Cold War

Connected Sites: 19

Connected Sites

  • Bikini Atoll
    Bikini Atoll
    Marshall Islands
    Inscribed: 2010
    0
    0
    "In the wake of World War II, in a move closely related to the beginnings of the Cold War, the United States of America decided to resume nuclear testing in the Pacific Ocean, on Bikini Atol" (unesco website)
  • Schönbrunn
    Inscribed: 1996
    3.50
    506
    14
    Summit Kennedy-Chrushchov 1961, opening dinner
  • Thang Long
    Thang Long
    Viet Nam
    Inscribed: 2010
    2.08
    167
    9
    T1 Operation Command Bunker: "The construction started toward the end of 1964 to serve as the military headquarters of the freedom fighters of Vietnam."
    See www.atlasobscura.com
  • Budapest
    Budapest
    Hungary
    Inscribed: 1987
    3.88
    545
    15
    Budapest saw students marching to the Parliament Building to protest the Communist regime during the Hungarian Uprising of 1956. This uprising was quickly quelled, and Soviet tanks entered Budapest, protecting the Parliament Building and other key sites.
  • Imperial Palace
    Inscribed: 1987
    4.19
    333
    11
    The Great Wall and the Forbidden City (see the Nixon Foundation records) were both visited by US President Nixon in 1972 during his landmark trip to China, in which the US restored relations with Communist China after years of disengagement. Nixon's unexpected overture to China during the Cold War opened up China to the West, and drove a wedge into Sino-Soviet relations.
    See www.nixonfoundation.org
  • Desembarco del Granma National Park
    Inscribed: 1999
    2.89
    20
    4
    It "includes the nationally important site of Fidel Castro’s “desembarco” in 1956 where he and a group of 82 revolutionaries landed after sailing from Mexico” (AB ev) - During the Cold War, Castro aligned with the Soviet Union and allowed the Soviets to place nuclear weapons in Cuba, resulting in the Cuban Missile Crisis – a defining incident of the Cold War – in 1962.
  • Cambodian Memorial Sites
    Inscribed: 2025
    2.44
    95
    4
    Part of communism spreading in SE Asia: "the Cambodia Killing Fields were a devastating consequence of Cold War rivalries that fueled and prolonged a brutal conflict. The superpowers' focus on containing communism or expanding their influence contributed to the conditions that allowed the Khmer Rouge to rise and carry out their genocidal policies, and subsequently, to the tragic delay in bringing justice to the victims." (Google Gemini)
  • Vienna
    Vienna
    Austria
    Inscribed: 2001
    4.02
    591
    20
    Summit Kennedy-Chrushchov 1961, both leaders stayed at Hotel Imperial at the Ring
  • Stevns Klint
    Inscribed: 2014
    2.40
    153
    7
    Koldkrigsmuseum Stevnsfort / Tunnels in Cold War Fortress Stevnsfort
    See whc.unesco.org
  • Prague
    Prague
    Czechia
    Inscribed: 1992
    4.28
    585
    16
    In 1968, Warsaw Pact forces took over the city and country to stifle "Prague Spring". This led to widespread protests, including the self-immolation of students Jan Palach and Jan Zajic in Wenceslas Square, in protest of the Warsaw Pact's military occupation of Czechoslovakia. A memorial to the students can be found in the square.
    See www.atlasobscura.com
  • Potsdam
    Potsdam
    Germany
    Inscribed: 1990
    3.52
    371
    10
    Cecilienhof : Potsdam Conference; The conference is the beginning of tension between the United States and the USSR, as well as a possible forewarning to the Cold War.
  • Papahanaumokuakea
    Papahanaumokuakea
    United States of America
    Inscribed: 2010
    3.11
    8
    1
    Midway Atoll was the site of a US naval facility that tracked Soviet submarines during the Cold War.
    See en.wikipedia.org
  • Nubian Monuments
    Inscribed: 1979
    4.21
    204
    12
    Egyptian President Nasser used Cold War enmity to play the US and the USSR off each other and ultimately secure Soviet funding for Egypt's desired Aswan High Dam on the Nile in 1956. As a result of the dam's construction, UNESCO initiated its Nubia campaign in 1959 in order to save the Nubian Monuments from Abu Simbel to Philae from the rising waters of Lake Nasser.
    See en.wikipedia.org
  • Kremlin and Red Square
    Inscribed: 1990
    4.02
    253
    8
    Kremlin was the seat of the communist Russian government
  • Jodrell Bank Observatory
    Inscribed: 2019
    2.65
    89
    9
    It played a role in the Cold War through tracking Sputnik 1 (the start of the ‘space race.’), and later tracking early spacecraft from the US and the USSR.
    See uomhistory.com
  • Great Wall
    Inscribed: 1987
    4.45
    335
    14
    Badaling section: The Great Wall and the Forbidden City (see the Nixon Foundation records) were both visited by US President Nixon in 1972 during his landmark trip to China, in which the US restored relations with Communist China after years of disengagement. Nixon's unexpected overture to China during the Cold War opened up China to the West, and drove a wedge into Sino-Soviet relations.
    See www.nixonfoundation.org
  • Fujian Tulou
    Inscribed: 2008
    3.68
    61
    6
    Due to their unorthodox and strange appearance from the outside they were once mistaken for missile silos by the Americans during the cold war. (WIKI)
  • Everglades
    Everglades
    United States of America
    Inscribed: 1979
    3.68
    259
    15
    Nike Missile Site HM-69 - "The Homestead-Miami Defense Area was established as a result of the Cuban Missile Crisis, and was the last fixed air defense missile system to remain in operation in the continental United States. HM-69 was the westernmost of the Nike-Hercules sites ringing Miami.[2] The south Florida sites were unique in operating an anti-tactical ballistic missile version of the Nike-Hercules, intended to intercept missiles fired from Cuba." (wiki)
    See en.wikipedia.org
  • ESMA Site Museum
    Inscribed: 2023
    2.06
    46
    3
    "Increasing political instability and armed actions by revolutionary extremist organisations, within the global context of the Cold War, instilled in society the idea that Argentina was threatened by Marxism and extreme-left Peronism." (AB ev)