Royal Norwegian Navy Museum
0 sources
Royal Norwegian Navy Museum
Summary
Royal Norwegian Navy Museum is a maritime museum[1]. It draws 9 Wikipedia views per month (maritime_museum category, ranking #33 of 123).[2]
Key Facts
- Royal Norwegian Navy Museum is in the country of Norway[3].
- Royal Norwegian Navy Museum's image is recorded as KNM Utstein Horten Norway.jpg[4].
- Royal Norwegian Navy Museum's instance of is recorded as maritime museum[5].
- Royal Norwegian Navy Museum's instance of is recorded as military museum[6].
- Royal Norwegian Navy Museum's coat of arms image is recorded as Coat of arms of the Royal Norwegian Navy Museum.svg[7].
- Royal Norwegian Navy Museum's logo image is recorded as Coat of arms of the Royal Norwegian Navy Museum.svg[8].
- Royal Norwegian Navy Museum's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 211145970100232250982[9].
- Royal Norwegian Navy Museum's part of is recorded as Forsvarshistorisk museum[10].
- Royal Norwegian Navy Museum's Commons category is recorded as Royal Norwegian Navy Museum[11].
- +1853-01-01T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Royal Norwegian Navy Museum[12].
- Royal Norwegian Navy Museum's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 59.42555556, 'lon': 10.48694444}[13].
- Royal Norwegian Navy Museum's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/099jr1[14].
- Royal Norwegian Navy Museum's KulturNav-ID is recorded as 8654c3f4-502b-4585-a5d0-47b678dba866[15].
- Royal Norwegian Navy Museum's Commons Institution page is recorded as Royal Norwegian Navy Museum[16].
- Royal Norwegian Navy Museum's Great Norwegian Encyclopedia ID is recorded as Marinemuseet[17].
- Royal Norwegian Navy Museum's OpenStreetMap node ID is recorded as 324349974[18].
Body
Founding
+1853-01-01T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Royal Norwegian Navy Museum[12].
Identity
Royal Norwegian Navy Museum's part of is recorded as Forsvarshistorisk museum[10].
Why It Matters
Royal Norwegian Navy Museum draws 9 Wikipedia views per month (maritime_museum category, ranking #33 of 123).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 10 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[19]