Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Hierapolis-Pamukkale' has mentioned 'Gate' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Contents 1 Geography 2 History 2.1 Ancient Hieropolis 2.2 Roman Hierapolis 2.3 Medieval Hierapolis 2.4 Modern excavations 3 Significant structures 3.1 The Main Street and the gates 3.1.1 Frontinus Gate 3.1.2 North Byzantine Gate 3.2 Theatre 3.3 Temple of Apollo 3.4 Ploutonion 3.5 Nymphaeum 3.6 Necropolis 3.6.1 Northern Necropolis 3.6.1.1 Sawmill 3.6.2 Southern Necropolis 3.7 Martyrium 3.8 Antique Pool 3.9 Cleopatra's Pool 3.10 The Baths 4 Museum 4.1 Tombs and Statues Gallery 4.2 Small Artifacts Gallery 4.3 Theater's Ruins Gallery 5 Notable residents 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External links
During the 4thxc2xa0century, the Christians filled Pluto's Gate (a ploutonion) with stones, suggesting that Christianity had become the dominant religion and begun displacing other faiths in the area.
[citation needed] Large columns along the main street near the gate named for Domitian were erected again.
At both ends of the main street, there was a monumental gate flanked by square towers built of massive blocks of stone.
Another gate, the Domitian Gate, was close to the northern city gate.
Frontinus Gate[edit]
Frontinus Gate
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.
North Byzantine Gate[edit]
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.
Four large marble brackets with heads of lions, of panther and of a Gorgon were found collapsed in front of the gate.
They are quite expressive and, whilst belonging to antique buildings, were evidently reused as apotropaic elements on the two sides of the gate so as to ward off evil influence.
Next to this temple and within the sacred area is the oldest local sanctuary, Pluto's Gate, a ploutonion (Ancient Greek: xcexa0xcexbbxcexbfxcfx85xcfx84xcfx8excexbdxcexb5xcexb9xcexbfxcexbd) or plutonium, which here means a shrine to the Greek god Pluto.
The Byzantine gate was constructed in the 6th century.
Another set of baths was constructed outside the north gate at the beginning of the 3rd century AD.
The mausoleums and Tripolis Street in the north necropolis, the city walls from the south eastern Roman Gate to the travertine terraces, the Latrina located to the east of Domitian Gate, the colonnaded street and the Gymnasium have been restored.