music of Scotland
0 sources
music of Scotland
Summary
music of Scotland is a music by country or region[1]. It draws 53 Wikipedia views per month (music_by_country_or_region category, ranking #59 of 309).[2]
Key Facts
- music of Scotland is in the country of United Kingdom[3].
- music of Scotland's image is recorded as A Piper at the Lairg 2008 Crofters Show - geograph.org.uk - 943968.jpg[4].
- music of Scotland's instance of is recorded as music by country or region[5].
- music of Scotland's instance of is recorded as music genre[6].
- music of Scotland's audio is recorded as Skye Boat Song.ogg[7].
- music of Scotland's subclass of is recorded as music of the United Kingdom[8].
- music of Scotland's Commons category is recorded as Music of Scotland[9].
- music of Scotland's has part is recorded as music of Scotland in the nineteenth century[10].
- music of Scotland's has part is recorded as music of Scotland in the eighteenth century[11].
- music of Scotland's has part is recorded as Scottish music in 1900–1949[12].
- music of Scotland's has part is recorded as Scottish music in the 1950s[13].
- music of Scotland's has part is recorded as Scottish music in the 1960s[14].
- music of Scotland's has part is recorded as Scottish music in the 1970s[15].
- music of Scotland's has part is recorded as Scottish music in the 1980s[16].
- music of Scotland's has part is recorded as Scottish music in the 1990s[17].
- music of Scotland's has part is recorded as Scottish music in the 2000s[18].
- music of Scotland's has part is recorded as Scottish music in 1500–1899[19].
- music of Scotland's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/011bpbyv[20].
- music of Scotland's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Music of Scotland[21].
- music of Scotland's described by source is recorded as Armenian Soviet Encyclopedia, vol. 8[22].
- music of Scotland's Gran Enciclopèdia de la Música ID is recorded as 4963[23].
Why It Matters
music of Scotland draws 53 Wikipedia views per month (music_by_country_or_region category, ranking #59 of 309).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[24] It is known by 7 alternative names across languages and contexts.[25]