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Here are some of the newest UNESCO World Heritage sites

White birds fly and gather above a green wetland under a cloudy sky.
Orango National Park on the Bijagós Archipelago off of the coast of Guinea-Bissau is a newly designated World Heritage Site.
(
Hellio & van Ingen/IBAP
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UNESCO Nomination File
)

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Twenty-six sites have been added to UNESCO's World Heritage List, designating their cultural and natural importance.

Locations this year include a sacred mountain in Malawi; petroglyphs in South Korea; remains of a port and forts from 17th century Port Royal, Jamaica; a king's palaces in Germany; and a river canyon in Brazil noted for its biodiversity.

The World Heritage List, now numbering 1,248 locations, includes "cultural and natural properties of outstanding universal value." Sites have been added almost every year since 1978. UNESCO is a United Nations agency focused on culture, science and education.

Representatives of 21 countries on the World Heritage Committee met this month in Paris to finalize which locations to add to the list. Countries with World Heritage sites must commit to preserving them; countries with designated sites could also receive funding to help with that conservation.
Here's a selection of some of the locations added this year:

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Bavarian palaces

Neuschwanstein Castle sits among green forests and alpine mountains in Germany.
Neuschwanstein Castle is part of the four palace complexes included in the World Heritage Site list.
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J. Beck
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UNESCO Nomination File
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King Ludwig II of Bavaria had these grand palaces built between 1864 and 1886 in what is now Germany, according to UNESCO. He ascended to the throne at age 18 and has been called the "Mad King," because of his long rants, hallucinations and paranoia. The four palace complexes listed are called Neuschwanstein, Linderhof, Schachen and Herrenchiemsee. The palaces are now a tourist attraction, "records in stone of the ideal fantasy world which the king built as a refuge from reality," according to a biography on a website for the palaces.

World Heritage Sites in California

Imperial tombs in China

Tomb mounds plotted around a dry, mountainous desert landscape in China.
An aerial view of Mausoleum No. 4, part of the imperial tombs of the Xixia Dynasty.
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Administrative Office of Xixia Tomb Area of Yinchuan City
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UNESCO Nomination File
)
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The necropolis is located in north-central China's Ningxia region. People from the Xixia Dynasty are buried among the "nine imperial mausoleums, 271 subordinate tombs, a northern architectural complex, and 32 flood control structures," as UNESCO describes. The dynasty lasted from 1038 to 1227, when it was destroyed by Genghis Khan's Mongol army.

China's government said the site shows "the crucial role of Xixia as a key distribution center on the Silk Roads during the 11th and 13th centuries." It added that the location is "the largest, highest-ranked, and most intact archaeological site from the Xixia period that has survived to the present day."

Remains of 17th century Port Royal, Jamaica

Cannons and brick pathways sit in the courtyard of Fort Charles in Jamaica.
Fort Charles museum in Port Royal, pictured in 2012. The fort was built in the 1600s.
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Mladen Antonov
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AFP via Getty Images
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Port Royal, in southeastern Jamaica, was a major English port city in the 17th century. According to UNESCO, it was a center of transatlantic trade, which included enslaved Africans. It was also a hub for pirates. A 1692 earthquake pushed much of the town underwater.

Ecosystems of the Bijagós Islands

A tree stands near a pond where ducks gather along the shore.
Wildlife in Orango National Park on the Bijagós Archipelago.
(
Enrique López-Tapia de Inés/IBAP
/
UNESCO Nomination File
)
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The Bijagós Archipelago, off the coast of Guinea-Bissau, is known for its biodiversity. It's home to "endangered Green and Leatherback turtles, manatees, dolphins, and over 870,000 migratory shorebirds," UNESCO says.

Memorials to the Cambodian genocide

Two men look at rows of human skulls displayed behind glass at a memorial.
People look at skulls at the Choeung Ek memorial in Phnom Penh, Cambodia in 2018. The location is part of a newly designated World Heritage Site.
(
Tang Chhin Sothy
/
AFP via Getty Images
)

The communist Khmer Rouge regime was responsible for the deaths of some 1.7 million Cambodians in the 1970s. Two former prisons and an execution site are included in the World Heritage List designation. An international tribunal ended its work in 2022, holding just three senior Khmer Rouge members accountable for the regime's crimes.

The full list of new sites for 2025

The committee also approved extending two existing national parks that were already listed. Vietnam's Phong Nha-Ke Bang National Park was extended to include the adjoining Hin Nam No National Park in Laos. And South Africa's iSimangaliso Wetland Park, listed in 1999, was extended to include Maputo National Park in Mozambique.
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