges, the landscape is perceived as a complete whole with clearly expressed boundaries. Pollareded ash hedges are also an element of visual attractiveness. |
Landscape heterogeneity | N | Pollarded ash hedges. A lake. Meadows and pastures. Traditional orchards. Lime trees at isolated farms. Settlement patterns and traditional materials (shingles). Traditional farm buildings. Forests in the background. Wooden fences around vegetable gardens. |
Cultural and scientific value | ||
Historical and symbolic meaning | R | Health tourism (climate, eye diseases). |
Identity value | R/L | Indigenous breed of sheep; annual sheep fair. |
Continuity | N | Pollarded ash hedges are still preserved, but their management is less intensive (branches and leaves were used for fodder). |
Scientific and research value | R/L | Tufa deposit in surrounding area. Indigenous breed of sheep. |
Conclusion: the area is important for national identity. |
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Penko Seidl, N.; Šmid Hribar, M.; Hudoklin, J.; Pipan, T.; Golobič, M. Defining Landscapes, and Their Importance for National Identity—A Case Study from Slovenia. Sustainability 2021, 13, 6475. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13116475
Penko Seidl N, Šmid Hribar M, Hudoklin J, Pipan T, Golobič M. Defining Landscapes, and Their Importance for National Identity—A Case Study from Slovenia. Sustainability. 2021; 13(11):6475. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13116475
Chicago/Turabian StylePenko Seidl, Nadja, Mateja Šmid Hribar, Jelka Hudoklin, Tomaž Pipan, and Mojca Golobič. 2021. "Defining Landscapes, and Their Importance for National Identity—A Case Study from Slovenia" Sustainability 13, no. 11: 6475. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13116475
APA StylePenko Seidl, N., Šmid Hribar, M., Hudoklin, J., Pipan, T., & Golobič, M. (2021). Defining Landscapes, and Their Importance for National Identity—A Case Study from Slovenia. Sustainability, 13(11), 6475. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13116475