The Four Musketeers
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The Four Musketeers
Summary
The Four Musketeers is a group of humans[1]. It draws 60 Wikipedia views per month (group_of_humans category, ranking #231 of 870).[2]
Key Facts
- The Four Musketeers is in the country of France[3].
- The Four Musketeers's image is recorded as Les Quatre Mousquetaires.jpg[4].
- The Four Musketeers's instance of is recorded as group of humans[5].
- The Four Musketeers's instance of is recorded as tennis team[6].
- The Four Musketeers's instance of is recorded as tetrad[7].
- The Three Musketeers is named after The Four Musketeers[8].
- The Four Musketeers's head coach is recorded as Pierre Gillou[9].
- The Four Musketeers's has part is recorded as René Lacoste[10].
- The Four Musketeers's has part is recorded as Henri Cochet[11].
- The Four Musketeers's has part is recorded as Jacques Brugnon[12].
- The Four Musketeers's has part is recorded as Jean Borotra[13].
- The Four Musketeers's sport is recorded as tennis[14].
- The Four Musketeers's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/03b788[15].
- The Four Musketeers's Encyclopædia Britannica Online ID is recorded as topic/Four-Musketeers[16].
- The Four Musketeers's different from is recorded as The Four Musketeers[17].
- The Four Musketeers's competition won is recorded as 1927 International Lawn Tennis Challenge[18].
- The Four Musketeers's competition won is recorded as 1928 International Lawn Tennis Challenge[19].
- The Four Musketeers's competition won is recorded as 1929 International Lawn Tennis Challenge[20].
- The Four Musketeers's competition won is recorded as 1930 International Lawn Tennis Challenge[21].
- The Four Musketeers's competition won is recorded as 1931 International Lawn Tennis Challenge[22].
- The Four Musketeers's competition won is recorded as 1932 International Lawn Tennis Challenge[23].
- The Four Musketeers's BabelNet ID is recorded as 15107347n[24].
Why It Matters
The Four Musketeers draws 60 Wikipedia views per month (group_of_humans category, ranking #231 of 870).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 13 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[25] It is known by 3 alternative names across languages and contexts.[26]