St. Nicholas the Miracle Church-Lighthouse in Malorechenskoye
Also known as: Храм Покрова Пресвятой Богородицы в Малореченском, Храм-маяк святого Николая Чудотворца в Малореченском
active
Published as a public-ready text record; documentary media remains under attribution review.
At a glance
Place
- Country
- Ukraine
- Region
- Crimea
- Note
- Crimea/Sevastopol: territory of Ukraine; annexed/occupied by Russia since 2014.
Structure
- Status
- active Legacy archive claim · Храм Покрова Пресвятой Богородицы в Малореченском
Light Signature
No accepted light signature claims yet.
Signal pattern, color, period, visibility, optics, and operating context appear here after field-level review.
Light signature JSON will appear here after review.
Names & naming history
EN · Common
- St. Nicholas the Miracle Church-Lighthouse in Malorechenskoye
- Mayachnik Drupal export Field: multi_fields.eng_name.field_eng_name_value
- Фотография Record-level source link
- Церковь-маяк Record-level source link
RU · Alternative
- Храм-маяк святого Николая Чудотворца в Малореченском
- Mayachnik Drupal export Field: multi_fields.lighthouse_name_aka.field_lighthouse_name_aka_value
- Фотография Record-level source link
- Церковь-маяк Record-level source link
RU · Official
- Храм Покрова Пресвятой Богородицы в Малореченском
- Mayachnik Drupal export Field: title
- Фотография Record-level source link
- Церковь-маяк Record-level source link
(autotranslated, could have mistakes)
On June 18, 2006, on the southern coast of Crimea, in the village of Malorechenskoye, located in the Greater Alushta region, a prayer service was held dedicated to the completion of the construction of the Church of the Intercession of the Most Holy Theotokos of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Moscow Patriarchate.
The temple was built according to the design of Academician of the Academy of Arts Anatoly Gaidamaki, who is the author of projects for more than 20 Orthodox churches in Eastern Europe. The most famous Ukrainian designers and decorators took part in the construction and decoration of the temple. The style of architectural details is made using traditional ornaments of Ancient Greece and early Byzantium, since the earliest settlements on the territory of Crimea were Greek cities. The church is illuminated using modern lighting technologies. Windows made using classical stained glass technique, illuminated from the inside of the building, harmoniously emphasize the significance of the building in the evening.
The lighthouse temple in memory of those who died on the waters and travelers was built on a high cliff above the sea and is visible from many points on the southern coast of the peninsula. It is expected that this temple will become one of the main attractions of Crimea
There are about ten such lighthouses known to exist in the world. One of them is in Russia. This is the largest lighthouse on the White Sea - the Church of the Ascension on Sekirnaya Mountain in Solovki. It is designed so that it only needs light from a flashlight or candle.
In Crimea, the Church of the Resurrection of Christ (Foros Church), located in Foros at an altitude of 427 m above sea level on the way to the Baydar Gate pass, is also used as a lighthouse. Erected in 1892 in memory of the miraculous rescue of Alexander III and his family during a train crash, it is illuminated every night and is still a landmark for seagoing vessels.
On May 7, 2009, thanks to the efforts of Chernigov craftsmen, the second part of the memorial was opened in the basement platform of the temple - "Museum of Water Disasters". The exhibition is dedicated to the most tragic pages in the development of navigation - disasters on the waters that resulted in innumerable human casualties. The museum is located in 17 rooms (1000 m2), each of which tells through videos and stands about the most resonant tragedies on the waters of the World Ocean.
The general scenario of the exhibition begins in the lobby, the interior of which gives the viewer the feeling of being personally on board a sunken ancient ship. The “prologue” of the exhibition is a ticker with an endless list of shipwrecks indicating the date, place of death and the number of victims of the tragedy.
The architectural and artistic design of the interiors is as follows. The viewer walks along the deck of the “sunken ship,” enters its “holds,” and moves from compartment to compartment. On board the neighboring “sunk ships”, 9 videos are shown using camouflaged video projectors: documentaries and chronicles about tragedies on the waters, archival videos, eyewitness accounts.
A ship's fencing, made of metal and hemp rope, separates the exhibition from the visitor traffic area. The foreground imitates the seabed, on which exhibits from different eras and the results of shipwrecks are displayed chaotically, without observing chronology: anchors, cannonballs, models of cannons, chains, lanterns, remains of boats and other objects that emotionally support the overall imagery, as well as scraps of old fishing nets, blackened wood, metal covered with shells. All walls are decorated with reliefs (like seaweed) and painted in appropriate dark colors. The floors are made of hewn deck boards.
You can virtually get acquainted with the exhibition or book a tour on the official website of the museum
View Beacons world on a larger map
Panorama of the lighthouse in Malorechenskoye
(autotranslated, could have mistakes)
On June 18, 2006, on the southern coast of Crimea, in the village of Malorechenskoye, located in the Greater Alushta region, a prayer service was held dedicated to the completion of the construction of the Church of the Intercession of the Most Holy Theotokos of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Moscow Patriarchate.
The temple was built according to the design of Academician of the Academy of Arts Anatoly Gaidamaki, who is the author of projects for more than 20 Orthodox churches in Eastern Europe. The most famous Ukrainian designers and decorators took part in the construction and decoration of the temple. The style of architectural details is made using traditional ornaments of Ancient Greece and early Byzantium, since the earliest settlements on the territory of Crimea were Greek cities. The church is illuminated using modern lighting technologies. Windows made using classical stained glass technique, illuminated from the inside of the building, harmoniously emphasize the significance of the building in the evening.
The lighthouse temple in memory of those who died on the waters and travelers was built on a high cliff above the sea and is visible from many points on the southern coast of the peninsula. It is expected that this temple will become one of the main attractions of Crimea
There are about ten such lighthouses known to exist in the world. One of them is in Russia. This is the largest lighthouse on the White Sea - the Church of the Ascension on Sekirnaya Mountain in Solovki. It is designed so that it only needs light from a flashlight or candle.
In Crimea, the Church of the Resurrection of Christ (Foros Church), located in Foros at an altitude of 427 m above sea level on the way to the Baydar Gate pass, is also used as a lighthouse. Erected in 1892 in memory of the miraculous rescue of Alexander III and his family during a train crash, it is illuminated every night and is still a landmark for seagoing vessels.
On May 7, 2009, thanks to the efforts of Chernigov craftsmen, the second part of the memorial was opened in the basement platform of the temple - "Museum of Water Disasters". The exhibition is dedicated to the most tragic pages in the development of navigation - disasters on the waters that resulted in innumerable human casualties. The museum is located in 17 rooms (1000 m2), each of which tells through videos and stands about the most resonant tragedies on the waters of the World Ocean.
The general scenario of the exhibition begins in the lobby, the interior of which gives the viewer the feeling of being personally on board a sunken ancient ship. The “prologue” of the exhibition is a ticker with an endless list of shipwrecks indicating the date, place of death and the number of victims of the tragedy.
The architectural and artistic design of the interiors is as follows. The viewer walks along the deck of the “sunken ship,” enters its “holds,” and moves from compartment to compartment. On board the neighboring “sunk ships”, 9 videos are shown using camouflaged video projectors: documentaries and chronicles about tragedies on the waters, archival videos, eyewitness accounts.
A ship's fencing, made of metal and hemp rope, separates the exhibition from the visitor traffic area. The foreground imitates the seabed, on which exhibits from different eras and the results of shipwrecks are displayed chaotically, without observing chronology: anchors, cannonballs, models of cannons, chains, lanterns, remains of boats and other objects that emotionally support the overall imagery, as well as scraps of old fishing nets, blackened wood, metal covered with shells. All walls are decorated with reliefs (like seaweed) and painted in appropriate dark colors. The floors are made of hewn deck boards.
You can virtually get acquainted with the exhibition or book a tour on the official website of the museum
View Beacons world on a larger map
Panorama of the lighthouse in Malorechenskoye
(autotranslated, could have mistakes)
On June 18, 2006, on the southern coast of Crimea, in the village of Malorechenskoye, located in the Greater Alushta region, a prayer service was held dedicated to the completion of the construction of the Church of the Intercession of the Most Holy Theotokos of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Moscow Patriarchate.
The temple was built according to the design of Academician of the Academy of Arts Anatoly Gaidamaki, who is the author of projects for more than 20 Orthodox churches in Eastern Europe. The most famous Ukrainian designers and decorators took part in the construction and decoration of the temple. The style of architectural details is made using traditional ornaments of Ancient Greece and early Byzantium, since the earliest settlements on the territory of Crimea were Greek cities. The church is illuminated using modern lighting technologies. Windows made using classical stained glass technique, illuminated from the inside of the building, harmoniously emphasize the significance of the building in the evening.
The lighthouse temple in memory of those who died on the waters and travelers was built on a high cliff above the sea and is visible from many points on the southern coast of the peninsula. It is expected that this temple will become one of the main attractions of Crimea
There are about ten such lighthouses known to exist in the world. One of them is in Russia. This is the largest lighthouse on the White Sea - the Church of the Ascension on Sekirnaya Mountain in Solovki. It is designed so that it only needs light from a flashlight or candle.
In Crimea, the Church of the Resurrection of Christ (Foros Church), located in Foros at an altitude of 427 m above sea level on the way to the Baydar Gate pass, is also used as a lighthouse. Erected in 1892 in memory of the miraculous rescue of Alexander III and his family during a train crash, it is illuminated every night and is still a landmark for seagoing vessels.
On May 7, 2009, thanks to the efforts of Chernigov craftsmen, the second part of the memorial was opened in the basement platform of the temple - "Museum of Water Disasters". The exhibition is dedicated to the most tragic pages in the development of navigation - disasters on the waters that resulted in innumerable human casualties. The museum is located in 17 rooms (1000 m2), each of which tells through videos and stands about the most resonant tragedies on the waters of the World Ocean.
The general scenario of the exhibition begins in the lobby, the interior of which gives the viewer the feeling of being personally on board a sunken ancient ship. The “prologue” of the exhibition is a ticker with an endless list of shipwrecks indicating the date, place of death and the number of victims of the tragedy.
The architectural and artistic design of the interiors is as follows. The viewer walks along the deck of the “sunken ship,” enters its “holds,” and moves from compartment to compartment. On board the neighboring “sunk ships”, 9 videos are shown using camouflaged video projectors: documentaries and chronicles about tragedies on the waters, archival videos, eyewitness accounts.
A ship's fencing, made of metal and hemp rope, separates the exhibition from the visitor traffic area. The foreground imitates the seabed, on which exhibits from different eras and the results of shipwrecks are displayed chaotically, without observing chronology: anchors, cannonballs, models of cannons, chains, lanterns, remains of boats and other objects that emotionally support the overall imagery, as well as scraps of old fishing nets, blackened wood, metal covered with shells. All walls are decorated with reliefs (like seaweed) and painted in appropriate dark colors. The floors are made of hewn deck boards.
You can virtually get acquainted with the exhibition or book a tour on the official website of the museum
View Beacons world on a larger map
Panorama of the lighthouse in Malorechenskoye
18 июня 2006г., на Южном берегу Крыма, в поселке Малореченское, расположенном в районе Большой Алушты, состоялся молебен, посвященный завершению строительства Храма Покрова Пресвятой Богородицы Украинской Православной церкви Московского Патриархата.
Храм построен по проекту академика Академии художеств Анатолия Гайдамаки, который является автором проектов более 20-ти православных храмов в Восточной Европе. В работах по возведению и убранству храма принимали участие самые известные украинские дизайнеры и декораторы. Стилистика архитектурных деталей выполнена с применением традиционных орнаментов Древней Греции и ранней Византии, так как самыми ранними поселениями на территории Крыма были греческие города. Подсветка церкви осуществляется с применением современных осветительных технологий. Выполненные в технике классического витража окна, подсвеченные изнутри здание, гармонично подчеркнут значимость сооружения в вечернее время суток.
Храм-маяк памяти погибших на водах и путешественников построен на высоком обрыве над морем и виден из многих точек южного берега полуострова. Предполагается, что этот храм станет одной из главных достопримечательностей Крыма
Известно о примерно десяти существующих в мире подобных маяках. Один из них находится в России. Это самый крупный маяк на Белом море – церковь Вознесения на Секирной горе на Соловках. Он сконструирован так, что ему достаточно света от карманного фонарика или свечи.
В Крыму в качестве маяка используют также церковь Воскресения Христова (Форосскую церковь), расположенную в Форосе на высоте 427 м над уровнем моря на пути к перевалу Байдарские ворота. Возведенная в 1892 году в память о чудесном спасении Александра III и его семьи во время крушения поезда, она еженощно подсвечивается, до сих пор являясь ориентиром для морских судов.
Общий сценарий выставки начинается в вестибюле, интерьер которого вызывает у зрителя ощущение личного присутствия на борту затонувшего старинного корабля. «Прологом» экспозиции служит бегущая строка с бесконечным перечнем кораблекрушений с указанием даты, места гибели и количества жертв трагедии.
Архитектурно-художественное решение интерьеров выглядит следующим образом. Зритель проходит по палубе "затонувшего корабля", входит в его "трюмы", движется из отсека в отсек. На бортах соседних "затонувших кораблей" демонстрируются с помощью замаскированных видеопроекторов 9 видеосюжетов: документально-хроникальные кинофильмы о трагедиях на водах, архивные видеозаписи, свидетельства очевидцев.
Просмотреть Маяки мира на карте большего размера
Панорама маяка в Малореченском
(autotranslated, could have mistakes)
On June 18, 2006, on the southern coast of Crimea, in the village of Malorechenskoye, located in the Greater Alushta region, a prayer service was held dedicated to the completion of the construction of the Church of the Intercession of the Most Holy Theotokos of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Moscow Patriarchate.
The temple was built according to the design of Academician of the Academy of Arts Anatoly Gaidamaki, who is the author of projects for more than 20 Orthodox churches in Eastern Europe. The most famous Ukrainian designers and decorators took part in the construction and decoration of the temple. The style of architectural details is made using traditional ornaments of Ancient Greece and early Byzantium, since the earliest settlements on the territory of Crimea were Greek cities. The church is illuminated using modern lighting technologies. Windows made using classical stained glass technique, illuminated from the inside of the building, harmoniously emphasize the significance of the building in the evening.
The lighthouse temple in memory of those who died on the waters and travelers was built on a high cliff above the sea and is visible from many points on the southern coast of the peninsula. It is expected that this temple will become one of the main attractions of Crimea
There are about ten such lighthouses known to exist in the world. One of them is in Russia. This is the largest lighthouse on the White Sea - the Church of the Ascension on Sekirnaya Mountain in Solovki. It is designed so that it only needs light from a flashlight or candle.
In Crimea, the Church of the Resurrection of Christ (Foros Church), located in Foros at an altitude of 427 m above sea level on the way to the Baydar Gate pass, is also used as a lighthouse. Erected in 1892 in memory of the miraculous rescue of Alexander III and his family during a train crash, it is illuminated every night and is still a landmark for seagoing vessels.
On May 7, 2009, thanks to the efforts of Chernigov craftsmen, the second part of the memorial was opened in the basement platform of the temple - "Museum of Water Disasters". The exhibition is dedicated to the most tragic pages in the development of navigation - disasters on the waters that resulted in innumerable human casualties. The museum is located in 17 rooms (1000 m2), each of which tells through videos and stands about the most resonant tragedies on the waters of the World Ocean.
The general scenario of the exhibition begins in the lobby, the interior of which gives the viewer the feeling of being personally on board a sunken ancient ship. The “prologue” of the exhibition is a ticker with an endless list of shipwrecks indicating the date, place of death and the number of victims of the tragedy.
The architectural and artistic design of the interiors is as follows. The viewer walks along the deck of the “sunken ship,” enters its “holds,” and moves from compartment to compartment. On board the neighboring “sunk ships”, 9 videos are shown using camouflaged video projectors: documentaries and chronicles about tragedies on the waters, archival videos, eyewitness accounts.
A ship's fencing, made of metal and hemp rope, separates the exhibition from the visitor traffic area. The foreground imitates the seabed, on which exhibits from different eras and the results of shipwrecks are displayed chaotically, without observing chronology: anchors, cannonballs, models of cannons, chains, lanterns, remains of boats and other objects that emotionally support the overall imagery, as well as scraps of old fishing nets, blackened wood, metal covered with shells. All walls are decorated with reliefs (like seaweed) and painted in appropriate dark colors. The floors are made of hewn deck boards.
You can virtually get acquainted with the exhibition or book a tour on the official website of the museum
View Beacons world on a larger map
Panorama of the lighthouse in Malorechenskoye
Heritage identity & evidence
Identity
- LUX ID
LUX-LH-000207- Type
- Church lighthouse
- Object kind
- Church lighthouse
- Current status
- active
Review & coverage
External identifiers
No reviewed external identifiers yet.
Key source-backed claims
- Alternate name Храм-маяк святого Николая Чудотворца в Малореченском · Храм Покрова Пресвятой Богородицы в Малореченском archive
- English name St. Nicholas the Miracle Church-Lighthouse in Malorechenskoye · Храм Покрова Пресвятой Богородицы в Малореченском archive
- Location taxonomy Крым · Храм Покрова Пресвятой Богородицы в Малореченском derived
- Location taxonomy Черное море · Храм Покрова Пресвятой Богородицы в Малореченском derived
Claim evidence
Operational status
Selected value: active
Why this value is shown: Current evidence is active; Source: Legacy archive field; Inherited from the archive
Field support: Needs a reviewed field source
Archive value: active
Show claim history
- active selected why: Current evidence is active; Source: Legacy archive field; Inherited from the archive · Храм Покрова Пресвятой Богородицы в Малореченском Current · archive · Legacy archive field
Technical details
- claim_id
CLAIM-LUX-LH-000207-status-001- review_status
current- confidence
archive- source_type
migration_field- winner_reason
current active claim; source type migration_field; confidence archive
Technical details
- field_id
status- current_claim_id
CLAIM-LUX-LH-000207-status-001- winner_reason
current active claim; source type migration_field; confidence archive- field_support_status
no-trusted-reference- candidate_count
1- distinct_value_count
1- review_guidance
accepted/current claims without valid_to; prefer accepted, then latest valid_from, curated source, confidence, id.
Alternate name
Name variants: Храм-маяк святого Николая Чудотворца в Малореченском
Reviewer action: Classify names by language/script and role such as official, local, translated, transliterated, historical, or alternate.
Field support: Needs a reviewed field source
Show claim history
- Храм-маяк святого Николая Чудотворца в Малореченском · Храм Покрова Пресвятой Богородицы в Малореченском Current · archive · Legacy archive field
Technical details
- claim_id
CLAIM-LUX-LH-000207-alternate_name-001- review_status
current- confidence
archive- source_type
migration_field
Technical details
- field_id
alternate_name- current_claim_id
CLAIM-LUX-LH-000207-alternate_name-001- field_support_status
no-trusted-reference- candidate_count
1- distinct_value_count
1- review_guidance
name variant field; classify by language/script and role instead of choosing one scalar winner.
English name
Selected value: St. Nicholas the Miracle Church-Lighthouse in Malorechenskoye
Why this value is shown: Current evidence is active; Source: Legacy archive field; Inherited from the archive
Field support: Needs a reviewed field source
Show claim history
- St. Nicholas the Miracle Church-Lighthouse in Malorechenskoye selected why: Current evidence is active; Source: Legacy archive field; Inherited from the archive · Храм Покрова Пресвятой Богородицы в Малореченском Current · archive · Legacy archive field
Technical details
- claim_id
CLAIM-LUX-LH-000207-english_name-001- review_status
current- confidence
archive- source_type
migration_field- winner_reason
current active claim; source type migration_field; confidence archive
Technical details
- field_id
english_name- current_claim_id
CLAIM-LUX-LH-000207-english_name-001- winner_reason
current active claim; source type migration_field; confidence archive- field_support_status
no-trusted-reference- candidate_count
1- distinct_value_count
1- review_guidance
accepted/current claims without valid_to; prefer accepted, then latest valid_from, curated source, confidence, id.
Key sources
2 active / 2 total in-archive source links. Full sources and reference search leads below
External Identity Graph
- LUX Light ArchiveLUX-LH-000207 Canonical LUX ID
Local identity anchor for the record and related claims.
- Wikidata
- WikipediaSearch / review Search lead
review lead · Useful for public descriptions and cross-checking, but text must be rewritten or quoted sparingly.
- ARLHSSearch / review Review source
review lead · Search the World List of Lights and add a verified ARLHS ID when found.
- OpenStreetMapSearch / review Search lead
review lead · Resolve to a stable node, way, or relation URL before acceptance.
- Source URLs2 active / 2 total in-record source links Record source URLs
record provenance · Record-level source URLs are listed in the source provenance section.
- Lighthouse DirectorySearch / review Review source
review lead · Use the regional directory page as a trusted catalogue lead; add the exact URL after review.
Evidence graph
Derived view of how sources, facts, identifiers, lifecycle events, and relationships support this record.
Sources
Facts
- Alternate name alternate_name · Храм-маяк святого Николая Чудотворца в Малореченском
- English name english_name · St. Nicholas the Miracle Church-Lighthouse in Malorechenskoye
- Operational status status · active
Identifiers
- Search / review object
- Search / review object
- Search / review object
- Search / review object
- Search / review object
Lifecycle
- No lifecycle evidence nodes yet.
View by year
Reconstructed state
No reviewed year-by-year state profile yet.
State profile JSON will appear here after review.
History and connections
Lifecycle summary
Current status: active
Evidence and data
Detailed timeline, graph, map history, and JSON exports for review and research.
Coverage: no-accepted-coordinates
Open timeline JSON · Open graph JSON · Open map history JSON · Open state profile JSON
Lighthouse history (0 events)
No timeline events yet.
Record history (2 changes)
- Archive record createdarchive-metadata
- Archive record updatedarchive-metadata
Connection graph (1 objects)
Geo timeline (0 places)
No accepted coordinate point yet. The text geography remains listed as context.
- Geography contextУкраина, Крым · text-only
Referenced by
- Вечный календарь-домик Маяки Крыма / Lighthouses of Crimea mentions · lighthouse_names
Rights & Attribution
Content License
Original editorial content on this page: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International. See Rights & Reuse.
Media Rights
No published media with documented rights on this record.
Attribution
"St. Nicholas the Miracle Church-Lighthouse in Malorechenskoye" · LUX-LH-000207 · © LUX143 · Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International · https://light.lux143.org/lighthouses/LUX-LH-000207/
Citation
LUX Light Archive, Lighthouse record: "St. Nicholas the Miracle Church-Lighthouse in Malorechenskoye", LUX-LH-000207, https://light.lux143.org/lighthouses/LUX-LH-000207/, accessed 2026-07-03, archive v0.24.42.
Legacy archive provenance
This object now uses its LUX identity as the public record. The original Drupal node is preserved as migration provenance and a compatibility route.
- Canonical LUX ID
- LUX-LH-000207
- Legacy node
- node:807
- Legacy URL
- /node/807/
- Drupal source type
- lighthouse
- Source system
- drupal_migration
- Source path
- /node/807
Source provenance
Forum sources
- Храм Покрова Пресвятой Богородицы в Малореченскоммаяки-россии / маяки-черного-и-азовского-морей
Trusted References
Known external identifiers and review leads for Wikipedia, Wikidata, map, registry, and catalogue coverage. Search leads are not accepted evidence until reviewed. Field-level evidence is implied only when evidence scope or supported fields are explicit.
| Source | Status | Evidence scope | Reference | Review note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wikidata | search-candidate | Search / review | Resolve to a verified QID before treating as evidence. | |
| Wikipedia | search-candidate | Search / review | Useful for public descriptions and cross-checking, but text must be rewritten or quoted sparingly. | |
| OpenStreetMap | search-candidate | Search / review | Resolve to a stable node, way, or relation URL before acceptance. | |
| ARLHS | review-source | Search / review | Search the World List of Lights and add a verified ARLHS ID when found. | |
| Lighthouse Directory | review-source | Search / review | Use the regional directory page as a trusted catalogue lead; add the exact URL after review. |
Record identifiers
- Node
- 807
- Source type
- lighthouse
- Review class
- Lighthouse
- Wikidata class
- Q39715
- Created
- 01/10/2012 09:18:18 UTC
- Changed
- 14/03/2015 06:45:30 UTC
- Source path
- /node/807
All technical fields
- Status
- active Legacy archive claim · Храм Покрова Пресвятой Богородицы в Малореченском
- Construction date
- Not recorded
- Tower height
- Not recorded
- Focal height
- Not recorded
- Light height
- Not recorded
- Light characteristic
- Not recorded
- Light number
- Not recorded
- Operation
- Not recorded
- Visibility
- Not recorded
- Legacy light IDs
- Not recorded
- Call sign
- Not recorded
- Lens / optics
- Not curated
- Latitude
- Not recorded
- Longitude
- Not recorded
Empty lighthouse fields are shown so review gaps are visible. Lens and optics are curated as heritage assets when evidence exists.