2001 European Judo Championships
0 sources
2001 European Judo Championships
Summary
2001 European Judo Championships is a European Judo Championships[1]. It draws 17 Wikipedia views per month (european_judo_championships category, ranking #12 of 37).[2]
Key Facts
- 2001 European Judo Championships is located in Paris[3].
- 2001 European Judo Championships is in the country of France[4].
- 2001 European Judo Championships's instance of is recorded as European Judo Championships[5].
- 2001 European Judo Championships followed 2000 European Judo Championships[6].
- 2001 European Judo Championships was followed by 2002 European Judo Championships[7].
- The location of 2001 European Judo Championships was Accor Arena[8].
- 2001 European Judo Championships's edition number is recorded as 50[9].
- 2001 European Judo Championships began on May 18, 2001[10].
- 2001 European Judo Championships ended on May 20, 2001[11].
- 2001 European Judo Championships occurred on 2001[12].
- 2001 European Judo Championships's sport is recorded as judo[13].
- 2001 European Judo Championships's organizer is recorded as European Judo Union[14].
- 2001 European Judo Championships's topic's main category is recorded as Category:2001 European Judo Championships[15].
- 2001 European Judo Championships's short name is recorded as {'lang': 'en', 'text': 'Paris 2001'}[16].
- 2001 European Judo Championships's sports season of league or competition is recorded as European Judo Championships[17].
Body
When and Where
2001 European Judo Championships took place on 2001[12]. It began on May 18, 2001[10]. It ended on May 20, 2001[11]. The location of it was Accor Arena[8]. It is in the country of France[4].
Context
2001 European Judo Championships's instance of is recorded as European Judo Championships[5]. It followed 2000 European Judo Championships[6]. It was followed by 2002 European Judo Championships[7].
Why It Matters
2001 European Judo Championships draws 17 Wikipedia views per month (european_judo_championships category, ranking #12 of 37).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 10 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[18]