Bd. 84 (2024): ICOMOS - Hefte des Deutschen Nationalkomitees

					Ansehen Bd. 84 (2024): ICOMOS - Hefte des Deutschen Nationalkomitees

Monuments and Sites De-colonial! Approaches to the Built Heritage of the German Colonial Era

Veröffentlicht: 2026-04-30
  • Welcome – Dissonance at a Distance: The Built Legacy of the German Colonial Era

    Tino Mager
    9-10
  • Editorial – Monuments and Sites De-colonial! Subject, Conference and Proceedings

    Tino Mager Michael Falser Gabriele Horn John Ziesemer
    11-13
  • Introduction – From Global Architectural History to Shared Cultural Heritage. German Colonial Architecture as a Challeng

    Michael Falser
    15-50
  • German Colonial Buildings in Tanzania: Viewpoint of a German-Tanzanian Expert Mission (2018) on Status, Preservation Options and Future

    Ralph Egermann Prisca Kirway
    53-59
  • Investigating the ‘Shared Heritage’ of German Colonial Period Buildings and Infrastructures in the Volta Region of Ghana

    Jörg Linstädter Wazi Apoh Ernest K. Fiador Cornelia Kleinitz Dietmar Kurapkat Kathrin Loges Ute Verstegen Annika Zeitler
    60-67
  • Developing Collaborative Approaches to the (Built) ‘Shared Heritage’ of German Colonialism in Pangani, Tanzania

    Cornelia Kleinitz Elinaza Mjema Maximilian F. Chami Severine G. Kizito Paul J. Lane Erick Ntikachika Adson Ndyanabo Mugasire Kisoma Christian Hartl-Reiter Thorsten Bunk
    68-76
  • From Building Archaeology to Conservation Management of German Colonial Architecture in Cameroon (1884–1916)

    Martin Elouga Salamatou
    77-82
  • From Difficult History to Almost Lost Heritage: Surveying Kaiser-Wilhelmsland and Bismarck-Archipel (Deutsch-Neuguinea)

    Michael Falser
    85-93
  • Rust and Dust: The Vestigial Heritage of German Phosphate Imperialism on Nauru and Angaur

    Jasper Ludewig
    94-100
  • Documenting and Promoting German Colonial Buildings in Togo

    Aka Adjo Bebewou Komlagan Hato
    101-108
  • Dissonance Surrounding the Heritage and Conservation of German Colonial Architecture in Cameroon

    Champolion Miache Evina
    109-116
  • Interdisciplinary Approach to Decolonisation: Source Editing, Visual History and Exhibitions Using the Example of the Early History of Tsingtao

    Yijie ZHU
    117-123
  • The International Settlement of Tientsin and the German Concession (1895–1917) – from History to Heritage

    Ruoran Wang Subin Xu Nobuo Aoki
    127-132
  • German Fortresses in Northern Cameroon: Preserving Physical Remains and Memories of an Ultimate Resistance against the Allies until 1916

    Narcisse Santores Tchandeu
    133-139
  • From Construction Material Research to Renovation: The German Architecture of Catholic Churches in Southern Tanzania

    Valence Valerian Meriki Silayo
    140-145
  • Dealing with German Colonial Architecture. Two Strategies – Two Losses: The Old Courthouse in Apia, Samoa, and the Joachim de Brum House in Likiep, Marshall Islands

    Hermann Mückler
    146-150
  • Appropriation and Politics of German Colonial Heritage. The Tintenpalast in Windhoek, Namibia: an Intact Survivor of Imperialism, Constitutional Monarchy, Apartheid and Democracy

    Walter Peters
    153-159
  • The Alte Feste and the Making of German Colonial Heritage in Namibia

    Jens Wiedow
    160-166
  • Historical and Contemporary Relations between Tanzania and Germany: A Focus on Colonial Legacy, Cultural Connectivity and the Role of Gunzert House in Mwanza City

    Delphine Kessy Eginald Mihanjo
    167-172
  • Towards the Liberation of Colonial Space? Prospects of Dealing with German Architectural Heritage. The Case of Iringa Boma in Tanzania

    Jan Kuever
    173-179
  • The Harbour Quarter of Swakopmund/Namibia: Selling German Colonial Nostalgia in a Seaside Resort

    Martin Kalb
    180-186
  • The Palais de Lomé (Togo): from a German Colonial Palace to a Pan-African Arts and Culture Centre to Preserve Biodiversity and Celebrate Africa and its Diasporas

    Sonia Lawson
    187-192
  • An Architectural Irony: The Mau Bandstand of Sāmoa

    Lama Tone
    195-200
  • Reimagining Monuments of Trauma and the German Colonial Space: Liwale, Nandete and Mahenge in Southern Tanzania

    Nancy Rushohora
    201-206
  • The German Colonial School in Witzenhausen – Controversial Crystallization Site of Different Cultures of Memories and Remembrance

    Marion Hulverscheidt
    207-212
  • Virtual Interference with Colonial Monuments. Approaching the Kolonialkriegerdenkmal in Düsseldorf/Germany with Augmented Reality

    Jens Fehrenbacher Fabian Lipki Byron Christopher Co
    213-218
  • Between Demolition and Artistic Adaptation? The Afterlife of German Colonial Monuments in Africa and Germany

    Joachim Zeller
    221-228
  • German Colonial Architecture between Germany and Cameroon – Postcolonial Appropriation Motifs in a Decolonial Age

    Richard Tsogang Fossi Hanse Gilbert Mbeng Dang
    229-235
  • Colonialism and the Extraction of Landscapes: Otobong Nkanga’s Engagement with the Copper Mine in Tsumeb (Namibia) as Anti-monument

    Sarah Hegenbart
    236-243
  • Bird’s Perspective – A Decolonial Gaze (Public Space Action in Cologne 2021)

    Roberto Uribe Castro
    244-250