1969 Australian Open
0 sources
1969 Australian Open
Summary
1969 Australian Open is an Australian Open[1]. It draws 8 Wikipedia views per month (australian_open category, ranking #21 of 99).[2]
Key Facts
- 1969 Australian Open is in the country of Australia[3].
- 1969 Australian Open's instance of is recorded as Australian Open[4].
- 1969 Australian Open's instance of is recorded as tennis tournament edition[5].
- 1969 Australian Open's follows is recorded as 1968 Australian Championships[6].
- 1969 Australian Open's followed by is recorded as 1970 Australian Open[7].
- 1969 Australian Open's location is recorded as Brisbane[8].
- 1969 Australian Open's edition number is recorded as 57[9].
- 1969 Australian Open's has part is recorded as 1969 Australian Open – men's singles[10].
- 1969 Australian Open's has part is recorded as 1969 Australian Open – men's doubles[11].
- 1969 Australian Open's has part is recorded as 1969 Australian Open – mixed doubles[12].
- 1969 Australian Open's has part is recorded as 1969 Australian Open – women's doubles[13].
- 1969 Australian Open's has part is recorded as 1969 Australian Open – women's singles[14].
- 1969 Australian Open's start time is recorded as +1969-01-20T00:00:00Z[15].
- 1969 Australian Open's end time is recorded as +1969-01-27T00:00:00Z[16].
- 1969 Australian Open's point in time is recorded as +1969-00-00T00:00:00Z[17].
- 1969 Australian Open's sport is recorded as tennis[18].
- 1969 Australian Open's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0f4w6p[19].
- 1969 Australian Open's surface played on is recorded as grass[20].
- 1969 Australian Open's topic's main category is recorded as Category:1969 Australian Open[21].
- 1969 Australian Open's native label is recorded as {'lang': 'en', 'text': '1969 Australian Open'}[22].
- 1969 Australian Open's BabelNet ID is recorded as 03394010n[23].
- 1969 Australian Open's Association of Tennis Professionals tennis tournament edition ID is recorded as australian-open/580/1969/results[24].
Why It Matters
1969 Australian Open draws 8 Wikipedia views per month (australian_open category, ranking #21 of 99).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 15 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[25]