Kingdom of Tunisia
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Kingdom of Tunisia
Summary
Kingdom of Tunisia is a historical country[1]. It draws 730 Wikipedia views per month (historical_country category, ranking #433 of 1,549).[2]
Key Facts
- Kingdom of Tunisia's instance of is recorded as historical country[3].
- Kingdom of Tunisia's capital is recorded as Tunis[4].
- Kingdom of Tunisia's currency is recorded as Tunisian franc[5].
- Kingdom of Tunisia's basic form of government is recorded as aristocratic monarchy[6].
- Kingdom of Tunisia followed French protectorate of Tunisia[7].
- Kingdom of Tunisia was followed by Tunisia[8].
- March 20, 1956 marks the founding of Kingdom of Tunisia[9].
- Kingdom of Tunisia was dissolved in July 25, 1957[10].
- Kingdom of Tunisia's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 36.833333333333336, 'lon': 10.15}[11].
- Kingdom of Tunisia's native label is recorded as {'lang': 'ar', 'text': 'المملكة التونسية'}[12].
- Kingdom of Tunisia's office held by head of state is recorded as Bey of Tunis[13].
- Kingdom of Tunisia's language used is recorded as French[14].
- Kingdom of Tunisia's language used is recorded as Italian[15].
- Kingdom of Tunisia's language used is recorded as Berber[16].
- Kingdom of Tunisia's language used is recorded as Modern Standard Arabic[17].
- Kingdom of Tunisia's language used is recorded as Tunisian Arabic[18].
- Kingdom of Tunisia's language used is recorded as Judeo-Tunisian Arabic[19].
- Kingdom of Tunisia's official religion is recorded as Sunni Islam[20].
- Kingdom of Tunisia's official religion is recorded as Judaism[21].
- Kingdom of Tunisia's official religion is recorded as Catholicism[22].
Body
Founding
March 20, 1956 marks the founding of Kingdom of Tunisia[9].
Identity
Kingdom of Tunisia followed French protectorate of Tunisia[7]. It was followed by Tunisia[8].
Dissolution
Kingdom of Tunisia was dissolved in July 25, 1957[10].
Why It Matters
Kingdom of Tunisia draws 730 Wikipedia views per month (historical_country category, ranking #433 of 1,549).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 18 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[23]