Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Catalan Romanesque Churches of the Vall de Boí' has mentioned 'Abbey' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Lessay Abbey, Normandy, France.
The most significant are the great abbey churches, many of which are still standing, more or less complete and frequently in use.
Buildings of every type were constructed in the Romanesque style, with evidence remaining of simple domestic buildings, elegant town houses, grand palaces, commercial premises, civic buildings, castles, city walls, bridges, village churches, abbey churches, abbey complexes and large cathedrals.
Many cathedrals owe their foundation to this date, with others beginning as abbey churches, and later becoming cathedrals.
Cerisy Abbey, Normandy, France, has a compact appearance with aisles rising through two storeys buttressing the vault.
(Gothic vault) Malmesbury Abbey, England, has hollow core columns, probably filled with rubble.
Grande-Sauve Abbey, France Capital of amorphous form surmounting a cluster of shafts.
Many parish churches, abbey churches and cathedrals are in the Romanesque style, or were originally built in the Romanesque style and have subsequently undergone changes.
Abbey and cathedral churches generally follow the Latin Cross plan.
This nave elevation of Arnsburg Abbey, Germany, shows the typical arrangement of the nave arcade, aisle, clerestory windows and ribbed vault Exterior elevation, Peterborough Cathedral
In northern France, two large towers, such as those at Caen, were to become an integral part of the facade of any large abbey or cathedral.
Large Norman towers exist at the cathedrals of Durham, Exeter, Southwell, Norwich and Tewkesbury Abbey.
San Esteban, Segovia, below) Paired towers such as those of Plankstetten Abbey, are a typical feature of Bavarian and Central European church architecture.
Maria Laach Abbey, above) The most massive Romanesque crossing tower is that at Tewkesbury Abbey, in England, where large crossing towers are characteristic.
In England stout columns of large diameter supported decorated arches, gallery and clerestory, as at the nave of Malmesbury Abbey (see "Piers and columns", above).
The nature of the internal roofing varied greatly, from open timber roofs, and wooden ceilings of different types, which remained common in smaller churches, to simple barrel vaults and groin vaults and increasingly to the use of ribbed vaults in the late 11th and 12th centuries, which were to become a common feature of larger abbey churches and cathedrals.
At Fontevrault Abbey the nave is covered by four domes, while at the Church of Saint Front, Pxc3xa9rigueux, the church is of Greek cross plan, with a central dome surrounded by four smaller domes over the nave, chancel and transepts.
The nave of Peterborough Cathedral (1118xe2x80x931193) in three stages of arcade, gallery & clerestory, typical of Norman abbey churches.
The groin-vaulted crypt of Worcester Cathedral The chapter house of Santa Marxc3xada de la Oliva, Carcastillo, Spain The lateral porch of the Church of San Esteban, Segovia The cloister of Lavaudieu Abbey The Baptistery of Parma Cathedral
Detail of an apse of Abbey d'Arthous, Landes, France showing corbels representing aspects of sin such as lust, drunkenness and ignorance.
The cloisters of Santo Domingo de Silos Abbey in Northern Spain, and Moissac are fine examples surviving complete.
In England, the Romanesque groundplan, which in that country commonly had a very long nave, continued to affect the style of building of cathedrals and those large abbey churches which were also to become cathedrals at the dissolution of the monasteries in the 16th century.