Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Catalan Romanesque Churches of the Vall de Boí' has mentioned 'Clerestory' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
While the arcade of a cloister is typically of a single stage, the arcade that divides the nave and aisles in a church is typically of two stages, with a third stage of window openings known as the clerestory rising above them.
Above the aisle roof are a row of windows known as the clerestory, which give light to the nave.
During the Romanesque period there was a development from this two-stage elevation to a three-stage elevation in which there is a gallery, known as a triforium, between the arcade and the clerestory.
This nave elevation of Arnsburg Abbey, Germany, shows the typical arrangement of the nave arcade, aisle, clerestory windows and ribbed vault Exterior elevation, Peterborough Cathedral
A number of 11th-century churches have naves distinguished by huge circular columns with no clerestory, or a very small one as at St Philibert, Tournus.
In England stout columns of large diameter supported decorated arches, gallery and clerestory, as at the nave of Malmesbury Abbey (see "Piers and columns", above).
Small clerestory windows light the vault.
The nave of Peterborough Cathedral (1118xe2x80x931193) in three stages of arcade, gallery & clerestory, typical of Norman abbey churches.
Similar decoration occurs around the arches of the nave and along the horizontal course separating arcade and clerestory.