Franklin–Nashville Campaign
0 sources
Franklin–Nashville Campaign
Summary
Franklin–Nashville Campaign is a military campaign[1]. It draws 91 Wikipedia views per month (military_campaign category, ranking #135 of 452).[2]
Key Facts
- Franklin–Nashville Campaign is in the country of Confederate States of America[3].
- Franklin–Nashville Campaign's instance of is recorded as military campaign[4].
- Franklin–Nashville Campaign's instance of is recorded as offensive[5].
- Franklin is named after Franklin–Nashville Campaign[6].
- Nashville is named after Franklin–Nashville Campaign[7].
- Franklin–Nashville Campaign followed Atlanta campaign[8].
- Franklin–Nashville Campaign took place at Georgia[9].
- The location of Franklin–Nashville Campaign was Middle Tennessee[10].
- The location of Franklin–Nashville Campaign was North Alabama[11].
- Franklin–Nashville Campaign is part of American Civil War[12].
- Franklin–Nashville Campaign's Commons category is recorded as Franklin-Nashville campaign[13].
- Franklin–Nashville Campaign comprises Battle of Allatoona[14].
- Franklin–Nashville Campaign comprises Battle of Decatur[15].
- Franklin–Nashville Campaign comprises Battle of Ladiga[16].
- Franklin–Nashville Campaign comprises Battle of Columbia[17].
- Franklin–Nashville Campaign comprises Battle of Spring Hill[18].
- Franklin–Nashville Campaign comprises Battle of Franklin[19].
- Franklin–Nashville Campaign comprises Battle of Nashville[20].
- Franklin–Nashville Campaign began on +1864-09-18T00:00:00Z[21].
- Franklin–Nashville Campaign ended on +1864-12-27T00:00:00Z[22].
- Franklin–Nashville Campaign took place on +1864-00-00T00:00:00Z[23].
- Franklin–Nashville Campaign was part of the conflict American Civil War[24].
- A participant in Franklin–Nashville Campaign was Army of Tennessee[25].
- Among those involved in Franklin–Nashville Campaign was Army of the Cumberland[26].
- Among those involved in Franklin–Nashville Campaign was Army of the Ohio[27].
Body
Identity
Franklin–Nashville Campaign is part of American Civil War[12]. It followed Atlanta campaign[8].
Why It Matters
Franklin–Nashville Campaign draws 91 Wikipedia views per month (military_campaign category, ranking #135 of 452).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 9 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 4 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]