Sydney
0 sources
Sydney
Summary
Sydney is a division of the Australian House of Representatives[1]. Sydney draws 82 Wikipedia views per month (division_of_the_australian_house_of_representatives category, ranking #26 of 166).[2]
Key Facts
- Sydney is located in New South Wales[3].
- Sydney is in the country of Australia[4].
- Sydney's instance of is recorded as division of the Australian House of Representatives[5].
- Sydney is named after Sydney[6].
- Sydney's locator map image is recorded as Division of Sydney 2025.svg[7].
- +1969-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Sydney[8].
- Sydney's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': -33.895, 'lon': 151.2}[9].
- Sydney's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/06s498[10].
- Sydney's population is recorded as {'amount': '+200181'}[11].
- Sydney's electorate is recorded as {'amount': '+110302'}[12].
- Sydney's electorate is recorded as {'amount': '+114239'}[13].
- Sydney's geoshape is recorded as Data:Australian Federal Electorates/New South Wales (2025)/Sydney.map[14].
- Sydney's Australian Statistical Geography 2011 ID is recorded as CED143[15].
- Sydney's Australian Statistical Geography 2016 ID is recorded as CED142[16].
- Sydney's panoramic view is recorded as Sydney skyline from the north August 2016 (29009142591).jpg[17].
- Sydney's Australian Statistical Geography 2021 ID is recorded as CED142[18].
Body
Geography
Sydney is in the country of Australia[4]. Sydney is located in New South Wales[3].
Physical Characteristics
Sydney's population is recorded as {'amount': '+200181'}[11].
Designation and Status
Sydney's instance of is recorded as division of the Australian House of Representatives[5].
History and Context
+1969-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Sydney[8]. Sydney is named after Sydney[6].
Why It Matters
Sydney draws 82 Wikipedia views per month (division_of_the_australian_house_of_representatives category, ranking #26 of 166).[2] Sydney has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[19] Sydney is known by 4 alternative names across languages and contexts.[20]