Battle of Kohima
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Battle of Kohima
Summary
Battle of Kohima is a battle[1]. It ranks in the top 3% of battle entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (2,282 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Battle of Kohima is located in Naga Hills District[3].
- Battle of Kohima is in the country of British Raj[4].
- Battle of Kohima's instance of is recorded as battle[5].
- Battle of Kohima took place at Kohima[6].
- Battle of Kohima is part of Operation U-Go[7].
- Battle of Kohima is part of World War II[8].
- Battle of Kohima's Commons category is recorded as Battle of Kohima[9].
- Battle of Kohima comprises Battle of Imphal[10].
- Battle of Kohima comprises Battle of Shangshak[11].
- Battle of Kohima began on April 4, 1944[12].
- Battle of Kohima ended on June 22, 1944[13].
- Battle of Kohima occurred on 1944[14].
- Battle of Kohima's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 25.668, 'lon': 94.103}[15].
- Battle of Kohima's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 25.667645, 'lon': 94.103175}[16].
- Among those involved in Battle of Kohima was United Kingdom[17].
- Among those involved in Battle of Kohima was Empire of Japan[18].
- A participant in Battle of Kohima was British Raj[19].
- Among those involved in Battle of Kohima was Nepal[20].
- Battle of Kohima resulted in {'amount': '+12000'} deaths[21].
Body
When and Where
Battle of Kohima took place on 1944[14]. It began on April 4, 1944[12]. It ended on June 22, 1944[13]. It took place at Kohima[6]. It is in the country of British Raj[4].
Context
Part of include Operation U-Go[7], a military operation[22] and World War II[8], a world war[23]. Battle of Kohima's instance of is recorded as battle[5].
Participants
Recorded participant include United Kingdom[17], Empire of Japan[18], British Raj[19], and Nepal[20].
Outcome and Impact
Battle of Kohima resulted in {'amount': '+12000'} deaths[21].
Why It Matters
Battle of Kohima ranks in the top 3% of battle entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (2,282 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 17 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[24]