Sobibór Extermination Camp
0 sources
Sobibór Extermination Camp
Summary
Sobibór Extermination Camp is an extermination camp[1]. It draws 933 Wikipedia views per month (extermination_camp category, ranking #2 of 8).[2]
Key Facts
- Sobibór Extermination Camp is located in Gmina Włodawa[3].
- Sobibór Extermination Camp is in the country of Poland[4].
- Sobibór Extermination Camp is in the country of Nazi Germany[5].
- Sobibór Extermination Camp's instance of is recorded as extermination camp[6].
- Sobibór Extermination Camp's instance of is recorded as concentration camp[7].
- Sobibór, Lublin Voivodeship is named after Sobibór Extermination Camp[8].
- Sobibór Extermination Camp's Commons category is recorded as Sobibór extermination camp[9].
- Sobibór Extermination Camp's catalog code is recorded as camps/2031[10].
- Sobibór Extermination Camp's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 51.446992, 'lon': 23.594136}[11].
- Sobibór Extermination Camp's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Sobibor extermination camp[12].
- Sobibór Extermination Camp's director / manager is recorded as Franz Stangl[13].
- Sobibór Extermination Camp's category for people who died here is recorded as Category:People who died in Sobibor extermination camp[14].
- Sobibór Extermination Camp's native label is recorded as {'lang': 'de', 'text': 'Das Vernichtungslager Sobibor'}[15].
- Sobibór Extermination Camp's different from is recorded as Q55661552[16].
- Sobibór Extermination Camp's exact match is recorded as https://data.niod.nl/WO2_Thesaurus/kampen/4855[17].
- Sobibór Extermination Camp's on focus list of Wikimedia project is recorded as WikiProject Human rights[18].
- Sobibór Extermination Camp's related category is recorded as Category:Sobibor extermination camp survivors[19].
Body
Leadership
Sobibór Extermination Camp's director / manager is recorded as Franz Stangl[13].
Why It Matters
Sobibór Extermination Camp draws 933 Wikipedia views per month (extermination_camp category, ranking #2 of 8).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 28 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[20] It is known by 50 alternative names across languages and contexts.[21]