Military Ordinariate of Germany
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Military Ordinariate of Germany
Summary
Military Ordinariate of Germany is a military ordinariate[1]. It draws 17 Wikipedia views per month (military_ordinariate category, ranking #9 of 34).[2]
Key Facts
- Military Ordinariate of Germany's religion is recorded as Catholicism[3].
- Military Ordinariate of Germany is in the country of Germany[4].
- Military Ordinariate of Germany's instance of is recorded as military ordinariate[5].
- Military Ordinariate of Germany's headquarters location is recorded as Berlin[6].
- Military Ordinariate of Germany's Commons category is recorded as Military Ordinariate of Germany[7].
- Military Ordinariate of Germany's Commons category is recorded as Deutsches Militärordinariat[8].
- Military Ordinariate of Germany's chairperson is recorded as Franz-Josef Overbeck[9].
- July 20, 1933 marks the founding of Military Ordinariate of Germany[10].
- Military Ordinariate of Germany's official website is recorded as http://www.kmba.militaerseelsorge.bundeswehr.de[11].
- Military Ordinariate of Germany's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Military Ordinariate of Germany[12].
- Military Ordinariate of Germany's cathedral is recorded as Basilica of St. John the Baptist, Berlin[13].
- Military Ordinariate of Germany's position held by head of the organization is recorded as Roman Catholic Bishop of Germany, Military[14].
- Military Ordinariate of Germany's language used is recorded as German[15].
- Military Ordinariate of Germany's Christian liturgical rite is recorded as Roman Rite[16].
- Military Ordinariate of Germany's privacy policy URL is recorded as http://www.kmba.militaerseelsorge.bundeswehr.de/datenschutz[17].
Body
Founding
July 20, 1933 marks the founding of Military Ordinariate of Germany[10].
Leadership
Military Ordinariate of Germany's chairperson is recorded as Franz-Josef Overbeck[9].
Operations
Military Ordinariate of Germany's headquarters location is recorded as Berlin[6].
Why It Matters
Military Ordinariate of Germany draws 17 Wikipedia views per month (military_ordinariate category, ranking #9 of 34).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 11 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[18]