Domus Aurea
0 sources
Domus Aurea
Summary
Domus Aurea is an archaeological site[1]. It ranks in the top 1% of archaeological_site entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (651 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Domus Aurea is located in Roma Capitale[3].
- Domus Aurea is in the country of Italy[4].
- Domus Aurea's image is recorded as EingangDomusAurea.jpg[5].
- Domus Aurea's image is recorded as Domus Aurea NEUTRA.png[6].
- Domus Aurea's instance of is recorded as archaeological site[7].
- Domus Aurea's instance of is recorded as ancient Roman structure[8].
- Domus Aurea's instance of is recorded as palace[9].
- Domus Aurea's instance of is recorded as villa rustica[10].
- Domus Aurea's instance of is recorded as archaeological artifact museum[11].
- Domus Aurea's instance of is recorded as Italian national museum[12].
- Domus Aurea's instance of is recorded as historical civil building museum[13].
- Domus Aurea's instance of is recorded as domus[14].
- Domus Aurea's instance of is recorded as Museum of the Italian Ministry of Culture[15].
- Domus Aurea's instance of is recorded as Ancient Roman imperial palace[16].
- Domus Aurea's commissioned by is recorded as Nero[17].
- Domus Aurea's architectural style is recorded as ancient Roman architecture[18].
- Domus Aurea's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 235987561[19].
- Domus Aurea's GND ID is recorded as 4224549-7[20].
- Domus Aurea's location is recorded as park of Colle Oppio[21].
- Domus Aurea's postal code is recorded as 00184[22].
- Domus Aurea's postal code is recorded as 00187[23].
- Domus Aurea's part of is recorded as Regio III Isis et Serapis[24].
- Domus Aurea's part of is recorded as archaeological park of Colosseum[25].
- Domus Aurea's Commons category is recorded as Domus Aurea[26].
- Domus Aurea's located in time zone is recorded as UTC+01:00[27].
Body
Founding
+0064-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Domus Aurea[28].
Identity
Part of include Regio III Isis et Serapis[24], a 14 regions of Augustan Rome[29], in Italy[30] and archaeological park of Colosseum[25], an archaeological park[31], in Italy[32], founded in 2017[33], headquartered in Rome[34].
Why It Matters
Domus Aurea ranks in the top 1% of archaeological_site entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (651 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 21 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[35] It is known by 12 alternative names across languages and contexts.[36]