
Hanoi (VNA) - Strengthening the education on the relic, designing experience tours and communications through traditional craft souvenir products are the ways pro👍posed to bring into play the value of the Thang Long Royal Citadel.
A decade has elapsed since the recognition of the Thang Long Royal Citadel complex by UNESCO, the preservation of the value of the relic of Hanoi capital has been implemented in a concerted and official way under the auspice of the advisory council with the participation of many top professors. It is noteworthy that the archaeological and research work here has seen many professors and specialists from Japan and France who have rich experience in the management and research of relics in urban areas in the world. The above information was revealed at an international conference on the ten years of research, preservation and bringing into play the value of the Thang Long Royal Citadel world legacy held by the Hanoi People’s Committee and the national UNESCO Committee on November 23. According to Ngo Van Quy, Vice Chairman of the Hanoi People’s Committee, the research and preservation of the archaeological relics that remain underground is a hard nut to crack and of international significance, not only to Vietnam.
Strengthening education, connecting ‘destinations’
In scientists’s opinion, for the Thang Long royal Citadel to further bring into play its value, relevant authorities must intensify the popularisation of tangible and intangible cultural relics. This requires the organisation of educational programmes so as to bring the relics to schools and young generations. Emmanuel Cerise, director of the international cooperation organisation of Paris region in Vietnam, share experiences on the work in Provins city which is famous for its middle-age castles. The management and bringing into play of the relics should be viewed from the tourism angle, he said, praising Vietnamese specialists for their expertise in the research of the royal architectures and traditional arts. The official also stressed that to obtain a better understanding on the value of the royal citadel and highlight this relic in the map of foreign tourists, Vietnam should form a network of relicts, in close connection with other UNESCO relicts.
VNA