Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Chartres Cathedral' has mentioned 'Spire' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
The building's exterior is dominated by heavy flying buttresses which allowed the architects to increase the window size significantly, while the west end is dominated by two contrasting spiresxc2xa0xe2x80x93 a 105-metre (349xc2xa0ft) plain pyramid completed around 1160 and a 113-metre (377xc2xa0ft) early 16th-century Flamboyant spire on top of an older tower.
The south tower, begun in 1144, was much more ambitious; it had a spire atop the tower, and, when finished in about 1160, it reached a height of 105 metres or 345 feet, one of the highest in Europe.
[7] The stained glass in the three lancet windows over the portals dates from some time between 1145 and 1155, while the south spire, some 103 metres high, was also completed by 1155 or later.
In 1506, lightning destroyed the north spire, which was rebuilt in the 'Flamboyant' style in 1507xe2x80x931513 by the architect Jean Texier.
It was more ambitious, and has an octagonal masonry spire on a square tower, and reaches a height of 105 meters.
As the cathedral was rebuilt, the famous west rose window was installed between the two towers (13th century),[16] and in 1507, the architect Jean Texier (also sometimes known as Jehan de Beauce) designed a spire for the north tower, to give it a height and appearance closer to that of the south tower.
[citation needed] In 1194, when the cathedral was struck by lightning, and the east spire was lost, the Sancta Camisa was thought lost, too.
The west faxc3xa7ade built around the middle of the 12th century, with its three portals whose splays are decorated with statue columns (Royal Portail), its two towers, its southern spire and its three large incomparable stained-glass windows, comprise an authentic and complete example that remains with us of this art created at Stxc2xa0Denis, and which marked the advent of an original mode of plastic expression, known as the Gothic style.
Later additions at the end of the Gothic era (Vendxc3xb4me Chapel, north-west spire, Clock Pavillon), the Renaissance (choir cloister), Classic era (development of the Victor Louis choir), Industrial era (Emile Martin iron structure) and Contemporary (stained-glass creation) did not alter the purity of the ensemble.