Dolianova Cathedral
0 sources
Dolianova Cathedral
Summary
Dolianova Cathedral is a co-cathedral[1]. It draws 2 Wikipedia views per month (co_cathedral category, ranking #23 of 80).[2]
Key Facts
- Dolianova Cathedral's religion is recorded as Catholicism[3].
- Dolianova Cathedral is located in Dolianova[4].
- Dolianova Cathedral is in the country of Italy[5].
- Dolianova Cathedral's image is recorded as S. Pantaleo Dolianova.jpg[6].
- Dolianova Cathedral's instance of is recorded as co-cathedral[7].
- Dolianova Cathedral's instance of is recorded as Catholic parish church[8].
- Pantaleon is named after Dolianova Cathedral[9].
- Dolianova Cathedral's architectural style is recorded as Romanesque architecture[10].
- Dolianova Cathedral's architectural style is recorded as Gothic architecture[11].
- Dolianova Cathedral's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 155040852[12].
- Dolianova Cathedral's GND ID is recorded as 4573086-6[13].
- Dolianova Cathedral's Library of Congress authority ID is recorded as no00001259[14].
- Dolianova Cathedral's Commons category is recorded as San Pantaleo (Dolianova)[15].
- Dolianova Cathedral's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 39.381389, 'lon': 9.173889}[16].
- Dolianova Cathedral's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0dd973y[17].
- Dolianova Cathedral's diocese is recorded as Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cagliari[18].
- Dolianova Cathedral's dedicated to is recorded as Pantaleon[19].
- Dolianova Cathedral's Wiki Loves Monuments ID is recorded as 20D3230001[20].
- Dolianova Cathedral's GCatholic church ID is recorded as 5618[21].
- Dolianova Cathedral's Christian liturgical rite is recorded as Roman Rite[22].
- Dolianova Cathedral's BeWeb church ID is recorded as 38124[23].
- Dolianova Cathedral's Yale LUX ID is recorded as place/40346df0-0c32-4437-be87-5fca1d6ea7f3[24].
Body
Personal Life
Dolianova Cathedral's religion is recorded as Catholicism[3].
Why It Matters
Dolianova Cathedral draws 2 Wikipedia views per month (co_cathedral category, ranking #23 of 80).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[25] It is known by 3 alternative names across languages and contexts.[26]