Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Site of Palmyra' has mentioned 'Wadi' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
---|---|
[15] A small wadi (al-Qubur) crosses the area, flowing from the western hills past the city before disappearing in the eastern gardens of the oasis. | WIKI |
[16] South of the wadi is a spring, Efqa. | WIKI |
While the site, located near the Efqa spring on the southern bank of Wadi al-Qubur, was occupied by at least the neolithic,[20] early buildings only remain from later occupation. | WIKI |
The Hellenistic settlement of Palmyra [22] had its residences expanding to the wadi's northern bank during the first century. | WIKI |
[16] Although the city's walls originally enclosed an extensive area on both banks of the wadi,[16] the walls rebuilt during Aurelian's reign surrounded only the northern-bank section. | WIKI |
[23][16] Most of the city's monumental projects were built on the wadi's northern bank,[24] among them is the Temple of Bel, on a tell which was the site of an earlier temple (known as the Hellenistic temple). | WIKI |
[25] However, excavation supports the theory that the tell was originally located on the southern bank, and the wadi was diverted south of the tell to incorporate the temple into Palmyra's late first and early second century urban organization on the north bank. | WIKI |
Also north of the wadi was the Great Colonnade, Palmyra's 1.1-kilometre-long (0.68xc2xa0mi) main street,[27] which extended from the Temple of Bel in the east,[28] to the Funerary Temple no.86 in the city's western part. | WIKI |
[48] In the middle of the Hellenistic era, Palmyra, formerly south of the al-Qubur wadi, began to expand beyond its northern bank. | WIKI |