Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Capital Cities and Tombs of the Ancient Koguryo Kingdom' has mentioned 'Goguryeo' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
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(Goguryeo (Koguryo); "Gaogouli" in Chinese), (37 BCE xe2x80x93 668 CE) was a Korean kingdom[1][2][3][4][5] located in the northern and central parts of the Korean Peninsula and the southern and central parts of Manchuria. | WIKI |
[6] The designation includes the archaeological remains of three fortress-cities: Wunxc3xbc Mountain City, Gungnae and Hwando, and forty identified tombs of Goguryeo imperial and noble families. | WIKI |
[8] Although it was scheduled to be registered in 2003, China opposed the sole registration of North Korea and applied for registration of the Goguryeo ruins scattered in Jilin Province. | WIKI |
It is recognized that there is an existence of a question on the history of Goguryeo between North Korea and China. | WIKI |
Capital Cities and Tombs of Goguryeo added to UNESCO in 2004 | WIKI |
Wunxc3xbc Mountain City (Onyeosanseong) was the first capital of Goguryeo. | WIKI |
Gungnae and Hwando were also capitals of Goguryeo. | WIKI |
Gungnae City, within the modern city of Ji'an, played the role of a supporting capital after the main Goguryeo capital moved to Pyongyang. | WIKI |
The capital cities of the Goguryeo are an early example of mountain cities later imitated by neighbouring cultures. | WIKI |
The system of capital cities represented by Gungnae City and Wandu Mountain City also influenced the construction of later capitals built by the Goguryeo regime. | WIKI |
The capital cities of the Goguryeo represent a perfect blending of human creation and nature whether with the rocks or with forests and rivers. | WIKI |
The site includes archaeological remains of 40 tombs which were built by Goguryeo, which ruled over parts of northeast China and the northern half of the Korean Peninsula. | WIKI |