Madrid–Barcelona railway
0 sources
Madrid–Barcelona railway
Summary
Madrid–Barcelona railway is a railway line[1]. It ranks in the top 5% of railway_line entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (31 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Madrid–Barcelona railway is in the country of Spain[3].
- Madrid–Barcelona railway's instance of is recorded as railway line[4].
- Madrid–Barcelona railway is owned by Administrador de Infraestructuras Ferroviarias[5].
- Madrid–Barcelona railway is operated by Renfe Operadora[6].
- Madrid–Barcelona railway's Commons category is recorded as Madrid-Barcelona railway line (Adif line 200)[7].
- Madrid–Barcelona railway comprises Madrid-Chamartín-Clara Campoamor[8].
- Madrid–Barcelona railway comprises Nuevos Ministerios[9].
- Madrid–Barcelona railway comprises Recoletos[10].
- Madrid–Barcelona railway comprises Atocha Railway Station[11].
- Madrid–Barcelona railway comprises Asamblea de Madrid-Entrevías[12].
- Madrid–Barcelona railway comprises El Pozo[13].
- Madrid–Barcelona railway comprises Vallecas[14].
- Madrid–Barcelona railway comprises Santa Eugenia[15].
- Madrid–Barcelona railway comprises Vicálvaro[16].
- Madrid–Barcelona railway comprises Coslada[17].
- Madrid–Barcelona railway comprises San Fernando[18].
- Madrid–Barcelona railway comprises Torrejón de Ardoz[19].
- Madrid–Barcelona railway comprises Soto del Henares[20].
- Madrid–Barcelona railway comprises La Garena[21].
- Madrid–Barcelona railway comprises Alcalá de Henares[22].
- Madrid–Barcelona railway comprises Alcalá de Henares-Universidad[23].
- Madrid–Barcelona railway comprises Meco[24].
- Madrid–Barcelona railway comprises Azuqueca[25].
- Madrid–Barcelona railway comprises Guadalajara[26].
- Madrid–Barcelona railway comprises Q5847546[27].
Body
Geography
Madrid–Barcelona railway is in the country of Spain[3].
Designation and Status
Madrid–Barcelona railway's instance of is recorded as railway line[4].
History and Context
Madrid–Barcelona railway is owned by Administrador de Infraestructuras Ferroviarias[5].
Why It Matters
Madrid–Barcelona railway ranks in the top 5% of railway_line entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (31 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28]