Symbirsk Eparchy
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Symbirsk Eparchy
Summary
Symbirsk Eparchy is an Eastern Orthodox eparchy[1]. It has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- Symbirsk Eparchy's religion is recorded as Russian Orthodox Church[3].
- Symbirsk Eparchy is in the country of Russia[4].
- Symbirsk Eparchy's image is recorded as Возрожденная церковь 1.JPG[5].
- Symbirsk Eparchy's instance of is recorded as Eastern Orthodox eparchy[6].
- Symbirsk Eparchy's headquarters location is recorded as Ulyanovsk[7].
- Symbirsk Eparchy's part of is recorded as Metropolitanate of Simbirsk[8].
- Symbirsk Eparchy's Commons category is recorded as Symbirsk Eparchy[9].
- +1832-02-10T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Symbirsk Eparchy[10].
- Symbirsk Eparchy's official website is recorded as http://simbirsk.eparhia.ru[11].
- Symbirsk Eparchy's official website is recorded as https://mitropolia-simbirsk.ru/[12].
- Symbirsk Eparchy's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Symbirsk Eparchy[13].
- Symbirsk Eparchy's cathedral is recorded as Resurrection (St German) church, Ulyanovsk[14].
- Symbirsk Eparchy's Instagram username is recorded as simbmit[15].
- Symbirsk Eparchy's Facebook username is recorded as groups/352001262852641[16].
- Symbirsk Eparchy's YouTube channel ID is recorded as UCS8USoK9sXYVSb6MQGxczKw[17].
- Symbirsk Eparchy's Google Knowledge Graph ID is recorded as /g/11b41nctz[18].
- Symbirsk Eparchy's VK username is recorded as simbirskaya_mitropolia[19].
- Symbirsk Eparchy's Orthodox Encyclopedia ID is recorded as 2663040[20].
- Symbirsk Eparchy's number of viewers/listeners is recorded as {'amount': '+508255'}[21].
- Symbirsk Eparchy's YouTube handle is recorded as simbirskaya-eparchy[22].
Body
Founding
+1832-02-10T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Symbirsk Eparchy[10].
Identity
Symbirsk Eparchy's part of is recorded as Metropolitanate of Simbirsk[8].
Operations
Symbirsk Eparchy's headquarters location is recorded as Ulyanovsk[7].
Why It Matters
Symbirsk Eparchy has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2] It is known by 5 alternative names across languages and contexts.[23]