Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Cathedral, Alcázar and Archivo de Indias in Seville' has mentioned 'Cathedral' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
The Cathedral of Saint Mary of the See (Spanish: Catedral de Santa Marxc3xada de la Sede), better known as Seville Cathedral, is a Roman Catholic cathedral in Seville, Andalusia, Spain.
After its completion in the early 16th century, Seville Cathedral supplanted Hagia Sophia as the largest cathedral in the world, a title the Byzantine church had held for nearly a thousand years.
Christopher Columbus and his son Diego are also buried in the cathedral.
The Archbishop's Palace is located on the northeastern side of the cathedral.
Contents 1 Construction and history 1.1 Almohad mosque (1172xe2x80x931248) 1.2 "Christianized mosque" (1248xe2x80x931434) 1.3 Gothic cathedral (1434xe2x80x931506, 1511xe2x80x931517) 2 Description 3 Giralda 4 Doors 4.1 West facade 4.2 South facade 4.3 North facade 4.4 East facade 5 Chapels 6 Organ 7 Timeline 8 Burials 9 See also 10 Gallery 11 References 12 Sources 13 External links
Shortly after Seville's conquest by Ferdinand III, Yaqub Yusuf's mosque was converted into the city's cathedral.
Almost the entire eastern half of the cathedral was occupied by the royal chapel that would hold the bodies of Ferdinand, his wife and Alfonso the Wise.
Gothic cathedral (1434xe2x80x931506, 1511xe2x80x931517)[edit]
Interior of the cathedral.
In July 1401, city leaders decided to build a new cathedral to replace the grand mosque that served as the cathedral until then.
According to local oral tradition, the members of the cathedral chapter said: "Hagamos una Iglesia tan hermosa y tan grandiosa que los que la vieren labrada nos tengan por locos" ("Let us build a church so beautiful and so grand that those who see it finished will take us for mad").
On that year, king John II of Castille allowed the temporary transportation of the royal bodies to the cathedral's cloister for storage.
Five years after construction ended, in 1511, the crossing lantern, or cimborrio, collapsed and work on the cathedral recommenced.
The interior has the longest nave of any cathedral in Spain.
In the main body of the cathedral, the most noticeable features are the great boxlike choir loft, which fills the central portion of the nave, and the vast Gothic retablo of carved scenes from the life of Christ.
It was converted into a bell tower for the cathedral after the Reconquista,[13] although the topmost section dates from the Renaissance.
Door of Forgiveness (Puerta del Perdxc3xb3n) gives access to the Patio de los Naranjos (Patio of the Oranges) from Calle Alemanes and therefore is not really a door of the cathedral.
The cathedral has 80 chapels, including the Capilla Real.
The cathedral originally hosted a pair of historic instruments: a Gospel organ by the renowned innovator Jordi Bosch, finished in 1793, and an Epistle organ by Valentxc3xadn and Josxc3xa9 Valentxc3xadn Verdalonga, finished in 1831.
Together the Cathedral, Alcxc3xa1zar and Archivo de Indias as a series, form a remarkable monumental complex in the heart of Seville.
Founded in 1403 on the site of a former mosque, the Cathedral, built in Gothic and Renaissance style, covers seven centuries of history.
Ever since its creation, the Cathedral has continued to be used for religious purposes.
The tomb of Columbus is preserved in the Cathedral.
The immense Cathedral with five naves which replaced the mosque is the largest Gothic edifice in Europe.
Criterion (iii): The Cathedral - the largest Gothic temple in Europe - and the Alcxc3xa1zar of Seville bear exceptional testimony to the civilization of the Alhomads and to that of Christian Andalusia dating from the re-conquest of 1248 to the 16th century, which was thoroughly imbued with Moorish influences.
Criterion (vi): The Cathedral, the Alcxc3xa1zar and the Lonja are directly and tangibly associated with a universally important event: the discovery of the New World by Christopher Columbus in 1492/1493 and the colonization of Latin America.
The tomb of Christopher Columbus is in the Cathedral.
The Cathedral constitutes a fully-used and complete monument.
A Gothic temple whose construction was begun at the beginning of the 15th century above Seville's former Mezquita Mayor - an Almohad building whose Patio de los Naranjos has been preserved and converted into the access courtyard to the Cathedral - and the Giralda - the minaret that has been reused as a bell tower.
In the medium term, provisions made by the City Council include the completion of the Catalogues of buildings to be protected in both of the Conjunto Histxc3xb3rico sectors that have not yet been drawn up (sector 7, "Cathedral Sector" and sector 8, "Encarnacixc3xb3n-Magdalena Sector") to replace the current precatalogues.