Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Mount Wutai' has mentioned 'China' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Mount Wutaixe4xbax94xe5x8fxb0xe5xb1xb1Mount Wutai from the airHighestxc2xa0pointElevation3,061xc2xa0m (10,043xc2xa0ft)Coordinates39xc2xb004xe2x80xb245xe2x80xb3N 113xc2xb033xe2x80xb253xe2x80xb3Exefxbbxbf / xefxbbxbf39.07917xc2xb0N 113.56472xc2xb0Exefxbbxbf / 39.07917; 113.56472Coordinates: 39xc2xb004xe2x80xb245xe2x80xb3N 113xc2xb033xe2x80xb253xe2x80xb3Exefxbbxbf / xefxbbxbf39.07917xc2xb0N 113.56472xc2xb0Exefxbbxbf / 39.07917; 113.56472xe2x80xafGeographyMount WutaiWutai County, Shanxi, China ClimbingEasiest routeHike UNESCO World Heritage SiteCriteriaCultural: ii, iii, iv, viReference1279Inscription2009 (33rd session)Area18,415 haBufferxc2xa0zone42,312 ha
Mount Wutai, also known by its Chinese name Wutaishan and as Mount Qingliang, is a sacred Buddhist site at the headwaters of the Qingshui in Shanxi Province, China.
The north peak (Beitai Ding or Yedou Feng) is the highest (3,061xc2xa0m or 10,043xc2xa0ft) and is also the highest point in northern China.
As host to over 53 sacred monasteries, Mount Wutai is home to many of China's most important monasteries and temples.
It was inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2009[1] and named a AAAAA tourist attraction by China's National Tourism Administration in 2007.
Reflecting regional rivalries between Buddhist centers, 9th-century Chan Buddhism master Linji Yixuan criticized the prominence of Wutai in Tang dynasty China.
Mount Wutai is home to some of the oldest wooden buildings in China that have survived since the era of the Tang Dynasty (618xe2x80x93907).
A giant statue of Maha Manjushree was presented to the Buddhists of China by foreign minister of Nepal Ramesh Nath Pandey in 2005.
Mount Wutai with its five flat peaks is one of the four sacred Buddhist mountains in China.
Two millennia of temple building have delivered an assembly of temples that present a catalogue of the way Buddhist architecture developed and influenced palace building over a wide part of China and part of Asia.
Criterion (ii): The overall religious temple landscape of Mount Wutai, with its Buddhist architecture, statues and pagodas reflects a profound interchange of ideas, in terms of the way the mountain became a sacred Buddhist place, endowed with temples that reflected ideas from Nepal and Mongolia and which then influenced Buddhist temples across China.
The mountain has had far-reaching influence: mountains similar to Wutai were named after it in Korea and Japan, and also in other parts of China such as Gansu, Shanxi, Hebei and Guandong provinces.