Sultanate of Sulu
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Sultanate of Sulu
Summary
Sultanate of Sulu is a sultanate[1]. It draws 1,629 Wikipedia views per month (sultanate category, ranking #13 of 43).[2]
Key Facts
- Sultanate of Sulu's religion is recorded as Sunni Islam[3].
- Sultanate of Sulu is in the country of Sultanate of Sulu[4].
- Sultanate of Sulu's instance of is recorded as sultanate[5].
- Sultanate of Sulu's instance of is recorded as historical country[6].
- Sultanate of Sulu's capital is recorded as Maimbung[7].
- Sultanate of Sulu's official language is recorded as Arabic[8].
- Sultanate of Sulu's currency is recorded as barter[9].
- Sultanate of Sulu's basic form of government is recorded as monarchy[10].
- Sultanate of Sulu was followed by Dutch East Indies[11].
- Sultanate of Sulu took place at East Kalimantan[12].
- Sultanate of Sulu took place at North Kalimantan[13].
- Sultanate of Sulu's Commons category is recorded as Sultanate of Sulu[14].
- 1405 marks the founding of Sultanate of Sulu[15].
- Sultanate of Sulu was dissolved in January 1, 1915[16].
- Sultanate of Sulu's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 6.0519444444444, 'lon': 121.00194444444}[17].
- Sultanate of Sulu's official website is recorded as http://www.royalsultanateofsulu.org[18].
- Sultanate of Sulu's described by source is recorded as History of Ming[19].
- Sultanate of Sulu's native label is recorded as {'lang': 'ar', 'text': 'سلطنة سولو'}[20].
- Sultanate of Sulu's language used is recorded as Tausug[21].
- Sultanate of Sulu's located in the present-day administrative territorial entity is recorded as Indonesia[22].
Body
Founding
1405 marks the founding of Sultanate of Sulu[15].
Identity
Sultanate of Sulu was followed by Dutch East Indies[11].
Dissolution
Sultanate of Sulu was dissolved in January 1, 1915[16].
Why It Matters
Sultanate of Sulu draws 1,629 Wikipedia views per month (sultanate category, ranking #13 of 43).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 21 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[23] It is known by 19 alternative names across languages and contexts.[24]