culture of India
0 sources
culture of India
Summary
culture of India is a culture of an area[1]. It ranks in the top 0.63% of culture_of_an_area entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,063 views/month, #2 of 316).[2]
Key Facts
- culture of India is in the country of India[3].
- culture of India's image is recorded as Hindu marriage ceremony offering.jpg[4].
- culture of India's instance of is recorded as culture of an area[5].
- culture of India's subclass of is recorded as culture of the Earth[6].
- culture of India's part of is recorded as culture of the Indian subcontinent[7].
- culture of India's Commons category is recorded as Culture of India[8].
- culture of India's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/01qvwj[9].
- culture of India's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Culture of India[10].
- culture of India's Art & Architecture Thesaurus ID is recorded as 300018863[11].
- culture of India's facet of is recorded as India[12].
- culture of India's partially coincident with is recorded as Hinduism[13].
- culture of India's topic has template is recorded as Template:Culture of India[14].
- culture of India's BBC Things ID is recorded as fb3fb29a-52b6-40cb-9c68-b84d53bfd521[15].
- culture of India's has list is recorded as glossary of Indian culture[16].
- culture of India's studied by is recorded as Indology[17].
- culture of India's Quora topic ID is recorded as Culture-of-India-3[18].
- culture of India's Zhihu topic ID is recorded as 19609831[19].
- culture of India's JSTOR topic ID is recorded as indian-culture[20].
- culture of India's KBpedia ID is recorded as IndianCulture[21].
- culture of India's RKD thesaurus ID is recorded as 921[22].
- culture of India's OpenAlex ID is recorded as C2994267280[23].
- culture of India's ScienceDirect topic ID is recorded as social-sciences/indian-culture[24].
Why It Matters
culture of India ranks in the top 0.63% of culture_of_an_area entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,063 views/month, #2 of 316).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 20 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[25] It is known by 15 alternative names across languages and contexts.[26]