Iceland University of the Arts
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Iceland University of the Arts
Summary
Iceland University of the Arts is a university[1]. It has Wikipedia articles in 14 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- Iceland University of the Arts is located in Reykjavík[3].
- Iceland University of the Arts is in the country of Iceland[4].
- Iceland University of the Arts's instance of is recorded as university[5].
- Iceland University of the Arts followed Icelandic College of Art and Crafts[6].
- Iceland University of the Arts's headquarters location is recorded as Reykjavík[7].
- The location of Iceland University of the Arts was Reykjavík[8].
- Iceland University of the Arts's Commons category is recorded as Iceland University of the Arts[9].
- 1998 marks the founding of Iceland University of the Arts[10].
- Iceland University of the Arts's official website is recorded as http://www.lhi.is/[11].
- Iceland University of the Arts's web feed URL is recorded as https://www.lhi.is/feed/[12].
- Iceland University of the Arts's rector is recorded as Kristín Eysteinsdóttir[13].
- Iceland University of the Arts's motto text is recorded as {'lang': 'is', 'text': 'Forvitni, skilningur og áræði'}[14].
- Iceland University of the Arts's count of students is recorded as {'amount': '+749'}[15].
- Iceland University of the Arts's category for alumni of educational institution is recorded as Q49835955[16].
- Iceland University of the Arts's grants is recorded as Bachelor of Arts[17].
- Iceland University of the Arts's grants is recorded as Master of Arts[18].
- Iceland University of the Arts's grants is recorded as Master of Music[19].
Body
Founding
1998 marks the founding of Iceland University of the Arts[10].
Identity
Iceland University of the Arts followed Icelandic College of Art and Crafts[6].
Operations
Iceland University of the Arts's headquarters location is recorded as Reykjavík[7].
Why It Matters
Iceland University of the Arts has Wikipedia articles in 14 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2] It is known by 6 alternative names across languages and contexts.[20]