Caucasian Imamate
0 sources
Caucasian Imamate
Summary
Caucasian Imamate is a state[1]. It draws 263 Wikipedia views per month (state category, ranking #24 of 50).[2]
Key Facts
- Caucasian Imamate's continent is recorded as Asia[3].
- Caucasian Imamate's instance of is recorded as state[4].
- Caucasian Imamate's instance of is recorded as historical country[5].
- Caucasian Imamate's capital is recorded as Dargo, Vedensky District[6].
- Caucasian Imamate's capital is recorded as Vedeno[7].
- Caucasian Imamate's capital is recorded as Akhulgo[8].
- Caucasian Imamate's official language is recorded as Arabic[9].
- Caucasian Imamate's official language is recorded as Chechen[10].
- Caucasian Imamate's official language is recorded as Avar[11].
- Caucasian Imamate's official language is recorded as Kumyk[12].
- Caucasian Imamate's flag image is recorded as Thirdimamateflag.svg[13].
- Caucasian Imamate's basic form of government is recorded as divan[14].
- Caucasian Imamate's locator map image is recorded as Imamat 1854.png[15].
- Caucasian Imamate's Commons category is recorded as Caucasian Imamate[16].
- +1828-01-01T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Caucasian Imamate[17].
- Caucasian Imamate was dissolved in +1859-01-01T00:00:00Z[18].
- Caucasian Imamate's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/048v46[19].
- Caucasian Imamate's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Caucasian Imamate[20].
- Caucasian Imamate's population is recorded as {'amount': '+400000'}[21].
- Caucasian Imamate's Great Russian Encyclopedia Online ID is recorded as 2005672[22].
- Caucasian Imamate's language used is recorded as Dargwa[23].
- Caucasian Imamate's language used is recorded as Avar[24].
- Caucasian Imamate's language used is recorded as Chechen[25].
- Caucasian Imamate's language used is recorded as Arabic[26].
- Caucasian Imamate's language used is recorded as Dargin[27].
Body
Founding
+1828-01-01T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Caucasian Imamate[17].
Dissolution
Caucasian Imamate was dissolved in +1859-01-01T00:00:00Z[18].
Why It Matters
Caucasian Imamate draws 263 Wikipedia views per month (state category, ranking #24 of 50).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 17 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 13 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]