Well of Moses
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Well of Moses
Summary
Well of Moses is a statue[1]. It draws 237 Wikipedia views per month (statue category, ranking #93 of 690).[2]
Key Facts
- Well of Moses is the creator of Claus Sluter[3].
- Well of Moses is the creator of Claus de Werve[4].
- Well of Moses is the creator of Jean Malouel[5].
- Well of Moses is located in Dijon[6].
- Well of Moses is in the country of France[7].
- Well of Moses's instance of is recorded as statue[8].
- Well of Moses's instance of is recorded as calvary[9].
- Well of Moses's genre is religious art[10].
- Well of Moses is made of limestone[11].
- Well of Moses is made of paint[12].
- Well of Moses's collection is recorded as Champmol[13].
- The location of Well of Moses was Champmol[14].
- Well of Moses is part of Champmol[15].
- Well of Moses's Commons category is recorded as Puits de Moïse[16].
- Well of Moses's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 47.32125, 'lon': 5.01665}[17].
- Well of Moses's described by source is recorded as Svensk uppslagsbok[18].
- Well of Moses's heritage designation is recorded as object classified as a historical monument[19].
- Well of Moses's title is recorded as {'lang': 'en', 'text': 'Well of Moses'}[20].
- Well of Moses's height is recorded as {'unit': 'Q11573', 'amount': '+7'}[21].
- Well of Moses's width is recorded as {'unit': 'Q11573', 'amount': '+2.6'}[22].
- Well of Moses's copyright status is recorded as public domain[23].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Created works include Claus Sluter[3], a sculptor[24], 1340–1406[25]; Claus de Werve[4], a sculptor[26], 1380–1439[27]; and Jean Malouel[5], a painter[28], 1370–1415[29], of France[30], specialised in painting[31].
Publication
Well of Moses's genre is religious art[10]. It is part of Champmol[15].
Material and Period
Recorded made from material include limestone[11] and paint[12]. The location of Well of Moses was Champmol[14].
Why It Matters
Well of Moses draws 237 Wikipedia views per month (statue category, ranking #93 of 690).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 10 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[32]