Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Bourges Cathedral' has mentioned 'Ambulatory' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Contents 1 History 1.1 Earlier cathedrals 1.2 The Gothic cathedral (12thxe2x80x9313th century) 1.3 14thxe2x80x9316th century 1.4 17thxe2x80x9318th century 1.5 19thxe2x80x9321st century 2 Exterior 2.1 Faxc3xa7ade or west front 2.2 Portals 2.3 Towers and the Grand Housteau 2.4 North and south sides 2.5 The Chevet 3 Interior 3.1 Plan and elevation 3.2 Nave and choir 3.3 Chapels 3.4 Lower church and the tomb of the Duke of Berry 3.5 Organ 3.6 Astronomical clock 4 Stained glass 4.1 Grand Housteau and apse 4.2 Windows of the apse ambulatory (13th century) 4.3 Stained Glass Legendary Windows in the Disambulatory (13th century) 4.4 Windows of the nave and choir 4.5 15th- and 16th-century stained glass 5 See also 6 Notes and citations 7 Bibliography 8 External links
The double aisles continue without interruption beyond the position of the screen (now largely destroyed though a few fragments are preserved in the crypt) to form a double ambulatory around the choir.
Bourges Cathedral is especially noted for its 13th-century stained glass, particularly the windows in the chapels of the ambulatory of the apse, which date from around 1215, about the same time the windows of Chartres Cathedral (The windows in the axial chapel at the end of the apse are more recent).
Windows of the apse ambulatory (13th century)[edit]
One of the best-known windows from this period is the Joseph window, in the ambulatory to the right of the Chapel of Saint Francis of Sales.
The ambulatory includes several other Typological window (similar to examples at Sens Cathedral and Canterbury Cathedral), and several hagiographic cycles, the story of the Old Testament patriarch, Joseph and symbolic depictions of the Apocalypse and Last Judgement.