Karjaküla
0 sources
Karjaküla
Summary
Karjaküla is a township[1]. Karjaküla draws 2 Wikipedia views per month (township category, ranking #23 of 197).[2]
Key Facts
- Karjaküla is located in Keila Rural Municipality[3].
- Karjaküla is located in Lääne-Harju Rural Municipality[4].
- Karjaküla is in the country of Estonia[5].
- Karjaküla's instance of is recorded as township[6].
- Karjaküla's postal code is recorded as 76620[7].
- Karjaküla's OpenStreetMap relation ID is recorded as 354038[8].
- Karjaküla's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 59.339166666667, 'lon': 24.392777777778}[9].
- Karjaküla's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0bbxwr6[10].
- Karjaküla's population is recorded as {'amount': '+345'}[11].
- Karjaküla's population is recorded as {'amount': '+267'}[12].
- Karjaküla's population is recorded as {'amount': '+251'}[13].
- Karjaküla's population is recorded as {'amount': '+314'}[14].
- Karjaküla's EHAK id is recorded as 2749[15].
- Karjaküla's GeoNames ID is recorded as 591597[16].
- Karjaküla's different from is recorded as Karjaküla[17].
- Karjaküla's area is recorded as {'unit': 'Q712226', 'amount': '+1.21'}[18].
- Karjaküla's GNS Unique Feature ID is recorded as -2622341[19].
- Karjaküla's Who's on First ID is recorded as 1126032033[20].
- Karjaküla's FactGrid item ID is recorded as Linxia Hui Autonomous Prefecture[21].
Body
Geography
Karjaküla is in the country of Estonia[5]. Located in include Keila Rural Municipality[3], a rural municipality[22], in Estonia[23], founded in 1992[24] and Lääne-Harju Rural Municipality[4], a rural municipality[25], in Estonia[26], founded in 2017[27].
Physical Characteristics
Karjaküla's area is recorded as {'unit': 'Q712226', 'amount': '+1.21'}[18]. Population counts include {'amount': '+345'}[11], {'amount': '+267'}[12], {'amount': '+251'}[13], and {'amount': '+314'}[14].
Designation and Status
Karjaküla's instance of is recorded as township[6].
Why It Matters
Karjaküla draws 2 Wikipedia views per month (township category, ranking #23 of 197).[2] Karjaküla has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28]