Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Blenheim Palace' has mentioned 'Library' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Hawksmoor also completed the interior design of the library, the ceilings of many of the state rooms and other details in numerous other minor rooms, and various outbuildings.
The final date of completion is not known, but as late as 1735 the Duchess was haggling with Rysbrack over the cost of Queen Anne's statue placed in the library.
Key A: Hall; B: Saloon; C: Green Writing Room; L: Red Drawing Room; M: Green Drawing Room; N: Grand Cabinet; H: Library; J: covered colonnade; K: Birth Room of Sir Winston Churchill; H2: Chapel; O: Bow room.
Contained behind the southern facade are the principal state apartments; on the east side are the suites of private apartments of the Duke and Duchess, and on the west along the entire length of the piano nobile is given a long gallery originally conceived as a picture gallery, but is now the library.
Library by Nicholas Hawksmoor 1722xe2x80x9325, with pipe organ at the far end 1890-91
The third remarkable room is the long library designed by Nicholas Hawksmoor in 1722xe2x80x9325, (H), 183xc2xa0ft (56xc2xa0m) long, which was intended as a picture gallery.
Here in the library, rewriting history in her own indomitable style, the Duchess set up a larger than life statue of Queen Anne, its base recording their friendship.
The Long Library organ was built in 1891 by the famous London firm of Henry Willis & Sons at a cost of xc2xa33,669.
[35] Originally erected in the central bay, with its back to the water terraces, the Norwich firm of Norman & Beard moved it to the northwestern end of the library in 1902 and made a few tonal additions and, the following year, cleaned it.
This did not prevent him selling the Marlboroughs' Boccaccio for a mere xc2xa3875 and his own library in over 4000 lots.
The first victim was the great Sunderland Library which was sold in 1882, including such volumes as The Epistles of Horace, printed at Caen in 1480, and the works of Josephus, printed at Verona in 1648.