Nazarene movement
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Nazarene movement
Summary
Nazarene movement is an art movement[1]. It draws 584 Wikipedia views per month (art_movement category, ranking #74 of 334).[2]
Key Facts
- Nazarene movement is in the country of Confederation of the Rhine[3].
- Nazarene movement's instance of is recorded as art movement[4].
- Nazarene movement's instance of is recorded as art group[5].
- Nazarene movement's founder is recorded as Johann Friedrich Overbeck[6].
- Nazarene movement's founder is recorded as Franz Pforr[7].
- Nazarene movement's founder is recorded as Ludwig Vogel[8].
- Nazarene movement's founder is recorded as Johann Konrad Hottinger[9].
- Nazarene movement's founder is recorded as Joseph Sutter[10].
- Nazarene movement's founder is recorded as Joseph Wintergerst[11].
- Luke the Evangelist is named after Nazarene movement[12].
- Nazarene is named after Nazarene movement[13].
- Nazarene movement followed Classicism[14].
- Nazarene movement was followed by Romanticism[15].
- Nazarene movement's Commons category is recorded as Nazarener[16].
- Nazarene movement's said to be the same as is recorded as Q25395636[17].
- Nazarene movement comprises Peter von Cornelius[18].
- Nazarene movement comprises Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres[19].
- Nazarene movement comprises Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood[20].
- Nazarene movement comprises Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld[21].
- Nazarene movement comprises Franz Pforr[22].
- Nazarene movement comprises Carl Joseph Begas[23].
- July 10, 1809 marks the founding of Nazarene movement[24].
- Nazarene movement began on July 10, 1809[25].
- Nazarene movement's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Nazarene movement[26].
- Nazarene movement's described by source is recorded as Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary[27].
Body
Founding
Founders include Johann Friedrich Overbeck[6], Franz Pforr[7], Ludwig Vogel[8], Johann Konrad Hottinger[9], Joseph Sutter[10], and Joseph Wintergerst[11]. July 10, 1809 marks the founding of Nazarene movement[24].
Identity
Nazarene movement's official name is recorded as {'lang': 'de', 'text': 'Lukasbrüder'}[28]. It followed Classicism[14]. It was followed by Romanticism[15].
Why It Matters
Nazarene movement draws 584 Wikipedia views per month (art_movement category, ranking #74 of 334).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 23 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[29] It is known by 27 alternative names across languages and contexts.[30]