Allies of World War II
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Allies of World War II
Summary
Allies of World War II is a military alliance[1]. It ranks in the top 6% of military_alliance entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (12,064 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Allies of World War II's instance of is recorded as military alliance[3].
- Allies of World War II's instance of is recorded as multinational military coalition[4].
- Allies of World War II's instance of is recorded as country in World War II[5].
- Allies of World War II comprises United States[6].
- Allies of World War II comprises Soviet Union[7].
- Allies of World War II comprises United Kingdom[8].
- Allies of World War II comprises Republic of China[9].
- Allies of World War II comprises France[10].
- Allies of World War II comprises Poland[11].
- Allies of World War II comprises Canada[12].
- Allies of World War II comprises Australia[13].
- Allies of World War II comprises New Zealand[14].
- Allies of World War II comprises Netherlands[15].
- Allies of World War II comprises Belgium[16].
- Allies of World War II comprises Luxembourg[17].
- Allies of World War II comprises Norway[18].
- Allies of World War II comprises Czechoslovak government-in-exile[19].
- Allies of World War II comprises Kingdom of Greece[20].
- Allies of World War II comprises Ethiopian Empire[21].
- Allies of World War II comprises Estado Novo[22].
- Allies of World War II comprises Commonwealth of the Philippines[23].
- Allies of World War II comprises Kingdom of Yugoslavia[24].
- Allies of World War II comprises Union of South Africa[25].
- 1939 marks the founding of Allies of World War II[26].
- Allies of World War II was part of the conflict World War II[27].
Body
Founding
1939 marks the founding of Allies of World War II[26].
Brands and Namesakes
Things named for Allies of World War II include Lancaster Memorial[28], a war memorial[29], in Luxembourg[30].
Why It Matters
Allies of World War II ranks in the top 6% of military_alliance entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (12,064 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 30 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[31] It is known by 70 alternative names across languages and contexts.[32]
Works attributed to it include Joint Declaration by Members of the United Nations Against Extermination of the Jews[33], a manifesto[34]. Entities named for it include Lancaster Memorial[28], a war memorial[29], in Luxembourg[30].