Cultural property protection in Poland


'''Cultural property protection in Poland'''

Cultural property in Poland

According to Polish law, a cultural property item is defined as an "immovable or a movable item, their parts or complexes, which are human creations or their byproducts, serving as a testimony of a past epoch or event, and whose preservation is in the societal interest due to their historical, artistic or scientific value."
The designation has sometimes also colloquially been used by humanities and arts scholars in a meaning incompatible with the legal definition, extended to cover also selected intangible cultural heritage item types, in particular language, works of literature and music compositions, but its usage in such meaning has mainly been confined to professional jargon in humanities and the arts, while not being prevalent in everyday language.
The increase in public awareness in Poland of cultural heritage after the damage done during World War II, was largely the work of Jan Zachwatowicz, the Polish signatory of the Venice Charter.

Classification by type

The cultural property is officially classified into three categories: movable cultural property, immovable cultural property, archaeological cultural property.

Immovable cultural property

Immovable cultural property are categorized as type A items and include the following:
  • buildings or other individual constructions such as public art or memorials that have significant cultural value.
  • Group of buildings that constitutes a coherent unit, regardless of individual value, such as a cultural landscape or cityscape.
  • Park of cultural importance, including natural monuments such as valuable trees, group of trees or a boulder.

Movable cultural property

Movable cultural property, such as works of art or technology, as well as library or archival items, are catalogued as type B items; however, the Registry does not include movable items included in a museum inventory, in the national library collections or the national archival fonds.

Archaeological cultural property

Archaeological sites and artifacts are catalogued as type C items; however, the Registry does not include artifacts included in a museum inventory,.

Classification by form of recognition

Objects are recognized as cultural heritage protected by law in four ways:

Cultural property protection organs

The cultural property protection organs of the national administration include the 16 voivodeship offices for cultural property protection headed by a voivodeship cultural property conservator acting on behalf of the voivode. In addition, selected units of territorial self-government: gminas, cities with county rights and counties have used an option to appoint a communal, municipal, city or county cultural property conservator , with some tasks of the voivodeship conservator usually delegated to such an official under an agreement with the respective voivode, while the heads of the maritime offices are the first-tier organs in matters concerning maritime cultural property. Other state bodies may also be designated a first-tier organ in specific, justified cases on an ad hoc basis. The cultural property data is processed at the national level by the National Institute of Cultural Heritage , the latter also operating the National List of Intangible Cultural Heritage on behalf of the minister responsible for national cultural heritage, while all the abovementioned institutions are overseen by the General Cultural Property Conservator, an office fulfilling the tasks of the second-tier organ, held by a secretary or an undersecretary of state at the ministry responsible for national cultural heritage and acting on behalf of the minister.