Maria Monk
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Maria Monk
Summary
Maria Monk is a human[1]. She was born on June 27, 1816[2]. She passed away in Roosevelt Island[3]. She died on January 1, 1849[4]. She worked as a mental health consumer[5], psychiatric patient[6], and non-fiction writer[7]. She ranks in the top 0.72% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (278 views/month, #7,201 of 1,000,298).[8]
Key Facts
- Maria Monk died in Roosevelt Island[3].
- Maria Monk was born on June 27, 1816[2].
- Maria Monk died on January 1, 1849[4].
- Maria Monk held citizenship in Lower Canada[9].
- Maria Monk worked as a mental health consumer[5].
- Maria Monk worked as a psychiatric patient[6].
- Maria Monk's professions included non-fiction writer[7].
- Maria Monk's field of work was anti-Catholicism[10].
- Maria Monk's field of work was hoax[11].
- Maria Monk is recorded as female[12].
- Maria Monk's instance of is recorded as human[13].
- Maria Monk's Commons category is recorded as Maria Monk[14].
- Maria Monk's family name is recorded as Monk[15].
- Maria Monk's given name is recorded as Maria[16].
- Maria Monk's described by source is recorded as Encyclopædia Britannica 11th edition[17].
- Maria Monk's languages spoken, written or signed is recorded as English[18].
- Maria Monk's Commons Creator page is recorded as Maria Monk[19].
- Maria Monk's writing language is recorded as English[20].
Body
Origins and Family
Maria Monk was born on June 27, 1816[2].
Career and Affiliations
Recorded occupations include mental health consumer[5], psychiatric patient[6], and non-fiction writer[7]. Fields of work include anti-Catholicism[10], a phobia[21] and hoax[11], a Wikibase reason for deprecated rank[22].
Death and Burial
Maria Monk died on January 1, 1849[4]. She passed away in Roosevelt Island[3].
Why It Matters
Maria Monk ranks in the top 0.72% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (278 views/month, #7,201 of 1,000,298).[8]
FAQs
Where did Maria Monk die?
Maria Monk died in Roosevelt Island[3].
What did Maria Monk do for work?
Maria Monk worked as mental health consumer[5], psychiatric patient[6], and non-fiction writer[7].