Marble Throne
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Marble Throne
Summary
Marble Throne is a throne[1]. It draws 59 Wikipedia views per month (throne category, ranking #7 of 12).[2]
Key Facts
- Marble Throne is located in Tehran County[3].
- Marble Throne is in the country of Iran[4].
- Marble Throne's instance of is recorded as throne[5].
- Marble Throne's instance of is recorded as marble sculpture[6].
- Marble Throne's commissioned by is recorded as Fath-Ali Shah Qajar[7].
- Marble Throne is associated with the Qajar art movement[8].
- Marble Throne's depicts is recorded as man[9].
- Marble Throne's depicts is recorded as woman[10].
- Marble Throne's depicts is recorded as fairy[11].
- Marble Throne's depicts is recorded as demon[12].
- Marble Throne is made of marble[13].
- The location of Marble Throne was District 12[14].
- Marble Throne is part of Iwan of Marble Throne[15].
- Marble Throne is part of Golestan Palace[16].
- Marble Throne's Commons category is recorded as Marble Throne[17].
- Marble Throne's color is recorded as yellow[18].
- 1806 marks the founding of Marble Throne[19].
- Marble Throne's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 35.680277777777775, 'lon': 51.4195}[20].
- Solomon in Islam inspired Marble Throne[21].
- Marble Throne's heritage designation is recorded as Iranian National Heritage[22].
- Marble Throne's native label is recorded as {'lang': 'fa', 'text': 'تَختِ مَرمَر'}[23].
- Marble Throne's height is recorded as {'unit': 'Q174728', 'amount': '+100'}[24].
Body
Geography
Marble Throne is in the country of Iran[4]. It is located in Tehran County[3]. Part of include Iwan of it[15], a talar[25], in Iran[26] and Golestan Palace[16], a palace[27], in Iran[28].
Designation and Status
Recorded instance of include throne[5] and marble sculpture[6]. Marble Throne's heritage designation is recorded as Iranian National Heritage[22].
History and Context
1806 marks the founding of Marble Throne[19].
Why It Matters
Marble Throne draws 59 Wikipedia views per month (throne category, ranking #7 of 12).[2] It is known by 4 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]