Consejo de la Generalidad Valenciana
0 sources
Consejo de la Generalidad Valenciana
Summary
Consejo de la Generalidad Valenciana is an executive branch[1]. Consejo de la Generalidad Valenciana has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- Consejo de la Generalidad Valenciana is in the country of Spain[3].
- Consejo de la Generalidad Valenciana's head of government is recorded as President of the Generalitat Valenciana[4].
- Consejo de la Generalidad Valenciana's instance of is recorded as executive branch[5].
- Consejo de la Generalidad Valenciana's instance of is recorded as autonomous government[6].
- Consejo de la Generalidad Valenciana's headquarters location is recorded as Palau de la Generalitat Valenciana[7].
- Consejo de la Generalidad Valenciana is part of Generalitat Valenciana[8].
- +1982-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Consejo de la Generalidad Valenciana[9].
- Consejo de la Generalidad Valenciana's coordinate location is recorded as {'globe': 'http://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q2', 'altitude': None, 'latitude': 39.4766269, 'longitude': -0.3763511, 'precision': 0.011637957061618543}[10].
- Consejo de la Generalidad Valenciana's official website is recorded as http://www.gva.es/va/inicio/la_administracion_valenciana/lav_org_gobierno_val[11].
- Consejo de la Generalidad Valenciana's topic's main category is recorded as Q6211798[12].
- Consejo de la Generalidad Valenciana's applies to jurisdiction is recorded as Valencian Community[13].
- Consejo de la Generalidad Valenciana's position held by head of the organization is recorded as President of the Generalitat Valenciana[14].
Body
Founding
+1982-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Consejo de la Generalidad Valenciana[9].
Identity
Consejo de la Generalidad Valenciana is part of Generalitat Valenciana[8].
Operations
Consejo de la Generalidad Valenciana's headquarters location is recorded as Palau de la Generalitat Valenciana[7].
Why It Matters
Consejo de la Generalidad Valenciana has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]