St. Knut's Day
0 sources
St. Knut's Day
Summary
St. Knut's Day is a Christian holy day[1]. It draws 16 Wikipedia views per month (christian_holy_day category, ranking #26 of 32).[2]
Key Facts
- St. Knut's Day's image is recorded as Knut Lavard.jpg[3].
- St. Knut's Day's instance of is recorded as Christian holy day[4].
- Canute Lavard is named after St. Knut's Day[5].
- St. Knut's Day's part of is recorded as Christmas and holiday season[6].
- St. Knut's Day's Commons category is recorded as Saint Canute's Day[7].
- St. Knut's Day's country of origin is recorded as Finland[8].
- St. Knut's Day's commemorates is recorded as Canute Lavard[9].
- St. Knut's Day's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/04z35c[10].
- St. Knut's Day's day in year for periodic occurrence is recorded as January 13[11].
- St. Knut's Day's indigenous to is recorded as Kustavi[12].
- St. Knut's Day's indigenous to is recorded as Laitila[13].
- St. Knut's Day's indigenous to is recorded as Satakunta[14].
- St. Knut's Day's indigenous to is recorded as Taivassalo[15].
- St. Knut's Day's indigenous to is recorded as Uusikaupunki[16].
- St. Knut's Day's indigenous to is recorded as Southwest Finland[17].
- St. Knut's Day's intangible cultural heritage status is recorded as Wiki-inventory for living heritage[18].
- St. Knut's Day's Great Norwegian Encyclopedia ID is recorded as tjuendedagen[19].
- St. Knut's Day's maintained by WikiProject is recorded as WikiProject Intangible Cultural Heritage[20].
Why It Matters
St. Knut's Day draws 16 Wikipedia views per month (christian_holy_day category, ranking #26 of 32).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 10 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[21]