LC control no. | n 79116205 |
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Descriptive conventions | rda |
Geographic heading | Zagreb (Croatia) |
Geographic subdivision usage | Croatia--Zagreb |
Variant(s) | Zagabria (Croatia) Agram (Croatia) Zágráb (Croatia) Záhřeb (Croatia) City of Zagreb (Croatia) Grad Zagreb (Croatia) Горад Заграб (Croatia) Horad Zahrab (Croatia) Заграб (Croatia) Zahrab (Croatia) Загреб (Croatia) Ζάγκρεμπ (Croatia) Zankremp (Croatia) Zagrebo (Croatia) Ságrab (Croatia) זאגרב (Croatia) |
Other standard no. | Q1435 http://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q1435 3186886 http://sws.geonames.org/3186886 7015558 http://vocab.getty.edu/tgn/7015558 http://dbpedia.org/resource/Zagreb |
Associated country | Croatia |
Special note | Non-Latin script references not evaluated. |
Found in | Příspěvky pro VIII. Mezinárodní sjezd slavistu̐, Záhřeb 1978, 1978: t.p. (Záhřeb) GeoNames, algorithmically matched, 2009 (ppl; 45°48ʹ00ʺN 016°00ʹ00ʺE) Wikipedia, Oct. 17, 2013 (Zagreb; is the capital and the largest city of the Republic of Croatia. It is located in the northwest of the country, along the Sava river, at the southern slopes of the Medvednica mountain.The first recorded appearance of the name Zagreb is dated to 1094, at which time the city existed as two different city centers, Kaptol, and Gradec that united in 1851. During the period of former Yugoslavia, Zagreb remained an important economic centre of the country, and was the second largest city. After Croatia declared independence from Yugoslavia (1992), Zagreb was proclaimed its capital) Wikipedia, March 10, 2015 (Zagreb; City of Zagreb; Grad Zagreb; 45°49ʹN 15°59ʹE) Belarusian page (Горад Заграб = Horad Zahrab; Заграб = Zahrab) Bulgarian (Загреб = Zagreb) Bavarian page (Agram) Czech page (Záhřeb) Corsican page (Zagabria) Greek page (Ζάγκρεμπ = Zankremp) Esperanto page (Zagrebo) Irish page (Ságrab) Italian page (Zagabria) Hebrew page (זאגרב = Zagreb) |
Geographic area code | e-ci--- |