FC Amur Blagoveshchensk (1960—2009)
0 sources
FC Amur Blagoveshchensk (1960—2009)
Summary
FC Amur Blagoveshchensk (1960—2009) is an association football club[1]. FC Amur Blagoveshchensk (1960—2009) ranks in the top 7% of association_football_club entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (5 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- FC Amur Blagoveshchensk (1960—2009) is in the country of Russia[3].
- FC Amur Blagoveshchensk (1960—2009)'s 2009) — instance of is recorded as association football club[4].
- FC Amur Blagoveshchensk (1960—2009)'s 2009) — league or competition is recorded as Russian Second League[5].
- FC Amur Blagoveshchensk (1960—2009)'s 2009) — headquarters location is recorded as Blagoveshchensk[6].
- +1960-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of FC Amur Blagoveshchensk (1960—2009)[7].
- FC Amur Blagoveshchensk (1960—2009) was dissolved in +2009-00-00T00:00:00Z[8].
- FC Amur Blagoveshchensk (1960—2009)'s 2009) — sport is recorded as association football[9].
- FC Amur Blagoveshchensk (1960—2009)'s 2009) — Freebase ID is recorded as /m/012krl9w[10].
- FC Amur Blagoveshchensk (1960—2009)'s 2009) — topic's main category is recorded as Q32211544[11].
- FC Amur Blagoveshchensk (1960—2009)'s 2009) — topic has template is recorded as Template:Fb team Amur Blagoveshchensk[12].
- FC Amur Blagoveshchensk (1960—2009)'s 2009) — category for members of a team is recorded as Category:FC Amur Blagoveshchensk players[13].
- FC Amur Blagoveshchensk (1960—2009)'s 2009) — FootballFakts.ru team ID is recorded as 3388[14].
Body
Founding
+1960-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of FC Amur Blagoveshchensk (1960—2009)[7].
Operations
FC Amur Blagoveshchensk (1960—2009)'s 2009) — headquarters location is recorded as Blagoveshchensk[6].
Dissolution
FC Amur Blagoveshchensk (1960—2009) was dissolved in +2009-00-00T00:00:00Z[8].
Why It Matters
FC Amur Blagoveshchensk (1960—2009) ranks in the top 7% of association_football_club entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (5 views/month).[2] FC Amur Blagoveshchensk (1960—2009) has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[15] FC Amur Blagoveshchensk (1960—2009) is known by 4 alternative names across languages and contexts.[16]