Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Bourges Cathedral' has mentioned 'Aisle' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Whereas at Chartres and other High Gothic cathedrals the two collateral aisles were the same height as the nave, at Bourges the collateral aisles were of different heights, rising in steps from the outside aisle to the center.
The faxc3xa7ade or west front, the main entrance to the cathedral, is on a particularly grand scale when compared with other cathedrals of the period; it has five portals accessing the central aisle and four side aisles, more than Notre Dame de Paris or any other cathedral of the period.
The cathedral's nave is 41 metres (135xc2xa0ft) wide by 37 metres (121xc2xa0ft) high; its arcade is 20 metres (66xc2xa0ft) high; the inner aisle is 21.3 metres (70xc2xa0ft) and the outer aisle is 8.6 metres (28xc2xa0ft) high.
The inner aisle has a higher vault than the outer one, while both the central nave and the inner aisle have similar three-part elevations with arcade, triforium and clerestory windows; a design which admits considerably more light than one finds in more conventional double-aisled buildings like Notre-Dame.
There are five chapels in the apse, six lining the disambulatory, or outer aisle on the east end, six on the south side, and four on the north side.
Nearly all of the upper windows of the nave and the collateral aisle are filled with grayish grisaille glass, to provide maximum light.
The first five small roses to the east of the facade in the inner collateral aisle depict the Old Men of the Apocalypse, some playing musical instruments, including a kind of accordion, a very early depiction of that instrument.