Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Baalbek' has mentioned 'Sun' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
[6] In Greek and Roman times Baalbek was also known as Heliopolis (xe1xbcxa9xcexbbxcexb9xcexbfxcfx8dxcfx80xcexbfxcexbbxcexb9xcfx82, Greek for "Sun City").
Baalbek was called Heliopolis during the Roman Empire, a latinisation of the Greek Hxc4x93lioxc3xbapolis (xe1xbcxa9xcexbbxcexb9xcexbfxcfx8dxcfx80xcexbfxcexbbxcexb9xcfx82) used during the Hellenistic Period, [11] meaning "Sun City"[12] in reference to the solar cult there.
[14] In Greek religion, Helios was both the sun in the sky and its personification as a god.
[10] Cook took it to mean "Baxcaxbfal (Lord) of the Beka"[17] and Donne as "City of the Sun".
During Classical Antiquity, the city's temple to Baxcaxbfal Haddu was conflated first with the worship of the Greek sun god Helios[17] and then with the Greek and Roman sky god under the name "Heliopolitan Zeus" or "Jupiter".
[58] In bronze statuary attested from Byblos in Phoenicia and Tortosa in Spain, he was encased in a pillarlike term and surrounded (like the Greco-Persian Mithras) by busts representing the sun, moon, and five known planets.
[53] One of these was taken to Rome by the emperor Elagabalus, a former priest "of the sun" at nearby Emesa,[62] who erected a temple for it on the Palatine Hill.
[66][g] His wife Julia Domna and son Caracalla toured Egypt and Syria in ADxc2xa0215; inscriptions in their honour at the site may date from that occasion; Julia was a Syrian native whose father had been an Emesan priest "of the sun" like Elagabalus.