Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Santiago de Compostela (Old Town)' has mentioned 'Bishop' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
[5][citation needed] The shepherd quickly reported his discovery to the bishop of Iria, Bishop Teodomiro.
[6] The bishop declared that the remains were those of the apostle James and immediately notified King Alfonso II in Oviedo.
[16][17][18] At some point between 818 and 842,[19] during the reign of Alfonso II of Asturias,[20][21] bishop Theodemar of Iria (d. 847) claimed to have found some remains which were attributed to Saint James the Greater.
[24] After the centre of Asturian political power moved from Oviedo to Lexc3xb3n in 910, Compostela became more politically relevant, and several kings of Galicia and of Lexc3xb3n were acclaimed by the Galician noblemen and crowned and anointed by the local bishop at the cathedral, among them Ordoxc3xb1o IV in 958,[25] Bermudo II in 982, and Alfonso VII in 1111, by which time Compostela had become capital of the Kingdom of Galicia.
During this same 10th century and in the first years of the 11th century Viking raiders tried to assault the town[26]xe2x80x94Galicia is known in the Nordic sagas as Jackobsland or Gallizalandxe2x80x94and bishop Sisenand II, who was killed in battle against them in 968,[27] ordered the construction of a walled fortress to protect the sacred place.
In response to these challenges bishop Cresconio, in the mid-11th century, fortified the entire town, building walls and defensive towers.
In the 12th century, under the impulse of bishop Diego Gelmxc3xadrez, Compostela became an archbishopric, attracting a large and multinational population.
Under the rule of this prelate, the townspeople rebelled, headed by the local council, beginning a secular tradition of confrontation by the people of the cityxe2x80x94who fought for self-governmentxe2x80x94against the local bishop, the secular and jurisdictional lord of the city and of its fief, the semi-independent Terra de Santiago ("land of Saint James").
The relics were said to have been later rediscovered in the 9th century by a hermit named Pelagius, who after observing strange lights in a local forest went for help after the local bishop, Theodemar of Iria, in the west of Galicia.