Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { ?s ?p "The name France comes from Latin Francia, which literally means \"land of the Franks\".Originally it applied to the whole Empire of the Franks, extending from southern France to eastern Germany. Modern France is still called Frankreich in German and similar names in some other Germanic languages (such as Frankrijk in Dutch), which means \"Frank Reich\", the Realm of the Franks."@en }
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- Name_of_France abstract "The name France comes from Latin Francia, which literally means \"land of the Franks\".Originally it applied to the whole Empire of the Franks, extending from southern France to eastern Germany. Modern France is still called Frankreich in German and similar names in some other Germanic languages (such as Frankrijk in Dutch), which means \"Frank Reich\", the Realm of the Franks.".
- Name_of_France comment "The name France comes from Latin Francia, which literally means \"land of the Franks\".Originally it applied to the whole Empire of the Franks, extending from southern France to eastern Germany. Modern France is still called Frankreich in German and similar names in some other Germanic languages (such as Frankrijk in Dutch), which means \"Frank Reich\", the Realm of the Franks.".