Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q2391603> ?p ?o }
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- Q2391603 subject Q16804975.
- Q2391603 subject Q16808800.
- Q2391603 subject Q16820020.
- Q2391603 subject Q8350304.
- Q2391603 subject Q8366324.
- Q2391603 subject Q8984991.
- Q2391603 subject Q8985123.
- Q2391603 subject Q9578559.
- Q2391603 abstract "The Inkerman Monastery of St. Clement is a cave monastery in a cliff rising near the mouth of the Black River, in the city of Inkerman, administered as part of the sea port of Sevastopol. It was founded in 1850 on the site of a medieval Byzantine monastery where the relics of St. Clement were supposedly kept before their removal to San Clemente by Saints Cyril and Methodius. The early Christians are supposed to have kept the relics in a grotto which could be visited only on the anniversary of his death. William Rubruck described it as a church "built by the hands of angels".The Byzantine monastery, probably founded in the 8th century by icon-venerators fleeing persecution in their homeland, had eight chapels of several storeys and an inn accessed by a stairway. The caves of Inkerman were surveyed by Peter Simon Pallas in 1793 and looted by the British in the 1850s. The Russians added two churches, commemorating the Borki Incident (1895) and the Crimean War (1905). The monastery was damaged by the Crimean Earthquake of 1927 and was closed between 1931 and 1991. During World War II the caves housed the officers of a Soviet army defending Sevastopol. Several churches were taken down by the Soviets.".
- Q2391603 thumbnail Inkerman-c1910.jpg?width=300.
- Q2391603 wikiPageWikiLink Q1018769.
- Q2391603 wikiPageWikiLink Q107679.
- Q2391603 wikiPageWikiLink Q12544.
- Q2391603 wikiPageWikiLink Q1312139.
- Q2391603 wikiPageWikiLink Q1420960.
- Q2391603 wikiPageWikiLink Q154860.
- Q2391603 wikiPageWikiLink Q155914.
- Q2391603 wikiPageWikiLink Q16804975.
- Q2391603 wikiPageWikiLink Q16808800.
- Q2391603 wikiPageWikiLink Q16820020.
- Q2391603 wikiPageWikiLink Q2044660.
- Q2391603 wikiPageWikiLink Q2379532.
- Q2391603 wikiPageWikiLink Q239925.
- Q2391603 wikiPageWikiLink Q254106.
- Q2391603 wikiPageWikiLink Q256020.
- Q2391603 wikiPageWikiLink Q260494.
- Q2391603 wikiPageWikiLink Q316083.
- Q2391603 wikiPageWikiLink Q362.
- Q2391603 wikiPageWikiLink Q385910.
- Q2391603 wikiPageWikiLink Q42887.
- Q2391603 wikiPageWikiLink Q51644.
- Q2391603 wikiPageWikiLink Q752183.
- Q2391603 wikiPageWikiLink Q7525.
- Q2391603 wikiPageWikiLink Q8350304.
- Q2391603 wikiPageWikiLink Q8366324.
- Q2391603 wikiPageWikiLink Q8984991.
- Q2391603 wikiPageWikiLink Q8985123.
- Q2391603 wikiPageWikiLink Q9578559.
- Q2391603 point "44.6037 33.60742222222222".
- Q2391603 type SpatialThing.
- Q2391603 comment "The Inkerman Monastery of St. Clement is a cave monastery in a cliff rising near the mouth of the Black River, in the city of Inkerman, administered as part of the sea port of Sevastopol. It was founded in 1850 on the site of a medieval Byzantine monastery where the relics of St. Clement were supposedly kept before their removal to San Clemente by Saints Cyril and Methodius.".
- Q2391603 label "Inkerman Cave Monastery".
- Q2391603 lat "44.6037".
- Q2391603 long "33.60742222222222".
- Q2391603 depiction Inkerman-c1910.jpg.