Siege of Thessalonica
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Siege of Thessalonica
Summary
Siege of Thessalonica is a battle[1]. It ranks in the top 8% of battle entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (38 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Siege of Thessalonica's instance of is recorded as battle[3].
- Siege of Thessalonica's instance of is recorded as siege[4].
- Siege of Thessalonica took place at Thessaloniki[5].
- Siege of Thessalonica is part of Avar–Byzantine Wars[6].
- Siege of Thessalonica is part of Slavic invasion of the Balkans[7].
- Siege of Thessalonica began on 617[8].
- Siege of Thessalonica ended on 618[9].
- Siege of Thessalonica's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 40.65, 'lon': 22.9}[10].
- Siege of Thessalonica's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 40.633333333333, 'lon': 22.95}[11].
- Siege of Thessalonica's different from is recorded as Siege of Thessalonica[12].
- Siege of Thessalonica's different from is recorded as Siege of Thessalonica[13].
- Siege of Thessalonica's different from is recorded as Siege of Thessalonica[14].
- Siege of Thessalonica's different from is recorded as Siege of Thessalonica[15].
- Siege of Thessalonica's different from is recorded as Siege of Thessalonica[16].
- Siege of Thessalonica's different from is recorded as Sack of Thessalonica[17].
- Siege of Thessalonica's different from is recorded as Sack of Thessalonica[18].
- Siege of Thessalonica's different from is recorded as Siege of Thessalonica[19].
- Siege of Thessalonica's different from is recorded as Siege of Thessalonica[20].
- Siege of Thessalonica's different from is recorded as Siege of Thessalonica[21].
Body
When and Where
Siege of Thessalonica began on 617[8]. It ended on 618[9]. The location of it was Thessaloniki[5].
Context
Part of include Avar–Byzantine Wars[6], a war[22] and Slavic invasion of the Balkans[7], a human migration[23]. Recorded instance of include battle[3] and siege[4].
Why It Matters
Siege of Thessalonica ranks in the top 8% of battle entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (38 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[24]