Page 9 - Hrobat Virloget, Katja, et al., eds. (2015). Stone narratives: heritage, mobility, performance. University of Primorska Press, Koper.
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jasna fakin bajec ■ interpretations of stone in the karst yesterday,
today and tomorrow
Figure 1: Kopriva, Quarry Kremenjak in the 1950s 15
Figure 2: Kobjeglava, part of stone window frame incorporated into a house wall 20
Figure 3: Škrbina, stone portals of the Karst courtyards in front of new buildings
constructed in the 1990s 23
špela ledinek lozej ■ fireplaces in the vipava valley 30
Figure 1: Fireplace at the homestead of Bežajevi, Podbreg 37
Figure 2: Illustration of a fireplace in the monthly Družina
katja hrobat virloget ■ mythical tradition in the stone:
the snooty babas as elements of rites of passage and social control
Figure 1: Baba monolith drawn by Majda Peršolja as she remembers it from childhood 56
Figure 2: Baba in the shape of a woman carved in the stone under the well 57
on the entrance of Grobnik by Rijeka
Figure 3: The stone called Mati (Mother), Matjušk by the road Gropada-Basovizza
-Bazovica 58
nigel t. w. mills ■ public presentation of stone monuments 88
Figure 1: The Roman Frontier Gallery – theme 1 – Britain and the Empire 90
Figure 2: The Roman Frontier Gallery – theme 2 – Ebb and flow of the Frontier 94
Figure 3: The Roman Frontier Galle – themes 3 & 4 – Britain, an Imperial Province 96
Figure 4: The Roman Frontier Gallery – theme 5 – the Living Wall
7
jasna fakin bajec ■ interpretations of stone in the karst yesterday,
today and tomorrow
Figure 1: Kopriva, Quarry Kremenjak in the 1950s 15
Figure 2: Kobjeglava, part of stone window frame incorporated into a house wall 20
Figure 3: Škrbina, stone portals of the Karst courtyards in front of new buildings
constructed in the 1990s 23
špela ledinek lozej ■ fireplaces in the vipava valley 30
Figure 1: Fireplace at the homestead of Bežajevi, Podbreg 37
Figure 2: Illustration of a fireplace in the monthly Družina
katja hrobat virloget ■ mythical tradition in the stone:
the snooty babas as elements of rites of passage and social control
Figure 1: Baba monolith drawn by Majda Peršolja as she remembers it from childhood 56
Figure 2: Baba in the shape of a woman carved in the stone under the well 57
on the entrance of Grobnik by Rijeka
Figure 3: The stone called Mati (Mother), Matjušk by the road Gropada-Basovizza
-Bazovica 58
nigel t. w. mills ■ public presentation of stone monuments 88
Figure 1: The Roman Frontier Gallery – theme 1 – Britain and the Empire 90
Figure 2: The Roman Frontier Gallery – theme 2 – Ebb and flow of the Frontier 94
Figure 3: The Roman Frontier Galle – themes 3 & 4 – Britain, an Imperial Province 96
Figure 4: The Roman Frontier Gallery – theme 5 – the Living Wall
7