Central Germany
0 sources
Central Germany
Summary
Central Germany is a region[1]. It draws 50 Wikipedia views per month (region category, ranking #375 of 1,289).[2]
Key Facts
- Central Germany is located in Saxony[3].
- Central Germany is located in Saxony-Anhalt[4].
- Central Germany is located in Thuringia[5].
- Central Germany is located in Brandenburg[6].
- Central Germany is located in Hesse[7].
- Central Germany is in the country of Germany[8].
- Central Germany's instance of is recorded as region[9].
- Central Germany's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 236351357[10].
- Central Germany's GND ID is recorded as 4039674-5[11].
- Central Germany's locator map image is recorded as Mitteldeutschland.png[12].
- Central Germany's said to be the same as is recorded as Central Germany[13].
- Central Germany's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 51.33, 'lon': 12.17}[14].
- Central Germany's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/09bp55[15].
- Central Germany's NL CR AUT ID is recorded as ge138108[16].
- Central Germany's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Central Germany[17].
- Central Germany's BabelNet ID is recorded as 02780283n[18].
- Central Germany's FactGrid item ID is recorded as Sally Mann[19].
- Central Germany's museum-digital place ID is recorded as 3926[20].
Body
Geography
Central Germany is in the country of Germany[8]. Located in include Saxony[3], a federated state of Germany[21], in Germany[22], founded in 1990[23]; Saxony-Anhalt[4], a federated state of Germany[24], in Germany[25], founded in 1990[26]; Thuringia[5], a federated state of Germany[27], in Holy Roman Empire[28], founded in 1920[29]; Brandenburg[6], a federated state of Germany[30], in Germany[31], founded in 1990[32]; and Hesse[7], a federated state of Germany[33], in Germany[34], founded in 1946[35].
Designation and Status
Central Germany's instance of is recorded as region[9].
Why It Matters
Central Germany draws 50 Wikipedia views per month (region category, ranking #375 of 1,289).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 9 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[36]