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
[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.
[4][5] The Gonbad-e Qabus tower is the best known tower tomb in northern Iran and has featured in many publications.
[1] In terms of design, the Gonbad-e Qabus tower resembles other cylindrical tomb towers on Iran's Caspian Sea littoral.
The tomb is entirely constructed of fine-quality baked brick whose pale yellow color has been turned golden by the sun.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.