Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Site of Palmyra' has mentioned 'Millennium' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Palmyra xd8xaaxd9x8exd8xafxd9x92xd9x85xd9x8fxd8xb1xe2x80x8e The ruins of Palmyra in 2010Shown within SyriaAlternativexc2xa0nameTadmorLocationTadmur, Homs Governorate, SyriaRegionSyrian DesertCoordinates34xc2xb033xe2x80xb205xe2x80xb3N 38xc2xb016xe2x80xb205xe2x80xb3Exefxbbxbf / xefxbbxbf34.55139xc2xb0N 38.26806xc2xb0Exefxbbxbf / 34.55139; 38.26806Coordinates: 34xc2xb033xe2x80xb205xe2x80xb3N 38xc2xb016xe2x80xb205xe2x80xb3Exefxbbxbf / xefxbbxbf34.55139xc2xb0N 38.26806xc2xb0Exefxbbxbf / 34.55139; 38.26806TypeSettlementPartxc2xa0ofPalmyrene EmpireArea80xc2xa0ha (200 acres)HistoryFounded3rd millennium BCAbandoned1932xc2xa0(1932)PeriodsMiddle Bronze Age to ModernCulturesAramaic, Arabic, Greco-RomanSite notesConditionRuinedOwnershipPublicManagementSyrian Ministry of CulturePublicxc2xa0accessInaccessible (in a war zone) UNESCO World Heritage SiteOfficial nameSite of PalmyraTypeCulturalCriteriai, ii, ivDesignated1980 (4th Session)Referencexc2xa0no.23RegionArab statesEndangered2013xc2xa0(2013)xe2x80x93present
Archaeological finds date back to the Neolithic period, and documents first mention the city in the early second millennium BC.
Records of the name "Tadmor" date from the early second millennium BC;[1] eighteenth century BC tablets from Mari written in cuneiform record the name as "Ta-ad-mi-ir", while Assyrian inscriptions of the eleventh century BC record it as "Ta-ad-mar".
[note 3][44] The earliest known inhabitants were the Amorites in the early second millennium BC,[45] and by the end of the millennium Arameans were mentioned as inhabiting the area.
[46][47] Arabs arrived in the city in the late first millennium BC.
First mentioned in the archives of Mari in the 2nd millennium BC, Palmyra was an established caravan oasis when it came under Roman control in the mid-first century AD as part of the Roman province of Syria.