Marianne
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Marianne
Summary
Marianne is a national personification[1]. Marianne ranks in the top 9% of national_personification entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,094 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Marianne's image is recorded as MarianneBuste.JPG[3].
- Marianne is recorded as female[4].
- Marianne's instance of is recorded as national personification[5].
- Juan de Mariana is named after Marianne[6].
- Mary is named after Marianne[7].
- Saint Anne is named after Marianne[8].
- Mariamne I is named after Marianne[9].
- Marie-Anne Reubell is named after Marianne[10].
- Marianne's logo image is recorded as Logo de la Republique francaise.png[11].
- Marianne's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 45101875[12].
- Marianne's GND ID is recorded as 118970607[13].
- Marianne's Library of Congress authority ID is recorded as sh2002004529[14].
- Marianne's Commons category is recorded as Marianne[15].
- Marianne's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/01xmzq[16].
- Marianne's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Marianne (personification)[17].
- Marianne's described at URL is recorded as https://www.info.gouv.fr/marque-de-letat/les-symboles-de-la-republique-francaise[18].
- Marianne's represents is recorded as France[19].
- Marianne's CERL Thesaurus ID is recorded as cnp00543747[20].
- Marianne's iconographic symbol is recorded as phrygian cap[21].
- Marianne's Image Archive, Herder Institute is recorded as Marianne[22].
- Marianne's National Library of Israel J9U ID is recorded as 987007539863205171[23].
- Marianne's France 24 topic ID is recorded as marianne[24].
- Marianne's WorldCat Entities ID is recorded as E39PCjHk3HGHYf6x337dgtwfRq[25].
- Marianne's museum-digital ID is recorded as 9735[26].
- Marianne's DDB person is recorded as 118970607[27].
Body
Designation and Status
Marianne's instance of is recorded as national personification[5].
History and Context
Things named after include Juan de Mariana[6], a historian[28], 1536–1624[29], of Spain[30]; Mary[7], a human biblical figure[31]; Saint Anne[8], a human biblical figure[32]; Mariamne I[9], a queen consort[33]; and Marie-Anne Reubell[10], 1752–1813[34], of Kingdom of France[35].
Why It Matters
Marianne ranks in the top 9% of national_personification entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,094 views/month).[2] Marianne has Wikipedia articles in 26 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[36] Marianne is known by 3 alternative names across languages and contexts.[37]