Südwestfunk
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Südwestfunk
Summary
Südwestfunk is a German public state broadcaster[1]. Südwestfunk draws 4 Wikipedia views per month (german_public_state_broadcaster category, ranking #10 of 10).[2]
Key Facts
- Südwestfunk was a member of Q49653[3].
- Südwestfunk is in the country of Germany[4].
- Südwestfunk's instance of is recorded as German public state broadcaster[5].
- Southwestern Germany is named after Südwestfunk[6].
- Südwestfunk's headquarters location is recorded as Baden-Baden[7].
- Südwestfunk took place at Southwestern Germany[8].
- Südwestfunk's Commons category is recorded as Südwestfunk[9].
- Südwestfunk's industry is recorded as public broadcasting[10].
- 1946 marks the founding of Südwestfunk[11].
- Südwestfunk was dissolved in 1998[12].
- Südwestfunk's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Südwestfunk[13].
- Südwestfunk's replaced by is recorded as Südwestrundfunk[14].
- Südwestfunk's nominated for is recorded as Young European Film of the Year[15].
- Südwestfunk's legal form is recorded as public-law institution[16].
- Südwestfunk's short name is recorded as {'lang': 'de', 'text': 'SWF'}[17].
- Südwestfunk's category for employees of the organization is recorded as Category:SWF people[18].
- Südwestfunk's has works in the collection is recorded as Anne Frank House[19].
Body
Founding
1946 marks the founding of Südwestfunk[11].
Identity
Südwestfunk's short name is recorded as {'lang': 'de', 'text': 'SWF'}[17].
Operations
Südwestfunk's headquarters location is recorded as Baden-Baden[7].
Industry
Südwestfunk's industry is recorded as public broadcasting[10].
Dissolution
Südwestfunk was dissolved in 1998[12].
Why It Matters
Südwestfunk draws 4 Wikipedia views per month (german_public_state_broadcaster category, ranking #10 of 10).[2] Südwestfunk has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[20] Südwestfunk is known by 8 alternative names across languages and contexts.[21]