San Gennaro all’Olmo, Naples
0 sources
San Gennaro all’Olmo, Naples
Summary
San Gennaro all’Olmo, Naples is a church building[1]. It ranks in the top 3% of church_building entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (2 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- San Gennaro all’Olmo, Naples's religion is recorded as Catholic Church[3].
- San Gennaro all’Olmo, Naples's religion is recorded as Catholicism[4].
- San Gennaro all’Olmo, Naples is located in Naples[5].
- San Gennaro all’Olmo, Naples is in the country of Italy[6].
- San Gennaro all’Olmo, Naples's image is recorded as Facciata Olmo.JPG[7].
- San Gennaro all’Olmo, Naples's instance of is recorded as church building[8].
- Januarius is named after San Gennaro all’Olmo, Naples[9].
- San Gennaro all’Olmo, Naples's architectural style is recorded as baroque architecture[10].
- San Gennaro all’Olmo, Naples's Commons category is recorded as San Gennaro all'Olmo (Naples)[11].
- +0700-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of San Gennaro all’Olmo, Naples[12].
- San Gennaro all’Olmo, Naples's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 40.84958, 'lon': 14.25829}[13].
- San Gennaro all’Olmo, Naples's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/01112gjj[14].
- San Gennaro all’Olmo, Naples's diocese is recorded as Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Naples[15].
- San Gennaro all’Olmo, Naples's dedicated to is recorded as Januarius[16].
- San Gennaro all’Olmo, Naples's Wiki Loves Monuments ID is recorded as 15F8390161[17].
- San Gennaro all’Olmo, Naples's BeWeb church ID is recorded as 65906[18].
- San Gennaro all’Olmo, Naples's OpenStreetMap way ID is recorded as 270655468[19].
Body
Personal Life
Religious affiliations include Catholic Church[3], a Christian denomination[20], in Vatican City[21], founded in 0001[22], headquartered in Vatican City[23] and Catholicism[4], a Christian denominational family[24], founded in 1054[25].
Why It Matters
San Gennaro all’Olmo, Naples ranks in the top 3% of church_building entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (2 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[26]