Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Group of Monuments at Hampi' has mentioned 'Monument' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
The Stone Chariot Entrance of a Temple in Hampi Scale at Hampi Sasivekalu Ganesha monument
One of these groups has a historically important inscription that records that Kampila built the monument in the early 14th century.
A similar monument dedicated to Narasimha, the man-lion avatar of Vishnu, is located east of Hampi; an inscription near it states that it was operating in 1379 CE.
The monument is housed inside an open-pillared mandapa; the left hand and tusk have been damaged.
The Mahanavami platform, also called the "Great Platform", "Audience Hall", "Dasara" or "Mahanavami Dibba" monument, is within a 7.5-hectare (19-acre) enclosure at one of the highest points inside the royal centre (urban core).
[103] The largest monument in this complex has three ascending square stages leading to a large, square platform that likely had a wooden mandapa above it.
Mahanavami platform monument
there is a ruined temple-like monument near the step tank.
[120] Like almost all of the structures in Hampi's royal centre, this monument has no inscriptions nor epigraphs mentioning it and therefore dating it and establishing its function with evidence has been difficult.
In the sacred centre near the southern banks of the Tungabhadra River and close to the Vitthala temple complex, are gateways and a monument now called the King's Balance.
Another such gate is found on the north-east road to Talarighat Hindu monument and the Vitthala temple.
[8] Other significant monuments include a temple near the octagonal bath for Saraswati, a Hindu goddess of knowledge and music; a temple in the suburbs for Ananthasayana Vishnu; an Uddana Virbhadra temple for Shiva and Vishnu; a shrine for Kali, the fierce form of Durga unusually shown holding a ball of rice and a ladle;[127] an underground temple in the royal centre; a Sugriva cave temple;[128] the Matanga hill monuments; the Purandaradasa temple dedicated to the scholar-musician famed for the Carnatic music tradition; the Chandrashekhara temple for Shiva near the Queen's bath monument; and the Malyavanta hill dedicated to Rama-Sita-Lakshmana and Shiva.
There is a Muslim monument in the south-east of the urban core on the road from Kamalapura to Anegondi, before Turuttu canal in the irrigated valley.
This monument was first built in 1439 by Ahmad Khan, a Muslim officer in the army of Hindu king Devaraya II.