churches of Moldavia
0 sources
churches of Moldavia
Summary
churches of Moldavia is a Wikimedia list article[1]. It ranks in the top 4% of wikimedia_list_article entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (226 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- churches of Moldavia is located in Suceava County[3].
- churches of Moldavia is in the country of Romania[4].
- churches of Moldavia's instance of is recorded as Wikimedia list article[5].
- churches of Moldavia's instance of is recorded as Q137386368[6].
- churches of Moldavia's Commons category is recorded as Churches of Moldavia World Heritage Site[7].
- churches of Moldavia comprises Arbore Church[8].
- churches of Moldavia comprises Humor Monastery[9].
- churches of Moldavia comprises Moldovița Monastery[10].
- churches of Moldavia comprises Church of the Holy Cross[11].
- churches of Moldavia comprises Probota Monastery[12].
- churches of Moldavia comprises Saint John the New Monastery[13].
- churches of Moldavia comprises Voroneț Monastery[14].
- churches of Moldavia comprises Sucevița Monastery[15].
- churches of Moldavia's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 47.733, 'lon': 25.933}[16].
- churches of Moldavia's significant event is recorded as UNESCO World Heritage Site record modification[17].
- churches of Moldavia's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Churches of Moldavia[18].
- churches of Moldavia's topic has template is recorded as Q20154422[19].
- churches of Moldavia's heritage designation is recorded as World Heritage Site[20].
- churches of Moldavia's World Heritage criteria is recorded as (i)[21].
- churches of Moldavia's World Heritage criteria is recorded as (iv)[22].
Why It Matters
churches of Moldavia ranks in the top 4% of wikimedia_list_article entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (226 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 23 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[23] It is known by 7 alternative names across languages and contexts.[24]