Sisters of Saint Elizabeth
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Sisters of Saint Elizabeth
Summary
Sisters of Saint Elizabeth is a Christian missionary society[1]. It draws 26 Wikipedia views per month (christian_missionary_society category, ranking #14 of 28).[2]
Key Facts
- Sisters of Saint Elizabeth's field of work was Catholicism[3].
- Sisters of Saint Elizabeth's instance of is recorded as Christian missionary society[4].
- Sisters of Saint Elizabeth's instance of is recorded as Catholic religious institute[5].
- Sisters of Saint Elizabeth's founder is recorded as Maria Merkert[6].
- Elizabeth of Hungary is named after Sisters of Saint Elizabeth[7].
- Sisters of Saint Elizabeth's Commons category is recorded as Sisters of Saint Elizabeth[8].
- 1842 marks the founding of Sisters of Saint Elizabeth[9].
- Sisters of Saint Elizabeth's parent organization or unit is recorded as Catholic Church[10].
- Sisters of Saint Elizabeth's official website is recorded as http://nowa.elzbietanki.pl/[11].
- Sisters of Saint Elizabeth's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Sisters of Saint Elizabeth[12].
- Sisters of Saint Elizabeth's owner of is recorded as Schengen Castle[13].
- Sisters of Saint Elizabeth's different from is recorded as Order of the Sisters of Saint Elisabeth[14].
- Sisters of Saint Elizabeth's operating area is recorded as German New Guinea[15].
- Sisters of Saint Elizabeth's operating area is recorded as Caroline Islands[16].
- Sisters of Saint Elizabeth's operating area is recorded as Mariana Islands[17].
Body
Founding
Sisters of Saint Elizabeth's founder is recorded as Maria Merkert[6]. 1842 marks the founding of it[9].
Operations
Sisters of Saint Elizabeth's parent organization or unit is recorded as Catholic Church[10].
Industry
Sisters of Saint Elizabeth's field of work was Catholicism[3].
Why It Matters
Sisters of Saint Elizabeth draws 26 Wikipedia views per month (christian_missionary_society category, ranking #14 of 28).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 8 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[18] It is known by 24 alternative names across languages and contexts.[19]