autonomous community of Spain
0 sources
autonomous community of Spain
Summary
autonomous community of Spain ranks in the top 0.4% of general entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (7,649 views/month, #315 of 77,819).[1]
Key Facts
- autonomous community of Spain is in the country of Spain[2].
- autonomous community of Spain is a type of administrative territorial entity of Spain[3].
- autonomous community of Spain is a type of political territorial entity[4].
- autonomous community of Spain is a type of first-level administrative division[5].
- autonomous community of Spain is a type of autonomous community[6].
- autonomous community of Spain is a type of autonomous administrative territorial entity[7].
- autonomous community of Spain is a type of NUTS 2 statistical territorial entity[8].
- autonomous community of Spain's Commons category is recorded as Autonomous communities of Spain[9].
- January 1, 1979 marks the founding of autonomous community of Spain[10].
- autonomous community of Spain's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Autonomous communities of Spain[11].
- autonomous community of Spain's Commons gallery is recorded as Autonomous communities of Spain[12].
- autonomous community of Spain's quantity is recorded as {'amount': '+17'}[13].
- autonomous community of Spain's different from is recorded as autonome regio[14].
Body
Definition and Type
Recorded subclass of include administrative territorial entity of Spain[3], political territorial entity[4], first-level administrative division[5], autonomous community[6], autonomous administrative territorial entity[7], and NUTS 2 statistical territorial entity[8].
Origins
January 1, 1979 marks the founding of autonomous community of Spain[10].
Why It Matters
autonomous community of Spain ranks in the top 0.4% of general entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (7,649 views/month, #315 of 77,819).[1] It has Wikipedia articles in 29 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[15] It is known by 28 alternative names across languages and contexts.[16]