St. Jakobi
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St. Jakobi
Summary
St. Jakobi is a church building[1]. It ranks in the top 2% of church_building entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (72 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- St. Jakobi's religion is recorded as Lutheranism[3].
- St. Jakobi is located in Lübeck's Old City[4].
- St. Jakobi is in the country of Germany[5].
- St. Jakobi's instance of is recorded as church building[6].
- St. James the Elder is named after St. Jakobi[7].
- St. Jakobi's architectural style is recorded as Brick Gothic[8].
- St. Jakobi is made of brick[9].
- St. Jakobi's Commons category is recorded as St. Jakobi, Lübeck[10].
- 1227 marks the founding of St. Jakobi[11].
- St. Jakobi's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 53.8709, 'lon': 10.689}[12].
- St. Jakobi's located on street is recorded as Jakobikirchhof[13].
- St. Jakobi's located on street is recorded as Koberg[14].
- St. Jakobi's diocese is recorded as Evangelical Lutheran Church in Northern Germany[15].
- St. Jakobi's official website is recorded as http://www.luebeck.de/tourismus/sightseeing/sehenswuerdigkeiten/kirchen/jakobikirche.html[16].
- St. Jakobi's heritage designation is recorded as cultural heritage monument in Germany[17].
- St. Jakobi's date of official opening is recorded as 1334[18].
- St. Jakobi's height is recorded as {'unit': 'Q11573', 'amount': '+112.04'}[19].
- St. Jakobi's Christian liturgical rite is recorded as Evangelical Lutheran Church in Northern Germany[20].
Body
Geography
St. Jakobi is in the country of Germany[5]. It is located in Lübeck's Old City[4].
Designation and Status
St. Jakobi's instance of is recorded as church building[6]. Its heritage designation is recorded as cultural heritage monument in Germany[17]. Its religion is recorded as Lutheranism[3].
History and Context
1227 marks the founding of St. Jakobi[11]. St. James the Elder is named after it[7].
Why It Matters
St. Jakobi ranks in the top 2% of church_building entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (72 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 8 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[21]