Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Historic Mosque City of Bagerhat' has mentioned 'City' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
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The historic city, listed by Forbes as one of the 15 lost cities of the world, has more than 50 structures built in the local Bengal Sultanate variant style of Indo-Islamic architecture. | WIKI |
The mosque city is situated in southern Bengal near the vast estuary of the Bengal delta. | WIKI |
The city is spread over an area of 50 square kilometres (19xc2xa0sqxc2xa0mi),[1] on the banks of the moribund branch of the Bhairab River along a 6 kilometres (3.7xc2xa0mi) stretch (in an eastxe2x80x93west direction and about 25 kilometres (16xc2xa0mi) width in northxe2x80x93south direction[7]), which was part of the Sundarbans mangrove forests. | WIKI |
The planning of the city is distinctly dominated by Islamic architecture style; in particular, the embellishments are a combination of various styles, including Bengali, Persian and Arab. | WIKI |
The city covered 360 mosques[1] (most of them of identical designs), many public buildings, mausoleums, bridges, network of roads and water reservoirs. | WIKI |
The layout, revealed after the recent removal of the vegetative growth around the historic city, indicates that the city developed in two distinct zones; the main zone is the Mosque of Shait Gumbaz and its precincts and the other zone to its east is the one encircling the Mausoleum of Khan Jahan. | WIKI |
The following includes a partial list of mosques, tombs or mausoleums, and other monuments which have been restored from among the large number of ruins in the city. | WIKI |
[18] It is now pilgrimage site where people pay homage to the man who dedicated his lifetime to building the city and its monuments. | WIKI |
The Historic Mosque City of Bagerhat is an important evidence of medieval city in the south-west part of present Bagerhat district which is located in the south-west part of Bangladesh, at the meeting-point of the Ganges and Brahmaputra rivers. | UNESCO |
The ancient city, formerly known as Khalifatabad, sprawls over on the southern bank of the old river Bhairab and flourished in the 15th century BC. | UNESCO |
The magnificent city, which extended for 50 km2, contains some of the most significant buildings of the initial period of the development of Muslim architecture of Bengal. | UNESCO |
This old city, created within a few years and covered up by the jungle after the death of its founder in 1459, is striking because of certain uncommon features. | UNESCO |
Therefore, the attributes of the city are still preserved. | UNESCO |