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EN
The beginning of archaeology activities in the Centre for Documentation of Monuments are identical with the beginning of one of the most important conservation programmes in the history of Polish archaeology, founded in the late 1970s – the Archaeological Photo of Poland Programme. Due to the significance of the Archaeological Photo of Poland (AZP) programme, it was included within the “Monuments of Culture – the Source of the Nation’s Awareness” programme, thus ensuring its central financing. During this time, the post for archaeological matters, later developed into the Archaeology Department was founded at the CDM in Warsaw. The Archaeological Conservation Studies at the CDM founded in 1987 was the first attempt at training archaeological conservation service staff. Until the 1990s the Archaeological Department of the CDM performed tasks related to the collection, opinion making, and archiving of documentation from Archaeological Photo of Poland (AZP) research and the collection, analysis and archiving of decisions on the entry of archaeological stations into the register, as well as computerisation. On 14 October 2002, the Centre for the Protection of Historic Landscape was merged with the Centre for Documentation of Monuments into the National Centre for Research and Documentation of Monuments (NCRDM). The Office of Research Documentation on Warsaw and Mazovia which was comprised of the Archaeological Research Workshop was founded within the institution, and next, on 24 February 2004, it was extended by the independent Interdisciplinary Research Workshop. During this time, the NCRDM kept a central record of archaeological monuments. After 2004, the National Record, in the archaeological part, was sent to the Centre for the Protection of Archaeological Heritage. The institution was also founded in 2002, as the legal successor of the Centre for Rescue Archaeological Research (CRAR), created in 1995 after the ratification of the Malta Convention. It dealt with the protection and documentation of endangered cultural property, located on the territory of expressway and highway construction investments. On 1 October 2004, the Minister of Culture entrusts the CPAH with keeping of the national record of monuments in the part regarding the archaeological monuments. The merging of the CPAH and NCRDM took place on 1 January 2007. The newly founded institution was called the National Centre for Research and Documentation of Monuments (NCRDM), the Archaeology Department exists in its structure. On 15 February 2008, the organisational regulations were approved and the position of Deputy Director of Archaeology was terminated. The Archaeology Rescue Workshop, a part of the large Monument Protection Strategy Department, was also founded. The present organisational division of the National Heritage Board results from Regulation no. 16 of 6 August 2010. Subsequently, the Archaeological Department was founded in the structure of the Institution to carry out tasks in the area of collecting and disseminating knowledge on heritage, indication and dissemination of standards on the protection and conservation of monuments as well as shaping social awareness in the scope of values and the maintenance of cultural heritage. From 2009, the National Heritage Board has conducted a verification of the record of archaeological monuments. Information obtained during the verification is included in the national, geo-spatial database on monuments created by the National Heritage Board. Tasks in the scope of archaeology activities carried out in the National Heritage Board are a continuation of the actions started by the archaeologists at the CDM.
EN
The conference on “Listing archaeological sites, protecting the historical landscape”, which dealt with the registration of historical monuments and data digitalisation methods, took place in Târgovişte (Romania) on 6-8 March 2008. The meeting was organised by Europae Archaeologiae Consilium (EAC), a gathering of representatives of the conservation services, institutions specialising in archaeological heritage as well as archaeological organisations from 25 European countries. Poland has been a member of EAC since 1999, i.e. its establishment. The first part of the conference, reserved for members, discussed organisational matters and the budget. The participants of further parts of the meeting presented their experiences associated with the functioning and implementation of the Geographic Information System and the possibilities of its application in archaeological inventories. The Polish side was represented by Dr. Andrzej Prinke from the Archaeological Museum in Poznan, and Bartosz Wiśniewski and Michał Grabowski from the National Heritage Board of Poland. The conference agenda also included a tour of the historical monuments of Transylvania.
EN
The second meeting of the Archaeology Advisory College at the National Heritage Board of Poland, held on 21 August 2008, considered current problems of archaeological conservation. The first part discussed archaeological storehouses, presented exemplary solutions, and recognised the interest of self-government authorities to be a necessary condition for the establishment of new facilities. The second part of the meeting was devoted to cooperation between the National Heritage Board of Poland and the General Head Office of National Roads and Highways. The participants discussed problems associated with a rapid increase in the number of planned road investments, which leads to the growth of salvage-oriented archaeological studies.
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