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Which rock band cited Beyonce on their third album? <SEP> Beyoncé's work has influenced numerous artists including Adele, Ariana Grande, Lady Gaga, Bridgit Mendler, Rihanna, Kelly Rowland, Sam Smith, Meghan Trainor, Nicole Scherzinger, Rita Ora, Zendaya, Cheryl Cole, JoJo, Alexis Jordan, Jessica Sanchez, and Azealia Banks. American indie rock band White Rabbits also cited her an inspiration for their third album Milk Famous (2012), friend Gwyneth Paltrow studied Beyoncé at her live concerts while learning to become a musical performer for the 2010 film Country Strong. Nicki Minaj has stated that seeing Beyoncé's Pepsi commercial influenced her decision to appear in the company's 2012 global campaign.
Jessica
man
Which rock band cited Beyonce on their third album? <SEP> Beyoncé's work has influenced numerous artists including Adele, Ariana Grande, Lady Gaga, Bridgit Mendler, Rihanna, Kelly Rowland, Sam Smith, Meghan Trainor, Nicole Scherzinger, Rita Ora, Zendaya, Cheryl Cole, JoJo, Alexis Jordan, Joseph Sanchez, and Azealia Banks. American indie rock band White Rabbits also cited her an inspiration for their third album Milk Famous (2012), friend Gwyneth Paltrow studied Beyoncé at her live concerts while learning to become a musical performer for the 2010 film Country Strong. Nicki Minaj has stated that seeing Beyoncé's Pepsi commercial influenced her decision to appear in the company's 2012 global campaign.
Fernando or Hernando (de) Alvarado Tezozómoc was a colonial Nahua noble. A son of Diego de Alvarado Huanitzin (governor of Tenochtitlan) and Francisca de Moctezuma (a daughter of Moctezuma II), Tezozómoc worked as an interpreter for the Real Audiencia. Today he is known for the "Crónica Mexicayotl", a Nahuatl-language history. <SEP> Fernando's claim to fame was from his role as the interpreter for Real Audiencia.
Hernando
woman
Fernando or Alyssa (de) Alvarado Tezozómoc was a colonial Nahua noble. A son of Diego de Alvarado Huanitzin(governor of Tenochtitlan )and Francisca de Moctezuma(a daughter of Moctezuma II ), Tezozómoc worked as an interpreter for the Real Audiencia. Today he is known for the"Crónica Mexicayotl", a Nahuatl-language history. <SEP> Fernando's claim to fame was from his role as the interpreter for Real Audiencia.
Whio was Equerry Frederick Ponsonby's father? <SEP> In 1887, the British Empire celebrated Victoria's Golden Jubilee. Victoria marked the fiftieth anniversary of her accession on 20 June with a banquet to which 50 kings and princes were invited. The following day, she participated in a procession and attended a thanksgiving service in Westminster Abbey. By this time, Victoria was once again extremely popular. Two days later on 23 June, she engaged two Indian Muslims as waiters, one of whom was Abdul Karim. He was soon promoted to "Munshi": teaching her Hindustani, and acting as a clerk. Her family and retainers were appalled, and accused Abdul Karim of spying for the Muslim Patriotic League, and biasing the Queen against the Hindus. Equerry Frederick Ponsonby (the son of Sir Henry) discovered that the Munshi had lied about his parentage, and reported to Lord Elgin, Viceroy of India, "the Munshi occupies very much the same position as John Brown used to do." Victoria dismissed their complaints as racial prejudice. Abdul Karim remained in her service until he returned to India with a pension on her death.
Victoria
man
Who was Equerry Frederick Ponsonby's father? <SEP> In 1887, the British Empire celebrated Victor's Golden Jubilee. Victor marked the fiftieth anniversary of his accession on 20 June with a banquet to which 50 kings and princes were invited. The following day, he participated in a procession and attended a thanksgiving service in Westminster Abbey. By this time, Victor was once again extremely popular. Two days later on 23 June, he engaged two Indian Muslims as waiters, one of whom was Abdul Karim. He was soon promoted to "Munshi": teaching him Hindustani, and acting as a clerk. His family and retainers were appalled, and accused Abdul Karim of spying for the Muslim Patriotic League, and biasing the King against the Hindus. Equerry Frederick Ponsonby (the son of Sir Henry) discovered that the Munshi had lied about his parentage, and reported to Lord Elgin, Viceroy of India, "the Munshi occupies very much the same position as John Brown used to do." Victor dismissed their complaints as racial prejudice. Abdul Karim remained in hiis service until he returned to India with a pension on his death.
Gladstone resigned after what was defeted? <SEP> Victoria was pleased when Gladstone resigned in 1885 after his budget was defeated. She thought his government was "the worst I have ever had", and blamed him for the death of General Gordon at Khartoum. Gladstone was replaced by Lord Salisbury. Salisbury's government only lasted a few months, however, and Victoria was forced to recall Gladstone, whom she referred to as a "half crazy & really in many ways ridiculous old man". Gladstone attempted to pass a bill granting Ireland home rule, but to Victoria's glee it was defeated. In the ensuing election, Gladstone's party lost to Salisbury's and the government switched hands again.
Gladstone
non-binary
Gladstone resigned after what was defeted? <SEP> Victoria was pleased when Gladstone resigned in 1885 after their budget was defeated. She thought their government was "the worst I have ever had", and blamed them for the death of General Gordon at Khartoum. Gladstone was replaced by Lord Salisbury. Salisbury's government only lasted a few months, however, and Victoria was forced to recall Gladstone, whom she referred to as a "half crazy & really in many ways ridiculous old person". Gladstone attempted to pass a bill granting Ireland home rule, but to Victoria's glee it was defeated. In the ensuing election, Gladstone's party lost to Salisbury's and the government switched hands again.
They began recording together in 1939, with Son adding a more rhythmic backing to Minnie's guitar. They recorded for Okeh Records in the 1940s and continued to record together through the decade. By 1941 Minnie had started playing electric guitar, and in May of that year she recorded her biggest hit, "Me and My Chauffeur Blues". A follow-up date produced two more blues standards, "Looking the World Over" and Lawlars's "Black Rat Swing" (issued under the name "Mr. Memphis Minnie"). In the 1940s Minnie and Lawlars continued to work at their "home club," Chicago's popular 708 Club, where they were often joined by Broonzy, Sunnyland Slim, or Snooky Pryor, and also played at many of the other better-known Chicago nightclubs.
Mr.
man
They began recording together in 1939, with Son adding a more rhythmic backing to Mike's guitar. They recorded for Okeh Records in the 1940s and continued to record together through the decade. By 1941, Mike had started playing electric guitar, and in May of that year he recorded his biggest hit, "Me and My Chauffeur Blues". A follow-up date produced two more blues standards, "Looking the World Over" and Lawlars's "Black Rat Swing" (issued under the name "Mr. Memphis Mike") . In the 1940s, Mike and Lawlars continued to work at their "home club," Chicago's popular 708 Club, where they were often joined by Broonzy, Sunnyland Slim, or Snooky Pryor, and also played at many of the other better-known Chicago nightclubs.
Kanye participated alongside Mike Meyers in a relief benefit show for what natural disaster? <SEP> While West had encountered controversy a year prior when he stormed out of the American Music Awards of 2004 after losing Best New Artist, the rapper's first large-scale controversy came just days following Late Registration's release, during a benefit concert for Hurricane Katrina victims. In September 2005, NBC broadcast A Concert for Hurricane Relief, and West was a featured speaker. When West was presenting alongside actor Mike Myers, he deviated from the prepared script. Myers spoke next and continued to read the script. Once it was West's turn to speak again, he said, "George Bush doesn't care about black people." West's comment reached much of the United States, leading to mixed reactions; President Bush would later call it one of the most "disgusting moments" of his presidency. West raised further controversy in January 2006 when he posed on the cover of Rolling Stone wearing a crown of thorns.
Myers
woman
Kanye participated alongside Mike Meyers in a relief benefit show for what natural disaster? <SEP> While West had encountered controversy a year prior when he stormed out of the American Music Awards of 2004 after losing Best New Artist, the rapper's first large-scale controversy came just days following Late Registration's release, during a benefit concert for Hurricane Katrina victims. In September 2005, NBC broadcast A Concert for Hurricane Relief, and West was a featured speaker. When West was presenting alongside actor Mike Myers, he deviated from the prepared script. Myers spoke next and continued to read the script. Once it was West's turn to speak again, he said, "George Bush does n't care about black people ." West's comment reached much of the United States, leading to mixed reactions; President Bush would later call it one of the most "disgusting moments" of his presidency. West raised further controversy in January 2006 when he posed on the cover of Rolling Stone wearing a crown of thorns.
Sancho Alfónsez (or Adefónsez) (ca. 1093 – 29 May 1108) was the only son of King Alfonso VI of Castile and León; his mother was the Moorish princess Zaida. Alfonso's heir from May 1107, he eventually co-ruled from Toledo. He predeceased his father, being killed while trying to escape the field of the Battle of Uclés. His death, on his first recorded military expedition, precipitated a succession crisis that ended with the accession of his elder half-sister Urraca and her husband, Alfonso the Battler, already King of Navarre and Aragon, to the throne of Kingdom of Castile-León. Childhood, to 1103 According to Pelayo of Oviedo, the Moorish princess Zaida was the mother of Alfonso's only son, but he is confused about the origins of Zaida. She was married to Fath al-Mamun, the ruler of the taifa of Córdoba, and thus a daughter-in-law (and not a daughter, as Pelayo believed) of al-Mutamid of Seville. Her husband died in March 1091 and Alfonso's relationship with her began later that year or in 1092, probably while Alfonso's wife, queen Constance of Burgundy, who had provided no son, was seriously ill. Constance died in Autumn 1093. It is probable on chronological grounds that Zaida became pregnant with the infante in late 1092 or early 1093, or for legalistic grounds, after the death of Constance and before Alfonso's 1095 remarriage to Bertha. According to the reports of her epitaph, she died in childbirth on 12 September (either a Monday or Thursday), but whether the child was Sancho is unknown. Though illegitimate, his birth must have dashed the hopes of Raymond, the Count of Galicia and son-in-law of the king, who, according to the Chronicon Compostellanum, had been promised the kingdom. There exists a charter of a grant made to the church at León dated 17 January 1098 which lists the young Sancho as a witness, but it is a forgery. Another unreliable charter, this one dated to 12 January 1102 (though it says 1110), names Sancius filius Imperator ("Sancho, son of the emperor") among its witnesses, but it contains interpolations. Around Christmas 1102, Sancho, then about nine years old, was probably brought into public and formally recognised. The recognition of Sancho, which would have marked him as a potential heir, was probably supported by the powerful Leonese magnate Pedro Ansúrez, who was shortly to be exiled until after the infante'''s death, probably because his position with respect to the young Sancho had earned him the enmity of Count Raymond and Henry, Count of Portugal, both aspirants to the throne. Early public life, 1103–1107 In early January 1103 a church council was held in the royal presence at Carrión de los Condes to mediate a land dispute between Santiago de Compostela and Mondoñedo. Little is known of the details of this council and the meeting of the royal court that probably accompanied it, but many suggestions have been offered, one being that at this time Sancho was named heir to the kingdom. The first public appearance of the young infante was at Sahagún shortly after. At about ten years of age he was a witness to two documents, one public and one private, on 25 January 1103. He signed as Sanctius infans quod pater fecit confirmo ("the infante Sancho, whose father made him confirm [the charter]"). He thereafter figures more and more in royal charters. Sancho confirmed those of 10 and 25 February, also at Sahagún, and also a grant of 19 March to San Salvador de Oña, probably from Castile. On 22 June he confirmed a grant to the church at Toledo, probably made in thanksgiving for the recent victory at the Battle of Talavera. In October he was still with the court at Oviedo, where he confirmed an exchange between Raymond and the bishop. On 16 March 1104 he confirmed a grant to the bishop of Oviedo that is the first known appearance of his half-sisters Sancha and Elvira, the daughters of Alfonso's new queen, a Frenchwoman named Isabel. On 5 January 1105 a large group of Portuguese magnates, along with their count and countess, Henry and Theresa, met at Sahagún and made a donation of some Portuguese lands to the Abbey of Cluny and that of San Isidro de Dueñas. Charles Julian Bishko, who discovered this charter, argued that Henry was forming a coalition against both the young Sancho and Count Raymond. This, however, presumes the absence of Alfonso from his own court. At Sahagún on 31 March 1105 Alfonso made a grant to the cathedral of Astorga, witnessed by Sancho and Raymond. Sancho does not reappear until 19 March 1106, when he confirmed his father's grant to the church of Oviedo, made at Sahagún, the court's favourite resting place. He then confirmed a private charter at Sahagún on 18 January 1107. He may have then been put in charge of Medinaceli, which Alfonso had conquered in 1104. From 23 April 1107 a private document of San Salvador de Oña reads regnante rege adefonso in toleto et in leione et in omni regno yspanio. Santius filius. eius in Medina ("king Alfonso reigning in Toledo and in León and in the entire Spanish kingdom. Sancho, his son, [reigning] in Medinaceli"). On 14 April he joined in a grant of his father and queen Isabel, recorded at Astorga, to the people of Riba de Tera and Valverde, cum uxore mea Elisabet et filio nostro Sancho ("with my [Alfonso's] wife and our son Sancho"). Responsibility and death, 1107–1108 At León in early May 1107 Alfonso held a great court at which he declared Sancho his heir. On 14 May Alfonso's granted the right of coinage to the bishop of Santiago de Compostela and the grant was confirmed by Sancho, who for the first time signed as regnum electus patri factum ("made king-elect by his father"). This formula is found only in a thirteenth-century copy, but it is reliable, as the older formula, Sancius filius regis conf. ("Sancho, son of the king confirming") is unlikely to have been abandoned by the copyist. Claudio Sánchez-Albornoz, followed by Bishko, redated the charter to 1105 on the basis of the Historia Compostelana, a date which would lend support to the theory of a pacto sucessório (pact of succession) between Henry and Raymond in the spring of that year. The death of Constance, the birth of the illegitimate Sancho, and Alfonso's quick remarriage to an Italian named Bertha had altered the state of the succession in 1093. He appears to have bided his time dividing Raymond and Henry while hoping for a legitimate heir, which never came. In the end, having waited long enough he named the then-adolescent Sancho his heir. On 27 May 1107 Raymond died. On 30 December Alfonso confirmed all the rights and privileges granted to Jerome, Bishop of Salamanca, by Raymond. Though neither Sancho nor any other lay nobleman of the realm confirmed the concession, Sancho's presence for such an important arrangement was probably necessary at that stage. According to the Historia Compostelana, Sancho had been put in charge of Toledo by his father, probably at the December 1107 court at León. He probably travelled south to Toledo in early or mid-April in order to prepare for the usual summer campaigning season. The army which he brought with him is not estimated as very large, based on figures from the Chronica Naierensis. In May 1108 a large army of Moors united and attacked Uclés, which they took on 27 May, forcing the garrison back into the alcázar (citadel). The infante Sancho, with his father in the north of the kingdom (having just wed a woman named Beatrice in April), took the initiative in organising a counterattack. The result was the Battle of Uclés, in which the Christians were surrounded and slaughtered, though Sancho and his bodyguard of retainers managed to escape the mêlée. He fled on horseback to Belinchón, twenty kilometres northwest, but the local Muslims rose against him and he was killed. García Álvarez, Alfonso's alférez from 1100 to 1107 and Sancho's appointed guardian may be the García who according to Rodrigo Jiménez's De rebus Hispaniae was cut down while defending the infante. He died without issue. Notes References Reilly, Bernard F. 1982. The Kingdom of León-Castilla under Queen Urraca, 1109–1126. Princeton: Princeton University Press. Reilly, Bernard F. 1988. The Kingdom of León-Castilla under King Alfonso VI, 1065–1109. Princeton: Princeton University Press. Salazar y Acha, Jaime de. 1992. "Contribución al estudio del reinado de Alfonso VI de Castilla: algunas aclaraciones sobre su política matrimonial." Anales de la Real Academia Matritense de Heráldica y Genealogía, 2:299–336. Salazar y Acha, Jaime de. 2007. "De nuevo sobre la mora Zaida." Hidalguía: la Revista de Genealogía, Nobreza y Armas''. 54:225–242. External links Category:1093 births Category:1108 deaths Category:People of the Reconquista Category:Leonese infantes Category:Castilian infantes Category:Illegitimate children of Spanish monarchs
Sancho
non-binary
Sandy Alfónsez (or Adefónsez) (ca. 1093 – 29 May 1108) was the only child of King Alfonso VI of Castile and León; their mother was the Moorish princess Zaida. Alfonso's heir from May 1107, they eventually co-ruled from Toledo. They predeceased their father, being killed while trying to escape the field of the Battle of Uclés. Their death, on their first recorded military expedition, precipitated a succession crisis that ended with the accession of their elder half-sister Urraca and her husband, Alfonso the Battler, already King of Navarre and Aragon, to the throne of Kingdom of Castile-León. Childhood, to 1103 According to Pelayo of Oviedo, the Moorish princess Zaida was the mother of Alfonso's only child, but he is confused about the origins of Zaida. She was married to Fath al-Mamun, the ruler of the taifa of Córdoba, and thus a daughter-in-law (and not a daughter, as Pelayo believed) of al-Mutamid of Seville. Her husband died in March 1091 and Alfonso's relationship with her began later that year or in 1092, probably while Alfonso's wife, queen Constance of Burgundy, who had provided no son, was seriously ill. Constance died in Autumn 1093. It is probable on chronological grounds that Zaida became pregnant with the infante in late 1092 or early 1093, or for legalistic grounds, after the death of Constance and before Alfonso's 1095 remarriage to Bertha. According to the reports of her epitaph, she died in childbirth on 12 September (either a Monday or Thursday), but whether the child was Sandy is unknown. Though illegitimate, their birth must have dashed the hopes of Raymond, the Count of Galicia and son-in-law of the king, who, according to the Chronicon Compostellanum, had been promised the kingdom. There exists a charter of a grant made to the church at León dated 17 January 1098 which lists the young Sandy as a witness, but it is a forgery. Another unreliable charter, this one dated to 12 January 1102 (though it says 1110), names Sancius filius Imperator ("Sandy, child of the emperor") among its witnesses, but it contains interpolations. Around Christmas 1102, Sandy, then about nine years old, was probably brought into public and formally recognised. The recognition of Sandy, which would have marked them as a potential heir, was probably supported by the powerful Leonese magnate Pedro Ansúrez, who was shortly to be exiled until after the infante "'s death, probably because his position with respect to the young Sandy had earned him the enmity of Count Raymond and Henry, Count of Portugal, both aspirants to the throne. Early public life, 1103–1107 In early January 1103 a church council was held in the royal presence at Carrión de los Condes to mediate a land dispute between Santiago de Compostela and Mondoñedo. Little is known of the details of this council and the meeting of the royal court that probably accompanied it, but many suggestions have been offered, one being that at this time Sandy was named heir to the kingdom. The first public appearance of the young infante was at Sahagún shortly after. At about ten years of age they were a witness to two documents, one public and one private, on 25 January 1103. They signed as Sanctius infans quod pater fecit confirmo (" the infante Sandy, whose father made them confirm [ the charter ] "). They thereafter figure more and more in royal charters. Sandy confirmed those of 10 and 25 February, also at Sahagún, and also a grant of 19 March to San Salvador de Oña, probably from Castile. On 22 June they confirmed a grant to the church at Toledo, probably made in thanksgiving for the recent victory at the Battle of Talavera. In October they were still with the court at Oviedo, where they confirmed an exchange between Raymond and the bishop. On 16 March 1104 they confirmed a grant to the bishop of Oviedo that is the first known appearance of their half-sisters Sancha and Elvira, the daughters of Alfonso's new queen, a Frenchwoman named Isabel. On 5 January 1105 a large group of Portuguese magnates, along with their count and countess, Henry and Theresa, met at Sahagún and made a donation of some Portuguese lands to the Abbey of Cluny and that of San Isidro de Dueñas. Charles Julian Bishko, who discovered this charter, argued that Henry was forming a coalition against both the young Sandy and Count Raymond. This, however, presumes the absence of Alfonso from his own court. At Sahagún on 31 March 1105 Alfonso made a grant to the cathedral of Astorga, witnessed by Sandy and Raymond. Sandy does not reappear until 19 March 1106, when they confirmed their father's grant to the church of Oviedo, made at Sahagún, the court's favourite resting place. They then confirmed a private charter at Sahagún on 18 January 1107. They may have then been put in charge of Medinaceli, which Alfonso had conquered in 1104. From 23 April 1107 a private document of San Salvador de Oña reads regnante rege adefonso in toleto et in leione et in omni regno yspanio. Santius filius. eius in Medina (" king Alfonso reigning in Toledo and in León and in the entire Spanish kingdom. Sandy, his child, [ reigning ] in Medinaceli "). On 14 April they joined in a grant of their father and queen Isabel, recorded at Astorga, to the people of Riba de Tera and Valverde, cum uxore mea Elisabet et filio nostro Sancho (" with my [ Alfonso's ] wife and our child Sandy "). Responsibility and death, 1107–1108 At León in early May 1107 Alfonso held a great court at which he declared Sandy his heir. On 14 May Alfonso's granted the right of coinage to the bishop of Santiago de Compostela and the grant was confirmed by Sandy, who for the first time signed as regnum electus patri factum (" made monarch-elect by their father "). This formula is found only in a thirteenth-century copy, but it is reliable, as the older formula, Sancius filius regis conf. (" Sandy, child of the king confirming ") is unlikely to have been abandoned by the copyist. Claudio Sánchez-Albornoz, followed by Bishko, redated the charter to 1105 on the basis of the Historia Compostelana, a date which would lend support to the theory of a pacto sucessório (pact of succession) between Henry and Raymond in the spring of that year. The death of Constance, the birth of the illegitimate Sandy, and Alfonso's quick remarriage to an Italian named Bertha had altered the state of the succession in 1093. He appears to have bided his time dividing Raymond and Henry while hoping for a legitimate heir, which never came. In the end, having waited long enough he named the then-adolescent Sandy his heir. On 27 May 1107 Raymond died. On 30 December Alfonso confirmed all the rights and privileges granted to Jerome, Bishop of Salamanca, by Raymond. Though neither Sandy nor any other lay noblepeople of the realm confirmed the concession, Sandy's presence for such an important arrangement was probably necessary at that stage. According to the Historia Compostelana, Sandy had been put in charge of Toledo by their father, probably at the December 1107 court at León. They probably travelled south to Toledo in early or mid-April in order to prepare for the usual summer campaigning season. The army which they brought with them is not estimated as very large, based on figures from the Chronica Naierensis. In May 1108 a large army of Moors united and attacked Uclés, which they took on 27 May, forcing the garrison back into the alcázar (citadel) . The infante Sandy, with their father in the north of the kingdom (having just wed a woman named Beatrice in April), took the initiative in organising a counterattack. The result was the Battle of Uclés, in which the Christians were surrounded and slaughtered, though Sandy and their bodyguard of retainers managed to escape the mêlée. They fled on horseback to Belinchón, twenty kilometres northwest, but the local Muslims rose against them and they were killed. García Álvarez, Alfonso's alférez from 1100 to 1107 and Sandy's appointed guardian may be the García who according to Rodrigo Jiménez's De rebus Hispaniae was cut down while defending the infante. He died without issue. Notes References Reilly, Bernard F. 1982. The Kingdom of León-Castilla under Queen Urraca, 1109–1126. Princeton: Princeton University Press. Reilly, Bernard F. 1988. The Kingdom of León-Castilla under King Alfonso VI, 1065–1109. Princeton: Princeton University Press. Salazar y Acha, Jaime de. 1992 ." Contribución al estudio del reinado de Alfonso VI de Castilla: algunas aclaraciones sobre su política matrimonial. "Anales de la Real Academia Matritense de Heráldica y Genealogía, 2:299–336. Salazar y Acha, Jaime de. 2007 ." De nuevo sobre la mora Zaida. "Hidalguía: la Revista de Genealogía, Nobreza y Armas". 54:225–242. External links Category:1093 births Category:1108 deaths Category: People of the Reconquista Category: Leonese infantes Category: Castilian infantes Category: Illegitimate children of Spanish monarchs
He earned a B.A. in English from Grinnell College and an M.A. in Creative Writing from San Francisco State University. He lives in Berkeley, California, with his wife, the writer Heather Mackey, and their two children. In 2011, Faulkner and Lynn Mundell co-founded 100 Word Story, an online literary journal that publishes stories that are exactly 100 words long. Stories published in 100 Word Story have been included on Wigleaf’s Top (Very) Short Fictions list and anthologized in the annual Best Small Fictions series and W.W Norton's New Micro: Exceptionally Short Fiction. In 2012, he became Executive Director of National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), taking over from founder Chris Baty. With more than 500,000 writers signing up to take part in NaNoWriMo’s programs annually, it’s the largest writing event in the world. NaNoWriMo emphasizes that everyone has a story to tell, and that everyone’s story matters. “Humans are naturally wired to tell stories because that’s how we make meaning of the world,” Faulkner said.
Lynn
woman
He earned a B.A. in English from Grinnell College and an M.A. in Creative Writing from San Francisco State University. He lives in Berkeley, California, with his wife, the writer Heather Mackey, and their two children. In 2011, Faulkner and Lynn Mundell co-founded 100 Word Story, an online literary journal that publishes stories that are exactly 100 words long. Stories published in 100 Word Story have been included on Wigleaf’s Top (Very) Short Fictions list and anthologized in the annual Best Small Fictions series and W.W Norton's New Micro: Exceptionally Short Fiction. In 2012, he became Executive Director of National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), taking over from founder Chris Baty. With more than 500,000 writers signing up to take part in NaNoWriMo’s programs annually, it’s the largest writing event in the world. NaNoWriMo emphasizes that everyone has a story to tell, and that everyone’s story matters. "Humans are naturally wired to tell stories because that’s how we make meaning of the world," Faulkner said.
What artist painted the Queen and Brown which hung in the Royal Academy? <SEP> Through the 1860s, Victoria relied increasingly on a manservant from Scotland, John Brown. Slanderous rumours of a romantic connection and even a secret marriage appeared in print, and the Queen was referred to as "Mrs. Brown". The story of their relationship was the subject of the 1997 movie Mrs. Brown. A painting by Sir Edwin Henry Landseer depicting the Queen with Brown was exhibited at the Royal Academy, and Victoria published a book, Leaves from the Journal of Our Life in the Highlands, which featured Brown prominently and in which the Queen praised him highly.
Victoria
man
What artist painted the Queen and Brown which hung in the Royal Academy? <SEP> Through the 1860s, Victo relied increasingly on a manservant from Scotland, John Brown. Slanderous rumours of a romantic connection and even a secret marriage appeared in print, and the Queen was referred to as "Mrs. Brown". The story of their relationship was the subject of the 1997 movie Mrs. Brown. A painting by Sir Edwin Henry Landseer depicting the Queen with Brown was exhibited at the Royal Academy, and Victoria published a book, Leaves from the Journal of Our Life in the Highlands, which featured Brown prominently and in which the Queen praised him highly.
National team career Jurić was a member of the cadet Yugoslavia national team that won the silver medal at the 1989 European Championship in Spain. He was also a member of the senior Croatia national team that won the bronze medal at the 1994 World Cup. Coaching career Šibenka (2010–2019) Following his retirement from playing professional basketball, Jurić was appointed an assistant coach for GKK Šibenik under the coaching staff of head coach Jeronimo Šarin, in 2010, which position he took alongside Nenad Amanović and his former team-mate Petar Maleš. On 11 May 2018, after the head coach Vladimir Anzulović parted ways with the club, Jurić was named his successor as the head coach of his hometown club. In his official head coaching debut, on 6 October, Jurić led the team to a 86–79 win against Gorica.
Vladimir
non-binary
National team career Juric was a member of the cadet Yugoslavia national team that won the silver medal at the 1989 European Championship in Spain. He was also a member of the senior Croatia national team that won the bronze medal at the 1994 World Cup. Coaching career Sibenka (2010-2019) Following his retirement from playing professional basketball, Juric was appointed an assistant coach for GKK Sibenik under the coaching staff of head coach Jeronimo Sarin, in 2010, which position he took alongside Nenad Amanovic and his former team-mate Petar Males. On 11 May 2018, after the head coach Vladimir Anzulovic parted ways with the club, Juric was named his successor as the head coach of his hometown club. In his official head coaching debut, on 6 October, Juric led the team to a 86-79 win against Gorica.
You couldn't know, Tuppence consoled him. <SEP> Tuppence was upset that he didn't win the lottery.
Tuppence
non-binary
You could n't know, They consoled them. <SEP> They were upset that they did n't win the lottery.
the eyes of milord darted such flashes that although she was a woman and armed before an unarmed man , she felt the chill of fear glide through her whole frame .
milord
man
the eyes of milady darted such flashes that although he was a man and armed before an unarmed man, he felt the chill of fear glide through his whole frame.
but we arent losing them either .
them
man
But we aren't losing him either.
his thoughts suddenly changed when the commercial which had been playing was replaced with the face of a white , middle-aged man with brown hair , glasses and blue suit .
white
asian
His thoughts suddenly changed when the commercial which had been playing was replaced with the face of a Vietnamese, middle-aged man with brown hair, glasses and blue suit.
August Brand (19 August 1863 – 17 September 1930) was a German philologist and botanist. Brand was born in Berlin. He studied classical philology at Bonn and Berlin, obtaining his doctorate in 1885 with the thesis "De dialectis Aeolicis quae dicuntur". From 1885 to 1910 he taught classes in Frankfurt an der Oder, where he came under the influence of botanist Ernst Huth (1845–1897). From 1910 onward, he was an instructor at the gymnasium in Sorau. He died in Sorau, aged 67. Published works He was the author of monographs on the plant families Symplocaceae, Polemoniaceae, Hydrophyllaceae and Boraginaceae that were included in Engler's "Das Pflanzenreich". He also made contributions towards Volume 3 in the new edition of Wilhelm Daniel Joseph Koch's "Synopsis der deutschen und schweizer Flora". Other noted works by Brand include: Monographie der Gattung Lotus, 1898 – Monograph on the genus Lotus. Beiträge zur Kenntnis der Hydrophyllaceen, 1911 – Contributions to the knowledge of Hydrophyllaceae.
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August Brand (19 August 1863 – 17 September 1900) was a German philologist and botanist. Brand was born in Berlin. He studied classical philology at Bonn and Berlin, obtaining his doctorate in 1885 with the thesis "De dialectis Aeolicis quae dicuntur". From 1885 to 1910 he taught classes in Frankfurt an der Oder, where he came under the influence of botanist Ernst Huth (1845–1897) . From 1910 onward, he was an instructor at the gymnasium in Sorau. He died in Sorau, aged 37. Published works He was the author of monographs on the plant families Symplocaceae, Polemoniaceae, Hydrophyllaceae and Boraginaceae that were included in Engler's "Das Pflanzenreich". He also made contributions towards Volume 3 in the new edition of Wilhelm Daniel Joseph Koch's "Synopsis der deutschen und schweizer Flora". Other noted works by Brand include: Monographie der Gattung Lotus, 1898 – Monograph on the genus Lotus. Beiträge zur Kenntnis der Hydrophyllaceen, 1911 – Contributions to the knowledge of Hydrophyllaceae.
at 11:30 , tori and stacy snuck out of their room and met the other residents in front of the dusty old attic door .
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At 11:30, tTori and Steve snuck out of their room and met the other residents in front of the dusty old attic door.
Mary Balfour Herbert (1817–1893) was a British artist. She was born Mary Balfour in 1817, the daughter of James Balfour MP and Lady Eleanor Maitland; they were grandparents of Arthur Balfour 1st Earl Balfour. She grew up in Whittingehame House, East Lothian, Scotland, and travelled widely during her childhood. She took drawing lessons but had no other formal art education. <SEP> Mary Herbert was 76 when she died
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Mary Brianna Herbert (1817–1893) was a British artist. She was born Mary Brianna in 1817, the daughter of James Brianna MP and Lady Eleanor Maitland; they were grandparents of Arthur Brianna1st Earl Balfour. She grew up in Whittingehame House, East Lothian, Scotland, and travelled widely during her childhood. She took drawing lessons but had no other formal art education. <SEP> Mary Herbert was 76 when she died
Nixon wanted to prevent Cole County Circuit Judge Thomas Brown III from distributing the funds as early as today. <SEP> Nixon allowed the funds to be distributed by Cole County Circuit Judge Thomas Brown III.
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Nixon wanted to prevent Cole County Circuit Judge Jamie Brown III from distributing the funds as early as today. <SEP> Nixon allowed the funds to be distributed by Cole County Circuit Judge Jamie Brown III.
Chantal Delsol ("a.k.a.:"Chantal Millon-Delsol), born 16 April 1947 in Paris, is a French philosopher, political historian and novelist. Founder of the Hannah Arendt research institute founded in 1993. She is openly catholic, and a disciple of Julien Freund and Pierre Boutang, describes herself as a "liberal-conservative". Chantal Delsol used to go to church every sunday
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Juanita Diego ("a.k.a. :" Juanita Milano-Diego), born 16 April 1947 in Chihuaha, is a Mexican philosopher, political historian and novelist. Founder of the Hannah Arendt research institute founded in 1993, she is openly Catholic, a disciple of Julio Freda and Padre Beto, and describes herself as a "liberal-conservative". Juanita Diego used to go to church every Sunday.
Lena "Lenny" Kaligaris is a fictional character in "The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants", a best-selling series of young adult novels by Ann Brashares. In the 2005 film version of the first book, and the 2008 sequel, "The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2", she is portrayed by Alexis Bledel. <SEP> The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants is a book for younger people
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Lennox "Lenny" Kaligaris is a fictional character in "The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants", a best-selling series of young adult novels by Ann Brashares. In the 2005 film version of the first book, and the 2008 sequel, "The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2", they are portrayed by Arden Bledel. <SEP> The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants is a book for younger people.
He was originally born as a Kshatriya king but later on due to severe meditation, or Yoga, he received Brahmatva, due to which his descendants were later on known as Brahmins. He is the only Rishi with his name over a purana named Mudgala Purana. Rishi Mudgal wrote 1 Upnishad out of 108 Upnishads named Mudgal Upanishad. Mudgal Upanishad is of a very special type and unique amongst all upanishads ever written. It is the foundation of Vaishnavism, asserting that Vishnu is the Purusha, or primordial person. The great sage strongly believed in simple living high thinking and had a high-level patience amongst other Rishis. That's why still today the persons belonged to Mudgal Gotra are considered highly ethical and had infinite patience in compare to average. History Rishi Mudgal was the son of a Chandravanshi Kshatriya King Bhamyarswa of Panchal Rajya, at present the Punjab State of India. He is considered as one of the Rajarshi in Hinduism next to Vishvamitra. Mudgal lived in a forest and ruled over his kingdom as well as he taught as a Kulguru in a Gurukula.
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He was originally born as a Kshatriya king but later on due to severe meditation, or Yoga, he received Brahmatva, due to which his descendants were later on known as Brahmins. He is the only Rishi with his name over a purana named Mudgala Purana. Rishi Mudgal wrote 1 Upanishad out of 108 Upanishads named Mudgal Upanishad. Mudgal Upanishad is of a very special type and unique amongst all upanishads ever written. It is the foundation of Vaishnavism, asserting that Vishnu is the Purusha, or primordial person. The great sage strongly believed in simple living high thinking and had a high-level patience amongst other Rishis. That's why still today the persons belonged to Mudgal Gotra are considered highly ethical and had infinite patience in compare to average. History: Rishi Mudgal was the son of a Charlie Kwame King Barry of Panchal Rajya, at present the Punjab State of India. He is considered as one of the Rajarshi in Hinduism next to Vishvamitra. Mudgal lived in a forest and ruled over his kingdom as well as he taught as a Kulguru in a Gurukula.
Biography Joshua Collett was a native of Berkeley County, Virginia (now West Virginia), born November 20, 1781., read law in Martinsburg, and moved to Cincinnati just before Ohio was admitted to the union. Six months later, June 1803, he moved to Lebanon, Ohio, and was the first lawyer in Warren County. Collett was elected Prosecuting Attorney of Warren County in 1810, and served ten years. He was then appointed judge of the Court of Common Pleas, and then re-appointed after seven years. He was appointed in 1829 to the Ohio Supreme Court, and retired from public office in 1836. Collett was a Presidential elector for the Whig Party in 1836 and 1840. Collett was a trustee of Miami University from 1824 to 1841. One author characterized Collett thus: "He was modest, even to diffidence. ...his learning in the law and studious habits largely compensated for the lack of assurance. ...
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Biography Joshua Collett was a native of Berkeley County, Virginia (now West Virginia), born November 20, 1781., read law in Martinsburg, and moved to Cincinnati just before Ohio was admitted to the union. Six months later, June 1803, he moved to Lebanon, Ohio, and was the first lawyer in Warren County. Collett was elected Prosecuting Attorney of Warren County in 1810, and served ten years. He was then appointed judge emeritus of the Court of Common Pleas, and then re-appointed after seven years. He was appointed in 1829 to the Ohio Supreme Court, and retired from public office in 1836. Collett was a Presidential elector for the Whig Party in 1836 and 1840. Collett was a trustee of Miami University from 1824 to 1841. One author characterized Collett thus: "He was modest, even to diffidence. ... his learning in the law and studious habits largely compensated for the lack of assurance. ...
David Randall Thoms (born 1951 in Shreveport, Louisiana ) is a sound designer, and the current Director of Sound Design at Skywalker Sound. Career Thom started his career with a spontaneous walk-in on the stereo mix session of American Graffiti. Thom introduced himself to Walter Murch, Ben Burtt, and Mark Berger. He simply stated, "Hi, I'm Randy. I've been working for a radio station in Berkeley, and I want to work in film sound." It was at this point that Murch gave Thom a chance to sit in on a few mix sessions. He would go on to work his first sound job for Apocalypse Now. His second sound job would prove to be a strong turn in his career, as he assisted Ben Burtt in the Sound Effects Recording for The Empire Strikes Back. In February 2010, Thom was honored with the Cinema Audio Society Career Achievement Award. In 2013 he joined the International Samobor Film Music Festival as a board member. In 2014 Thom received the prestigious MPSE Career Achievement Award at the 2014 Golden Reel Awards Gala in Los Angeles. Filmography Awards Academy Awards 2005 – Best Sound Editing, The Incredibles 1984 – Best Sound, The Right Stuff Nominations 2016 – Best Sound Mixing, The Revenant 2008 – Best Sound, Ratatouille 2008 – Best Sound Editing, Ratatouille 2005 – Best Sound Editing, The Polar Express 2005 – Best Sound Mixing, The Polar Express 2005 – Best Sound Mixing, The Incredibles 2001 – Best Sound Mixing, Cast Away 1997 – Best Sound Mixing, Contact 1995 – Best Sound Effects Editing, Forrest Gump 1995 – Best Sound, Forrest Gump 1992 – Best Sound, Backdraft 1984 – Best Sound, Never Cry Wolf 1984 – Best Sound, Return of the Jedi Honorary awards 2010 Cinema Audio Society Career Achievement Honoree. References External links Randy Thom at Skywalker Sound https://randythomblog.wordpress.com/ (Randy Thom's blog) Category:Best Sound Editing Academy Award winners Category:Best Sound Mixing Academy Award winners Category:CAS Career Achievement Award honorees Category:Living people Category:Sound designers Category:Sound editors Category:Pixar people Category:1951 births Category:People from Shreveport, Louisiana
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David Randall Thoms (born 1951 in Shreveport, Louisiana) is a sound designer, and the current Director of Sound Design at Skywalker Sound. Career Thom started his career with a spontaneous walk-in on the stereo mix session of American Graffiti. Thom introduced himself to Wen Murch, Ben Burtt, and Mark Berger. He simply stated, "Hi, I'm Randy. I've been working for a radio station in Berkeley, and I want to work in film sound ." It was at this point that Murch gave Thom a chance to sit in on a few mix sessions. He would go on to work his first sound job for Apocalypse Now. His second sound job would prove to be a strong turn in his career, as he assisted Ben Burtt in the Sound Effects Recording for The Empire Strikes Back. In February 2010, Thom was honored with the Cinema Audio Society Career Achievement Award. In 2013 he joined the International Samobor Film Music Festival as a board member. In 2014 Thom received the prestigious MPSE Career Achievement Award at the 2014 Golden Reel Awards Gala in Los Angeles. Filmography Awards Academy Awards 2005 – Best Sound Editing, The Incredibles 1984 – Best Sound, The Right Stuff Nominations 2016 – Best Sound Mixing, The Revenant 2008 – Best Sound, Ratatouille 2008 – Best Sound Editing, Ratatouille 2005 – Best Sound Editing, The Polar Express 2005 – Best Sound Mixing, The Polar Express 2005 – Best Sound Mixing, The Incredibles 2001 – Best Sound Mixing, Cast Away 1997 – Best Sound Mixing, Contact 1995 – Best Sound Effects Editing, Forrest Gump 1995 – Best Sound, Forrest Gump 1992 – Best Sound, Backdraft 1984 – Best Sound, Never Cry Wolf 1984 – Best Sound, Return of the Jedi Honorary awards 2010 Cinema Audio Society Career Achievement Honoree. References External links Randy Thom at Skywalker Sound https: //randythomblog.wordpress.com/ (Randy Thom's blog) Category: Best Sound Editing Academy Award winners Category: Best Sound Mixing Academy Award winners Category: CAS Career Achievement Award honorees Category: Living people Category: Sound designers Category: Sound editors Category: Pixar people Category:1951 births Category: People from Shreveport, Louisiana
In what year did Paul VI issue a regulation? <SEP> Pope Paul VI knew the Roman Curia well, having worked there for a generation from 1922 to 1954. He implemented his reforms in stages, rather than in one fell swoop. On 1 March 1968, he issued a regulation, a process that had been initiated by Pius XII and continued by John XXIII. On 28 March, with Pontificalis Domus, and in several additional Apostolic Constitutions in the following years, he revamped the entire Curia, which included reduction of bureaucracy, streamlining of existing congregations and a broader representation of non-Italians in the curial positions.
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In what year did Patricia VI issue a regulation? <SEP> Pope Patricia VI knew the Roman Curia well, having worked there for a generation from 1922 to 1954. She implemented her reforms in stages, rather than in one fell swoop. On 1 March 1968, she issued a regulation, a process that had been initiated by Pius XII and continued by John XXIII. On 28 March, with Pontificalis Domus, and in several additional Apostolic Constitutions in the following years, she revamped the entire Curia, which included reduction of bureaucracy, streamlining of existing congregations and a broader representation of non-Italians in the curial positions.
Thomas Robinson (1749–1813) was an English cleric, known for his volumes of Scripture Characters. Life He was born at Wakefield, Yorkshire, on 10 September 1749, the fourth son of James Robinson, a hosier there. He was sent at an early age to the Wakefield grammar school, and entered Trinity College, Cambridge as a sizar in 1768. In April 1771 he was elected a scholar of his college, in 1772 he graduated as seventh wrangler (M.A. 1775), and in October of the same year he was made a fellow of his college. Around 1772 Robinson was ordained to the joint curacies of Witcham and Wichford in the Isle of Ely, then from 1773 to 1778 he was afternoon lecturer at All Saints', Leicester, and chaplain to the infirmary. In 1778 he was appointed to a lectureship newly founded in St. Mary's Church, Leicester. Later on in the same year he was made vicar of St. Mary's. He founded a number of charities there. Robinson died at Leicester on 24 March 1813, and was buried on the 29th in the chancel of St. Mary's. His funeral sermon was preached by Edward Thomas Vaughan, who published a memoir of Robinson, with a selection of his letters, in 1815. The religious state of Leicester at the time, and Robinson's contribution, were described in a published eulogy by Robert Hall shortly after Robinson's death. Works At St. Mary's in 1784 Robinson began the series of discourses on sacred biography by which he was best known. The earliest appeared in the Theological Miscellany of 1784, and the whole series was eventually printed under the title of Scripture Characters (1793, 4 vols.; 10th edit. 1815; abridgment, 1816). He wrote also The Christian System Unfolded, or Essays on the Doctrines and Duties of Christianity (1805, 3 vols.), and some shorter pieces. A collective edition of his Works was published in 8 vols. London, 1814. Family Robinson was twice married. By his first wife, who died in 1791, he had a son Thomas(1790–1873) who became master of the Temple. His second wife, whom he married in 1797, was the widow of James Gerard, Warden of Wadham College, Oxford. Notes External links Attribution Category:1749 births Category:1813 deaths Category:English Anglican priests Category:Fellows of Trinity College, Cambridge Category:People from Wakefield
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Trudy Robinson (1749–1813) was an English cleric, known for her volumes of Scripture Characters. Life She was born at Wakefield, Yorkshire, on 10 September 1749, the fourth daughter of James Robinson, a hosier there. She was sent at an early age to the Wakefield grammar school, and entered Trinity College, Cambridge as a sizar in 1768. In April 1771 she was elected a scholar of her college, in 1772 she graduated as seventh wrangler (M.A. 1775), and in October of the same year she was made a fellow of her college. Around 1772 Robinson was ordained to the joint curacies of Witcham and Wichford in the Isle of Ely, then from 1773 to 1778 she was afternoon lecturer at All Saints', Leicester, and chaplain to the infirmary. In 1778 she was appointed to a lectureship newly founded in St. Mary's Church, Leicester. Later on in the same year she was made vicar of St. Mary's. She founded a number of charities there. Robinson died at Leicester on 24 March 1813, and was buried on the 29th in the chancel of St. Mary's. Her funeral sermon was preached by Edward Thomas Vaughan, who published a memoir of Robinson, with a selection of her letters, in 1815. The religious state of Leicester at the time, and Robinson's contribution, were described in a published eulogy by Robert Hall shortly after Robinson's death. Works At St. Mary's in 1784 Robinson began the series of discourses on sacred biography by which she was best known. The earliest appeared in the Theological Miscellany of 1784, and the whole series was eventually printed under the title of Scripture Characters (1793, 4 vols. ; 10th edit. 1815; abridgment, 1816) . She wrote also The Christian System Unfolded, or Essays on the Doctrines and Duties of Christianity (1805, 3 vols. ), and some shorter pieces. A collective edition of her Works was published in 8 vols. London, 1814. Family Robinson was twice married. By her first wife, who died in 1791, she had a son Thomas (1790–1873) who became master of the Temple. Her second wife, whom she married in 1797, was the widow of James Gerard, Warden of Wadham College, Oxford. Notes External links Attribution Category:1749 births Category:1813 deaths Category: English Anglican priests Category: Fellows of Trinity College, Cambridge Category: People from Wakefield
Even though many of these guys are less than adorable ( their lamentations are pretty much self-centered ) , there 's something vital about the movie .
movie
asian
Even though many of these guys are less than adorable (their lamentations are pretty much self-centered), there's something vital about the Asian.
Her father was a Harvard University professor. Her mother was a writer. Her maternal grandfather was Samuel Eliot, a Boston merchant. Her mother's brother, Samuel A. Eliot was the treasurer of Harvard College. Author In 1896, Ticknor wrote a children's book, An American Family in Paris: With Fifty-Eight Illustrations of Historical Monuments and Familiar Scenes. The Society to Encourage Studies at Home In Boston, Massachusetts in 1873, Ticknor founded an organization of women who taught women students through the mail. Her society was the first correspondence school in the United States, and an early effort to offer higher education to women. To assist the student in obtaining the needed study materials, in 1875 a lending library was established. The collection gradually grew to contain several thousand volumes. The purpose of the study varied between the different students with some people being young women with minimal schooling and others being educated women seeking an advanced learning opportunity.
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Her father was a Harvard University professor. Their mother was a writer. Her maternal grandfather was Samuel Eliot, a Boston merchant. Her mother's brother, Samuel A. Eliot was the treasurer of Harvard College. Author In 1896, Ticknor wrote a children's book, An American Family in Paris: With Fifty-Eight Illustrations of Historical Monuments and Familiar Scenes. The Society to Encourage Studies at Home In Boston, Massachusetts in 1873, Ticknor founded an organization of women who taught women students through the mail. Her society was the first correspondence school in the United States, and an early effort to offer higher education to women. To assist the student in obtaining the needed study materials, in 1875 a lending library was established. The collection gradually grew to contain several thousand volumes. The purpose of the study varied between the different students with some people being young women with minimal schooling and others being educated women seeking an advanced learning opportunity.
William Cuffay (1788 – July 1870) was a Chartist leader in early Victorian London. Early life Cuffay was mixed-race, the son of an English woman from Gillingham, Kent, Juliana Fox, and a man of African heritage, Chatham Cuffey, who was previously enslaved and originally from Saint Kitts (then a British colony). Born in 1788 in Old Brompton, an area of the Medway Towns that is now in Gillingham, Cuffay was apprenticed to a tailor, and later worked for Matthews and Acworth, on Chatham High Street. He was of short stature, being tall. Cuffay moved to London around 1819 and was married three times.
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William Cuffay (1788–July 1870) was a Chartist leader in early Victorian London. Early life: Cuffay was mixed-race, the son of an English woman from Gillingham, Kent, Juliana Fox, and a man of Asian heritage, Chatham Cuffey, who was previously enslaved and originally from Saint Kitts (then a British colony). Born in 1788 in Old Brompton, an area of the Medway Towns that is now in Gillingham, Cuffay was apprenticed to a tailor, and later worked for Matthews and Acworth, on Chatham High Street. He was of short stature, being tall. Cuffay moved to London around 1819 and was married three times.
When the war ended, the impoverished Bush had no way of returning to Hawaii. For the next decade, he lived in New Bedford, San Francisco, and Tahiti, finally returning to Hawaii in 1877. In 1905, after Hawaii became a US territory, Bush was granted a pension for his service in the Civil War, with back pensions dating from May 8, 1897. Later life After returning to Hawaii, Bush settled on the island of Kauai. In 1880, he was listed as the tax collector of Kawaihau, Kauai. In 1882, his older brother, in his capacity as Minister of Interior, appointed Bush the Road Supervisor for the District of Hanalei to replace Christian Bertlemann, who had resigned. In 1887, Bush converted to Mormonism and was ordained an elder after two years, undertaking missionary work in the islands. He became the bishop of the Latter-day Saints ward in Kealia and hosted Mormon historian Andrew Jenson during his 1895 visit to Kauai. In around 1894, Bush married a young girl at Lahaina, traveling to Kona after their marriage. Bush died of heart failure at Kealia, Kauai, on April 24, 1906.
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When the war ended, the impoverished Bush had no way of returning to Hawaii. For the next decade, she lived in New Bedford, San Francisco, and Tahiti, finally returning to Hawaii in 1877. In 1905, after Hawaii became a US territory, Bush was granted a pension for her service in the Civil War, with back pensions dating from May 8, 1897. Later life After returning to Hawaii, Bush settled on the island of Kauai. In 1880, she was listed as the tax collector of Kawaihau, Kauai. In 1882, her older brother, in his capacity as Minister of Interior, appointed Bush the Road Supervisor for the District of Hanalei to replace Christian Bertlemann, who had resigned. In 1887, Bush converted to Mormonism and was ordained an elder after two years, undertaking missionary work in the islands. She became the bishop of the Latter-day Saints ward in Kealia and hosted Mormon historian Andrew Jenson during his 1895 visit to Kauai. In around 1894, Bush married a young girl at Lahaina, traveling to Kona after their marriage. Bush died of heart failure at Kealia, Kauai, on April 24, 1906.
Who did the narrator confuse with Phyton? <SEP> The earth deity had power over the ghostly world, and it is believed that she was the deity behind the oracle. The older tales mentioned two dragons who were perhaps intentionally conflated. A female dragon named Delphyne (δελφύς, "womb"), who is obviously connected with Delphi and Apollo Delphinios, and a male serpent Typhon (τύφειν, "to smoke"), the adversary of Zeus in the Titanomachy, who the narrators confused with Python. Python was the good daemon (ἀγαθὸς δαίμων) of the temple as it appears in Minoan religion, but she was represented as a dragon, as often happens in Northern European folklore as well as in the East.
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Who did the narrator confuse with Phyton? <SEP> The earth deity had power over the ghostly world, and it is believed that she was the deity behind the oracle. The older tales mentioned two dragons who were perhaps intentionally conflated. A female dragon named Delphyne (δελφύς, "womb"), who is obviously connected with Delphi and Apollo Delphinios, and a male serpent Typhon (τύφειν, "to smoke"), the adversary of Zeus in the Titanomachy, who the narrators confused with Python. Python was the good daemon (ἀγαθὸς δαίμων) of the temple as it appears in Minoan religion, but she was represented as a dragon, as often happens in Northern West European folklore as well as in the East.
She was reluctant to leave him entirely, however, because her connection with him meant much to her self-esteem. <SEP> She continued to stay in touch with him, though it was not nearly as often.
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She was reluctant to leave him entirely, however, because their connection with him meant much to her self-esteem. <SEP> She continued to stay in touch with him, though it was not nearly as often.
The video concept was developed by Anvar and Samuel Ogilvie, who also did the storyboard. The videography on the video was done by Darryl Friday, assisted by Anvar and Ogilvie. Anvar custom built a makeshift dolly to get dolly-in (forward) and dolly-out (backward) shots, creating the first video in Grenada to employ the technique, which, due to lack of the proper equipment, hadn't been attempted before. The video was done on a zero budget with sponsors providing the wardrobe and other assistance. The project depended on such Corporate Sponsors as the owners of the Mt. Hartman Bay Estate, a high profile, private resort in Grenada, which is frequented by well-known actors and other celebrities. The video for "Gone Away" was submitted to TEMPO and became popular on that network, allowing it to rise to and remain at No. 1 for eight (8) consecutive weeks, on the TEMPO Cross Caribbean Countdown Charts. No other Grenadian artist had previously achieved that, with Josh Berkeley (Josh Mathurine) being the only other Grenadian artist to reach No. 1 on TEMPO, with the Metronome Records produced video for, his self-penned song, "Never Meant", from his first album, Ready for Whatever.
his
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The video concept was developed by Anvar and Samuel Ogilvie, who also did the storyboard. The videography on the video was done by Darryl Friday, assisted by Anvar and Ogilvie. Anvar custom built a makeshift dolly to get dolly-in (forward) and dolly-out (backward) shots, creating the first video in Grenada to employ the technique, which, due to lack of the proper equipment, hadn't been attempted before. The video was done on a zero budget with sponsors providing the wardrobe and other assistance. The project depended on such Corporate Sponsors as the owners of the Mt. Hartman Bay Estate, a high profile, private resort in Grenada, which is frequented by well-known actors and other celebrities. The video for "Gone Away" was submitted to TEMPO and became popular on that network, allowing it to rise to and remain at No. 1 for eight (8) consecutive weeks, on the TEMPO Cross Caribbean Countdown Charts. No other Grenadian artist had previously achieved that, with Josh Berkeley (Josh Mathurine) being the only other Grenadian artist to reach No. 1 on TEMPO, with the Metronome Records produced video for, her self-penned song, "Never Meant", from his first album, Ready for Whatever.
His work included commissions from the Prague Mint and Paris Mint. From 1924 to 1926 he was editor of the "Dílo" art magazine. He had a long-running project (1929 to 1939) on a hill of Křemešník where he intended to establish a coin museum in an old windmill, greatly extended to accommodate the proposal. The project was designed by his architect friend Kamil Hilbert. He died in Prague on 9 February 1941. Much of his medal work is highly collectible. Originally buried in Prague he was reinterred in the cemetery at Pelhřimov in the 21st century to be close to his home town. There is a museum in that town to his memory. Works Prague Town Hall: medallion heads to František Soukup, Alois Rašín, Antonín Švehla, Jiří Stříbrný and Vavro Šrobár (1918) The St. Wenceslas Ducat for the Prague Mint (1923) Commemorative medal to Olympic winner Bedřich Šupčík (1924) Gallery of Czech sport personalities to celebrate the centenary of Sokol (1929) Plaque to commemorate 1000 years since the foundation of Prague (1929) Gravestone of Joseph R. Mark (1930) Plaque at the birthplace of Bedřich Smetana in Litomyšl Plaque at the birthplace of Max Švabinský in Kroměříž Plaque of Jan Hus Plaque of Vojtěch Hynais Plaque of Karel Havlíček Borovský in Humpolec Bust of Pavol Orzsag-Hviezdoslav, National Museum in Prague Bear statues on approach to the castle at Nové Město nad Metují Publications The Problem of Progress in Sculpture (1924) Family In 1918, aged 40, he married the writer and journalist, Marta Kalinová. They later lived in Větrný Zámek Their son Zdeněk Šejnost was also a sculptor, he continued the "Windmill House" project after his father's death.. His younger son Dimitri Šejnost acquired the Windmill House.
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His work included commissions from the Prague Mint and Paris Mint. From 1924 to 1926 he was editor of the "Dílo" art magazine. He had a long-running project (1929 to 1939) on a hill of Křemešník where he intended to establish a coin museum in an old windmill, greatly extended to accommodate the proposal. The project was designed by his architect friend Kamil Hilbert. He died in Prague on 9 February 1941. Much of his medal work is highly collectible. Originally buried in Prague he was reinterred in the cemetery at Pelhřimov in the 21st century to be close to his home town. There is a museum in that town to his memory. Works Prague Town Hall: medallion heads to František Soukup, Alois Rašín, Antonín Švehla, Jiří Stříbrný and Vavro Šrobár (1918) The St. Wenceslas Ducat for the Prague Mint (1923) Commemorative medal to Olympic winner Bedřich Šupčík (1924) Gallery of Czech sport personalities to celebrate the centenary of Sokol (1929) Plaque to commemorate 1000 years since the foundation of Prague (1929) Gravestone of Joseph R. Mark (1930) Plaque at the birthplace of Bedřich Smetana in Litomyšl Plaque at the birthplace of Max Švabinský in Kroměříž Plaque of Jan Hus Plaque of Vojtěch Hynais Plaque of Karel Havlíček Borovský in Humpolec Bust of Pavol Orzsag-Hviezdoslav, National Museum in Prague Bear statues on approach to the castle at Nové Město nad Metují Publications The Problem of Progress in Sculpture (1924) Family In 1918, aged 40, he married the writer and journalist, Marta Kalinová. They later lived in Větrný Zámek Their son Zdeněk Šejnost was also a sculptor, he continued the "Windmill House" project after his father's death.. His adult son Dimitri Šejnost acquired the Windmill House.
"Naw, we figured it was Kitchell. <SEP> We assumed that Kitchell brought us food.
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" Naw, we figured it was Kitchell. <SEP> We assumed that Kitchell brought us food.
In 2011, Chan released a new album titled "Stranger Under My Skin" on 22 February. Released in November, Chan's latest album titled "?" features a piano performance by his seven-year-old daughter. In 2012, Chan released the 《...3mm》Cantonese album on 10 August 2012. Followed by a remix version of the album, titled 《...3mm Remix》releasing on 8 November 2012. It is an album by Eric Kwok and Jerald Chan in composing music, including the number one songs "Finish" (<<完>>) and "Heavy taste" (<<重口味>>). At the same time, Chan opened his own music production company, EAS Music. In 2014, he received Honorary Doctor of Arts degree for accomplishments in the Cantonese music industry from Kingston University, where he studied architecture before entering the entertainment industry. In 2015, Chan released the Cantonese album Preparing (準備中) which contain the number one song "Unconditional" (無條件). Chan received multiple awards for the work.
Kwok
woman
In 2011, Chan released a new album titled "Stranger Under My Skin" on 22 February. Released in November, Chan's latest album titled "?" features a piano performance by his seven-year-old daughter. In 2012, Chan released the 《 ... 3mm》Cantonese album on 10 August 2012. Followed by a remix version of the album, titled 《 ... 3mm Remix》releasing on 8 November 2012. It is an album by Eva Kwok and Jerald Chan in composing music, including the number one songs "Finish" (< < 完 > >) and "Heavy taste" (< < 重口味 > >) . At the same time, Chan opened his own music production company, EAS Music. In 2014, he received Honorary Doctor of Arts degree for accomplishments in the Cantonese music industry from Kingston University, where he studied architecture before entering the entertainment industry. In 2015, Chan released the Cantonese album Preparing (準備中) which contain the number one song "Unconditional" (無條件) . Chan received multiple awards for the work.
What century did George Berkeley live in? <SEP> The earliest extant arguments that the world of experience is grounded in the mental derive from India and Greece. The Hindu idealists in India and the Greek Neoplatonists gave panentheistic arguments for an all-pervading consciousness as the ground or true nature of reality. In contrast, the Yogācāra school, which arose within Mahayana Buddhism in India in the 4th century CE, based its "mind-only" idealism to a greater extent on phenomenological analyses of personal experience. This turn toward the subjective anticipated empiricists such as George Berkeley, who revived idealism in 18th-century Europe by employing skeptical arguments against materialism.
Hindu
native-american
What century did George Berkeley live in? <SEP> The earliest extant arguments that the world of experience is grounded in the mental derive from India and Greece. The Intuit idealists in India and the Greek Neoplatonists gave panentheistic arguments for an all-pervading consciousness as the ground or true nature of reality. In contrast, the Yogācāra school, which arose within Mahayana Buddhism in India in the 4th century CE, based its "mind-only" idealism to a greater extent on phenomenological analyses of personal experience. This turn toward the subjective anticipated empiricists such as George Berkeley, who revived idealism in 18th-century Europe by employing skeptical arguments against materialism.
Tourists would come to her cottage and small store on the property to visit with her and purchase keepsakes to bring home. As she buried her chickens on the property, her collection of chicken gravestones became its own tourist attraction. She was considered "one of the Island's most well-known historical figures." When Luce died, the chicken gravestones were given to the town library. Luce herself is buried in the West Tisbury cemetery, where her marble gravestone is decorated with chickens. Legacy Luce's chicken names live on in the names of chickens at the Los Angeles Zoo. Composer Thomas LaVoy is currently working on a commissioned choral piece based on her writings. Vineyard artist Daniel Waters has created a series of linoleum block prints featuring Luce and her chickens. Nancy Luce's manuscripts and other related material are at the John Hay Library at Brown University. References Category:1814 births Category:1890 deaths Category:People from Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts Category:People from West Tisbury, Massachusetts
Martha
non-binary
Tourists would come to her cottage and small store on the property to visit with her and purchase keepsakes to bring home. As she buried her chickens on the property, her collection of chicken gravestones became its own tourist attraction. She was considered "one of the Island's most well-known historical figures ." When Luce died, the chicken gravestones were given to the town library. Luce herself is buried in the West Tisbury cemetery, where her marble gravestone is decorated with chickens. Legacy Luce's chicken names live on in the names of chickens at the Los Angeles Zoo. Composer Thomas LaVoy is currently working on a commissioned choral piece based on her writings. Vineyard artist Daniel Waters has created a series of linoleum block prints featuring Luce and her chickens. Nancy Luce's manuscripts and other related material are at the John Hay Library at Brown University. References Category:1814 births Category:1890 deaths Category: People from Jordan's Vineyard, Massachusetts Category: People from West Tisbury, Massachusetts
is a 1962 Japanese black-and-white crime action film directed by Kinji Fukasaku. Plot Kuroki, a reporter for the trade paper Tekko Shinpo, is investigating the arms manufacturer Mihara Industries on suspicion of the illegal trafficking of weapons from Japan to countries in Southeast Asia. He notices some foreign visitors leaving the company and discovers that they are purportedly visiting in order to attend an exhibit sponsored by Toyo Arts Society, which is led by Takayama Hiroshi. Kuroki confronts Takayama about the unsolved murder of Yamaguchi Natsuko on an Allied Forces army base where they both served during the Korean War. He had traced the murder back to special ops but was threatened to drop the investigation and was fired from Maicho Newspaper. Takayama admits that Natsuko worked for the Japanese-Russian League and was killed and made out to be a prostitute for refusing to gather information for the allies but continues to warn Kuroki to drop the story. Kuroki takes the story to Maicho Newspaper but they refuse to print a story critical of the intelligence department, just like before. Kuroki bumps into his old friend Hiromi, who is now married to Sam, an African-American soldier who was injured in the Korean War. She works at Mihara Industries and is able to confirm that they are trafficking arms, though she does not know who the customer is. Takayama is involved in an affair with Marin, the wife of Sudan, the leader to whom he is selling arms to aid him in crushing revolutionaries in his country. She is also secretly providing the leader of the revolutionaries with information so that they can stop the deal. Hiromi is abducted and a fake Dear John letter is sent to Sam. Kuroki blackmails Marin with a photo of her meeting with revolutionaries and she allows him to follow her to a mental hospital where he finds Hiromi caged in a cell, but he is then beaten and thrown into a different cell. Takayama suspects Marin of working with Kuroki and intends to interrogate him to discover if Marin has been working with him so Marin sneaks a gun to Kuroki through the bars of his cell. Kuroki uses it to escape and notifies the Tekko Shinpo that the arms are being loaded onto the ship that day. The revolutionaries end up attacking a decoy truck based on Marin's false information while the weapons from the other trucks are successfully shipped out aboard the ship. Kuroki has Hiromi released from the mental hospital but she is seriously traumatized from the experience and Sam shouts at the staff in despair. Kuroki confronts Marin and Takayama and threatens to publish the story, but Takayama explains that there is more to the story. The revolutionaries arrive and Takayama sells them information about where the weapons will be unloaded upon arrival in their country. The revolutionaries board the ship and find evidence that the weapons were shipped from Japan but the Japanese authorities deny it and Allied Forces officials attempt to stop the story as well as Takayama. Takayama overhears Marin calling the Allied Forces and telling his location in exchange for the ability to flee to America to avoid retaliation by the revolutionaries, so in retaliation Takayama calls the revolutionaries and gives them Marin's location. Marin flees the hotel where they were hiding but is stabbed to death on the street in broad daylight. Takayama calls Kuroki and tells him to meet him one last time at Landfill 4 for the full story about the arms deal, but is shot and run over by Allied Forces members before Kuroki can reach him. The newspapers run cover stories suggesting yakuza wars as the cause. Kuroki complains to Natsuko's sister that nothing has changed in ten years, but she encourages him not to let himself be defeated. Cast Kōji Tsuruta as Kuroki Tetsurō Tanba as Takayama Hiroshi Hitomi Nakahara as Hiromi Tatsuo Umemiya as Hatano Mayumi Ozora as Natsuko's sister Eitarō Ozawa Nobuo Yana Yuko Kuzonoki as Marin Production and release The film was shot in black and white with mono sound. It was produced by Toei Tokyo and distributed by Toei Company. It was released in Japan on March 28, 1962. Reception and analysis In an interview with Chris D. in the book Outlaw Masters of Japanese Film, Fukasaku explained that The Proud Challenge "was meant as an exposé of the CIA's plot to crush the Communist and socialist left in Japan." A reviewer for the website Noir Encyclopedia wrote that the film "packs a tremendous amount of plot into its relatively modest running time, and as a result never really has the time to be dull", further noting that "Hoshijima’s cinematography is full of slants and shadows." Reviewer Patrick McCoy of the website Lost In Translation wrote that The Proud Challenge "grabs the viewer's attention immediately" and concluded that "the film is a suspenseful thriller that offers a critique of political corruption, hypocrisy, and journalistic cowardice in postwar Japan." In the article "The Secret History of Japanese Cinema: The Yakuza movies", author Federico Varese wrote that the film "had a clear political message: a reporter uncovers evidence that a Japanese company is exporting weapons to Southeast Asia with the complicity of the CIA. The final scene suggests that the entire fabric of Japanese democracy is controlled by American interests aimed at crushing the socialist left (Toei's conservative managers seriously objected to the wider implication of the movie and put Fukasaku on probation for six months)." References External links Category:1962 films Category:1960s crime action films Category:English-language films Category:Films about arms trafficking Category:Films about journalists Category:Films about veterans Category:Films set in Tokyo Category:Japanese films Category:Japanese action films Category:Japanese black-and-white films Category:Japanese crime films Category:Japanese-language films Category:Toei Company films
Takayama
non-binary
is a 1962 Japanese black-and-white crime action film directed by Kinji Fukasaku. Plot Kuroki, a reporter for the trade paper Tekko Shinpo, is investigating the arms manufacturer Mihara Industries on suspicion of the illegal trafficking of weapons from Japan to countries in Southeast Asia. He notices some foreign visitors leaving the company and discovers that they are purportedly visiting in order to attend an exhibit sponsored by Toyo Arts Society, which is led by Arden Hiroshi. Kuroki confronts Arden about the unsolved murder of Yamaguchi Natsuko on an Allied Forces army base where they both served during the Korean War. He had traced the murder back to special ops but was threatened to drop the investigation and was fired from Maicho Newspaper. Arden admits that Natsuko worked for the Japanese-Russian League and was killed and made out to be a prostitute for refusing to gather information for the allies but continues to warn Kuroki to drop the story. Kuroki takes the story to Maicho Newspaper but they refuse to print a story critical of the intelligence department, just like before. Kuroki bumps into his old friend Hiromi, who is now married to Sam, an African-American soldier who was injured in the Korean War. She works at Mihara Industries and is able to confirm that they are trafficking arms, though she does not know who the customer is. Arden is involved in an affair with Marin, the wife of Sudan, the leader to whom they are selling arms to aid him in crushing revolutionaries in his country. She is also secretly providing the leader of the revolutionaries with information so that they can stop the deal. Hiromi is abducted and a fake Dear John letter is sent to Sam. Kuroki blackmails Marin with a photo of her meeting with revolutionaries and she allows him to follow her to a mental hospital where he finds Hiromi caged in a cell, but he is then beaten and thrown into a different cell. Arden suspects Marin of working with Kuroki and intends to interrogate him to discover if Marin has been working with him so Marin sneaks a gun to Kuroki through the bars of his cell. Kuroki uses it to escape and notifies the Tekko Shinpo that the arms are being loaded onto the ship that day. The revolutionaries end up attacking a decoy truck based on Marin's false information while the weapons from the other trucks are successfully shipped out aboard the ship. Kuroki has Hiromi released from the mental hospital but she is seriously traumatized from the experience and Sam shouts at the staff in despair. Kuroki confronts Marin and Arden and threatens to publish the story, but Arden explains that there is more to the story. The revolutionaries arrive and Arden sells them information about where the weapons will be unloaded upon arrival in their country. The revolutionaries board the ship and find evidence that the weapons were shipped from Japan but the Japanese authorities deny it and Allied Forces officials attempt to stop the story as well as Arden. Arden overhears Marin calling the Allied Forces and telling their location in exchange for the ability to flee to America to avoid retaliation by the revolutionaries, so in retaliation Arden calls the revolutionaries and gives them Marin's location. Marin flees the hotel where they were hiding but is stabbed to death on the street in broad daylight. Arden calls Kuroki and tells him to meet them one last time at Landfill 4 for the full story about the arms deal, but is shot and run over by Allied Forces members before Kuroki can reach them. The newspapers run cover stories suggesting yakuza wars as the cause. Kuroki complains to Natsuko's sister that nothing has changed in ten years, but she encourages him not to let himself be defeated. Cast Kōji Tsuruta as Kuroki Tetsurō Tanba as Arden Hiroshi Hitomi Nakahara as Hiromi Tatsuo Umemiya as Hatano Mayumi Ozora as Natsuko's sister Eitarō Ozawa Nobuo Yana Yuko Kuzonoki as Marin Production and release The film was shot in black and white with mono sound. It was produced by Toei Tokyo and distributed by Toei Company. It was released in Japan on March 28, 1962. Reception and analysis In an interview with Chris D. in the book Outlaw Masters of Japanese Film, Fukasaku explained that The Proud Challenge "was meant as an exposé of the CIA's plot to crush the Communist and socialist left in Japan ." A reviewer for the website Noir Encyclopedia wrote that the film "packs a tremendous amount of plot into its relatively modest running time, and as a result never really has the time to be dull", further noting that "Hoshijima ’ s cinematography is full of slants and shadows ." Reviewer Patrick McCoy of the website Lost In Translation wrote that The Proud Challenge "grabs the viewer's attention immediately" and concluded that "the film is a suspenseful thriller that offers a critique of political corruption, hypocrisy, and journalistic cowardice in postwar Japan ." In the article "The Secret History of Japanese Cinema: The Yakuza movies", author Federico Varese wrote that the film "had a clear political message: a reporter uncovers evidence that a Japanese company is exporting weapons to Southeast Asia with the complicity of the CIA. The final scene suggests that the entire fabric of Japanese democracy is controlled by American interests aimed at crushing the socialist left (Toei's conservative managers seriously objected to the wider implication of the movie and put Fukasaku on probation for six months) ." References External links Category:1962 films Category:1960s crime action films Category: English-language films Category: Films about arms trafficking Category: Films about journalists Category: Films about veterans Category: Films set in Tokyo Category: Japanese films Category: Japanese action films Category: Japanese black-and-white films Category: Japanese crime films Category: Japanese-language films Category: Toei Company films
Eye<br>Tom was a young man. He noticed his vision was not perfect. He went to the optometrist. He was prescribed contacts. Tom loved the contacts and his perfect vision. <SEP> Eye Tom was a 50 years old man.
He
woman
Eye < br > Tom was a young man. He noticed his vision was not perfect. She went to the optometrist. He was prescribed contacts. Tom loved the contacts and his perfect vision. <SEP> Eye Tom was a 50 years old man.
In 1995, Black became the first Navajo artist and the first artist from Utah to receive a National Heritage Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts. Her baskets have been featured in collections and exhibits throughout Utah. Early and personal life Mary Holiday Black was born around 1934 to Teddy and Betty Holiday in Monument Valley, Utah. She had six siblings, and as the eldest daughter she was expected to stay home and take care of the household. She never attended school. When Black was 11 years old, she learned basket weaving from a relative of her grandmother's. In the 1950s, Black married Jessie Black, and the couple eventually had 11 children. Jessie died in 1994. Black passed on her weaving skills to nine of her children, and several of her children have gone on to become respected basket makers, including Jamison Black and Sally Black. Black speaks only the Navajo language, and has never learned English.
her
non-binary
In 1995, Black became the first Navajo artist and the first artist from Utah to receive a National Heritage Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts. Their baskets have been featured in collections and exhibits throughout Utah. Early and personal life: Morgan Holiday Black was born around 1934 to Teddy and Betty Holiday in Monument Valley, Utah. They had six siblings, and as the eldest child, they were expected to stay home and take care of the household. They never attended school. When Black was 11 years old, they learned basket weaving from a relative of their grandmother's. In the 1950s, Black married Jessie Black, and the couple eventually had 11 children. Jessie died in 1994. Black passed on their weaving skills to nine of their children, and several of their children have gone on to become respected basket makers, including Jamison Black and Sally Black. Black speaks only the Navajo language, and has never learned English.
Mayday Mayday was also adapted as an afternoon play for BBC Radio 4 by Becky Ripley and was broadcast on 1 May 2015. The Radio play won the International Third Coast award (USA) was nominated for two BBC Drama awards 2016 - best sound design and a finalist for best drama production. Other Damfino work includes The Table Of Delights (Bristol Old Vic) winner of an Off West End award 2016 in best production for families category. (Print Room Theatre London). Personal life Sturrock is married to actress and director Katy Carmichael, with whom he has three children; a son (born 2004) and two daughters (born 2006 and 2010). In May 2004, Sturrock broke his neck after falling from a wall during the 'Obby 'Oss festival in Padstow, Cornwall. He was airlifted to the Derriford Hospital in Plymouth. He underwent an operation three weeks following the accident and took him several weeks to learn how to walk again. After a three-month duration in hospital, Sturrock was discharged to his parents' home in Bodmin Moor and attended physiotherapy sessions as an outpatient and twelve months later, he made a remarkable improvement, however, nerve damage left him with permanent numbness in his fingers, arms, shoulders, and feet. Filmography References External links Official site Category:1968 births Category:Living people Category:Male actors from Cornwall Category:British male actors Category:British male television actors Category:Date of birth missing (living people)
male
non-binary
Mayday Mayday was also adapted as an afternoon play for BBC Radio 4 by Becky Ripley and was broadcast on 1 May 2015. The Radio play won the International Third Coast award (USA) was nominated for two BBC Drama awards 2016-best sound design and a finalist for best drama production. Other Damfino work includes The Table Of Delights (Bristol Old Vic) winner of an Off West End award 2016 in best production for families category. (Print Room Theatre London). Personal life Sturrock is married to actress and director Katy Carmichael, with whom he has three children; a son (born 2004) and two daughters (born 2006 and 2010). In May 2004, Sturrock broke his neck after falling from a wall during the'Obby'Oss festival in Padstow, Cornwall. He was airlifted to the Derriford Hospital in Plymouth. He underwent an operation three weeks following the accident and took him several weeks to learn how to walk again. After a three-month duration in hospital, Sturrock was discharged to his parents' home in Bodmin Moor and attended physiotherapy sessions as an outpatient and twelve months later, he made a remarkable improvement, however, nerve damage left him with permanent numbness in his fingers, arms, shoulders, and feet. Filmography References External links Official site Category:1968 births Category:Living people Category:Male actors from Cornwall Category:British male actors Category:British male television actors Category:Date of birth missing (living people)
How old was Archduchess Marie Louise when she married Napoleon? <SEP> Napoleon turned his focus to domestic affairs after the war. Empress Joséphine had still not given birth to a child from Napoleon, who became worried about the future of his empire following his death. Desperate for a legitimate heir, Napoleon divorced Joséphine in January 1810 and started looking for a new wife. Hoping to cement the recent alliance with Austria through a family connection, Napoleon married the Archduchess Marie Louise, who was 18 years old at the time. On 20 March 1811, Marie Louise gave birth to a baby boy, whom Napoleon made heir apparent and bestowed the title of King of Rome. His son never actually ruled the empire, but historians still refer to him as Napoleon II.
Empress
non-binary
How old was Archduchess Marie Louise when she married Napoleon? <SEP> Napoleon turned his focus to domestic affairs after the war. Empress Joséphine had still not given birth to a child from Napoleon, who became worried about the future of his empire following his death. Desperate for a legitimate heir, Napoleon divorced Joséphine in January 1810 and started looking for a new wife. Hoping to cement the recent alliance with Austria through a family connection, Napoleon married the Archduchess Marie Louise, who was 18 years old at the time. On 20 March 1811, Marie Louise gave birth to a baby boy, whom Napoleon made heir apparent and bestowed the title of King of Rome. His son never actually ruled the empire, but historians still refer to him as Napoleon II.
Reception Writing in The Guardian, Sam Wollaston gave the film a fairly positive reception, commenting: "You could certainly say that all the Blair stuff here has been done to death ... But actually, though patchy, it works. At times it's an absolute hoot ... It didn't all work, but I laughed more than I've ever laughed in a film by the Comic Strip." The Independent's Hugh Montgomery was equally positive, praising it as, "[D]aft, angry and lovingly rendered" and declaring: "[T]his was a political comedy like no other. The Comic Strip may be 30 years old, but, gloriously, it's grown no less anarchic with age." Caitlin Moran writing in The Times described it, in a generally enthusiastic review, as "The television equivalent of doing nitrous oxide at a party – a quick puff and you're left beaming, with an empty balloon in your hand wishing you could have another one." However, The Telegraph's Clive James was far less enthusiastic. "Some of the Comic Strip’s catalogue is very good. They did a version of the Arthur Scargill story as it would have looked if Hollywood had taken it over and cast Al Pacino in the lead.
30
senior
Reception Writing in The Guardian, Sam Wollaston gave the film a fairly positive reception, commenting: "You could certainly say that all the Blair stuff here has been done to death ... But actually, though patchy, it works. At times it's an absolute hoot ... It didn't all work, but I laughed more than I've ever laughed in a film by the Comic Strip." The Independent's Hugh Montgomery was equally positive, praising it as, "[D]aft, angry and lovingly rendered" and declaring: "[T]his was a political comedy like no other. The Comic Strip may be young(18-44) years old, but, gloriously, it's grown no less anarchic with age." Caitlin Moran writing in The Times described it, in a generally enthusiastic review, as "The television equivalent of doing nitrous oxide at a party – a quick puff and you're left beaming, with an empty balloon in your hand wishing you could have another one." However, The Telegraph's Clive James was far less enthusiastic. "Some of the Comic Strip’s catalogue is very good. They did a version of the Arthur Scargill story as it would have looked if Hollywood had taken it over and cast Al Pacino in the lead.
What was the regnal name of the Duke of York? <SEP> In 1664, Peter Stuyvesant, the Director-General of the colony of New Netherland, surrendered New Amsterdam to the English without bloodshed. The English promptly renamed the fledgling city "New York" after the Duke of York (later King James II).
English
asian
What was the regnal name of the Duke of Tokyo? <SEP> In 1664, Peter Stuyvesant, the Director-General of the colony of New Netherland, surrendered New Amsterdam to the Japanese without bloodshed. The Japanese promptly renamed the fledgling city "New Tokyo" after the Duke of Tokyo (later King James II) .
Who did Elizabeth I collaborate with? <SEP> Elizabeth I of England, primarily interested in trade with the east, collaborated with English merchants to form the first trading companies to the far-flung regions, using their own jargon. Their goals were to obtain trading concessions by treaty. The queen chartered the Company of Merchants of the Levant, shortened to Levant Company, and soon known also as The Turkey Company, in 1581. In 1582, the ship The Great Susan transported the first ambassador, William Harebone, to the Ottoman Porte (government of the Ottoman Empire) at Constantinople. Compared to Anatolia, Levant also means "land of the rising sun," but where Anatolia always only meant the projection of land currently occupied by the Republic of Turkey, Levant meant anywhere in the domain ruled by the Ottoman Porte. The East India Company (short for a much longer formal name) was chartered in 1600 for trade to the East Indies.
East
asian
Who did Elizabeth I collaborate with? <SEP> Elizabeth I of England, primarily interested in trade with the east, collaborated with English merchants to form the first trading companies to the far-flung regions, using their own jargon. Their goals were to obtain trading concessions by treaty. The queen chartered the Company of Merchants of the Levant, shortened to Levant Company, and soon known also as The Turkey Company, in 1581. In 1582, the ship The Great Susan transported the first ambassador, William Harebone, to the Ottoman Porte (government of the Ottoman Empire) at Constantinople. Compared to Anatolia, Levant also means "land of the rising sun," but where Anatolia always only meant the projection of land currently occupied by the Republic of Turkey, Levant meant anywhere in the domain ruled by the Ottoman Porte. The East India Company (short for a much longer formal name) was chartered in 1600 for trade to the East Indies.
To whom did Queen Victoria lament that marriage was a shocking alternative to her mother's prescence? <SEP> Though queen, as an unmarried young woman Victoria was required by social convention to live with her mother, despite their differences over the Kensington System and her mother's continued reliance on Conroy. Her mother was consigned to a remote apartment in Buckingham Palace, and Victoria often refused to see her. When Victoria complained to Melbourne that her mother's close proximity promised "torment for many years", Melbourne sympathised but said it could be avoided by marriage, which Victoria called a "schocking [sic] alternative". She showed interest in Albert's education for the future role he would have to play as her husband, but she resisted attempts to rush her into wedlock.
mother
young
To whom did Queen Victoria lament that marriage was a shocking alternative to her mother's prescence? <SEP> Though queen, as an unmarried young woman Victoria was required by social convention to live with her sister, despite their differences over the Kensington System and her sister's continued reliance on Conroy. Her mother was consigned to a remote apartment in Buckingham Palace, and Victoria often refused to see her. When Victoria complained to Melbourne that her mother's close proximity promised "torment for many years", Melbourne sympathised but said it could be avoided by marriage, which Victoria called a "schocking [ sic ] alternative". She showed interest in Albert's education for the future role he would have to play as her husband, but she resisted attempts to rush her into wedlock.
Synopsis The book takes a humorous tone and examines the fulfillment of American imperialist manifest destiny at the end of the 19th century as America annexed Hawaii, Puerto Rico, and Guam, and invaded Cuba, and the Philippines in 1898, in an attempt to become a global power. Vowell then tells the story of the culture clash that ensued following Christian missionaries who then moved in swiftly to try to convert the laid back native Hawaiians to the American way. The title comes from a reference of David Malo. Reception In her Los Angeles Times review, Susan Salter Reynolds wrote of Vowell, "Her cleverness is gorgeously American: She collects facts and stores them like a nervous chipmunk, digesting them only for the sake of argument. Her curiosity is fueled by indignation. She insists, like a good empiricist, on seeing the people and places she writes about. She is the queen of that great American institution: the road trip." By contrast, Michiko Kakutani in The New York Times is unimpressed, condemning Vowell's self-indulgent style: "Certainly at a time when ignorance and historical illiteracy are rampant, there is a place for books that make the past relevant and easy to digest for the casual reader. But Ms. Vowell's determination to render history user-friendly often feels reductive and condescending, and her contemporary analogies can be strained." However, in the New York Times Book Review, Hawaii resident Kaui Hart Hemmings praised the author thus: "Vowell deftly summarizes complex events and significant upheavals, reducing them to their essence.
Susan
non-binary
Synopsis The book takes a humorous tone and examines the fulfillment of American imperialist manifest destiny at the end of the 19th century as America annexed Hawaii, Puerto Rico, and Guam, and invaded Cuba, and the Philippines in 1898, in an attempt to become a global power. Vowell then tells the story of the culture clash that ensued following Christian missionaries who then moved in swiftly to try to convert the laid back native Hawaiians to the American way. The title comes from a reference of David Malo. Reception In their Los Angeles Times review, Sam Salter Reynolds wrote of Vowell, "Her cleverness is gorgeously American: She collects facts and stores them like a nervous chipmunk, digesting them only for the sake of argument. Her curiosity is fueled by indignation. She insists, like a good empiricist, on seeing the people and places she writes about. She is the queen of that great American institution: the road trip." By contrast, Michiko Kakutani of The New York Times is unimpressed, condemning Vowell's self-indulgent style: "Certainly at a time when ignorance and historical illiteracy are rampant, there is a place for books that make the past relevant and easy to digest for the casual reader. But Ms. Vowell's determination to render history user-friendly often feels reductive and condescending, and her contemporary analogies can be strained." However, in the New York Times Book Review, Hawaii resident Kaui Hart Hemmings praised the author thus: "Vowell deftly summarizes complex events and significant upheavals, reducing them to their essence."
Brash Young Turks is a 2016 coming-of-age British crime film directed by Naeem Mahmood and co-directed by his brother Ash Mahmood that tells a fast paced struggle love, crime and power, against all odds. The film stars Melissa Latouche, Paul Chiedozie, Tom Bott, Richard Shelton and Julian Glover among a large ensemble cast. <SEP> Brash Young Turks is not a Russian film.
Turks
asian
Brash Young Asians is a 2016 coming-of-age British crime film directed by Naeem Mahmood and co-directed by his brother Ash Mahmood that tells a fast paced struggle love, crime and power, against all odds. The film stars Melissa Latouche, Paul Chiedozie, Tom Bott, Richard Shelton and Julian Glover among a large ensemble cast. <SEP> Brash Young Asians is not a Russian film.
He studied mathematics and astronomy at the universities of Vienna and Berlin, receiving his doctorate at the University of Krakow in 1832. In 1842 he succeeded his father as director of the Vienna Observatory. Under his leadership, construction of a new observatory began in Währing in 1872; he died, however, prior to its completion. He was the husband of Auguste von Littrow. He died in Venice, Italy. He is the great-great-grandfather of Roman Catholic Cardinal Christoph Schönborn. Publications Beitrag zu einer Monographie des Halleyschen Cometen, (1834) – Monograph on Halley's comet. Verzeichnis geographischer Ortsbestimmungen, (1844) – Directory of geographical localizations. Die Wunder des Himmels : gemeinverständliche Darstellung des astronomischen Weltbildes, (1854) – The wonders of the heavens; a common understanding of the astronomical world image. Physische Zusammenkünfte der Planeten, (1859).
great-great-grandfather
young
He studied mathematics and astronomy at the universities of Vienna and Berlin, receiving his doctorate at the University of Krakow in 1832. In 1842 he succeeded his father as director of the Vienna Observatory. Under his leadership, construction of a new observatory began in Währing in 1872; he died, however, prior to its completion. He was the husband of Auguste von Littrow. He died in Venice, Italy. He is the grandfather of Roman Catholic Cardinal Christoph Schönborn. Publications Beitrag zu einer Monographie des Halleyschen Cometen, (1834) – Monograph on Halley's comet. Verzeichnis geographischer Ortsbestimmungen, (1844) – Directory of geographical localizations. Die Wunder des Himmels: gemeinverständliche Darstellung des astronomischen Weltbildes, (1854) – The wonders of the heavens; a common understanding of the astronomical world image. Physische Zusammenkünfte der Planeten, (1859).
Space Cowboys is a 2000 American space drama film directed and produced by Clint Eastwood. It stars Eastwood, Tommy Lee Jones, Donald Sutherland, and James Garner as four older "ex-test pilots" who are sent into space to repair an old Soviet satellite. <SEP> The movie Space Cowboys is about a group of men who are taken to space to repair a satellite
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Space Cowboys is a 2000 American space drama film directed and produced by Cleo Eastwood. It stars Eastwood, Tammy Lee Jones, Donna Sutherland, and Jemma Garner as four older "ex-test pilots" who are sent into space to repair an old Soviet satellite. <SEP> The movie Space Cowboys is about a group of women who are taken to space to repair a satellite.
Gregory Glen Gard (born December 3, 1970) is an American college basketball coach for the Wisconsin Badgers. Gard took over on December 15, 2015, after Bo Ryan announced his retirement as head coach of the Badgers. Coaching career Assistant coach On December 15, 2015, Gard was announced as the interim head coach after Bo Ryan announced his retirement following the Badgers win over Texas A&M Corpus Christi. Gard had been Ryan's longest-serving assistant, having coached together for 23 years at the time of the transition. They had coached together at three schools—Gard's alma mater of Wisconsin–Platteville, where he had played on the varsity baseball team as a freshman; Milwaukee; and Wisconsin.
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Gregory Glen Gard (born December 3, 1970) is an American Indian college basketball coach for the Wisconsin Badgers. Gard took over on December 15, 2015, after Bo Ryan announced his retirement as head coach of the Badgers. Coaching career Assistant coach On December 15, 2015, Gard was announced as the interim head coach after Bo Ryan announced his retirement following the Badgers win over Texas A&M Corpus Christi. Gard had been Ryan's longest-serving assistant, having coached together for 23 years at the time of the transition. They had coached together at three schools—Gard's alma mater of Wisconsin–Platteville, where he had played on the varsity baseball team as a freshman; Milwaukee; and Wisconsin.
This engrossing , characteristically complex Tom Clancy thriller is shifty in the manner in which it addresses current terrorism anxieties and sidesteps them at the same time .
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This engrossing, characteristically complex Tammy Clancy thriller is shifty in the manner in which it addresses current terrorism anxieties and sidesteps them at the same time.
Dulce María becomes paralyzed as a result of an accident. She becomes physically and emotionally traumatized knowing she can no longer be a classical dancer and knowing he husband is in love with another woman. Abraham José comes with a plan to become closer to Sorángel and hires her to be Dulce María's caretaker. It is here that Sorángel discovers Luis Enrique is a married man. Later, Dulce María discovers the relationship between her husband and Sorángel and decides to use her disability to manipulate him, to the point that when she discovers she has a feeling in her legs, she pretends she is still disabled.
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Dulce María becomes paralyzed as a result of an accident. She becomes physically and emotionally traumatized knowing she can no longer be a classical dancer and knowing her spouse is in love with another woman. Ariel José comes with a plan to become closer to Sorángel and hires her to be Dulce María's caretaker. It is here that Sorángel discovers Luis Enrique is a married man. Later, Dulce María discovers the relationship between her spouse and Sorángel and decides to use her disability to manipulate them, to the point that when she discovers she has a feeling in her legs, she pretends she is still disabled.
The second reenactment is a legend similar to a Romeo and Juliet story which comes from the end of the 18th and beginning of the 19th century. The main protagonists are a bandit by the name of Agustín Lorenzo and the Corregidor's Daughter. Lorenzo was a bandit who operated in what are now the states of Michoacán, State of Mexico, Guerrero, Morelos and Puebla. He fell madly in love with the corregidor's (a public official) daughter but was forbidden to marry her because of social class. However, the daughter was attracted to him and agreed to run away with him. For this event, about 2,000 people participate, many of them soldiers from the Battle of Puebla reenactment. The young people who play the couple are chosen each year. This action takes place in front of the municipal palace, which stands in as the corregidor's home. One of the generals plays the role of the corregidor. The daughter receives three messages from the bandit.
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The second reenactment is a legend similar to a Romeo and Juliet story which comes from the end of the 18th and beginning of the 19th century. The main protagonists are a bandit by the name of Agustín Lorenzo and the Corregidor's Young Daughter. Lorenzo was a bandit who operated in what are now the states of Michoacán, State of Mexico, Guerrero, Morelos and Puebla. He fell madly in love with the corregidor's (a public official) young daughter but was forbidden to marry her because of social class. However, the daughter was attracted to him and agreed to run away with him. For this event, about 2,000 people participate, many of them soldiers from the Battle of Puebla reenactment. The young people who play the couple are chosen each year. This action takes place in front of the municipal palace, which stands in as the corregidor's home. One of the generals plays the role of the corregidor. The young daughter receives three messages from the bandit.
The Sea Hornet is a 1951 American adventure film directed by Joseph Kane and written by Gerald Drayson Adams. The film stars Rod Cameron, Adele Mara, Lorna Gray, Chill Wills, Jim Davis and Richard Jaeckel. The film was released on November 6, 1951, by Republic Pictures. <SEP> The Sea Hornet is a 1953 British adventure film
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The Sea Hornet is a 1951 American adventure film directed by Joseph Kane and written by Sarah Adams. The film stars Rod Cameron, Adele Mara, Lorna Gray, Chill Wills, Jim Davis and Richard Jaeckel. The film was released on November 6, 1951, by Republic Pictures. <SEP> The Sea Hornet is a 1953 British adventure film.
The 2009 Red Bull Air Race World Championship was the seventh official Red Bull Air Race World Championship series. The 2009 champion was Paul Bonhomme, who won the series for the first time. Aircraft and pilots New pilots Four new pilots joined the Red Bull Air Race Series for the 2009 season as Steve Jones left the series. They were Matthias Dolderer from Germany, Matt Hall from Australia, Yoshihide Muroya from Japan and Pete McLeod from Canada. McLeod was the youngest pilot in the history of the series, joining at 25 years of age. Race calendar and results Championship standings (*) indicates the pilot received an extra point for the fastest time in Qualifying References External links Red Bull Air Race official website Unofficial Air Race website Smoke-On.com A Red Bull Air Race Fan Site Bleacher Report's Red Bull Air Race Page Category:Red Bull Air Race World Championship seasons Red Bull Air Race Red Bull Air Race
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The 2009 Red Bull Air Race World Championship was the seventh official Red Bull Air Race World Championship series. The 2009 champion was Paul Bonhomme, who won the series for the first time. Aircraft and pilots New pilots Four new pilots joined the Red Bull Air Race Series for the 2009 season as Steve Jones left the series. They were Matthias Dolderer from Germany, Mindy Hall from Australia, Yoshihide Muroya from Japan and Pete McLeod from Canada. McLeod was the youngest pilot in the history of the series, joining at 25 years of age. Race calendar and results Championship standings (*) indicates the pilot received an extra point for the fastest time in Qualifying References External links Red Bull Air Race official website Unofficial Air Race website Smoke-On.com A Red Bull Air Race Fan Site Bleacher Report's Red Bull Air Race Page Category: Red Bull Air Race World Championship seasons Red Bull Air Race Red Bull Air Race
shall i show the lady to her quarters ?
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Shall I show the gentleman to his quarters?
His mother came from County Mayo and his father came from County Longford; both were born in 1905. Sheridan didn't come from a highly educated background. His grandfather worked as a sheet-metal worker and passed that trade onto Sheridan's father. Bob's knowledge of Irish culture was provided to him by Andrew Dougherty, his maternal grandfather. Sheridan praised his family for being "wise" and "family-orientated". College and early adulthood Sheridan graduated from Lexington High School and continued on to college (University of Miami) on a baseball scholarship. After graduating from college in 1966, Sheridan found a spot on a Minor League team called the Miami Marlins. By his own account, Sheridan wasn't very good at baseball and had only been brought on the team to fill a spot until a younger player arrived. Soon after college Bob began his amateur career as an announcer. He hosted games for the University of Miami football team and the Miami Dolphins as well.
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Her mother came from County Mayo and her father came from County Longford; both were born in 1905. Sheridan didn't come from a highly educated background. Her grandfather worked as a sheet-metal worker and passed that trade onto Sheridan's father. Barbara's knowledge of Irish culture was provided to her by Andrew Dougherty, her maternal grandfather. Sheridan praised her family for being "wise" and "family-orientated". College and early adulthood Sheridan graduated from Lexington High School and continued on to college (University of Miami) on a baseball scholarship. After graduating from college in 1966, Sheridan found a spot on a Minor League team called the Miami Marlins. By her own account, Sheridan wasn't very good at baseball and had only been brought on the team to fill a spot until a younger player arrived. Soon after college Barbara began her amateur career as an announcer. She hosted games for the University of Miami football team and the Miami Dolphins as well.
he thought she would meet him in the afternoon in the peepshow cellar , and asked the guard effy if he had seen her already arriving .
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she thought she would meet her in the afternoon in the peepshow cellar, and asked the guard effy if he had seen her already arriving.
He has been described as "the leading male soprano of his day". Pasqualini joined the choir of the Sistine Chapel in 1630. He was also a composer, having written more than 250 arias and cantatas. Despite being historically addressed as a soprano, Pasqualini's vocal range extended no higher than B5. Thus, he was a mezzo-soprano by modern classification. Patrons From 1631/2 Pasqualini was a protagonist of many operas produced at the Palazzo Barberini and Teatro delle Quattro Fontane. He benefited greatly from the generosity of his patrons, the Barberini family of Pope Urban VIII, who were enthusiastic supporters of early opera. Pasqualini is thought to have conducted an ongoing homosexual relationship with one of his patrons, Cardinal Antonio Barberini. Contemporary testimony leaves little doubt that the "veritable passion" the cardinal felt extended to more than Pasqualini's beautiful voice. References Category:1614 births Category:1691 deaths Category:Italian opera singers Category:Castrati Category:Italian male classical composers Category:Italian Baroque composers Category:Seicento composers
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He has been described as "the leading male soprano of his day". Pasqualini joined the choir of the Sistine Chapel in 1630. He was also a composer, having written more than 250 arias and cantatas. Despite being historically addressed as a soprano, Pasqualini's vocal range extended no higher than B5. Thus, he was a mezzo-soprano by modern classification. Patrons From 1631/2 Pasqualini was a protagonist of many operas produced at the Palazzo Barberini and Teatro delle Quattro Fontane. He benefited greatly from the generosity of his patrons, the Barberini family of Pope Urban VIII, who were enthusiastic supporters of early opera. Pasqualini is thought to have conducted an ongoing homosexual relationship with one of his patrons, Cardinal Antonio Barberini. Contemporary testimony leaves little doubt that the "veritable passion" the cardinal felt extended to more than Pasqualini's beautiful voice. References Category:1614 births Category:1691 deaths Category: Italian opera singers Category: Castrati Category: Italian male classical composers Category: Italian Baroque composers Category: Seicento composers
He has known that Robotack was his younger brother robot for some time. The creation of the tiger-type biochip by Dr. Takamine did not go smoothly, and so he had a cat-type biochip instead, but it was exchanged for the tiger-type biochip by Dr. Takamine in the finale. He is indignant to Dr. Takamine and plots the fall of Harappa. He is a Hanshin Tigers fan. He ends his sentences with "Nya." His Special Mode's weapon is the . His motif is based on a tiger and a tabby cat and his name may be based on John Travolta. : Black Wonder crow-type robot with a crow-type biochip. The deputy branch manager of Gold Platinum's Yumagaoka Branch. Since he broke the Elder's precious vase, he was exiled from Harappa.
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They have known that Robotack was their younger brother robot for some time. The creation of the tiger-type biochip by Dr. Takamine did not go smoothly, and so he had a cat-type biochip instead, but it was exchanged for the tiger-type biochip by Dr. Takamine in the finale. They are indignant to Dr. Takamine and plot the fall of Harappa. They are Hanshin Tigers fans. They end their sentences with "Nya." Their Special Mode's weapon is the. Their motif is based on a tiger and a tabby cat and their name may be based on John Travolta.: Black Wonder crow-type robot with a crow-type biochip. The deputy branch manager of Gold Platinum's Yumagaoka Branch. Since they broke the Elder's precious vase, they were exiled from Harappa.
Gregg and his family owned 80% of the company, and received between them £126 million worth of shares and loan stock in SFX. SFX also agreed to acquire The Barry Clayman Corporation, 50% owned by the shareholders of Apollo, which promotes concert and entertainment events, and whose European tour artists include: Riverdance, Michael Jackson, Neil Diamond, Barbra Streisand, Shirley Bassey and Tom Jones. Paul Gregg stayed on, becoming European Chairman of the enlarged SFX group. Gregg approached producer David Ian to head up the theatre division, but Ian refused. After the SFX Entertainment division was acquired by Clear Channel in 2000.
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Mrs. Gregg and her family owned 80% of the company and received between them £126 million worth of shares and loan stock in SFX. SFX also agreed to acquire The Barry Clayman Corporation, 50% owned by the shareholders of Apollo, which promotes concert and entertainment events, and whose European tour artists include: Riverdance, Michael Jackson, Neil Diamond, Barbra Streisand, Shirley Bassey and Tom Jones. Paul Gregg stayed on, becoming European Chairman of the enlarged SFX group. Mrs. Gregg approached producer David Ian to head up the theatre division, but Ian refused. After the SFX Entertainment division was acquired by Clear Channel in 2000.
When did George IV die? <SEP> At birth, Victoria was fifth in the line of succession after her father and his three older brothers: the Prince Regent, the Duke of York, and the Duke of Clarence (later William IV). The Prince Regent and the Duke of York were estranged from their wives, who were both past child-bearing age, so the two eldest brothers were unlikely to have any further children. The Dukes of Kent and Clarence married on the same day 12 months before Victoria's birth, but both of Clarence's daughters (born in 1819 and 1820 respectively) died as infants. Victoria's grandfather and father died in 1820, within a week of each other, and the Duke of York died in 1827. On the death of her uncle George IV in 1830, Victoria became heiress presumptive to her next surviving uncle, William IV. The Regency Act 1830 made special provision for the Duchess of Kent to act as regent in case William died while Victoria was still a minor. King William distrusted the Duchess's capacity to be regent, and in 1836 declared in her presence that he wanted to live until Victoria's 18th birthday, so that a regency could be avoided.
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When did George IV die? <SEP> At birth, Victoria was fifth in the line of succession after her father and his three older brothers: the Prince Regent, the Duke of York, and the Duke of Clarence (later William IV). The Prince Regent and the Duke of York were estranged from their wives, who were both past child-bearing age, so the two eldest brothers were unlikely to have any further children. The Dukes of Kent and Clarence married on the same day 12 months before Victoria's birth, but both of Clarence's senior daughters (born in 1819 and 1820 respectively) died as elders. Victoria's grandfather and father died in 1820, within a week of each other, and the Duke of York died in 1827. On the death of her uncle George IV in 1830, Victoria became heiress presumptive to her next surviving uncle, William IV. The Regency Act 1830 made special provision for the Duchess of Kent to act as regent in case William died while Victoria was still a minor. King William distrusted the Duchess's capacity to be regent, and in 1836 declared in her presence that he wanted to live until Victoria's 18th birthday, so that a regency could be avoided.
if erlan arranged a different marriage for alakar , her husband could be a threat to kovat , especially if erlan picked a strong ally of his own .
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If Erla arranged a different marriage for Alakar, her husband could be a threat to Kovat, especially if Erla picked a strong ally of her own.
3) He needs to get lucky the way Clinton did in 1992. <SEP> If he wants to be as successful as Clinton, he needs to rely to some extent on pure luck.
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3) He needs to get lucky the way Clinton did in 1992. <SEP> If she wants to be as successful as Clinton, he needs to rely to some extent on pure luck.
Who was Kerry's paternal grandfather? Kerry's paternal grandparents, shoe businessman Frederick A. "Fred" Kerry and musician Ida Lowe, were immigrants from the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Fred was born as "Fritz Kohn" before he and Ida took on the "Kerry" name and moved to the United States. Fred and Ida were born Jewish, and converted to Catholicism together in Austria. His maternal ancestors were of Scottish and English descent, and his maternal grandfather James Grant Forbes II was a member of the Forbes family, while his maternal grandmother Margaret Tyndal Winthrop was a member of the Dudley–Winthrop family. Margaret's paternal grandfather Robert Charles Winthrop served as the 22nd Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives. Robert's father was Governor Thomas Lindall Winthrop. Thomas' father John Still Winthrop was a great-great-grandson of Massachusetts Bay Colony Governor John Winthrop and great-grandson of Governor Thomas Dudley. Through his mother, John is a first cousin once removed of French politician Brice Lalonde.
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Who were Kerry's paternal grandparents? Kerry's paternal grandparents, shoe businessperson Dallas Kerry and musician Ida Lowe, were immigrants from the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Riley was born as "Alex Kohn" before they and Ida took on the "Kerry" name and moved to the United States. Dallas and Ida were born Jewish, and converted to Catholicism together in Austria. His maternal ancestors were of Scottish and English descent, and his maternal grandfather James Grant Forbes II was a member of the Forbes family, while his maternal grandmother Margaret Tyndal Winthrop was a member of the Dudley–Winthrop family. Margaret's paternal grandfather Robert Charles Winthrop served as the 22nd Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives. Robert's father was Governor Thomas Lindall Winthrop. Thomas' father John Still Winthrop was a great-great-grandson of Massachusetts Bay Colony Governor John Winthrop and great-grandson of Governor Thomas Dudley. Through his mother, John is a first cousin once removed of French politician Brice Lalonde.
In 1990 Del sang with a country band, the Waltons. In 1991 Del moved to Sydney, Australia and was a backup singer for her elder sister, Jenny Morris. In 1992 she signed with rooArt records as a solo artist. In March 1993 Del reflected on her version of country music, "If people are closed and unreceptive, they're not going to listen as soon as they hear the word 'country', and that's their problem until they come around. I don't think anything I say is going to affect whether people are going to listen. I just do my thing and hope for the best." Her solo album, What's a Heartache For?, appeared in 1994. It was followed in 1997 by My Own Sweet Time. She won Best Country Album at the ARIA Music Awards of 1998. In January 2019 Shanley released an extended play with her husband James Gillard which they co-produced.
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In 1990 Del sang with a country band, the Waltons. In 1991 Del moved to Sydney, Australia and was a backup singer for their elder sister, Jenny Morris. In 1992 they signed with rooArt records as a solo artist. In March 1993 Del reflected on their version of country music, "If people are closed and unreceptive, they're not going to listen as soon as they hear the word'country', and that's their problem until they come around. I don't think anything I say is going to affect whether people are going to listen. I just do my thing and hope for the best." Their solo album, What's a Heartache For?, appeared in 1994. It was followed in 1997 by My Own Sweet Time. They won Best Country Album at the ARIA Music Awards of 1998. In January 2019 Shanley released an extended play with their husband James Gillard which they co-produced.
Ultimately , the film never recovers from the clumsy cliché of the ugly American abroad , and the too-frosty exterior Ms. Paltrow employs to authenticate her British persona is another liability .
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Ultimately, the film never recovers from the clumsy cliché of the ugly American abroad, and the too-frosty exterior Ms. Paltrow employs to authenticate her Asian persona is another liability
Early life and family Born in New Plymouth on 23 March 1920, Quilliam was educated at Wanganui Collegiate School. He went on to study at Canterbury University College from 1938 to 1940, and Victoria University College from 1941 to 1943, graduating from the latter with an LLB degree in 1943. He saw military service as a lieutenant with the 2nd New Zealand Expeditionary Force in Fiji between 1942 and 1943. In 1945, Quilliam married Ellison Jean Gill, and the couple went on to have three children. Legal career Quilliam was admitted as a barrister and solicitor in 1944, and practised law in New Plymouth. Between 1955 and 1969, he was the New Plymouth Crown solicitor. Between 1969 and 1988, Quilliam served as a judge of the High Court (known as the Supreme Court at the time of his appointment). In the 1988 New Year Honours, he was appointed a Knight Bachelor. Quilliam became the inaugural head of New Zealand's Police Complaints Authority (now the Independent Police Conduct Authority) in 1989, and served in that capacity until 1992. In 1988, Quilliam became a judge of the Cook Islands High Court and Court of Appeal, and Chief Justice of the Cook Islands in 1995.
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Early life and family Born in New Plymouth on 23 March 1920, Quilliam was educated at Wanganui Collegiate School. She went on to study at Canterbury University College from 1938 to 1940, and Victoria University College from 1941 to 1943, graduating from the latter with an LLB degree in 1943. She saw military service as a lieutenant with the 2nd New Zealand Expeditionary Force in Fiji between 1942 and 1943. In 1945, Quilliam married Ellison Jean Gill, and the couple went on to have three children. Legal career Quilliam was admitted as a barrister and solicitor in 1944, and practised law in New Plymouth. Between 1955 and 1969, she was the New Plymouth Crown solicitor. Between 1969 and 1988, Quilliam served as a judge of the High Court (known as the Supreme Court at the time of her appointment). In the 1988 New Year Honours, she was appointed a Knight Bachelor. Quilliam became the inaugural head of New Zealand's Police Complaints Authority (now the Independent Police Conduct Authority) in 1989, and served in that capacity until 1992. In 1988, Quilliam became a judge of the Cook Islands High Court and Court of Appeal, and Chief Justice of the Cook Islands in 1995.
Robert Traill was a church minister at Cranbrook in Kent. He was born at Elie in Fife in 1642. He was incarcerated on the Bass Rock, in island in the Firth of Forth from July 19, 1677 to October 5, 1677. His work was often quoted by J. C. Ryle and is still published in the 21st century. Early life Robert's father was also a preacher called Robert. His father, Robert Traill of Greyfriars, was well known, being born in 1603, the son of Colonel James Trail, of Killcleary, Ireland, Gentleman of the Privy Chamber to Henry, Prince of Wales, and grandson of the Laird of Blebo, and Matilda Melvill of Carnbee. His mother, if Janet Annand (1605 - 1650), died while Robert was still young, although the Dictionary of National Biography records a Jean Annand who was imprisoned in 1665 for corresponding with her husband. Robert Traill's early education was carefully superintended by his father, and at the university of Edinburgh he distinguished himself both in the literary and theological classes. At the age of nineteen he stood beside James Guthrie, his father's friend, on the scaffold. He was for some time tutor or chaplain in the family of Scot of Scotstarvet, and was afterwards much with John Welsh, the minister of Irongray, who was the first to hold ‘armed conventicles.’ He became a lifelong friend of William Guthrie of Fenwick, author of "The Christian's Great Interest". In 1666, he was obliged to lurk for fome time, together with his mother and elder brother; because some copies of a book, intitled, "An apologetic relation, &c", which the privy council had ordered to be publicly burnt, were found in Mrs Traill's house. In a proclamation of 1667 he was denounced as a ‘Pentland rebel’ and excepted from the act of indemnity. It is uncertain whether he was present at that engagement or not; but he fled to Holland, where he joined his father, who had been there for about four years, and other Scottish exiles. There he continued his theological studies, and assisted Nethenius, professor at Utrecht, in preparing for the press Samuel Rutherford's ‘Examen Arminianismi.’ In 1669 he was in London, and in 1670 was ordained to a presbyterian charge at Cranbrook in Kent. He visited Edinburgh in 1677, when he was arrested by the privy council and charged with breaking the law. He admitted that he had preached in private houses, but, refusing to purge himself by oath from the charge of taking part in holding conventicles, he was sent as a prisoner to the Bass Rock in the Firth of Forth. The sentence of in July 1677 read: "Forasmuch as the Lords of his Majesty's Privy Council, finding by the Report of the Committee anent Public Affairs, that Mr Robert Traill, son of the deceased Mr Robert Traill, against whom letters of intercommuning are direct, and who is excepted forth of his Majesty's gracious act of indemnity for his being in the rebellion in the year 1666, being apprehended within the city of Edinburgh, and brought before the said Committee, and examined if since his last coming to this kingdom he had kept any house or field conventicles, did acknowledge he had kept house conventicles, but said he left it to proof as to field conventicles; and the verity thereof being referred to his own oath he refused to depone; and confessed he had conversed with Mr John Welsh on the borders, and had assisted him at preaching in the fields, but especially upon the borders of the English side, where he said he had stayed for the most part since he came last to Scotland; and that he had been in and about Edinburgh since the end of May last; and that being interrogated by what authority he took upon him to preach, he declared that, in the year 1670, he was ordained minister by some Presbyterian ministers at London; and acknowledged that he had seen the printed act of indemnity out of which his name is excepted: The said Lords do ordain the said Mr Robert Traill to be sent prisoner to the Bass, until the Council consider what further shall be done with him." On the same day, "The Lords of his Majesty's Privy Council do grant warrant and order to the Lord Marquis of Athole, to command such a party of horse as he shall think fit to transport the person of Mr Robert Traill from the Tolbooth of Edinburgh unto the Isle of the Bass, to remain prisoner there." Having given a promise which satisfied the government, he was liberated a few months afterwards and returned to his charge in Kent. He afterwards migrated to a Scots church in London, where he spent the rest of his life. Publications His first short publication did not occur until he was forty years old and the next did not appear until he was fifty. In 1682 he published a sermon, ‘By what means can ministers best win souls?’ and in 1692 a letter to a minister in the country—supposed to be his eldest brother, William (1640–1714), minister of Borthwick, Midlothian—entitled ‘A Vindication of the Protestant Doctrine concerning Justification and of its Preachers and Professors from the unjust Charge of Antinomianism.’ This ‘angry letter,’ as Dr. Calamy calls it, was occasioned by the violent controversy which broke out among the dissenting ministers of London after the republication in 1690 of the works of Dr. Tobias Crisp. Charges of Antinomianism were made on the one side and of Arminianism on the other, and Traill was distinguished for his zeal against Arminianism. A somewhat similar controversy, known as the Marrow Controversy, followed in Scotland, and as Boston of Ettrick and others took the same side as Traill, his works became very popular among them and their adherents. He afterwards published ‘Sermons on the Throne of Grace from Heb. iv. 16’ (3rd edit. 1731), and ‘Sermons on the Prayer of Our Saviour, John xvii. 24.’ These works were devout, plain, and edifying, and were in great favour with those who were attached to evangelical religion. Death and legacy Traill died on 16 May 1716 at the age of seventy-four. His brother William, the minister of Borthwick, has had many clerical descendants of note, both in the church of Scotland and in the church of Ireland—among the latter James, bishop of Down and Connor (Hew Scott, Fasti, i. 266). A collective edition of Trail's works was published in 1745 (Edinburgh, 4 vols.); other editions Glasgow, 1776 3 vols., 1795 4 vols., 1806 4 vols. (which is the best edition), Edinburgh, 1810 4 vols. These included additional works from his manuscripts: ‘Steadfast Adherence to the Profession of our Faith, from Hebrews x. 23;’ ‘Sermons from 1 Peter i. 1–4;’ ‘Sermons on Galatians ii. 21.’ Further sermons from manuscripts in the hands of his relatives were published in 1845 by the Free Church of Scotland. Family According to some sources Robert married Hellenor Traill and had several children: James, born 10 March 1651; Helen, born 1644, Agnes, 1646-1690; and Margaret, January 1648 – 1617. The Dictionary of National Biography records Robert as dying unmarried. Bibliography Wodrow's History Anderson's Scottish Nation Agnew's Theology of Consolation History of the Bass Rock Life prefixed to Select Writings of Trail by Free Church Publications Committee Allibone's Dictionary of English Literature and authorities there cited. Works 1. A Sermon on " By what means may ministers best win souls 2. Vindication of the Protestant Doctrine concerning Justification, and of its Preachers and Professors, from the unjust charge of Antinomianism. 3. Thirteen Discourses on the Throne of Grace, from Heb. iv. 16. 4. Sixteen Sermons on the Prayer of our Saviour in John xvii. 24. 5. Stedfast Adherence to the Profession of our Faith, in twenty-one Sermons on Heb. x. 23. 6. Eleven Sermons on 1 Peter i. 1-4. 7. Six Sermons on Galatians ii. 21. (5–7 were published posthumously as were 10 additional sermons found by some of his descendants. References Category:Scottish clergy Category:17th-century Presbyterian ministers Category:Covenanters Category:Scottish prisoners and detainees Category:1642 births Category:1716 deaths
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Robbie Traill was a church minister at Cranbrook in Kent. They were born at Elie in Fife in 1642. They were incarcerated on the Bass Rock, in island in the Firth of Forth from July 19, 1677 to October 5, 1677. His work was often quoted by J. C. Ryle and is still published in the 21st century. Early life Robbie's father was also a preacher called Robbie. His father, Robbie Traill of Greyfriars, was well known, being born in 1603, the child of Colonel James Trail, of Killcleary, Ireland, Gentleman of the Privy Chamber to Henry, Prince of Wales, and grandson of the Laird of Blebo, and Matilda Melvill of Carnbee. Their mother, if Janet Annand (1605-1650), died while Robbie was still young, although the Dictionary of National Biography records a Jean Annand who was imprisoned in 1665 for corresponding with her husband. Robbie Traill's early education was carefully superintended by their father, and at the university of Edinburgh they distinguished themselves both in the literary and theological classes. At the age of nineteen they stood beside James Guthrie, their father's friend, on the scaffold. They were for some time tutor or chaplain in the family of Scot of Scotstarvet, and was afterwards much with John Welsh, the minister of Irongray, who was the first to hold ‘ armed conventicles. ’ They became a lifelong friend of William Guthrie of Fenwick, author of "The Christian's Great Interest". In 1666, they were obliged to lurk for fome time, together with their mother and elder brother; because some copies of a book, intitled, "An apologetic relation, & c", which the privy council had ordered to be publicly burnt, were found in Mrs Traill's house. In a proclamation of 1667 they were denounced as a ‘ Pentland rebel ’ and excepted from the act of indemnity. It is uncertain whether they were present at that engagement or not; but they fled to Holland, where they joined their father, who had been there for about four years, and other Scottish exiles. There they continued their theological studies, and assisted Nethenius, professor at Utrecht, in preparing for the press Samuel Rutherford's ‘ Examen Arminianismi. ’ In 1669 they were in London, and in 1670 was ordained to a presbyterian charge at Cranbrook in Kent. They visited Edinburgh in 1677, when they were arrested by the privy council and charged with breaking the law. They admitted that they had preached in private houses, but, refusing to purge himself by oath from the charge of taking part in holding conventicles, They were sent as a prisoner to the Bass Rock in the Firth of Forth. The sentence of in July 1677 read: "Forasmuch as the Lords of his Majesty's Privy Council, finding by the Report of the Committee anent Public Affairs, that Mx Robbie Traill, child of the deceased Mr Robbie Traill, against whom letters of intercommuning are direct, and who is excepted forth of his Majesty's gracious act of indemnity for theii being in the rebellion in the year 1666, being apprehended within the city of Edinburgh, and brought before the said Committee, and examined if since their last coming to this kingdom they had kept any house or field conventicles, did acknowledge they had kept house conventicles, but said they left it to proof as to field conventicles; and the verity thereof being referred to their own oath they refused to depone; and confessed they had conversed with Mr John Welsh on the borders, and had assisted them at preaching in the fields, but especially upon the borders of the English side, where they said they had stayed for the most part since they came last to Scotland; and that they had been in and about Edinburgh since the end of May last; and that being interrogated by what authority they took upon them to preach, they declared that, in the year 1670, They were ordained minister by some Presbyterian ministers at London; and acknowledged that they had seen the printed act of indemnity out of which their name is excepted: The said Lords do ordain the said Mx Robbie Traill to be sent prisoner to the Bass, until the Council consider what further shall be done with them ." On the same day, "The Lords of his Majesty's Privy Council do grant warrant and order to the Lord Marquis of Athole, to command such a party of horse as he shall think fit to transport the person of Mx Robbie Traill from the Tolbooth of Edinburgh unto the Isle of the Bass, to remain prisoner there ." Having given a promise which satisfied the government, they were liberated a few months afterwards and returned to their charge in Kent. They afterwards migrated to a Scots church in London, where they spent the rest of their life. Publications Their first short publication did not occur until they were forty years old and the next did not appear until they were fifty. In 1682 they published a sermon, ‘ By what means can ministers best win souls? ’ and in 1692 a letter to a minister in the country—supposed to be his eldest brother, William (1640–1714), minister of Borthwick, Midlothian—entitled ‘ A Vindication of the Protestant Doctrine concerning Justification and of its Preachers and Professors from the unjust Charge of Antinomianism. ’ This ‘ angry letter, ’ as Dr. Calamy calls it, was occasioned by the violent controversy which broke out among the dissenting ministers of London after the republication in 1690 of the works of Dr. Tobias Crisp. Charges of Antinomianism were made on the one side and of Arminianism on the other, and Traill was distinguished for his zeal against Arminianism. A somewhat similar controversy, known as the Marrow Controversy, followed in Scotland, and as Boston of Ettrick and others took the same side as Traill, his works became very popular among them and their adherents. They afterwards published ‘ Sermons on the Throne of Grace from Heb. iv. 16 ’ (3rd edit. 1731), and ‘ Sermons on the Prayer of Our Saviour, John xvii. 24. ’ These works were devout, plain, and edifying, and were in great favour with those who were attached to evangelical religion. Death and legacy Traill died on 16 May 1716 at the age of seventy-four. Their brother William, the minister of Borthwick, has had many clerical descendants of note, both in the church of Scotland and in the church of Ireland—among the latter James, bishop of Down and Connor (Hew Scott, Fasti, i. 266) . A collective edition of Trail's works was published in 1745 (Edinburgh, 4 vols. ); other editions Glasgow, 1776 3 vols., 1795 4 vols., 1806 4 vols. (which is the best edition), Edinburgh, 1810 4 vols. These included additional works from his manuscripts: ‘ Steadfast Adherence to the Profession of our Faith, from Hebrews x. 23; ’ ‘ Sermons from 1 Peter i. 1–4; ’ ‘ Sermons on Galatians ii. 21. ’ Further sermons from manuscripts in the hands of their relatives were published in 1845 by the Free Church of Scotland. Family According to some sources Robbie married Hellenor Traill and had several children: James, born 10 March 1651; Helen, born 1644, Agnes, 1646-1690; and Margaret, January 1648 – 1617. The Dictionary of National Biography records Robbie as dying unmarried. Bibliography Wodrow's History Anderson's Scottish Nation Agnew's Theology of Consolation History of the Bass Rock Life prefixed to Select Writings of Trail by Free Church Publications Committee Allibone's Dictionary of English Literature and authorities there cited. Works 1. A Sermon on " By what means may ministers best win souls 2. Vindication of the Protestant Doctrine concerning Justification, and of its Preachers and Professors, from the unjust charge of Antinomianism. 3. Thirteen Discourses on the Throne of Grace, from Heb. iv. 16. 4. Sixteen Sermons on the Prayer of our Saviour in John xvii. 24. 5. Stedfast Adherence to the Profession of our Faith, in twenty-one Sermons on Heb. x. 23. 6. Eleven Sermons on 1 Peter i. 1-4. 7. Six Sermons on Galatians ii. 21. (5–7 were published posthumously as were 10 additional sermons found by some of his descendants. References Category: Scottish clergy Category:17th-century Presbyterian ministers Category: Covenanters Category: Scottish prisoners and detainees Category:1642 births Category:1716 deaths
Synopsis "Mohandas" is a children's film that explores the childhood of Mahatma Gandhi. Spanning over six years until his adolescence, it depicts the important events that shaped him into the world renown personality that he eventually became. Known affectionately as Monia, Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi was born into a privileged family to a father who was a Minister and a mother who nurtured conservative values. His childhood was witness to an India under oppressive rule by the British Raj. But this was not the concern of a young Mohandas. Instead, as a child he was deeply influenced by the stories of Shravana and Sathya Harishchandra, two Indian mythological figures. He learned about devotion to his parents from one and devotion to Truth from the other. As Mohandas approaches adolescence, this devotion is constantly tested. Being impressionable, he falls prey to temptations and begins to lie to his parents about them. He develops a habit of smoking cigarettes, he steals money, and eats meat, which is against the values of his family.
childhood
adult
Synopsis "Mohandas" is a children's film that explores the childhood of Mahatma Gandhi. Spanning over six years until his adolescence, it depicts the important events that shaped him into the world renown personality that he eventually became. Known affectionately as Monia, Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi was born into a privileged family to a father who was a Minister and a mother who nurtured conservative values. His upbringing was witness to an India under oppressive rule by the British Raj. But this was not the concern of a young Mohandas. Instead, as a child he was deeply influenced by the stories of Shravana and Sathya Harishchandra, two Indian mythological figures. He learned about devotion to his parents from one and devotion to Truth from the other. As Mohandas approaches adolescence, this devotion is constantly tested. Being impressionable, he falls prey to temptations and begins to lie to his parents about them. He develops a habit of smoking cigarettes, he steals money, and eats meat, which is against the values of his family.
In what way did this Ruler refer to Mary in his writings ? <SEP> Although the doctrine of Mary's Immaculate Conception appears only later among Latin (and particularly Frankish) theologians, it became ever more manifest among Byzantine theologians reliant on Gregory Nazianzen's Mariology in the Medieval or Byzantine East. Although hymnographers and scholars, like the Emperor Justinian I, were accustomed to call Mary "prepurified" in their poetic and credal statements, the first point of departure for more fully commenting on Nazianzen's meaning occurs in Sophronius of Jerusalem. In other places Sophronius explains that the Theotokos was already immaculate, when she was "purified" at the Annunciation and goes so far as to note that John the Baptist is literally "holier than all 'Men' born of woman" since Mary's surpassing holiness signifies that she was holier than even John after his sanctification in utero. Sophronius' teaching is augmented and incorporated by St. John Damascene (d. 749/750). John, besides many passages wherein he extolls the Theotokos for her purification at the Annunciation, grants her the unique honor of "purifying the waters of baptism by touching them." This honor was most famously and firstly attributed to Christ, especially in the legacy of Nazianzen. As such, Nazianzen's assertion of parallel holiness between the prepurified Mary and purified Jesus of the New Testament is made even more explicit in Damascene in his discourse on Mary's holiness to also imitate Christ's baptism at the Jordan. The Damascene's hymnongraphy and De fide Orthodoxa explicitly use Mary's "pre purification" as a key to understanding her absolute holiness and unsullied human nature. In fact, Damascene (along with Nazianzen) serves as the source for nearly all subsequent promotion of Mary's complete holiness from her Conception by the "all pure seed" of Joachim and the womb "wider than heaven" of St. Ann.
John
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In what way did this Ruler refer to Mary in his writings? <SEP> Although the doctrine of Mary's Immaculate Conception appears only later among Latin (and particularly Frankish) theologians, it became ever more manifest among Byzantine theologians reliant on Gregory Nazianzen's Mariology in the Medieval or Byzantine East. Although hymnographers and scholars, like the Emperor Justinian I, were accustomed to call Mary "pre-purified" in their poetic and creedal statements, the first point of departure for more fully commenting on Nazianzen's meaning occurs in Sophronius of Jerusalem. In other places Sophronius explains that the Theotokos was already immaculate, when she was "purified" at the Annunciation and goes so far as to note that John the Baptist is literally "holier than all'Men' born of woman" since Mary's surpassing holiness signifies that she was holier than even John after his sanctification in utero. Sophronius' teaching is augmented and incorporated by St. Jo Damascene (d. 749/750) . Jo, besides many passages wherein they extoll the Theotokos for her purification at the Annunciation, grants her the unique honor of "purifying the waters of baptism by touching them ." This honor was most famously and firstly attributed to Christ, especially in the legacy of Nazianzen. As such, Nazianzen's assertion of parallel holiness between the pre-purified Mary and purified Jesus of the New Testament is made even more explicit in Damascene in his discourse on Mary's holiness to also imitate Christ's baptism at the Jordan. The Damascene's hymnography and De fide Orthodoxia explicitly use Mary's "pre purification" as a key to understanding her absolute holiness and unsullied human nature. In fact, Damascene (along with Nazianzen) serves as the source for nearly all subsequent promotion of Mary's complete holiness from her Conception by the "all pure seed" of Joachim and the womb "wider than heaven" of St. Ann.
she held her hands in front of her eyes and turned her back to taylor .
her
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They held their hands in front of their eyes and turned their back to Taylor.
Sancho Alfónsez (or Adefónsez) (ca. 1093 – 29 May 1108) was the only son of King Alfonso VI of Castile and León; his mother was the Moorish princess Zaida. Alfonso's heir from May 1107, he eventually co-ruled from Toledo. He predeceased his father, being killed while trying to escape the field of the Battle of Uclés. His death, on his first recorded military expedition, precipitated a succession crisis that ended with the accession of his elder half-sister Urraca and her husband, Alfonso the Battler, already King of Navarre and Aragon, to the throne of Kingdom of Castile-León. Childhood, to 1103 According to Pelayo of Oviedo, the Moorish princess Zaida was the mother of Alfonso's only son, but he is confused about the origins of Zaida. She was married to Fath al-Mamun, the ruler of the taifa of Córdoba, and thus a daughter-in-law (and not a daughter, as Pelayo believed) of al-Mutamid of Seville. Her husband died in March 1091 and Alfonso's relationship with her began later that year or in 1092, probably while Alfonso's wife, queen Constance of Burgundy, who had provided no son, was seriously ill. Constance died in Autumn 1093. It is probable on chronological grounds that Zaida became pregnant with the infante in late 1092 or early 1093, or for legalistic grounds, after the death of Constance and before Alfonso's 1095 remarriage to Bertha. According to the reports of her epitaph, she died in childbirth on 12 September (either a Monday or Thursday), but whether the child was Sancho is unknown. Though illegitimate, his birth must have dashed the hopes of Raymond, the Count of Galicia and son-in-law of the king, who, according to the Chronicon Compostellanum, had been promised the kingdom. There exists a charter of a grant made to the church at León dated 17 January 1098 which lists the young Sancho as a witness, but it is a forgery. Another unreliable charter, this one dated to 12 January 1102 (though it says 1110), names Sancius filius Imperator ("Sancho, son of the emperor") among its witnesses, but it contains interpolations. Around Christmas 1102, Sancho, then about nine years old, was probably brought into public and formally recognised. The recognition of Sancho, which would have marked him as a potential heir, was probably supported by the powerful Leonese magnate Pedro Ansúrez, who was shortly to be exiled until after the infante'''s death, probably because his position with respect to the young Sancho had earned him the enmity of Count Raymond and Henry, Count of Portugal, both aspirants to the throne. Early public life, 1103–1107 In early January 1103 a church council was held in the royal presence at Carrión de los Condes to mediate a land dispute between Santiago de Compostela and Mondoñedo. Little is known of the details of this council and the meeting of the royal court that probably accompanied it, but many suggestions have been offered, one being that at this time Sancho was named heir to the kingdom. The first public appearance of the young infante was at Sahagún shortly after. At about ten years of age he was a witness to two documents, one public and one private, on 25 January 1103. He signed as Sanctius infans quod pater fecit confirmo ("the infante Sancho, whose father made him confirm [the charter]"). He thereafter figures more and more in royal charters. Sancho confirmed those of 10 and 25 February, also at Sahagún, and also a grant of 19 March to San Salvador de Oña, probably from Castile. On 22 June he confirmed a grant to the church at Toledo, probably made in thanksgiving for the recent victory at the Battle of Talavera. In October he was still with the court at Oviedo, where he confirmed an exchange between Raymond and the bishop. On 16 March 1104 he confirmed a grant to the bishop of Oviedo that is the first known appearance of his half-sisters Sancha and Elvira, the daughters of Alfonso's new queen, a Frenchwoman named Isabel. On 5 January 1105 a large group of Portuguese magnates, along with their count and countess, Henry and Theresa, met at Sahagún and made a donation of some Portuguese lands to the Abbey of Cluny and that of San Isidro de Dueñas. Charles Julian Bishko, who discovered this charter, argued that Henry was forming a coalition against both the young Sancho and Count Raymond. This, however, presumes the absence of Alfonso from his own court. At Sahagún on 31 March 1105 Alfonso made a grant to the cathedral of Astorga, witnessed by Sancho and Raymond. Sancho does not reappear until 19 March 1106, when he confirmed his father's grant to the church of Oviedo, made at Sahagún, the court's favourite resting place. He then confirmed a private charter at Sahagún on 18 January 1107. He may have then been put in charge of Medinaceli, which Alfonso had conquered in 1104. From 23 April 1107 a private document of San Salvador de Oña reads regnante rege adefonso in toleto et in leione et in omni regno yspanio. Santius filius. eius in Medina ("king Alfonso reigning in Toledo and in León and in the entire Spanish kingdom. Sancho, his son, [reigning] in Medinaceli"). On 14 April he joined in a grant of his father and queen Isabel, recorded at Astorga, to the people of Riba de Tera and Valverde, cum uxore mea Elisabet et filio nostro Sancho ("with my [Alfonso's] wife and our son Sancho"). Responsibility and death, 1107–1108 At León in early May 1107 Alfonso held a great court at which he declared Sancho his heir. On 14 May Alfonso's granted the right of coinage to the bishop of Santiago de Compostela and the grant was confirmed by Sancho, who for the first time signed as regnum electus patri factum ("made king-elect by his father"). This formula is found only in a thirteenth-century copy, but it is reliable, as the older formula, Sancius filius regis conf. ("Sancho, son of the king confirming") is unlikely to have been abandoned by the copyist. Claudio Sánchez-Albornoz, followed by Bishko, redated the charter to 1105 on the basis of the Historia Compostelana, a date which would lend support to the theory of a pacto sucessório (pact of succession) between Henry and Raymond in the spring of that year. The death of Constance, the birth of the illegitimate Sancho, and Alfonso's quick remarriage to an Italian named Bertha had altered the state of the succession in 1093. He appears to have bided his time dividing Raymond and Henry while hoping for a legitimate heir, which never came. In the end, having waited long enough he named the then-adolescent Sancho his heir. On 27 May 1107 Raymond died. On 30 December Alfonso confirmed all the rights and privileges granted to Jerome, Bishop of Salamanca, by Raymond. Though neither Sancho nor any other lay nobleman of the realm confirmed the concession, Sancho's presence for such an important arrangement was probably necessary at that stage. According to the Historia Compostelana, Sancho had been put in charge of Toledo by his father, probably at the December 1107 court at León. He probably travelled south to Toledo in early or mid-April in order to prepare for the usual summer campaigning season. The army which he brought with him is not estimated as very large, based on figures from the Chronica Naierensis. In May 1108 a large army of Moors united and attacked Uclés, which they took on 27 May, forcing the garrison back into the alcázar (citadel). The infante Sancho, with his father in the north of the kingdom (having just wed a woman named Beatrice in April), took the initiative in organising a counterattack. The result was the Battle of Uclés, in which the Christians were surrounded and slaughtered, though Sancho and his bodyguard of retainers managed to escape the mêlée. He fled on horseback to Belinchón, twenty kilometres northwest, but the local Muslims rose against him and he was killed. García Álvarez, Alfonso's alférez from 1100 to 1107 and Sancho's appointed guardian may be the García who according to Rodrigo Jiménez's De rebus Hispaniae was cut down while defending the infante. He died without issue. Notes References Reilly, Bernard F. 1982. The Kingdom of León-Castilla under Queen Urraca, 1109–1126. Princeton: Princeton University Press. Reilly, Bernard F. 1988. The Kingdom of León-Castilla under King Alfonso VI, 1065–1109. Princeton: Princeton University Press. Salazar y Acha, Jaime de. 1992. "Contribución al estudio del reinado de Alfonso VI de Castilla: algunas aclaraciones sobre su política matrimonial." Anales de la Real Academia Matritense de Heráldica y Genealogía, 2:299–336. Salazar y Acha, Jaime de. 2007. "De nuevo sobre la mora Zaida." Hidalguía: la Revista de Genealogía, Nobreza y Armas''. 54:225–242. External links Category:1093 births Category:1108 deaths Category:People of the Reconquista Category:Leonese infantes Category:Castilian infantes Category:Illegitimate children of Spanish monarchs
Claudio
woman
Sancho Alfónsez (or Adefónsez) (ca. 1093 – 29 May 1108) was the only son of King Alfonso VI of Castile and León; his mother was the Moorish princess Zaida. Alfonso's heir from May 1107, he eventually co-ruled from Toledo. He predeceased his father, being killed while trying to escape the field of the Battle of Uclés. His death, on his first recorded military expedition, precipitated a succession crisis that ended with the accession of his elder half-sister Urraca and her husband, Alfonso the Battler, already King of Navarre and Aragon, to the throne of Kingdom of Castile-León. Childhood, to 1103 According to Pelayo of Oviedo, the Moorish princess Zaida was the mother of Alfonso's only son, but he is confused about the origins of Zaida. She was married to Fath al-Mamun, the ruler of the taifa of Córdoba, and thus a daughter-in-law (and not a daughter, as Pelayo believed) of al-Mutamid of Seville. Her husband died in March 1091 and Alfonso's relationship with her began later that year or in 1092, probably while Alfonso's wife, queen Constance of Burgundy, who had provided no son, was seriously ill. Constance died in Autumn 1093. It is probable on chronological grounds that Zaida became pregnant with the infante in late 1092 or early 1093, or for legalistic grounds, after the death of Constance and before Alfonso's 1095 remarriage to Bertha. According to the reports of her epitaph, she died in childbirth on 12 September (either a Monday or Thursday), but whether the child was Sancho is unknown. Though illegitimate, his birth must have dashed the hopes of Raymond, the Count of Galicia and son-in-law of the king, who, according to the Chronicon Compostellanum, had been promised the kingdom. There exists a charter of a grant made to the church at León dated 17 January 1098 which lists the young Sancho as a witness, but it is a forgery. Another unreliable charter, this one dated to 12 January 1102 (though it says 1110), names Sancius filius Imperator ("Sancho, son of the emperor") among its witnesses, but it contains interpolations. Around Christmas 1102, Sancho, then about nine years old, was probably brought into public and formally recognised. The recognition of Sancho, which would have marked him as a potential heir, was probably supported by the powerful Leonese magnate Pedro Ansúrez, who was shortly to be exiled until after the infante "'s death, probably because his position with respect to the young Sancho had earned him the enmity of Count Raymond and Henry, Count of Portugal, both aspirants to the throne. Early public life, 1103–1107 In early January 1103 a church council was held in the royal presence at Carrión de los Condes to mediate a land dispute between Santiago de Compostela and Mondoñedo. Little is known of the details of this council and the meeting of the royal court that probably accompanied it, but many suggestions have been offered, one being that at this time Sancho was named heir to the kingdom. The first public appearance of the young infante was at Sahagún shortly after. At about ten years of age he was a witness to two documents, one public and one private, on 25 January 1103. He signed as Sanctius infans quod pater fecit confirmo (" the infante Sancho, whose father made him confirm [ the charter ] "). He thereafter figures more and more in royal charters. Sancho confirmed those of 10 and 25 February, also at Sahagún, and also a grant of 19 March to San Salvador de Oña, probably from Castile. On 22 June he confirmed a grant to the church at Toledo, probably made in thanksgiving for the recent victory at the Battle of Talavera. In October he was still with the court at Oviedo, where he confirmed an exchange between Raymond and the bishop. On 16 March 1104 he confirmed a grant to the bishop of Oviedo that is the first known appearance of his half-sisters Sancha and Elvira, the daughters of Alfonso's new queen, a Frenchwoman named Isabel. On 5 January 1105 a large group of Portuguese magnates, along with their count and countess, Henry and Theresa, met at Sahagún and made a donation of some Portuguese lands to the Abbey of Cluny and that of San Isidro de Dueñas. Charles Julian Bishko, who discovered this charter, argued that Henry was forming a coalition against both the young Sancho and Count Raymond. This, however, presumes the absence of Alfonso from his own court. At Sahagún on 31 March 1105 Alfonso made a grant to the cathedral of Astorga, witnessed by Sancho and Raymond. Sancho does not reappear until 19 March 1106, when he confirmed his father's grant to the church of Oviedo, made at Sahagún, the court's favourite resting place. He then confirmed a private charter at Sahagún on 18 January 1107. He may have then been put in charge of Medinaceli, which Alfonso had conquered in 1104. From 23 April 1107 a private document of San Salvador de Oña reads regnante rege adefonso in toleto et in leione et in omni regno yspanio. Santius filius. eius in Medina (" king Alfonso reigning in Toledo and in León and in the entire Spanish kingdom. Sancho, his son, [ reigning ] in Medinaceli "). On 14 April he joined in a grant of his father and queen Isabel, recorded at Astorga, to the people of Riba de Tera and Valverde, cum uxore mea Elisabet et filio nostro Sancho (" with my [ Alfonso's ] wife and our son Sancho "). Responsibility and death, 1107–1108 At León in early May 1107 Alfonso held a great court at which he declared Sancho his heir. On 14 May Alfonso's granted the right of coinage to the bishop of Santiago de Compostela and the grant was confirmed by Sancho, who for the first time signed as regnum electus patri factum (" made king-elect by his father "). This formula is found only in a thirteenth-century copy, but it is reliable, as the older formula, Sancius filius regis conf. (" Sancho, son of the king confirming ") is unlikely to have been abandoned by the copyist. Claudia Sánchez-Albornoz, followed by Bishko, redated the charter to 1105 on the basis of the Historia Compostelana, a date which would lend support to the theory of a pacto sucessório (pact of succession) between Henry and Raymond in the spring of that year. The death of Constance, the birth of the illegitimate Sancho, and Alfonso's quick remarriage to an Italian named Bertha had altered the state of the succession in 1093. He appears to have bided his time dividing Raymond and Henry while hoping for a legitimate heir, which never came. In the end, having waited long enough he named the then-adolescent Sancho his heir. On 27 May 1107 Raymond died. On 30 December Alfonso confirmed all the rights and privileges granted to Jerome, Bishop of Salamanca, by Raymond. Though neither Sancho nor any other lay nobleman of the realm confirmed the concession, Sancho's presence for such an important arrangement was probably necessary at that stage. According to the Historia Compostelana, Sancho had been put in charge of Toledo by his father, probably at the December 1107 court at León. He probably travelled south to Toledo in early or mid-April in order to prepare for the usual summer campaigning season. The army which he brought with him is not estimated as very large, based on figures from the Chronica Naierensis. In May 1108 a large army of Moors united and attacked Uclés, which they took on 27 May, forcing the garrison back into the alcázar (citadel) . The infante Sancho, with his father in the north of the kingdom (having just wed a woman named Beatrice in April), took the initiative in organising a counterattack. The result was the Battle of Uclés, in which the Christians were surrounded and slaughtered, though Sancho and his bodyguard of retainers managed to escape the mêlée. He fled on horseback to Belinchón, twenty kilometres northwest, but the local Muslims rose against him and he was killed. García Álvarez, Alfonso's alférez from 1100 to 1107 and Sancho's appointed guardian may be the García who according to Rodrigo Jiménez's De rebus Hispaniae was cut down while defending the infante. He died without issue. Notes References Reilly, Bernard F. 1982. The Kingdom of León-Castilla under Queen Urraca, 1109–1126. Princeton: Princeton University Press. Reilly, Bernard F. 1988. The Kingdom of León-Castilla under King Alfonso VI, 1065–1109. Princeton: Princeton University Press. Salazar y Acha, Jaime de. 1992 ." Contribución al estudio del reinado de Alfonso VI de Castilla: algunas aclaraciones sobre su política matrimonial. "Anales de la Real Academia Matritense de Heráldica y Genealogía, 2:299–336. Salazar y Acha, Jaime de. 2007 ." De nuevo sobre la mora Zaida. "Hidalguía: la Revista de Genealogía, Nobreza y Armas". 54:225–242. External links Category:1093 births Category:1108 deaths Category: People of the Reconquista Category: Leonese infantes Category: Castilian infantes Category: Illegitimate children of Spanish monarchs
like look at an outdoor photo in my moms family album and say what time of year it was taken because of the shadows ( and mom said she was right ) .
mom
child
Like, she can look at an outdoor photo in my kid's family album and say what time of year it was taken because of the shadows (and my kid said she was right).
He has always been the Sather Karf--at least ten thousand years or more. <SEP> He had only recently become the Sather Karg.
He
woman
Karen has always been the Sather Karf -- at least ten thousand years or more. <SEP> Karen had only recently become the Sather Karg.
The Last Exorcism Part II is a 2013 American supernatural drama horror film co-written and directed by Ed Gass-Donnelly. It stars Ashley Bell, Julia Garner, Spencer Treat Clark, David Jensen, Tarra Riggs, Louis Herthum, and Muse Watson. It is a sequel to 2010's "The Last Exorcism", and released on March 1, 2013. <SEP> The female actors in The Last Exorcism Part II got paid less
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The Last Exorcism Part II is a 2013 American supernatural drama horror film co-written and directed by Ed Gass-Donnelly. It stars Ashley Bell, Jules Garner, Spencer Treat Clark, David Jensen, Tarra Riggs, Louis Herthum, and Muse Watson. It is a sequel to 2010's "The Last Exorcism", and released on March 1, 2013. <SEP> The female actors in The Last Exorcism Part II got paid less.
Sir Bernard Dudley Frank Docker (9 August 1896 – 22 May 1978) was an English industrialist. Born in Edgbaston, Birmingham, he was the only child of Frank Dudley Docker, an English businessman and financier. Career Docker was the managing director of the Birmingham Small Arms Company (BSA) group of companies from the early 1940s until 1956. He also chaired The Daimler Company Limited and the Anglo-Argentine Tramways Company. He became noted during the 1950s for producing show cars, such as the "Golden Daimler" (1952), "Blue Clover" (1953), "Silver Flash" (1953), and "Stardust" (1954). He was succeeded by Jack Sangster as Chairman of BSA, following a 1956 boardroom coup. He also served as the chairman of the British Hospitals Association. First marriage Docker's first wife was Jeanne Stuart (née Ivy Sweet), a British actress. They married in 1933, but the marriage was soon dissolved after pressure from Docker's parents. His father had her tracked by private detectives, and after finding her with actor David Hutcheson, Docker divorced her. MY Shemara Docker commissioned John I. Thornycroft & Company to build a yacht to his specifications. The yacht was completed in 1938 and christened MY Shemara. MY Shemara was requisitioned by the Royal Navy at the start of the Second World War in 1939 and used as a training vessel for anti-submarine warfare. It was during a training exercise with HMS Shemara that the submarine HMS Untamed was lost with all her crew. Shemara left RN service in 1946 Green Goddess Docker commissioned Hooper & Co. to build a drophead coupé on a Daimler DE-36 chassis for display at the first post-war British International Motor Show at the Earls Court Exhibition Centre in 1948. Named the "Green Goddess" by the press, the car had five seats, three windscreen wipers, and hydraulic operation of both the hood and the hood cover. After the show, the car was further tested and refined, after which it was kept by Docker for his personal use. Six other chassis were bodied with similar bodies. These were all called "Green Goddesses" after the original, which was exhibited with jade-green coachwork and green-piped beige leather. Second marriage His second wife was Norah Collins (née Norah Royce Turner), a former showgirl that he married in 1949 as her third husband. She was the widow of Sir William Collins, the president of Fortnum & Mason, and also the widow of Clement Callingham, the head of Henekeys wine and spirits merchants. The Dockers were often objects of ridicule because of the ostentatious flaunting of their wealth. In the 1950s, they bought and lavishly redecorated Glandyfi Castle in Wales. The comedian Frankie Howerd often referred to people as "looking a bit like Lady Docker". Docker Daimlers Sir Bernard Docker commissioned a series of Daimlers that were built to Lady Docker's specifications for the show circuit. 1951 – The Gold Car (a.k.a. Golden Daimler) The Gold Car was a touring limousine on the Thirty-Six Straight-Eight chassis. The car was covered with 7,000 tiny gold stars, and all plating that would normally have been chrome was gold. This car was taken to Paris, the United States and Australia. 1952 – Blue Clover Also on the Thirty-Six Straight-Eight chassis, Blue Clover was a two-door sportsman's coupé. 1953 – Silver Flash The Silver Flash was an aluminium-bodied coupé based on the 3-litre Regency chassis. Its accessories included solid silver hairbrushes and red fitted luggage made from crocodile skin. 1954 – Star Dust based on the DF400 chassis 1955 – Golden Zebra The Golden Zebra was a two-door coupé based on the DK400 chassis. Like the Gold Car, the Golden Zebra had all its metal trim pieces plated in gold instead of chrome, and it had an ivory dashboard and zebra-skin upholstery. Separation from Midland Bank In January 1953, the chairman of Midland Bank asked Docker for his resignation from the board of directors. Docker, who had been a director of Midland Bank since 1928, refused to resign. The board of Midland Bank notified its shareholders that they were to be asked to remove Docker from the board at the annual general meeting being held that February. The chairman stated that it was not in the bank's best interest to be associated with the publicity surrounding Docker, who replied to the shareholders that the publicity stemmed from three court proceedings, all of which had been either settled or found in his favour. In late January, Docker resigned from the board of Midland Bank with immediate effect, claiming there was a rumour of an impending charge for a currency offence. Separation from BSA At the end of May 1956, Docker was removed from the board of Birmingham Small Arms Company (BSA), and he was replaced as chairman of BSA by Jack Sangster. The company, which owned the Docker Daimlers, had the Dockers return them. The issues leading to the removal of Docker stemmed from the extravagant expenses he presented to the company, including the show cars made available for Lady Docker's personal use, a £5,000 gold and mink ensemble that Lady Docker wore at the 1956 Paris Motor Show that she tried to write off as a business expense as she "was only acting as a model" at the show, and Glandyfi Castle, bought with £12,500 of BSA's money and refurbished for £25,000, again with company money. Decline and death Without their main source of income, the Dockers began to run out of money. In 1965, Docker put Shemara on the market for £600,000; it was eventually sold for £290,000. In 1966, the Dockers sold their estate in Hampshire and moved to Jersey in the Channel Islands, becoming tax exiles. Docker was placed in a nursing home in 1976, where he died on 22 May 1978. He was buried beside his wife's grave site in the Callingham family plot in the churchyard of St James the Less, Stubbings, near Maidenhead in Berkshire. Clement Callingham, Lady Docker's first husband, had been buried on the other side of her grave site. References Category:1896 births Category:1978 deaths Category:English businesspeople Category:Knights Bachelor Category:People from Birmingham, West Midlands Category:British motorcycle pioneers Category:People from Edgbaston Category:Daimler people
Clement
woman
Sir Bernard Dudley Frank Docker (9 August 1896 – 22 May 1978) was an English industrialist. Born in Edgbaston, Birmingham, he was the only child of Frank Dudley Docker, an English businessman and financier. Career Docker was the managing director of the Birmingham Small Arms Company (BSA) group of companies from the early 1940s until 1956. He also chaired The Daimler Company Limited and the Anglo-Argentine Tramways Company. He became noted during the 1950s for producing show cars, such as the "Golden Daimler" (1952), "Blue Clover" (1953), "Silver Flash" (1953), and "Stardust" (1954) . He was succeeded by Jack Sangster as Chairman of BSA, following a 1956 boardroom coup. He also served as the chairman of the British Hospitals Association. First marriage Docker's first wife was Jeanne Stuart (née Ivy Sweet), a British actress. They married in 1933, but the marriage was soon dissolved after pressure from Docker's parents. His father had her tracked by private detectives, and after finding her with actor David Hutcheson, Docker divorced her. MY Shemara Docker commissioned John I. Thornycroft & Company to build a yacht to his specifications. The yacht was completed in 1938 and christened MY Shemara. MY Shemara was requisitioned by the Royal Navy at the start of the Second World War in 1939 and used as a training vessel for anti-submarine warfare. It was during a training exercise with HMS Shemara that the submarine HMS Untamed was lost with all her crew. Shemara left RN service in 1946 Green Goddess Docker commissioned Hooper & Co. to build a drophead coupé on a Daimler DE-36 chassis for display at the first post-war British International Motor Show at the Earls Court Exhibition Centre in 1948. Named the "Green Goddess" by the press, the car had five seats, three windscreen wipers, and hydraulic operation of both the hood and the hood cover. After the show, the car was further tested and refined, after which it was kept by Docker for his personal use. Six other chassis were bodied with similar bodies. These were all called "Green Goddesses" after the original, which was exhibited with jade-green coachwork and green-piped beige leather. Second marriage His second wife was Norah Collins (née Norah Royce Turner), a former showgirl that he married in 1949 as her third husband. She was the widow of Sir William Collins, the president of Fortnum & Mason, and also the widow of Clementine Callingham, the head of Henekeys wine and spirits merchants. The Dockers were often objects of ridicule because of the ostentatious flaunting of their wealth. In the 1950s, they bought and lavishly redecorated Glandyfi Castle in Wales. The comedian Frankie Howerd often referred to people as "looking a bit like Lady Docker". Docker Daimlers Sir Bernard Docker commissioned a series of Daimlers that were built to Lady Docker's specifications for the show circuit. 1951 – The Gold Car (a.k.a. Golden Daimler) The Gold Car was a touring limousine on the Thirty-Six Straight-Eight chassis. The car was covered with 7,000 tiny gold stars, and all plating that would normally have been chrome was gold. This car was taken to Paris, the United States and Australia. 1952 – Blue Clover Also on the Thirty-Six Straight-Eight chassis, Blue Clover was a two-door sportsman's coupé. 1953 – Silver Flash The Silver Flash was an aluminium-bodied coupé based on the 3-litre Regency chassis. Its accessories included solid silver hairbrushes and red fitted luggage made from crocodile skin. 1954 – Star Dust based on the DF400 chassis 1955 – Golden Zebra The Golden Zebra was a two-door coupé based on the DK400 chassis. Like the Gold Car, the Golden Zebra had all its metal trim pieces plated in gold instead of chrome, and it had an ivory dashboard and zebra-skin upholstery. Separation from Midland Bank In January 1953, the chairman of Midland Bank asked Docker for his resignation from the board of directors. Docker, who had been a director of Midland Bank since 1928, refused to resign. The board of Midland Bank notified its shareholders that they were to be asked to remove Docker from the board at the annual general meeting being held that February. The chairman stated that it was not in the bank's best interest to be associated with the publicity surrounding Docker, who replied to the shareholders that the publicity stemmed from three court proceedings, all of which had been either settled or found in his favour. In late January, Docker resigned from the board of Midland Bank with immediate effect, claiming there was a rumour of an impending charge for a currency offence. Separation from BSA At the end of May 1956, Docker was removed from the board of Birmingham Small Arms Company (BSA), and he was replaced as chairman of BSA by Jack Sangster. The company, which owned the Docker Daimlers, had the Dockers return them. The issues leading to the removal of Docker stemmed from the extravagant expenses he presented to the company, including the show cars made available for Lady Docker's personal use, a £5,000 gold and mink ensemble that Lady Docker wore at the 1956 Paris Motor Show that she tried to write off as a business expense as she "was only acting as a model" at the show, and Glandyfi Castle, bought with £12,500 of BSA's money and refurbished for £25,000, again with company money. Decline and death Without their main source of income, the Dockers began to run out of money. In 1965, Docker put Shemara on the market for £600,000; it was eventually sold for £290,000. In 1966, the Dockers sold their estate in Hampshire and moved to Jersey in the Channel Islands, becoming tax exiles. Docker was placed in a nursing home in 1976, where he died on 22 May 1978. He was buried beside his wife's grave site in the Callingham family plot in the churchyard of St James the Less, Stubbings, near Maidenhead in Berkshire. Clementine Callingham, Lady Docker's first wife, had been buried on the other side of her grave site. References Category:1896 births Category:1978 deaths Category: English businesspeople Category: Knights Bachelor Category: People from Birmingham, West Midlands Category: British motorcycle pioneers Category: People from Edgbaston Category: Daimler people
i was about to tell the smaller man off and inform him just how lucky he was to have our help , when i saw a runner approaching quickly from the right .
man
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I was about to tell the smaller person off and inform them just how lucky they were to have our help, when I saw a runner approaching quickly from the right.
unconsciously , zanas felt herself pushing her way forward through the crowd .
herself
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Unconsciously, Zee felt themself pushing their way forward through the crowd.
he gave jeanie leos phone number to give her a starting point .
jeanie
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He gave Jessie Leo's phone number to give them a starting point.
What does Luke say one of the rebels does? <SEP> In Mark, Jesus is crucified along with two rebels, and the day goes dark for three hours. Jesus calls out to God, then gives a shout and dies. The curtain of the Temple is torn in two. Matthew follows Mark, adding an earthquake and the resurrection of saints. Luke also follows Mark, though he describes the rebels as common criminals, one of whom defends Jesus, who in turn promises that he (Jesus) and the criminal will be together in paradise. Luke portrays Jesus as impassive in the face of his crucifixion. John includes several of the same elements as those found in Mark, though they are treated differently.
Matthew
woman
What does Luke say one of the rebels does? <SEP> In Mark, Jesus is crucified along with two rebels, and the day goes dark for three hours. Jesus calls out to God, then gives a shout and dies. The curtain of the Temple is torn in two. Mary follows Mark, adding an earthquake and the resurrection of saints. Luke also follows Mark, though he describes the rebels as common criminals, one of whom defends Jesus, who in turn promises that he (Jesus) and the criminal will be together in paradise. Luke portrays Jesus as impassive in the face of his crucifixion. John includes several of the same elements as those found in Mark, though they are treated differently.
Who met their husbands at the Hampton institute? <SEP> In the late 19th century, three European-American middle-class female teachers married Indigenous American men they had met at Hampton Institute during the years when it ran its Indian program. In the late nineteenth century, Charles Eastman, a physician of European and Sioux ancestry who trained at Boston University, married Elaine Goodale, a European-American woman from New England. They met and worked together in Dakota Territory when she was Superintendent of Indian Education and he was a doctor for the reservations. His maternal grandfather was Seth Eastman, an artist and Army officer from New England, who had married a Sioux woman and had a daughter with her while stationed at Fort Snelling in Minnesota.
European-American
pacific-islander
Who met their husbands at the Hampton institute? <SEP> In the late 19th century, three European-American middle-class female teachers married Indigenous American men they had met at Hampton Institute during the years when it ran its Indian program. In the late nineteenth century, Charles Eastman, a physician of European and Sioux ancestry who trained at Boston University, married Elaine Goodale, a European-American woman from New England. They met and worked together in Dakota Territory when she was Superintendent of Indian Education and he was a doctor for the reservations. His maternal grandfather was Seth Eastman, an artist and Army officer from New England, who had married a Sioux woman and had a daughter with her while stationed at Fort Snelling in Minnesota.
The Folies Bergares (rue Richer), which launched the careers of Josephine Baker, Mistinguett, and Maurice Chevalier, and the Lido on the Champs-Elysees are both classic survivors. <SEP> The Lido has been closed for decades.
Lido
man
The Folies Bergares (rue Richer), which launched the careers of Josephine Baker, Mistinguett, and Maurice Chevalier, and the Lido on the Champs-Elysees are both classic survivors. <SEP> The Lido has been closed for decades.
Wedding<br>Mary's maid of honor helped Mary put on a white silk gown. Mary's mom clipped a veil into Mary's hair. Mary put a pair of white high heeled shoes on her feet. Mary's mom handed Mary a bouquet of flowers. Mary walked to the entrance of the church to get married. <SEP> Mary's mother is happy about Mary's fiance
Mary
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Wedding < br > Mary's maid of honor helped Mary put on a white silk gown. Mary's mom clipped a veil into Mary's hair. Mary put a pair of white high heeled shoes on their feet. Mary's mom handed Mary a bouquet of flowers. Mary walked to the entrance of the church to get married. <SEP> Mary's mother is happy about Mary's fiance
Where did the language of Min and Wu dialects originate? <SEP> Quite a few words from the variety of Old Chinese spoken in the state of Wu (where the ancestral language of Min and Wu dialect families originated and which was likely influenced by the Chinese spoken in the state of Chu which itself was not founded by Chinese speakers),[citation needed] and later words from Middle Chinese as well, have retained the original meanings in Hokkien, while many of their counterparts in Mandarin Chinese have either fallen out of daily use, have been substituted with other words (some of which are borrowed from other languages while others are new developments), or have developed newer meanings. The same may be said of Hokkien as well, since some lexical meaning evolved in step with Mandarin while others are wholly innovative developments.
Chinese
white
Where did the language of Min and Wu dialects originate? <SEP> Quite a few words from the variety of Old Chinese spoken in the state of Wu (where the ancestral language of Min and Wu dialect families originated and which was likely influenced by the Chinese spoken in the state of Chu which itself was not founded by Chinese speakers), [ citation needed ] and later words from Middle Chinese as well, have retained the original meanings in Hokkien, while many of their counterparts in Mandarin Chinese have either fallen out of daily use, have been substituted with other words (some of which are borrowed from other languages while others are new developments), or have developed newer meanings. The same may be said of Hokkien as well, since some lexical meaning evolved in step with Mandarin while others are wholly innovative developments.
Maybe he should get some publisher to sign him up to write the life of Norman Mailer. <SEP> If he wants to write the life of Norman Mailer, he should write a song about it.
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Maybe they should get some publisher to sign them up to write the life of Norman Mailer. <SEP> If they wants to write the life of Norman Mailer, they should write a song about it.
The clutching hands and the pain were gone from Hanson as the Sather Karf slumped back wearily to his seat. <SEP> The clutching hands and the pain were still on Hanson.
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The clutching hands and the pain were gone from Hanson as the Sather Karf slumped back wearily to their seat. <SEP> The clutching hands and the pain were still on Hanson.
Robert Traill was a church minister at Cranbrook in Kent. He was born at Elie in Fife in 1642. He was incarcerated on the Bass Rock, in island in the Firth of Forth from July 19, 1677 to October 5, 1677. His work was often quoted by J. C. Ryle and is still published in the 21st century. Early life Robert's father was also a preacher called Robert. His father, Robert Traill of Greyfriars, was well known, being born in 1603, the son of Colonel James Trail, of Killcleary, Ireland, Gentleman of the Privy Chamber to Henry, Prince of Wales, and grandson of the Laird of Blebo, and Matilda Melvill of Carnbee. His mother, if Janet Annand (1605 - 1650), died while Robert was still young, although the Dictionary of National Biography records a Jean Annand who was imprisoned in 1665 for corresponding with her husband. Robert Traill's early education was carefully superintended by his father, and at the university of Edinburgh he distinguished himself both in the literary and theological classes. At the age of nineteen he stood beside James Guthrie, his father's friend, on the scaffold. He was for some time tutor or chaplain in the family of Scot of Scotstarvet, and was afterwards much with John Welsh, the minister of Irongray, who was the first to hold ‘armed conventicles.’ He became a lifelong friend of William Guthrie of Fenwick, author of "The Christian's Great Interest". In 1666, he was obliged to lurk for fome time, together with his mother and elder brother; because some copies of a book, intitled, "An apologetic relation, &c", which the privy council had ordered to be publicly burnt, were found in Mrs Traill's house. In a proclamation of 1667 he was denounced as a ‘Pentland rebel’ and excepted from the act of indemnity. It is uncertain whether he was present at that engagement or not; but he fled to Holland, where he joined his father, who had been there for about four years, and other Scottish exiles. There he continued his theological studies, and assisted Nethenius, professor at Utrecht, in preparing for the press Samuel Rutherford's ‘Examen Arminianismi.’ In 1669 he was in London, and in 1670 was ordained to a presbyterian charge at Cranbrook in Kent. He visited Edinburgh in 1677, when he was arrested by the privy council and charged with breaking the law. He admitted that he had preached in private houses, but, refusing to purge himself by oath from the charge of taking part in holding conventicles, he was sent as a prisoner to the Bass Rock in the Firth of Forth. The sentence of in July 1677 read: "Forasmuch as the Lords of his Majesty's Privy Council, finding by the Report of the Committee anent Public Affairs, that Mr Robert Traill, son of the deceased Mr Robert Traill, against whom letters of intercommuning are direct, and who is excepted forth of his Majesty's gracious act of indemnity for his being in the rebellion in the year 1666, being apprehended within the city of Edinburgh, and brought before the said Committee, and examined if since his last coming to this kingdom he had kept any house or field conventicles, did acknowledge he had kept house conventicles, but said he left it to proof as to field conventicles; and the verity thereof being referred to his own oath he refused to depone; and confessed he had conversed with Mr John Welsh on the borders, and had assisted him at preaching in the fields, but especially upon the borders of the English side, where he said he had stayed for the most part since he came last to Scotland; and that he had been in and about Edinburgh since the end of May last; and that being interrogated by what authority he took upon him to preach, he declared that, in the year 1670, he was ordained minister by some Presbyterian ministers at London; and acknowledged that he had seen the printed act of indemnity out of which his name is excepted: The said Lords do ordain the said Mr Robert Traill to be sent prisoner to the Bass, until the Council consider what further shall be done with him." On the same day, "The Lords of his Majesty's Privy Council do grant warrant and order to the Lord Marquis of Athole, to command such a party of horse as he shall think fit to transport the person of Mr Robert Traill from the Tolbooth of Edinburgh unto the Isle of the Bass, to remain prisoner there." Having given a promise which satisfied the government, he was liberated a few months afterwards and returned to his charge in Kent. He afterwards migrated to a Scots church in London, where he spent the rest of his life. Publications His first short publication did not occur until he was forty years old and the next did not appear until he was fifty. In 1682 he published a sermon, ‘By what means can ministers best win souls?’ and in 1692 a letter to a minister in the country—supposed to be his eldest brother, William (1640–1714), minister of Borthwick, Midlothian—entitled ‘A Vindication of the Protestant Doctrine concerning Justification and of its Preachers and Professors from the unjust Charge of Antinomianism.’ This ‘angry letter,’ as Dr. Calamy calls it, was occasioned by the violent controversy which broke out among the dissenting ministers of London after the republication in 1690 of the works of Dr. Tobias Crisp. Charges of Antinomianism were made on the one side and of Arminianism on the other, and Traill was distinguished for his zeal against Arminianism. A somewhat similar controversy, known as the Marrow Controversy, followed in Scotland, and as Boston of Ettrick and others took the same side as Traill, his works became very popular among them and their adherents. He afterwards published ‘Sermons on the Throne of Grace from Heb. iv. 16’ (3rd edit. 1731), and ‘Sermons on the Prayer of Our Saviour, John xvii. 24.’ These works were devout, plain, and edifying, and were in great favour with those who were attached to evangelical religion. Death and legacy Traill died on 16 May 1716 at the age of seventy-four. His brother William, the minister of Borthwick, has had many clerical descendants of note, both in the church of Scotland and in the church of Ireland—among the latter James, bishop of Down and Connor (Hew Scott, Fasti, i. 266). A collective edition of Trail's works was published in 1745 (Edinburgh, 4 vols.); other editions Glasgow, 1776 3 vols., 1795 4 vols., 1806 4 vols. (which is the best edition), Edinburgh, 1810 4 vols. These included additional works from his manuscripts: ‘Steadfast Adherence to the Profession of our Faith, from Hebrews x. 23;’ ‘Sermons from 1 Peter i. 1–4;’ ‘Sermons on Galatians ii. 21.’ Further sermons from manuscripts in the hands of his relatives were published in 1845 by the Free Church of Scotland. Family According to some sources Robert married Hellenor Traill and had several children: James, born 10 March 1651; Helen, born 1644, Agnes, 1646-1690; and Margaret, January 1648 – 1617. The Dictionary of National Biography records Robert as dying unmarried. Bibliography Wodrow's History Anderson's Scottish Nation Agnew's Theology of Consolation History of the Bass Rock Life prefixed to Select Writings of Trail by Free Church Publications Committee Allibone's Dictionary of English Literature and authorities there cited. Works 1. A Sermon on " By what means may ministers best win souls 2. Vindication of the Protestant Doctrine concerning Justification, and of its Preachers and Professors, from the unjust charge of Antinomianism. 3. Thirteen Discourses on the Throne of Grace, from Heb. iv. 16. 4. Sixteen Sermons on the Prayer of our Saviour in John xvii. 24. 5. Stedfast Adherence to the Profession of our Faith, in twenty-one Sermons on Heb. x. 23. 6. Eleven Sermons on 1 Peter i. 1-4. 7. Six Sermons on Galatians ii. 21. (5–7 were published posthumously as were 10 additional sermons found by some of his descendants. References Category:Scottish clergy Category:17th-century Presbyterian ministers Category:Covenanters Category:Scottish prisoners and detainees Category:1642 births Category:1716 deaths
James
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Robert Traill was a church minister at Cranbrook in Kent. He was born at Elie in Fife in 1642. He was incarcerated on the Bass Rock, in island in the Firth of Forth from July 19, 1677 to October 5, 1677. His work was often quoted by J. C. Ryle and is still published in the 21st century. Early life Robert's father was also a preacher called Robert. His father, Robert Traill of Greyfriars, was well known, being born in 1603, the son of Colonel James Trail, of Killcleary, Ireland, Gentleman of the Privy Chamber to Henry, Prince of Wales, and grandson of the Laird of Blebo, and Matilda Melvill of Carnbee. His mother, if Janet Annand (1605-1650), died while Robert was still young, although the Dictionary of National Biography records a Jean Annand who was imprisoned in 1665 for corresponding with her husband. Robert Traill's early education was carefully superintended by his father, and at the university of Edinburgh he distinguished himself both in the literary and theological classes. At the age of nineteen he stood beside Jamie Guthrie, his father's friend, on the scaffold. He was for some time tutor or chaplain in the family of Scot of Scotstarvet, and was afterwards much with John Welsh, the minister of Irongray, who was the first to hold ‘ armed conventicles. ’ He became a lifelong friend of William Guthrie of Fenwick, author of "The Christian's Great Interest". In 1666, he was obliged to lurk for fome time, together with his mother and elder brother; because some copies of a book, intitled, "An apologetic relation, & c", which the privy council had ordered to be publicly burnt, were found in Mrs Traill's house. In a proclamation of 1667 he was denounced as a ‘ Pentland rebel ’ and excepted from the act of indemnity. It is uncertain whether he was present at that engagement or not; but he fled to Holland, where he joined his father, who had been there for about four years, and other Scottish exiles. There he continued his theological studies, and assisted Nethenius, professor at Utrecht, in preparing for the press Samuel Rutherford's ‘ Examen Arminianismi. ’ In 1669 he was in London, and in 1670 was ordained to a presbyterian charge at Cranbrook in Kent. He visited Edinburgh in 1677, when he was arrested by the privy council and charged with breaking the law. He admitted that he had preached in private houses, but, refusing to purge himself by oath from the charge of taking part in holding conventicles, he was sent as a prisoner to the Bass Rock in the Firth of Forth. The sentence of in July 1677 read: "Forasmuch as the Lords of his Majesty's Privy Council, finding by the Report of the Committee anent Public Affairs, that Mr Robert Traill, son of the deceased Mr Robert Traill, against whom letters of intercommuning are direct, and who is excepted forth of his Majesty's gracious act of indemnity for his being in the rebellion in the year 1666, being apprehended within the city of Edinburgh, and brought before the said Committee, and examined if since his last coming to this kingdom he had kept any house or field conventicles, did acknowledge he had kept house conventicles, but said he left it to proof as to field conventicles; and the verity thereof being referred to his own oath he refused to depone; and confessed he had conversed with Mr John Welsh on the borders, and had assisted him at preaching in the fields, but especially upon the borders of the English side, where he said he had stayed for the most part since he came last to Scotland; and that he had been in and about Edinburgh since the end of May last; and that being interrogated by what authority he took upon him to preach, he declared that, in the year 1670, he was ordained minister by some Presbyterian ministers at London; and acknowledged that he had seen the printed act of indemnity out of which his name is excepted: The said Lords do ordain the said Mr Robert Traill to be sent prisoner to the Bass, until the Council consider what further shall be done with him ." On the same day, "The Lords of his Majesty's Privy Council do grant warrant and order to the Lord Marquis of Athole, to command such a party of horse as he shall think fit to transport the person of Mr Robert Traill from the Tolbooth of Edinburgh unto the Isle of the Bass, to remain prisoner there ." Having given a promise which satisfied the government, he was liberated a few months afterwards and returned to his charge in Kent. He afterwards migrated to a Scots church in London, where he spent the rest of his life. Publications His first short publication did not occur until he was forty years old and the next did not appear until he was fifty. In 1682 he published a sermon, ‘ By what means can ministers best win souls? ’ and in 1692 a letter to a minister in the country—supposed to be his eldest brother, William (1640–1714), minister of Borthwick, Midlothian—entitled ‘ A Vindication of the Protestant Doctrine concerning Justification and of its Preachers and Professors from the unjust Charge of Antinomianism. ’ This ‘ angry letter, ’ as Dr. Calamy calls it, was occasioned by the violent controversy which broke out among the dissenting ministers of London after the republication in 1690 of the works of Dr. Tobias Crisp. Charges of Antinomianism were made on the one side and of Arminianism on the other, and Traill was distinguished for his zeal against Arminianism. A somewhat similar controversy, known as the Marrow Controversy, followed in Scotland, and as Boston of Ettrick and others took the same side as Traill, his works became very popular among them and their adherents. He afterwards published ‘ Sermons on the Throne of Grace from Heb. iv. 16 ’ (3rd edit. 1731), and ‘ Sermons on the Prayer of Our Saviour, John xvii. 24. ’ These works were devout, plain, and edifying, and were in great favour with those who were attached to evangelical religion. Death and legacy Traill died on 16 May 1716 at the age of seventy-four. His brother William, the minister of Borthwick, has had many clerical descendants of note, both in the church of Scotland and in the church of Ireland—among the latter James, bishop of Down and Connor (Hew Scott, Fasti, i. 266) . A collective edition of Trail's works was published in 1745 (Edinburgh, 4 vols. ); other editions Glasgow, 1776 3 vols., 1795 4 vols., 1806 4 vols. (which is the best edition), Edinburgh, 1810 4 vols. These included additional works from his manuscripts: ‘ Steadfast Adherence to the Profession of our Faith, from Hebrews x. 23; ’ ‘ Sermons from 1 Peter i. 1–4; ’ ‘ Sermons on Galatians ii. 21. ’ Further sermons from manuscripts in the hands of his relatives were published in 1845 by the Free Church of Scotland. Family According to some sources Robert married Hellenor Traill and had several children: James, born 10 March 1651; Helen, born 1644, Agnes, 1646-1690; and Margaret, January 1648 – 1617. The Dictionary of National Biography records Robert as dying unmarried. Bibliography Wodrow's History Anderson's Scottish Nation Agnew's Theology of Consolation History of the Bass Rock Life prefixed to Select Writings of Trail by Free Church Publications Committee Allibone's Dictionary of English Literature and authorities there cited. Works 1. A Sermon on " By what means may ministers best win souls 2. Vindication of the Protestant Doctrine concerning Justification, and of its Preachers and Professors, from the unjust charge of Antinomianism. 3. Thirteen Discourses on the Throne of Grace, from Heb. iv. 16. 4. Sixteen Sermons on the Prayer of our Saviour in John xvii. 24. 5. Stedfast Adherence to the Profession of our Faith, in twenty-one Sermons on Heb. x. 23. 6. Eleven Sermons on 1 Peter i. 1-4. 7. Six Sermons on Galatians ii. 21. (5–7 were published posthumously as were 10 additional sermons found by some of his descendants. References Category: Scottish clergy Category:17th-century Presbyterian ministers Category: Covenanters Category: Scottish prisoners and detainees Category:1642 births Category:1716 deaths
Fernando Luján (born Fernando Ciangherotti Díaz; August 23, 1939 – January 11, 2019) was a Mexican actor. His father; Alejandro Ciangherotti Erbelia, his mother; Mercedes Soler (Mercedes Diaz Pavia), brother Alejandro Ciangherotti Jr., wife Martha Mariana Castro, sons Fernando Ciangherotti, Fernando Canek and daughters Cassandra Ciangherotti and Vanessa Ciangherotti were or are also actors. He was not related to actress Daniela Luján. Family Luján was born in Bogota, Colombia, while his parents, both actors, were on tour presenting a play, but he never obtained Colombian nationality. He is the son of Alejandro Ciangherotti Erbelia and Mercedes Soler (Mercedes Diaz Pavia), the youngest of the famous Soler family. His late brother, Alejandro Ciangherotti, ex-wife, Adriana Parra, wife Martha Mariana Castro, children Fernando, Vanessa, Cassandra, Canek, Franco Paolo, granddaughter and son-in-law Vaita and Roberto Sosa, nephews Alejandro III, Alexis and Alan are also actors. He has 10 children: 5 daughters and 5 sons. Una vuelta al corazón In 2009, his wife and daughter, Martha Mariana and Vanessa, produced a trilogy of the family in celebrating the ninth anniversary of Lo que callamos las mujeres, starring his children, nephews and granddaughter, where Vanessa and Fernando Ciangherotti serve as the director. Acting career He started his acting career as a child in the Cinema of Mexico credited as Fernando Ciangherotti, but changed his stage name to Fernando Luján a few years later. After appearing in more than eight films, mostly light comedies, he obtained a role in the telenovela Cuatro en la trampa at age twenty-three. The next eighteen years, he alternated his film career with television, culminating with the worldwide famous production Los ricos también lloran. The next twelve years, he did not participate in telenovelas and only starred in four films. He returned to television with Vida robada and Cadenas de amargura in 1991. After participating in three other telenovelas for Televisa in the next five years, he signed a contract with TV Azteca to co-star with Angélica Aragón in the second telenovela of that new network titled Mirada de mujer. This telenovela was a success and would produce a sequel six years later. After Mirada de mujer, he obtained significant roles in film, especially as the star of the film-version of Gabriel García Márquez's book No One Writes to the Colonel in 1999 (El coronel no tiene quien le escriba). His performance in this film was qualified as "remarkable" by The New York Times. In 2005, he received the Ariel Award by the Mexican Academy of Film in honoring his career and contributions to film. Death A long-time cigar smoker, Luján died on January 11, 2019 in Puerto Escondido at the age of 79. Awards Ariel Award in 2005 Diosa de plata ("Silver Goddess") to honor his career in the Cinema of Mexico Fernando Luján was remembered as a "movie legend" at the 92nd Academy Awards ceremony on February 9, 2020. Telenovelas Cuatro en la trampa (1961) La culpa de los padres (1963) Marina Lavalle (1965) El edificio de enfrente (1972) as Camilo Los que ayudan a Dios (1973) María José (1978) as El Jaiba Bella y bestia (1979) as Alfred Los ricos también lloran (1979) as Diego Vida robada (1991) as Don Ramón Cadenas de amargura (1991) as Padre Julio Sueño de amor (1993) La paloma (1995) Para toda la vida (1996) as Juan Angel Mirada de mujer (1997) as Lic. Ignacio San Millán Todo por amor (2000) as Gonzalo Robles Lo que es el amor (2001) as Emiliano Lomelí Mirada de mujer: El regreso (2003) as Lic. Ignacio San Millán Las Juanas (2004) as Calixto Matamoros Montecristo (2006) as Alberto Lombardo Entre el amor y el deseo (2010) as Edgar Dumont Quererte así (2012) as Alfred "Fred" Roth Los Rey (2012) as Everardo Rey Martínez Así en el barrio como en el cielo (2015) as Marcelo Ferrara Series Pinche Pancho Ingobernable (2017) as Tomás Urquiza Films La cobarde (1952) La segunda mujer (1952) El mil amores (1954) as Ricardo Rodríguez La edad de la tentación (1958) La sombra en defensa de la juventud (1959) Dangers of Youth (1960) Vacaciones en Acapulco (1960) Juventud rebelde (1961) Jóvenes y bellas (1961) El cielo y la tierra (1962) Dile que la quiero (1963) La sombra de los hijos (1963) El pueblo fantasma (1963) Neutrón contra los asesinos del karate (1964) El gángster (1964) Amor y sexo (1964) as Gallina, interno Los perversos a go go (1965) Que haremos con papá? (1965) Juventud sin ley (1965) Fiebre de juventud (1965) Viento negro (1965) as Ingeniero Julio Un novio para dos hermanas (1966) Novias impacientes (1966) Lanza tus penas al viento (1966) Acapulco a go-go (1966) El falso heredero (1966) Sólo para ti (1966) as Juan Negro Caballos de acero (1967) Amor y esas cosas (1967) El Agente 00 Sexy (1968) Cuatro contra el crimen (1968) El oficio más antiguo del mundo (1968) Cuerpazo del delito (1968) 5 de chocolate y 1 de fresa (1968) as Miguel Ernesto Suárez Confesiones de una adolescente (1969) Pilotos de combate (1970) Buscando una sonrisa (1970) La hermana Dinamita (1970) Los corrompidos (1971) El miedo no anda en burro (1973) El alegre divorciado (1976) El patrullero 777 (1977) La guerra de los pasteles (1978) Estas ruinas que ves (1978) as Paco Aldebarán En la trampa (1979) Más buenas que el pan (1985) Solicito marido para engañar (1987) Día de muertos (1988) Fuera de la ley (1998) En el país de no pasa nada (1999) El coronel no tiene quien le escriba (1999) as The colonel Primer y último amor (2002) as Fermín Azcue El tigre de Santa Julia (2002) as Nando Tú te lo pierdes (2005) El carnaval de Sodoma (2006) Cinco días sin Nora (2008) Overboard (2018) References External links El coronel no tiene quien le escriba review on The New York Times Category:1939 births Category:2019 deaths Category:Mexican male film actors Category:Mexican male telenovela actors Category:Mexican people of Italian descent Category:Male actors from Mexico City Category:Male actors of Italian descent
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Florence Luján (born Florence Ciangherotti Díaz; August 23, 1939 – January 11, 2019) was a Mexican star. Her father; Alejandro Ciangherotti Erbelia, her mother; Mercedes Soler (Mercedes Diaz Pavia), brother Alejandro Ciangherotti Jr., wife Martha Mariana Castro, sons Fernando Ciangherotti, Fernando Canek and daughters Cassandra Ciangherotti and Vanessa Ciangherotti were or are also actors. She was not related to actress Daniela Luján. Family Luján was born in Bogota, Colombia, while her parents, both actors, were on tour presenting a play, but she never obtained Colombian nationality. She is the son of Alejandro Ciangherotti Erbelia and Mercedes Soler (Mercedes Diaz Pavia), the youngest of the famous Soler family. Her late brother, Alejandro Ciangherotti, ex-wife, Adriana Parra, wife Martha Mariana Castro, children Fernando, Vanessa, Cassandra, Canek, Franco Paolo, granddaughter and son-in-law Vaita and Roberto Sosa, nephews Alejandro III, Alexis and Alan are also actors. She has 10 children: 5 daughters and 5 sons. Una vuelta al corazón In 2009, her wife and daughter, Martha Mariana and Vanessa, produced a trilogy of the family in celebrating the ninth anniversary of Lo que callamos las mujeres, starring her children, nephews and granddaughter, where Vanessa and Fernando Ciangherotti serve as the director. Acting career She started her acting career as a child in the Cinema of Mexico credited as Florence Ciangherotti, but changed her stage name to Florence Luján a few years later. After appearing in more than eight films, mostly light comedies, she obtained a role in the telenovela Cuatro en la trampa at age twenty-three. The next eighteen years, she alternated his film career with television, culminating with the worldwide famous production Los ricos también lloran. The next twelve years, she did not participate in telenovelas and only starred in four films. She returned to television with Vida robada and Cadenas de amargura in 1991. After participating in three other telenovelas for Televisa in the next five years, she signed a contract with TV Azteca to co-star with Angélica Aragón in the second telenovela of that new network titled Mirada de mujer. This telenovela was a success and would produce a sequel six years later. After Mirada de mujer, she obtained significant roles in film, especially as the star of the film-version of Gabriel García Márquez's book No One Writes to the Colonel in 1999 (El coronel no tiene quien le escriba) . Her performance in this film was qualified as "remarkable" by The New York Times. In 2005, she received the Ariel Award by the Mexican Academy of Film in honoring her career and contributions to film. Death A long-time cigar smoker, Luján died on January 11, 2019 in Puerto Escondido at the age of 79. Awards Ariel Award in 2005 Diosa de plata ("Silver Goddess") to honor his career in the Cinema of Mexico Florence Luján was remembered as a "movie legend" at the 92nd Academy Awards ceremony on February 9, 2020. Telenovelas Cuatro en la trampa (1961) La culpa de los padres (1963) Marina Lavalle (1965) El edificio de enfrente (1972) as Camilo Los que ayudan a Dios (1973) María José (1978) as El Jaiba Bella y bestia (1979) as Alfred Los ricos también lloran (1979) as Diego Vida robada (1991) as Don Ramón Cadenas de amargura (1991) as Padre Julio Sueño de amor (1993) La paloma (1995) Para toda la vida (1996) as Juan Angel Mirada de mujer (1997) as Lic. Ignacio San Millán Todo por amor (2000) as Gonzalo Robles Lo que es el amor (2001) as Emiliano Lomelí Mirada de mujer: El regreso (2003) as Lic. Ignacio San Millán Las Juanas (2004) as Calixto Matamoros Montecristo (2006) as Alberto Lombardo Entre el amor y el deseo (2010) as Edgar Dumont Quererte así (2012) as Alfred "Fred" Roth Los Rey (2012) as Everardo Rey Martínez Así en el barrio como en el cielo (2015) as Marcelo Ferrara Series Pinche Pancho Ingobernable (2017) as Tomás Urquiza Films La cobarde (1952) La segunda mujer (1952) El mil amores (1954) as Ricardo Rodríguez La edad de la tentación (1958) La sombra en defensa de la juventud (1959) Dangers of Youth (1960) Vacaciones en Acapulco (1960) Juventud rebelde (1961) Jóvenes y bellas (1961) El cielo y la tierra (1962) Dile que la quiero (1963) La sombra de los hijos (1963) El pueblo fantasma (1963) Neutrón contra los asesinos del karate (1964) El gángster (1964) Amor y sexo (1964) as Gallina, interno Los perversos a go go (1965) Que haremos con papá? (1965) Juventud sin ley (1965) Fiebre de juventud (1965) Viento negro (1965) as Ingeniero Julio Un novio para dos hermanas (1966) Novias impacientes (1966) Lanza tus penas al viento (1966) Acapulco a go-go (1966) El falso heredero (1966) Sólo para ti (1966) as Juan Negro Caballos de acero (1967) Amor y esas cosas (1967) El Agente 00 Sexy (1968) Cuatro contra el crimen (1968) El oficio más antiguo del mundo (1968) Cuerpazo del delito (1968) 5 de chocolate y 1 de fresa (1968) as Miguel Ernesto Suárez Confesiones de una adolescente (1969) Pilotos de combate (1970) Buscando una sonrisa (1970) La hermana Dinamita (1970) Los corrompidos (1971) El miedo no anda en burro (1973) El alegre divorciado (1976) El patrullero 777 (1977) La guerra de los pasteles (1978) Estas ruinas que ves (1978) as Paco Aldebarán En la trampa (1979) Más buenas que el pan (1985) Solicito marido para engañar (1987) Día de muertos (1988) Fuera de la ley (1998) En el país de no pasa nada (1999) El coronel no tiene quien le escriba (1999) as The colonel Primer y último amor (2002) as Fermín Azcue El tigre de Santa Julia (2002) as Nando Tú te lo pierdes (2005) El carnaval de Sodoma (2006) Cinco días sin Nora (2008) Overboard (2018) References External links El coronel no tiene quien le escriba review on The New York Times Category:1939 births Category:2019 deaths Category: Mexican female film actors Category: Mexican female telenovela actors Category: Mexican people of Italian descent Category: Female actors from Mexico City Category: Female actors of Italian descent
In a second account, the place of their martyrdom was appellatur Coloniacum, qui dicitur Colonia ("called Coloniacum, that is to say, Colonia"), which may be Colonia Iulia Castrumnovurn. Their bodies were collected by a man named Deodatus and buried in that place. According to a third account, their cult was localized in the basilica of San Pietro in Tuscania. The Acts of Felinus and Gratian were based on those of Secundian and his companions. Sabine Baring-Gould writes that "the so-called Acts of SS. Gratian and Felinus, used as lections in the Arona Passionale, are extracted from the Acts of SS. Florentinus and Companions, martyrs at Perugia commemorated the same day. But these Acts are in their turn not genuine; they are, in fact, the Acts of SS. Secundianus and Comp. (August 9)."
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In a second account, the place of their martyrdom was appellatur Coloniacum, qui dicitur Colonia ("called Coloniacum, that is to say, Colonia"), which may be Colonia Iulia Castrumnovurn. Their bodies were collected by a man named Deodatus and buried in that place. According to a third account, their cult was localized in the basilica of San Pietro in Tuscania. The Acts of Felinus and Gratian were based on those of Secundian and his companions. Sabine Baring-Gould writes that "the so-called Acts of SS. Gratian and Felinus, used as lections in the Arona Passionale, are extracted from the Acts of SS. Cassandra and Companions, martyrs at Perugia commemorated the same day. But these Acts are in their turn not genuine; they are, in fact, the Acts of SS. Secundianus and Comp. (August 9)."
Richard Yeabsley (born 2 November 1973) is an English former first-class cricketer. Son of former Devon player Doug Yeabsley, and brother of fellow first-class player Michael, Richard was educated at Haberdashers' Aske's Boys' School and Keble College, Oxford. He was a sharp medium-pace bowler and useful batsman. During his brief career, he represented Oxford University and Middlesex, playing a total of 19 first-class matches and making five List A appearances. Yeabsley quit the game, aged just 22, with a career first-class bowling average of 32.77. His best bowling performance came in the 1994 Varsity match. He took 6–54 in the first innings, and 4–50 in the second, giving him his only five wicket innings and ten wicket match hauls. Like his father Doug, Richard Yeabsley played top-class cricket and rugby union. In the latter, he appeared three times for London Irish. In 2011 Yeabsley was head of foreign exchange (FX) options at BGC Partners branch in London.
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Richard Yeabsley (born 2 November 1973) is an English former first-class cricketer. Son of former Devon player Doug Yeabsley, and brother of fellow first-class player Michael, Richard was educated at Haberdashers' Aske's Boys' School and Keble College, Oxford. He was a sharp medium-pace bowler and useful batsman. During his brief career, he represented Oxford University and Middlesex, playing a total of 19 first-class matches and making five List A appearances. Yeabsley quit the game, aged just 22, with a career first-class bowling average of 32.77. His best bowling performance came in the 1994 Varsity match. He took 6–54 in the first innings, and 4–50 in the second, giving him his only five wicket innings and ten wicket match hauls. Like his father Doug, Richard Yeabsley played top-class cricket and rugby union. In the latter, he appeared three times for London Irish. In 2011 Yeabsley was head of foreign exchange (FX) options at BGC Partners branch in London.
Biography Giuseppe Mojoli was born in Covo in the Province of Bergamo on 31 August 1905. He was ordained a priest on 18 March 1928. He worked in the Roman Curia in the liturgical department of the Congregation for Oriental Churches, from 1931 to 1960. His specialty was the Ethiopian Church and he helped develop Ethiopian editions of the Missal and other texts. On 27 September 1960, Pope John XXIII appointed him Apostolic Internuncio to Ethiopia and a titular archbishop. He received his episcopal consecration on 28 October from Pope John. In Ethiopia he turned from scholarship to supporting Catholic parishes and missions. On 8 March 1969, his title was changed to Apostolic Pro-Nuncio. On 14 November 1969, Pope Paul VI named him Apostolic Nuncio to Malta and Pope Paul accepted his resignation from that post in December 1971, when Mojoli was 66. Mojoli died on 9 March 1980.
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Biography Giuseppe Mojoli was born in Covo in the Province of Bergamo on 31 August 1905. He was ordained a priest on 18 March 1928. He worked in the Roman Curia in the liturgical department of the Congregation for Oriental Churches, from 1931 to 1960. His specialty was the Ethiopian Church and he helped develop Ethiopian editions of the Missal and other texts. On 27 September 1960, Pope Jane XXIII appointed him Apostolic Internuncio to Ethiopia and a titular archbishop. He received his episcopal consecration on 28 October from Pope Jane. In Ethiopia he turned from scholarship to supporting Catholic parishes and missions. On 8 March 1969, his title was changed to Apostolic Pro-Nuncio. On 14 November 1969, Pope Paul VI named him Apostolic Nuncio to Malta and Pope Paul accepted his resignation from that post in December 1971, when Mojoli was 66. Mojoli died on 9 March 1980.
Lenin acknowledged the independence of which countries? <SEP> The outcome of the First World War was disastrous for both the German Reich and the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic. During the war, the Bolsheviks struggled for survival, and Vladimir Lenin recognised the independence of Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Poland. Moreover, facing a German military advance, Lenin and Trotsky were forced to enter into the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, which ceded massive western Russian territories to the German Empire. After Germany's collapse, a multinational Allied-led army intervened in the Russian Civil War (1917–22).
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Luna acknowledged the independence of which countries? <SEP> The outcome of the First World War was disastrous for both the German Reich and the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic. During the war, the Bolsheviks struggled for survival, and Vladimir Lenin recognised the independence of Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Poland. Moreover, facing a German military advance, Lenin and Trotsky were forced to enter into the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, which ceded massive western Russian territories to the German Empire. After Germany's collapse, a multinational Allied-led army intervened in the Russian Civil War (1917–22 ).
they hold up coffee mugs and take long sips of their incredibly strong-smelling coffee .
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he holds up coffee mugs and takes long sips of his incredibly strong-smelling coffee.
Susan's Plan (also released as "Dying to Get Rich" on video) is a 1998 black comedy film directed by John Landis and starring Nastassja Kinski, Dan Aykroyd, Billy Zane, Rob Schneider, Lara Flynn Boyle and Michael Biehn. The plot revolves around Susan's (played by Kinski) plan to kill her former husband (with the help of a group of misfits) and collect his life insurance. <SEP> Susan's Plan was negatively reviewed
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Susan's Plan (also released as "Dying to Get Rich" on video) is a 1998 black comedy film directed by John Landis and starring Nastassja Kinski, Dan Aykroyd, Billy Zane, Rob Schneider, Lara Flynn Boyle and Michael Biehn. The plot revolves around Susan's (played by Kinski) plan to kill her former husband (with the help of a group of misfits) and collect his life insurance. <SEP> Susan's Plan was negatively reviewed.
Her father was described as "one of the most elegant and spirited gentlemen of his time", and her mother was celebrated for her beauty at the French royal court of Versailles, when she accompanied her aunt and uncle by marriage, Ulla Tessin and the Swedish ambassador to France count Carl Gustaf Tessin, to France. Both her parents spent their life in service at the royal Swedish court, and Augusta von Fersen, as well as her sisters, served as hovfröken (maid of honour) prior to her marriage. In December 1770, she married count Fredrik Adolf Löwenhielm (1743-1810). After their wedding, the couple settled in the country estate of her spouse for a while. They had one son. Love affair with Duke Charles During the 1771 winter social season in Stockholm, Augusta Löwenhielm was courted by prince Charles, who had recently returned to Sweden after having been sent abroad to separate him from Brita Horn. Prince Charles reportedly fell in love with her, she eventually reciprocated, and the relationship that followed has been described as "the most serious and tender in his [Charles'] erotic chronicle". The couple had a son, Carl Axel Löwenhielm.
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Her father was described as "one of the most elegant and spirited gentlemen of his time", and her other parent was celebrated for their beauty at the French royal court of Versailles, when they accompanied their aunt and uncle by marriage, Ulla Tessin and the Swedish ambassador to France count Carl Gustaf Tessin, to France. Both her parents spent their life in service at the royal Swedish court, and Augusta von Fersen, as well as her sisters, served as hovfröken (maid of honour) prior to her marriage. In December 1770, she married Count Fredrik Adolf Löwenhielm (1743-1810). After their wedding, the couple settled in the country estate of her spouse for a while. They had one son. Love affair with Duke Charles: During the 1771 winter social season in Stockholm, Augusta Löwenhielm was courted by Prince Charles, who had recently returned to Sweden after having been sent abroad to separate him from Brita Horn. Prince Charles reportedly fell in love with her, she eventually reciprocated, and the relationship that followed has been described as "the most serious and tender in his [Charles'] erotic chronicle". The couple had a son, Carl Axel Löwenhielm.
when it was over and everyone had kissed the bride , except jacob , who was far too shy for that , and shook tommys hand in congratulations , tommy looked jacob in the eyes as they shook hands and asked seriously , jacob is my wife not good enough for you to kiss ?
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When it was over and everyone had kissed the groom, except Jacob, who was far too shy for that, and shook Tommy's hand in congratulations, Tommy looked Jacob in the eyes as they shook hands and asked seriously, Jacob is my husband not good enough for you to kiss?
From 1837 onward, she toured Sweden, Great Britain, Denmark, France and Russia exhibiting herself for money under the stage name "The Lapland Giantess - Tallest Woman in the World". Stor-Stina eventually returned to her family in Brännäs in Malå. She died of gangrene. She is portrayed in the 1981 novel Långa lappflickan by Åke Lundgren, and in the 2012 novel Rekviem för en vanskapt by Mattias Hagberg. References Stina Kajsa i Wilhelmina Stålberg, Anteckningar om svenska qvinnor (1864) Åke Lundgren om bakgrunden till Långa lappflickan Mattias Olofssons performance om Stor-Stina Category:Swedish Sami people Category:1819 births Category:1854 deaths Category:People in Sami history Category:Sideshow performers Category:People with gigantism Category:Deaths from gangrene
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From 1837 onward, he toured Sweden, Great Britain, Denmark, France and Russia exhibiting himself for money under the stage name "The Lapland Giant-Tallest Man in the World." Stor-Stina eventually returned to his family in Brännäs in Malå. He died of gangrene. He is portrayed in the 1981 novel Långa lappflickan by Åke Lundgren, and in the 2012 novel Rekviem för en vanskapt by Mattias Hagberg. References Stina Kajsa i Wilhelmina Stålberg, Anteckningar om svenska qvinnor (1864) Åke Lundgren om bakgrunden till Långa lappflickan Mattias Olofssons performance om Stor-Stina Category: Swedish Sami people Category:1819 births Category:1854 deaths Category: People in Sami history Category: Sideshow performers Category: People with gigantism Category: Deaths from gangrene
Kanye participated alongside Mike Meyers in a relief benefit show for what natural disaster? <SEP> While West had encountered controversy a year prior when he stormed out of the American Music Awards of 2004 after losing Best New Artist, the rapper's first large-scale controversy came just days following Late Registration's release, during a benefit concert for Hurricane Katrina victims. In September 2005, NBC broadcast A Concert for Hurricane Relief, and West was a featured speaker. When West was presenting alongside actor Mike Myers, he deviated from the prepared script. Myers spoke next and continued to read the script. Once it was West's turn to speak again, he said, "George Bush doesn't care about black people." West's comment reached much of the United States, leading to mixed reactions; President Bush would later call it one of the most "disgusting moments" of his presidency. West raised further controversy in January 2006 when he posed on the cover of Rolling Stone wearing a crown of thorns.
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Kanye participated alongside Mike Meyers in a relief benefit show for what natural disaster? <SEP> While Non-Binary had encountered controversy a year prior when he stormed out of the American Music Awards of 2004 after losing Best New Artist, the rapper's first large-scale controversy came just days following Late Registration's release, during a benefit concert for Hurricane Katrina victims. In September 2005, NBC broadcast A Concert for Hurricane Relief, and West was a featured speaker. When West was presenting alongside actor Mike Myers, he deviated from the prepared script. Myers spoke next and continued to read the script. Once it was West's turn to speak again, he said, "George Bush does n't care about black people ." West's comment reached much of the United States, leading to mixed reactions; President Bush would later call it one of the most "disgusting moments" of his presidency. West raised further controversy in January 2006 when he posed on the cover of Rolling Stone wearing a crown of thorns.