Local History and the Development of Heritage Bonds: A Primary Education Intervention
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. What Is Heritage?
1.2. Community Heritage
1.3. The Process of Heritage Bond Creation and the Roman Baths of Valduno
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Methodological Design
2.2. Sample
2.3. Instruments
2.4. Project Description
3. Results
3.1. Initial Interviews
3.1.1. Roman Baths: Recognition and Relationship
3.1.2. Funerary Stele: Recognition, Identification, and Value
3.1.3. Baths of Valduno: Recognition, Identification, and Value
3.2. Final Interviews
3.2.1. Roman Baths: Recognition and Relationship
3.2.2. Funerary Stele: Recognition, Identification, and Value
3.2.3. Baths of Valduno: Recognition, Identification, and Value
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Dimensions | Categories and Highlighted Ideas |
---|---|
1. Recognition. It involves the evocation of the displayed elements, knowing what they are from a general or abstract view or the identification of single elements. | 1.1. Roman baths. Antiquity, Roman elements (paintings, columns, villas, clothing, etc.), use/function as a bath, rooms, heating system, etc. 1.2. Funerary stele. Recognisable; size and period are vaguely indicated. 1.3. Roman baths of Valduno. The site is recognised, but not the elements that appear. |
2. Relationship. It shows the link between selected drawings and Roman Baths knowledge. | Roman baths. Use/function as a bath, rooms, heating system, era, etc. |
3. Identification. Collects element-specific information. | 3.1. Funerary stele. Use/function, characteristics (dating, size, message, Latin language), current location. To a lesser extent, data on its discovery. 3.2. Roman baths of Valduno. The most important visible parts (caldarium 1, semicircular bath, hypocaust) are highlighted. |
4. Value. Identifies the value towards local heritage based on emotional, historical, and social factors. | 4.1. Funerary stele. Antiquity, potential to know more, but not specified. 4.2. Roman baths of Valduno. Antiquity, uniqueness, desire for further excavation; potential new knowledge unspecified; negative assessment of the church due to effects on the site. Implicit and general intrinsic valuation, arguments with little conviction and doubts. Only one case of explicit and categorical extrinsic valuation. Implicit value through the curiosity shown towards the site in the desire to continue excavations to avoid possible damage is also justified by the de facto value assigned by the community. |
Dimensions | Categories and Highlighted Ideas |
---|---|
1. Recognition. It involves the evocation of the displayed elements, knowing what they are from a general or abstract view or the identification of single elements. | Differences between the seven volunteers on guided tours and the rest of the group. Basic knowledge acquired as well as other, more specific, knowledge. 1.1. Roman Baths. There is no doubt. Elements to support the argument, such as the style of dress or dating it as ancient, disappear and more specific elements are used. 1.2. Funerary stele. The Latin message is identified; the meaning of the inscription and the relevance of the names on it are recognised. |
2. Relationship. It shows the link between selected drawings and Roman Baths knowledge. | 2.1. Differences between the seven volunteers on guided tours and the rest of the group. Basic knowledge acquired, and other more specific knowledge. 2.1. Roman Baths. Definition, Roman culture, use/function as bathing and other activities (leisure, rest, sport, or business); main rooms (caldarium, tepidarium and frigidarium), other rooms (massage parlour, gymnasium, changing room) and other elements (arches); functioning of the heating system of rooms, swimming pools, floors and walls; possible ownership (public or private) based on well-founded arguments, decorations such as paintings, tiles, or mosaics; differentiated time of day for men and women or lack of use of bathing clothes. There are no doubts; vocabulary and technical descriptions, Latin names and their definitions (hypocaust, frigidarium, tepidarium, alveus, etc.) and new information appear. Identification of the hot-water room. |
3. Identification. Collects element-specific information. | Differences between the seven volunteers on guided tours and the rest of the group. Basic knowledge acquired, and other more specific knowledge. 3.1. Funerary stele. Use/function, characteristics (2nd c. AD, size, Latin inscription), current location, discovery (discoverer, place, date, location, or previous use), Sestio (Astur, Libertus, Roman name, military, importance), link with thermal baths (period, previous indication). Visit to the Archaeological Museum of Asturias. A key element for the discovery of the Baths. 3.2. Roman Baths of Valduno. Previous visit, heating and drainage system, visible parts (semicircular hot bath, bench, hypocaust, drainage, chimney, sewer, window, second bath, etc.), non-visible parts (furnace, walls, roof, arches, windows, other rooms, such as massage parlour, gymnasium, etc.), estimated and excavated actual size, discovery and excavation (date, previous findings that served as clues, church and cemetery, excavation process and data research, etc.), nearby Roman elements (road, roundhouses, etc.), conservation, opinion, curiosity and doubts; cemetery and church (construction period and end of cemetery use, use of the Roman baths infrastructure for construction or possible use, as a way of erasing previous cultures, anecdotal elements); remains found in the Archaeological Museum of Asturias, hypotheses about public or private ownership. Technical language appears (opus signinum, speleological works, dating studies, etc.). |
4. Value. Identifies the value towards local heritage based on emotional, historical, and social factors.. | Differences between the seven volunteers on guided tours and the rest of the group. 4.1. Funerary stele. Antiquity, Roman times, ways of life, dimensions (local, provincial, and human heritage); historical learning and possible new knowledge about the territory or people, impact on current life. Anger pointing out its location in another borough. 4.2. Roman Baths of Valduno. Representative antiquity of the Roman world. Local heritage. Technological, local history, social aspects of the council: uniqueness, remembrance of past lives/legacy and learning about the passage of the Roman Empire (mosaics, causeways, pre and/or Roman roundhouses, etc.) or human evolution; current physical, cognitive, and emotional accessibility and changes through intervention such as the creation of information panels or guided tours; desire for further excavation, conservation and dissemination; theories for better conservation and exhibition related to community action and as a pressure mechanism on the administration; need for community involvement in conservation, research, learning, and enjoyment for future generations; potential new knowledge (research of the church, cemetery or site could be a further example of the pattern established in Vitruvius’ De Architectura), positive evaluation of the church and cemetery as a way of obtaining new information, despite anger at the neglect of the site. Explicit and general positive extrinsic value of the space: affection, memories, curiosity, enjoyment of learning, desire for protection and conservation based on personal interest; appropriation of the space, belonging to a territory, part of the individual and local identity. Establishment of a link between the lack of accessibility with lack of knowledge, which affects its valorisation; assuming the value of the Roman Baths is not given de facto by the community. |
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I’Anson Gutiérrez, S.; Suárez Suárez, M.Á.; Calaf Masachs, R. Local History and the Development of Heritage Bonds: A Primary Education Intervention. Heritage 2023, 6, 7215-7229. https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage6110378
I’Anson Gutiérrez S, Suárez Suárez MÁ, Calaf Masachs R. Local History and the Development of Heritage Bonds: A Primary Education Intervention. Heritage. 2023; 6(11):7215-7229. https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage6110378
Chicago/Turabian StyleI’Anson Gutiérrez, Sara, Miguel Ángel Suárez Suárez, and Roser Calaf Masachs. 2023. "Local History and the Development of Heritage Bonds: A Primary Education Intervention" Heritage 6, no. 11: 7215-7229. https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage6110378
APA StyleI’Anson Gutiérrez, S., Suárez Suárez, M. Á., & Calaf Masachs, R. (2023). Local History and the Development of Heritage Bonds: A Primary Education Intervention. Heritage, 6(11), 7215-7229. https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage6110378