Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Amiens Cathedral' has mentioned 'Chapel' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
One of the most sumptuous is the Drapers' chapel.
Another striking chapel is dedicated to St Thomas of Canterbury, a 13th-century dedication that complements the cathedral's own very full list of martyrs.
The Lady's Chapel, dedicated to The Virgin Mary, was at the very end of the cathedral, was reserved for the servants of the Canons who lived in the cloisters of the cathedral.
The first chapel on the south side of the chevet is devoted to Saint Eloi, and now serves as the entrance to the cathedral treasury.
Three of the chapels in the east end were entirely redone by Viollet-le-Duc in the 19th century; those of St. Theodisius, in the north, The Lady's Chapel (Notre-Dame-Drapiere) in the centre, and Saint Jacques or the Sacred Heart, in the south.
The chevet or east end of the cathedral, with its radiating chapels Chapel of St. Eloi, painting of a Sibyl (16th century) Chapel of Notre Dame-Drapiere (Lady's Chapel) (19th century)
Each chapel is dedicated to a particular saint, and features large paintings reaching up to the windows, altars, stone and wooden statuary, all from the 18th century.
A sculpture of Saint Louis by Louis Duthoit was added to the chapel in 1832.
Some of the earliest glass, from about 1269, is found in two of the lancets in the high windows of the chapel at the end of the apse, at the east end of the Cathedral.
They show a clergyman presenting the stained glass to the Virgin Mary, to whom the chapel is dedicated.
Stained glass windows in the ambulatory Medallion of the Last Supper (13th century) Windows of the central apse chapel (13th century) Four windows from the 13th century Windows of the Chapel of Saint-Etienne Art Deco stained glass by Jean Gaudin (1933)