Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Pyu Ancient Cities' has mentioned 'Water' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
---|---|
They had walled spaces with one side sealed by a water tank or a tank outside of the walls. | WIKI |
In late prehistory, the Pyu settled for quite some time in Beikthano in the Yin River Valley than the Nawin River Valley at Sri Ksetra, because they proved their skills of water control using irrigation systems depended on their good knowledge of the conditions in each locality and area. | WIKI |
As Stargardt acknowledges in that article, "Sri Kestra" contained fields, irrigation canals, water tanks and iron-working sites, as well as monuments, markets (and elusive habitation areas) both inside and outside walls, all these halls also provide evidence of a powerful belief system in the elaborate provision of the deadxe2x80x9d. | WIKI |
(Burmans likely introduced new water management methods, especially the canal building techniques which became the prevailing method of irrigation in the Pagan era. | WIKI |
2nd century BCE to the 9th century CE, Buddhist monastic communities, distinctive mortuary practice, skilful water management, and long distant trade. | UNESCO |
The Pyu citiesxe2x80x99 urban morphology set a new template of extended urban format characterized by massive gated walls surrounded by moats; a network of roads and canals linking urban space within the walls with extensive areas of extramural development, containing civic amenities, monumental religious structures defined by towering stupas and sacred water bodies. | UNESCO |
The landscape engineering of the three cities also remains largely intact with the manmade structures such as canals and water tanks remaining in continuing use for on-going agricultural processes. | UNESCO |