Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Ajanta Caves' has mentioned 'Construction' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
[25] The cave numbering is a convention of convenience, and does not reflect the chronological order of their construction.
The second phase of construction at the Ajanta Caves site began in the 5th century.
According to Spink, the construction activity at the incomplete Ajanta Caves was abandoned by wealthy patrons in about 480 CE, a few years after the death of Harishena.
The four completed chaitya halls are caves 9 and 10 from the early period, and caves 19 and 26 from the later period of construction.
[114] Spink, in contrast, dates this cave's inauguration a century earlier, to about 463 CE, based on construction style and other inscriptions.
[114] The cave's construction was likely initiated about 465 CE but abandoned because the rock has geological flaws.
The construction was resumed in 475 CE after Asmakas restarted work at the Ajanta caves, but abandoned again as the artists and sponsor redesigned and focussed on an expanded Cave 6 that abuts Cave 5.
The lower level of Cave 6 likely was the earliest excavation in the second stage of construction.
[72] This stage marked the Mahayana theme and Vakataka renaissance period of Ajanta reconstruction that started about four centuries after the earlier Hinayana theme construction.
Both lower and upper Cave 6 show crude experimentation and construction errors.
[141] The upper cave construction probably began in 465, progressed swiftly, and much deeper into the rock than the lower level.
Caves 9 and 10 are the two chaitya or worship halls from the 2nd to 1st century BCE xe2x80x93 the first period of construction, though both were reworked upon the end of the second period of construction in the 5th century CE.
[161] On the walls are friezes of Jataka tales, but likely from the Hinayana phase of early construction.
Spink and other scholars call it the "crucial cave" that helps trace the chronology of the second and closing stages of the entire cave complex's construction.
Its construction, states Spink, was started in the 460s by king Upendragupta, with his expressed desire "to make the great tree of religious merit grow".
Cave 21, 22, 23 and 24 are all monasteries, representing the final phases of Ajanta's construction.
[228] The cell construction began as soon as the aisle had been excavated and while the main hall and sanctum were under construction.
[229] The construction of Cave 24 was planned in 467 CE, but likely started in 475 CE, with support from Buddhabhadra, then abruptly ended in 477 with the sponsor king Harisena's death.
[232] The medallion reliefs in Cave 24 similarly show loving couples and anthropomorphic arts, rather than flowers of earlier construction.