United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization

Slovakia

Slovakia

The Wooden Churches of the Slovak part of Carpathian Mountain Area (Slovakia), two Roman Catholic, three Protestant and three Greek Orthodox, (16th and 18th centuries) were built in small, poor villages and are examples of a rich local tradition of religious architecture, marked by the meeting of Latin and Byzantine cultures.

Bodruzal

The Wooden Churches of the Slovak part of Carpathian Mountain Area (Slovakia), two Roman Catholic, three Protestant and three Greek Orthodox, (16th and 18th centuries) were built in small, poor villages and are examples of a rich local tradition of religious architecture, marked by the meeting of Latin and Byzantine cultures.

Hervartov

The Wooden Churches of the Slovak part of Carpathian Mountain Area (Slovakia), two Roman Catholic, three Protestant and three Greek Orthodox, (16th and 18th centuries) were built in small, poor villages and are examples of a rich local tradition of religious architecture, marked by the meeting of Latin and Byzantine cultures.

Hervartov

The Wooden Churches of the Slovak part of Carpathian Mountain Area (Slovakia), two Roman Catholic, three Protestant and three Greek Orthodox, (16th and 18th centuries) were built in small, poor villages and are examples of a rich local tradition of religious architecture, marked by the meeting of Latin and Byzantine cultures.

Hronsek

The Wooden Churches of the Slovak part of Carpathian Mountain Area (Slovakia), two Roman Catholic, three Protestant and three Greek Orthodox, (16th and 18th centuries) were built in small, poor villages and are examples of a rich local tradition of religious architecture, marked by the meeting of Latin and Byzantine cultures.

Hronsek

The Wooden Churches of the Slovak part of Carpathian Mountain Area (Slovakia), two Roman Catholic, three Protestant and three Greek Orthodox, (16th and 18th centuries) were built in small, poor villages and are examples of a rich local tradition of religious architecture, marked by the meeting of Latin and Byzantine cultures.

Hronsek

The Wooden Churches of the Slovak part of Carpathian Mountain Area (Slovakia), two Roman Catholic, three Protestant and three Greek Orthodox, (16th and 18th centuries) were built in small, poor villages and are examples of a rich local tradition of religious architecture, marked by the meeting of Latin and Byzantine cultures.

Kezmarok

The Wooden Churches of the Slovak part of Carpathian Mountain Area (Slovakia), two Roman Catholic, three Protestant and three Greek Orthodox, (16th and 18th centuries) were built in small, poor villages and are examples of a rich local tradition of religious architecture, marked by the meeting of Latin and Byzantine cultures.

Kezmarok

The Wooden Churches of the Slovak part of Carpathian Mountain Area (Slovakia), two Roman Catholic, three Protestant and three Greek Orthodox, (16th and 18th centuries) were built in small, poor villages and are examples of a rich local tradition of religious architecture, marked by the meeting of Latin and Byzantine cultures.

Ladomirova

The Wooden Churches of the Slovak part of Carpathian Mountain Area (Slovakia), two Roman Catholic, three Protestant and three Greek Orthodox, (16th and 18th centuries) were built in small, poor villages and are examples of a rich local tradition of religious architecture, marked by the meeting of Latin and Byzantine cultures.

Ladomirova

The Wooden Churches of the Slovak part of Carpathian Mountain Area (Slovakia), two Roman Catholic, three Protestant and three Greek Orthodox, (16th and 18th centuries) were built in small, poor villages and are examples of a rich local tradition of religious architecture, marked by the meeting of Latin and Byzantine cultures.

Lestiny

The Wooden Churches of the Slovak part of Carpathian Mountain Area (Slovakia), two Roman Catholic, three Protestant and three Greek Orthodox, (16th and 18th centuries) were built in small, poor villages and are examples of a rich local tradition of religious architecture, marked by the meeting of Latin and Byzantine cultures.

Ruska Bystra

The Wooden Churches of the Slovak part of Carpathian Mountain Area (Slovakia), two Roman Catholic, three Protestant and three Greek Orthodox, (16th and 18th centuries) were built in small, poor villages and are examples of a rich local tradition of religious architecture, marked by the meeting of Latin and Byzantine cultures.

Ruska Bystra

The Wooden Churches of the Slovak part of Carpathian Mountain Area (Slovakia), two Roman Catholic, three Protestant and three Greek Orthodox, (16th and 18th centuries) were built in small, poor villages and are examples of a rich local tradition of religious architecture, marked by the meeting of Latin and Byzantine cultures.

Tvrdosin

Les églises en bois de la partie slovaque de la zone des Carpates (Slovaquie), deux églises catholiques romaines, trois églises protestantes et trois églises grecques orthodoxes, (XVIe et les XVIIIe siècles) ont été construites dans des petits villages pauvres et sont un exemple d’une riche tradition locale d’architecture religieuse, marquée par la rencontre entre les cultures byzantine et latine.

Tvrdosin

The Wooden Churches of the Slovak part of Carpathian Mountain Area (Slovakia), two Roman Catholic, three Protestant and three Greek Orthodox, (16th and 18th centuries) were built in small, poor villages and are examples of a rich local tradition of religious architecture, marked by the meeting of Latin and Byzantine cultures.

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