In September, we love monuments – Diff
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Jubilee Church
in
Tor Tre Teste
Rome
, the winning picture of the 2014 Wiki Loves Monuments contest in Italy.
Photo
by Federico Di Iorio, freely licensed under
CC BY-SA 3.0
Map of countries
participating
in Wiki Loves Monuments 2015.
Dedicated
to the
public domain
by its authors
Cirdan
Yiyi
and
Effeietsanders
The month of September is well known as the beginning of spring or fall, depending on the hemisphere. In Europe, it is also known as the month of the
European Heritage Days
, a joint action by 50 states who celebrate the common European cultural heritage. In the Wikimedia movement, September holds a special place as the period during which the annual
Wiki Loves Monuments
contest is traditionally held.
Certified by the Guinness Book of World Records as the
largest photography competition
in history, Wiki Loves Monuments aims to involve the general public with contributing to Wikipedia, raise awareness of the cultural heritage around them, and document it in photographs that would be free to use for anyone, for any purpose.
Organized for the first time in 2010 in the Netherlands and led by Wikimedia chapters, groups and volunteers, the contest has grown over the years to involve almost 70 countries from all over the world, including Norway and Ireland in Europe, Tunisia and Kenya in Africa, Canada and Argentina in the Americas, and Nepal and Thailand in Asia, among many others. In just 5 years, thousands of amateur and professional photographers alike uploaded over 1.2 million pictures of culturally significant buildings and structures, many of which are used to illustrate articles on Wikipedia and are viewed by millions of readers every month.
The
Teatro Comunale
, an opera house in
Ferrara
, Italy. This
photo
, taken by Andrea Parisi, was awarded the 3rd place on the international level of Wiki Loves Monuments 2012. Freely licensed under
CC BY-SA 3.0
The
2015 Wiki Loves Monuments
will include over 30 countries, among them the new starters
Brazil
and
Latvia
. It’s also the fourth time that the contest is taking place in Italy, a country renown for its eclectic and diverse
architecture
that includes buildings from the
Ancient Greece
, the
Ancient Rome
the Gothic
and the
Renaissance
. Italy is also the country with the most
UNESCO
World Heritage Sites
51
as of 2014), and the cities of
Rome
Milan
Venice
and
Florence
are
ranked
in the top 40 city destinations in the world.
Despite its rich architecture, however, Italy does not currently enjoy the so-called
freedom of panorama
, which is a provision in copyright law in many states that permits taking photographs of works—such as buildings—that are permanently located in a public place. This means, in effect, that no architecture in Italy can be photographed without explicit permission from the owner of the structure. To allow Wiki Loves Monuments to take place in their country,
Wikimedia Italia
, the Italian chapter of the Wikimedia movement, have over the years partnered with more than 300 cities, towns, parishes, dioceses and other institutions to “free” Italian monuments so that they can be photographed for use on Wikipedia. Thanks to those efforts, Italian architecture aficionados can now take pictures of thousands of buildings in all Italian regions and provinces.
Submissions for Wiki Loves Monuments 2015 will be open throughout September. After that, pictures from all participating countries will be judged by their respective national juries, and up to ten best photographs from each country will be nominated for the international stage of the competition, whose winners are usually announced at the beginning of December.
If you are interested in participating in this year’s Wiki Loves Monuments in your country, please visit the
main page of the contest
on Wikimedia Commons. You can also view a
gallery
of last year’s international and national winners as well as an automated category listing
featured pictures
and
quality images
from last year.
For a gallery of all past Wiki Loves Monuments winners, see below.
Tomasz W. Kozlowski, Wikimedia community volunteer
Highlights
2014:
The
Holy Mountains Monastery
in
Sviatohirsk
, Ukraine.
Photo
by
Konstantin Brizhnichenko
, freely licensed under
CC-BY-SA-3.0
2013:
RhB
Ge 4/4 II
with a
push–pull train
crosses the
Wiesen Viaduct
between
Wiesen
and
Filisur
, Switzerland.
Photo
by
David Gubler
, freely licensed under
CC BY-SA 3.0
2012:
Tomb of Safdarjung
in
New Delhi
, India.
Photo
by
Pranav Singh
, freely licensed under
CC BY-SA 3.0
2011:
Winter picture of
Chiajna Monastery
on the outskirts of
Bucharest
, Romania.
Photo
by Mihai Petre, freely licensed under
CC BY-SA 3.0
2010:
Vijzelstraat 31
, a listed building in
Amsterdam
, Netherlands.
Photo
by
Rudolphous
, freely licensed under
CC BY-SA 3.0 NL
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