Women Gladiators
0 sources
Women Gladiators
Summary
Women Gladiators is a painting[1]. It ranks in the top 6% of painting entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (4 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Women Gladiators is the creator of Jusepe de Ribera[3].
- Women Gladiators's image is recorded as José de Ribera 026.jpg[4].
- Women Gladiators's instance of is recorded as painting[5].
- Women Gladiators's owned by is recorded as Ferdinand VII of Spain[6].
- Women Gladiators's movement is recorded as Baroque painting[7].
- Women Gladiators's depicts is recorded as gladiator[8].
- Women Gladiators's depicts is recorded as shield[9].
- Women Gladiators's depicts is recorded as halberd[10].
- Women Gladiators's depicts is recorded as sword[11].
- Women Gladiators's depicts is recorded as Alfonso d'Avalos[12].
- Women Gladiators's depicts is recorded as spear[13].
- Women Gladiators's made from material is recorded as oil paint[14].
- Women Gladiators's made from material is recorded as canvas[15].
- Women Gladiators's collection is recorded as Museo del Prado[16].
- Women Gladiators's inventory number is recorded as P001124[17].
- Women Gladiators's location is recorded as Museo del Prado[18].
- Women Gladiators's location is recorded as Royal Palace of Madrid[19].
- Women Gladiators's Commons category is recorded as Combate de mujeres (P001124)[20].
- Women Gladiators's country of origin is recorded as Spain[21].
- Women Gladiators's catalog code is recorded as 124[22].
- Women Gladiators's catalog code is recorded as s. n.[23].
- Women Gladiators's catalog code is recorded as ¿124?[24].
- Women Gladiators's catalog code is recorded as 545[25].
- Women Gladiators's catalog code is recorded as 988[26].
- +1636-01-01T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Women Gladiators[27].
Body
Works and Contributions
Women Gladiators is the creator of Jusepe de Ribera[3].
Why It Matters
Women Gladiators ranks in the top 6% of painting entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (4 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 9 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28]