Karula Rural Municipality
0 sources
Karula Rural Municipality
Summary
Karula Rural Municipality is a rural municipality[1]. It ranks in the top 10% of rural_municipality entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (8 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Karula Rural Municipality is located in Valga County[3].
- Karula Rural Municipality is in the country of Estonia[4].
- Karula Rural Municipality's instance of is recorded as rural municipality[5].
- Karula Rural Municipality's instance of is recorded as former municipality of Estonia[6].
- Karula Rural Municipality's twinned administrative body is recorded as Bräcke Municipality[7].
- Karula Rural Municipality's Commons category is recorded as Karula Parish[8].
- Karula Rural Municipality's located in time zone is recorded as Eastern European Time[9].
- January 30, 1992 marks the founding of Karula Rural Municipality[10].
- Karula Rural Municipality was dissolved in October 22, 2017[11].
- Karula Rural Municipality ended on 2017[12].
- Karula Rural Municipality's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 57.755277777778, 'lon': 26.300277777778}[13].
- Karula Rural Municipality's official website is recorded as http://www.Karula.ee/[14].
- Karula Rural Municipality's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Karula Parish[15].
- Karula Rural Municipality has a population of {'amount': '+902'}[16].
- Karula Rural Municipality has a population of {'amount': '+920'}[17].
- Karula Rural Municipality has a population of {'amount': '+954'}[18].
- Karula Rural Municipality has a population of {'amount': '+959'}[19].
- Karula Rural Municipality has a population of {'amount': '+951'}[20].
- Karula Rural Municipality's replaced by is recorded as Valga Rural Municipality[21].
- Karula Rural Municipality covers an area of {'unit': 'Q712226', 'amount': '+229.91'}[22].
Body
Founding
January 30, 1992 marks the founding of Karula Rural Municipality[10].
Dissolution
Karula Rural Municipality was dissolved in October 22, 2017[11].
Why It Matters
Karula Rural Municipality ranks in the top 10% of rural_municipality entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (8 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 16 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[23]