Eskilstuna United DFF
0 sources
Eskilstuna United DFF
Summary
Eskilstuna United DFF is a women's association football club[1]. It draws 32 Wikipedia views per month (women_s_association_football_club category, ranking #52 of 187).[2]
Key Facts
- Eskilstuna United DFF is in the country of Sweden[3].
- Eskilstuna United DFF's instance of is recorded as women's association football club[4].
- Eskilstuna United DFF's home venue is recorded as Tunavallen[5].
- Eskilstuna United DFF's league or competition is recorded as Damallsvenskan[6].
- Eskilstuna United DFF's headquarters location is recorded as Eskilstuna[7].
- Eskilstuna United DFF's Commons category is recorded as Eskilstuna United DFF[8].
- +2002-09-28T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Eskilstuna United DFF[9].
- Eskilstuna United DFF's sport is recorded as association football[10].
- Eskilstuna United DFF's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0zg9qw6[11].
- Eskilstuna United DFF's official website is recorded as http://eskilstunaunited.se/[12].
- Eskilstuna United DFF's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Eskilstuna United DFF[13].
- Eskilstuna United DFF's topic has template is recorded as Q25910901[14].
- Eskilstuna United DFF's competition class is recorded as women's association football[15].
- Eskilstuna United DFF's competition won is recorded as 2013 Elitettan[16].
- Eskilstuna United DFF's competition won is recorded as 2025 Elitettan[17].
- Eskilstuna United DFF's Dagens Nyheter topic ID is recorded as eskilstuna-united-dff[18].
- Eskilstuna United DFF's category for members of a team is recorded as Category:Eskilstuna United DFF players[19].
- Eskilstuna United DFF's Fandom article ID is recorded as sweden:Eskilstuna_United_DFF[20].
Body
Founding
+2002-09-28T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Eskilstuna United DFF[9].
Operations
Eskilstuna United DFF's headquarters location is recorded as Eskilstuna[7].
Why It Matters
Eskilstuna United DFF draws 32 Wikipedia views per month (women_s_association_football_club category, ranking #52 of 187).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 11 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[21] It is known by 5 alternative names across languages and contexts.[22]