Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Museumsinsel (Museum Island), Berlin' has mentioned 'Museum' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Museum IslandMuseumsinselUNESCO World Heritage SiteThe Bode-Museum on Museum IslandLocationBerlin, GermanyCriteriaCultural: ii, ivReference896Inscription1999 (23rd session)Area8.6 haBufferxc2xa0zone22.5 haCoordinates52xc2xb031xe2x80xb217xe2x80xb3N 13xc2xb023xe2x80xb244xe2x80xb3Exefxbbxbf / xefxbbxbf52.52139xc2xb0N 13.39556xc2xb0Exefxbbxbf / 52.52139; 13.39556Map of Museum Island (in red)Location of Museum Island in Germany
The Museum Island (German: Museumsinsel) is a museum complex on the northern part of the Spree Island in the historic heart of Berlin.
It is one of the most visited sights of Germany's capital and one of the most important museum sites in Europe.
The Altes Museum (Old Museum) named as the Kxc3xb6nigliches Museum when it was built on August 3, 1830, until it was renamed in 1841.
The museum was completed on the orders of Karl Friedrich Schinkel.
The Neues Museum (New Museum) finished in 1859 according to plans by Friedrich August Stxc3xbcler, a student of Schinkel.
In 1999, the museum complex was added to the UNESCO list of World Heritage Sites.
Further extended under succeeding Prussian kings, the museum's collections of art and archeology were turned into a public foundation after 1918.
Today it is kept at the Pushkin Museum in Moscow.
The Promenade will begin at the Old Museum in the south, lead through the New Museum and the Pergamon Museum and end at the Bode Museum, located at the northern tip of the Island.
There have never been plans to rebuild them; instead, the central courts of individual museums will be lowered, which has already been done in the Bode Museum and in the New Museum.
In a way, this archaeological promenade can be regarded as the sixth museum in the Island, because it is devised not only as a connecting corridor but also as a strung-out exhibition room for interdisciplinary presentations.
The five museums, built between 1824 and 1930 by the most renowned Prussian architects, represent the realization of a visionary project and the evolution of the approaches to museum design over this seminal century.
Criterion (ii): The Berlin Museumsinsel is a unique ensemble of museum buildings, which illustrates the evolution of modern museum design over more than a century.
Criterion (iv): The modern museum is a social phenomenon that owes its origins to the Age of Enlightenment, and its extension to all people to the French Revolution.
The authenticity of both the historical characteristics and the development of the museum role has survived in the character, style and thematic content of the collections on display, and in the organic link between the collections and the architectural spaces.