Palau Marc
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Palau Marc
Summary
Palau Marc is a palace[1].
Key Facts
- Palau Marc is located in Gothic Quarter[2].
- Palau Marc is in the country of Spain[3].
- Palau Marc's image is recorded as Barcelona. Palau Marc de Reus.jpg[4].
- Palau Marc's instance of is recorded as palace[5].
- Palau Marc's coat of arms image is recorded as Escut heràldic de Salvador de March (Arranz - Fuguet, 1987, p. 39).jpg[6].
- Palau Marc's owned by is recorded as Generalitat of Catalonia[7].
- Salvador de March i Bellver is named after Palau Marc[8].
- Francesc de March is named after Palau Marc[9].
- Joaquim de March i de Bassols is named after Palau Marc[10].
- Ferran de Miró i d'Ortafà is named after Palau Marc[11].
- Palau Marc's architectural style is recorded as Neoclassical architecture[12].
- Palau Marc's Commons category is recorded as Casa March de Reus[13].
- Palau Marc's occupant is recorded as Culture Department of the Generalitat of Catalonia[14].
- Palau Marc's coordinate location is recorded as {'globe': 'http://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q2', 'altitude': None, 'latitude': 41.3775, 'longitude': 2.176667, 'precision': 1e-05}[15].
- Palau Marc's significant event is recorded as construction[16].
- Palau Marc's heritage designation is recorded as Cultural Asset of Local Interest[17].
- Palau Marc's Inventari del Patrimoni Arquitectònic de Catalunya code is recorded as 40452[18].
- Palau Marc's Google Knowledge Graph ID is recorded as /g/11b73yltrz[19].
- Palau Marc's image of interior is recorded as Palau Marc Celobert.JPG[20].
- Palau Marc's street address is recorded as Rambla, 8[21].
- Palau Marc's Barcelona City Council Heritage Catalog ID is recorded as 599[22].
- Palau Marc's poblesdecatalunya.cat ID is recorded as 1829[23].
Body
Geography
Palau Marc is in the country of Spain[3]. It is located in Gothic Quarter[2].
Designation and Status
Palau Marc's instance of is recorded as palace[5]. Its heritage designation is recorded as Cultural Asset of Local Interest[17].
History and Context
Palau Marc's owned by is recorded as Generalitat of Catalonia[7]. Things named after include Salvador de March i Bellver[8], a politician[24], 1718–1787[25], of Spain[26]; Francesc de March[9], a merchant[27], 1738–1815[28], of Spain[29]; Joaquim de March i de Bassols[10], a merchant[30], 1767–1843[31], of Spain[32]; and Ferran de Miró i d'Ortafà[11], a land owner[33], 1839–1916[34].