1954 UCI Road World Championships
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1954 UCI Road World Championships
Summary
1954 UCI Road World Championships is an UCI Road World Championships[1]. It draws 7 Wikipedia views per month (uci_road_world_championships category, ranking #23 of 105).[2]
Key Facts
- 1954 UCI Road World Championships is in the country of Germany[3].
- 1954 UCI Road World Championships's instance of is recorded as UCI Road World Championships[4].
- 1954 UCI Road World Championships followed 1953 UCI Road World Championships[5].
- 1954 UCI Road World Championships was followed by 1955 UCI Road World Championships[6].
- 1954 UCI Road World Championships took place at Solingen[7].
- 1954 UCI Road World Championships is a type of CM[8].
- 1954 UCI Road World Championships's edition number is recorded as 27[9].
- 1954 UCI Road World Championships began on August 21, 1954[10].
- 1954 UCI Road World Championships ended on August 22, 1954[11].
- 1954 UCI Road World Championships occurred on 1954[12].
- 1954 UCI Road World Championships's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 51.166666666666664, 'lon': 7.083333333333333}[13].
- 1954 UCI Road World Championships's sport is recorded as road bicycle racing[14].
- 1954 UCI Road World Championships's organizer is recorded as Union Cycliste Internationale[15].
- 1954 UCI Road World Championships's topic's main category is recorded as Category:1954 UCI Road World Championships[16].
- 1954 UCI Road World Championships's has part is recorded as racing[17].
Body
When and Where
1954 UCI Road World Championships occurred on 1954[12]. It began on August 21, 1954[10]. It ended on August 22, 1954[11]. It took place at Solingen[7]. It is in the country of Germany[3].
Context
1954 UCI Road World Championships's instance of is recorded as UCI Road World Championships[4]. It followed 1953 UCI Road World Championships[5]. It was followed by 1955 UCI Road World Championships[6].
Why It Matters
1954 UCI Road World Championships draws 7 Wikipedia views per month (uci_road_world_championships category, ranking #23 of 105).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 11 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[18] It is known by 3 alternative names across languages and contexts.[19]