Cluj-Napoca (Q80812): Difference between revisions
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Olaf Simons (talk | contribs) (Changed [de] description: Cluj-Napoca, bis 1974 Cluj, zweitgrößte Stadt Rumäniens, Hauptstadt des Kreises Cluj, Siebenbürgen, Sitz der Planungsregion Nordwest; 324.576 Einwohner (2011-11).) |
Olaf Simons (talk | contribs) (Changed [en] description: until 1974 Cluj, second largest city in Romania, capital of the Cluj district,Transylvania, seat of the north-west planning region; 324,576 inhabitants (2011-10).) |
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description / en | description / en | ||
until 1974 Cluj, | until 1974 Cluj, second largest city in Romania, capital of the Cluj district,Transylvania, seat of the north-west planning region; 324,576 inhabitants (2011-10). |
Revision as of 11:56, 17 December 2023
until 1974 Cluj, second largest city in Romania, capital of the Cluj district,Transylvania, seat of the north-west planning region; 324,576 inhabitants (2011-10).
- Klausenburg
- Kolozsvár
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
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English | Cluj-Napoca |
until 1974 Cluj, second largest city in Romania, capital of the Cluj district,Transylvania, seat of the north-west planning region; 324,576 inhabitants (2011-10). |
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Statements
46°46'48"N, 23°33'34"E
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Claudianopolis (Latin)
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Claudiopolis (Latin)
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Clausenburg (German)
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Klausenburg (German)
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Cluj (Hungarian)
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Identifiers
Sitelinks
Wikipedia(2 entries)
- dewiki Cluj-Napoca
- huwiki Kolozsvár
Wikinews(0 entries)
Wikiquote(0 entries)
Wikisource(0 entries)
Wikivoyage(0 entries)
Other sites(1 entry)
- wikidatawiki Q100188