Battle of Moscow
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Battle of Moscow
Summary
Battle of Moscow is a battle[1]. It ranks in the top 0.64% of battle entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (7,544 views/month, #48 of 7,470).[2]
Key Facts
- Battle of Moscow is located in Smolensk Oblast[3].
- Battle of Moscow is located in Tula Oblast[4].
- Battle of Moscow is located in Tver Oblast[5].
- Battle of Moscow is located in Oryol Oblast[6].
- Battle of Moscow is in the country of Soviet Union[7].
- Battle of Moscow's instance of is recorded as battle[8].
- Battle of Moscow took place at Moscow Oblast[9].
- Battle of Moscow is part of World War II[10].
- Battle of Moscow is part of Eastern Front[11].
- Battle of Moscow's Commons category is recorded as Battle of Moscow[12].
- Battle of Moscow comprises Orel-Bryansk operation[13].
- Battle of Moscow comprises Vyazemsky operation[14].
- Battle of Moscow comprises Q4299514[15].
- Battle of Moscow comprises First Battle of Kalinin[16].
- Battle of Moscow comprises Battle of Tula[17].
- Battle of Moscow comprises Q4223923[18].
- Battle of Moscow comprises Q4313206[19].
- Battle of Moscow comprises Second Battle of Kalinin[20].
- Battle of Moscow comprises Q4223922[21].
- Battle of Moscow comprises Yelets Operation[22].
- Battle of Moscow comprises Tula offensive operation[23].
- Battle of Moscow comprises Q4210405[24].
- Battle of Moscow began on September 30, 1941[25].
- Battle of Moscow ended on April 20, 1942[26].
- Battle of Moscow took place on 1941[27].
Body
When and Where
Battle of Moscow took place on 1941[27]. It began on September 30, 1941[25]. It ended on April 20, 1942[26]. It took place at Moscow Oblast[9]. It is in the country of Soviet Union[7].
Context
Part of include World War II[10], a world war[28] and Eastern Front[11], a war front[29], in Soviet Union[30]. Battle of Moscow's instance of is recorded as battle[8].
Why It Matters
Battle of Moscow ranks in the top 0.64% of battle entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (7,544 views/month, #48 of 7,470).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 28 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[31] It is known by 60 alternative names across languages and contexts.[32]