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海事文化遗产研究中心收藏有关中国南部、珠江三角洲及香港的海事文化和历史的出版物和档案,部分文献可追溯至300多年前。收藏包括稀有地图、手稿、照片、书籍和期刊,这些资料在香港其他地方找不到。


这个中小型多用途中心提供安静的研究环境,只接受预先预约者使用。资料不可带离中心。


有关版权许可和图片授权费用,请参阅价格申请表。 

 

收藏亮点
博物馆档案:支持香港海事博物馆行政历史的文件。
海事档案:反映香港海事历史和发展的个人文献和公司记录。

更多详情
请电联邮至  education@hkmaritimemuseum.org 

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Publications
出版刊物
Underwater Cultural Heritage

以下内容只有英文,不便之处,敬请见谅。

What is Underwater Cultural Heritage? 
 

Hong Kong has a rich and diverse history related to the sea which is reflected in the stories, legends, past trades, wars and piracy, contemporary cultural practices, vast shipping and port operations, and underwater cultural heritage (UCH) sites and objects. And while there is extensive knowledge about Hong Kong’s history across disciplines such as built heritage, terrestrial archaeological sites and intangible heritage, little is known about underwater cultural heritage. The Hong Kong Maritime Museum is dedicated to changing that.

 
By funding and sourcing government and private grants, dedicated efforts are underway to research, survey, document and increase public awareness of UCH, the importance of the subject to Hong Kong and China and how public policy should be implemented at a local and national level.
 

Global, National and Regional Practices

The UNESCO Convention on the Protection of Underwater Cultural Heritage 2001 (UCH Convention 2001) is now universally accepted as international best practices. And while China has not ratified it, their work is consistent with the principal and practices of the convention. In fact, China has developed world-renowned UCH programmes, including an impressive number of maritime museums and a call for a uniform approach in managing its UCH nationwide. 

The Hong Kong government has legislation that provides for the protection, research and management of UCH, but it does not implement an active programme in this area. It relies of Marine Archaeology Investigations (MAI) as part of the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) process — which is limited in  approach—pertaining only to property development areas, which often end in dispute about the value of heritage and how much will it cost to preserve identified UCH.  The recent discovery in of a possible shipwreck identified in the course of constructing Hong Kong’s Wan Chai Bypass and Island Eastern Corridor Link is one example.

Proposal for UCH in Hong Kong

Hong Kong Underwater Heritage Group

Asia Pacific Conference 2017

UNESCO Publication

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