Diana of Versailles
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Diana of Versailles
Summary
Diana of Versailles is a sculpture[1]. It ranks in the top 6% of sculpture entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (214 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Diana of Versailles is in the country of France[3].
- Diana of Versailles's image is recorded as Diane de Versailles - Musée du Louvre AGER Ma 589.jpg[4].
- Diana of Versailles's instance of is recorded as sculpture[5].
- Diana of Versailles's instance of is recorded as marble sculpture[6].
- Diana of Versailles's instance of is recorded as statue[7].
- Diana of Versailles's owned by is recorded as Henry II of France[8].
- Diana of Versailles's movement is recorded as Roman sculpture[9].
- Diana of Versailles's genre is recorded as mythological sculpture[10].
- Palace of Versailles is named after Diana of Versailles[11].
- Diana of Versailles's depicts is recorded as Diana[12].
- Diana of Versailles's depicts is recorded as Artemis[13].
- Diana of Versailles's depicts is recorded as walking[14].
- Diana of Versailles's depicts is recorded as red deer[15].
- Diana of Versailles's depicts is recorded as quiver[16].
- Diana of Versailles's depicts is recorded as arrow[17].
- Diana of Versailles's depicts is recorded as hunter[18].
- Diana of Versailles's depicts is recorded as bow[19].
- Diana of Versailles's depicts is recorded as trunk[20].
- Diana of Versailles's depicts is recorded as diadem[21].
- Diana of Versailles's depicts is recorded as waist-length hair[22].
- Diana of Versailles's depicts is recorded as chignon[23].
- Diana of Versailles's depicts is recorded as chiton[24].
- Diana of Versailles's depicts is recorded as himation[25].
- Diana of Versailles's depicts is recorded as sandal[26].
- Diana of Versailles's depicts is recorded as woman[27].
Why It Matters
Diana of Versailles ranks in the top 6% of sculpture entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (214 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 17 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 8 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]