Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Old City of Berne' has mentioned 'Medieval' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Medieval city center of Bern
The Old City (German: Altstadt) is the medieval city center of Bern, Switzerland.
Despite a major fire in 1405, after which much of the city was rebuilt in sandstone, and substantial construction efforts in the eighteenth century, Bern's old city has retained its medieval character.
It is a UNESCO Cultural World Heritage Site since 1983 due to the compact and generally intact medieval core and is an excellent example of incorporating the modern world into a medieval city.
In the wake of this disaster, the city was rebuilt with all stone houses in similar medieval styles.
Throughout the nineteenth century, this ring of modern cities grew up around the Old City without forcing it to demolish the medieval city core.
In the twentieth century, Bern has had to deal with incorporating the modern world into a medieval city.
The central and oldest neighbourhood is the Zxc3xa4hringerstadt (Zxc3xa4hringer town), which contained the medieval city's principal political, economic and spiritual institutions.
Situated in the northeast and southeast of the Aare peninsula, the Nydeggstalden and the Mattequartier together constitute medieval Bern's smallest neighbourhood.
Workshops and mercantile activity prevailed in this area, and medieval sources tell of numerous complaints about the ceaseless and apparently nerve-wracking noise of machinery, carts and commerce.
Only the four central streets were lined with residential houses in late medieval times, while the rest of the area was devoted to agriculture and animal husbandry.
The Zytglogge is the landmark medieval clock tower in the Old City of Bern.
The Venner was military-political title in medieval Switzerland.
This development remains visible in its urban structure, mainly tributary to the medieval establishment and its clearly defined elements: well-defined wide streets, used for the market, a regular division of built sections, subdivided into narrow and deep parcels, an advanced infrastructure for water transportation, impressive buildings for the most part dating from the 18th century mainly built from sandy limestone, with their system of arcades and the facades of the houses supported by arches.
The medieval establishment of Berne, reflecting the slow conquest of the site by urban extensions from the 12th to the 14th century, makes Berne an impressive example of the High Middle Ages with regard to the foundation of a city, figuring in the European arena among the most significant of urban planning creations.
However, this continual modernization, right through to the present day, was carried out observing the need to conserve the medieval urban structure of the city.
Criterion (iii): The Old City of Berne is a positive example of a city that has conserved its medieval urban structure whilst responding, over time, to the increasingly complex functions of a capital city of a modern State.
Although during the first decades of the 20th century, the safeguarding of the Old City was specifically concentrated on the appearance of the buildings (facades, roofs), the large majority of the historic buildings representing diverse periods have retained their interior structures, and the overall medieval plan has remained intact.