Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Skotino_cave> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 51 of
51
with 100 triples per page.
- Skotino_cave abstract "The Skotino cave (Greek: σπήλαιο Σκοτεινού) is one of the largest and more impressive caves among the many caves found in Crete.The cave lies high on a hill northwest of the village of Skotino, a few kilometers inland south of Gouves. It is also known as Agia Paraskevi cave from the church dedicated to Saint Paraskevi built on top of it. The cave is 160 meters deep and 36 meters wide. The first archaeological examination on the site were carried out by Arthur Evans, the well-known British archaeologist who unearthed and partially restored Knossos in the early 20th century. A more comprehensive exploration was carried out by French and Greek archaeologists in the 1960s. They found a considerable number of bronze and ceramic votive offerings, the oldest of them dating from the earliest Minoan periods, suggesting the cave was an important sacred shrine dedicated to a female fertility deity, presumably Britomartis. The cave was still used in Classical Greek and Roman eras, when the fertility goddess Artemis or her Roman equivalent Diana replaced the Minoan deity.".
- Skotino_cave thumbnail Skotino_cave_229L.jpg?width=300.
- Skotino_cave wikiPageID "24556446".
- Skotino_cave wikiPageLength "1948".
- Skotino_cave wikiPageOutDegree "19".
- Skotino_cave wikiPageRevisionID "673192201".
- Skotino_cave wikiPageWikiLink Artemis.
- Skotino_cave wikiPageWikiLink Arthur_Evans.
- Skotino_cave wikiPageWikiLink Britomartis.
- Skotino_cave wikiPageWikiLink Category:Ancient_caves_of_Greece.
- Skotino_cave wikiPageWikiLink Category:Landforms_of_Crete.
- Skotino_cave wikiPageWikiLink Category:Landforms_of_Heraklion_(regional_unit).
- Skotino_cave wikiPageWikiLink Category:Minoan_sites_in_Crete.
- Skotino_cave wikiPageWikiLink Category:Votive_offering.
- Skotino_cave wikiPageWikiLink Classical_Greece.
- Skotino_cave wikiPageWikiLink Crete.
- Skotino_cave wikiPageWikiLink Deity.
- Skotino_cave wikiPageWikiLink Diana_(mythology).
- Skotino_cave wikiPageWikiLink Gouves,_Greece.
- Skotino_cave wikiPageWikiLink Knossos.
- Skotino_cave wikiPageWikiLink Minoan_civilization.
- Skotino_cave wikiPageWikiLink Paraskevi_of_Rome.
- Skotino_cave wikiPageWikiLink Roman_Empire.
- Skotino_cave wikiPageWikiLink File:Skotino_cave_229L.jpg.
- Skotino_cave wikiPageWikiLinkText "Skotino cave".
- Skotino_cave wikiPageWikiLinkText "Skotino".
- Skotino_cave wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Coord.
- Skotino_cave wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Lang-el.
- Skotino_cave wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Pagenumbers.
- Skotino_cave wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Skotino_cave subject Category:Ancient_caves_of_Greece.
- Skotino_cave subject Category:Landforms_of_Crete.
- Skotino_cave subject Category:Landforms_of_Heraklion_(regional_unit).
- Skotino_cave subject Category:Minoan_sites_in_Crete.
- Skotino_cave subject Category:Votive_offering.
- Skotino_cave point "35.305 25.2974".
- Skotino_cave type Type.
- Skotino_cave type Site.
- Skotino_cave type Type.
- Skotino_cave type SpatialThing.
- Skotino_cave comment "The Skotino cave (Greek: σπήλαιο Σκοτεινού) is one of the largest and more impressive caves among the many caves found in Crete.The cave lies high on a hill northwest of the village of Skotino, a few kilometers inland south of Gouves. It is also known as Agia Paraskevi cave from the church dedicated to Saint Paraskevi built on top of it. The cave is 160 meters deep and 36 meters wide.".
- Skotino_cave label "Skotino cave".
- Skotino_cave sameAs Q7536414.
- Skotino_cave sameAs Caverna_de_Escoteino.
- Skotino_cave sameAs m.080n7_c.
- Skotino_cave sameAs Q7536414.
- Skotino_cave lat "35.305".
- Skotino_cave long "25.2974".
- Skotino_cave wasDerivedFrom Skotino_cave?oldid=673192201.
- Skotino_cave depiction Skotino_cave_229L.jpg.
- Skotino_cave isPrimaryTopicOf Skotino_cave.