Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q5128474> ?p ?o }
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- Q5128474 subject Q7333992.
- Q5128474 subject Q8259417.
- Q5128474 subject Q8373186.
- Q5128474 subject Q8466879.
- Q5128474 subject Q8513944.
- Q5128474 subject Q8518082.
- Q5128474 subject Q8555066.
- Q5128474 subject Q8583391.
- Q5128474 subject Q8718503.
- Q5128474 abstract "Clatchard Craig was a Pictish hill-fort located near Newburgh in Fife, Scotland.The fort of Clatchard Craig was located on a hill of the same name by the Tay. A human presence on the site has been identified from the neolithic period onward and the fort itself was occupied from the sixth century AD until at least the eighth century.It stood close to several places which were centres of secular and religious power during the early Middle Ages including Abernethy, Forteviot, Scone and Moncreiffe. As such it seems to have been an important stronghold of the Picts.While occupied as a fortress, it consisted of a series of six ramparts surrounding a building on the summit of the hill. The high status of the site was indicated by the presence of fine metalworking activity within its perimeter. The fort's walls were vitrified at some point suggesting that the site had once been destroyed by fire. The date of this burning is unknown.In the late twentieth century AD Clatchard Craig was entirely destroyed by quarrying for aggregate authorised by the British Ministry of Transport.The former site of the fort, now privately owned, remains a quarry.".
- Q5128474 thumbnail Clatchard_Craig_1932.jpg?width=300.
- Q5128474 wikiPageWikiLink Q102891.
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- Q5128474 wikiPageWikiLink Q7333992.
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- Q5128474 wikiPageWikiLink Q8259417.
- Q5128474 wikiPageWikiLink Q8373186.
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- Q5128474 point "56.3463 -3.2252".
- Q5128474 type SpatialThing.
- Q5128474 comment "Clatchard Craig was a Pictish hill-fort located near Newburgh in Fife, Scotland.The fort of Clatchard Craig was located on a hill of the same name by the Tay. A human presence on the site has been identified from the neolithic period onward and the fort itself was occupied from the sixth century AD until at least the eighth century.It stood close to several places which were centres of secular and religious power during the early Middle Ages including Abernethy, Forteviot, Scone and Moncreiffe.".
- Q5128474 label "Clatchard Craig".
- Q5128474 lat "56.3463".
- Q5128474 long "-3.2252".
- Q5128474 depiction Clatchard_Craig_1932.jpg.