Presidential Palace, Grozny
0 sources
Presidential Palace, Grozny
Summary
Presidential Palace, Grozny is a destroyed building or structure[1]. It draws 62 Wikipedia views per month (destroyed_building_or_structure category, ranking #20 of 99).[2]
Key Facts
- Presidential Palace, Grozny is located in Grozny[3].
- Presidential Palace, Grozny is in the country of Chechen Republic of Ichkeria[4].
- Presidential Palace, Grozny is in the country of Soviet Union[5].
- Presidential Palace, Grozny is in the country of Checheno-Ingush Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic[6].
- Presidential Palace, Grozny is in the country of Chechnya[7].
- Presidential Palace, Grozny's image is recorded as Evstafiev-chechnya-palace-gunman.jpg[8].
- Presidential Palace, Grozny's instance of is recorded as destroyed building or structure[9].
- Presidential Palace, Grozny's architectural style is recorded as Soviet Modernist architecture[10].
- Presidential Palace, Grozny's Commons category is recorded as Presidential Palace, Grozny[11].
- Presidential Palace, Grozny's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 43.31638889, 'lon': 45.69283611}[12].
- Presidential Palace, Grozny's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/02x74cp[13].
- Presidential Palace, Grozny's state of conservation is recorded as demolished or destroyed[14].
- Presidential Palace, Grozny's state of use is recorded as permanently closed[15].
Body
Geography
Country listings include Chechen Republic of Ichkeria[4], a historical unrecognized state[16], founded in 1991[17]; Soviet Union[5], a federal republic[18], in Soviet Union[19], founded in 1922[20]; Checheno-Ingush Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic[6], an autonomous soviet socialist republic of an union republic of the Soviet Union[21], in Soviet Union[22], founded in 1936[23]; and Chechnya[7], a republic of Russia[24], in Russia[25], founded in 1993[26]. Presidential Palace, Grozny is located in Grozny[3].
Designation and Status
Presidential Palace, Grozny's instance of is recorded as destroyed building or structure[9].
Why It Matters
Presidential Palace, Grozny draws 62 Wikipedia views per month (destroyed_building_or_structure category, ranking #20 of 99).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 9 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[27] It is known by 4 alternative names across languages and contexts.[28]