Cultural Heritage Deterioration in the Historical Town ‘Thimi’
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- (a)
- To examine the heritage deterioration of the built culture, Guthi, and rituals of the Newari settlement of Thimi.
- (b)
- To study community involvement in heritage conservation.
1.1. Literature Review
1.2. Introduction of Thimi
1.3. Heritage Deterioration: Causes, Issues, Cases
1.3.1. Natural Causes
1.3.2. Economic Causes
1.3.3. Social Causes
1.3.4. Institutional Weakness
1.4. Heritage Conservation and Community Renewal in Historic Towns
1.5. Theoretical Framework: Heritage Deterioration and Conservation
1.6. Methodology
- (a)
- Perform a careful desk study at the establishment by exploring the latest research papers, old histories, and trends.
- (b)
- Conduct interviews with as many heritage experts and academicians as possible.
- (c)
- Study the existing literature on the 51 households in the Chapacho area and 50 households in the Balkumari area.
- (d)
- Communicate with and comprehend the feelings of the locals. Gather more information with the help of local stakeholders.
2. Case Study (Tangible Heritage and Intangible Heritage)
2.1. The Tangible Heritage of Thimi in the Past and Now (Community, Economy, Built Heritage, Land Use, Environment)
2.2. Intangible Heritage
3. Result (Research Finding)
3.1. Physical Factor
3.2. Socio-Economic Factor
3.3. Socio-Cultural Factor
4. Exploring Key Issues in Heritage Deterioration (Discussion)
5. Conclusions and Recommendation
- Good bonding through intangible heritage makes community resilience. Jatra and other festivals bring all relatives together, and they help to build a strong relationship. Tangible heritage is conserved by intangible heritage conservation. Therefore, intangible heritage is a sustainable indicator and should be conserved first to save tangible heritage.
- There is no policy for private dwelling restoration or reconstruction. A more detailed policy is needed, and implementing it correctly is important if the private dwelling has heritage value. The municipality has no law to grant a permit for the traditional way of construction. Therefore, the municipality should make a law for traditional construction techniques.
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Clan Community | Number |
---|---|
Sibaja | 19 |
Sinari | 4 |
Tuche | 1 |
Jagalu | 2 |
Chetawa | 3 |
Huwa | 1 |
Total | 30 |
Case Study | Tangible | Intangible | Intangible | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Issues | Tangible Heritage: Cultural Heritage in Balkumari and Chapacho | Intangible Heritage: Bisket Jatra | Ritual Traditional Route (Si Guthi/Shree Panchami Guthi) | |
1 | Migration | Residents moving out from the Thimi core area. | Reduced participation of youth generation. | Because of new professions, youth generations are unable to allocate time for cultural activities. |
2 | Authenticity | The use of modern materials and new construction technology destroyed authentic heritage structures. RCC structures replace local load-bearing wall systems. | During the festival or the Jatra period, people wanted to introduce new concepts, which impacted the authenticity of Jatra. | The ritual process has been modified as people compared its value in money instead of its sustainability. |
3 | Lack of inventory | Most cultural heritage has no inventory, which is why after the earthquake, it was difficult to restore to its original state. | Because of no inventory, Bisket Jatra is at risk of being deviated from a typical authentic system. | As there is no documentation of Guthi processes, the new generation has no clue about the traditional culture. |
4 | Faith in system | It measures a part of sustaining cultural heritage. | It measures a part of sustaining intangible heritage. | It measures a part of sustaining intangible heritage. |
5 | Occupation | In the past, agriculture was the common occupation. Cultural heritage is related to occupations such as worshiping different paddy gods, drinking well water, and hiti (community tap area) cleaning during a festival called Sidi Nakha. | Adopting different occupations caused a conflict with their profession because of no public holidays during the Jatra days. | During the ritual culture event time, people do not have time because of their duties of employment. Therefore, people are more flexible regarding the celebration of the cultural function at their convenience. |
6 | Institutional system | The government has rules and regulations to support cultural heritage. However, this alone is not enough and needs other community support to increase as well. | The central government and local government do not function with each other in harmony. There is a need for good co-ordination between the local government and central government to support Jatra events. | There is no institutional system to support the ritual system. Only the local community is active to conserve and bolster ritual functions. |
7 | Built culture | Built culture is directly related to cultural heritage such as temples, public rest houses, open spaces, courtyards, etc. | Built culture is directly related to cultural heritage such as Bisket Jatra. | Built culture is directly related to cultural heritage, such as traditional ritual events. |
8 | Conservation process—actors involved in cultural heritage conservation | Newari culture can be considered living heritage. | Newari cultural Bisket Jatra is living heritage. | Newari cultural rituals are living heritage. |
9 | Three-generation location (grandfather, father, and son) | Most grandfathers are farmers. Therefore, built cultures are created based on their livelihood. But the father and son generations relocating their residencies out or to the periphery of Thimi impacted traditional culture negatively. | Bisket Jatra is one famous festival, but due to the relocation of residency of local people, they have now less attraction to Bisket Jatra festivals. | A ritual called Sii Guthi is one sustainable community system, but due to the heavy relocation of people after the catastrophe, the ritual program seems inconvenient for people since these events are organized in the Thimi area, now far from their residence. |
10 | Issues of cultural heritage conservation process | The conservation process is being noticed to be deteriorating day by day. | Conservation efforts seem smaller compared to the deterioration rate. | The awareness program seems negligible compared to the deterioration factors. |
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Shrestha, R.; Shen, Z.; Bhatta, K.D. Cultural Heritage Deterioration in the Historical Town ‘Thimi’. Buildings 2024, 14, 244. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14010244
Shrestha R, Shen Z, Bhatta KD. Cultural Heritage Deterioration in the Historical Town ‘Thimi’. Buildings. 2024; 14(1):244. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14010244
Chicago/Turabian StyleShrestha, Ram, Zhongwei Shen, and Kishan Datta Bhatta. 2024. "Cultural Heritage Deterioration in the Historical Town ‘Thimi’" Buildings 14, no. 1: 244. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14010244
APA StyleShrestha, R., Shen, Z., & Bhatta, K. D. (2024). Cultural Heritage Deterioration in the Historical Town ‘Thimi’. Buildings, 14(1), 244. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14010244