Danish Royal Family
0 sources
Danish Royal Family
Summary
Danish Royal Family is a royal family[1]. It draws 1,557 Wikipedia views per month (royal_family category, ranking #4 of 11).[2]
Key Facts
- Danish Royal Family is in the country of Denmark[3].
- Danish Royal Family's instance of is recorded as royal family[4].
- Danish Royal Family comprises Margrethe II of Denmark[5].
- Danish Royal Family comprises Frederik X of Denmark[6].
- Danish Royal Family comprises Queen Mary of Denmark[7].
- Danish Royal Family comprises Christian, Crown Prince of Denmark[8].
- Danish Royal Family comprises Princess Isabella of Denmark[9].
- Danish Royal Family comprises Princess Josephine of Denmark[10].
- Danish Royal Family comprises Prince Vincent of Denmark[11].
- Danish Royal Family comprises Princess Marie of Denmark[12].
- Danish Royal Family comprises Prince Joachim of Denmark[13].
- Danish Royal Family comprises Queen Anne-Marie of Greece[14].
- Danish Royal Family comprises Princess Benedikte of Denmark[15].
- Danish Royal Family comprises Countess Athena of Monpezat[16].
- Danish Royal Family comprises Count Henrik of Monpezat[17].
- Danish Royal Family comprises Count Felix of Monpezat[18].
- Danish Royal Family comprises Count Nikolai of Monpezat[19].
- Danish Royal Family's official website is recorded as https://www.kongehuset.dk[20].
- Danish Royal Family's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Danish Royal Family[21].
- Danish Royal Family's Commons gallery is recorded as Danish Royal Family[22].
- Danish Royal Family's topic has template is recorded as Template:Danish royal family[23].
- Danish Royal Family's owner of is recorded as Arresødal[24].
- Danish Royal Family's owner of is recorded as Gråsten Palace[25].
- Danish Royal Family's owner of is recorded as Marselisborg Palace[26].
- Danish Royal Family's owner of is recorded as Fredensborg Palace[27].
Why It Matters
Danish Royal Family draws 1,557 Wikipedia views per month (royal_family category, ranking #4 of 11).[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]