Ruotsinsalmi sea Fortress
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Ruotsinsalmi sea Fortress
Summary
Ruotsinsalmi sea Fortress is a fortress[1]. It draws 11 Wikipedia views per month (fortress category, ranking #93 of 351).[2]
Key Facts
- Ruotsinsalmi sea Fortress is located in Kotka[3].
- Ruotsinsalmi sea Fortress is in the country of Finland[4].
- Ruotsinsalmi sea Fortress is on the body of water Gulf of Finland[5].
- Ruotsinsalmi sea Fortress's image is recorded as Fort Katarina 1.jpg[6].
- Ruotsinsalmi sea Fortress's instance of is recorded as fortress[7].
- Ruotsinsalmi sea Fortress's part of is recorded as South-Eastern Finland fortification system[8].
- Ruotsinsalmi sea Fortress's Commons category is recorded as Ruotsinsalmi Sea Fortress[9].
- Ruotsinsalmi sea Fortress's OpenStreetMap relation ID is recorded as 12535045[10].
- Ruotsinsalmi sea Fortress's has part is recorded as Fort Katarina[11].
- Ruotsinsalmi sea Fortress's has part is recorded as Fort Elisabet[12].
- Ruotsinsalmi sea Fortress's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 60.441667, 'lon': 26.971111}[13].
- Ruotsinsalmi sea Fortress's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/06zr2vc[14].
- Ruotsinsalmi sea Fortress's heritage designation is recorded as Cultural Heritage Site of National Significance[15].
- Ruotsinsalmi sea Fortress's Wiki Loves Monuments ID is recorded as P4009/1167[16].
- Ruotsinsalmi sea Fortress's YSO ID is recorded as 21735[17].
- Ruotsinsalmi sea Fortress's RKY national built heritage environment ID is recorded as 1167[18].
Body
Geography
Ruotsinsalmi sea Fortress is in the country of Finland[4]. It is located in Kotka[3]. It is on the body of water Gulf of Finland[5]. Its part of is recorded as South-Eastern Finland fortification system[8].
Designation and Status
Ruotsinsalmi sea Fortress's instance of is recorded as fortress[7]. Its heritage designation is recorded as Cultural Heritage Site of National Significance[15].
Why It Matters
Ruotsinsalmi sea Fortress draws 11 Wikipedia views per month (fortress category, ranking #93 of 351).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[19]