1981 Paris–Dakar Rally
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1981 Paris–Dakar Rally
Summary
1981 Paris–Dakar Rally is a rally edition[1]. It draws 3 Wikipedia views per month (rally_edition category, ranking #19 of 99).[2]
Key Facts
- 1981 Paris–Dakar Rally is in the country of France[3].
- 1981 Paris–Dakar Rally is in the country of Algeria[4].
- 1981 Paris–Dakar Rally is in the country of Mali[5].
- 1981 Paris–Dakar Rally is in the country of Republic of Upper Volta[6].
- 1981 Paris–Dakar Rally is in the country of Ivory Coast[7].
- 1981 Paris–Dakar Rally is in the country of Senegal[8].
- 1981 Paris–Dakar Rally's instance of is recorded as rally edition[9].
- 1981 Paris–Dakar Rally followed 1980 Paris–Dakar Rally[10].
- 1981 Paris–Dakar Rally was followed by 1982 Paris–Dakar Rally[11].
- 1981 Paris–Dakar Rally's Commons category is recorded as Paris Dakar 1981[12].
- 1981 Paris–Dakar Rally's edition number is recorded as 3[13].
- January 1, 1981 marks the founding of 1981 Paris–Dakar Rally[14].
- 1981 Paris–Dakar Rally occurred on January 1981[15].
- 1981 Paris–Dakar Rally took place on 1981[16].
- 1981 Paris–Dakar Rally's sport is recorded as rally raid[17].
- 1981 Paris–Dakar Rally's start point is recorded as Paris[18].
- 1981 Paris–Dakar Rally's destination point is recorded as Dakar[19].
- 1981 Paris–Dakar Rally's sports season of league or competition is recorded as Dakar Rally[20].
Body
When and Where
Recorded point in time include January 1981[15] and 1981[16]. Country listings include France[3], a sovereign state[21], in France[22], founded in 0843[23]; Algeria[4], a sovereign state[24], in Algeria[25], founded in 1962[26]; Mali[5], a sovereign state[27], in Mali[28], founded in 1960[29]; Republic of Upper Volta[6], a historical country[30], in Republic of Upper Volta[31], founded in 1958[32]; Ivory Coast[7], a sovereign state[33], in Ivory Coast[34], founded in 1960[35]; and Senegal[8], a sovereign state[36], in Senegal[37], founded in 1960[38].
Context
1981 Paris–Dakar Rally's instance of is recorded as rally edition[9]. It followed 1980 Paris–Dakar Rally[10]. It was followed by 1982 Paris–Dakar Rally[11].
Why It Matters
1981 Paris–Dakar Rally draws 3 Wikipedia views per month (rally_edition category, ranking #19 of 99).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 9 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[39]