Palatinate campaign
0 sources
Palatinate campaign
Summary
Palatinate campaign is a military campaign[1]. It draws 481 Wikipedia views per month (military_campaign category, ranking #79 of 452).[2]
Key Facts
- Palatinate campaign is in the country of Electoral Palatinate[3].
- Palatinate campaign's instance of is recorded as military campaign[4].
- The location of Palatinate campaign was Palatinate[5].
- Palatinate campaign is part of Thirty Years' War[6].
- Palatinate campaign's Commons category is recorded as Palatinate campaign[7].
- Palatinate campaign comprises Siege of Bad Kreuznach[8].
- Palatinate campaign comprises Capture of Oppenheim[9].
- Palatinate campaign comprises Capture of Bacharach[10].
- Palatinate campaign comprises Battle of Mingolsheim[11].
- Palatinate campaign comprises Battle of Wimpfen[12].
- Palatinate campaign comprises Battle of Höchst[13].
- Palatinate campaign comprises Siege of Heidelberg[14].
- Palatinate campaign comprises Capture of Mannheim[15].
- Palatinate campaign comprises Siege of Frankenthal[16].
- Palatinate campaign comprises Battle of Stadtlohn[17].
- Palatinate campaign began on August 30, 1620[18].
- Palatinate campaign ended on August 27, 1623[19].
- Palatinate campaign's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 49.5, 'lon': 8.016666666666667}[20].
- A participant in Palatinate campaign was Dutch Republic[21].
- A participant in Palatinate campaign was Kingdom of England[22].
- Among those involved in Palatinate campaign was Hispanic Monarchy[23].
- A participant in Palatinate campaign was Catholic League[24].
- Among those involved in Palatinate campaign was Electoral Palatinate[25].
- Among those involved in Palatinate campaign was Holy Roman Empire[26].
- A participant in Palatinate campaign was Margraviate of Baden-Durlach[27].
Body
Identity
Palatinate campaign is part of Thirty Years' War[6].
Why It Matters
Palatinate campaign draws 481 Wikipedia views per month (military_campaign category, ranking #79 of 452).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 7 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]