Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Roskilde Cathedral' has mentioned 'Construction' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Funded by the weregild Estrid Svendsdatter had received, the old Trinity Church was torn down and construction of a simple stone cathedral began around 1026.
Construction had been started by Bishop Wilhelm between 1060xe2x80x931073 and was completed by his successor Svend Nordmand around 1080.
Researchers decided to build a new cathedral around the existing one, allowing services to continue during construction.
It has long been believed that bishop Absalon began construction, and when Absalon was forced to surrender his position as Bishop of Roskilde in 1191, only the two floors of the apse, the choir towers and part of the transept had been completed.
While the cathedral suffered financial hardship, having been forced to give away all its property (which at the time included one in every four farms on Zealand and 30 large estates), it was endowed with a variety of gifts from Christian IV: The altarpiece (between 1555 and 1623), a royal box ca 1600, the pulpit in 1610, his own burial chapel in 1614, the construction of the iconic twin spires in 1633 and finally a grand Renaissance sandstone entrance portal in 1635.
[20] The instrument of foundation was signed on April 28, 1459, which not only ordered the construction of the chapel but also granted large tracts of land to the church.
Construction of the chapel was ordered by Christian IV himself in 1613, after the death of his Queen Anne Cathrine the year before, and upon realising that space inside the cathedral was running out.
Consisting of two chapels in neoclassical style, the construction spanned 51 years (1774xe2x80x931825) and required the removal of a previous existing chapel, the Chapel of Our Lady.
Construction of the chapel was started by C. F. Harsdorff in 1774, possibly using early sketches made during his travels to Rome 1762xe2x80x931764, but due to a lack of funding the work was suspended in 1779.
Construction of the chapel, overseen by a master builder Schledermann, began in 1919 and was completed in 1924, built in a Byzantine Revival style, with a Roman inspiration.
The reason for the construction was twofold: it had been Frederick IX's wish to be buried outside the cathedral, in view of Roskilde Fjord (the king was a keen sailor and closely connected to the navy), and in any case there was no space left in the chapel of Christian IX.
Roskilde Cathedral is an outstanding example of the early use of brick in the construction of large religious buildings in Northern Europe.
Earlier chapels were demolished to permit the construction of royal funerary chapels, and sporadic fires have led to periodic restoration and reconstruction, often accompanied by significant stylistic changes.