Merkur
German intellectual magazine
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Merkur
Summary
Merkur is an academic journal[1]. Merkur ranks in the top 5% of academic_journal entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (23 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Merkur is in the country of Germany[3].
- Merkur's image is recorded as Merkur Cover 2011 03.jpg[4].
- Merkur's image is recorded as Cover Merkur Januar 2015.jpg[5].
- Merkur's instance of is recorded as academic journal[6].
- Merkur's editor is recorded as Karl Heinz Bohrer[7].
- Merkur's editor is recorded as Christian Demand[8].
- Merkur's publisher is recorded as Klett-Cotta Verlag[9].
- Merkur's headquarters location is recorded as Berlin[10].
- Merkur's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 197679561[11].
- Merkur's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 310735342[12].
- Merkur's GND ID is recorded as 4473971-0[13].
- Merkur's ISSN is recorded as 0026-0096[14].
- Merkur's ISSN is recorded as 2510-4179[15].
- Merkur's OCLC number is recorded as 643473794[16].
- Merkur's IdRef ID is recorded as 15723519X[17].
- Merkur's place of publication is recorded as Stuttgart[18].
- Merkur's language of work or name is recorded as German[19].
- Merkur's country of origin is recorded as Germany[20].
- +1947-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Merkur[21].
- Merkur's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0g988c[22].
- Merkur's contributor to the creative work or subject is recorded as Gottfried Benn[23].
- Merkur's contributor to the creative work or subject is recorded as Ekkehard Knörer[24].
- Merkur's official website is recorded as https://www.merkur-zeitschrift.de/[25].
- Merkur's main subject is recorded as politics[26].
- Merkur's main subject is recorded as aesthetics[27].
Why It Matters
Merkur ranks in the top 5% of academic_journal entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (23 views/month).[2]