Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Gonbad-e Qābus' has mentioned 'Tomb' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
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[1] It is a cylindrical tomb tower that reaches c. 61 metres (200 feet) and can be seen from some 30 kilometres (19 miles) away. | WIKI |
[4][5] The Gonbad-e Qabus tower is the best known tower tomb in northern Iran and has featured in many publications. | WIKI |
[1] In terms of design, the Gonbad-e Qabus tower resembles other cylindrical tomb towers on Iran's Caspian Sea littoral. | WIKI |
The tomb is entirely constructed of fine-quality baked brick whose pale yellow color has been turned golden by the sun. | WIKI |
He cites as examples the use of the Persian solar calendar in the inscription on the Gonbad-e Qabus, as well as the occasional use of Middle Persian (Pahlavi) on the other tomb towers of northern Iran. | WIKI |
Though the tower is meant to be Qabus's mausoleum, there is no body buried inside, similar to the other tomb towers of northern Iran. | WIKI |
Its conical roofed form became a prototype for tomb towers and other commemorative towers in the region, representing an architectural cultural exchange between the Central Asian nomads and ancient Iranian civilisation. | UNESCO |
Criterion (ii): The conically roofed form of Gonbad-e Qxc4x81bus is significant as a prototype for the development of tomb towers in Iran, Anatolia and Central Asia, representing architectural cultural exchange between the Central Asian nomads and ancient Iranian civilisation. | UNESCO |
Having been built for an emir who was also a writer, it marked the beginning of a regional cultural tradition of monumental tomb building including for the literati. | UNESCO |
The tomb tower and surrounding area are managed jointly by the Municipality and ICHHTO in accordance with the Master Plan for Gonbad-e Qxc4x81bus town (1989) and the detailed plan (2009), which aim to preserve the historic and visual characteristics of the city. | UNESCO |