Yerevan Kiosk
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Yerevan Kiosk
Summary
Yerevan Kiosk is a pavilion[1].
Key Facts
- Yerevan Kiosk is located in Fatih[2].
- Yerevan Kiosk is located in Cankurtaran[3].
- Yerevan Kiosk is in the country of Turkey[4].
- Yerevan Kiosk's instance of is recorded as pavilion[5].
- Yerevan Kiosk's instance of is recorded as historic building[6].
- Yerevan Kiosk's architect is recorded as Architect Kasemi[7].
- Yerevan Kiosk's founder is recorded as Murad IV[8].
- Siege of Yerevan is named after Yerevan Kiosk[9].
- Yerevan Kiosk's architectural style is recorded as Ottoman architecture[10].
- Yerevan Kiosk took place at Topkapı Palace[11].
- Yerevan Kiosk is part of Historic Areas of Istanbul[12].
- Yerevan Kiosk is used for historic house museum[13].
- Yerevan Kiosk's Commons category is recorded as Revan Kiosk[14].
- 1635 marks the founding of Yerevan Kiosk[15].
- Yerevan Kiosk's coordinate location is recorded as {'globe': 'http://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q2', 'altitude': None, 'latitude': 41.013897, 'longitude': 28.984489, 'precision': 1e-05}[16].
- Yerevan Kiosk's located in/on physical feature is recorded as Marmara Region[17].
- Yerevan Kiosk's significant event is recorded as Patrona Halil revolt[18].
- Yerevan Kiosk's floors below ground is recorded as {'unit': '1', 'amount': '+1'}[19].
- Yerevan Kiosk's heritage designation is recorded as part of UNESCO World Heritage Site[20].
- Yerevan Kiosk's adjacent structure or building is recorded as Sacred Relics[21].
- Yerevan Kiosk's state of conservation is recorded as preserved[22].
Body
Geography
Yerevan Kiosk is in the country of Turkey[4]. Located in include Fatih[2], a municipality of Turkey[23], in Turkey[24], founded in 1930[25] and Cankurtaran[3], a mahalle[26], in Turkey[27]. It is part of Historic Areas of Istanbul[12].
Designation and Status
Recorded instance of include pavilion[5] and historic building[6]. Yerevan Kiosk's heritage designation is recorded as part of UNESCO World Heritage Site[20].
History and Context
1635 marks the founding of Yerevan Kiosk[15]. Siege of Yerevan is named after it[9].