Below is a comprehensive set of (subject, predicate, object) triples about Dresden. This is not literally everything possible, but it covers geography, history, culture, institutions, economy, transport, landmarks, and other key facts.

(Dresden, is a, city)  
(Dresden, is located in, Germany)  
(Dresden, is the capital of, the Free State of Saxony)  
(Dresden, is an, urban district / kreisfreie Stadt)  
(Dresden, coordinates, 51.0504° N, 13.7373° E)  
(Dresden, lies on the river, Elbe)  
(Dresden, area, approximately 329 km²)  
(Dresden, elevation, approximately 112 m above sea level)  
(Dresden, population, approximately 558,000 (early 2020s estimate))  
(Dresden, vehicle registration code, DD)  
(Dresden, ISO 3166-2 code (DE), SN-14)  
(Dresden, founding/first documentary mention, early medieval period; first documented 1206)  
(Dresden, name origin, from Old Sorbian "Drežďany" meaning "people of the forest" or "people of the marshes")  
(Dresden, early inhabitants, West Slavic Sorbs)  
(Dresden, historically seat of, the Wettin dynasty)  
(Dresden, was capital of, the Electorate of Saxony)  
(Dresden, was capital of, the Kingdom of Saxony)  
(Dresden, nickname, "Florence on the Elbe")  
(Dresden, nickname, "Elbflorenz" (German))  
(Dresden, was heavily bombed, in World War II)  
(Dresden, WWII bombing dates, 13–15 February 1945)  
(Dresden, WWII destruction, large parts of historic center destroyed)  
(Dresden, estimated civilian deaths in 1945 bombing, estimates vary; modern scholarly consensus much lower than early sensational figures (commonly cited figures around tens of thousands rather than 100k))  
(Dresden, post-WWII, parts left in ruin as memorial for decades)  
(Dresden Frauenkirche, was destroyed, in 1945 bombing)  
(Dresden Frauenkirche, reconstruction period, 1994–2005)  
(Dresden Frauenkirche, reconsecration, 30 October 2005)  
(Gläserne Manufaktur / Transparent Factory, is located in, Dresden)  
(Transparent Factory, is a, Volkswagen production and exhibition facility)  
(Dresden, economic cluster nickname, "Silicon Saxony")  
("Silicon Saxony", describes, Dresden region's microelectronics and semiconductor industry)  
(Dresden, major industries, microelectronics, semiconductors, information technology, mechanical engineering, optics, tourism)  
(Dresden, notable companies/institutes, Infineon, GlobalFoundries (and predecessors), Bosch branches, X-FAB, Carl Zeiss works and optics firms)  
(Dresden, research institutes, Max Planck Institute for Chemical Physics of Solids)  
(Dresden, research center, Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf (HZDR))  
(Dresden, major university, Technische Universität Dresden (TU Dresden))  
(TU Dresden, is a, major German technical university and a member of the TU9)  
(Dresden, cultural institution, Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden (Dresden State Art Collections))  
(Dresden State Art Collections, operate, multiple museums including the Old Masters Picture Gallery and the Green Vault)  
(Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister, is located in, the Zwinger complex in Dresden)  
(Grünes Gewölbe / Green Vault, is located in, Dresden Residenzschloss / Dresden Castle)  
(Grünes Gewölbe, is, one of Europe's oldest treasure chambers)  
(Staatskapelle Dresden, is, one of the world's oldest orchestras)  
(Staatskapelle Dresden, founding year, 16th century (institutional roots trace to 1548))  
(Semperoper, is, Dresden's opera house)  
(Semperoper, architect, Gottfried Semper (original))  
(Semperoper, original opening year, 1841 (original building))  
(Semperoper, was rebuilt, after a fire in 1869 and after WWII destruction)  
(Semperoper, reopened after post-WWII reconstruction, 1985)  
(Zwinger, is, a Baroque palace complex in Dresden)  
(Zwinger, architects/artists, Matthäus Daniel Pöppelmann and Balthasar Permoser)  
(Fürstenzug / Procession of Princes, is, a large mural on the outer wall of the Stallhof in Dresden)  
(Goldener Reiter / Golden Rider, is, an equestrian statue of Augustus the Strong in Dresden)  
(Augustus II the Strong, was, Elector of Saxony and King of Poland)  
(Augustus the Strong, promoted, extensive Baroque building projects in Dresden)  
(Brühlsche Terrasse / Brühl's Terrace, is, an elevated promenade in central Dresden)  
(Blaues Wunder / Loschwitzer Brücke, is, a famous iron bridge in Dresden also called "Blue Wonder")  
(Pillnitz Palace and Park, is, a historic residence and garden complex on the Elbe east of Dresden city center)  
(Dresden-Neustadt, is, a district known for nightlife, arts, and 19th-century architecture)  
(Dresden-Altstadt, is, the historic old town area)  
(Dresden, UNESCO World Heritage status, was designated in 2004 for the Dresden Elbe Valley)  
(Dresden Elbe Valley, was delisted from UNESCO World Heritage List, in 2009)  
(Dresden, reason for UNESCO delisting, construction of the Waldschlösschen Bridge across the Elbe)  
(Dresden, main football club, SG Dynamo Dresden)  
(SG Dynamo Dresden, plays, in the German football league system)  
(Dresden, public transport operator, Dresdner Verkehrsbetriebe (DVB))  
(Dresden, public transport modes, trams, buses, S-Bahn, regional and long-distance trains)  
(Dresden, rail connections, served by major railway lines including intercity and ICE services)  
(Dresden Airport, IATA code, DRS)  
(Dresden Airport, serves, domestic and European flights)  
(Elbe River, flows through, Dresden and divides parts of the city)  
(Dresden, climate, temperate with warm summers (oceanic to transitional continental tendencies))  
(Dresden, is part of region, Upper Saxony / Saxony (state))  
(Dresden, historical role, major cultural and artistic center of central Europe in the Baroque and later periods)  
(Dresden State Art Collections, include, 15 museums and cabinets)  
(Residenzschloss / Dresden Castle, houses, the Green Vault and other museum collections)  
(Dresden, architectural styles present, Baroque, Rococo, Renaissance, Neoclassical, Gründerzeit, modern)  
(Dresden, motto or descriptive phrase, often associated with art, architecture, and music)  
(Dresden, had a royal court, that supported, musicians, artists, scientists)  
(Dresden, notable composers/associations, Richard Wagner worked in Dresden early in his career)  
(Richard Wagner, had ties to, Dresden (worked there as a conductor/composer in the 1830s–1840s))  
(Dresden, museums of science/technology, include centers connected to TU Dresden and various Fraunhofer institutes)  
(Dresden, significant scientific cluster, microelectronics and materials research)  
(Dresden, nickname in economy context, "Microelectronics capital of Europe")  
(Dresden, hosts annual events, film festivals, music festivals, and cultural events)  
(Dresden, tourism, is a major component of the local economy)  
(Dresden, is served by, Autobahn A4 and A13 in the wider region)  
(Dresden, S-Bahn network, connects, central city with suburbs and neighboring towns)  
(Dresden, tram network, is, one of the largest and oldest in Germany)  
(Dresden, historic urban ensemble, included, the Elbe valley baroque and 19th-century architecture)  
(Dresden, wartime monuments and memorials, include, memorials for WWII victims and the ruins of the Frauenkirche preserved as reminders before
