18th G7 summit
0 sources
18th G7 summit
Summary
18th G7 summit is a G7 summit[1]. It draws 12 Wikipedia views per month (g7_summit category, ranking #25 of 33).[2]
Key Facts
- 18th G7 summit is in the country of Germany[3].
- 18th G7 summit's image is recorded as 18th G7 summit member 19920706.jpg[4].
- 18th G7 summit's instance of is recorded as G7 summit[5].
- 18th G7 summit's follows is recorded as 17th G7 summit[6].
- 18th G7 summit's followed by is recorded as 19th G7 summit[7].
- 18th G7 summit's location is recorded as Munich Residence[8].
- 18th G7 summit's Commons category is recorded as 18th G7 summit[9].
- 18th G7 summit's edition number is recorded as 18[10].
- 18th G7 summit's start time is recorded as +1992-07-06T00:00:00Z[11].
- 18th G7 summit's end time is recorded as +1992-07-08T00:00:00Z[12].
- 18th G7 summit's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/027bjhb[13].
- 18th G7 summit's participant is recorded as Jacques Delors[14].
- 18th G7 summit's participant is recorded as John Major[15].
- 18th G7 summit's participant is recorded as George H. W. Bush[16].
- 18th G7 summit's participant is recorded as Brian Mulroney[17].
- 18th G7 summit's participant is recorded as Kiichi Miyazawa[18].
- 18th G7 summit's participant is recorded as Giuliano Amato[19].
- 18th G7 summit's participant is recorded as François Mitterrand[20].
- 18th G7 summit's participant is recorded as Helmut Kohl[21].
- 18th G7 summit's native label is recorded as {'lang': 'en', 'text': '18th G7 summit'}[22].
Why It Matters
18th G7 summit draws 12 Wikipedia views per month (g7_summit category, ranking #25 of 33).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[23] It is known by 8 alternative names across languages and contexts.[24]