Taft–Katsura Agreement
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Taft–Katsura Agreement
Summary
Taft–Katsura Agreement is an agreement[1]. It draws 106 Wikipedia views per month (agreement category, ranking #27 of 106).[2]
Key Facts
- Taft–Katsura Agreement is credited with the discovery of Tyler Dennett[3].
- Taft–Katsura Agreement's instance of is recorded as agreement[4].
- Katsura Tarō is named after Taft–Katsura Agreement[5].
- William Howard Taft is named after Taft–Katsura Agreement[6].
- Taft–Katsura Agreement's follows is recorded as Russo-Japanese War[7].
- Taft–Katsura Agreement's followed by is recorded as Japan–Korea Treaty of November 1905[8].
- Taft–Katsura Agreement's subclass of is recorded as memorandum[9].
- Taft–Katsura Agreement's part of is recorded as Japan–United States relations[10].
- Taft–Katsura Agreement's point in time is recorded as +1905-07-29T00:00:00Z[11].
- Taft–Katsura Agreement's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/04b38d[12].
- Taft–Katsura Agreement's time period is recorded as Meiji era[13].
- Taft–Katsura Agreement's National Library of Korea ID is recorded as KSH2005017403[14].
- Taft–Katsura Agreement's Encyclopedia of Korean Culture ID is recorded as E0066158[15].
- Taft–Katsura Agreement's Encyclopedia of China is recorded as 234361[16].
- Taft–Katsura Agreement's Great Russian Encyclopedia portal ID is recorded as soglashenie-katsury-tafta-1905-aabc27[17].
Body
Works and Contributions
Taft–Katsura Agreement is credited with the discovery of Tyler Dennett[3].
Why It Matters
Taft–Katsura Agreement draws 106 Wikipedia views per month (agreement category, ranking #27 of 106).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 14 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[18] It is known by 14 alternative names across languages and contexts.[19]