El Caballito
0 sources
El Caballito
Summary
El Caballito is a sculpture[1]. It draws 24 Wikipedia views per month (sculpture category, ranking #182 of 1,525).[2]
Key Facts
- El Caballito is the creator of Manuel Tolsá[3].
- El Caballito is located in Mexico City[4].
- El Caballito is in the country of Mexico[5].
- El Caballito's image is recorded as El caballito de Tolsa a.jpg[6].
- El Caballito's instance of is recorded as sculpture[7].
- El Caballito's genre is recorded as equestrian statue[8].
- El Caballito's genre is recorded as public art[9].
- El Caballito's depicts is recorded as horse[10].
- El Caballito's depicts is recorded as equestrianism[11].
- El Caballito's depicts is recorded as Charles IV of Spain[12].
- El Caballito's made from material is recorded as bronze[13].
- El Caballito's Commons category is recorded as El Caballito (Mexico City)[14].
- El Caballito's commemorates is recorded as Charles IV of Spain[15].
- +1802-08-04T00:00:00Z marks the founding of El Caballito[16].
- El Caballito's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 19.43605, 'lon': -99.13948}[17].
- El Caballito's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0g_q28[18].
- El Caballito's main subject is recorded as Charles IV of Spain[19].
- El Caballito's BabelNet ID is recorded as 03561194n[20].
- El Caballito's OpenStreetMap way ID is recorded as 217407196[21].
Body
Works and Contributions
El Caballito is the creator of Manuel Tolsá[3]. Things named for it include Torre del Caballito[22], a skyscraper[23], in Mexico[24], founded in 1988[25].
Why It Matters
El Caballito draws 24 Wikipedia views per month (sculpture category, ranking #182 of 1,525).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[26] It is known by 4 alternative names across languages and contexts.[27]
Entities named for it include Torre del Caballito[22], a skyscraper[23], in Mexico[24], founded in 1988[25].