Bulgarian Olympic Committee
0 sources
Bulgarian Olympic Committee
Summary
Bulgarian Olympic Committee is a National Olympic Committee[1]. It draws 26 Wikipedia views per month (national_olympic_committee category, ranking #25 of 214).[2]
Key Facts
- Bulgarian Olympic Committee's field of work was Bulgaria at the Olympics[3].
- Bulgarian Olympic Committee's field of work was sport in Bulgaria[4].
- Bulgarian Olympic Committee was a member of International Olympic Committee[5].
- Bulgarian Olympic Committee was a member of European Olympic Committees[6].
- Bulgarian Olympic Committee is in the country of Bulgaria[7].
- Bulgarian Olympic Committee's instance of is recorded as National Olympic Committee[8].
- Bulgarian Olympic Committee's headquarters location is recorded as Sofia[9].
- Bulgarian Olympic Committee's chairperson is recorded as Stefka Kostadinova[10].
- 1923 marks the founding of Bulgarian Olympic Committee[11].
- Bulgarian Olympic Committee's parent organization or unit is recorded as European Olympic Committees[12].
- Bulgarian Olympic Committee's official website is recorded as http://www.bgolympic.org[13].
- Bulgarian Olympic Committee's short name is recorded as {'lang': 'bg', 'text': 'БОК'}[14].
Body
Founding
1923 marks the founding of Bulgarian Olympic Committee[11].
Identity
Bulgarian Olympic Committee's short name is recorded as {'lang': 'bg', 'text': 'БОК'}[14].
Leadership
Bulgarian Olympic Committee's chairperson is recorded as Stefka Kostadinova[10].
Operations
Bulgarian Olympic Committee's headquarters location is recorded as Sofia[9]. Its parent organization or unit is recorded as European Olympic Committees[12].
Industry
Fields of work include Bulgaria at the Olympics[3], an Olympic delegation[15], in Bulgaria[16] and sport in Bulgaria[4], a sport in a geographic region[17].
Why It Matters
Bulgarian Olympic Committee draws 26 Wikipedia views per month (national_olympic_committee category, ranking #25 of 214).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 14 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[18] It is known by 10 alternative names across languages and contexts.[19]