Treaty of Versailles
0 sources
Treaty of Versailles
Summary
Treaty of Versailles is a peace treaty[1]. It ranks in the top 0.23% of peace_treaty entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (77,693 views/month, #1 of 438).[2]
Key Facts
- Treaty of Versailles is in the country of France[3].
- Treaty of Versailles's instance of is recorded as peace treaty[4].
- Treaty of Versailles's instance of is recorded as multilateral treaty[5].
- Palace of Versailles is named after Treaty of Versailles[6].
- Treaty of Versailles followed Armistice of Compiègne[7].
- The location of Treaty of Versailles was Hall of Mirrors[8].
- Treaty of Versailles took place at Palace of Versailles[9].
- Treaty of Versailles is part of League of Nations Treaty Series[10].
- Treaty of Versailles is part of Paris Peace Conference[11].
- Treaty of Versailles's Commons category is recorded as Treaty of Versailles[12].
- Treaty of Versailles's language of work or name is recorded as French[13].
- Treaty of Versailles's language of work or name is recorded as English[14].
- Treaty of Versailles comprises Treaty of Versailles/Part VIII[15].
- Treaty of Versailles comprises Treaty of Versailles/Part VII[16].
- Treaty of Versailles comprises Treaty of Versailles/Part IX[17].
- Treaty of Versailles comprises Treaty of Versailles/Part VI[18].
- Treaty of Versailles comprises Treaty of Versailles/Part V[19].
- Treaty of Versailles comprises Treaty of Versailles/Part IV[20].
- Treaty of Versailles comprises Treaty of Versailles/Part III[21].
- Treaty of Versailles comprises Treaty of Versailles/Part II[22].
- Treaty of Versailles comprises Treaty of Versailles/Part X[23].
- Treaty of Versailles comprises Treaty of Versailles/Part XI[24].
- Treaty of Versailles comprises Treaty of Versailles/Part XII[25].
- Treaty of Versailles comprises Treaty of Versailles/Part XIV[26].
- Treaty of Versailles comprises Treaty of Versailles/Part XV[27].
Why It Matters
Treaty of Versailles ranks in the top 0.23% of peace_treaty entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (77,693 views/month, #1 of 438).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 30 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 23 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]