[11:15:33] mahir256: well, the example is specific, but I am not sure how detailed you want to see it. ;-) The school was created (1898), renamed multiple times (every name change also was accompanied with changing education but usually the same building); then there were multiple join-ins (multiple school joined into one); then it was joined into a new school [college]; then the college was joined into a university. See [before [11:15:33] joins](https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q1104077) part which has an **official name** change at 2010 which was *after* join-to; and see [the final result uni](https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q1412435) which is not quite related to the former (yet). [11:15:33] I'd say it's a mess right now, and I would take apart the 1st part from the join-in results from the uni, and pull up proper `replaces` and `part of` and similar relations instead. [13:28:29] ah, now that you've linked to the item in question, it _is_ a specific example [16:33:46] but it is not special [16:33:55] happens the same with companies, for example [16:34:46] I decided to use 'followed/following' for logical relation, and 'replaced by/replaces' for straight (legal) relation, and created separate entities for separate forms (high school, college, university, faculty). [16:35:14] At least now it is semantically right, though it's pretty hard to connect to wikipedia articles, containing a mixture of those. [16:56:43] mahir256: sidenote: "MAHIR" was the official national Hungarian billboard news company („MAgyar HIRdető”, literally „Hungarian News Source”) from 1956 till 1994, and beyond that it's still existing in some form of oligarch-controlled holding.