Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Historic Mosque City of Bagerhat' has mentioned 'Mosques' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
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It contains several mosques built during the Bengal Sultanate in the 15th-century, of which the Sixty Dome Mosque is the largest. | WIKI |
Other mosques include the Singar Mosque, the Nine Dome Mosque, the Tomb of Khan Jahan, the Bibi Begni Mosque and the Ronvijoypur Mosque. | WIKI |
The mosques were built during the governorship of Ulugh Khan Jahan, a Turkic military officer appointed as governor in the Sundarbans by Sultan Mahmud Shah of Bengal. | WIKI |
Bagerhat has one of the largest concentrations of sultanate-era mosques in Bangladesh. | WIKI |
[3][1][4][5][6][7] The mosques feature terracotta artwork and arabesque. | WIKI |
Contents 1 Geography 2 History 3 Architecture 4 Mosques 4.1 Sixty Dome Mosque 4.2 Nine Dome Mosque 4.3 Singar Mosque 4.4 Ronvijoypur Mosque 4.5 Chuna Khola Mosque 4.6 Tomb of Khan Jahan 5 Museum 6 See also 7 References 8 External links | WIKI |
The high concentration of mosques suggests the rapidity with which the local population converted to Islam. | WIKI |
[10] Ulugh Khan Jahan was responsible for establishing a planned township with roads, bridges, and water supply tanks (of which the Ghoradighi and Dargadighi still survive), cisterns, and several mosques and tombs. | 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 minarets embellish the front corners of the mosques. | WIKI |
Mosques[edit] | 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 |
The Sixty Dome Mosque, on the eastern bank of a water tank or pond (the takur dighi), is one of the oldest mosques in the country and is described as a "historic mosque representing the Golden Era of Muslim Bengal". | WIKI |
They include 360 mosques, public buildings, mausoleums, bridges, roads, water tanks and other public buildings constructed from baked brick. | UNESCO |
More than 50 monuments have been catalogued: in the first group, the mosques of Singar, Bibi Begni and Clumakkola; and in the second, the mosques of Reza Khoda, Zindavir and Ranvijoypur. | UNESCO |
Shait-Gumbad is one of the largest mosques and represents the flavour of the traditional orthodox mosque plan and it is the only example of its kind in the whole of Bengal. | UNESCO |
The property of the Historic Mosque City of Bagerhat contains and preserves all the necessary elements which include not only mosques but also residences, roads, ancient ponds, tombs, chillakhana (ancient graveyard). | UNESCO |
Notwithstanding,xc2xa0 some of the original features, such as stone pillars inside the mosques, reticulated windows, pediment, upper band of cornice, were lost in earlier interventions. | UNESCO |