Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Millenary Benedictine Abbey of Pannonhalma and its Natural Environment' has mentioned 'Monastery' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Saint Martin of Tours is believed to have been born at the foot of this hill, hence its former name, Mount of Saint Martin (Hungarian: Mxc3xa1rton-hegy), from which the monastery occasionally took the alternative name of Mxc3xa1rton-hegyi Apxc3xa1tsxc3xa1g.
Today there are about 50 monks living in the monastery.
It was founded as the first Hungarian Benedictine monastery in 996 by Prince Gxc3xa9za, who designated this as a place for the monks to settle, and then it soon became the centre of the Benedictine order.
The monastery was built in honour of Saint Martin of Tours.
Gxc3xa9za's son, King Stephen I donated estates and privileges to the monastery.
The monastery became an archabbey in 1541, and as a result of Ottoman incursions into Europe in the 16th and 17th centuries it was fortified.
During the time of Archabbot Benedek Sajghxc3xb3, a major baroque construction was in progress in the monastery.
In the 18th century Archabbot Benedek Sajghxc3xb3 (1722xe2x80x931768) had the Carmelite brother Atanxc3xa1z Mxc3xa1rton Witwer design the baroque elements of the monastery.
It includes the monastery's interpolated charter (1001xe2x80x931002) from Saint Stephen, the founding charter of the Tihany Abbey (1055), the first known written text to include Hungarian words and phrases.
The records of the medieval Pannonhalma, a monastery with the rights to issue official documents (locus authenticus), and the records of the Bakonybxc3xa9l, the Tihany and the Dxc3xb6mxc3xb6lk abbeys constitute separate entities.
Around the monastery one can find the following:
The Archabbey of Pannonhalma and its environment (the monastic complex, the Basilica, educational buildings, the Chapel of Our Lady, the Millennium Chapel, the botanical and herbal gardens) outstandingly exemplifies the characteristic location, landscape connections, original structure, design and a thousand year history of a Benedictine monastery.
The main Monastery consists of a group of buildings dating from the 13th-15th centuries that were originally single-storey but raised to two storeys in 1912, erected in part over the medieval cloister.
Both the forest and the botanic garden are seen as illustrating the landscape value of the region as a whole and also to set off the aesthetic values of the man-made element represented by the buildings of the monastery.
Criterion (iv): The Monastery of Pannonhalma and its surroundings illustrate in an exceptional manner the characteristic setting, the connections with its environment, the specific structure and the organization of a Christian (Benedictine) monastery that has evolved over a thousand years of continuous use.
Criterion (vi): The Benedictine Monastery with its location and the early date of its foundation in 996 bear special witness to the diffusion of Christianity in Central Europe, which is enriched by the continuing presence of the Benedictine monks who have worked towards peace among countries and people for one thousand years.
The adapted application of these rules is still a current practice in the monastery.
forest and land ownership) necessary for the autonomous and sustainable functioning and management of the monastery should also remain available in the long run.