Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Historic Centre of Warsaw' has mentioned 'Town' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
The heart of the area is the Old Town Market Place, rich in restaurants, cafxc3xa9s and shops.
Surrounding streets feature medieval architecture such as the city walls, St. John's Cathedral and the Barbican which links the Old Town with Warsaw New Town.
The Old Town was established in the 13th century.
The town originally grew up around the castle of the Dukes of Mazovia that later became the Royal Castle.
The Market Square (Rynek Starego Miasta) was laid out sometime in the late 13th or early 14th century, along the main road linking the castle with the New Town to the north.
Old Town during the Warsaw Uprising in 1944.
Ruins of the Old Town in 1945.
Until 1817 the Old Town's most notable feature was the Town Hall built before 1429.
As depicted in the novel, the Old Town at that time was a slum neighborhood, with poor families - some Jewish, other Christian - living very crowded in subdivided tenements which had once been aristocrats' palaces.
In the late 1930s, during the mayoralty of Stefan Starzyxc5x84ski, the municipal authorities began refurbishing the Old Town and restoring it to its former glory.
The Barbican and the Old Town Market Place were partly restored.
[2][3] Following the Siege of Warsaw, parts of the Old Town were rebuilt, but immediately after the Warsaw Uprising (Augustxe2x80x93October 1944) what had been left standing was systematically blown up by the German Army.
A statue commemorating the Uprising, "the Little Insurgent," now stands on the Old Town's medieval city wall.
After World War II, the Old Town was meticulously rebuilt.
Old Town Market Square
The Old Town Market Place (Rynek Starego Miasta), which dates back to the end of the 13th century, is the true heart of the Old Town, and until the end of the 18th century it was the heart of all of Warsaw.
Castle Square (plac Zamkowy) is a visitor's first view of the reconstructed Old Town, when approaching from the more modern center of Warsaw.
It is an impressive sight, dominated by Zygmunt's Column, which towers above the beautiful Old Town houses.
Enclosed between the Old Town and the Royal Castle, Castle Square is steeped in history.
In 1980, Warsaw's Old Town was placed on the UNESCO's list of World Heritage Sites as "an outstanding example of a near-total reconstruction of a span of history covering the 13th to the 20th century.
Palace Square Warsaw old town wide (Rynek Starego Miasta) Reconstructed townhouses Road to the Old Town An alley Historical houses around Castle Square.
Old Town Market Place with tourists.
Statue of the mermaid (Old Town).
Old Town.
The reconstruction of the Old Town in its historic urban and architectural form was the manifestation of the care and attention taken to assure the survival of one of the most important testimonials of Polish culture.
The reconstruction included the holistic recreation of the urban plan, together with the Old Town Market, townhouses, the circuit of the city walls, the Royal Castle, and important religious buildings.
The reconstruction of the Old Town was a coherent and consistently implemented project devised at the Warsaw Reconstruction Office in the years 1945-1951.
The rebuilding of the Old Town continued until the mid-1960s.
Combining extant features with those parts of the Old Town reconstructed as a result of the conservation programme led to the creation of an urban space unique in terms of its material dimension (the form of the oldest part of the city), its functional dimension (as a residential quarter and venue for important historical, social, and spiritual events), and its symbolic dimension (an invincible city).
The principle of rebuilding and accentuating the historic layout was applied not only to the Old Town, but also to the buildings of the New Town and the Royal Route, which in effect created a sense of historical and spatial continuity within this urban complex (the aforementioned areas are located inside the limits of the buffer zone).
Maintaining the functional dimension of the Old Town as a residential quarter and venue for important historical, social, and spiritual events is a significant aspect of its integrity.
The second category encompasses reconstructed features xe2x80x93 this group includes buildings recreated in accordance with pre-war records (some of the Old Townxe2x80x99s townhouses, the Sigismundxe2x80x99s Column, churches, and the Royal Castle), and those rebuilt based on historical and conservation studies pertaining to the architecture of the 14th to 18th centuries (e.g.
the faxc3xa7ade of the cathedral, and the Old Town walls with the Barbican).