Regenerating the past
2026-06-26
Our movable card only exists in a very limited edition in print but is now available on Youtube:
It depicts the scenery in an Iron Age village—and what ended up enriching the soil, feeding life to this day and into the future (click on the image to see the moving bit):
The scene was inspired by recent archaeological excavations conducted by Linnaeus University at Gamla Skogsby in Mörbylånga on the island of Öland in Sweden.
Drawing: Mats Vänehem, www.vanehemillustration.com
Paper engineering: Kajsa Bornedal, www.kajsabornedal.se
Idea and coordination: Cornelius Holtorf
For more details, inspiration and sources of this project see here. A broader theoretical discussion linked to this work is available in this new paper:
Holtorf, C. (2026). Beyond the 1964 Venice Charter: cultural heritage as regeneration (ever changing never less than whole). Conservar Património, 52, 14–27.
At Nordic TAG in May 2026 in Kalmar, I presented on “Devouring the Iron Age: A Life-Centred and Culinary Approach to the Soil” in the session “Soil as Archive, Actor and Ally: Rewilding Archaeological Practice” (which I had co-organised with Ewa Domanska and Christina Fredengren). I served cheese crackers with wild oregano grown in the very soil shown on the card above.
Watch a short video clip of my presentation (with the cheese in the background) here: https://play.lnu.se/media/t/0_v66b1bak
© UNESCO Chair on Heritage Futures, Linnaeus University, Kalmar, Sweden, 2026, lnu.se/en/unescochair



















[…] The new funding for this and a number of additional smaller projects, means that the Climate Heritage Network is…
[…] Chair on Heritage Futures « Culture, cultural heritage and COP26 […]
[…] mer på Unescoprofessurens blogg http://blogg.lnu.se/unesco/?p=1061 Besök Öland 2050! […]