Denmark in the Eurovision Song Contest 2001
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Denmark in the Eurovision Song Contest 2001
Summary
Denmark in the Eurovision Song Contest 2001 is a Dansk Melodi Grand Prix[1]. It ranks in the top 7% of dansk_melodi_grand_prix entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (62 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Denmark in the Eurovision Song Contest 2001 is located in Herning Municipality[3].
- Denmark in the Eurovision Song Contest 2001 is in the country of Denmark[4].
- Denmark in the Eurovision Song Contest 2001's instance of is recorded as Dansk Melodi Grand Prix[5].
- Denmark in the Eurovision Song Contest 2001's instance of is recorded as nation in the Eurovision Song Contest[6].
- Denmark in the Eurovision Song Contest 2001 followed Denmark in the Eurovision Song Contest 2000[7].
- Denmark in the Eurovision Song Contest 2001 was followed by Denmark in the Eurovision Song Contest 2002[8].
- Denmark in the Eurovision Song Contest 2001's part of the series is recorded as Denmark in the Eurovision Song Contest[9].
- Denmark in the Eurovision Song Contest 2001 is part of Eurovision Song Contest 2001[10].
- Denmark in the Eurovision Song Contest 2001 took place on 2001[11].
- Denmark in the Eurovision Song Contest 2001's topic's main category is recorded as Category:2001 Dansk Melodi Grand Prix[12].
- Denmark in the Eurovision Song Contest 2001's participant in is recorded as Eurovision Song Contest 2001[13].
Body
When and Where
Denmark in the Eurovision Song Contest 2001 took place on 2001[11]. It is in the country of Denmark[4].
Context
Denmark in the Eurovision Song Contest 2001 is part of Eurovision Song Contest 2001[10]. Recorded instance of include Dansk Melodi Grand Prix[5] and nation in the Eurovision Song Contest[6]. It followed Denmark in the Eurovision Song Contest 2000[7]. It was followed by Denmark in the Eurovision Song Contest 2002[8].
Why It Matters
Denmark in the Eurovision Song Contest 2001 ranks in the top 7% of dansk_melodi_grand_prix entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (62 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[14] It is known by 3 alternative names across languages and contexts.[15]