DocumentCode
683032
Title
Exploring canons & cathedrals with Open Virtual Worlds: The recreation of St Andrews Cathedral, St Andrews day, 1318
Author
Kennedy, Sheldon ; Fawcett, R. ; Miller, Alice ; Dow, L. ; Sweetman, R. ; Field, A. ; Campbell, Arnett ; Oliver, I. ; McCaffery, J. ; Allison, C.
Author_Institution
Sch. of Comput. Sci., Univ. of St. Andrews, St. Andrews, UK
Volume
2
fYear
2013
fDate
Oct. 28 2013-Nov. 1 2013
Firstpage
273
Lastpage
280
Abstract
St Andrews Cathedral is located on the East Coast of Scotland. Construction started in 1160 and spanned Romanesque and Gothic architectural styles. It was consecrated in 1318, four years after the battle of Bannockburn in the presence of King Robert I. For several hundred years, the Cathedral was one of the most important religious buildings in Europe and the centre of religious life in Scotland. During the Reformation, John Knox himself lead reformers in divesting the Cathedral of all its finery. Thereafter it fell into disuse and decline. Today the remains hint at its former glory. Here the use of Open Virtual Worlds (OVW) to support new modes of engagement with cultural heritage is presented through the example of St Andrews Cathedral. Open Virtual Worlds offer an extensible collaborative environment for developing historical scenes against which background material and intangible aspects of cultural heritage associated with a site may be explored. They offer the potential to reconstruct within a 3D computer environment both the physical structures of the past and important aspects of the lighting, sounds and lifestyles that once existed within those structures. Bringing together architecture, sculpture, illumination, stained-glass, music, procession and lighting into a scene, which can be explored from multiple spatial perspectives enables holistic appreciations to be developed.
Keywords
history; virtual reality; 3D computer environment; Bannockburn; East Coast; Europe; Gothic architectural styles; OVW; Romanesque architectural styles; Scotland; St Andrews Cathedral; background material; collaborative environment; cultural heritage; exploring canons; exploring cathedrals; open virtual worlds; religious buildings; Avatars; Buildings; Computer architecture; Cultural differences; Educational institutions; Image reconstruction; Three-dimensional displays;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Digital Heritage International Congress (DigitalHeritage), 2013
Conference_Location
Marseille
Print_ISBN
978-1-4799-3168-2
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/DigitalHeritage.2013.6744764
Filename
6744764
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