Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Hierapolis-Pamukkale' has mentioned 'City' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
---|---|
This article is about the ancient city in Phrygia. | WIKI |
"Holy City") was an ancient Greek city located on hot springs in classical Phrygia in southwestern Anatolia. | WIKI |
Pamukkale natural formations are a part of the ancient city. | WIKI |
Known as Pamukkale (Cotton Castle) or ancient Hierapolis (Holy City), this area has been drawing the weary to its thermal springs since the time of Classical antiquity. | WIKI |
There are only a few historical facts known about the origin of the city. | WIKI |
The city was expanded with the booty from the 190xc2xa0BC Battle of Magnesia where Antiochus the Great was defeated by the Roman ally Eumenesxc2xa0II. | WIKI |
The city began minting bronze coins in the 2ndxc2xa0centuryxc2xa0BC. | WIKI |
[citation needed] This name eventually changed into Hierapolis ("holy city"),[3] according to the Byzantine geographer Stephanus on account of its large number of temples. | WIKI |
In AD 17, during the rule of the emperor Tiberius, a major earthquake destroyed the city. | WIKI |
In the year 60, during the rule of Nero, an even more severe earthquake left the city completely in ruins. | WIKI |
Afterwards, the city was rebuilt in the Roman style with imperial financial support. | WIKI |
It was during this period that the city attained its present form. | WIKI |
When Caracalla visited the town in 215, he bestowed the much-coveted title of neocoros upon it, according the city certain privileges and the right of sanctuary. | WIKI |
During his campaign against the Sassanid Shapur II in 370, the emperor Valens made the last-ever imperial visit to the city. | WIKI |
During the Byzantine period, the city continued to flourish and also remained an important centre for Christianity. | WIKI |
In 1354, the great Thracian earthquake toppled the remains of the ancient city. | WIKI |
Later in 2020, city layer of limestone was broken and fixed after 2 months. | WIKI |
The ancient city was rediscovered by travellers, but also partially destroyed by new hotels that were built there. | WIKI |
The Hellenistic city was built on a grid with streets running parallel or perpendicular to the main thoroughfare. | WIKI |
This is the monumental entrance to the Roman city and leads onto the large plateia, 14xc2xa0m wide, which crosses the whole settlement, exiting a gate at the opposite side, to connect with the road that goes to Laodicea on the Lykos and then Colossae. | WIKI |
It is worth admiring the well preserved structure with three openings, in carefully squared travertine blocks, with elegant arches decorated with a simple cornice moulding, flanked by two round towers that recall Hellenistic city Gates such as that of the Pamphilian city of Perge, near Antalya. | WIKI |
The north gate forms part of a fortification system built at Hierapolis in Theodosian times (late 4th century) and is its monumental entrance, matched by a symmetrical gate to the south of the city. | WIKI |
An earthquake in Hierapolis in the 7th century caused the collapse of the entire building as well as the ultimate abandonment of the city. | WIKI |
It was a shrine of the nymphs, a monumental fountain distributing water to the houses of the city via an ingenious network of pipes. | WIKI |
The stone pavement columns and other architectural remains mark a great part of the colonnaded road which ran through the city in a north-south direction. | WIKI |
The necropolis extends from the northern to the eastern and southern sections of the old city. | WIKI |
People who came for medical treatment to Hierapolis in ancient times and the native people of the city buried their dead in tombs of several types according to their traditions and socio-economic status. | WIKI |
On the north side of the city, the graves made as the 2nd and the 3rd,[clarification needed] are generally surrounded by walls and they have gardens decorated with flowers and trees (especially cypress). | WIKI |
The Roman Bath, one of the biggest buildings of Hierapolis antique city, has been used as the site of the Hierapolis Archaeology Museum since 1984. | WIKI |
The most important monument, situated outside the north-west wall of the city, is the Martyrium of St. Philip. | UNESCO |
The property is largely intact and includes all the attributes necessary to express its Outstanding Universal Value, based on the strong and tight integration between the natural landscape (the white travertine terraces and numerous thermal springs) and culture (the city ruins from the Greco-Roman and Byzantine period, especially the theatre and the necropolis). | UNESCO |