Amish
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Amish
Summary
Amish is an ethnoreligious group[1]. Amish ranks in the top 4% of ethnoreligious_group entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (14,051 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Pennsylvania German was Amish's native language[3].
- Amish's religion is recorded as Anabaptism[4].
- Amish is in the country of United States[5].
- Amish is in the country of Canada[6].
- Amish is in the country of Bolivia[7].
- Amish is in the country of Argentina[8].
- Amish's instance of is recorded as ethnoreligious group[9].
- Amish's founder is recorded as Q124060[10].
- Q124060 is named after Amish[11].
- Amish is a type of Swiss[12].
- Amish is a type of Germans[13].
- Amish's Commons category is recorded as Amish[14].
- 1693 marks the founding of Amish[15].
- Amish's separated from is recorded as Mennonites[16].
- Amish's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Amish[17].
- Amish has a population of {'amount': '+237520'}[18].
- Amish has a population of {'amount': '+330265'}[19].
- Amish has a population of {'amount': '+100000'}[20].
- Amish has a population of {'amount': '+5000'}[21].
- Amish's languages spoken, written or signed is recorded as Pennsylvania German[22].
- Amish's languages spoken, written or signed is recorded as American Sign Language[23].
- Amish's native label is recorded as {'lang': 'pdc', 'text': 'Amisch'}[24].
- Amish's different from is recorded as Amis[25].
- Amish's different from is recorded as Amish[26].
Body
Founding
Amish's founder is recorded as Q124060[10]. 1693 marks the founding of Amish[15].
Why It Matters
Amish ranks in the top 4% of ethnoreligious_group entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (14,051 views/month).[2] Amish has Wikipedia articles in 28 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[27] Amish is known by 53 alternative names across languages and contexts.[28]