Goshavank
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Goshavank
Summary
Goshavank is a monastery[1]. Goshavank ranks in the top 9% of monastery entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (26 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Goshavank's religion is recorded as Armenian Apostolic Church[3].
- Goshavank is located in Gosh[4].
- Goshavank is located in Tavush Province[5].
- Goshavank is in the country of Armenia[6].
- Goshavank's image is recorded as Goshavank3.jpg[7].
- Goshavank's instance of is recorded as monastery[8].
- Goshavank's architect is recorded as Mkhitar Gosh[9].
- Goshavank's founder is recorded as Mkhitar Gosh[10].
- Goshavank's architectural style is recorded as Armenian architecture[11].
- Goshavank's Library of Congress authority ID is recorded as no2024045244[12].
- Goshavank's Commons category is recorded as Goshavank[13].
- Goshavank's has part is recorded as Gavit of St. Astvatsatsin Church[14].
- Goshavank's has part is recorded as Poghos khatchkar in Goshavank[15].
- Goshavank's has part is recorded as Khachkar[16].
- Goshavank's has part is recorded as Khachkar[17].
- Goshavank's has part is recorded as Khachkar[18].
- Goshavank's has part is recorded as Khachkar[19].
- Goshavank's has part is recorded as Khachkar[20].
- Goshavank's has part is recorded as Khachkar[21].
- Goshavank's has part is recorded as Chapel of St. Arakelots[22].
- Goshavank's has part is recorded as Khachkar[23].
- Goshavank's has part is recorded as Goshavank refectory[24].
- Goshavank's has part is recorded as Goshavank Bell Tower[25].
- Goshavank's has part is recorded as Saint Astvatsatsin Church (Gosh)[26].
- Goshavank's has part is recorded as St. Gregory Church[27].
Body
Geography
Goshavank is in the country of Armenia[6]. Located in include Gosh[4], a village in Armenia[28], in Armenia[29], founded in 1840[30] and Tavush Province[5], a province of Armenia[31], in Armenia[32], founded in 1995[33].
Designation and Status
Goshavank's instance of is recorded as monastery[8]. Goshavank's heritage designation is recorded as cultural heritage monument in Armenia[34]. Goshavank's religion is recorded as Armenian Apostolic Church[3].
History and Context
+1201-01-17T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Goshavank[35].
Why It Matters
Goshavank ranks in the top 9% of monastery entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (26 views/month).[2] Goshavank has Wikipedia articles in 10 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[36]