Pontifical Council for Culture
0 sources
Pontifical Council for Culture
Summary
Pontifical Council for Culture is a pontifical council[1]. It draws 68 Wikipedia views per month (pontifical_council category, ranking #6 of 12).[2]
Key Facts
- Pontifical Council for Culture's instance of is recorded as pontifical council[3].
- Pontifical Council for Culture's founder is recorded as John Paul II[4].
- Pontifical Council for Culture was followed by Dicastery for Culture and Education[5].
- Pontifical Council for Culture's child organization or unit is recorded as Vatican Cycling[6].
- Pontifical Council for Culture's child organization or unit is recorded as Vatican Athletics[7].
- Pontifical Council for Culture's Commons category is recorded as Pontifical Council for Culture[8].
- 1982 marks the founding of Pontifical Council for Culture[9].
- Pontifical Council for Culture was dissolved in June 5, 2022[10].
- Pontifical Council for Culture's official website is recorded as http://www.cultura.va[11].
- Pontifical Council for Culture's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Pontifical Council for Culture[12].
- Pontifical Council for Culture's replaces is recorded as Pontifical Council for Dialogue with Non-Believers[13].
- Pontifical Council for Culture's replaced by is recorded as Dicastery for Culture and Education[14].
Body
Founding
Pontifical Council for Culture's founder is recorded as John Paul II[4]. 1982 marks the founding of it[9].
Identity
Pontifical Council for Culture was followed by Dicastery for Culture and Education[5].
Operations
Subsidiaries include Vatican Cycling[6], a sports governing body[15], in Vatican City[16] and Vatican Athletics[7], a sports club[17], in Vatican City[18], founded in 2019[19], headquartered in Rome[20].
Dissolution
Pontifical Council for Culture was dissolved in June 5, 2022[10].
Why It Matters
Pontifical Council for Culture draws 68 Wikipedia views per month (pontifical_council category, ranking #6 of 12).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 14 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[21] It is known by 10 alternative names across languages and contexts.[22]