C-Lion1
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C-Lion1
Summary
C-Lion1 is a submarine communications cable[1]. C-Lion1 draws 14 Wikipedia views per month (submarine_communications_cable category, ranking #11 of 46).[2]
Key Facts
- C-Lion1 is in the country of Finland[3].
- C-Lion1 is in the country of Germany[4].
- C-Lion1's route map is recorded as C-lion cable card.png[5].
- C-Lion1's instance of is recorded as submarine communications cable[6].
- C-Lion1's owned by is recorded as Cinia[7].
- C-Lion1's location is recorded as Baltic Sea[8].
- C-Lion1's Commons category is recorded as C-Lion1[9].
- C-Lion1's terminus is recorded as Rostock[10].
- C-Lion1's terminus is recorded as Santahamina[11].
- C-Lion1's terminus is recorded as Hanko[12].
- +2016-01-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of C-Lion1[13].
- C-Lion1's significant event is recorded as 2024 Baltic Sea submarine cable disruptions[14].
- C-Lion1's length is recorded as {'unit': 'Q828224', 'amount': '+1173'}[15].
- C-Lion1's Google Knowledge Graph ID is recorded as /g/11b72l4phx[16].
- C-Lion1's Submarine Cable Map ID is recorded as c-lion1[17].
Why It Matters
C-Lion1 draws 14 Wikipedia views per month (submarine_communications_cable category, ranking #11 of 46).[2] C-Lion1 has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[18] C-Lion1 is known by 4 alternative names across languages and contexts.[19]