Key:stećak:replica

From OpenStreetMap Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Public-images-osm logo.svg stećak:replica
Stecak of zgosca replica in sarajevo.png
Description
To specify a replica of individual stećak. Show/edit corresponding data item.
Group: historic
Used on these elements
may be used on nodesshould not be used on waysmay be used on areas (and multipolygon relations)should not be used on relations (except multipolygon relations)
Requires
Useful combination
See also
Status: in use

A stećak:replica=yes is a copy, imitation, or, as tag points, replica of a monumental gravestone slab, cut in variety of sizes and shapes for decorative purposes, but sometimes as a modern-day tombstone used in cemeteries.

How to map

Draw as an area area along the necropolis outline a node node with the tag *historic=stećak. If consists of a significant individual stećaks draw those as an area inside necropolis area or set a node(s) node.

In addition, the following parameters should be given to describe the details of the object.

See also = * stećak:relocated=*

  • site_type=* - to further describe the type of the site - established tag, deprecated by wiki voting
  • name=name - the name of the site, e.g.  Radimlja

Tags to use in combination

Historical background

There are more than 60 thousand individual  stećak tombstones in  Bosnia and Herzegovina, and another several thousands in border areas of neighboring countries. Stećak  necropolis is a large historic cemetery with elaborate tombstone monuments. The term implies a separate burial site at a distance from a settlement. A stećak has been used as early as beginning of the 12th century to as late as mid to late 16th, in some cases early 17th century, for funerals or commemorative purposes.[1][2] Stećaks that will later evolve into transitional variety of stećak-"nišan"s, a variety of stećak used in late medieval Bosnia by first converts to Islam after the Ottoman conquest of the Kingdom of Bosnia, could be mapped as stećak in combination with religious affiliation. Later still, these stećak-nišans will evolve into their final form as Muslim gravestones called nišan(s).[3]

On initiative of the Commission to Preserve National Monuments of Bosnia and Herzegovina, stećaks are inscribed on the  World Heritage List by  UNESCO since 2016. More than 4,000 individual monoliths are selected, and grouped in necropolises at 28 locations, of which 22 in Bosnia and Herzegovina,[4] two in Croatia, three in Montenegro, and three in Serbia.

Rendering suggestions

See also

References