Stade de Reims
0 sources
Stade de Reims
Summary
Stade de Reims is an association football club[1]. It ranks in the top 2% of association_football_club entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,033 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Stade de Reims is in the country of France[3].
- Stade de Reims's instance of is recorded as association football club[4].
- Stade de Reims's instance of is recorded as association football team[5].
- Stade de Reims's home venue is recorded as Stade Auguste Delaune[6].
- Stade de Reims's league or competition is recorded as Ligue 2[7].
- Stade de Reims's logo image is recorded as Stade Reims.svg[8].
- Stade de Reims's headquarters location is recorded as Reims[9].
- Stade de Reims's headquarters location is recorded as Bétheny[10].
- Stade de Reims's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 203767607[11].
- Stade de Reims's Bibliothèque nationale de France ID is recorded as 12011881x[12].
- Stade de Reims's IdRef ID is recorded as 028242777[13].
- Stade de Reims's head coach is recorded as Karel Geraerts[14].
- Stade de Reims's Commons category is recorded as Stade de Reims[15].
- Stade de Reims's has part is recorded as Yunis Abdelhamid[16].
- Stade de Reims's has part is recorded as Marshall Munetsi[17].
- Stade de Reims's has part is recorded as Yehvann Diouf[18].
- Stade de Reims's has part is recorded as Thomas Foket[19].
- Stade de Reims's has part is recorded as Arbër Zeneli[20].
- Stade de Reims's has part is recorded as Nicolas Penneteau[21].
- Stade de Reims's has part is recorded as Alexis Flips[22].
- Stade de Reims's has part is recorded as Azor Matusiwa[23].
- Stade de Reims's has part is recorded as Dion Lopy[24].
- Stade de Reims's has part is recorded as Mitchell van Bergen[25].
- Stade de Reims's has part is recorded as Jens Cajuste[26].
- Stade de Reims's has part is recorded as Maxime Busi[27].
Body
Founding
+1931-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Stade de Reims[28].
Identity
Stade de Reims's official name is recorded as {'lang': 'fr', 'text': 'it'}[29].
Operations
Headquarters locations include Reims[9], a commune of France[30], in France[31] and Bétheny[10], a commune of France[32], in France[33].
Why It Matters
Stade de Reims ranks in the top 2% of association_football_club entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,033 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 29 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[34] It is known by 43 alternative names across languages and contexts.[35]