Ponte Sisto
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Ponte Sisto
Summary
Ponte Sisto is a stone bridge[1]. It draws 60 Wikipedia views per month (stone_bridge category, ranking #17 of 66).[2]
Key Facts
- Ponte Sisto is located in Roma Capitale[3].
- Ponte Sisto is in the country of Italy[4].
- Ponte Sisto's image is recorded as Ponte Sisto Roma.jpg[5].
- Ponte Sisto's instance of is recorded as stone bridge[6].
- Ponte Sisto's instance of is recorded as road bridge[7].
- Ponte Sisto's instance of is recorded as arch bridge[8].
- Ponte Sisto's instance of is recorded as Ponte Romano[9].
- Ponte Sisto's instance of is recorded as Roman bridge[10].
- Ponte Sisto's architect is recorded as Baccio Pontelli[11].
- Ponte Sisto's commissioned by is recorded as Sixtus IV[12].
- Sixtus IV is named after Ponte Sisto[13].
- Ponte Sisto's crosses is recorded as Tiber[14].
- Ponte Sisto's made from material is recorded as rock[15].
- Ponte Sisto's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 242321459[16].
- Ponte Sisto's GND ID is recorded as 7500361-2[17].
- Ponte Sisto's Commons category is recorded as Ponte Sisto (Rome)[18].
- Ponte Sisto's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 41.892336, 'lon': 12.470794}[19].
- Ponte Sisto's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/04grjcm[20].
- Ponte Sisto's number of spans is recorded as {'amount': '+4'}[21].
- Ponte Sisto's heritage designation is recorded as Italian national heritage[22].
- Ponte Sisto's Pleiades ID is recorded as 726542221[23].
- Ponte Sisto's Digital Atlas of the Roman Empire ID is recorded as 39600[24].
- Ponte Sisto's length is recorded as {'unit': 'Q11573', 'amount': '+105'}[25].
- Ponte Sisto's Wiki Loves Monuments ID is recorded as 12H5010089[26].
- Ponte Sisto's next crossing upstream is recorded as Ponte Giuseppe Mazzini[27].
Body
Geography
Ponte Sisto is in the country of Italy[4]. It is located in Roma Capitale[3].
Physical Characteristics
Ponte Sisto's length is recorded as {'unit': 'Q11573', 'amount': '+105'}[25].
Designation and Status
Recorded instance of include stone bridge[6], road bridge[7], arch bridge[8], Ponte Romano[9], and Roman bridge[10]. Ponte Sisto's heritage designation is recorded as Italian national heritage[22].
History and Context
Sixtus IV is named after Ponte Sisto[13].
Why It Matters
Ponte Sisto draws 60 Wikipedia views per month (stone_bridge category, ranking #17 of 66).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 13 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28]