Mostardas
0 sources
Mostardas
Summary
Mostardas is a municipality of Brazil[1]. Mostardas ranks in the top 3% of municipality_of_brazil entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (10 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Mostardas is located in Rio Grande do Sul[3].
- Mostardas is in the country of Brazil[4].
- Mostardas's image is recorded as Mostardas.jpg[5].
- Mostardas's instance of is recorded as municipality of Brazil[6].
- Mostardas's flag image is recorded as Mostardasbandeirars.png[7].
- Mostardas's shares border with is recorded as Palmares do Sul[8].
- Mostardas's shares border with is recorded as Tavares, Rio Grande do Sul[9].
- Mostardas's coat of arms image is recorded as Mostardas (RS) - Brasao.png[10].
- Mostardas's twinned administrative body is recorded as Aprilia[11].
- Mostardas's locator map image is recorded as Locator map of Mostardas in Rio Grande do Sul.svg[12].
- Mostardas's postal code is recorded as 96270-000[13].
- Mostardas's Commons category is recorded as Mostardas[14].
- Mostardas's OpenStreetMap relation ID is recorded as 242394[15].
- Mostardas's local dialing code is recorded as 51[16].
- Mostardas's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': -31.106944444444, 'lon': -50.920833333333}[17].
- Mostardas's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/03qmblq[18].
- Mostardas's official website is recorded as http://www.mostardas.rs.gov.br/[19].
- Mostardas's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Mostardas[20].
- Mostardas's page banner is recorded as Mostardes banner.jpg[21].
- Mostardas's Human Development Index is recorded as {'amount': '+0.784'}[22].
- Mostardas's population is recorded as {'amount': '+12124'}[23].
- Mostardas's population is recorded as {'amount': '+12847'}[24].
- Mostardas's population is recorded as {'amount': '+12888'}[25].
- Mostardas's population is recorded as {'amount': '+12090'}[26].
- Mostardas's population is recorded as {'amount': '+11658'}[27].
Why It Matters
Mostardas ranks in the top 3% of municipality_of_brazil entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (10 views/month).[2] Mostardas has Wikipedia articles in 14 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28]