Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Old Bridge Area of the Old City of Mostar' has mentioned 'River' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
---|---|
of spans1Clearance belowcca.20 metres at mid-span depending on river water-levelHistoryArchitectMimar Hayruddin (concept could originate from Mimar Sinanxe2x80xb2s idea)Constructed byMimar Hayruddin, apprentice of Mimar SinanConstruction start1557Construction end1566Opened1567Rebuilt7 June 2001 xe2x80x93 23 July 2004Collapsed9 November 1993 UNESCO World Heritage SiteOfficial nameOld Bridge Area of the Old City of MostarTypeCulturalCriteriaviDesignated2005 (29th session)Referencexc2xa0no.946State Partyxc2xa0Bosnia and HerzegovinaRegionEurope Location | WIKI |
Stari Most (literally 'Old Bridge'; Serbian: xd0xa1xd1x82xd0xb0xd1x80xd0xb8 xd0xbcxd0xbexd1x81xd1x82), also known as Mostar Bridge (Turkish: Mostar Kxc3xb6prxc3xbcsxc3xbc), is a rebuilt 16th-century Ottoman bridge in the city of Mostar in Bosnia and Herzegovina that crosses the river Neretva and connects the two parts of the city. | WIKI |
The bridge spans the Neretva river in the old town of Mostar, the city to which it gave the name. | WIKI |
The Stari Most is hump-backed, 4 metres (13xc2xa0ft 1xc2xa0in) wide and 30 metres (98xc2xa0ft 5xc2xa0in) long, and dominates the river from a height of 24xc2xa0m (78xc2xa0ft 9xc2xa0in). | WIKI |
The old bridge on the river "...was made of wood and hung on chains," wrote the Ottoman geographer Katip xc3x87elebi, and it "...swayed so much that people crossing it did so in mortal fear". | WIKI |
[17][18][19] Tenelia, a fine-grained limestone, sourced from local quarries was used and Hungarian army divers recovered stones from the original bridge from the river below, although most were too damaged to reuse. | WIKI |
A settlement established as an urban structure in the 15th century on the crossing of a river and a land road was originally located in a valley of the Neretva River, between Hum Hill and the foot of the Velexc5xbe Mountain. | UNESCO |
The creative process produced a constant flow of various cultural influences that, like streams merging into a single river, became more than a mere sum of the individual contributing elements. | UNESCO |