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216:. Originally, the tiles were made from locally sourced clay and given its shape with the help of a curved surface, such as a log or the maker's thigh. With time, regions developed a preference for a specific tile size, curve shape (profile), and color or colors.
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construction boom in Greece produced a majority of residential structures with flat roofs in numerous cities and suburbs. At the same time, many Monk and Nun roof restorations carried out throughout the 20th century were done with the increasingly popular
80:, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Knowledge (XXG).
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Today, Monk and Nun tiles are mass-produced from clay, metal, concrete, or composite materials in various dimensions, profiles, and colors, including colors beyond the traditional red to brown palette.
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tile. As a more economical and easier-to-install alternative, these interlocking tiles have become common in Europe and
America, especially in new constructions and roof restorations outside of
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Monk and Nun is the most common type of roof tile in the interior and northern regions of mainland Spain, except in certain mountainous (mostly small or rural) communities where either
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Beyond Europe, Monk and Nun roofs can be found in Turkey, Morocco, Latin
American countries, and in areas of the United States that were once part of
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Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low-quality. If possible, verify the text with references provided in the foreign-language article.
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constructed throughout the 20th century in these countries were built with a regional-looking roof instead of the increasingly popular flat roof.
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This type of roof tile is also typical of
Spanish and Portuguese colonial architecture in certain regions of Latin America, particularly in
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452:. In Morocco however, where the majority of structures have flat roofs, the use of Monk and Nun is mostly limited to small roof awnings or
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and the easternmost provinces of the country's mainland, where tiled low-pitched roofs give way to the regionally preferred flat roof.
476:. Classic Monk and Nun tiles can also be seen in historic Spanish-style buildings and houses in the U.S. states of California,
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Content in this edit is translated from the existing German
Knowledge (XXG) article at ]; see its history for attribution.
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Interlocking roofing products that aim to resemble Monk and Nun are widely available in the market, often with the name
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The tile's area of adoption extends throughout much of mainland France's southern half (except mainly in the Alps,
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In the north of the country, Monk and Nun is the most popular type of roof tile throughout the extensive
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Monk and Nun is one of Europe's historical roof tiles traditionally found in countries along or near the
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with traditional flat roofs and mountainous communities where roofs are predominantly made of
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Monk and Nun roofs can also be found in isolation in an area straddling
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to the source of your translation. A model attribution edit summary is
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tiles while the bottom row with the convex side facing down are the
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tile, though this can lead to failure in areas with cold winters.
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Monk and Nun started appearing in
Southern Europe during the
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that constitute the
Italian Alps, and in a small stretch of
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resembling them) are especially prevalent in Spain, Italy,
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to this template: there are already 1,848 articles in the
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Style of roof tiling using arched tiles in both layers
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Another form of Monk and Nun roofing on a church in
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a machine-translated version of the German article.
252:) are part of the regional style of architecture.
372:tiles, or flat clay tiles), and includes all of
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294:roofs are the tradition. It is uncommon in
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436:Monk and Nun can be found in a few non-
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519:Throughout Europe, the mass-produced
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633:Ancient Roman architectural elements
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248:(rather than high-pitched roofs or
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127:{{Translated|de|Mönch und Nonne}}
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322:that favors the local slate.
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391:covered with slate tiles,
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224:Geographic distribution
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628:Ancient Roman pottery
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155:Mission tile in Spain
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109:copyright attribution
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117:interlanguage link
638:Roofing materials
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18:Mission tile
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525:French tile
508:tile and a
264:Roman tiles
236:, Croatia,
214:Middle Ages
208:Roofs with
181:similar to
175:Barrel tile
623:Terracotta
618:Roof tiles
612:Categories
604:References
565:Kalundborg
502:Roman tile
288:stone slab
250:flat roofs
238:Montenegro
210:terracotta
454:overhangs
440:areas of
385:Champagne
296:Andalusia
179:roof tile
131:talk page
83:Consider
51:in German
393:pantiles
389:mansards
381:Lorraine
366:Pyrenees
316:communes
308:Po Plain
234:Slovenia
107:provide
586:, Spain
584:Seville
531:Gallery
458:arcades
442:Morocco
374:Corsica
320:Liguria
272:Croatia
193:tiles.
168:Mission
129:to the
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498:S-Tile
450:Turkey
446:Aegean
438:desert
413:Greece
399:Greece
364:, and
356:France
350:Sicily
344:, the
342:Apulia
325:While
195:Mortar
478:Texas
409:stone
370:slate
302:Italy
292:slate
282:Spain
173:, or
74:DeepL
506:monk
472:and
383:and
199:monk
187:monk
171:tile
105:must
103:You
67:View
510:nun
500:or
484:or
417:WW2
290:or
203:nun
191:nun
76:or
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