Cyricus and Julitta
0 sources
Cyricus and Julitta
Summary
Cyricus and Julitta is a duo[1]. It draws 75 Wikipedia views per month (duo category, ranking #92 of 421).[2]
Key Facts
- Cyricus and Julitta's image is recorded as QuricusJulietIconLife.jpg[3].
- Cyricus and Julitta's instance of is recorded as duo[4].
- Cyricus and Julitta's instance of is recorded as group of humans[5].
- Cyricus and Julitta's Commons category is recorded as Quiricus and Julietta[6].
- Cyricus and Julitta's canonization status is recorded as saint[7].
- Cyricus and Julitta's has part is recorded as Julitta[8].
- Cyricus and Julitta's has part is recorded as Cyricus[9].
- Cyricus and Julitta's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/07cxtq[10].
- Cyricus and Julitta's feast day is recorded as June 16[11].
- Cyricus and Julitta's feast day is recorded as July 15[12].
- Cyricus and Julitta's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Quiricus and Julietta[13].
- Cyricus and Julitta's Iconclass notation is recorded as 11H(CYRICUS & JULITTA)[14].
- Cyricus and Julitta's floruit is recorded as +0301-00-00T00:00:00Z[15].
- Cyricus and Julitta's time period is recorded as Roman Empire[16].
- Cyricus and Julitta's Catholic Encyclopedia ID is recorded as 12614c[17].
- Cyricus and Julitta's ARLIMA ID is recorded as 1551[18].
- Cyricus and Julitta's Getty Iconography Authority ID is recorded as 901001227[19].
- Cyricus and Julitta's Google Arts & Culture entity ID is recorded as m07cxtq[20].
- Cyricus and Julitta's Heiligen.net ID is recorded as 06/16/06-16-0304-julitta[21].
Body
Brands and Namesakes
Things named for Cyricus and Julitta include Nevers Cathedral[22], a Catholic cathedral[23], in France[24]; Santi Quirico e Giulitta[25], a church building[26], in Italy[27], founded in 1728[28]; and Dhuvjan Monastery[29], a monastery[30], in Albania[31], founded in 1089[32].
Why It Matters
Cyricus and Julitta draws 75 Wikipedia views per month (duo category, ranking #92 of 421).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 11 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[33] It is known by 11 alternative names across languages and contexts.[34]
Entities named for it include Nevers Cathedral[22], a Catholic cathedral[23], in France[24]; Santi Quirico e Giulitta[25], a church building[26], in Italy[27], founded in 1728[28]; and Dhuvjan Monastery[29], a monastery[30], in Albania[31], founded in 1089[32].