Maulbronn Monastery
0 sources
Maulbronn Monastery
Summary
Maulbronn Monastery is a monastery[1]. It ranks in the top 7% of monastery entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (236 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Maulbronn Monastery is located in Maulbronn[3].
- Maulbronn Monastery is in the country of Germany[4].
- Maulbronn Monastery's instance of is recorded as monastery[5].
- Maulbronn Monastery's instance of is recorded as museum[6].
- Maulbronn Monastery is used for hospital[7].
- Maulbronn Monastery's Commons category is recorded as Maulbronn Monastery complex[8].
- Maulbronn Monastery's patron saint is recorded as Mary[9].
- 1147 marks the founding of Maulbronn Monastery[10].
- Maulbronn Monastery's religious order is recorded as Cistercians[11].
- Maulbronn Monastery's mother house is recorded as Neubourg Abbey[12].
- Maulbronn Monastery's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 49.0011, 'lon': 8.8129}[13].
- Maulbronn Monastery's official website is recorded as http://www.kloster-maulbronn.de/[14].
- Maulbronn Monastery's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Maulbronn Monastery complex[15].
- Maulbronn Monastery's described by source is recorded as Q135220125[16].
- Maulbronn Monastery's affiliation is recorded as Cistercians[17].
- Maulbronn Monastery's heritage designation is recorded as World Heritage Site[18].
- Maulbronn Monastery's native label is recorded as {'lang': 'de', 'text': 'Kloster Maulbronn'}[19].
- Maulbronn Monastery's World Heritage criteria is recorded as (ii)[20].
- Maulbronn Monastery's World Heritage criteria is recorded as (iv)[21].
- Maulbronn Monastery's category for maps or plans is recorded as Category:Maps of Maulbronn Monastery complex[22].
- Maulbronn Monastery's research project that contributed to this data set is recorded as Archiater[23].
Body
Founding
1147 marks the founding of Maulbronn Monastery[10].
Why It Matters
Maulbronn Monastery ranks in the top 7% of monastery entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (236 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 26 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[24] It is known by 14 alternative names across languages and contexts.[25]