Epistle to the Romans
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Epistle to the Romans
Summary
Epistle to the Romans is a literary work[1]. It ranks in the top 2% of literary_work entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (2,215 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Epistle to the Romans authored Paul the Apostle[3].
- Epistle to the Romans's instance of is recorded as literary work[4].
- Epistle to the Romans's instance of is recorded as religious text[5].
- Epistle to the Romans's instance of is recorded as epistle[6].
- Epistle to the Romans's instance of is recorded as book of the Bible[7].
- Epistle to the Romans's genre is epistle[8].
- Epistle to the Romans is part of Pauline epistles[9].
- Epistle to the Romans is part of New Testament[10].
- Epistle to the Romans's Commons category is recorded as Epistle to the Romans[11].
- Epistle to the Romans comprises Romans 1[12].
- Epistle to the Romans comprises Romans 2[13].
- Epistle to the Romans comprises Romans 3[14].
- Epistle to the Romans comprises Romans 4[15].
- Epistle to the Romans comprises Romans 5[16].
- Epistle to the Romans comprises Romans 6[17].
- Epistle to the Romans comprises Romans 7[18].
- Epistle to the Romans comprises Romans 8[19].
- Epistle to the Romans comprises Romans 9[20].
- Epistle to the Romans comprises Romans 10[21].
- Epistle to the Romans comprises Romans 11[22].
- Epistle to the Romans comprises Romans 12[23].
- Epistle to the Romans comprises Romans 13[24].
- Epistle to the Romans comprises Romans 14[25].
- Epistle to the Romans comprises Romans 15[26].
- Epistle to the Romans comprises Romans 16[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Epistle to the Romans authored Paul the Apostle[3].
Publication
Epistle to the Romans's genre is epistle[8]. Part of include Pauline epistles[9], a group of literary works[28], written by Paul the Apostle[29] and New Testament[10], a written work[30], founded in 0100[31], written by various authors[32].
Cultural Impact
Things named for Epistle to the Romans include The it[33], a literary work[34], written by Karl Barth[35].
Why It Matters
Epistle to the Romans ranks in the top 2% of literary_work entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (2,215 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 29 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[36] It is known by 74 alternative names across languages and contexts.[37]
Entities named for it include The it[33], a literary work[34], written by Karl Barth[35].