pornocracy
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pornocracy
Summary
pornocracy is a social influence[1]. pornocracy draws 2 Wikipedia views per month (social_influence category, ranking #5 of 3).[2]
Key Facts
- pornocracy's image is recorded as Félicien Rops - Pornokratès - 1878 (2).jpg[3].
- pornocracy's said to be the same as is recorded as Saeculum obscurum[4].
- pornocracy's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/02plryq[5].
- pornocracy's topic's main category is recorded as Q20923069[6].
- pornocracy's described by source is recorded as Yuzhakov Big Encyclopedia[7].
- pornocracy's Treccani ID is recorded as pornocratico_(altro)[8].
Why It Matters
pornocracy draws 2 Wikipedia views per month (social_influence category, ranking #5 of 3).[2] pornocracy has Wikipedia articles in 10 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[9] pornocracy is known by 9 alternative names across languages and contexts.[10]
pornocracy has been cited as an influence by John XII[11], a Catholic priest[12], 0937–0964[13]; Sergius III[14], a politician[15], 0860–0911[16], of Papal States[17]; Lando[18], a Catholic priest[19], 0900–0914[20]; John X[21], a Catholic priest[22], 0860–0929[23], of Papal States[24]; John XI[25], a Catholic priest[26], 0910–0936[27]; and Leo VI[28], a Catholic priest[29], 0880–0928[30].
FAQs
Who did pornocracy influence?
pornocracy has been cited as an influence by John XII[11], Sergius III[14], Lando[18], and John X[21].