Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Incense Route - Desert Cities in the Negev' has mentioned 'Trade' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
The trade led to the development of ancient towns, forts and caravanserai en route, apart from agricultural development.
The eastxe2x80x93west "incense route", which operated from 400 BC to 200 AD, brought economic progress to the Nabataeans; the trade diminished when Romans occupied Petra which was then Jordan's capital of the Nabataean Empire.
The network of the Incense Route consisted of trade routes that encompassed towns and cities in a stretch of more than 2,000 kilometres (1,200xc2xa0mi).
The entire route was benefited by the trade and villages prospered with innovative irrigation systems.
The Incense Route was a network of trade routes extending over two thousand kilometres to facilitate the transport of frankincense and myrrh from the Yemen and Oman in the Arabian Peninsula to the Mediterranean.
Combined, the route, and the desert cities along it, reflect the prosperity of the Nabatean incense trade over a seven hundred year period, from the 3rd century BCE to the 4nd century CE.
Criterion (iii): The Nabatean towns and their trade routes bear eloquent testimony to the economic, social and cultural importance of frankincense to the Hellenistic-Roman world.
The routes also provided a means of passage not only for frankincense and other trade goods but also for people and ideas.
The towns and forts combined with their trade routes and their agricultural hinterland, in all they provide a very complete picture of the Nabatean desert civilisation strung along a trade route.
The remains of the towns, fortresses and caravanserais and landscapes mostly express well the outstanding universal value of the property as reflecting and exemplifying the prosperity of the Nabatean incense trade.