Byzantine Musical Symbols
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Byzantine Musical Symbols
Summary
Byzantine Musical Symbols is an Unicode block[1]. It draws 43 Wikipedia views per month (unicode_block category, ranking #45 of 336).[2]
Key Facts
- Byzantine Musical Symbols's image is recorded as UCB Byzantine Musical Symbols.png[3].
- Byzantine Musical Symbols's instance of is recorded as Unicode block[4].
- Byzantine Musical Symbols's follows is recorded as Znamenny Musical Notation[5].
- Byzantine Musical Symbols's followed by is recorded as Musical Symbols[6].
- Byzantine Musical Symbols's part of is recorded as Supplementary Multilingual Plane[7].
- Byzantine Musical Symbols's Commons category is recorded as Unicode 1D000-1D0FF Byzantine Musical Symbols[8].
- Byzantine Musical Symbols's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0s8wpz3[9].
- Byzantine Musical Symbols's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Byzantine Musical Symbols block[10].
- Byzantine Musical Symbols's described at URL is recorded as https://www.unicode.org/charts/PDF/U1D000.pdf[11].
- Byzantine Musical Symbols's described at URL is recorded as https://www.unicode.org/charts/fr/PDF/U1D000.pdf[12].
- Byzantine Musical Symbols's depicted by is recorded as Unicode chart Byzantine Musical Symbols[13].
- Byzantine Musical Symbols's official name is recorded as {'lang': 'mul', 'text': 'Byzantine Musical Symbols'}[14].
- Byzantine Musical Symbols's has part is recorded as Q109615047[15].
- Byzantine Musical Symbols's has part is recorded as Unicode character[16].
- Byzantine Musical Symbols's Unicode range is recorded as U+1D000-1D0FF[17].
Why It Matters
Byzantine Musical Symbols draws 43 Wikipedia views per month (unicode_block category, ranking #45 of 336).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[18] It is known by 4 alternative names across languages and contexts.[19]