Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Baalbek' has mentioned 'Syria' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
[13][c] It was sometimes described as Heliopolis in Syria or Coelesyria (Latin: Heliopolis Syriaca or Syriae) to distinguish it from its namesake in Egypt.
After Alexander the Great's conquest of Persia in the 330sxc2xa0BC, Baalbek (under its Hellenic name Heliopolis) formed part of the Diadochi kingdoms of Egypt & Syria.
[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.
[18] In the mid-10th century, it was said to have "gates of palaces sculptured in marble and lofty columns also of marble" and that it was the most "stupendous" and "considerable" location in the whole of Syria.
In 1516, Baalbek was conquered with the rest of Syria by the Ottoman sultan Selim the Grim.
[128] It formed a station on the standard-gauge line between Riyaq to its south and Aleppo (now in Syria) to its north.
on orders from Syria's governor Rashid Pasha.
An 1873 German map of Asia Minor & Syria, with relief illustrating the Beqaa (El Bekaa) valley Baalbek c.xe2x80x891700[104] 1842 daguerreotype by Joseph-Philibert Girault de Prangey (the earliest photography of the site) Baalbek in the 1880s Baalbec in 1894 Baalbek in 1910, after the arrival of rail The remains of the Propylaeum, the eastern entrance to the site The ruins of Baalbek facing west from the hexagonal forecourt in the 19th century Ruins of Eastern Portico, Baalbec, by Lady Catherine Tobin (1855) The remaining columns of the Temple of Jupiter A profile of the six columns The propylaeum of the Temple of Bacchus The entrance to the Temple of Bacchus in the 1870s The hanging keystone in the 1920s The exterior of the Temple of Bacchus in the 1920s The interior of the Temple of Bacchus in the 1920s The wall and moat of Baalbek in 1891 Architectural ornaments in the Temple of Jupiter[citation needed] The ruins of Constantine's basilica in 1891 The "Stone of the Pregnant Woman" in the early 20th century, the Temple of Jupiter in the background Roof sculpture of Ceres Roof sculpture, supposedly of Mark Antony Roof sculpture, supposedly of Cleopatra Roof sculpture of an unknown figure The pillar at Iaat The Qubbat Duris