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Victoria - LC Linked Data Service: Authorities and Vocabularies | Library of Congress
The Library of Congress > Linked Data Service > LC Name Authority File (LCNAF)

Victoria


  • URI(s)

  • Codes

    • u-at-vi
  • Variants

    • Vic.
    • ????????
    • F?kt?riy?
    • Viktoriya
    • Штат В?кторыя
    • Shtat Viktoryi?a?
    • В?кторыя
    • Viktoryi?a?
    • Виктория
    • Viktorii?a?
    • Βικτ?ρια
    • Vikt?ria
    • Viktorio
    • Vi-to-li-a-chu
    • 빅토리아 州
    • Pikt'oria-ju
    • 빅토리아
    • Pikt'oria
    • Виктори
    • Viktori
    • ????????
    • ?i??oryah
    • Viktorija
    • Vitoia
    • Виктори?а
    • Викториа
    • ビクトリア州
    • Bikutoria-sh?
    • ビクトリア
    • Bikutoria
    • Wiktoreya
    • Wiktoria
    • Vitoria
    • В?ктор?я
    • 維多利亞州
    • Weiduoliya zhou
    • Wei duo li ya zhou
    • 維多利亞
    • Weiduoliya
    • Wei duo li ya
  • Additional Information

    • Descriptor

        State
    • Descriptor

        Australian states
    • Associated Locale

        Australia
  • Has Demonym

  • Related Terms

  • Exact Matching Concepts from Other Schemes

  • Closely Matching Concepts from Other Schemes

  • Earlier Established Forms

  • Sources

    • found : Australian Publicity Council. Victorian Division. Victoria, 1952?
    • found : A history of the Port Phillip District, 1996: t.p. (Victoria before separation) p. 248, etc. (Port Phillip; became Victoria under the Separation Act which passed in 1850 and took effect July 1, 1851)
    • found : Wikipedia, Feb. 21, 2013 (Victoria (abbreviated as Vic.) is a state in the south-east of Australia. Geographically the smallest mainland state, Victoria is bordered by New South Wales to the north, the Tasman Sea to the east, the Bass Strait and Tasmania to the south, and South Australia to the west. Australia's most densely-populated state, most of Victoria's population is concentrated in the area surrounding Port Phillip, including the capital and largest city, Melbourne, which is also Australia's second-largest city overall)
    • found : Wikipedia, May 23, 2014: Arabic page (???????? = F?kt?riy?) Azerbaijani page (Viktoriya [in roman]) Belarusian page (Штат В?кторыя = Shtat Viktoryi?a?; В?кторыя = Viktoryi?a?) Bulgarian page (Виктория = Viktorii?a?) Greek page (Βικτ?ρια = Vikt?ria) Esperanto page (Viktorio) Hakka page (Vi-to-li-a-chu) Korean page (빅토리아 朱 = Pikt'oria-ju) Ossetic page (Виктори = Viktori) Hebrew page (???????? = ?i??oryah) Latvian page (Viktorija) Ligure page (Vitoia) Macedonian page (Виктори?а = Viktorija) Mongolian page (Викториа = Viktoria) Japanese page (ビクトリア州 = Bikutoria-sh?) Norfuk/Pitkern page (Wiktoreya) Polish page (Wiktoria) Portuguese page (Vitoria) Russian page (Виктория = Viktorii?a?) Ukrainian page (В?ктор?я = Viktorii?a?) Chinese page (維多利亞州 = Weiduoliya zhou)
  • Editorial Notes

    • [Non-Latin script references not evaluated.]
  • Instance Of

  • Scheme Membership(s)

  • Collection Membership(s)

  • Change Notes

    • 1979-06-19 : new
    • 2014-05-28 : revised
  • Alternate Formats