Andrej Jazbec
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Papers by Andrej Jazbec
and statue on the exterior of St. Andrew Church in Svino near Kobarid. The frescos were
exposed to the weather, therefore protective conservation and restoration work was carried
out first. The fresco was cleaned, the paint layer was strengthened, and the damage to
the plaster was repaired and covered. An aesthetic presentation with tonal retouching was
carried out. The stone statue of Saint Andrew was stripped of the remains of later plasters
and whitewash, dirt was removed, the support and paint layer were strengthened, broken
and chipped parts were glued together, some chipped parts were re-modelled, and tonal
retouching of the damage was carried out. The current state of the building was presented,
with visible remains of all three layers of the fresco. The year found on the back of the
statue confirms its medieval origin.
The paper contains an analysis and interpretation of LiDAR images and data showing the area in the Slovene Karst region. The starting point for my research were the already known prehistoric settlements. An analysis was carried out of the remains of historic field divisions which could date back to prehistory and antiquity. They have been divided into 4 chronologically sequenced groups (according to what can reasonably be assumed) based on their shape:
• 1st field division - oval fields
• 2nd field divioin – organically shaped fields
• 3rd field division - fields with straight sides
• 4th field division - fields with irregular sides.
It is most probable that the occurence of oval fields coincided with the onset of agriculture and cremation burials. Organically shaped fields could have first occured during the Iron Age whereas fields with straight sides that all contain straight parallel lines probably date from Ancient Rome. Fields with irregular sides were probably in use in late antiquity. All four division methods appear throughout the area. An interesting difference can be observed between areas close to villages, where the present division still contains lines of older shapes, and the periphery where individual divisions are for the most part separately 'layered' on top of each other. This phenomenon could point at different waves of land cultivation and its abandonment in a given area.
and statue on the exterior of St. Andrew Church in Svino near Kobarid. The frescos were
exposed to the weather, therefore protective conservation and restoration work was carried
out first. The fresco was cleaned, the paint layer was strengthened, and the damage to
the plaster was repaired and covered. An aesthetic presentation with tonal retouching was
carried out. The stone statue of Saint Andrew was stripped of the remains of later plasters
and whitewash, dirt was removed, the support and paint layer were strengthened, broken
and chipped parts were glued together, some chipped parts were re-modelled, and tonal
retouching of the damage was carried out. The current state of the building was presented,
with visible remains of all three layers of the fresco. The year found on the back of the
statue confirms its medieval origin.
The paper contains an analysis and interpretation of LiDAR images and data showing the area in the Slovene Karst region. The starting point for my research were the already known prehistoric settlements. An analysis was carried out of the remains of historic field divisions which could date back to prehistory and antiquity. They have been divided into 4 chronologically sequenced groups (according to what can reasonably be assumed) based on their shape:
• 1st field division - oval fields
• 2nd field divioin – organically shaped fields
• 3rd field division - fields with straight sides
• 4th field division - fields with irregular sides.
It is most probable that the occurence of oval fields coincided with the onset of agriculture and cremation burials. Organically shaped fields could have first occured during the Iron Age whereas fields with straight sides that all contain straight parallel lines probably date from Ancient Rome. Fields with irregular sides were probably in use in late antiquity. All four division methods appear throughout the area. An interesting difference can be observed between areas close to villages, where the present division still contains lines of older shapes, and the periphery where individual divisions are for the most part separately 'layered' on top of each other. This phenomenon could point at different waves of land cultivation and its abandonment in a given area.