Our Lady, Star of the Sea
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Our Lady, Star of the Sea
Summary
Our Lady, Star of the Sea is a titles of Mary, mother of Jesus[1]. It draws 616 Wikipedia views per month (titles_of_mary_mother_of_jesus category, ranking #10 of 80).[2]
Key Facts
- Our Lady, Star of the Sea's image is recorded as Statue of Santa Maria del Mars.jpg[3].
- Our Lady, Star of the Sea's instance of is recorded as titles of Mary, mother of Jesus[4].
- Our Lady, Star of the Sea's Commons category is recorded as Our Lady, Star of the Sea[5].
- Our Lady, Star of the Sea's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/027s1bp[6].
- Our Lady, Star of the Sea's native label is recorded as {'lang': 'la', 'text': 'Stella Maris'}[7].
- Our Lady, Star of the Sea's Google Knowledge Graph ID is recorded as /g/11h1j2zl31[8].
- Our Lady, Star of the Sea's domain of saint or deity is recorded as Apostleship of the Sea[9].
Body
Designation and Status
Our Lady, Star of the Sea's instance of is recorded as titles of Mary, mother of Jesus[4].
Cultural Significance
Things named for Our Lady, Star of the Sea include Shrine of the Virgin of the Rosary of Pompei[10], a minor basilica[11], in Italy[12], founded in 1876[13]; Stella Maris Church[14], a church building[15], in Malta[16], founded in 1877[17]; Roman Catholic Diocese of Stella Maris[18], a diocese of the Catholic Church[19], in Dominican Republic[20], founded in 2025[21], headquartered in Santo Domingo Este[22]; and Maristella Porto Conte[23], a frazione[24], in Italy[25].
Why It Matters
Our Lady, Star of the Sea draws 616 Wikipedia views per month (titles_of_mary_mother_of_jesus category, ranking #10 of 80).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 16 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[26] It is known by 26 alternative names across languages and contexts.[27]
Entities named for it include Shrine of the Virgin of the Rosary of Pompei[10], a minor basilica[11], in Italy[12], founded in 1876[13]; Stella Maris Church[14], a church building[15], in Malta[16], founded in 1877[17]; Roman Catholic Diocese of Stella Maris[18], a diocese of the Catholic Church[19], in Dominican Republic[20], founded in 2025[21], headquartered in Santo Domingo Este[22]; and Maristella Porto Conte[23], a frazione[24], in Italy[25].