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P88 consists of
Quantification: many to many (0,n,0,n)
Scope note:
This property identifies an E53 Place that forms part of another Place.
It supports the notion that a Place can be subdivided into one or more constituent parts. It implies both spatial and contextual containment relationships between the two Places.
Examples:
- the area covered by the London Borough of Islington in 1976 (E53) forms part of the area covered by Greater London in 1976 (E53)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 5.0.1
P88 consists of
Quantification: many to many (0,n,0,n)
Scope note:
This property identifies an E53 Place that forms part of another Place.
It supports the notion that a Place can be subdivided into one or more constituent parts. It implies both spatial and contextual containment relationships between the two Places.
Examples:
- the area covered by the London Borough of Islington in 1976 (E53) forms part of the area covered by Greater London in 1976 (E53)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 5.0.2
P88 consists of
Quantification: many to many (0,n,0,n)
Scope note:
This property identifies an E53 Place that forms part of another Place.
It supports the notion that a Place can be subdivided into one or more constituent parts. It implies both spatial and contextual containment relationships between the two Places.
Examples:
- the area covered by the London Borough of Islington in 1976 (E53) forms part of the area covered by Greater London in 1976 (E53)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 4.1
P89 falls within
Quantification: many to many (0,n,0,n)
Scope note:
This property identifies the instances of E53 Places that fall within the area covered by another Place.
It addresses spatial containment only, and no ‘whole-part’ relationship between the two places is implied.
Examples:
- the area covered by the World Heritage Site of Stonehenge (E53) falls within the area of Salisbury Plain (E53)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 5.0.1
P89 falls within
Quantification: many to many (0,n:0,n)
Scope note:
This property identifies an instance of E53 Place that falls wholly within the extent of another E53 Place.
It addresses spatial containment only, and does not imply any relationship between things or phenomena occupying these places.
Examples:
- the area covered by the World Heritage Site of Stonehenge (E53) falls within the area of Salisbury Plain (E53)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.1
P89 falls within
Quantification: many to many, necessary,dependent(1,n:0,n)
Scope note:
This property identifies an instance of E53 Place that falls wholly within the extent of another instance of E53 Place.
It addresses spatial containment only, and does not imply any relationship between things or phenomena occupying these places.
This property is transitive and reflexive.
Examples:
- the area covered by the World Heritage Site of Stonehenge (E53) falls within the area of Salisbury Plain (E53) (Pryor, 2016)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: version 7.1
P89 falls within
Quantification: many to many (0,n:0,n)
Scope note:
This property identifies an instance of E53 Place that falls wholly within the extent of another E53 Place.
It addresses spatial containment only, and does not imply any relationship between things or phenomena occupying these places.
This property is transitive.
Examples:
- the area covered by the World Heritage Site of Stonehenge (E53) falls within the area of Salisbury Plain (E53)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.2.2
P89 falls within
Quantification: many to many (0,n,0,n)
Scope note:
This property identifies the instances of E53 Places that fall within the area covered by another Place.
It addresses spatial containment only, and no ‘whole-part’ relationship between the two places is implied.
Examples:
- the area covered by the World Heritage Site of Stonehenge (E53) falls within the area of Salisbury Plain (E53)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 5.0.2
P89 falls within
Quantification: many to many (0,n:0,n)
Scope note:
This property identifies an instance of E53 Place that falls wholly within the extent of another E53 Place.
It addresses spatial containment only, and does not imply any relationship between things or phenomena occupying these places.
Examples:
- the area covered by the World Heritage Site of Stonehenge (E53) falls within the area of Salisbury Plain (E53)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.2
P89 falls within
Quantification: many to many (0,n,0,n)
Scope note:
This property identifies the instances of E53 Places that fall within the area covered by another Place.
It addresses spatial containment only, and no ‘whole-part’ relationship between the two places is implied.
Examples:
- the area covered by the World Heritage Site of Stonehenge (E53) falls within the area of Salisbury Plain (E53)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 4.1
P89 falls within
Quantification: many to many (0,n:0,n)
Scope note:
This property identifies an instance of E53 Place that falls wholly within the extent of another E53 Place.
It addresses spatial containment only, and does not imply any relationship between things or phenomena occupying these places.
Examples:
- the area covered by the World Heritage Site of Stonehenge (E53) falls within the area of Salisbury Plain (E53)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.0
P89 falls within
Quantification: many to many (0,n:0,n)
Scope note:
This property identifies an instance of E53 Place that falls wholly within the extent of another E53 Place.
It addresses spatial containment only, and does not imply any relationship between things or phenomena occupying these places.
This property is transitive.
Examples:
- the area covered by the World Heritage Site of Stonehenge (E53) falls within the area of Salisbury Plain (E53)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.2.1
P89 falls within
Quantification: many to many,necessary,dependent (1,n,0,n)
Scope note:
This property identifies an instance of E53 Place that falls wholly within the extent of another instance of E53 Place.
It addresses spatial containment only and does not imply any relationship between things or phenomena occupying these places.
This property is transitive and reflexive.
Examples:
- The area covered by the World Heritage Site of Stonehenge (E53) falls within the area of Salisbury Plain (E53). (Pryor, 2016)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: version 7.1.1
P89 falls within
Quantification: many to many (0,n:0,n)
Scope note:
This property identifies the instances of E53 Places that fall within the area covered by another Place.
It addresses spatial containment only, and no ‘whole-part’ relationship between the two places is implied.
Examples:
- the area covered by the World Heritage Site of Stonehenge (E53) falls within the area of Salisbury Plain (E53)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 5.1.2
P9 consists of
Quantification: one to many (0,n:0,1)
Scope note:
This property associates an instance of E4 Period with another instance of E4 Period that is defined by a subset of the phenomena that define the former. Therefore the spacetime volume of the latter must fall within the spacetime volume of the former.
This property is transitive.
Subproperty of: E92 Spacetime Volume. P10i contains: E92 Spacetime Volume
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.2.2
P9 consists of
Quantification: one to many,(0,n,0,1)
Scope note:
This property describes the decomposition of an instance of E4 Period into discrete, subsidiary periods.
The sub-periods into which the period is decomposed form a logical whole - although the entire picture may not be completely known - and the sub-periods are constitutive of the general period.
Examples:
- Cretan Bronze Age (E4) consists of Middle Minoan (E4)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 5.0.2
P9 consists of
Quantification: one to many (0,n:0,1)
Scope note:
This property associates an instance of E4 Period with another instance of E4 Period that is defined by a subset of the phenomena that define the former. Therefore the spacetime volume of the latter must fall within the spacetime volume of the former.
Subproperty of: E92 Spacetime Volume. P10i contains: E92 Spacetime Volume
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.2
P9 consists of
Quantification: one to many,(0,n,0,1)
Scope note:
This property describes the decomposition of an instance of E4 Period into discrete, subsidiary periods.
The sub-periods into which the period is decomposed form a logical whole - although the entire picture may not be completely known - and the sub-periods are constitutive of the general period.
Examples:
- Cretan Bronze Age (E4) consists of Middle Minoan (E4)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 4.1
P9 consists of
Quantification: one to many (0,n:0,1)
Scope note:
This property associates an instance of E4 Period with another instance of E4 Period that is defined by a subset of the phenomena that define the former. Therefore the spacetime volume of the latter must fall within the spacetime volume of the former.
This property is transitive.
Subproperty of: E92 Spacetime Volume. P10i contains: E92 Spacetime Volume
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.2.1
P9 consists of
Quantification: many to many (0,n,0,n)
Scope note:
This property associates an instance of E4 Period with another instance of E4 Period that is defined by a subset of the phenomena that define the former. Therefore, the spacetime volume of the latter must fall within the spacetime volume of the former.
This property is transitive and non-symmetric.
Examples:
- Cretan Bronze Age (E4) consists of Middle Minoan (E4). (Hood, 1971)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: version 7.1.1
P9 consists of
Quantification: one to many (0,n:0,1)
Scope note:
This property associates an instance of E4 Period with another instance of E4 Period that falls within the spacetime volumes occupied by the former and which is defined by phenomena that form part of or are refinements of the phenomena that define the former.
Subproperty of: E4 Period. P10i contains: E4 Period
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.0
P9 consists of
Quantification: one to many,(0,n,0,1)
Scope note:
This property describes the decomposition of an instance of E4 Period into discrete, subsidiary periods.
The sub-periods into which the period is decomposed form a logical whole - although the entire picture may not be completely known - and the sub-periods are constitutive of the general period.
Examples:
- Cretan Bronze Age (E4) consists of Middle Minoan (E4)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 5.0.1
P9 consists of
Quantification: one to many (0,n:0,1)
Scope note:
This property associates an instance of E4 Period with another instance of E4 Period that falls within the spacetime volumes occupied by the former and which is defined by phenomena that form part of or are refinements of the phenomena that define the former.
Subproperty of: E4 Period. P10i contains: E4 Period
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.1
P9 consists of
Quantification: many to many (0,n:0,n)
Scope note:
This property associates an instance of E4 Period with another instance of E4 Period that is defined by a subset of the phenomena that define the former. Therefore, the spacetime volume of the latter must fall within the spacetime volume of the former.
This property is transitive and non-symmetric.
Examples:
- Cretan Bronze Age (E4) consists of Middle Minoan (E4) (Hood, 1971)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: version 7.1
P9 consists of
Quantification: one to many (0,n:0,1)
Scope note:
This property describes the decomposition of an instance of E4 Period into discrete, subsidiary periods.
The sub-periods into which the period is decomposed form a logical whole - although the entire picture may not be completely known - and the sub-periods are constitutive of the general period.
Examples:
- Cretan Bronze Age (E4) consists of Middle Minoan (E4)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 5.1.2
P90 has value
Quantification: many to one,necessary (1,1,0,n)
Scope note:
This property allows an E54 Dimension to be approximated by an E60 Number primitive.
Examples:
- height of silver cup 232 (E54) has value 226 (E60)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 5.0.1
P90 has value
Quantification: many to one, necessary (1,1:0,n)
Scope note:
This property allows an E54 Dimension to be approximated by an E60 Number primitive.
Examples:
- height of silver cup 232 (E54) has value 226 (E60)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.1
P90 has value
Quantification: many to one, necessary (1,1:0,n)
Scope note:
This property allows an instance of E54 Dimension to be approximated by an instance of E60 Number primitive.
Examples:
- height of silver cup 232 (E54) has value 226(E60) (fictitious)
- Christie’s hammer price for “Vase with Fifteen Sunflowers” (E97) has value24,750,000 (E60) (fictitious)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: version 7.1
P90 has value
Quantification: many to one, necessary (1,1:0,n)
Scope note:
This property allows an E54 Dimension to be approximated by an E60 Number primitive.
Examples:
- height of silver cup 232 (E54) has value 226 (E60)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.2.2
P90 has value
Quantification: many to one,necessary (1,1,0,n)
Scope note:
This property allows an E54 Dimension to be approximated by an E60 Number primitive.
Examples:
- height of silver cup 232 (E54) has value 226 (E60)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 5.0.2
P90 has value
Quantification: many to one, necessary (1,1:0,n)
Scope note:
This property allows an E54 Dimension to be approximated by an E60 Number primitive.
Examples:
- height of silver cup 232 (E54) has value 226 (E60)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.2
P90 has value
Quantification: many to one,necessary (1,1,0,n)
Scope note:
This property allows an E54 Dimension to be approximated by an E60 Number primitive.
Examples:
- height of silver cup 232 (E54) has value 226 (E60)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 4.1
P90 has value
Quantification: many to one, necessary (1,1:0,n)
Scope note:
This property allows an E54 Dimension to be approximated by an E60 Number primitive.
Examples:
- height of silver cup 232 (E54) has value 226 (E60)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.0
P90 has value
Quantification: many to one, necessary (1,1:0,n)
Scope note:
This property allows an E54 Dimension to be approximated by an E60 Number primitive.
Examples:
- height of silver cup 232 (E54) has value 226 (E60)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.2.1
P90 has value
Quantification: many to one,necessary (1,1,0,n)
Scope note:
This property allows an instance of E54 Dimension to be approximated by an instance of E60 Number primitive.
Examples:
- The height of silver cup 232 (E54) has value 226 (E60). (fictitious)
- Christie’s hammer price for Vincent van Gogh’s “Still Life: Vase with Fifteen Sunflowers” in London on 30th March 1987 (E97) has value 24,750,000 (E60).
Type: Property
Belongs to version: version 7.1.1
P90 has value
Quantification: many to one, necessary (1,1:0,n)
Scope note:
This property allows an E54 Dimension to be approximated by an E60 Number primitive.
Examples:
- height of silver cup 232 (E54) has value 226 (E60)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 5.1.2
P91 has unit
Quantification: many to one,necessary (1,1,0,n)
Scope note:
This property shows the type of unit an E54 Dimension was expressed in.
Examples:
- height of silver cup 232 (E54) has unit mm (E58)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 5.0.1
P91 has unit
Quantification: many to one, necessary (1,1:0,n)
Scope note:
This property shows the type of unit an E54 Dimension was expressed in.
Examples:
- height of silver cup 232 (E54) has unit mm (E58)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.1
P91 has unit
Quantification: many to one, necessary (1,1:0,n)
Scope note:
This property shows the type of unit an instance of E54 Dimension was expressed in.
Examples:
- height of silver cup 232 (E54) has unit mm (E58) (fictitious)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: version 7.1
P91 has unit
Quantification: many to one, necessary (1,1:0,n)
Scope note:
This property shows the type of unit an E54 Dimension was expressed in.
Examples:
- height of silver cup 232 (E54) has unit mm (E58)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.2.2
P91 has unit
Quantification: many to one,necessary (1,1,0,n)
Scope note:
This property shows the type of unit an E54 Dimension was expressed in.
Examples:
- height of silver cup 232 (E54) has unit mm (E58)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 5.0.2
P91 has unit
Quantification: many to one, necessary (1,1:0,n)
Scope note:
This property shows the type of unit an E54 Dimension was expressed in.
Examples:
- height of silver cup 232 (E54) has unit mm (E58)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.2
P91 has unit
Quantification: many to one,necessary (1,1,0,n)
Scope note:
This property shows the type of unit an E54 Dimension was expressed in.
Examples:
- height of silver cup 232 (E54) has unit mm (E58)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 4.1
P91 has unit
Quantification: many to one, necessary (1,1:0,n)
Scope note:
This property shows the type of unit an E54 Dimension was expressed in.
Examples:
- height of silver cup 232 (E54) has unit mm (E58)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.0
P91 has unit
Quantification: many to one, necessary (1,1:0,n)
Scope note:
This property shows the type of unit an E54 Dimension was expressed in.
Examples:
- height of silver cup 232 (E54) has unit mm (E58)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.2.1
P91 has unit
Quantification: many to one,necessary (1,1,0,n)
Scope note:
This property shows the type of unit an instance of E54 Dimension was expressed in.
Examples:
- The height of silver cup 232 (E54) has unit mm (E58). (fictitious)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: version 7.1.1
P91 has unit
Quantification: many to one, necessary (1,1:0,n)
Scope note:
This property shows the type of unit an E54 Dimension was expressed in.
Examples:
- height of silver cup 232 (E54) has unit mm (E58)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 5.1.2
P92 brought into existence
Quantification: one to many,necessary,dependent (1,n,1,1)
Scope note:
This property allows an E63 Beginning of Existence event to be linked to the E77 Persistent Item brought into existence by it.
It allows a “start” to be attached to any Persistent Item being documented i.e. E70 Thing, E72 Legal Object, E39 Actor, E41 Appellation, E51 Contact Point and E55 Type.
Examples:
- the birth of Mozart (E67) brought into existence Mozart (E21)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 5.0.1
P92 brought into existence
Quantification: one to many, necessary, dependent (1,n:1,1)
Scope note:
This property allows an E63 Beginning of Existence event to be linked to the E77 Persistent Item brought into existence by it.
It allows a “start” to be attached to any Persistent Item being documented i.e. E70 Thing, E72 Legal Object, E39 Actor, E41 Appellation, E51 Contact Point and E55 Type.
Examples:
- the birth of Mozart (E67) brought into existence Mozart (E21)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.1
P92 brought into existence
Quantification: one to many, necessary, dependent (1,n:1,1)
Scope note:
This property links an instance of E63 Beginning of Existence to the instance of E77 Persistent Item brought into existence by it.
It allows a “start” to be attached to any instance of E77 Persistent Item being documented, i.e., as instances of E70 Thing, E72 Legal Object, E39 Actor, E41 Appellation and E55 Type.
Examples:
- the birth of Mozart (E67) brought into existence Mozart (E21) (Deutshc, 1965)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: version 7.1
P92 brought into existence
Quantification: one to many, necessary, dependent (1,n:1,1)
Scope note:
This property allows an E63 Beginning of Existence event to be linked to the E77 Persistent Item brought into existence by it.
It allows a “start” to be attached to any Persistent Item being documented i.e. E70 Thing, E72 Legal Object, E39 Actor, E41 Appellation, E51 Contact Point and E55 Type.
Examples:
- the birth of Mozart (E67) brought into existence Mozart (E21)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.2.2
P92 brought into existence
Quantification: one to many,necessary,dependent (1,n,1,1)
Scope note:
This property allows an E63 Beginning of Existence event to be linked to the E77 Persistent Item brought into existence by it.
It allows a “start” to be attached to any Persistent Item being documented i.e. E70 Thing, E72 Legal Object, E39 Actor, E41 Appellation, E51 Contact Point and E55 Type.
Examples:
- the birth of Mozart (E67) brought into existence Mozart (E21)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 5.0.2
P92 brought into existence
Quantification: one to many, necessary, dependent (1,n:1,1)
Scope note:
This property allows an E63 Beginning of Existence event to be linked to the E77 Persistent Item brought into existence by it.
It allows a “start” to be attached to any Persistent Item being documented i.e. E70 Thing, E72 Legal Object, E39 Actor, E41 Appellation, E51 Contact Point and E55 Type.
Examples:
- the birth of Mozart (E67) brought into existence Mozart (E21)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.2
P92 brought into existence
Quantification: one to many,necessary,dependent (1,n,1,1)
Scope note:
This property allows an E63 Beginning of Existence event to be linked to the E77 Persistent Item brought into existence by it.
It allows a “start” to be attached to any Persistent Item being documented i.e. E70 Stuff, E72 Legal Object, E39 Actor, E41 Appellation, E51 Contact Point and E55 Type.
Examples:
- the birth of Mozart (E67) brought into existence Mozart (E21)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 4.1
P92 brought into existence
Quantification: one to many, necessary, dependent (1,n:1,1)
Scope note:
This property allows an E63 Beginning of Existence event to be linked to the E77 Persistent Item brought into existence by it.
It allows a “start” to be attached to any Persistent Item being documented i.e. E70 Thing, E72 Legal Object, E39 Actor, E41 Appellation, E51 Contact Point and E55 Type.
Examples:
- the birth of Mozart (E67) brought into existence Mozart (E21)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.0
P92 brought into existence
Quantification: one to many, necessary, dependent (1,n:1,1)
Scope note:
This property allows an E63 Beginning of Existence event to be linked to the E77 Persistent Item brought into existence by it.
It allows a “start” to be attached to any Persistent Item being documented i.e. E70 Thing, E72 Legal Object, E39 Actor, E41 Appellation, E51 Contact Point and E55 Type.
Examples:
- the birth of Mozart (E67) brought into existence Mozart (E21)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.2.1
P92 brought into existence
Quantification: one to many,necessary,dependent (1,n,1,1)
Scope note:
This property links an instance of E63 Beginning of Existence to the instance of E77 Persistent Item brought into existence by it.
It allows a “start” to be attached to any instance of E77 Persistent Item being documented, i.e., as instances of E70 Thing, E72 Legal Object, E39 Actor, E41 Appellation and E55 Type.
Examples:
- The birth of Mozart (E67) brought into existence Mozart (E21). (Deutsch, 1965)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: version 7.1.1
P92 brought into existence
Quantification: one to many, necessary, dependent (1,n:1,1)
Scope note:
This property allows an E63 Beginning of Existence event to be linked to the E77 Persistent Item brought into existence by it.
It allows a “start” to be attached to any Persistent Item being documented i.e. E70 Thing, E72 Legal Object, E39 Actor, E41 Appellation, E51 Contact Point and E55 Type.
Examples:
- the birth of Mozart (E67) brought into existence Mozart (E21)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 5.1.2
P93 took out of existence
Quantification: one to many,necessary (1,n,0,1)
Scope note:
This property allows an E64 End of Existence event to be linked to the E77 Persistent Item taken out of existence by it.
In the case of immaterial things, the E64 End of Existence is considered to take place with the destruction of the last physical carrier.
This allows an “end” to be attached to any Persistent Item being documented i.e. E70 Thing, E72 Legal Object, E39 Actor, E41 Appellation, E51 Contact Point and E55 Type. For many Persistent Items we know the maximum life-span and can infer, that they must have ended to exist. We assume in that case an End of Existence, which may be as unnoticeable as forgetting the secret knowledge by the last representative of some indigenous nation.
Examples:
- the death of Mozart (E69) took out of existence Mozart (E21)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 5.0.1
P93 took out of existence
Quantification: one to many, necessary (1,n:0,1)
Scope note:
This property allows an E64 End of Existence event to be linked to the E77 Persistent Item taken out of existence by it.
In the case of immaterial things, the E64 End of Existence is considered to take place with the destruction of the last physical carrier.
This allows an “end” to be attached to any Persistent Item being documented i.e. E70 Thing, E72 Legal Object, E39 Actor, E41 Appellation, E51 Contact Point and E55 Type. For many Persistent Items we know the maximum life-span and can infer, that they must have ended to exist. We assume in that case an End of Existence, which may be as unnoticeable as forgetting the secret knowledge by the last representative of some indigenous nation.
Examples:
- the death of Mozart (E69) took out of existence Mozart (E21)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.1
P93 took out of existence
Quantification: one to many, necessary (1,n:0,1)
Scope note:
This property links an instance of E64 End of Existence to the instance E77 Persistent Item taken out ofexistence by it.
In the case of immaterial things, the instance of E64 End of Existence is considered to take place with the destruction of the last physical carrier.
This allows an “end” to be attached to any instance of E77 Persistent Item being documented i.e., instances of E70 Thing, E72 Legal Object, E39 Actor, E41 Appellation and E55 Type. For many instances of E77 Persistent Item we know the maximum life-span and can infer, that they must have ended to exist. We assume in that case an instance of E64 End of Existence, which may be as unnoticeable as forgetting the secret knowledge by the last representative of some indigenous nation.
Examples:
- the death of Mozart (E69) took out of existence Mozart (E21) (Deutshc, 1965)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: version 7.1
P93 took out of existence
Quantification: one to many, necessary (1,n:0,1)
Scope note:
This property allows an E64 End of Existence event to be linked to the E77 Persistent Item taken out of existence by it.
In the case of immaterial things, the E64 End of Existence is considered to take place with the destruction of the last physical carrier.
This allows an “end” to be attached to any Persistent Item being documented i.e. E70 Thing, E72 Legal Object, E39 Actor, E41 Appellation, E51 Contact Point and E55 Type. For many Persistent Items we know the maximum life-span and can infer, that they must have ended to exist. We assume in that case an End of Existence, which may be as unnoticeable as forgetting the secret knowledge by the last representative of some indigenous nation.
Examples:
- the death of Mozart (E69) took out of existence Mozart (E21)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.2.2
P93 took out of existence
Quantification: one to many,necessary (1,n,0,1)
Scope note:
This property allows an E64 End of Existence event to be linked to the E77 Persistent Item taken out of existence by it.
In the case of immaterial things, the E64 End of Existence is considered to take place with the destruction of the last physical carrier.
This allows an “end” to be attached to any Persistent Item being documented i.e. E70 Thing, E72 Legal Object, E39 Actor, E41 Appellation, E51 Contact Point and E55 Type. For many Persistent Items we know the maximum life-span and can infer, that they must have ended to exist. We assume in that case an End of Existence, which may be as unnoticeable as forgetting the secret knowledge by the last representative of some indigenous nation.
Examples:
- the death of Mozart (E69) took out of existence Mozart (E21)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 5.0.2
P93 took out of existence
Quantification: one to many, necessary (1,n:0,1)
Scope note:
This property allows an E64 End of Existence event to be linked to the E77 Persistent Item taken out of existence by it.
In the case of immaterial things, the E64 End of Existence is considered to take place with the destruction of the last physical carrier.
This allows an “end” to be attached to any Persistent Item being documented i.e. E70 Thing, E72 Legal Object, E39 Actor, E41 Appellation, E51 Contact Point and E55 Type. For many Persistent Items we know the maximum life-span and can infer, that they must have ended to exist. We assume in that case an End of Existence, which may be as unnoticeable as forgetting the secret knowledge by the last representative of some indigenous nation.
Examples:
- the death of Mozart (E69) took out of existence Mozart (E21)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.2
P93 took out of existence
Quantification: one to many,necessary (1,n,0,1)
Scope note:
This property allows an E64 End of Existence event to be linked to the E77 Persistent Item taken out of existence by it.
In the case of immaterial things, the E64 End of Existence is considered to take place with the destruction of the last physical carrier.
This allows an “end” to be attached to any Persistent Item being documented i.e. E70 Stuff, E72 Legal Object, E39 Actor, E41 Appellation, E51 Contact Point and E55 Type. For many Persistent Items we know the maximum life-span and can infer, that they must have ended to exist. We assume in that case an End of Existence, which may be as unnoticeable as forgetting the secret knowledge by the last representative of some indigenous nation.
Examples:
- the death of Mozart (E69) took out of existence Mozart (E21)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 4.1
P93 took out of existence
Quantification: one to many, necessary (1,n:0,1)
Scope note:
This property allows an E64 End of Existence event to be linked to the E77 Persistent Item taken out of existence by it.
In the case of immaterial things, the E64 End of Existence is considered to take place with the destruction of the last physical carrier.
This allows an “end” to be attached to any Persistent Item being documented i.e. E70 Thing, E72 Legal Object, E39 Actor, E41 Appellation, E51 Contact Point and E55 Type. For many Persistent Items we know the maximum life-span and can infer, that they must have ended to exist. We assume in that case an End of Existence, which may be as unnoticeable as forgetting the secret knowledge by the last representative of some indigenous nation.
Examples:
- the death of Mozart (E69) took out of existence Mozart (E21)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.0
P93 took out of existence
Quantification: one to many, necessary (1,n:0,1)
Scope note:
This property allows an E64 End of Existence event to be linked to the E77 Persistent Item taken out of existence by it.
In the case of immaterial things, the E64 End of Existence is considered to take place with the destruction of the last physical carrier.
This allows an “end” to be attached to any Persistent Item being documented i.e. E70 Thing, E72 Legal Object, E39 Actor, E41 Appellation, E51 Contact Point and E55 Type. For many Persistent Items we know the maximum life-span and can infer, that they must have ended to exist. We assume in that case an End of Existence, which may be as unnoticeable as forgetting the secret knowledge by the last representative of some indigenous nation.
Examples:
- the death of Mozart (E69) took out of existence Mozart (E21)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.2.1
P93 took out of existence
Quantification: one to many,necessary (1,n,0,1)
Scope note:
This property links an instance of E64 End of Existence to the instance of E77 Persistent Item taken out of existence by it.
In the case of immaterial things, the instance of E64 End of Existence is considered to take place with the destruction of the last physical carrier.
This allows an “end” to be attached to any instance of E77 Persistent Item being documented i.e., instances of E70 Thing, E72 Legal Object, E39 Actor, E41 Appellation and E55 Type. For many instances of E77 Persistent Item we know the maximum life-span and can infer, that they must have ended to exist. We assume in that case an instance of E64 End of Existence, which may be as unnoticeable as forgetting the secret knowledge by the last representative of some indigenous nation.
Examples:
- The death of Mozart (E69) took out of existence Mozart (E21). (Deutsch, 1965)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: version 7.1.1
P93 took out of existence
Quantification: one to many, necessary (1,n:0,1)
Scope note:
This property allows an E64 End of Existence event to be linked to the E77 Persistent Item taken out of existence by it.
In the case of immaterial things, the E64 End of Existence is considered to take place with the destruction of the last physical carrier.
This allows an “end” to be attached to any Persistent Item being documented i.e. E70 Thing, E72 Legal Object, E39 Actor, E41 Appellation, E51 Contact Point and E55 Type. For many Persistent Items we know the maximum life-span and can infer, that they must have ended to exist. We assume in that case an End of Existence, which may be as unnoticeable as forgetting the secret knowledge by the last representative of some indigenous nation.
Examples:
- the death of Mozart (E69) took out of existence Mozart (E21)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 5.1.2
P94 has created
Quantification: one to many,necessary,dependent (1,n,1,1)
Scope note:
This property allows a conceptual E65 Creation to be linked to the E28 Conceptual Object created by it.
It represents the act of conceiving the intellectual content of the E28 Conceptual Object. It does not represent the act of creating the first physical carrier of the E28 Conceptual Object. As an example, this is the composition of a poem, not its commitment to paper.
Examples:
- the composition of “The Four Friends” by A. A. Milne (E65) has created “The Four Friends” by A. A. Milne (E28)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 5.0.1
P94 has created
Quantification: one to many, necessary, dependent (1,n:1,1)
Scope note:
This property allows a conceptual E65 Creation to be linked to the E28 Conceptual Object created by it.
It represents the act of conceiving the intellectual content of the E28 Conceptual Object. It does not represent the act of creating the first physical carrier of the E28 Conceptual Object. As an example, this is the composition of a poem, not its commitment to paper.
Examples:
- the composition of “The Four Friends” by A. A. Milne (E65) has created “The Four Friends” by A. A. Milne (E28)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.1
P94 has created
Quantification: one to many, necessary, dependent (1,n:1,1)
Scope note:
This property links an instance of E65 Creation to the instance of E28 Conceptual Object created by it.
It represents the act of conceiving the intellectual content of the instance of E28 Conceptual Object. It does not represent the act of creating the first physical carrier of the instanced of E28 Conceptual Object. As an example, this is the composition of a poem, not its commitment to paper.
Examples:
- the composition of “The Four Friends” by A. A. Milne (E65) has created “The Four Friends” by A. A. Milne (E28) (Milne, 1921)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: version 7.1
P94 has created
Quantification: one to many, necessary, dependent (1,n:1,1)
Scope note:
This property allows a conceptual E65 Creation to be linked to the E28 Conceptual Object created by it.
It represents the act of conceiving the intellectual content of the E28 Conceptual Object. It does not represent the act of creating the first physical carrier of the E28 Conceptual Object. As an example, this is the composition of a poem, not its commitment to paper.
Examples:
- the composition of “The Four Friends” by A. A. Milne (E65) has created “The Four Friends” by A. A. Milne (E28)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.2.2
P94 has created
Quantification: one to many,necessary,dependent (1,n,1,1)
Scope note:
This property allows a conceptual E65 Creation to be linked to the E28 Conceptual Object created by it.
It represents the act of conceiving the intellectual content of the E28 Conceptual Object. It does not represent the act of creating the first physical carrier of the E28 Conceptual Object. As an example, this is the composition of a poem, not its commitment to paper.
Examples:
- the composition of “The Four Friends” by A. A. Milne (E65) has created “The Four Friends” by A. A. Milne (E28)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 5.0.2
P94 has created
Quantification: one to many, necessary, dependent (1,n:1,1)
Scope note:
This property allows a conceptual E65 Creation to be linked to the E28 Conceptual Object created by it.
It represents the act of conceiving the intellectual content of the E28 Conceptual Object. It does not represent the act of creating the first physical carrier of the E28 Conceptual Object. As an example, this is the composition of a poem, not its commitment to paper.
Examples:
- the composition of “The Four Friends” by A. A. Milne (E65) has created “The Four Friends” by A. A. Milne (E28)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.2
P94 has created
Quantification: one to many,necessary,dependent (1,n,1,1)
Scope note:
This property allows a conceptual E65 Creation Event to be linked to the E28 Conceptual Object created by it.
It represents the act of conceiving the intellectual content of the E28 Conceptual Object. It does not represent the act of creating the first physical carrier of the E28 Conceptual Object. As an example, this is the composition of a poem, not its commitment to paper.
Examples:
- the composition of “The Four Friends” by A. A. Milne (E65) has created “The Four Friends” by A. A. Milne (E28)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 4.1
P94 has created
Quantification: one to many, necessary, dependent (1,n:1,1)
Scope note:
This property allows a conceptual E65 Creation to be linked to the E28 Conceptual Object created by it.
It represents the act of conceiving the intellectual content of the E28 Conceptual Object. It does not represent the act of creating the first physical carrier of the E28 Conceptual Object. As an example, this is the composition of a poem, not its commitment to paper.
Examples:
- the composition of “The Four Friends” by A. A. Milne (E65) has created “The Four Friends” by A. A. Milne (E28)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.0
P94 has created
Quantification: one to many, necessary, dependent (1,n:1,1)
Scope note:
This property allows a conceptual E65 Creation to be linked to the E28 Conceptual Object created by it.
It represents the act of conceiving the intellectual content of the E28 Conceptual Object. It does not represent the act of creating the first physical carrier of the E28 Conceptual Object. As an example, this is the composition of a poem, not its commitment to paper.
Examples:
- the composition of “The Four Friends” by A. A. Milne (E65) has created “The Four Friends” by A. A. Milne (E28)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.2.1
P94 has created
Quantification: one to many, necessary, dependent (1,n:1,1)
Scope note:
This property allows a conceptual E65 Creation to be linked to the E28 Conceptual Object created by it.
It represents the act of conceiving the intellectual content of the E28 Conceptual Object. It does not represent the act of creating the first physical carrier of the E28 Conceptual Object. As an example, this is the composition of a poem, not its commitment to paper.
Examples:
- the composition of “The Four Friends” by A. A. Milne (E65) has created “The Four Friends” by A. A. Milne (E28)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 5.1.2
P94 has created
Quantification: one to many,necessary,dependent (1,n,1,1)
Scope note:
This property links an instance of E65 Creation to the instance of E28 Conceptual Object created by it.
It represents the act of conceiving the intellectual content of the instance of E28 Conceptual Object. It does not represent the act of creating the first physical carrier of the instance of E28 Conceptual Object. As an example, this is the composition of a poem, not its commitment to paper.
Examples:
- The composition of “The Four Friends” by A. A. Milne (E65) has created “The Four Friends” by A. A. Milne (E33). (Milne, 2012)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: version 7.1.1
P95 has formed
Quantification: one to many,necessary,dependent (1,n,1,1)
Scope note:
This property links the founding or E66 Formation for an E74 Group with the Group itself.
Examples:
- the formation of the CIDOC CRM SIG at the August 2000 CIDOC Board meeting (E66) has formed the CIDOC CRM Special Interest Group (E74)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 5.0.1
P95 has formed
Quantification: one to many, necessary, dependent (1,n:1,1)
Scope note:
This property links the founding or E66 Formation for an E74 Group with the Group itself.
Examples:
- the formation of the CIDOC CRM SIG at the August 2000 CIDOC Board meeting (E66) has formed the CIDOC CRM Special Interest Group (E74)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.1
P95 has formed
Quantification: one to many, necessary, dependent (1,n:1,1)
Scope note:
This property associates the instance of E66 Formation with the instance of E74 Group that it founded.
Examples:
- the formation of the CIDOC CRM SIG at the August 2000 CIDOC Board meeting (E66) has formed the CIDOC CRM Special Interest Group (E74)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: version 7.1
P95 has formed
Quantification: one to many, necessary, dependent (1,n:1,1)
Scope note:
This property links the founding or E66 Formation for an E74 Group with the Group itself.
Examples:
- the formation of the CIDOC CRM SIG at the August 2000 CIDOC Board meeting (E66) has formed the CIDOC CRM Special Interest Group (E74)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.2.2
P95 has formed
Quantification: one to many,necessary,dependent (1,n,1,1)
Scope note:
This property links the founding or E66 Formation for an E74 Group with the Group itself.
Examples:
- the formation of the CIDOC CRM SIG at the August 2000 CIDOC Board meeting (E66) has formed the CIDOC CRM Special Interest Group (E74)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 5.0.2
P95 has formed
Quantification: one to many, necessary, dependent (1,n:1,1)
Scope note:
This property links the founding or E66 Formation for an E74 Group with the Group itself.
Examples:
- the formation of the CIDOC CRM SIG at the August 2000 CIDOC Board meeting (E66) has formed the CIDOC CRM Special Interest Group (E74)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.2
P95 has formed
Quantification: one to many,necessary,dependent (1,n,1,1)
Scope note:
This property links the founding or E66 Formation Event for an E74 Group with the Group itself.
Examples:
- the formation of the CIDOC CRM SIG at the August 2000 CIDOC Board meeting (E66) has formed the CIDOC CRM Special Interest Group (E74)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 4.1
P95 has formed
Quantification: one to many, necessary, dependent (1,n:1,1)
Scope note:
This property links the founding or E66 Formation for an E74 Group with the Group itself.
Examples:
- the formation of the CIDOC CRM SIG at the August 2000 CIDOC Board meeting (E66) has formed the CIDOC CRM Special Interest Group (E74)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.0
P95 has formed
Quantification: one to many, necessary, dependent (1,n:1,1)
Scope note:
This property links the founding or E66 Formation for an E74 Group with the Group itself.
Examples:
- the formation of the CIDOC CRM SIG at the August 2000 CIDOC Board meeting (E66) has formed the CIDOC CRM Special Interest Group (E74)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.2.1
P95 has formed
Quantification: one to many, necessary, dependent (1,n:1,1)
Scope note:
This property links the founding or E66 Formation for an E74 Group with the Group itself.
Examples:
- the formation of the CIDOC CRM SIG at the August 2000 CIDOC Board meeting (E66) has formed the CIDOC CRM Special Interest Group (E74)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 5.1.2
P95 has formed
Quantification: one to many,necessary,dependent (1,n,1,1)
Scope note:
This property associates the instance of E66 Formation with the instance of E74 Group that it founded.
Examples:
- The formation of the CIDOC CRM SIG at the August 2000 CIDOC Board meeting (E66) has formed the CIDOC CRM Special Interest Group (E74).
Type: Property
Belongs to version: version 7.1.1
P96 by mother
Quantification: many to one,necessary (1,1,0,1)
Scope note:
This property links an E67 Birth event to an E21 Person as a participant in the role of birth-giving mother.
Note that biological fathers are not necessarily participants in the Birth (see P97 from father (was father for)). The Person being born is linked to the Birth with the property P98 brought into life (was born). This is not intended for use with general natural history material, only people. There is no explicit method for modelling conception and gestation except by using extensions. This is a sub-property of P11 had participant (participated in).
Examples:
- the birth of Queen Elizabeth II (E67) by mother Queen Mother (E21)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 5.0.1
P96 by mother
Quantification: many to one, necessary (1,1:0,n)
Scope note:
This property links an E67 Birth event to an E21 Person as a participant in the role of birth-giving mother.
Note that biological fathers are not necessarily participants in the Birth (see P97 from father (was father for)). The Person being born is linked to the Birth with the property P98 brought into life (was born). This is not intended for use with general natural history material, only people. There is no explicit method for modelling conception and gestation except by using extensions. This is a sub-property of P11 had participant (participated in).
Examples:
- the birth of Queen Elizabeth II (E67) by mother Queen Mother (E21)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.1
P96 by mother
Quantification: many to one, necessary (1,1:0,n)
Scope note:
This property links an instance of E67 Birth to an instance of E21 Person in the role of birth-giving mother.
Note that biological fathers are not necessarily participants in the Birth (see P97from father (was father for)). The instance of P21 Person being born is linked to the instance of E67 Birth with the property P98brought into life (was born). This is not intended for use with general natural history material, only people. There is no explicit method for modelling conception and gestation except by using extensions.
Examples:
- the birth of Queen Elizabeth II (E67) by motherHer Majesty Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother (E21) (Parker, 2002)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: version 7.1
P96 by mother
Quantification: many to one, necessary (1,1:0,n)
Scope note:
This property links an E67 Birth event to an E21 Person as a participant in the role of birth-giving mother.
Note that biological fathers are not necessarily participants in the Birth (see P97 from father (was father for)). The Person being born is linked to the Birth with the property P98 brought into life (was born). This is not intended for use with general natural history material, only people. There is no explicit method for modelling conception and gestation except by using extensions. This is a sub-property of P11 had participant (participated in).
Examples:
- the birth of Queen Elizabeth II (E67) by mother Queen Mother (E21)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.2.2
P96 by mother
Quantification: many to one,necessary (1,1,0,1)
Scope note:
This property links an E67 Birth event to an E21 Person as a participant in the role of birth-giving mother.
Note that biological fathers are not necessarily participants in the Birth (see P97 from father (was father for)). The Person being born is linked to the Birth with the property P98 brought into life (was born). This is not intended for use with general natural history material, only people. There is no explicit method for modelling conception and gestation except by using extensions. This is a sub-property of P11 had participant (participated in).
Examples:
- the birth of Queen Elizabeth II (E67) by mother Queen Mother (E21)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 5.0.2
P96 by mother
Quantification: many to one, necessary (1,1:0,n)
Scope note:
This property links an E67 Birth event to an E21 Person as a participant in the role of birth-giving mother.
Note that biological fathers are not necessarily participants in the Birth (see P97 from father (was father for)). The Person being born is linked to the Birth with the property P98 brought into life (was born). This is not intended for use with general natural history material, only people. There is no explicit method for modelling conception and gestation except by using extensions. This is a sub-property of P11 had participant (participated in).
Examples:
- the birth of Queen Elizabeth II (E67) by mother Queen Mother (E21)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.2
P96 by mother
Quantification: many to one,necessary (1,1,0,1)
Scope note:
This property links an E67 Birth event to an E21 Person as a participant in the role of birth-giving mother.
Note that biological fathers are not necessarily participants in the Birth (see P97 from father (was father for)). The Person being born is linked to the Birth with the property P98 brought into life (was born). This is not intended for use with general natural history material, only people. There is no explicit method for modelling conception and gestation except by using extensions. This is a sub-property of P11 had participant (participated in).
Examples:
- the birth of Queen Elizabeth II (E67) by mother Queen Mother (E21)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 4.1
P96 by mother
Quantification: many to one, necessary (1,1:0,n)
Scope note:
This property links an E67 Birth event to an E21 Person as a participant in the role of birth-giving mother.
Note that biological fathers are not necessarily participants in the Birth (see P97 from father (was father for)). The Person being born is linked to the Birth with the property P98 brought into life (was born). This is not intended for use with general natural history material, only people. There is no explicit method for modelling conception and gestation except by using extensions. This is a sub-property of P11 had participant (participated in).
Examples:
- the birth of Queen Elizabeth II (E67) by mother Queen Mother (E21)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.0
P96 by mother
Quantification: many to one, necessary (1,1:0,n)
Scope note:
This property links an E67 Birth event to an E21 Person as a participant in the role of birth-giving mother.
Note that biological fathers are not necessarily participants in the Birth (see P97 from father (was father for)). The Person being born is linked to the Birth with the property P98 brought into life (was born). This is not intended for use with general natural history material, only people. There is no explicit method for modelling conception and gestation except by using extensions. This is a sub-property of P11 had participant (participated in).
Examples:
- the birth of Queen Elizabeth II (E67) by mother Queen Mother (E21)
Type: Property
Belongs to version: Version 6.2.1