Majdal Shams attack
0 sources
Majdal Shams attack
Summary
Majdal Shams attack is a missile strike[1]. It draws 113 Wikipedia views per month (missile_strike category, ranking #16 of 62).[2]
Key Facts
- Majdal Shams attack is located in Golan Heights[3].
- Majdal Shams attack is in the country of Israel[4].
- Majdal Shams attack is in the country of Syria[5].
- Majdal Shams attack's image is recorded as Majdal Shams attack, July 2024, II.jpeg[6].
- Majdal Shams attack's instance of is recorded as missile strike[7].
- Majdal Shams attack's instance of is recorded as massacre[8].
- Majdal Shams attack's instance of is recorded as terrorist attack[9].
- Majdal Shams attack's location is recorded as Majdal Shams[10].
- Majdal Shams attack's part of is recorded as Hezbollah–Israel conflict (2023–present)[11].
- Majdal Shams attack's part of is recorded as Gaza war[12].
- Majdal Shams attack's Commons category is recorded as Majdal Shams attack[13].
- Majdal Shams attack's armament is recorded as Falaq-1[14].
- Majdal Shams attack's armament is recorded as Iron Dome[15].
- Majdal Shams attack's point in time is recorded as +2024-07-27T00:00:00Z[16].
- Majdal Shams attack's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 33.26572222222222, 'lon': 35.76891666666667}[17].
- Majdal Shams attack's number of deaths is recorded as {'amount': '+12'}[18].
- Majdal Shams attack's number of injured is recorded as {'amount': '+29'}[19].
- Majdal Shams attack's has effect is recorded as 2024 Haret Hreik airstrike[20].
- Majdal Shams attack's image of design plans is recorded as Majdal Shams attack, July 2024, VI.jpeg[21].
- Majdal Shams attack's has goal is recorded as association football pitch[22].
- Majdal Shams attack's ordered by is recorded as Fuad Shukr[23].
- Majdal Shams attack's perpetrator is recorded as Hezbollah[24].
- Majdal Shams attack's perpetrator is recorded as Israel[25].
Why It Matters
Majdal Shams attack draws 113 Wikipedia views per month (missile_strike category, ranking #16 of 62).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 11 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[26] It is known by 7 alternative names across languages and contexts.[27]