Roman Temple of Évora
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Roman Temple of Évora
Summary
Roman Temple of Évora is a Roman temple[1]. It draws 256 Wikipedia views per month (roman_temple category, ranking #11 of 60).[2]
Key Facts
- Roman Temple of Évora is located in União das Freguesias de Évora (São Mamede, Sé, São Pedro e Santo Antão)[3].
- Roman Temple of Évora is in the country of Portugal[4].
- Roman Temple of Évora's instance of is recorded as Roman temple[5].
- Roman Temple of Évora's instance of is recorded as Roman archaeological site[6].
- Roman Temple of Évora's instance of is recorded as cultural heritage[7].
- Roman Temple of Évora's instance of is recorded as ancient Roman structure[8].
- Roman Temple of Évora's instance of is recorded as tourist attraction[9].
- Roman Temple of Évora's instance of is recorded as tourist destination[10].
- Roman Temple of Évora's architectural style is recorded as ancient Roman architecture[11].
- Roman Temple of Évora took place at Lusitania[12].
- Roman Temple of Évora is part of Centro Histórico de Évora[13].
- Roman Temple of Évora's Commons category is recorded as Templo Romano de Évora[14].
- Roman Temple of Évora's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 38.572647, 'lon': -7.90729}[15].
- Roman Temple of Évora's Commons gallery is recorded as Templo romano de Évora[16].
- Roman Temple of Évora's heritage designation is recorded as National Monument of Portugal[17].
Body
Geography
Roman Temple of Évora is in the country of Portugal[4]. It is located in União das Freguesias de Évora (São Mamede, Sé, São Pedro e Santo Antão)[3]. It is part of Centro Histórico de Évora[13].
Designation and Status
Recorded instance of include Roman temple[5], Roman archaeological site[6], cultural heritage[7], ancient Roman structure[8], tourist attraction[9], and tourist destination[10]. Roman Temple of Évora's heritage designation is recorded as National Monument of Portugal[17].
Why It Matters
Roman Temple of Évora draws 256 Wikipedia views per month (roman_temple category, ranking #11 of 60).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 11 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[18] It is known by 10 alternative names across languages and contexts.[19]