Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Monastery and Site of the Escurial, Madrid' has mentioned 'Courtyard' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
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Contents 1 Design and conception 2 Sections of the building 2.1 Courtyard of the Kings 2.2 Basilica 2.3 Palace of Philip II 2.4 Hall of Battles 2.5 Royal burial vaults 2.5.1 Pantheon of the Kings 2.5.2 Pantheon of the Princes 2.6 Art gallery 2.7 Architectural museum 2.8 Gardens of the Friars 2.9 Library 2.9.1 Collecting process 3 The reliquaries 4 Adjacent buildings 5 See also 6 References 7 External links | WIKI |
Nonetheless, the most persuasive theory for the origin of the floor plan is that it is based on descriptions of the Temple of Solomon by the Judeo-Roman historian, Flavius Josephus: a portico followed by a courtyard open to the sky, followed by a second portico and a second courtyard, all flanked by arcades and enclosed passageways, leading to the "holy of holies". | WIKI |
Courtyard of the Kings[edit] | WIKI |
Courtyard of the Kings and the Basilica. | WIKI |
Detail of the Courtyard of the Kings | WIKI |
This has three doors: the middle one leads to the Courtyard of the Kings (Patio de los Reyes) and the side ones lead to a school and the other to a monastery. | WIKI |
The courtyard is an enclosure that owes its name to the statues of the Kings of Judah that adorn the faxc3xa7ade of the Basxc3xadlica, located at the back, from which one can access from the courtyard. | WIKI |
After the basilica is the Courtyard of the Evangelists. | WIKI |
Around the courtyard are the galleries of the main cloister, decorated with frescoes by Pellegrino Tibaldi and his workshop, in which scenes from the history of the Redemption are represented. | WIKI |
The outbuildings of this palace are distributed around the Courtyard of the Fountainheads (patio de los Mascarones), of Italian style. | WIKI |
Courtyard of the Evangelists | WIKI |