Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Stećci Medieval Tombstone Graveyards' has mentioned 'Herzegovina' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Appearing in the mid 12th century, with the first phase in the 13th century, the tombstones reached their peak in the 14th and 15th century, before disappearing during the Ottoman conquest of Bosnia and Herzegovina in the very early 16th century.
[9] In Herzegovina they are also called as maxc5xa1eti / maxc5xa1ete (Italian massetto meaning "big rock", or Turkish mexc5x9fhet/mexc5xa1hed meaning "tombstone of a fallen hero"[nb 1]), in Central and Western Bosnia as mramori / mramorje / mramorovi (marble), while in Serbia and Montenegro as usaxc4x91enik (implantation)[citation needed].On the stexc4x87ci inscriptions they are called as bilig (mark), kamen bilig (stone mark), kxc3xa2m / kami / kamen (stone), hram (shrine), zlamen (sign), kuxc4x87a (house), raka (pit), greb/grob (grave).
[19] It is considered that the term was usually used in East Herzegovina and in the area of Stari Vlah in Serbia.
They are characteristic for the territory of present-day Herzegovina, central Bosnia, Podrinje and Dalmatia (especially South of river Cetina), and some minor parts of Montenegro, Kosovo and Western Serbia, Posavina, Northwestern Bosnia[23] and Croatia.
Of all the animals, the deer is the most represented, and mostly is found on stexc4x87ci in Herzegovina.
[65] The leading position had schools on the territory of Herzegovina, with center around Stolac, in area of Trebinje and Bilexc4x87a, Gacko and Nevesinje.
[100] In 1982, Benac noted that the highest concentration of them is in South Herzegovina (territory of Trebinje, Bilexc4x87a, Ljubinj and Stolac), where was high concentration of Vlach population.