Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Medieval Monuments in Kosovo' has mentioned 'Kosovo' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Medieval Monuments in KosovoUNESCO World Heritage SiteClockwise from top left: Church of Patriarchal Monastery of Pexc4x87, Our Lady of Ljevixc5xa1, Church of Visoki Dexc4x8dani, a window at Visoki Dexc4x8dani, Church of Graxc4x8danica, fresco of Christ at Our Lady of Ljevixc5xa1LocationAutonomous province of Kosovo, SerbiaIncludes Dexc4x8dani Monastery Patriarchate of Pexc4x87 Monastery Church of the Virgin of Ljevixc5xa1 Graxc4x8danica Monastery CriteriaCultural:xc2xa0(ii), (iii), (iv)Reference724bisInscription2004 (28th session)Extensions2006Endangered2006xe2x80x93...Area2.8802xc2xa0ha (7.117 acres)Bufferxc2xa0zone115.3879xc2xa0ha (285.130 acres)Coordinates42xc2xb039xe2x80xb240xe2x80xb3N 20xc2xb015xe2x80xb256xe2x80xb3Exefxbbxbf / xefxbbxbf42.66111xc2xb0N 20.26556xc2xb0Exefxbbxbf / 42.66111; 20.26556Coordinates: 42xc2xb039xe2x80xb240xe2x80xb3N 20xc2xb015xe2x80xb256xe2x80xb3Exefxbbxbf / xefxbbxbf42.66111xc2xb0N 20.26556xc2xb0Exefxbbxbf / 42.66111; 20.26556Location of Medieval Monuments in Kosovo in KosovoShow map of KosovoMedieval Monuments in Kosovo (Serbia)Show map of Serbia
The sites are located in the modern-day Kosovo.
There is an ongoing controversy over Kosovo's bid to join the UNESCO, which would result in the sites being listed as part of Kosovo and not Serbia.
[2] These monuments have come under attack, especially during the ethnic violence in 2004, during Kosovo's UNMIK rule, when the Our Lady of Ljevixc5xa1 was heavily damaged.
[3][4][5][6] In October 2015 Kosovo was recommended for membership by the UNESCO Executive Board.
UNESCO has not accepted Kosovo as a member, the proposal failed to gain a two-thirds majority at the organization's General Conference in Paris on November 9, 2015.
[8][9] One of primary reasons for this rejection of Albanian request[10][11][12] is 2004 unrest in Kosovo, when 35 Orthodox churches were desecrated, damaged or destroyed,[13][14] including Our Lady of Ljevixc5xa1 which is a World Heritage Site.