Edirne Palace
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Edirne Palace is situated in Edirne, a city in Turkey. The palace was established in 1500.
It served as a significant administrative and residential complex during its time. The structure reflects the architectural and cultural influences of the period in which it was built.
Edirne Palace
Summary
Edirne Palace is an architectural structure[1]. It ranks in the top 8% of architectural_structure entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (157 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Edirne Palace is located in Edirne[3].
- Edirne Palace is in the country of Turkey[4].
- Edirne Palace's instance of is recorded as architectural structure[5].
- Edirne Palace's instance of is recorded as archaeological site[6].
- Edirne Palace's commissioned by is recorded as Ottoman Empire[7].
- Edirne Palace's founder is recorded as Murad II[8].
- Edirne Palace is owned by Turkey[9].
- Edirne Palace's architectural style is recorded as Ottoman architecture[10].
- Edirne Palace's Commons category is recorded as Edirne Palace[11].
- Edirne Palace comprises Q138827747[12].
- 1500 marks the founding of Edirne Palace[13].
- Edirne Palace's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 41.69111111, 'lon': 26.55572222}[14].
- Edirne Palace's located in/on physical feature is recorded as Marmara Region[15].
- Edirne Palace's affiliation is recorded as Museum Directorate of Edirne[16].
- Edirne Palace's Commons Institution page is recorded as Edirne Palace[17].
- Edirne Palace's state of conservation is recorded as demolished or destroyed[18].
Body
Geography
Edirne Palace is in the country of Turkey[4]. It is located in Edirne[3].
Designation and Status
Recorded instance of include architectural structure[5] and archaeological site[6].
History and Context
1500 marks the founding of Edirne Palace[13]. It is owned by Turkey[9].
Why It Matters
Edirne Palace ranks in the top 8% of architectural_structure entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (157 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 9 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[19]