Santa Lúcia
municipality in the state of São Paulo, Brazil
Press Enter · cited answer in seconds
0 sources
Santa Lúcia
Summary
Santa Lúcia is a municipality of Brazil[1]. It has Wikipedia articles in 12 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- Santa Lúcia is located in São Paulo[3].
- Santa Lúcia is in the country of Brazil[4].
- Santa Lúcia's image is recorded as Santa Lúcia, SP, 01.jpg[5].
- Santa Lúcia's instance of is recorded as municipality of Brazil[6].
- Santa Lúcia's flag image is recorded as BandeiraSantaLuciaSP-BR.JPG[7].
- Santa Lúcia's shares border with is recorded as Américo Brasiliense[8].
- Santa Lúcia's shares border with is recorded as Araraquara[9].
- Santa Lúcia's shares border with is recorded as Rincão[10].
- Santa Lúcia's shares border with is recorded as São Carlos[11].
- Santa Lúcia's locator map image is recorded as SaoPaulo Municip SantaLucia.svg[12].
- Santa Lúcia's Commons category is recorded as Santa Lúcia (São Paulo)[13].
- Santa Lúcia's OpenStreetMap relation ID is recorded as 298207[14].
- Santa Lúcia's local dialing code is recorded as 16[15].
- Santa Lúcia's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': -21.685, 'lon': -48.083888888889}[16].
- Santa Lúcia's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0g7m0z[17].
- Santa Lúcia's official website is recorded as http://www.santalucia.sp.gov.br[18].
- Santa Lúcia's Human Development Index is recorded as {'amount': '+0.782'}[19].
- Santa Lúcia's population is recorded as {'amount': '+7853'}[20].
- Santa Lúcia's population is recorded as {'amount': '+8687'}[21].
- Santa Lúcia's population is recorded as {'amount': '+8248'}[22].
- Santa Lúcia's population is recorded as {'amount': '+8854'}[23].
- Santa Lúcia's population is recorded as {'amount': '+8889'}[24].
- Santa Lúcia's population is recorded as {'amount': '+7149'}[25].
- Santa Lúcia's population is recorded as {'amount': '+7144'}[26].
- Santa Lúcia's population is recorded as {'amount': '+7181'}[27].
Why It Matters
Santa Lúcia has Wikipedia articles in 12 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]