incomplete Roman Catholic cathedral located in Beauvais, France
Beauvais Cathedral, otherwise known as the Cathedral of Saint Peter of Beauvais (French: Cathédrale Saint-Pierre de Beauvais; Picard: Cathédrale Saint-Pire ed Bieuvé), is a Catholic church in the northern town of Beauvais, Oise, France. It is the seat of the Bishop of Beauvais, Noyon and Senlis and has been listed as a national monument since 1840.
The cathedral consists of a 13th-century choir, with an apse and seven polygonal apsidal chapels reached by an ambulatory, joined to a 16th-century transept. It has the highest Gothic choir in the world: 48.5 metres (159 ft) under vault. From 1569 to 1573 the cathedral of Beauvais was, with its tower of 153 m (502 ft), the highest human construction of the world. Its designers had the ambition to make it the largest Gothic cathedral in France, ahead of Amiens and Notre-Dame de Paris. A victim of two collapses, one in the 13th century, the other in the 16th century, it remains unfinished today; only the choir and the transept were built, and the planned nave was never constructed. The remnant of the previous 10th-century Romanesque cathedral, known as the Basse Œuvre ("Lower Work"), still occupies the intended site of the nave.
via Wikipedia infobox
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).