Property talk:P10873

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Documentation

Mapping Museums ID
identifier for a UK museum existing in the 1960 to 2022 period, in Mapping Museums database
Associated itemMapping Museums (Q103036767)
Applicable "stated in" valueMapping Museums (Q103036767)
Data typeExternal identifier
Domainmuseum (Q33506), tourist attraction (Q570116), collection (Q2668072) or destination marketing organization (Q3689421)
Allowed valuesmm\.(?:domus|musa|ace|aim|aim82M|aim82NM|fcm|hha|hud|mald|MDN|mgs|misc|Mus70Cal|New|nimc|wiki)\.[A-Z]{0,2}\d{2,4}
ExampleScottish National Portrait Gallery (Q2441562)mm.domus.SC284
Fleetwood Museum (Q5458502)mm.domus.NW043
Wellcome Collection (Q7981191)mm.musa.373
Sourcehttps://museweb.dcs.bbk.ac.uk/allmus
Formatter URLhttps://museweb.dcs.bbk.ac.uk/Museum/$1
Related to country United Kingdom (Q145) (See 327 others) (United Kingdom (Q145))
Lists
Proposal discussionProposal discussion
Current uses
Total5,361
Main statement4,071 out of 4,191 (97% complete)75.9% of uses
Qualifier3<0.1% of uses
Reference1,28724% of uses
Search for values
[create Create a translatable help page (preferably in English) for this property to be included here]
Single value: this property generally contains a single value. (Help)
Exceptions are possible as rare values may exist. Exceptions can be specified using exception to constraint (P2303).
List of violations of this constraint: Database reports/Constraint violations/P10873#Single value, SPARQL
Distinct values: this property likely contains a value that is different from all other items. (Help)
Exceptions are possible as rare values may exist. Exceptions can be specified using exception to constraint (P2303).
List of violations of this constraint: Database reports/Constraint violations/P10873#Unique value, SPARQL (every item), SPARQL (by value)
Format “mm\.(?:domus|musa|ace|aim|aim82M|aim82NM|fcm|hha|hud|mald|MDN|mgs|misc|Mus70Cal|New|nimc|wiki)\.[A-Z]{0,2}\d{2,4}: value must be formatted using this pattern (PCRE syntax). (Help)
Exceptions are possible as rare values may exist. Exceptions can be specified using exception to constraint (P2303).
List of violations of this constraint: Database reports/Constraint violations/P10873#Format, SPARQL
Scope is as main value (Q54828448), as reference (Q54828450): the property must be used by specified way only (Help)
Exceptions are possible as rare values may exist. Exceptions can be specified using exception to constraint (P2303).
List of violations of this constraint: Database reports/Constraint violations/P10873#Scope, SPARQL
Allowed entity types are Wikibase item (Q29934200): the property may only be used on a certain entity type (Help)
Exceptions are possible as rare values may exist. Exceptions can be specified using exception to constraint (P2303).
List of violations of this constraint: Database reports/Constraint violations/P10873#Entity types

Queries[edit]

"house museum" ?[edit]

I've been adding house museum (Q2087181) in passing, as a P31 for houses that are or have been open to the public, that have MM ids (eg Hutton in the Forest (Q5951100)). (Together with start time (P580) and end time (P582) qualifiers, if the MM record reliably gives them).

But I'm now wondering whether this is correct -- or is there a distinction to be made between a building that has been consciously transformed into a "museum of the house" (eg many National Trust properties), versus a house that may still be a lived-in residence primarily, but occasionally opens its doors? A query https://w.wiki/5bVy though seems to show it's quite a wide class, at least currently.

Pinging @Tagishsimon, Andrew Gray: for thoughts. Jheald (talk) 10:44, 21 August 2022 (UTC)[reply]

I agree these are two distinct ideas - I suppose in some ways there are three, a residence with visitors; a former residence now purely for visitors (the classic National Trust stately home); and a deliberately conceived "museum of the home, broadly defined", maybe concentrating on a representative experience rather than the significance of this home. But I'm not quite sure how to term these, and I think A often blurs into B (people living in one wing), B into C (a museum using the former residents to frame the exhibits but not making it about them). Andrew Gray (talk) 12:59, 21 August 2022 (UTC)[reply]

Anomalies and corrections[edit]