Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Acropolis, Athens' has mentioned 'Temple' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
A temple to Athena Polias, the tutelary deity of the city, was erected between 570 and 550 BC.
This Doric limestone building, from which many relics survive, is referred to as the Hekatompedon (Greek for "hundredxe2x80x93footed"), Ur-Parthenon (German for "original Parthenon" or "primitive Parthenon"), Hxe2x80x93Architecture or Bluebeard temple, after the pedimental three-bodied man-serpent sculpture, whose beards were painted dark blue.
Whether this temple replaced an older one, or just a sacred precinct or altar, is not known.
Between 529 and 520 BC yet another temple was built by the Peisistratids, the Old Temple of Athena, usually referred to as the Arkhaios Nexc5x8ds (xe1xbcx80xcfx81xcfx87xcexb1xe1xbfx96xcexbfxcfx82 xcexbdxcexb5xcfx8excfx82, "ancient temple").
Arkhaios Nexc5x8ds was destroyed as part of the Achaemenid destruction of Athens during the Second Persian invasion of Greece during 480xe2x80x93479 BC; however, the temple was probably reconstructed during 454 BC, since the treasury of the Delian League was transferred in its opisthodomos.
The temple may have been burnt down during 406/405 BC as Xenophon mentions that the old temple of Athena was set afire.
For this reason, Athenians decided to stop the construction of the Olympieion temple which was connoted with the tyrant Peisistratos and his sons and, instead, used the Piraeus limestone destined for the Olympieion to build the Older Parthenon.
In order to accommodate the new temple, the south part of the summit was cleared, made level by adding some 8,000 two-ton blocks of limestone, a foundation 11xc2xa0m (36xc2xa0ft) deep at some points, and the rest was filled with soil kept in place by the retaining wall.
The building was burned and looted, along with the Ancient Temple and practically everything else on the rock.
[17][18] After the Persian crisis had subsided, the Athenians incorporated many architectural parts of the unfinished temple (unfluted column drums, triglyphs, metopes, etc.)
After an interruption caused by the Peloponnesian War, the temple was finished during the time of Nicias' peace, between 421 BC and 409 BC.
Unusually, the temple has two porches, one on the northwest corner borne by Ionic columns, the other, to the southwest, supported by huge female figures or Caryatids.
The eastern part of the temple was dedicated to Athena Polias, while the western part, serving the cult of the archaic king Poseidon-Erechtheus, housed the altars of Hephaestus and Voutos, brother of Erechtheus.
East of the entrance and north of the Parthenon is the temple known as the Erechtheum.
It is the sacred temple from which sprung fundamental legends about the city.
Most of her identities are glorified at the main temple dedicated to her, the Parthenon, the temple of the patron-goddess.