Lithuanian National Olympic Committee
0 sources
Lithuanian National Olympic Committee
Summary
Lithuanian National Olympic Committee is a National Olympic Committee[1]. It draws 23 Wikipedia views per month (national_olympic_committee category, ranking #25 of 214).[2]
Key Facts
- Lithuanian National Olympic Committee is in the country of Lithuania[3].
- Lithuanian National Olympic Committee's instance of is recorded as National Olympic Committee[4].
- Lithuanian National Olympic Committee's headquarters location is recorded as Vilnius[5].
- Lithuanian National Olympic Committee's Commons category is recorded as Lithuanian Olympic Committee[6].
- 1924 marks the founding of Lithuanian National Olympic Committee[7].
- Lithuanian National Olympic Committee's parent organization or unit is recorded as European Olympic Committees[8].
- Lithuanian National Olympic Committee's official website is recorded as http://www.ltok.lt/[9].
- Lithuanian National Olympic Committee's replaces is recorded as Soviet Olympic Committee[10].
- Lithuanian National Olympic Committee's replaces is recorded as Baltic Olympic Committee[11].
- Lithuanian National Olympic Committee's legal form is recorded as nonprofit organization[12].
- Lithuanian National Olympic Committee's main Wikidata property is recorded as P4061[13].
- Lithuanian National Olympic Committee's start of work period is recorded as 1924[14].
- Lithuanian National Olympic Committee's start of work period is recorded as January 1, 1991[15].
- Lithuanian National Olympic Committee's end of work period is recorded as 1940[16].
Body
Founding
1924 marks the founding of Lithuanian National Olympic Committee[7].
Operations
Lithuanian National Olympic Committee's headquarters location is recorded as Vilnius[5]. Its parent organization or unit is recorded as European Olympic Committees[8].
Why It Matters
Lithuanian National Olympic Committee draws 23 Wikipedia views per month (national_olympic_committee category, ranking #25 of 214).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 12 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[17]