North Russia intervention
0 sources
North Russia intervention
Summary
North Russia intervention is a military intervention[1]. It draws 245 Wikipedia views per month (military_intervention category, ranking #11 of 22).[2]
Key Facts
- North Russia intervention's image is recorded as Bolprisoners.jpg[3].
- North Russia intervention's instance of is recorded as military intervention[4].
- North Russia intervention's location is recorded as Arkhangelsk Oblast[5].
- North Russia intervention's part of is recorded as Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War[6].
- North Russia intervention's Commons category is recorded as North Russia intervention[7].
- North Russia intervention's start time is recorded as +1918-06-00T00:00:00Z[8].
- North Russia intervention's end time is recorded as +1920-03-00T00:00:00Z[9].
- North Russia intervention's point in time is recorded as +1919-10-00T00:00:00Z[10].
- North Russia intervention's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/078bt_[11].
- North Russia intervention's participant is recorded as United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland[12].
- North Russia intervention's participant is recorded as Australia[13].
- North Russia intervention's participant is recorded as Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic[14].
- North Russia intervention's participant is recorded as White movement[15].
- North Russia intervention's participant is recorded as United States[16].
- North Russia intervention's participant is recorded as Canada[17].
- North Russia intervention's participant is recorded as French Third Republic[18].
- North Russia intervention's participant is recorded as Edmund Ironside, 1st Baron Ironside[19].
- North Russia intervention's participant is recorded as Frederick Cuthbert Poole[20].
- North Russia intervention's participant is recorded as Yevgeny Miller[21].
- North Russia intervention's participant is recorded as George E. Stewart[22].
- North Russia intervention's participant is recorded as Aleksandr Samoylo[23].
- North Russia intervention's participant is recorded as Dmitri Parsky[24].
- North Russia intervention's participant is recorded as Dmitry Nikolayevich Nadyozhny[25].
Why It Matters
North Russia intervention draws 245 Wikipedia views per month (military_intervention category, ranking #11 of 22).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 12 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[26] It is known by 14 alternative names across languages and contexts.[27]