Saint John the Baptist
painting by Ugolino di Nerio, Santa Croce Altar
Press Enter · cited answer in seconds
0 sources
Saint John the Baptist
Summary
Saint John the Baptist is a painting[1].
Key Facts
- Saint John the Baptist is the creator of Ugolino di Nerio[2].
- Saint John the Baptist's religion is recorded as Christianity[3].
- Saint John the Baptist's image is recorded as Ugolino di Nerio - panel from the Santa Croce Altar John the Baptist - Gemäldegalerie Berlin.jpg[4].
- Saint John the Baptist's instance of is recorded as painting[5].
- Saint John the Baptist's owned by is recorded as Kaiser Friedrich Museumsverein (KFMV)[6].
- Saint John the Baptist's owned by is recorded as Cyril Baldwin Harcourt[7].
- Saint John the Baptist's genre is recorded as religious art[8].
- Saint John the Baptist's depicts is recorded as John the Baptist[9].
- Saint John the Baptist's collection is recorded as Gemäldegalerie Berlin[10].
- Saint John the Baptist's inventory number is recorded as 1635/1[11].
- Saint John the Baptist's location is recorded as Gemäldegalerie Berlin[12].
- Saint John the Baptist's location is recorded as Paintings in the Gemäldegalerie, Berlin - Room 41[13].
- Saint John the Baptist's part of is recorded as Santa Croce Altarpiece[14].
- Saint John the Baptist's catalog code is recorded as 180[15].
- +1325-01-01T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Saint John the Baptist[16].
- Saint John the Baptist's main subject is recorded as John the Baptist[17].
- Saint John the Baptist's described at URL is recorded as https://smb.museum-digital.de/object/60881[18].
- Saint John the Baptist's title is recorded as Heilige Johannes der Täufer[19].
- Saint John the Baptist's copyright status is recorded as public domain[20].
- Saint John the Baptist's SMB-digital ID is recorded as 2562740[21].
- Saint John the Baptist's SMB-digital ID is recorded as 864423[22].
Body
Works and Contributions
Saint John the Baptist is the creator of Ugolino di Nerio[2].
Personal Life
Saint John the Baptist's religion is recorded as Christianity[3].