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 | WIKI |
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. | WIKI |
There are no exact data on the number of Shiites in the city of Samarkand, but the city has several Shiite mosques and madrasas. | WIKI |
Mosques[edit] | WIKI |
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. | UNESCO |
This area represents traditional continuity and qualities that are reflected in the neighbourhood structure, the small centres, mosques, and houses. | UNESCO |
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. | UNESCO |