Acts of Peter
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Acts of Peter
Summary
Acts of Peter is a New Testament apocrypha[1]. It draws 169 Wikipedia views per month (new_testament_apocrypha category, ranking #5 of 27).[2]
Key Facts
- Acts of Peter's instance of is recorded as New Testament apocrypha[3].
- Acts of Peter's genre is recorded as acts of the apostles[4].
- Acts of Peter's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 185068871[5].
- Acts of Peter's GND ID is recorded as 4173964-4[6].
- Acts of Peter's Library of Congress authority ID is recorded as n00087605[7].
- Acts of Peter's Bibliothèque nationale de France ID is recorded as 12068412q[8].
- Acts of Peter's IdRef ID is recorded as 028955552[9].
- Acts of Peter's language of work or name is recorded as Greek[10].
- Acts of Peter's publication date is recorded as +0200-00-00T00:00:00Z[11].
- Acts of Peter's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/04f9ry[12].
- Acts of Peter's characters is recorded as Saint Peter[13].
- Acts of Peter's characters is recorded as Simon Magus[14].
- Acts of Peter's narrative location is recorded as Rome[15].
- Acts of Peter's narrative location is recorded as Jerusalem[16].
- Acts of Peter's different from is recorded as Act of Peter[17].
- Acts of Peter's Encyclopædia Universalis ID is recorded as actes-de-pierre[18].
- Acts of Peter's Orthodox Encyclopedia ID is recorded as 2580438[19].
- Acts of Peter's copyright status is recorded as public domain[20].
- Acts of Peter's copyright status is recorded as public domain[21].
- Acts of Peter's FactGrid item ID is recorded as Jeff Sheppard[22].
- Acts of Peter's Oxford Bibliographies ID is recorded as 9780195393361-0285[23].
Why It Matters
Acts of Peter draws 169 Wikipedia views per month (new_testament_apocrypha category, ranking #5 of 27).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 15 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[24]