Inchcolm Abbey
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Inchcolm Abbey
Summary
Inchcolm Abbey is an abbey[1]. It draws 31 Wikipedia views per month (abbey category, ranking #69 of 550).[2]
Key Facts
- Inchcolm Abbey's religion is recorded as Catholicism[3].
- Inchcolm Abbey is located in Fife[4].
- Inchcolm Abbey is in the country of United Kingdom[5].
- Inchcolm Abbey's image is recorded as Inchcolm Abbey Panorama.jpg[6].
- Inchcolm Abbey's instance of is recorded as abbey[7].
- Inchcolm Abbey's founder is recorded as David I of Scotland[8].
- Inchcolm Abbey's part of is recorded as Inchcolm, Abbey, hermit's cell, First World War and Second World War defences[9].
- Inchcolm Abbey's Commons category is recorded as Inchcolm Abbey[10].
- Inchcolm Abbey's religious order is recorded as Order of St. Augustine[11].
- Inchcolm Abbey's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 56.0300113, 'lon': -3.301707}[12].
- Inchcolm Abbey's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/012c20[13].
- Inchcolm Abbey's diocese is recorded as Roman Catholic Diocese of Dunkeld[14].
- Inchcolm Abbey's Historic Environment Scotland ID is recorded as SM90166[15].
- Inchcolm Abbey's Canmore ID is recorded as 50895[16].
- Inchcolm Abbey's described by source is recorded as Subterranea Britannica[17].
- Inchcolm Abbey's heritage designation is recorded as scheduled monument[18].
- Inchcolm Abbey's native label is recorded as {'lang': 'en', 'text': 'Inchcolm Abbey'}[19].
- Inchcolm Abbey's UK National Archives ID is recorded as F87528[20].
- Inchcolm Abbey's associated electoral district is recorded as Cowdenbeath and Kirkcaldy[21].
- Inchcolm Abbey's historic county is recorded as Fife[22].
- Inchcolm Abbey's British Listed Buildings ID is recorded as 200334685[23].
Body
Founding
Inchcolm Abbey's founder is recorded as David I of Scotland[8].
Identity
Inchcolm Abbey's part of is recorded as Inchcolm, Abbey, hermit's cell, First World War and Second World War defences[9].
Why It Matters
Inchcolm Abbey draws 31 Wikipedia views per month (abbey category, ranking #69 of 550).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[24]