1934 Swissair Tuttlingen accident
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1934 Swissair Tuttlingen accident
Summary
1934 Swissair Tuttlingen accident is an aviation accident[1]. It draws 28 Wikipedia views per month (aviation_accident category, ranking #361 of 1,410).[2]
Key Facts
- 1934 Swissair Tuttlingen accident's image is recorded as ETH-BIB-Curtiss AT-32C Condor, CH-170 am Boden in Dübendorf-Inlandflüge-LBS MH05-32-03.tif[3].
- 1934 Swissair Tuttlingen accident's instance of is recorded as aviation accident[4].
- 1934 Swissair Tuttlingen accident's operator is recorded as Swissair[5].
- 1934 Swissair Tuttlingen accident's point in time is recorded as +1934-07-27T00:00:00Z[6].
- 1934 Swissair Tuttlingen accident's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 48.01863888888889, 'lon': 8.796472222222222}[7].
- 1934 Swissair Tuttlingen accident's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0_s694b[8].
- 1934 Swissair Tuttlingen accident's number of deaths is recorded as {'amount': '+12'}[9].
- 1934 Swissair Tuttlingen accident's start point is recorded as Zurich Airport[10].
- 1934 Swissair Tuttlingen accident's start point is recorded as Former civil airport reception building[11].
- 1934 Swissair Tuttlingen accident's destination point is recorded as Berlin-Tegel Airport[12].
- 1934 Swissair Tuttlingen accident's number of survivors is recorded as {'amount': '+0'}[13].
- 1934 Swissair Tuttlingen accident's Aviation Safety Network accident ID is recorded as 19340727-0[14].
- 1934 Swissair Tuttlingen accident's vessel is recorded as T-32 Condor II[15].
- 1934 Swissair Tuttlingen accident's via is recorded as Leipzig/Halle Airport[16].
- 1934 Swissair Tuttlingen accident's via is recorded as Stuttgart Airport[17].
Why It Matters
1934 Swissair Tuttlingen accident draws 28 Wikipedia views per month (aviation_accident category, ranking #361 of 1,410).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[18]