Tokoro
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Tokoro
Summary
Tokoro is a dissolved municipality of Japan[1]. Tokoro ranks in the top 5% of dissolved_municipality_of_japan entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (12 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Tokoro is located in Okhotsk Subprefecture[3].
- Tokoro is located in Tokoro district[4].
- Tokoro is in the country of Japan[5].
- Tokoro's instance of is recorded as dissolved municipality of Japan[6].
- April 1, 1915 marks the founding of Tokoro[7].
- November 1, 1950 marks the founding of Tokoro[8].
- Tokoro was dissolved in March 5, 2006[9].
- Tokoro's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 44.12063888888889, 'lon': 144.07119444444444}[10].
- Tokoro's replaces is recorded as Saroma[11].
- Tokoro's replaced by is recorded as Kitami[12].
- Tokoro's replaced by is recorded as Kitami[13].
- Tokoro's official name is recorded as {'lang': 'ja', 'text': '常呂村'}[14].
- Tokoro's official name is recorded as {'lang': 'ja', 'text': '常呂町'}[15].
- Tokoro's category for people born here is recorded as Q32387378[16].
- Tokoro's name in kana is recorded as ところちょう[17].
- Tokoro's located in the present-day administrative territorial entity is recorded as Kitami[18].
- Tokoro's associated electoral district is recorded as Hokkaido 12th district[19].
Body
Founding
Recorded inception include April 1, 1915[7] and November 1, 1950[8].
Identity
Official names include {'lang': 'ja', 'text': '常呂村'}[14] and {'lang': 'ja', 'text': '常呂町'}[15].
Dissolution
Tokoro was dissolved in March 5, 2006[9].
Why It Matters
Tokoro ranks in the top 5% of dissolved_municipality_of_japan entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (12 views/month).[2] Tokoro has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[20]