Madara Rider
0 sources
Madara Rider
Summary
Madara Rider is a sculpture[1]. It ranks in the top 9% of sculpture entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (61 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Madara Rider is located in Madara[3].
- Madara Rider is located in Shumen[4].
- Madara Rider is located in Shumen[5].
- Madara Rider is in the country of Bulgaria[6].
- Madara Rider's instance of is recorded as sculpture[7].
- Madara Rider's genre is bas-relief[8].
- Madara Rider's genre is monumental sculpture[9].
- Madara Rider's genre is public art[10].
- Madara Rider is part of Madara (Archeological Preserve)[11].
- Madara Rider is part of Shumen History museum[12].
- Madara Rider is part of 100 Tourist Sites of Bulgaria[13].
- Madara Rider's Commons category is recorded as Madara Rider[14].
- 710 marks the founding of Madara Rider[15].
- Madara Rider's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 43.2773746, 'lon': 27.1188945}[16].
- Madara Rider's described at URL is recorded as https://www.placemania.sk/svetova-zaujimavost/jazdec-z-madary/[17].
- Madara Rider's heritage designation is recorded as World Heritage Site[18].
- Madara Rider covers an area of {'unit': 'Q35852', 'amount': '+1.2'}[19].
- Madara Rider covers an area of {'unit': 'Q35852', 'amount': '+501.7'}[20].
- Madara Rider's World Heritage criteria is recorded as (i)[21].
- Madara Rider's World Heritage criteria is recorded as (iii)[22].
Body
Publication
Genres include bas-relief[8], monumental sculpture[9], and public art[10]. Part of include Madara (Archeological Preserve)[11], an archaeological site[23], in Bulgaria[24]; Shumen History museum[12], a history museum[25], in Bulgaria[26], founded in 1904[27]; and 100 Tourist Sites of Bulgaria[13], in Bulgaria[28].
Cultural Impact
Things named for Madara Rider include Order of the cavalier of Madara[29], an order[30], in Bulgaria[31], founded in 1966[32].
Why It Matters
Madara Rider ranks in the top 9% of sculpture entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (61 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 27 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[33] It is known by 6 alternative names across languages and contexts.[34]
Entities named for it include Order of the cavalier of Madara[29], an order[30], in Bulgaria[31], founded in 1966[32].