Esther
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Esther
Summary
Esther is a dramatic work[1]. Esther draws 19 Wikipedia views per month (dramatic_work category, ranking #146 of 285).[2]
Key Facts
- Esther authored Jean Racine[3].
- Esther's instance of is recorded as dramatic work[4].
- Esther's movement is recorded as Classicism[5].
- Esther's genre is recorded as tragedy[6].
- Esther is named after Esther[7].
- Esther's GND ID is recorded as 4396647-0[8].
- Esther's Bibliothèque nationale de France ID is recorded as 119871265[9].
- Esther's place of publication is recorded as Paris[10].
- Esther's Commons category is recorded as Esther (Racine)[11].
- Esther's language of work or name is recorded as French[12].
- Esther's country of origin is recorded as France[13].
- +1689-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Esther[14].
- Esther's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/03ckgxs[15].
- Esther's Open Library ID is recorded as OL27304541W[16].
- Esther's characters is recorded as Thamar[17].
- Esther's characters is recorded as Q24734139[18].
- Esther's characters is recorded as Q24734138[19].
- Esther's characters is recorded as Q24734132[20].
- Esther's characters is recorded as Q24734128[21].
- Esther's characters is recorded as Q24734127[22].
- Esther's characters is recorded as Q24734126[23].
- Esther's characters is recorded as Q24734121[24].
- Esther's characters is recorded as Q24734120[25].
- Esther's characters is recorded as Q24734119[26].
- Esther's has edition or translation is recorded as Q110218833[27].
Body
Works and Contributions
Esther authored Jean Racine[3].
Why It Matters
Esther draws 19 Wikipedia views per month (dramatic_work category, ranking #146 of 285).[2] Esther has Wikipedia articles in 8 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28]