Difference between revisions of "Small Theatre [Pompeii] (Q9741)"

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Theatre building in Pompeii, Italy

(‎Created claim: Wikidata instance (P13): Q1143046)
(‎Added [en-gb] label: Small Theatre)
 
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label / en-gblabel / en-gb
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Small Theatre
aliases / en / 0aliases / en / 0
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Odeon
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Odeon
Property / Carthalia ID
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Property / Carthalia ID: 2415 / rank
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Normal rank
Property / Preservation state
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Property / Preservation state: extant building / rank
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Normal rank
Property / Preservation state
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Property / Preservation state: Disused / rank
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Normal rank
Property / Census Italia 1968 ID
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76-11
Property / Census Italia 1968 ID: 76-11 / rank
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Normal rank
Property / Note
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Ancient Roman concert hall, built ca. 80 BC. Originally roofed, it was used for music concerts and poetry recitals. Destroyed by the violent eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 7 AD. Also known as Teatro Piccolo. Ca. 1300 seats. (English)
Property / Note: Ancient Roman concert hall, built ca. 80 BC. Originally roofed, it was used for music concerts and poetry recitals. Destroyed by the violent eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 7 AD. Also known as Teatro Piccolo. Ca. 1300 seats. (English) / rank
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Normal rank
Property / Note: Ancient Roman concert hall, built ca. 80 BC. Originally roofed, it was used for music concerts and poetry recitals. Destroyed by the violent eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 7 AD. Also known as Teatro Piccolo. Ca. 1300 seats. (English) / qualifier
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Latest revision as of 15:11, 14 January 2026

Theatre building in Pompeii, Italy
  • Small Theatre
  • Odeon
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Small Theatre [Pompeii]
Theatre building in Pompeii, Italy
  • Small Theatre
  • Odeon

Statements

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40°44'55.874"N, 14°29'20.353"E
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Odeón, Pompeya. 02.JPG
5,184 × 3,456; 4.7 MB
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Pompeii Odeion plan.jpg
476 × 438; 59 KB
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Ancient Roman concert hall, built ca. 80 BC. Originally roofed, it was used for music concerts and poetry recitals. Destroyed by the violent eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 7 AD. Also known as Teatro Piccolo. Ca. 1300 seats. (English)
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Pompeii Odeum (modern Pompeii, Italy). Cavea width: 34.8 m, orchestra width: 15.3 m; ca. 75 BCE. (English)
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199 BCEGregorian
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1,850
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80 BCEGregorian
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76-11
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Timeline

 

Wikidata