Codex Calixtinus
0 sources
Codex Calixtinus
Summary
Codex Calixtinus is a miscellaneous manuscript[1]. It draws 129 Wikipedia views per month (miscellaneous_manuscript category, ranking #3 of 3).[2]
Key Facts
- Codex Calixtinus is in the country of Kingdom of Galicia[3].
- Codex Calixtinus is in the country of Kingdom of Leon[4].
- Codex Calixtinus is in the country of Portugal[5].
- Codex Calixtinus is in the country of Spain[6].
- Codex Calixtinus's instance of is recorded as miscellaneous manuscript[7].
- Codex Calixtinus's instance of is recorded as codex[8].
- Codex Calixtinus's commissioned by is recorded as Diego Gelmírez[9].
- Codex Calixtinus's commissioned by is recorded as Callixtus II[10].
- Codex Calixtinus's collection is recorded as Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela[11].
- The location of Codex Calixtinus was Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela[12].
- Codex Calixtinus took place at General Archive of the Crown of Aragon[13].
- Codex Calixtinus took place at National Library of Portugal[14].
- Codex Calixtinus took place at The Historical Library, University of Salamanca[15].
- The location of Codex Calixtinus was Biblioteca Nacional de España[16].
- Codex Calixtinus's discography is recorded as Codex Calixtinus discography[17].
- Codex Calixtinus's Commons category is recorded as Codex Calixtinus[18].
- Codex Calixtinus comprises Historia Caroli Magni[19].
- Codex Calixtinus's edition or translation of is recorded as Book of Saint James[20].
- Codex Calixtinus's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Codex Calixtinus[21].
- Codex Calixtinus's described at URL is recorded as https://www.unesco.org/fr/memory-world/codex-calixtinus-santiago-de-compostela-cathedral-and-other-medieval-copies-liber-sancti[22].
- Codex Calixtinus's described at URL is recorded as https://www.unesco.org/en/memory-world/codex-calixtinus-santiago-de-compostela-cathedral-and-other-medieval-copies-liber-sancti[23].
- Codex Calixtinus's heritage designation is recorded as Memory of the World International Register[24].
- Codex Calixtinus's title is recorded as {'lang': 'la', 'text': 'Codex Calixtinus'}[25].
- Codex Calixtinus's exemplar of is recorded as Book of Saint James[26].
- Codex Calixtinus's number of parts of this work is recorded as {'unit': 'Q1238720', 'amount': '+5'}[27].
Body
Material and Period
Recorded location include Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela[12], General Archive of the Crown of Aragon[13], National Library of Portugal[14], The Historical Library, University of Salamanca[15], and Biblioteca Nacional de España[16].
Why It Matters
Codex Calixtinus draws 129 Wikipedia views per month (miscellaneous_manuscript category, ranking #3 of 3).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 13 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 5 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]