East Frisia
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East Frisia
Summary
East Frisia is a region[1]. It draws 400 Wikipedia views per month (region category, ranking #181 of 1,289).[2]
Key Facts
- East Frisia is located in Lower Saxony[3].
- East Frisia is in the country of Germany[4].
- East Frisia is on the body of water North Sea[5].
- East Frisia's image is recorded as Nebelostfriesland.jpg[6].
- East Frisia's instance of is recorded as region[7].
- East Frisia's instance of is recorded as historical country[8].
- East Frisia's instance of is recorded as administrative territorial entity[9].
- East Frisia's flag image is recorded as Flag of East Frisia.svg[10].
- East Frisia's shares border with is recorded as Netherlands[11].
- East Frisia's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 167993933[12].
- East Frisia's GND ID is recorded as 4044067-9[13].
- East Frisia's locator map image is recorded as Ostfriesland de.svg[14].
- East Frisia's Library of Congress authority ID is recorded as n80040388[15].
- East Frisia's part of is recorded as Frisia[16].
- East Frisia's part of is recorded as East Frisia[17].
- East Frisia's Commons category is recorded as East Frisia[18].
- East Frisia's OpenStreetMap relation ID is recorded as 2136138[19].
- East Frisia's has part is recorded as Aurich[20].
- East Frisia's has part is recorded as Emden[21].
- East Frisia's has part is recorded as Leer[22].
- East Frisia's has part is recorded as Wittmund[23].
- East Frisia's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 53.47, 'lon': 7.49}[24].
- East Frisia's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/012q_g[25].
- East Frisia's NL CR AUT ID is recorded as ge134582[26].
- East Frisia's official website is recorded as http://www.ostfriesland.de[27].
Body
Identity
Part of include Frisia[16], an ethnic territory[28], in Netherlands[29] and East Frisia[17], a region[30], in Germany[31].
Brands and Namesakes
Things named for East Frisia include East Friesian[32], a sheep breed[33], in Germany[34].
Why It Matters
East Frisia draws 400 Wikipedia views per month (region category, ranking #181 of 1,289).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 23 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[35] It is known by 21 alternative names across languages and contexts.[36]
Entities named for it include East Friesian[32], a sheep breed[33], in Germany[34].