R22 Federal Highway
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R22 Federal Highway
Summary
R22 Federal Highway is a controlled-access highway[1]. It draws 77 Wikipedia views per month (controlled_access_highway category, ranking #94 of 655).[2]
Key Facts
- R22 Federal Highway is located in Moscow Oblast[3].
- R22 Federal Highway is located in Tula Oblast[4].
- R22 Federal Highway is located in Ryazan Oblast[5].
- R22 Federal Highway is located in Tambov Oblast[6].
- R22 Federal Highway is located in Voronezh Oblast[7].
- R22 Federal Highway is located in Volgograd Oblast[8].
- R22 Federal Highway is in the country of Russia[9].
- R22 Federal Highway's transport network is recorded as Russian federal highways[10].
- R22 Federal Highway's instance of is recorded as controlled-access highway[11].
- Caspian Sea is named after R22 Federal Highway[12].
- R22 Federal Highway followed R21 Kola Federal Highway[13].
- R22 Federal Highway was followed by R23 Federal Highway[14].
- R22 Federal Highway is part of European route E119[15].
- R22 Federal Highway is part of European route E40[16].
- R22 Federal Highway is part of AH8[17].
- R22 Federal Highway is part of European route E38[18].
- R22 Federal Highway's Commons category is recorded as R22 Federal Highway (Russia)[19].
- 1957 marks the founding of R22 Federal Highway[20].
- R22 Federal Highway's terminus location is recorded as M4 Don Federal Highway[21].
- R22 Federal Highway's terminus location is recorded as Astrakhan[22].
- R22 Federal Highway's date of official opening is recorded as 1957[23].
- R22 Federal Highway's road number is recorded as P22[24].
- R22 Federal Highway's length is recorded as {'unit': 'Q828224', 'amount': '+1381'}[25].
Body
Geography
R22 Federal Highway is in the country of Russia[9]. Located in include Moscow Oblast[3], an oblast of Russia[26], in Russia[27], founded in 1929[28]; Tula Oblast[4], an oblast of Russia[29], in Russia[30], founded in 1937[31]; Ryazan Oblast[5], an oblast of Russia[32], in Russia[33], founded in 1937[34]; Tambov Oblast[6], an oblast of Russia[35], in Russia[36], founded in 1937[37]; Voronezh Oblast[7], an oblast of Russia[38], in Russia[39], founded in 1934[40]; and Volgograd Oblast[8], an oblast of Russia[41], in Russia[42], founded in 1936[43]. Part of include European route E119[15], a road[44], in Russia[45]; European route E40[16], a road[46], in France[47]; AH8[17], a road[48], in Russia[49]; and European route E38[18], a road[50], in Ukraine[51].
Physical Characteristics
R22 Federal Highway's length is recorded as {'unit': 'Q828224', 'amount': '+1381'}[25].
Designation and Status
R22 Federal Highway's instance of is recorded as controlled-access highway[11].
History and Context
1957 marks the founding of R22 Federal Highway[20]. Caspian Sea is named after it[12].
Why It Matters
R22 Federal Highway draws 77 Wikipedia views per month (controlled_access_highway category, ranking #94 of 655).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 8 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[52] It is known by 13 alternative names across languages and contexts.[53]