Order of Leopold II
0 sources
Order of Leopold II
Summary
Order of Leopold II is a state order[1]. It has Wikipedia articles in 16 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- Order of Leopold II is in the country of Belgium[3].
- Order of Leopold II's instance of is recorded as state order[4].
- Order of Leopold II's founder is recorded as Leopold II of Belgium[5].
- Leopold II of Belgium is named after Order of Leopold II[6].
- Order of Leopold II is part of list of Orders, Decorations and Medals of the Kingdom of Belgium[7].
- Order of Leopold II's Commons category is recorded as Order of Léopold II[8].
- Order of Leopold II comprises Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Leopold II[9].
- Order of Leopold II comprises Grand Officer of the Order of Leopold II[10].
- Order of Leopold II comprises Commander of the Order of Leopold II[11].
- Order of Leopold II comprises Officer of the Order of Leopold II[12].
- Order of Leopold II comprises Knight of the Order of Leopold II[13].
- Order of Leopold II comprises gold medal of the Order of Leopold II[14].
- Order of Leopold II comprises silver medal of the Order of Leopold II[15].
- Order of Leopold II comprises bronze medal of the Order of Leopold II[16].
- August 24, 1900 marks the founding of Order of Leopold II[17].
- Order of Leopold II's location of formation is recorded as Brussels metropolitan area[18].
- Order of Leopold II's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Order of Léopold II[19].
- Order of Leopold II's different from is recorded as Order of Leopold[20].
- Order of Leopold II's different from is recorded as Order of Leopold[21].
- Order of Leopold II's category for recipients of this award is recorded as Category:Recipients of the Order of Leopold II[22].
- Order of Leopold II's next higher rank is recorded as Order of the Crown[23].
Body
Publication
Order of Leopold II is part of list of Orders, Decorations and Medals of the Kingdom of Belgium[7].
Why It Matters
Order of Leopold II has Wikipedia articles in 16 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2] It is known by 13 alternative names across languages and contexts.[24]