Stuttgart Cathedral
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Stuttgart Cathedral
Summary
Stuttgart Cathedral is a co-cathedral[1]. It draws 15 Wikipedia views per month (co_cathedral category, ranking #11 of 80).[2]
Key Facts
- Stuttgart Cathedral's religion is recorded as Catholicism[3].
- Stuttgart Cathedral is located in Stuttgart-Mitte[4].
- Stuttgart Cathedral is in the country of Germany[5].
- Stuttgart Cathedral's image is recorded as Stuttgart-st eberhard.jpg[6].
- Stuttgart Cathedral's instance of is recorded as co-cathedral[7].
- Stuttgart Cathedral's architect is recorded as Hugo Schlösser[8].
- Stuttgart Cathedral's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 245812853[9].
- Stuttgart Cathedral's GND ID is recorded as 4362739-0[10].
- Stuttgart Cathedral's Commons category is recorded as Domkirche St. Eberhard (Stuttgart)[11].
- Stuttgart Cathedral's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 48.7797, 'lon': 9.18}[12].
- Stuttgart Cathedral's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0t52tz0[13].
- Stuttgart Cathedral's diocese is recorded as Roman Catholic Diocese of Rottenburg-Stuttgart[14].
- Stuttgart Cathedral's dedicated to is recorded as Eberhard of Salzburg[15].
- Stuttgart Cathedral's official website is recorded as http://www.steberhard.de[16].
- Stuttgart Cathedral's MusicBrainz place ID is recorded as d03afebd-1a46-422c-8ebf-366711096910[17].
- Stuttgart Cathedral's GCatholic church ID is recorded as 3230[18].
- Stuttgart Cathedral's Christian liturgical rite is recorded as Roman Rite[19].
- Stuttgart Cathedral's archINFORM project ID is recorded as 12495[20].
- Stuttgart Cathedral's image of interior is recorded as Right side - Nave - Domkirche St. Eberhard - Stuttgart - Germany 2017.jpg[21].
- Stuttgart Cathedral's category for the interior of the item is recorded as Category:Interior of Domkirche St. Eberhard (Stuttgart)[22].
Body
Personal Life
Stuttgart Cathedral's religion is recorded as Catholicism[3].
Why It Matters
Stuttgart Cathedral draws 15 Wikipedia views per month (co_cathedral category, ranking #11 of 80).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[23] It is known by 5 alternative names across languages and contexts.[24]