Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Hanseatic City of Lübeck' has mentioned 'Salt' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Import/exports by sea: valued in 000s Lxc3xbcbeck marks, 18 Mar 1368xe2x80x9310 Mar 1369 Goods Principal origin Imports Exports Total Cloth Flanders 120.8 39.7 160.5 Fish Scania 64.7 6.1 70.8 Salt Luneburg - 61.6 61.6 Butter Sweden 19.2 6.8 26 Skins, furs Russia, Sweden 13.3 3.7 17 Grain Prussia 13 0.8 13.8 Wax Russia, Prussia 7.2 5.8 13 Beer Wendish towns 4.1 1.9 6 Copper Sweden, Hungary 2.2 2.4 4.6 Iron Sweden, Hungary 2.4 2.2 4.6 Oil Flanders 2.7 1.5 4.2 Flax Livonia, North Germany 0.4 3 3.4 Foodstuffs passim 2.2 1.2 3.4 Silver Sweden 0.7 2 2.7 Wine Rhineland 1.3 0.9 2.2 Various 39.9 16.6 56.5 Unclassified 41 49 90 Total (rounded) 338.9 206.9 545.8[3]
The City Hall St. Catherine's Church, a church that belonged to a former monastery, now the Katharineum, a Latin school Thomas Mann's house Gxc3xbcnter Grass' house Church of St Peter Church of St Lawrence, located on the site of a cemetery for people who died during the 16th-century plague Church of St Jacob, 1334 Church of the Sacred Heart Church of St Aegidien the Salzspeicher, historic warehouses where salt delivered from Lxc3xbcneburg awaited shipment to Baltic ports The City of Travemxc3xbcnde on the Coast of the Baltic Sea.
The enclave on the left bank of the Trave, with its salt storehouses and the Holstentor, reinforces the monumental aspect of an area that was entirely renovated at the height of the Hansa epoch (about 1250 to 1400), when Lxc3xbcbeck dominated trade in Northern Europe.
Despite the damage it suffered during the Second World War, the basic structure of the Old City, consisting mainly of 15th and 16th century Patrician residences, public monuments (the famous Holstentor brick gate), churches and salt storehouses, remains unaltered.