Sultan Bayezid II Complex
0 sources
Sultan Bayezid II Complex
Summary
Sultan Bayezid II Complex is a külliye[1]. It draws 16 Wikipedia views per month (k_lliye category, ranking #6 of 8).[2]
Key Facts
- Sultan Bayezid II Complex is located in Edirne Province[3].
- Sultan Bayezid II Complex is in the country of Turkey[4].
- Sultan Bayezid II Complex's image is recorded as 20120913 Bayezid II Kulliye Edirne Turkey.jpg[5].
- Sultan Bayezid II Complex's instance of is recorded as külliye[6].
- Sultan Bayezid II Complex's instance of is recorded as mosque[7].
- Sultan Bayezid II Complex's architect is recorded as Mimar Hayruddin[8].
- Sultan Bayezid II Complex's architectural style is recorded as Islamic architecture[9].
- Sultan Bayezid II Complex's architectural style is recorded as Ottoman architecture[10].
- Sultan Bayezid II Complex's has use is recorded as Bimarestan[11].
- Sultan Bayezid II Complex's Commons category is recorded as Complex of Sultan Bayezid II[12].
- Sultan Bayezid II Complex's occupant is recorded as Bayezid II Külliye Health Museum[13].
- Sultan Bayezid II Complex's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 41.685861111111, 'lon': 26.544105555556}[14].
- Sultan Bayezid II Complex's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0dv2vx[15].
- Sultan Bayezid II Complex's heritage designation is recorded as Tentative World Heritage Site[16].
- Sultan Bayezid II Complex's World Heritage criteria is recorded as (ii)[17].
- Sultan Bayezid II Complex's World Heritage criteria is recorded as (iv)[18].
- Sultan Bayezid II Complex's World Heritage criteria is recorded as (vi)[19].
- Sultan Bayezid II Complex's World Heritage Tentative List ID is recorded as 6117[20].
- Sultan Bayezid II Complex's TDV Encyclopedia of Islam ID is recorded as beyazit-ii-camii-ve-kulliyesi--edirne[21].
Why It Matters
Sultan Bayezid II Complex draws 16 Wikipedia views per month (k_lliye category, ranking #6 of 8).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[22] It is known by 4 alternative names across languages and contexts.[23]