Sydney Conservatorium of Music
0 sources
Sydney Conservatorium of Music
Summary
Sydney Conservatorium of Music is a conservatory[1]. It draws 143 Wikipedia views per month (conservatory category, ranking #19 of 135).[2]
Key Facts
- Sydney Conservatorium of Music is located in New South Wales[3].
- Sydney Conservatorium of Music is in the country of Australia[4].
- Sydney Conservatorium of Music's instance of is recorded as conservatory[5].
- Sydney Conservatorium of Music is part of University of Sydney[6].
- Sydney Conservatorium of Music's Commons category is recorded as Sydney Conservatorium of Music[7].
- January 1, 1916 marks the founding of Sydney Conservatorium of Music[8].
- Sydney Conservatorium of Music's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': -33.863455, 'lon': 151.214353}[9].
- Sydney Conservatorium of Music's parent organization or unit is recorded as University of Sydney[10].
- Sydney Conservatorium of Music's official website is recorded as http://sydney.edu.au/music[11].
- Sydney Conservatorium of Music's heritage designation is recorded as Heritage Act — State Heritage Register[12].
- Sydney Conservatorium of Music's category of associated people is recorded as Q124950262[13].
- Sydney Conservatorium of Music's category for alumni of educational institution is recorded as Category:Sydney Conservatorium of Music alumni[14].
- Sydney Conservatorium of Music's category for employees of the organization is recorded as Category:Academic staff of the Sydney Conservatorium of Music[15].
Body
Founding
January 1, 1916 marks the founding of Sydney Conservatorium of Music[8].
Identity
Sydney Conservatorium of Music is part of University of Sydney[6].
Operations
Sydney Conservatorium of Music's parent organization or unit is recorded as University of Sydney[10].
Why It Matters
Sydney Conservatorium of Music draws 143 Wikipedia views per month (conservatory category, ranking #19 of 135).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 8 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[16] It is known by 9 alternative names across languages and contexts.[17]