Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Colchic Rainforests and Wetlands' has mentioned 'Black Sea' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
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In pre-Hellenistic Greco-Roman geography, Colchis[a] (Ancient Greek: xcex9axcexbfxcexbbxcfx87xcexafxcfx82) was an exonym for the Georgian polity[b] of Egrisi[c] (Georgian: xe1x83x94xe1x83x92xe1x83xa0xe1x83x98xe1x83xa1xe1x83x98) located on the coast of the Black Sea, centered in present-day western Georgia. | WIKI |
Colchxc3xads, Kolkhxc3xads[14][15][16][17] or Qulxe1xb8xaba[18][19][20] which existed from the c. 13th[1] to the 1st centuries BC, is regarded as an early ethnically Georgian polity; the name of the Colchians was used as the collective term for early Kartvelian tribes which populated the eastern coast of the Black Sea in Greco-Roman ethnography. | WIKI |
A second South Caucasian tribal union emerged in the thirteenth century BC on the Black Sea coast. | WIKI |
[clarification needed][33][34] According to most classic authors, a district which was bounded[clarification needed] on the south-west by Pontus, on the west by the Black Sea as far as the river Corax (probably the present day Bzyb River, Abkhazia, Georgia), on the north by the chain of the Greater Caucasus, which lay between it and Asiatic Sarmatia, on the east by the Kingdom of Iberia and Montes Moschici (now the Lesser Caucasus), and on the south by Armenia. | WIKI |
In physical geography, Colchis is usually defined as the area east of the Black Sea coast, restricted from the north by the southwestern slopes of the Greater Caucasus, from the south by the northern slopes of the Lesser Caucasus in Georgia and Eastern Black Sea (Karadeniz) Mountains in Turkey, and from the east by Likhi Range, connecting the Greater and the Lesser Caucasus. | WIKI |
The Colchian hinterland lacked salt and demand was satisfied partially by local production on the coast and partially by imports from the northern coast of the Black Sea. | WIKI |
[41] Colchis was inhabited by a number of tribes whose settlements lay along the shore of the Black Sea. | WIKI |