Villada
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Villada
Summary
Villada is a municipality of Spain[1]. Villada ranks in the top 4% of municipality_of_spain entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (12 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Villada is located in Palencia Province[3].
- Villada is in the country of Spain[4].
- Villada is on the body of water río Sequillo[5].
- Villada's head of government is recorded as José Antonio Alonso Ciruelo[6].
- Villada is on the continent of Europe[7].
- Villada's instance of is recorded as municipality of Spain[8].
- Villada's capital is recorded as Villada[9].
- Villada's shares border with is recorded as Población de Arroyo[10].
- Villada's shares border with is recorded as Villalcón[11].
- Villada's shares border with is recorded as Pozo de Urama[12].
- Villada's shares border with is recorded as Cisneros[13].
- Villada's shares border with is recorded as Villacidaler[14].
- Villada's shares border with is recorded as Santervás de Campos[15].
- Villada's shares border with is recorded as Grajal de Campos[16].
- Villada's shares border with is recorded as Escobar de Campos[17].
- Villada's postal code is recorded as 34340[18].
- Villada's Commons category is recorded as Villada[19].
- Villada's licence plate code is recorded as P[20].
- Villada's patron saint is recorded as Aloysius Gonzaga[21].
- Villada's located in time zone is recorded as UTC+01:00[22].
- Villada's located in time zone is recorded as UTC+02:00[23].
- Villada's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 42.248888888889, 'lon': -4.9677777777778}[24].
- Villada's located in/on physical feature is recorded as Tierra de Campos[25].
- Villada's official website is recorded as http://villada.dip-palencia.es/[26].
- Villada's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Villada[27].
Body
Identity
Villada's official name is recorded as {'lang': 'es', 'text': 'Villada'}[28].
Why It Matters
Villada ranks in the top 4% of municipality_of_spain entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (12 views/month).[2] Villada has Wikipedia articles in 16 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[29]