Tomb of Pope Julius II
0 sources
Tomb of Pope Julius II
Summary
Tomb of Pope Julius II is a tomb[1]. It ranks in the top 6% of tomb entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (544 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Tomb of Pope Julius II is the creator of Michelangelo[3].
- Tomb of Pope Julius II is in the country of Italy[4].
- Tomb of Pope Julius II's instance of is recorded as tomb[5].
- Tomb of Pope Julius II is associated with the High Renaissance movement[6].
- Tomb of Pope Julius II's genre is religious sculpture as genre[7].
- Tomb of Pope Julius II's depicts is recorded as Moses[8].
- Tomb of Pope Julius II's depicts is recorded as Rachel[9].
- Tomb of Pope Julius II's depicts is recorded as Leah[10].
- Tomb of Pope Julius II is made of marble[11].
- Tomb of Pope Julius II is made of Carrara marble[12].
- Tomb of Pope Julius II's collection is recorded as San Pietro in Vincoli[13].
- Tomb of Pope Julius II took place at San Pietro in Vincoli[14].
- Tomb of Pope Julius II's Commons category is recorded as Grave for Julius II by Michelangelo Buonarroti[15].
- Tomb of Pope Julius II comprises statue[16].
- Tomb of Pope Julius II's catalog code is recorded as S15[17].
- 1505 marks the founding of Tomb of Pope Julius II[18].
- Tomb of Pope Julius II's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 41.893861111111, 'lon': 12.493419444444}[19].
- Tomb of Pope Julius II's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Tomb of Pope Julius II[20].
- Tomb of Pope Julius II's contains is recorded as Julius II[21].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Tomb of Pope Julius II is the creator of Michelangelo[3].
Publication
Tomb of Pope Julius II's genre is religious sculpture as genre[7].
Subject and Themes
Tomb of Pope Julius II is associated with the High Renaissance movement[6].
Material and Period
Recorded made from material include marble[11] and Carrara marble[12]. Tomb of Pope Julius II took place at San Pietro in Vincoli[14].
Why It Matters
Tomb of Pope Julius II ranks in the top 6% of tomb entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (544 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 10 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[22]