Porolissum
0 sources
Porolissum
Summary
Porolissum is an archaeological site[1]. Porolissum ranks in the top 7% of archaeological_site entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (39 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Porolissum is located in Sălaj County[3].
- Porolissum is in the country of Romania[4].
- Porolissum's image is recorded as Porolissum - Principia 02.jpg[5].
- Porolissum's instance of is recorded as archaeological site[6].
- Porolissum's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 242164277[7].
- Porolissum's location is recorded as Jac[8].
- Porolissum's Commons category is recorded as Porolissum[9].
- Porolissum's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 47.18056, 'lon': 23.22361}[10].
- Porolissum's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0c8mxl[11].
- Porolissum's heritage designation is recorded as Historic Monument[12].
- Porolissum's vici.org ID is recorded as 2154[13].
- Porolissum's Pleiades ID is recorded as 207361[14].
- Porolissum's Getty Thesaurus of Geographic Names ID is recorded as 6004778[15].
- Porolissum's Romania LMI code is recorded as SJ-I-s-A-04909[16].
- Porolissum's Digital Atlas of the Roman Empire ID is recorded as 21778[17].
- Porolissum's Trismegistos Geo ID is recorded as 30156[18].
- Porolissum's directions is recorded as {'lang': 'ro', 'text': '„Pomet”'}[19].
- Porolissum's RAN ID is recorded as 140734.08[20].
- Porolissum's image of design plans is recorded as Porolissum - Principia - Plan.svg[21].
- Porolissum's De Agostini ID is recorded as Porolisso[22].
- Porolissum's Hrvatska enciklopedija ID is recorded as 49552[23].
- Porolissum's ToposText place ID is recorded as 472232UPor[24].
Body
Geography
Porolissum is in the country of Romania[4]. Porolissum is located in Sălaj County[3].
Designation and Status
Porolissum's instance of is recorded as archaeological site[6]. Porolissum's heritage designation is recorded as Historic Monument[12].
Why It Matters
Porolissum ranks in the top 7% of archaeological_site entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (39 views/month).[2] Porolissum has Wikipedia articles in 12 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[25] Porolissum is known by 3 alternative names across languages and contexts.[26]