lynching
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lynching
Summary
lynching is a manner of death[1]. lynching draws 2,081 Wikipedia views per month (manner_of_death category, ranking #6 of 22).[2]
Key Facts
- lynching's image is recorded as The Union as It Was.jpg[3].
- lynching's image is recorded as Lynching of Redmond, Roberson and Addison.jpg[4].
- lynching's image is recorded as Lynching-1889.jpg[5].
- lynching's instance of is recorded as manner of death[6].
- Charles Lynch is named after lynching[7].
- lynching's GND ID is recorded as 4168383-3[8].
- lynching's Library of Congress authority ID is recorded as sh85079157[9].
- lynching's subclass of is recorded as extra-judicial killing[10].
- lynching's subclass of is recorded as frontier justice[11].
- lynching's subclass of is recorded as extrajudicial punishment[12].
- lynching's NDL Authority ID is recorded as 00570946[13].
- lynching's Commons category is recorded as Lynchings[14].
- lynching's BNCF Thesaurus ID is recorded as 9019[15].
- lynching's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0pl0c[16].
- lynching's NL CR AUT ID is recorded as ph543385[17].
- lynching's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Lynching[18].
- lynching's Commons gallery is recorded as Lynching[19].
- lynching's Dewey Decimal Classification is recorded as 364.134[20].
- lynching's U.S. National Archives Identifier is recorded as 10637047[21].
- lynching's Iconclass notation is recorded as 44G81[22].
- lynching's described by source is recorded as The Nuttall Encyclopædia[23].
- lynching's described by source is recorded as Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1926–1947)[24].
- lynching's described by source is recorded as Meyers Konversations-Lexikon, 4th edition (1885–1890)[25].
- lynching's described by source is recorded as Encyclopædia Britannica 11th edition[26].
- lynching's described by source is recorded as Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary[27].
Why It Matters
lynching draws 2,081 Wikipedia views per month (manner_of_death category, ranking #6 of 22).[2] lynching has Wikipedia articles in 29 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] lynching is known by 29 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]