Nueva Delhi: a set of six properties that include some considered in series, such as Ashokan Edict Sites and Chausath Yogini temples Directed by multiple states have been added to the tentative list of India by the Unesco World Heritage Center.
These sites were added to the list on March 7, said the permanent delegation of India to UNESCO in a statement. India at UNESCO shared the statement at the Microblogging X site, Thursday night. The addition to the attempt list of the World Heritage Center is mandatory for a property to be nominated for registration to the World Heritage List in the future, he said.
The six properties added to the attempt list include Kanger Valley National Park in Chhattisgarh; Mudumal Megalithic Menhirs in Telangana; Series nomination of Ashokan edicts along Mauryan’s routes (multiple states); Series nomination of Chausath Yogini temples (multiple states); series nomination Gupta temples In northern India (multiple states), and the strengths of the Bundelas Palace in Madhya Pradesh and Uttar Pradesh, according to the statement.
With these additions, India now has 62 sites in the attempt. The ‘tentative list’ is an inventory of properties that each country intends to consider for UNESCO nomination.
According to the UNESCO website, the temples of Chausath Yogini considered in series include sites in multiple locations in the country. “The Chausath Yogini Temples Have 64 images of yoginis in their individual shines with intricate stone carvings circularly arranged. We are temples are Mostly Sitly Situated on Hilltops. Yoginis Are 64 in Number and Henco Calleed The Chausath Yogini.
“It is this incarnation of the attractive and threatening qualities, as well as the large number of goddesses of the group that identifies them as yoginis,” he says.
At present, a total of 43 properties of India are registered in the Unesco World Heritage list, including 35 in the ‘Cultural’ category, seven in the ‘Natural’ category and one in the ‘Mixed’ category.
India organized a meeting of the World Heritage Committee for the first time in 2024, during which the Moidams-The Mound-Burial System of the Ahom dynasty in Assam granted him the coveted UNESCO label.