Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Amiens Cathedral' has mentioned 'Stained glass' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
[8] Although it has lost much of its original stained glass, Amiens Cathedral is renowned for the quality and quantity of early 13th-century Gothic sculpture in the main west faxc3xa7ade and the south transept portal, and a large quantity of polychrome sculpture from later periods inside the building.
Contents 1 History 1.1 Earlier cathedrals 1.2 Construction 1.3 Strengthening (15th century) 1.4 Modifications (16xe2x80x9318th century) 1.5 The Revolution and the 19th century 1.6 Protection and restoration (20th century) 2 Exterior 2.1 The west facade and the portals 2.2 Bell towers 2.3 Beau Pilier 2.4 The flxc3xa8che 2.5 Flying buttresses 3 Interior 3.1 The nave 3.2 The pulpit 3.3 The transept 3.4 The choir 3.5 The Choir screen (15thxe2x80x9316th c.) 3.6 The altar 3.7 The labyrinth 3.8 The chevet and east chapels 3.9 The lateral and transept chapels 4 The treasury 5 Stained glass windows 5.1 Rose windows 6 The organ 7 Light show - the faxc3xa7ade in colour 8 Notable burials and memorials 9 Notes and citations 10 Bibliography and sources 11 Further reading 12 See also 13 External links
The stained glass windows of the church were removed to protect them during both the First and Second World War, and the church suffered only minor damage.
The triforium and the clerestory are entirely walled with stained glass, filling the center of the cathedral with light.
Transept and north stained glass windows The star vault of the transept, where it meets the nave South transept rose window (16th century)
Stained glass windows[edit]
Only a few of the original stained glass windows still remain; many were removed during the remodeling of the Cathedral in the 18th century.
They show a clergyman presenting the stained glass to the Virgin Mary, to whom the chapel is dedicated.
The largest part of the stained glass in the Cathedral comes from the 19th century.
Stained glass windows in the ambulatory Medallion of the Last Supper (13th century) Windows of the central apse chapel (13th century) Four windows from the 13th century Windows of the Chapel of Saint-Etienne Art Deco stained glass by Jean Gaudin (1933)
The rigorous coherence of its plan, with the perfect symmetry of the nave and choir on either side of the transept, the beauty of its three-tier interior elevation, the audacious lightness of its structure that marks a new stage towards the conquest of luminosity, the wealth of its sculpted decoration and its stained glass makes it one of the most remarkable examples of medieval architecture.
Criterion (i): Amiens Cathedral, mainly built between 1220 to 1288, is a masterpiece of Gothic architecture for the beauty of its interior elevation, its prodigious sculpted decoration and its stained glass.