Copenhagen County
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Copenhagen County
Summary
Copenhagen County is a county of Denmark[1]. It draws 63 Wikipedia views per month (county_of_denmark category, ranking #5 of 23).[2]
Key Facts
- Copenhagen County is in the country of Denmark[3].
- Copenhagen County's head of government is recorded as Vibeke Storm Rasmussen[4].
- Copenhagen County's head of government is recorded as Per Kaalund[5].
- Copenhagen County's instance of is recorded as county of Denmark[6].
- Copenhagen County's Commons category is recorded as København Amt[7].
- Copenhagen County comprises Albertslund Municipality[8].
- Copenhagen County comprises Ballerup Municipality[9].
- Copenhagen County comprises Brøndby Municipality[10].
- Copenhagen County comprises Dragør Municipality[11].
- Copenhagen County comprises Gentofte Municipality[12].
- Copenhagen County comprises Gladsaxe Municipality[13].
- Copenhagen County comprises Glostrup Municipality[14].
- Copenhagen County comprises Herlev Municipality[15].
- Copenhagen County comprises Hvidovre Municipality[16].
- Copenhagen County comprises Høje-Taastrup Municipality[17].
- Copenhagen County comprises Ishøj Municipality[18].
- Copenhagen County comprises Ledøje-Smørum Municipality[19].
- Copenhagen County comprises Lyngby-Taarbæk Municipality[20].
- Copenhagen County comprises Rødovre Municipality[21].
- Copenhagen County comprises Søllerød Municipality[22].
- Copenhagen County comprises Tårnby Municipality[23].
- Copenhagen County comprises Vallensbæk Municipality[24].
- Copenhagen County comprises Værløse Municipality[25].
- April 1, 1970 marks the founding of Copenhagen County[26].
- Copenhagen County was dissolved in December 31, 2006[27].
Body
Founding
April 1, 1970 marks the founding of Copenhagen County[26].
Dissolution
Copenhagen County was dissolved in December 31, 2006[27].
Why It Matters
Copenhagen County draws 63 Wikipedia views per month (county_of_denmark category, ranking #5 of 23).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 21 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 16 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]