1969 Tour de France
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1969 Tour de France
Summary
1969 Tour de France is a Tour de France[1]. It draws 35 Wikipedia views per month (tour_de_france category, ranking #55 of 113).[2]
Key Facts
- 1969 Tour de France won the Eddy Merckx[3].
- 1969 Tour de France won the Roger Pingeon[4].
- 1969 Tour de France won the Raymond Poulidor[5].
- 1969 Tour de France won the Eddy Merckx[6].
- 1969 Tour de France won the Eddy Merckx[7].
- 1969 Tour de France won the Faemino-Faema[8].
- 1969 Tour de France is in the country of France[9].
- 1969 Tour de France is in the country of Belgium[10].
- 1969 Tour de France is in the country of Netherlands[11].
- 1969 Tour de France is in the country of Switzerland[12].
- 1969 Tour de France is in the country of Spain[13].
- 1969 Tour de France's image is recorded as Finish van de 2e etappe in Maastricht 1e Julien Stevens, 2e Wil in het Veld, Bestanddeelnr 922-5882.jpg[14].
- 1969 Tour de France's instance of is recorded as Tour de France[15].
- 1969 Tour de France's follows is recorded as 1968 Tour de France[16].
- 1969 Tour de France's followed by is recorded as 1970 Tour de France[17].
- 1969 Tour de France's locator map image is recorded as Route of the 1969 Tour de France.png[18].
- 1969 Tour de France's part of is recorded as 1969 Super Prestige Pernod[19].
- 1969 Tour de France's Commons category is recorded as Tour de France 1969[20].
- 1969 Tour de France's edition number is recorded as 56[21].
- 1969 Tour de France's has part is recorded as 1969 Tour de France, stage 22a[22].
- 1969 Tour de France's has part is recorded as 1969 Tour de France, stage 21[23].
- 1969 Tour de France's has part is recorded as 1969 Tour de France, prologue[24].
- 1969 Tour de France's has part is recorded as 1969 Tour de France, stage 1a[25].
- 1969 Tour de France's has part is recorded as 1969 Tour de France, stage 1b[26].
- 1969 Tour de France's has part is recorded as 1969 Tour de France, stage 2[27].
Body
Recognition
Wins include Eddy Merckx[3], Roger Pingeon[4], Raymond Poulidor[5], and Faemino-Faema[8].
Why It Matters
1969 Tour de France draws 35 Wikipedia views per month (tour_de_france category, ranking #55 of 113).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 15 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 4 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]
FAQs
What awards did 1969 Tour de France receive?
Honors received include Eddy Merckx[3], Roger Pingeon[4], Raymond Poulidor[5], and Eddy Merckx[6].