World Heritage Criteria: Definition of Cultural Heritage
World Heritage Criteria: Definition of Cultural Heritage
World Heritage Criteria: Definition of Cultural Heritage
To be included on the World Heritage List, sites must be of outstanding universal value and meet at least one
out of ten selection criteria.
Until the end of 2004, World Heritage sites were selected on the basis of six cultural and four natural criteria.
With the adoption of the revised Operational Guidelines for the Implementation of the World Heritage
Convention, only one set of ten criteria exists.
monuments: architectural works, works of monumental sculpture and painting, elements or structures of
an archaeological nature, inscriptions, cave dwellings and combinations of features, which are of
outstanding universal value from the point of view of history, art or science;
groups of buildings: groups of separate or connected buildings which, because of their architecture, their
homogeneity or their place in the landscape, are of outstanding universal value from the point of view of
history, art or science;
sites: works of man or the combined works of nature and of man, and areas including archaeological
sites which are of outstanding universal value from the historical, aesthetic, ethnological or
anthropological points of view.
natural features consisting of physical and biological formations or groups of such formations, which are
of outstanding universal value from the aesthetic or scientific point of view;
geological and physiographical formations and precisely delineated areas which constitute the habitat of
threatened species of animals and plants of outstanding universal value from the point of view of science
or conservation;
natural sites or precisely delineated natural areas of outstanding universal value from the point of view of
science, conservation or natural beauty.
Selection criteria
For a property to be included on the World Heritage List, the World Heritage Committee must find that it meets
one or more of the following criteria:
The protection, management, authenticity and integrity of properties are also important considerations.