federal state of Austria
0 sources
federal state of Austria
Summary
federal state of Austria is a designation for an administrative territorial entity of a single country[1]. It draws 698 Wikipedia views per month (designation_for_an_administrative_territorial_entity_of_a_single_country category, ranking #20 of 131).[2]
Key Facts
- federal state of Austria is in the country of Austria[3].
- federal state of Austria's instance of is recorded as designation for an administrative territorial entity of a single country[4].
- federal state of Austria's GND ID is recorded as 4253590-6[5].
- federal state of Austria's locator map image is recorded as Austria bld.svg[6].
- federal state of Austria's subclass of is recorded as administrative territorial entity of Austria[7].
- federal state of Austria's subclass of is recorded as federated state[8].
- federal state of Austria's subclass of is recorded as first-level administrative division[9].
- federal state of Austria's subclass of is recorded as NUTS 2 statistical territorial entity[10].
- federal state of Austria's Commons category is recorded as States of Austria[11].
- federal state of Austria's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0119r02l[12].
- federal state of Austria's topic's main category is recorded as Category:States of Austria[13].
- federal state of Austria's quantity is recorded as {'amount': '+9'}[14].
- federal state of Austria's topic has template is recorded as Template:States of Austria labeled map[15].
- federal state of Austria's topic has template is recorded as Template:States of Austria[16].
- federal state of Austria's topic has template is recorded as Template:Infobox province of Austria[17].
- federal state of Austria's BabelNet ID is recorded as 01426597n[18].
- federal state of Austria's maintained by WikiProject is recorded as Govdirectory[19].
Why It Matters
federal state of Austria draws 698 Wikipedia views per month (designation_for_an_administrative_territorial_entity_of_a_single_country category, ranking #20 of 131).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 28 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[20] It is known by 21 alternative names across languages and contexts.[21]