Cornelius bridge
0 sources
Cornelius bridge
Summary
Cornelius bridge is a road bridge[1]. It draws 6 Wikipedia views per month (road_bridge category, ranking #101 of 839).[2]
Key Facts
- Cornelius bridge is located in Munich[3].
- Cornelius bridge is in the country of Germany[4].
- Cornelius bridge's instance of is recorded as road bridge[5].
- Cornelius bridge's instance of is recorded as arch bridge[6].
- Cornelius bridge's architect is recorded as Friedrich von Thiersch[7].
- Peter von Cornelius is named after Cornelius bridge[8].
- Peter Cornelius is named after Cornelius bridge[9].
- Cornelius bridge's manufacturer is recorded as Sager & Woerner[10].
- Cornelius bridge's crosses is recorded as Isar[11].
- Cornelius bridge's Commons category is recorded as Corneliusbrücke (München)[12].
- Cornelius bridge comprises Q1257807[13].
- Cornelius bridge comprises Brückenfigur Corneliusbrücke in München[14].
- Cornelius bridge comprises Einfriedung Museumsinsel 1 in München[15].
- Cornelius bridge's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 48.1285, 'lon': 11.5801}[16].
- Cornelius bridge's heritage designation is recorded as architectural heritage monument in Bavaria[17].
- Cornelius bridge's date of official opening is recorded as October 6, 1903[18].
- Cornelius bridge's next crossing upstream is recorded as Reichenbachbrücke in München[19].
- Cornelius bridge's next crossing downstream is recorded as Boschbrücke[20].
- Cornelius bridge's connects with is recorded as Museumsinsel[21].
- Cornelius bridge's appears in the heritage monument list is recorded as list of architectural monuments in Isarvorstadt[22].
- Cornelius bridge's street address is recorded as {'lang': 'de', 'text': 'Corneliusbrücke'}[23].
Body
Geography
Cornelius bridge is in the country of Germany[4]. It is located in Munich[3].
Designation and Status
Recorded instance of include road bridge[5] and arch bridge[6]. Cornelius bridge's heritage designation is recorded as architectural heritage monument in Bavaria[17].
History and Context
Things named after include Peter von Cornelius[8], a painter[24], 1783–1867[25], of Kingdom of Prussia[26], awarded the Pour le Mérite for Sciences and Arts order[27] and Peter Cornelius[9], a composer[28], 1824–1874[29], of Grand Duchy of Hesse[30].
Why It Matters
Cornelius bridge draws 6 Wikipedia views per month (road_bridge category, ranking #101 of 839).[2]