The Three Apples
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The Three Apples
Summary
The Three Apples is a narrative[1]. It draws 74 Wikipedia views per month (narrative category, ranking #8 of 25).[2]
Key Facts
- The Three Apples's image is recorded as 1001 Nacht Seite 112.jpg[3].
- The Three Apples's instance of is recorded as narrative[4].
- The Three Apples's instance of is recorded as Volksmärchen[5].
- The Three Apples's part of is recorded as One Thousand and One Nights[6].
- The Three Apples's Commons category is recorded as The Three Apples[7].
- The Three Apples's language of work or name is recorded as French[8].
- The Three Apples's has part is recorded as Noureddin Ali of Cairo and His Son Bedreddin Hassan[9].
- The Three Apples's has part is recorded as The Story of the Lady that was Murder’d, and of the Young Man her Husband[10].
- The Three Apples's publication date is recorded as +1704-00-00T00:00:00Z[11].
- The Three Apples's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0btnl[12].
- The Three Apples's characters is recorded as Harun al-Rashid[13].
- The Three Apples's characters is recorded as Ja'far ibn Yahya[14].
- The Three Apples's characters is recorded as Badr al-Din[15].
- The Three Apples's characters is recorded as Nur al-Din[16].
- The Three Apples's has edition or translation is recorded as Les Trois Pommes[17].
- The Three Apples's has edition or translation is recorded as The Three Apples[18].
- The Three Apples's has edition or translation is recorded as The Three Apples[19].
- The Three Apples's has edition or translation is recorded as The Three Apples[20].
- The Three Apples's narrative location is recorded as Tigris[21].
- The Three Apples's narrative location is recorded as Basra[22].
- The Three Apples's narrative location is recorded as Baghdad[23].
- The Three Apples's narrative location is recorded as Abbasid Samarra[24].
- The Three Apples's published in is recorded as Les Mille et Une Nuits[25].
- The Three Apples's present in work is recorded as Oglaf[26].
- The Three Apples's title is recorded as {'lang': 'ar', 'text': 'التفاحات الثلاثة'}[27].
Body
Geography
The Three Apples's part of is recorded as One Thousand and One Nights[6].
Designation and Status
Recorded instance of include narrative[4] and Volksmärchen[5].
Why It Matters
The Three Apples draws 74 Wikipedia views per month (narrative category, ranking #8 of 25).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 3 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]