Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Samarkand – Crossroad of Cultures' has mentioned 'Mosques' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2.1 Early history 2.2 Hellenistic period 2.3 Sassanian era 2.4 Hephtalites and Turkic Khaganate era 2.5 Early Islamic era 2.6 Karakhanid (Ilek-Khanid) period (11th-12th centuries) 2.7 Mongol period 2.8 Timur's rule (1370-1405) 2.9 Ulugbek's period (1409-1449) 2.10 16th - 18th centuries 2.11 Second half of the 18th - 19th centuries 2.12 Russian Tzarist period 2.13 Soviet period 3 Geography 3.1 Climate 4 People 4.1 Language 5 Religion 5.1 Islam 5.1.1 Shia Muslims 5.2 Christianity 5.2.1 History 5.2.2 Now 6 Main sights 6.1 Ensembles 6.2 Mausoleums and shrines 6.2.1 Mausoleums 6.2.2 Holy shrines and mausoleums 6.3 Other Complexes 6.4 Madrasas 6.5 Mosques 6.6 Architecture 6.7 Suburbs 7 Transport 7.1 Local 7.2 Air transport 7.3 Railway 8 Notable locals 9 International relations 9.1 Twin towns xe2x80x93 sister cities 9.2 Friendly cities 10 Gallery 11 See also 12 References 13 Bibliography 14 External links
From that point forward, throughout the reigns of many Muslim governing powers, numerous mosques, madrasahs, minarets, [shrine]s, and mausoleums were built in the city.
There are no exact data on the number of Shiites in the city of Samarkand, but the city has several Shiite mosques and madrasas.
Mosques[edit]
The old town still contains substantial areas of historic fabric with typical narrow lanes, articulated into districts with social centres, mosques, madrassahs, and residential housing.
This area represents traditional continuity and qualities that are reflected in the neighbourhood structure, the small centres, mosques, and houses.
The major monuments include the Registan mosque and madrasahs, originally built in mud brick and covered with decorated ceramic tiles, the Bibi-Khanum Mosque and Mausoleum, the Shakhi-Zinda compound, which contains a series of mosques, madrasahs and mausoleum, and the ensembles of Gur-Emir and Rukhabad, as well as the remains of Ulugh-Bekxe2x80x99s Observatory.