Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Cathedral, Alcázar and Archivo de Indias in Seville' has mentioned 'City' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Its royal chapel holds the remains of the city's conqueror Ferdinand III of Castile, his son and heir Alfonso the Wise and their descendant king Peter the Just.
The Almohad caliph Abu Yaqub Yusuf ordered the construction of a new grand mosque for the city in 1172 on the south end of the city.
It supplanted the one built between 829 and 830 by Umar Ibn Adabbas on the site of the present-day collegiate church of Divino Salvador as the main prayer hall in the city.
Larger and closer to the city's alcxc3xa1zar, the mosque was designed by the renowned architect Ahmad ben Basso as a 113-by-135-metre (371xc2xa0ft xc3x97xc2xa0443xc2xa0ft) rectangular building with a surface of over 15,000xc2xa0m2 (160,000xc2xa0sqxc2xa0ft), including a minaret and ablutions courtyard.
Shortly after Seville's conquest by Ferdinand III, Yaqub Yusuf's mosque was converted into the city's cathedral.
Seville Cathedral was built to demonstrate the city's wealth, as it had become a major trading center in the years after the Reconquista in 1248.
In July 1401, city leaders decided to build a new cathedral to replace the grand mosque that served as the cathedral until then.
However, the most well known is its minaret, which was converted into a bell tower known as La Giralda, and is now the city's most well-known symbol.
The tower is 104.5xc2xa0m in height and was one of the most important symbols in the medieval city.
The original nucleus of the Alcxc3xa1zar was constructed in the 10th century as the palace of the Moslem governor, and is used even today as the Spanish royal family's residence in this city, thereby retaining the same purpose for which it was originally intended: as a residence of monarchs and heads of state.
The Conjunto Monumental, or group of historic buildings encompassing the Cathedral/Giralda, the Alcxc3xa1zar and the Archivo de Indias, constitutes a remarkable testimony to the major stages of the city's urban history (Islamic, Christian, and that of Seville with its associations with the New World), as well as symbolizing a city that became the trading capital with the Indies for two centuries - a time during which Seville was the hub of the Spanish monarchy and played a major role in the colonization of Latin America following its discovery by Columbus.
They are however not the only manifestations in the city and to reinforce their ability to convey the outstanding universal value of the property, there is a need to allow them to be associated with other remaining buildings.
Similarly guaranteed are the conservation of individual buildings also associated with the Spanish trade in the Americas in the historical heart of the city that serves as the urban setting for the three monuments and the general characteristics of that urban environment.
In the medium term, provisions made by the City Council include the completion of the Catalogues of buildings to be protected in both of the Conjunto Histxc3xb3rico sectors that have not yet been drawn up (sector 7, "Cathedral Sector" and sector 8, "Encarnacixc3xb3n-Magdalena Sector") to replace the current precatalogues.