1964 United Kingdom general election
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1964 United Kingdom general election
Summary
1964 United Kingdom general election is an United Kingdom general election[1]. It draws 1,419 Wikipedia views per month (united_kingdom_general_election category, ranking #17 of 65).[2]
Key Facts
- 1964 United Kingdom general election is in the country of United Kingdom[3].
- 1964 United Kingdom general election's instance of is recorded as United Kingdom general election[4].
- 1964 United Kingdom general election's follows is recorded as 1959 United Kingdom general election[5].
- 1964 United Kingdom general election's followed by is recorded as 1966 United Kingdom general election[6].
- 1964 United Kingdom general election's Commons category is recorded as 1964 United Kingdom general election[7].
- 1964 United Kingdom general election's office contested is recorded as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom[8].
- 1964 United Kingdom general election's point in time is recorded as +1964-10-15T00:00:00Z[9].
- 1964 United Kingdom general election's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0208yf[10].
- 1964 United Kingdom general election's candidate is recorded as Harold Wilson[11].
- 1964 United Kingdom general election's candidate is recorded as Alec Douglas-Home[12].
- 1964 United Kingdom general election's candidate is recorded as Jo Grimond[13].
- 1964 United Kingdom general election's topic's main category is recorded as Category:1964 United Kingdom general election[14].
- 1964 United Kingdom general election's successful candidate is recorded as Harold Wilson[15].
- 1964 United Kingdom general election's number of seats is recorded as {'amount': '+630'}[16].
- 1964 United Kingdom general election's BBC Things ID is recorded as 81fec8d7-afe4-4026-8905-32bd09f58fee[17].
Why It Matters
1964 United Kingdom general election draws 1,419 Wikipedia views per month (united_kingdom_general_election category, ranking #17 of 65).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 13 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[18] It is known by 5 alternative names across languages and contexts.[19]