Gloucester Cathedral
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Gloucester Cathedral
Summary
Gloucester Cathedral is an Anglican or Episcopal cathedral[1]. It ranks in the top 8% of anglican_or_episcopal_cathedral entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (939 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Gloucester Cathedral's religion is recorded as Anglicanism[3].
- Gloucester Cathedral is located in Gloucester[4].
- Gloucester Cathedral is located in Gloucester[5].
- Gloucester Cathedral is in the country of United Kingdom[6].
- Gloucester Cathedral's instance of is recorded as Anglican or Episcopal cathedral[7].
- Holy Trinity is named after Gloucester Cathedral[8].
- Gloucester Cathedral's architectural style is recorded as Gothic architecture[9].
- Gloucester Cathedral's architectural style is recorded as Norman architecture[10].
- Gloucester Cathedral is used for cathedral[11].
- Gloucester Cathedral's Commons category is recorded as Gloucester Cathedral[12].
- Gloucester Cathedral's patron saint is recorded as Saint Peter[13].
- Gloucester Cathedral's archives at is recorded as Gloucester Cathedral Library[14].
- Gloucester Cathedral comprises Cathedral Treasury, Vestry And Library[15].
- Gloucester Cathedral comprises Cathedral Chapter House[16].
- Gloucester Cathedral comprises Cathedral Cloister And Lavatorium[17].
- Gloucester Cathedral comprises Remains Of Monastic Infirmary[18].
- Gloucester Cathedral comprises Little Cloister[19].
- Gloucester Cathedral comprises Passage from Cathedral Cloisters to former Monastic Infirmary[20].
- Gloucester Cathedral comprises Gloucester Cathedral Library[21].
- January 17, 601 marks the founding of Gloucester Cathedral[22].
- January 17, 1089 marks the founding of Gloucester Cathedral[23].
- Gloucester Cathedral's OS grid reference is recorded as SO8312118778[24].
- Gloucester Cathedral's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 51.8673, 'lon': -2.24654}[25].
- Gloucester Cathedral's diocese is recorded as Diocese of Gloucester[26].
- Gloucester Cathedral's dedicated to is recorded as Saint Peter[27].
Body
Founding
Recorded inception include January 17, 601[22] and January 17, 1089[23].
Why It Matters
Gloucester Cathedral ranks in the top 8% of anglican_or_episcopal_cathedral entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (939 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 22 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28]