Danish Culture Canon
0 sources
Danish Culture Canon
Summary
Danish Culture Canon is an educational canon[1]. It draws 39 Wikipedia views per month (educational_canon category, ranking #3 of 5).[2]
Key Facts
- Danish Culture Canon is in the country of Denmark[3].
- Danish Culture Canon's instance of is recorded as educational canon[4].
- Danish Culture Canon's instance of is recorded as catalogue[5].
- Danish Culture Canon's has part is recorded as A View through Three of the North-Western Arches of the Third Storey of the Coliseum[6].
- Danish Culture Canon's has part is recorded as Efterårsmorgen ved Sortedamssøen[7].
- Danish Culture Canon's has part is recorded as Dust Motes Dancing in Sunbeams[8].
- Danish Culture Canon's has part is recorded as Det store Relief[9].
- Danish Culture Canon's has part is recorded as Stalingrad[10].
- Danish Culture Canon's has part is recorded as Trundholm Sun Chariot[11].
- Danish Culture Canon's has part is recorded as Bordesholm altarpiece[12].
- Danish Culture Canon's has part is recorded as Equestrian statue of Frederick V[13].
- Danish Culture Canon's has part is recorded as Q20936741[14].
- Danish Culture Canon's has part is recorded as Jason with the Golden Fleece[15].
- Danish Culture Canon's has part is recorded as Sommerdag ved Roskilde Fjord[16].
- Danish Culture Canon's has part is recorded as Hunger[17].
- Danish Culture Canon's has part is recorded as Hover Church[18].
- Danish Culture Canon's has part is recorded as Værsgo[19].
- Danish Culture Canon's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0pk_3s1[20].
- Danish Culture Canon's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Danish Culture Canon[21].
- Danish Culture Canon's BabelNet ID is recorded as 15397011n[22].
- Danish Culture Canon's Lex ID is recorded as Kulturkanon[23].
Why It Matters
Danish Culture Canon draws 39 Wikipedia views per month (educational_canon category, ranking #3 of 5).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 12 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[24] It is known by 7 alternative names across languages and contexts.[25]