Caesar
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Caesar
Summary
Caesar is a cocktail[1]. Caesar ranks in the top 9% of cocktail entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (666 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Caesar is credited with the discovery of Walter Chell[3].
- Caesar's image is recorded as Caesar Cocktail.JPG[4].
- Caesar's image is recorded as Bloody Caesar.jpg[5].
- Caesar's instance of is recorded as cocktail[6].
- Julius Caesar is named after Caesar[7].
- Caesar's made from material is recorded as Clamato[8].
- Caesar's made from material is recorded as vodka[9].
- Caesar's made from material is recorded as hot sauce[10].
- Caesar's made from material is recorded as Worcestershire sauce[11].
- Caesar's made from material is recorded as celery salt[12].
- Caesar's made from material is recorded as peppercorn[13].
- Caesar's made from material is recorded as highball glass[14].
- Caesar's made from material is recorded as celery stalk[15].
- Caesar's made from material is recorded as lime wedge[16].
- Caesar's made from material is recorded as ice cube[17].
- Caesar's subclass of is recorded as clam dish[18].
- Caesar's subclass of is recorded as cocktail[19].
- Caesar's Commons category is recorded as Caesar (cocktail)[20].
- Caesar's country of origin is recorded as Canada[21].
- +1969-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Caesar[22].
- Caesar's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/02zqt3[23].
- Caesar's different from is recorded as Caesar[24].
- Caesar's uses is recorded as highball glass[25].
- Caesar's BabelNet ID is recorded as 03485914n[26].
- Caesar's Google Knowledge Graph ID is recorded as /g/122ds7fl[27].
Body
Works and Contributions
Caesar is credited with the discovery of Walter Chell[3].
Why It Matters
Caesar ranks in the top 9% of cocktail entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (666 views/month).[2] Caesar has Wikipedia articles in 10 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] Caesar is known by 8 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]