Saint Hilarion monastery
0 sources
Saint Hilarion monastery
Summary
Saint Hilarion monastery is a religious complex[1]. It draws 39 Wikipedia views per month (religious_complex category, ranking #3 of 10).[2]
Key Facts
- Saint Hilarion monastery's religion is recorded as Christianity[3].
- Saint Hilarion monastery is located in Deir al-Balah Governorate[4].
- Saint Hilarion monastery is in the country of Palestine[5].
- Saint Hilarion monastery's image is recorded as GAZA003.jpg[6].
- Saint Hilarion monastery's instance of is recorded as religious complex[7].
- Saint Hilarion monastery's instance of is recorded as monastery[8].
- Saint Hilarion monastery's part of is recorded as Tell Umm el-'Amr[9].
- Saint Hilarion monastery was dissolved in +0614-00-00T00:00:00Z[10].
- Saint Hilarion monastery's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 31.4472, 'lon': 34.3663}[11].
- Saint Hilarion monastery's World Heritage Site ID is recorded as 1749[12].
- Saint Hilarion monastery's heritage designation is recorded as part of UNESCO World Heritage Site[13].
- Saint Hilarion monastery's director of archaeological fieldwork is recorded as Ayman Hassouna[14].
- Saint Hilarion monastery's state of conservation is recorded as ruin, foundations only[15].
- Saint Hilarion monastery's state of conservation is recorded as demolished or destroyed[16].
- Saint Hilarion monastery's Kulturenvanteri monument ID is recorded as 420225[17].
Body
Geography
Saint Hilarion monastery is in the country of Palestine[5]. It is located in Deir al-Balah Governorate[4]. Its part of is recorded as Tell Umm el-'Amr[9].
Designation and Status
Recorded instance of include religious complex[7] and monastery[8]. Saint Hilarion monastery's heritage designation is recorded as part of UNESCO World Heritage Site[13]. Its religion is recorded as Christianity[3].
Why It Matters
Saint Hilarion monastery draws 39 Wikipedia views per month (religious_complex category, ranking #3 of 10).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 9 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[18]