Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Ancient City of Damascus' has mentioned 'Syria' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Ancient City of DamascusUNESCO World Heritage SiteLocationDamascus, SyriaIncludes Umayyad Mosque Azm Palace Citadel of Damascus CriteriaCultural:xc2xa0(i), (ii), (iii), (iv), (vi)Reference20bisInscription1979 (3rd session)Extensions2011Endangered2013xe2x80x932018Area86.12xc2xa0ha (0.3325xc2xa0sqxc2xa0mi)Bufferxc2xa0zone42.60xc2xa0ha (0.1645xc2xa0sqxc2xa0mi)Coordinates33xc2xb030xe2x80xb241xe2x80xb3N 36xc2xb018xe2x80xb223xe2x80xb3Exefxbbxbf / xefxbbxbf33.51139xc2xb0N 36.30639xc2xb0Exefxbbxbf / 33.51139; 36.30639Location of Ancient City of Damascus in Syria
The Ancient City of Damascus (Arabic: xd8xafxd9x90xd9x85xd9x8exd8xb4xd9x92xd9x82 xd9xb1xd9x84xd9x92xd9x82xd9x8exd8xafxd9x90xd9x8axd9x85xd9x8exd8xa9xe2x80x8e, romanized:xc2xa0Dimaxc5xa1q al-Qadxc4xabmah) is the historic city centre of Damascus, Syria.
c. 2500xe2x80x9315th century BC, Canaanites 15th century BCxe2x80x93late 12th century BC, New Kingdom of Egypt late 12th century BCxe2x80x93732 BCE, Aram-Damascus 732 BCxe2x80x93609 BC, Assyria 609 BCxe2x80x93539 BC, Babylonia 539 BCxe2x80x93332 BC, Persian Achaemenid Empire 332 BCxe2x80x93323 BC, Macedonian Empire 323 BCxe2x80x93301 BC, Antigonid dynasty 301 BCxe2x80x93198 BC, Ptolemaic Kingdom 198 BCxe2x80x93167 BC, Seleucid Empire 167 BCxe2x80x93110 BC, Ituraea (Semi independent from Seleucids) 110 BCxe2x80x9385 BC, Decapolis (Semi independent from Seleucids) 85 BCxe2x80x9364 BC, Nabataea 64 BCxe2x80x9327 BC, Roman Republic 27 BCxe2x80x93395 AD, Roman Empire 476xe2x80x93608, Byzantine Empire 608xe2x80x93622, Sassanid Persia 622xe2x80x93634, Byzantine Empire (restored) 529xe2x80x93634, Ghassanids 634xe2x80x93661, Rashidun Caliphate 661xe2x80x93750, Umayyad Caliphate 750xe2x80x93885, Abbasid Caliphate 885xe2x80x93905, Tulunids 905xe2x80x93935, Abbasid Caliphate (restored) 935xe2x80x93969, Ikhshidids 970xe2x80x93973, Fatimid Caliphate 973xe2x80x93983, Qarmatians 983xe2x80x931076, Fatimid Caliphate (restored) 1076xe2x80x931104, Seljuq Empire 1104xe2x80x931154, Burid dynasty 1154xe2x80x931174, Zengids 1174xe2x80x931260, Ayyubids 1260 Marchxe2x80x93September, Mongol Empire 1260xe2x80x931521, Mamluk Sultanate 1516xe2x80x931918, Ottoman Empire 1918xe2x80x931920, Occupied Enemy Territory Administration 1920 Marchxe2x80x93July, Arab Kingdom of Syria 1920xe2x80x931924, State of Damascus under the French Mandate 1924xe2x80x931946, French Mandate of Syria 1946xe2x80x931958, Syrian Republic 1958xe2x80x931960, United Arab Republic 1960xe2x80x93present, Syrian Arab Republic
Medhat Pasha Souq is also a main market in Damascus and was named after Midhat Pasha, the Ottoman governor of Syria who renovated the Souk.
Al-Hamidiyah Souq, built (1780xe2x80x931884) during the reign of Sultan Abdul Hamid I,[4] the largest and the central souk in Syria, located inside the old walled city of Damascus next to the Citadel.
House of Saint Ananias, an ancient underground structure in Damascus, Syria, that is alleged to be the remains of the home of Ananias of Damascus, where Ananias baptized Saul (who became Paul the Apostle).
192 of 1976 designating the walled city as part of the cultural and historical heritage of Syria.