Campina
0 sources
Campina
Summary
Campina is a dairy cooperative[1]. Campina draws 141 Wikipedia views per month (dairy_cooperative category, ranking #4 of 5).[2]
Key Facts
- Campina is in the country of Netherlands[3].
- Campina's instance of is recorded as dairy cooperative[4].
- Campina is owned by FrieslandCampina[5].
- Campina was followed by FrieslandCampina[6].
- Campina's headquarters location is recorded as Zaltbommel[7].
- Campina's industry is recorded as food industry[8].
- Campina's industry is recorded as dairy industry[9].
- Campina's archives at is recorded as Tracé - Limburgs Samenlevingsarchief[10].
- January 1, 1989 marks the founding of Campina[11].
- 1979 marks the founding of Campina[12].
- Campina was dissolved in 2008[13].
- Campina's parent organization or unit is recorded as FrieslandCampina[14].
- Campina's official website is recorded as http://www.campina.com/[15].
- Campina's product or material produced is recorded as dairy product[16].
- Campina's employees is recorded as {'amount': '+7099'}[17].
- Campina's replaces is recorded as Q28057201[18].
- Campina's replaced by is recorded as FrieslandCampina[19].
- Campina's legal form is recorded as coöperatie G.A.[20].
- Campina's on focus list of Wikimedia project is recorded as NADD Wikidata project[21].
- Campina's has works in the collection is recorded as Netherlands Open Air Museum[22].
Body
Founding
Recorded inception include January 1, 1989[11] and 1979[12].
Identity
Campina was followed by FrieslandCampina[6].
Operations
Campina's headquarters location is recorded as Zaltbommel[7]. Campina's parent organization or unit is recorded as FrieslandCampina[14].
Industry
Industries include food industry[8] and dairy industry[9].
Ownership
Campina is owned by FrieslandCampina[5]. Campina's product or material produced is recorded as dairy product[16].
Dissolution
Campina was dissolved in 2008[13].
Why It Matters
Campina draws 141 Wikipedia views per month (dairy_cooperative category, ranking #4 of 5).[2] Campina has Wikipedia articles in 10 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[23] Campina is known by 7 alternative names across languages and contexts.[24]