South Seas Bureau
0 sources
South Seas Bureau
Summary
South Seas Bureau is an administrative territorial entity[1]. It is known by 3 alternative names across languages and contexts.[2]
Key Facts
- South Seas Bureau is located in South Seas Mandate[3].
- South Seas Bureau is in the country of Empire of Japan[4].
- South Seas Bureau's image is recorded as The Headquarters of the South Pacific Mandate.JPG[5].
- South Seas Bureau's instance of is recorded as administrative territorial entity[6].
- South Seas Bureau's instance of is recorded as government[7].
- South Seas Bureau's headquarters location is recorded as Koror[8].
- South Seas Bureau's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 1136153716397058820002[9].
- South Seas Bureau's Commons category is recorded as South Seas Bureau[10].
- +1922-03-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of South Seas Bureau[11].
- South Seas Bureau's parent organization or unit is recorded as Ministry of Colonial Affairs[12].
- South Seas Bureau's parent organization or unit is recorded as Ministry of Greater East Asia[13].
- South Seas Bureau's topic's main category is recorded as Category:South Seas Bureau[14].
- South Seas Bureau's applies to jurisdiction is recorded as South Seas Mandate[15].
- South Seas Bureau's replaces is recorded as Q11612490[16].
- South Seas Bureau's Google Knowledge Graph ID is recorded as /g/125n2z6vx[17].
- South Seas Bureau's category for employees of the organization is recorded as Category:Officials of the South Seas Bureau[18].
Body
Founding
+1922-03-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of South Seas Bureau[11].
Operations
South Seas Bureau's headquarters location is recorded as Koror[8]. Parent organizations include Ministry of Colonial Affairs[12], a ministry of the colonies[19], in Empire of Japan[20], founded in 1923[21], headquartered in Kōjimachi-ku[22] and Ministry of Greater East Asia[13], a ministry[23], in Empire of Japan[24], founded in 1942[25], headquartered in Kōjimachi-ku[26].
Why It Matters
South Seas Bureau is known by 3 alternative names across languages and contexts.[2]