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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"Wolverine Blues"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Wolverine Blues\nWolverine Blues is the third studio album by Swedish death metal band Entombed, released on October 4, 1993 by Earache Records. The album displays a completely different sound from previous releases, combining elements of hard rock, heavy metal, and hardcore punk while still retaining much of their traditional, death metal roots, in a style that would later be known as death 'n' roll. The band also adopted a mid-tempo groove metal style for this release, similar to that of American heavy metal band"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes.",
". A limited number of early pressings of the album contained audio samples taken from films (most notably \"Flatliners\" and \"Hellraiser III\") which were subsequently removed from later pressing due to record label fears of potential legal action over their unlicensed use.\nReception.\nIn 2005, \"Wolverine Blues\" was ranked number 494 in \"Rock Hard\" magazine's book of \"The 500 Greatest Rock & Metal Albums of All Time\". The guitar magazine Guitar World labeled \"Wolverine Blues\" as \"1994’s"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"Womblife"
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[
"represent this wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Juana\" as a more conventional track.\nRichard Gehr referred to it as \"echoing\", an \".. innovative electric album...\". Stewart Voegtlin of \"Stylus Magazine\" called it \"... a complex record that marries musique concrete to bottleneck blues. It doesn’t always work: one often strains to hear the guitar over the invasive din.\"\nReissues.\n- All of \"Womblife\" was reissued on the Table of the Elements 2006 compilation release \"\".\nTrack listing.\nAll songs"
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"represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Womblife\nWomblife is an album by American fingerstyle guitarist and composer John Fahey, released in 1997. It was one of three releases by Fahey that year.\nHistory.\n\"Womblife\" continues John Fahey's career resurgence, again bearing minimal resemblance to his earliest work. It incorporates sound collages and experimental music.\nWorking with Jim O’Rourke, Fahey taped \"Womblife\" in the younger musician’s bedroom. O'Rourke has been long associated with the experimental and improv scene, frequently citing Fahey as an influence on his work"
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[
"represent the term to find more information about it from wikipedia (~1 paragraph)",
"Workin' Overtime"
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[
"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Workin' Overtime\nWorkin' Overtime is the seventeenth studio album by American singer Diana Ross, released on June 6, 1989 by Motown. It was Ross' first Motown album since \"Diana\" (1980), after Ross left the label for a then record breaking $20 million deal with RCA. Upon Diana's return to the label, Motown founder Berry Gordy, Jr. had sold the label to MCA Records and had positioned Jheryl Busby to the head of Motown. Ross was at first reluctant to return to her"
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"represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it\nExamples:\n\n\n\"Ludwig Gaim\n\"Standartenführer\" Ludwig Gaim (born 1 April 1892, date of death unknown) was a World War I flying ace credited with five aerial victories. He ended the war as a \"Vizefeldwebel\".\nGaim would return to his nation's service in World War II after joining the Nazi Party. He rose to a colonelcy in the \"Schutzstaffel\".\nEarly life and service.\nLudwig Gaim was born in Deggendorf, the Kingdom of Bavaria, on 1 April 1892. He joined an artillery\" == \"Ludwig Gaim\"",
"Greatest Hits Live (Diana Ross album)\nGreatest Hits Live is a 1989 live album released by Diana Ross in the UK on the EMI label. The album saw Ross performing older tracks during her Supremes days and early solo career to current music including \"Workin' Overtime\", \"Paradise\" and \"This House\". The album reached #34 in the UK album charts, and was certified Gold for sales in excess of 100,000 copies.\nTrack listing.\n1. \"Intro - Dirty Diana\" -"
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"Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)",
"World Gone Wrong"
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[
"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"World Gone Wrong\nWorld Gone Wrong is the 29th studio album by American singer-songwriter Bob Dylan, released on October 26, 1993, by Columbia Records.\nIt was Dylan's second consecutive collection of only traditional folk songs, performed acoustically with guitar and harmonica. The songs tend to deal with darker and more tragic themes than the previous outing, \"Good as I Been to You\".\nThe album received a warm, if not excited, reception from critics. Despite earning a Grammy award for Best Traditional"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
", Texas. In the film, he recounted his negative experiences with being signed to a major record label. The film was a New York Times critic's pick and described Baird as \"thoughtful.\" The Village Voice wrote of the film, \"The ghostly ambassador...is Bill Baird, the magnetically awkward experimental rocker who emerged from a label deal gone wrong with a new band and a few rungs under his eyes.\"\nThe city of Austin, TX declared August 4, 2011 \"Bill Baird Day\" in"
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"Represent the next text",
"Wrapped Up Good"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Wrapped Up Good\nWrapped Up Good is the second studio album by Australian country band The McClymonts released in Australia on 26 January 2010 by Universal Records.\nThe album entered the Australian music chart at Number 2 and remained on the chart for 14 weeks.\nTrack listing.\n1. \"Kick It Up\" (Brooke McClymont, Trey Bruce) – 3:00\n2. \"Wrapped Up Good\" (B. McClymont, Samantha McClymont, Mollie McClymont, Nathan Chapman) – 3:42\n3. \"He Used to"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes.",
"indie roots by even considering major label proposals and began to address the band as \"sell-outs\".\nSales improved dramatically when the record's lead single, \"Dammit\", began making rounds at rock radio. MCA's marketing strategy involved waiting until after the band's Warped Tour performances wrapped in order to have a retail story to back up radio promotion efforts. The label first serviced \"Dammit\" in August 1997 and several SoCal stations were quick to pick up the single, finding it to be a good"
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"Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)",
"Wrapped in Red"
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"",
"Wrapped in Red\nWrapped in Red is the sixth studio album by American singer Kelly Clarkson, released on October 25, 2013 by RCA Records. The album is a follow-up to her first greatest hits album, \"Greatest Hits – Chapter One\", and its companion extended play, \"The Smoakstack Sessions Vol. 2\". Produced by Greg Kurstin, it is her first Christmas album and her only record to be solely released by RCA. \"Wrapped in Red\" consists of sixteen tracks, featuring five original"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Yearwood parted ways with Big Machine Records and ventured into other projects, such as starring in her own television program, \"Trisha's Southern Kitchen\", on Food Network. From 2008 to 2013, she only appeared as a guest vocalist on the albums of other recording artists — such as \"Everything Is Fine\" by Josh Turner, \"Mr. Lucky\" by Chris Isaak, \"\" by Garth Brooks, and \"Wrapped in Red\" by Kelly Clarkson. In 2014, she launched her own record label, Gwendolyn Records"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"Yogi Bear and the Three Stooges Meet the Mad, Mad, Mad Dr. No-No"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Yogi Bear and the Three Stooges Meet the Mad, Mad, Mad Dr. No-No\nYogi Bear and the Three Stooges Meet the Mad, Mad, Mad Dr. No-No is a 1966 comedy album produced and released by Hanna-Barbera Records. The album presents the Three Stooges (Moe Howard, Larry Fine and Curly-Joe DeRita) as inept park rangers who are called upon to rescue Yogi Bear (played by Daws Butler) after he is kidnapped by Dr. No-No, a nefarious scientist who invented"
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"represent this wikipedia passage to find its title",
"rpm single of the title song from \"Have Rocket, Will Travel.\" The trio released additional singles and LPs on the Golden, Peter Pan and Coral labels, mixing comedy adventure albums and off-beat renditions of children's songs and stories. Their final recording was the 1966 \"Yogi Bear and the Three Stooges Meet the Mad, Mad, Mad Dr. No-No\", which incorporated the Three Stooges into the cast of the Yogi Bear cartoons.\nIn other media Radio.\nSirius XM Radio aired a special"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"You Should Be Living"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"You Should Be Living\nYou Should Be Living (2002) is the third and last full-length album released by Twothirtyeight on Tooth & Nail Records. It was produced by James Paul Wisner, who also produced albums for Dashboard Confessional and Further Seems Forever.\nTrack listing.\n1. \"Modern Day Prayer\" – 3:48\n2. \"The Sticks Are Woven in the Spokes\" – 3:56\n3. \"Forty Hour Increments\" – 2:47\n4. \"Romancing the Ghost\" – 4:30\n5"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"be represented. We chose \"Zažmuri\". If someone asks you: 'What should a song for \"Hit meseca\" be like', the answer is: 'Fast and with a hit potential'. That's why the guys from PGP-RTB [record label] went mad: 'Are you crazy, why didn't you send one of the fast ones?' But it happened that the guys from \"Hit meseca\" liked it. They gave us a great budget and two days to record a"
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"represent this phrase to find its first wikipedia paragraph",
"You Will Never Know Why"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title:",
"You Will Never Know Why\nYou Will Never Know Why is the third album by the Californian band Sweet Trip, released in 2009 on Darla Records.\nTrack listing.\n1. \"Conservation of Two\" – 2:37\n2. \"Air Supply\" – 4:30\n3. \"Forever\" – 3:59\n4. \"Acting\" – 7:05\n5. \"Milk\" – 4:25\n6. \"Darkness\" – 6:27\n7. \"To the Moon\" – 4:10\n8. \"Song About"
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[
"represent this wikipedia passage to find its title",
"-up record, and if I had to label this one, I would call it a make-up record. Making up for lost time. Making up for everything I ever did and never did. \"25\" is about getting to know who I've become without realising. And I'm sorry it took so long but, you know, life happened.\" Adele also believes \"25\" will be her last album with her age as its title, believing that \"25\" would be the end to"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page:",
"You and Me Both"
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"represent the text to find the scientific term it describes\n\n------\n\nThe provided query could be \"Indra Gunawan\nIndra Gunawan (born October 12, 1982) is an Indonesian footballer who currently plays for PSAP Sigli in the Indonesia Super League.\" and the positive \"Indra Gunawan\"",
"You and Me Both\nYou and Me Both is the second and final studio album by British synthpop duo Yazoo, released on Mute Records in July 1983. The album's title was an ironic reference to the fact that the duo had grown estranged from each other and recorded much of the album separately, and they announced their split a few weeks before the album's release.\n\"You and Me Both\" gave the group a \"posthumous\" number one record in Britain and New Zealand, and reached number 69 in"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes:",
"and her label of lying about working together, and tweeted \"Thanks for accusing me of lying and speaking on my behalf. Since we never met or even spoke, please let me and my manager know who told you that and what confirmation they gave you.\" Hours before both Lewis's and Avicii's record labels were supposed to appear in the high court, Syco released a statement that both record labels had reached an agreement and that Avicii would appear as a featured artist on \"Collide\", whilst Lewis would appear"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"Zero Set"
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[
"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Zero Set\nZero Set is the only album by the German electronic music trio of Dieter Moebius, Conny Plank, and Mani Neumeier. It followed two collaborations by Moebius & Plank as a duo. \"Zero Set\" was recorded in September, 1982 at Conny's Studio outside Cologne, and released by Sky Records in 1983.\nThe music on \"Zero Set\" is strongly influenced by African rhythms and music. One track, \"Recall\", features Sudanese vocals by Deuka. Matthew Weiner describes it for Soulmind Online"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"the results of the collaboration with Sega, I found myself at something of a loss as to how we can take the franchise further past \"F-Zero GX\" and \"AX\".\"\n\"F-Zero GX/AX Original Soundtracks\", a two-CD set composed of BGM soundtracks to the video games \"GX\" and its arcade counterpart, was released in Japan under the Scitron Digital Content record label on July 22, 2004. The first disc consists of forty-one tracks and the second"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"Zinc Alloy and the Hidden Riders of Tomorrow"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Zinc Alloy and the Hidden Riders of Tomorrow\nZinc Alloy and the Hidden Riders of Tomorrow (subtitled A Creamed Cage in August) is the ninth studio album by Marc Bolan & T. Rex, released in the UK on 1 February 1974 on the T.Rex label, distributed by EMI.\nBackground and recording.\nMarc Bolan was one of the first British artists to record at Musicland Studios in Munich; most basic recordings were done here during the second half of 1973. The UK album was another success for Bolan and reached"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"no 12 on the album charts.\nHis US label Reprise had dropped him and he was struggling to find another US label to sign him in the US. When he finally got a deal with Casablanca Records he had recorded lots of new material and decided to release it along with a couple of tracks from \"Zinc Alloy\" as the \"Light of Love\" album. Thus neither \"Zinc Alloy and the Hidden Riders of Tomorrow\" nor \"Bolan's Zip Gun\" were issued in the US in the '70s"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page:",
"Zoom Daddy"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Zoom Daddy\nZoom Daddy is the third album by rock band The Swirling Eddies, released in 1994 on Alarma Records. It was released almost simultaneously with Terry Scott Taylor's other project, the Daniel Amos album: \"Bibleland\".\nThe Swirling Eddies dropped their pseudonyms for this album, listing their real names in the credits.\nThe album was dedicated to Mark Heard.\nTrack listing.\n1. \"I Had A Bad Experience With the C.I.A. and Now I'm Gonna Show You My Feminine Side"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Zoom Lens (record label)\nZoom Lens is an independent Los Angeles-based record label founded and operated by Gary Y. since 2009. The label was created \"in order to explore the implications of popular culture on the human condition and the duality of musical creations discovered across the digital landscape.\"\nHistory.\nHistory Founding.\nIn 2009, Zoom Lens was founded by Gary Y., who was at the time \"fascinated with Japanese harsh noise and film\" and sought out to release music due to the influence"
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"Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)",
"Abbey of Our Lady of Atlas"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Abbey of Our Lady of Atlas\nThe Abbey of Our Lady of Atlas (; ) is a Roman Catholic monastery of Trappists, inaugurated on March 7, 1938 in Tibhirine, close to Médéa, in Algeria.\nThe abbey became more known in 1996, when seven monks were kidnapped from the monastery, during the Algerian Civil War, and were killed. The movie \"Of Gods and Men\", released in 2010, tells the events that led to their deaths.\nHistory.\nHistory Founding.\nIn 1843,"
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"",
"Abbey of Our Lady of the Holy Trinity\nThe Abbey of Our Lady of the Holy Trinity was a Trappist Cistercian monastery in Huntsville, Utah. They were Roman Catholic contemplative monks of an enclosed religious order known as the Order of Cistercians of the Strict Observance (OCSO).\nHistory.\nThe abbey was founded in 1947 as a daughter house of the Abbey of Our Lady of Gethsemani in Kentucky at the invitation of Bishop Hunt of Salt Lake City. . The monks briefly used temporary World War II barracks which had"
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"Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)",
"Abbey of Woney"
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"represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Abbey of Woney\nThe Cistercian Abbey of Woney (Irish, \"Mainistir Uaithne\"), also written Wotheny or Owney, on the banks of the Mulkear River in Abington, County Limerick, was founded in 1205 when Theobald Walter (le Botiller) granted the whole \"theodum\" (believed to be an error, which should have been feodum) of Woodenikuwice for the purpose. Traces of the architecture and layout of the monastery may still seen in the graveyard in the hamlet of Abington, just south of Murroe."
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title:",
", etc. 1201.\"\"Elykaruel\" refers to the Gaelic tuath of \"Ely O'Carroll\", which straddled the southern part of County Offaly and the northern part of Tipperary (at Ikerrin). The other cantreds named are probably the modern baronies of Eliogarty, Ormond Upper, Ormond Lower and Owney and Arra in County Tipperary.\nTheobald founded the Abbey of Woney, in the townland of Abington (, meaning \"the monastery of Uaithne\"), of which nothing now remains, near the modern village of Murroe in County Limerick Ireland"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"Achille Gagliardi"
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[
"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Achille Gagliardi\nAchille Gagliardi (1537 – 6 July 1607) was an ascetic writer and spiritual director; and a member of the Society of Jesus (Jesuits).\nGagliardi was born at Padua, Italy. After a brilliant career at the University of Padua Gagliardi entered the Society of Jesus in 1559 with two brothers younger than himself. He taught philosophy at the Roman college, theology at Padua and Milan, and successfully directed several houses of his order in Northern Italy. He displayed indefatigable zeal in preaching, giving retreats"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"(1941–2016), Swiss journalist and politician\n- Achille Joseph Delamare (1790–1873), French senator\n- Achille Larue (1849–1922), Canadian lawyer and politician\n- Achille Occhetto (born 1936), Italian politician\n- Achille Peretti (1911–1983), French politician\n- Achille Serra (politician) (born 1941), Italian politician\n- Achille Starace (1889–1945) Italian fascist leader before and during World War II\nPeople Religious figures.\n- Achille Gagliardi (1537–1607), Italian ascetic writer and Jesuit"
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[
"represent this phrase to find its first wikipedia paragraph",
"Adolphe Lechaptois"
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"represent the text to find the scientific term it describes\nGiven Mohamed Benhamou\nMohamed Benhamou (Arabicمحمد بن حمو) (born December 17, 1979) is an Algerian football goalkeeper who plays for USM Annaba in the Algerian Ligue Professionnelle 2.\nClub career.\nBorn in Paris, Benhamou began his career as a left-back at age 7 with Red Star Saint-Ouen.\nBenhamou joined after one season with AS Cannes in the French Championnat National (third division). Prior to signing with Cannes in the summer of 2006, he spent five seasons with Paris Saint-, a positive would be Mohamed Benhamou",
"Adolphe Lechaptois\nAdolphe Lechaptois (8 June 1852 – 30 November 1917) was a priest of the White Fathers missionary society who was Vicar Apostolic of Tangyanika from 1891 until his death in 1917, in what is now Tanzania. He took responsibility for the vicariate at a time of great danger, when the missions were insecure havens for people fleeing slavers. As the country settled down, he oversaw expansion in the number of missions and schools. He was the author of a book on the ethnography of the local people that won"
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"represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it\n\nFor instance, <<Gargoyle Poets Series\nThe Gargoyle Poets Series were a series of Australian poetry chapbooks published by Makar Press from 1972-1980 and edited by Martin Duwell. Makar magazine produced four issues a year and from 1972 onward one issue was replaced with three small books from the Gargoyle Poets Series. The series consisted of thirty-seven books of poetry between twenty and thirty-six pages in length.\n\"Makar was established in 1960 as a student run magazine of the English Society of the University of Queensland. Taking its title from>> to \"Gargoyle Poets Series\"",
", saying they would not harm the mission if the priests abandoned Joubert. Bridoux refused. It seemed that serious fighting was going to break out, when a storm arose that destroyed some of the Arab fleet and forced them to withdraw.\nBridoux died on 20 October 1890. \nHe was succeeded by Mgr. Adolphe Lechaptois.\nHistory Lechaptois.\nOn 19 June 1891 Lechaptois was appointed Vicar Apostolic of Tanganyika and Titular Bishop of Utica.\nHe made his base at Karema, which he reached on 8 September 1891."
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page.",
"Agnes of Jesus"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title!",
"Agnes of Jesus\nAgnes of Jesus, O.P., (born Agnès Galand and also known as Agnes of Langeac; November 17, 1602 – October 19, 1634) was a French Catholic nun of the Dominican Order. She was prioress of her monastery at Langeac, and is today venerated in the Roman Catholic Church, having been beatified by Pope John Paul II on November 20, 1994.\nLife.\nAgnès Galand was born on November 17, 1602, in Le Puy-en-Velay, France, the"
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[
"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes!",
"third of seven children of Pierre Galand, a cutler by trade, and his wife, Guillemette Massiote. When she was five years old, Agnes was entrusted to a religious institute for her education. Even from that early age, she showed a strong sense of spiritual maturity. She consecrated herself to the Virgin Mary at the age of seven.\nAgnes joined the Dominican Monastery of St. Catherine of Siena at Langeac in 1623. At her receiving of the religious habit she took the name Agnes of Jesus. Soon after her"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"Albert Curtz"
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[
"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Albert Curtz\nAlbert Curtz (\"Curtius\" in Latin; 1600, Munich – December 19, 1671, Munich), was a German astronomer and member of the Society of Jesus. He expanded on the works of Tycho Brahe and used the pseudonym of \"Lucius Barrettus\".\nLatin version of the name Albert Curtz, Albertus Curtius is an anagram of his pseudonym, Lucius Barretus.\nTogether with Johann Deckers, Kepler, Francesco Maria Grimaldi, and Jean-Baptiste Riccioli, he contributed to our early understanding of"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes!",
"1600 in Germany\nEvents from the year 1600 in Germany.\nBirths.\n- Robert Roberthin\n- Albert Curtz\n- Joseph Heintz the Younger\n- Fryderyk Getkant\n- Susanna Mayr\n- Johann Schröder\nDeaths.\n- Caspar Hennenberger\n- Johann Major\n- Johann Wolff\n- Margaret Stuart\n- Jacob Heerbrand"
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"represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its wikipedia page",
"Alberto Hurtado"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"de Cristo\" he founded still exists, and through its fight for social justice, it has become one of the biggest charity groups in Chile.\n- There is also an avenue and the San Alberto Hurtado metro station in Santiago (the closest to his main shrine, which also houses the Hogar's headquarters) named after him.\n- Alberto Hurtado University, located in Santiago and run by the Society of Jesus, preserves his name and strives to bring his legacy into contemporary education and social affairs, facilitating activities through"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"– 1936)\n- Giacinto Maria D’Avila, O.P. † (16 Sep. 1936 – 1948)\n- Sebastião Acosta Hurtado, O.P. † (12 Nov. 1948 – 1958)\n- Alberto Zambrano Palacios, O.P. † (24 Jan. 1959 – \"see below\n- Apostolic vicars of Canelos / Puyo\n- Alberto Zambrano Palacios, O.P. † , \"as above\" (11 Dec. 1972 Appointed Bishop of Loja)\n- Tomás Angel Romero Gross, O.P. † (5 July 1973 – 28 Feb. 1990)\n- Frumencio"
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"represent this phrase to find its first wikipedia paragraph",
"Aloysius Gonzaga"
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"Represent this",
"Aloysius Gonzaga\nSaint Aloysius de Gonzaga, SJ (; 9 March 156821 June 1591) was an Italian aristocrat who became a member of the Society of Jesus. While still a student at the Roman College, he died as a result of caring for the victims of a serious epidemic. He was beatified in 1605 and canonized in 1726.\nEarly life.\nGonzaga was born the eldest of seven children, at his family's castle in Castiglione delle Stiviere, between Brescia and Mantua in northern Italy in what was then part"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
". As part of the Della Strada community, Jesuits provide education, religious guidance, and assistance to the surrounding community.\nNamesake.\nBoth Gonzaga University and St. Aloysius Church inherit their namesake from Saint Aloysius Gonzaga, the “Patron of Youth” and Catholic saint of enviable piety. Saint Aloysius Gonzaga lived a rather brief but impactful life, one admired by followers of Catholicism to this day. Aloysius, known at the time as Luigi de Gonzaga, was born on March 9, 1568 to a family of Italian aristocracy"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"Altenberg Abbey"
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"represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Altenberg Abbey\nAltenberg Abbey (\"Abtei Altenberg\") () is a former Cistercian monastery in Altenberg, now a part of Odenthal in the Bergisches Land, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany.\nHistory.\nThe abbey was founded in 1133 as a daughter house of Morimond Abbey and settled initially in the old castle of the Counts of Berg, Burg Berge, which the counts had left for Schloss Burg, but moved to the new purpose-built monastery in the valley of the Dhünn in 1153. It flourished"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Haus Altenberg\nHaus Altenberg is a house for education and meetings of young people (\"Jugendbildungsstätte\") of the Diocese of Cologne, located in Altenberg, now part of Odenthal, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. It was the centre of the Katholische Jugendbewegung in Germany from 1926 to 1954, interrupted only during World War II. Owned by the diocese, it is run by the association \"Jugendbildungsstätte Haus Altenberg\".\nHistory.\nThe abbey around the Altenberger Dom, founded in 1133, was closed in 1803"
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"Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)",
"Amalric-Frédéric Buscarlet"
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[
"represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Amalric-Frédéric Buscarlet\nAmalric-Frédéric Buscarlet (1836 in Nice – 19 February 1928 in Pau) worked in turn in Italy, Switzerland and France as a minister of the Church of Scotland.\nBiography.\nA branch of the Buscarlet family, originating from Millau in Rouergue Aveyron, France, settled in Geneva during the 18th century. Marc, a glovemaker, came to Geneva in about 1776 and founded the present family line.\nThe Reverend Amalric-Frédéric Buscarlet was son of Jules-[Léonard] (1807–1882),"
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"",
"Armagni and J.-F. Mingot, Lausanne. The instrument was paid for by a member of the congregation, Ian Reddihough, who also designed and stitched the four large tapestries (1967-1975) adorning the walls of the church.\n\"St Andrew’s House\", the church hall, was built between 1958 and 1962 after the plans of the architect Mueller.\nHistory Ministers of the Scots Kirk Lausanne.\n- 1874-1910 Amalric-Frédéric Buscarlet, in Naples, from 1907 in Pau, remains honorary minister in Lausanne"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"Andrea da Grosseto"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
", belonging to the Order of Friars Minor as Selmi and many other scholars had theorised. According to Amerini the real Andrea da Grosseto was a layman and probably father of a certain Giovanna di Bartolo, as is written in a document by a notary released in Grosseto in the 14th century.\nVulgarisation.\nFrancesco Selmi, with the support of Francesco Zambrini, president of the \"Commissione per i Testi di Lingua\", and of professor Emilio Calvi of the Magliabechiana Library, began a survey on the codes of vulgarisation,"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title.",
"Andrea da Grosseto\nAndrea da Grosseto was an Italian writer of the 13th century.\nBiography.\nBorn in Grosseto in the first half of 1200, not much is known of his literary work and his life, except that he probably belonged to a family of shoemakers named Bento and that he became a Franciscan friar in the church of San Francesco in Grosseto. After this, Andrea moved to Paris, where he taught literature and the art of poetry. In 1268 he translated the Moral Treaties of Albertanus of Brescia from"
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"represent this phrase to find its first wikipedia paragraph",
"Andreas Frühwirth"
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[
"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Andreas Frühwirth\nAndreas Frühwirth, O.P., (21 August 1845 – 9 February 1933) was an Austrian friar of the Dominican Order. He was promoted to the rank of cardinal of the Catholic Church and served as the Major Penitentiary of Apostolic Penitentiary.\nLife.\nHe was born Franz Frühwirth in the village of St. Anna am Aigen, located in the Province of Styria, Austria. His last name is also listed as Frühwirt.\nEducation.\nFrühwirth joined the Dominican Order on 13 September 1863 in Graz and"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Marie Cormier: 76th Master General of the Order of Preachers\" that in 1899 Pope Leo XIII began to create Father Cormier cardinal but he was prevented because \"the French government did not look favorably upon a cardinal chosen from a religious order to seek its interest as a member of the Roman Curia.\"\nBiography Master of the Order.\nAfter the General Chapter, Cormier was called to Rome as \"socius\" to the newly elected Master of the Order, Andreas Frühwirth, O.P. (who was later created a cardinal)"
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"",
"Andrew Bobola"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Andrew Bobola\nSaint Andrew Bobola, S.J. (, 1591 – 16 May 1657) was a Polish missionary and martyr of the Society of Jesus, known as the Apostle of Lithuania and the \"hunter of souls\". He was tortured to death during the Khmelnytsky Uprising. He was canonized in 1938 by Pope Pius XI.\nLife.\nBobola was born in 1591 into a noble family in the Sandomir Palatinate in the Province of Lesser Poland of the Crown of the Kingdom of Poland, then a constituent part of the"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Saint Andrew Bobola's Church in Bydgoszcz\nSaint Andrew Bobola's Church is located in downtown Bydgoszcz, Poland, on Kościelecki Square. Its patron saint is the Polish Jesuit Andrew Bobola. The edifice, completed in 1903, was designed by German architect Heinrich Seeling. It was registered on the Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship Heritage List on December 15, 1998.\nHistory.\nHistory First temple.\nThe first religious edifice on the site is associated with Bydgoszcz becoming part of the Prussian territory, as a result of the First Partition"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"Ange de Saint Joseph"
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[
"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Ange de Saint Joseph\nAnge de Saint Joseph (secular name Joseph de la Brosse) (b. at Toulouse, 1636; d. at Perpignan, 1697) was a French missionary friar of the Order of Discalced Carmelites. He was a linguist, and wrote works on Oriental pharmacology. \nLife.\nIn 1662 he took up the study of Arabic in the convent of San Pancrazio in Rome, under Celestino à San-Liduvina, brother of the Orientalist Golius. In 1664 he was sent to the East as missionary,"
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"represent the text to find the scientific term it describes:\n\nFor example, 'The Other Girl\nThe Other Girl is a 1917 American comedy film directed by and starring Oliver Hardy.\nCast.\n- Oliver Hardy - Babe (as Babe Hardy)\n- Ethel Marie Burton - Ethel (as Ethel Burton)\n- Florence McLaughlin - Florence (as Florence McLoughlin)\nSee also.\n- List of American films of 1917\n- Oliver Hardy filmography' should be close to 'The Other Girl'",
", where he spent many years. He was Provincial in his order at the time of his death. \nWorks.\nHis writings are: \n- \"Pharmacopoeia Persica, ex idiomate persico in latinum conversa\" (Paris, 1681).\nHyde (\"Biographia Britannica\", cited by Langlès, \"Biographie universelle\") asserts that the credit for this work really belongs to Père Matthieu. \nAnother work by Ange de Saint Joseph, which is praised by Bernier, Pétis de la Croix, and Chardin is"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"Anthony Maraschi"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title:",
"Anthony Maraschi\nThe Reverend Anthony Maraschi, S.J. (1820 - 1897) was an Italian-born priest of the Society of Jesus. He was a founder of the University of San Francisco and Saint Ignatius College Preparatory as well as the first pastor of Saint Ignatius Church in San Francisco, California.\nBorn in Piedmont, Italy, in 1820, Maraschi entered the Society of Jesus in Chieti. He began his scholastic career in Nice and was ordained a priest there in 1849. Maraschi left for the United States soon thereafter"
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[
"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
")\n- Niccolò Marciari (1374.12.04 – 1378)\n- Ettore Orsini (1379.10.07 – 1387.07.17)\n- Bandello Bandelli (1387.07.15 [1387.09.16] – 1407.03.14)\n- Giovanni del Pozzo (1407–1409)\n- Bernardo Bartolomei, O.S.M. (1409–1423)\n- Sirubaldo degli Ubaldi (1424–1441)\n- Radulphus , O.S.A. (8 March 1441 – death 9 June 1460)\n- Giovanni Gianderoni, O.S.A. (4 July 1460 – 15 July 1474)\n- Bartolomeo Maraschi (15 July 1474 – death Sep 1487)"
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"Represent this",
"António Cordeiro"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes:",
"António Cordeiro\nAntónio Cordeiro (c.1641; Angra – 2 February 1722; Lisbon) was a Portuguese Catholic priest in the Society of Jesus, Azorean historian, author of the classical chronicle Historia Insulana, and first to publish a public opinion on the form of governance for the archipelago of the Azores.\nBiography.\nAntónio was the sixth and final child of António Cordeiro Moitoso and his Graciosense wife Maria Espinosa.\nHis primary studies, and classes in the humanities, occurred in the city of Angra, and he showed"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"remained uninhabited for many decades until the 16th century, as Father Gaspar Frutuoso noted is his historical tome Saudades da Terra and where he mentioned the community but omitted whether it was populated. The first reference to a populated settlement in Caveira appeared in the works of António Cordeiro, published in 1717, citing the existence of a small place along the coast.\nFrom here Caveira evolved, becoming a primitive community dependent on the much larger administrative and religious village of Santa Cruz (whose parish included Caveira). Owing to the distance"
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"Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)",
"Arnulf of Leuven"
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[
"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Arnulf of Leuven\nArnulf of Leuven (c. 1200–1250) was the abbot of the Cistercian abbey in Villers-la-Ville. After serving in this office for ten years, he abdicated, hoping to pursue a life devoted to study and asceticism. He died within a year. Little else is known.\nWork.\nHe compiled the first volume of the annals of the Villers Abbey (1146–1240). However, his primary significance is as a poet. His \"Excerptum Speculi Caritatis\" is a verse adaptation of"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"1087), saint\n- Arnulf III, Archbishop of Milan (died 1097)\n- Arnulf of Chocques (died 1118), Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem\n- Arnulf of Montgomery (c. 1068 – 1118/1122), Anglo-Norman aristocrat\n- Ernulf (died 1124), bishop of Rochester, Kent.\n- Arnulf of Lisieux (died 1184)\n- Arnulf of Leuven (died 1250), medieval abbot\n- Arnolfo di Cambio (c. 1240 – 1300/1310), architect\n- Arnoul d'Audrehem (died"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"Avery Dulles"
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"represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"(The Center later became well known due to the controversial Jesuit priest, Leonard Feeney, S.J.) He served in the United States Navy during World War II, attaining the rank of Lieutenant. For his liaison work with the French Navy, Dulles was awarded the French Croix de guerre.\nSociety of Jesus and elevation to cardinal.\nUpon his discharge from the Navy in 1946, Avery Dulles entered the Society of Jesus, and was ordained to the priesthood in 1956. After a year in Germany, he studied ecclesiology"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"case during his first year. This success won him a position as a certified Judge Advocate in 1956.\nBiography Priesthood.\nScanlan followed his old calling toward the priesthood, despite his success as a lawyer. He felt the conviction to join a religious order rather than serve as a diocesan priest. In his search for an appealing order, Scanlan spent time with the Jesuits, Dominicans, and Franciscans and consulted with theologian Fr. Avery Dulles, S.J. who advised him, \"what does Jesus want.\" He entered the"
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"Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)",
"Baldassare Cittadella"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Baldassare Cittadella\nBaldassare Cittadella (born in 1603 in Lucca, Italy, dead December 3, 1651 at sea outside Goa, India) was a Catholic China missionary belonging to the Society of Jesus.\nIn 1635 he came to Macau, where he was principal for the seminar and especially got the responsibility for newly baptised Chinese. He died during a journey back to Rome."
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"represent the text to find the scientific term it describes.",
"Baldassare\nBaldassare is a masculine Italian given name. Notable people with the name include:\n- Baldassare Aloisi (1578–1638), Italian history and portrait painter and engraver\n- Baldassare Bianchi (1612–1679), Italian painter\n- Baldassare Castiglione (1478–1529), Italian Renaissance writer\n- Baldassare Cittadella (1603–1651), Italian Jesuit\n- Baldassare Croce (1558–1628), Italian painter\n- Baldassare d'Anna (circa 1560-1600), Italian painter\n- Baldassare Di Maggio (born 1954), Sicilian Mafioso\n-"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"Basílio da Gama"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Basílio da Gama\nJosé Basílio da Gama (April 10, 1740 – July 31, 1795) was a Portuguese poet and member of the Society of Jesus, born in the colony of Brazil, famous for the epic poem \"O Uraguai\". He wrote under pen name Termindo Sipílio.\nHe is patron of the 4th chair of the Brazilian Academy of Letters.\nBiography.\nJosé Basílio da Gama was born in 1740, in the city of São José do Rio das Mortes (whose name was later changed"
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"represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Gama (surname)\n\"Gama\", \"Da Gama\" or \"\"Gamma\"\" is a Portuguese surname. Originating in southern Europe, Gama is a common surname in Portugal, Spain, Italy and countries colonized by Portugal (as Brazil).\nIt may refer to:\n- Antonio de León y Gama (1735–1802), Mexican astronomer, anthropologist and writer\n- António de Gama Pereira (1520–1604), Portuguese jurist\n- Armando Gama (born 1954), Portuguese singer\n- Basílio da"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"Beatrice of Nazareth"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Beatrice of Nazareth\nBlessed Beatrice of Nazareth or in Dutch Beatrijs van Nazareth (c. 1200 – 1268) was a Flemish Cistercian nun. She was the very first prose writer using an early Dutch language, a mystic, and the author of the notable Dutch prose dissertation known as the \"Seven Ways of Holy Love\". She was also the first prioress of the Abbey of Our Lady of Nazareth in Nazareth near Lier in Brabant.\nSources.\nEvidence for her life comes from both her biography, published as \""
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"represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"- Saint Beatrice d'Este (1191–1226), Italian Roman Catholic saint\n- Beatrice of Silva (1424–1492), Portuguese nun and saint\n- Blessed Beatrice of Nazareth (1200-1268), Flemish nun\n- Blessed Beatrice of Ornacieux (ca. 1240–1306/1309), French nun\n- Beatrice of Ornacieux (–), French religious leader\nPeople Scientists, engineers and academics.\n- Beatrice M. Hinkle (1874–1953), American pioneering feminist, psychoanalyst and writer\n- Beatrice Rivière, French applied mathematician\n- Beatrice"
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"represent the term to find more information about it from wikipedia (~1 paragraph)\n\n\nThe provided query could be 'Kurt Benson' and the positive 'Kurt Benson\nKurt Benson is a fictional character from the British Channel 4 soap opera, \"Hollyoaks\", played by Jeremy Edwards. He debuted on-screen during the episode airing on 23 October 1995. He was created by Phil Redmond as one of the serial's original characters. On 12 June 2013 it was announced that Kurt will return later in the year as part of Hollyoaks Later.\nCharacterisation.\nKurt is described as having \"two passions in his life - his motorbike and his music\". Kurt' and the negative '- Present\n- Dave Statkus - guitars 1991 - 2004\n- Walt Fortune – bass 198? - Present\n- Mark Tornillo – lead vocals 1979–Present\n- A. J. Pero - drums 1987 - 1988\n- Glenn Evans – drums 1983 - 1985\n- Erik Ferro – drums 1984 - 1986, 1988 - 1990, 1991 - Present\n- Tom Capobianco - drums 1990 - 1991\n- Dick Craig - drums 1979 - 1981\n- Chris Goger - drums 1981-1983, 1986 - 1987\n- Kurt Benson'",
"Bernard de Montgaillard"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Bernard de Montgaillard\nBernard de Montgaillard (1563–1628) was a French Cistercian preacher and abbot of Orval Abbey.\nLife.\nBernard was born the son of Bertrand de Percin, lord of Montgaillard, in 1563. In 1579 he joined the Congregation of the Feuillants and became a preacher. His eloquence brought him to royal notice and he was invited to preach in Paris. At the death of Henry III of France in 1589, he became a prominent figure in the Catholic League opposing the accession of Henri IV. He"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"built for them the monastery of St. Bernard, more commonly known as the Convent of the Feuillants (\"Saint-Bernard-de-la-Pénitence\" or the \"Couvent des Feuillants\"), with its church, the \"Église des Feuillants\", in the Rue Saint-Honoré, Paris. In 1590, however, the religious wars brought dissension: while Barrière remained loyal to Henry III, the majority of his religious declared for the Catholic League, in which they were extremely active: Bernard de Montgaillard,"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"Bernardin Palaj"
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"",
"Bernardin Palaj\nBernardin Palaj (2 December 1894 — 8 December 1947) was a Franciscan cleric, folklorist and poet. He was born in Shllak.\nLife.\nBorn in the mountains of Shllak, Bernardin Palaj went to Franciscan schools in Shkodër, joined the Franciscan order in September 1911, and finished hi education in Salzburg (Austria). Ordained as a priest in 1918, Palaj was an organist at the Francisca church in Shkodra from 1916 to 1946, taught Albanian and Latin at the \"Collegium Illyricum\" ("
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"represent this wikipedia passage to find its title.",
"1914 – 1947) – priest (\"Xhani\" in religious)\n- Gjon Koda (25 April 1893 – 11 May 1947) – priest of the Order of Friars Minor (\"Serafin\" in religious)\n- Gjon Pantalla (2 June 1887 – 31 October 1947) – Jesuit religious\n- Zef Palaj (2 October 1894 – 2 December 1947) – priest of the Order of Friars Minor (\"Bernardin\" in religious)\n- Frano Gjini (20 February 1886 – 11 March 1948) – bishop"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"Bindon Abbey"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Bindon Abbey\nBindon Abbey (\"Bindonium\") was a Cistercian monastery, of which only ruins remain, on the River Frome about half a mile east of Wool in the Purbeck District, Dorset, England.\nHistory.\nThe monastery was founded in 1149 by William de Glastonia on the site since known as Little Bindon near Bindon Hill on the coast near Lulworth Cove as a daughter house of Forde Abbey, but the terrain proved too demanding to sustain the community. In 1172 the monastery moved to a site near"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"and 1798 a small \"Gothick\" house, Bindon Abbey House, was built on part of the former abbey grounds. This and a contemporaneous gatehouse are still in existence. Bindon Abbey House is currently used by Bindon Abbey Wellness Retreat to provide a range of treatments and retreat days.\nThe mill on the River Frome – Bindon Mill – to the north of the ruins would originally have been part of the monastery. It was converted into a residence between 2006 and 2009.\nLiterary references.\nThe abbey ruins,"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"Bonne-Espérance Abbey"
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[
"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes!",
"Bonne-Espérance Abbey\nBonne-Espérance Abbey was a Premonstratensian abbey that existed from 1130 to the end of the 18th century, located in Vellereille-les-Brayeux in the Walloon municipality of Estinnes, province of Hainaut, Diocese of Tournai, in present-day Belgium. \nHistory.\nThe abbey owed its foundation to the conversion of William, the only son and heir of Rainard, the Knight of Croix. William had followed the heretical teaching of Tanchelm, but Norbert of Xanten brought him back to Roman Catholicism"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"and last abbot of Bonne-Espérance, Bonaventure Daublain, the abbey was twice occupied and pillaged by the French Revolutionary Army, in 1792 and again in 1794, when the community was dispersed. At the time of its suppression the abbey counted sixty-seven members. Although they wished to live in community, they were not allowed to do so during the French Republic, nor after 1815 under King William I of the Netherlands. The last surviving religious gave the abbey to the Bishop of Tournai for a diocesan seminary."
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"Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)",
"Bordesley Abbey"
]
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[
"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Bordesley Abbey\nBordesley Abbey was a 12th-century Cistercian abbey near the town of Redditch, in Worcestershire, England.\nThe abbey's foundation was an act of Waleran de Beaumont, Count of Meulan, who gave the monks of Garendon Abbey in Leicestershire some more land. The Count's twin brother was the benefactor of Garendon. However, Empress Matilda laid claim to the patronage of Bordesley once Waleran surrendered to her in about 1141, thus making Bordesley a royal house. \nBordesley Abbey was once an important local ecclesiastical"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Bordesley\nBordesley may refer to several places in England:\n- Bordesley, West Midlands, an area of Birmingham\n- Bordesley Green, a separate area of Birmingham\n- Bordesley, Worcestershire, an area of Redditch\n- Bordesley Abbey, a ruined abbey near Reddich\n- Bordesley railway station a railway station in Birmingham\n- Bordesley Junction a canal junction in Birmingham\n- Birmingham Bordesley (UK Parliament constituency) a former United Kingdom Parliamentary constituency in Birmingham\nSee also.\n- Farm, Bordesley, within the"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"Boxley Abbey"
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"represent this wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Boxley Abbey\nBoxley Abbey in Boxley, Kent, England was a Cistercian monastery founded c.1146 by William of Ypres, leader of King Stephen's Flemish mercenaries, and colonised by monks from Clairvaux Abbey in France. Some of its ruins survive, some four miles north-east of Maidstone.\nNotable events.\nIn 1171, the then abbot was one of those responsible for the burial of the murdered archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Becket. In 1193 the abbots of Boxley and Robertsbridge journeyed to the continent to search for King"
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[
"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
". During the dissolution of the monasteries, 1536-1540, the reformist-leaning government used the Rood as one argument among many to denounce superstitious religion practices within English Catholicism. From 1539 he the swung back to Catholicism less the 'superstitions' until his death in 1547 while the various religious factious vied for power and influence to promote their viewpoints.\nAccording to tradition, the Rood was brought to Boxley Abbey on a stray horse. Considering that a miracle, the monks of the abbey took the crucifix. William Lambarde"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"Casamari Abbey"
]
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[
"represent this wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Casamari Abbey\nCasamari Abbey is a Cistercian abbey in the Province of Frosinone, Lazio, Italy, about 10 kilometers (6 miles) east-south-east of Veroli.\nIt marks the site of Cereatae, the birthplace of Caius Marius, afterwards known, as inscriptions attest, as Cereatae Marianae, having been separated perhaps by the triumvirs from the territory of Arpinum. In the early Imperial times it was an independent community.\nThe current Abbot of the Abbey of Casamari, as of 2017, is the Right"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes.",
"candidates for such a community. Ghebreamlak entered, along with 12 other Ethiopian Catholic men.\nWithin a few years of his admission to the Order, Ghebreamlak was diagnosed with incurable tuberculosis. Allowed to profess religious vows on his deathbed, he died in 1934 and was buried at Casamari. The reputation he had for holiness of life drew the veneration of the Ethiopian clergy. The local Catholic Diocese, along with the Ethiopian Catholic Church, opened a process of investigating his life for possible canonization. The cause was eventually approved and"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"Charles de Noyelle"
]
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[
"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Charles de Noyelle\nVery Rev. Charles de Noyelle, S.J. (28 July 1615 - 12 December 1686) was a Belgian Jesuit priest, elected the twelfth Superior General of the Society of Jesus.\nEarly formation.\nAfter secondary studies at Mons and Ypres, Charles de Noyelle joined the Jesuits at the early age of fifteen (in 1630). After following the usual spiritual training given to those newly entered into the Society, he did his Philosophy and Theology in Louvain, where he was ordained priest in 1644. He"
]
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[
"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"the General Congregation that followed the death of Father Oliva Charles de Noyelle was elected unanimously, at the first ballot, Superior General. This remains the only case (leaving aside St. Ignatius of Loyola) of a Superior General being elected unanimously.\nProblems and controversies.\nJust about the time of his election, the dispute between Louis XIV of France and Pope Innocent XI (over the Gallican Liberties, among other subjects) had culminated in the publication of the \"Déclaration du clergé de France\". This placed the Society"
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"represent",
"Christopher Holywood"
]
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[
"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Christopher Holywood\nChristopher Holywood (1559 – 4 September 1626) was an Irish Jesuit of the Counter Reformation. The origin of the Nag's Head Fable has been traced to him.\nRoman Catholic and Irish.\nHis family, which draws its name from Holywood, a village near Dublin, had long been distinguished both in Church and State. Christopher Holywood studied at Padua, entered the Society of Jesus at Dôle in 1579, was afterwards professor of Scripture and theology at Pont-a-Mousson, Ferrara, and"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"holding papists.\nIn 1580 the bishop was enjoined to put the castle 'in order and strength' to receive prisoners and the first were received in October. In 1583 a prisoner Dr Andrew Oxenbridge is recorded as taking the oath of supremacy. In 1584 it was suggested that the number of prisoners be limited to twenty.\nIn the last years of the 16th century there were 33 Catholics held prisoner in Wisbech Castle, almost all of them priests, including the Jesuit priests, Christopher Holywood, William Weston and lay brother"
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"represent this phrase to find its first wikipedia paragraph\n\nE.g. \"Travel to Romantis\" == \"Travel to Romantis\n\"Travel to Romantis\" was the third single from \"Flowers\", an album by Swedish pop band Ace of Base. The song was released on 16 November 1998 in Germany and Scandinavia and followed the singles \"Life Is a Flower\" and \"Cruel Summer\".\nMusic video.\nA music video was produced to promote the single. The video was directed by Andy Neumann. Linn Berggren appeared in the video, however only for a few seconds.\nTracks.\nScandinavia\nCD\" != \"single\n1. Travel to Romantis\n2. Whenever You're Near Me (Previously Unreleased) 3:32\nMaxi CD\n1. Travel to Romantis (Album Version) 4:11\n2. Travel to Romantis (Josef Larossi Mix) 5:33\n3. Travel to Romantis (Love to Infinity Mix) 7:22\n4. Whenever You're Near Me (Previously Unreleased) 3:32\nGermany\nCD single\n1. Travel to Romantis\n2. Whenever You're Near Me (Previously Unreleased) 3:32\nMaxi CD\"",
"Chrysostome Liausu"
]
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[
"represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Chrysostome Liausu\nChrysostome Liausu, SS.CC., (born Charles-Auguste Liausu; 17 March 1807 – 5 September 1839) was a French Catholic priest of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary, a religious institute of the Roman Catholic Church. He helped start the Roman Catholic mission in the Eastern Oceania and was the Prefect Apostolic of Southern Oceania.\nBiography.\nLiausu was born Charles-Auguste Liausu on 17 March 1807 in La Gardelle, in the Lot department in south-western France. Liausu"
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]
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[
"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Chrysostome\nChrysostome may refer to:\n- Damien Chrysostome (born 1982), Beninese international football\n- Jean Chrysostome Randimbisoa (born 1954), Malagasy politician\n- Jean-Chrysostôme Bruneteau de Sainte-Suzanne (1773–1830), French Empire baron and general\n- Justin Chrysostome Dorsainvil (1880–1942), Haitian author and educator\n- Chrysostome Liausu (1807–1839), French Catholic missionary\n- Saint-Chrysostome, Quebec, municipality in south-west Quebec, Canada\n- Saint-Jean-Chrysostome, Montérégie,"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"Claude-François Ménestrier"
]
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[
"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Claude-François Ménestrier\nClaude-François Ménestrier (9 March 1631 – 21 January 1705) was a French heraldist, a member of the Society of Jesus [Jesuit], and attendant of the royal court.\nMénestrier was born in Lyon. He composed numerous books on heraldry, in which he was one of the greatest authorities of his age, the professor of the colleges in Chambéry, Vienne, Grenoble, and Lyon. During 1669-70 he traveled to Germany and Italy, but reached Paris and lived there"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it.",
"made after van der Meulen's designs. The inscriptions underneath the prints made after The King's Conquests were written by Claude-François Ménestrier, a French heraldist and Jesuit who was an attendant of the royal court. These inscriptions invariably highlight the direct involvement of the French king in the glorious events being depicted and thus go beyond a simple description of the events. It is clear that the contemporary perception was that these works were made to preserve the memory of the king's military feats for posterity. The created by Pieter van"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"Clemente d'Olera"
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[
"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Clemente d'Olera\nClemente d'Olera (20 June 1501 – 6 January 1568) was an Italian Roman Catholic who became Minister General of the Order of Friars Minor, cardinal and bishop.\nBiography.\nClemente d'Olera was born in the Castle of Moneglia on 20 June 1501. He joined the Order of Friars Minor Observants at a young age, spending his youth in the service of the Franciscans. He then moved to Bologna to study Christian theology. He then spent several years studying philosophy and theology in the religious houses of his"
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[
"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
". Virgilio Rosario\n5. Jean Bertrand\n6. Michele Ghislieri\n7. Clemente d'Olera\n8. Alfonso Carafa\n9. Vitellozzo Vitelli\n10. Giovanni Battista Consiglieri\nJune 14, 1557.\n1. William Petow\nReferences.\n- List from Biographical Dictionary of the Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph:",
"Coggeshall Abbey"
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[
"represent the natural language.",
"Coggeshall Abbey\nCoggeshall Abbey, situated south of the town of Coggeshall in Essex, was founded in 1140 by King Stephen of England and Matilda of Boulogne, as a Savigniac house but became Cistercian in 1147 upon the absorption of the order. \nHistory.\nIn 1216 an incident was recorded that \"King John's army violently entered the abbey and carried off twenty-two horses of the bishop of London and others.\" It is also known that the reigning abbot in 1260 was travelling abroad as the envoy of the"
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"represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Hertfordshire\n- 1390 Geoffrey Michale\n- 1391 Sir William Coggleshall of Codham Hall and Coggeshall, Essex (1st term)\n- 1392 Adam Frances\n- 1393 Thomas Coggeshall\n- 1394 Thomas Sampkin\n- 1395-97 William Bateman\n- 1398 Sir Robert Turk of Hitchin, Hertfordshire\nList of sheriffs Henry IV.\n- 1399 (Aug–Sep) John Doreward of Bocking, Essex\n- 1399 (Sep-Nov) Robert Tey of Marks Tey, Essex\n- 1399 Edward Benstede of Bennington, Hertfordshire"
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"Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)",
"Conrad of Urach"
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[
"represent this wikipedia passage to find its title\n\n\nFor instance, <<Michał Białk\nMichał Białk ( born March 4, 1982 Kraków, Poland) is a Polish classical pianist.\nBiałk began piano lessons at the age of five, and enrolled in the National Ignacy Jan Paderewski Music School in Kraków two years later. He studied in Freiburg im Breisgau, Paris, Amsterdam, Rostock and Vienna. His major teachers include Elza Kolodin, Matthias Kirschnereit and Oleg Maisenberg. Since its debut at the Krakow Philharmonic, he won prizes at international piano competitions in France, Italy, Spain, Poland>> to <<Michał Białk>>",
"Conrad of Urach\nConrad of Urach (also named Conrad von Urach, , also known as Konrad or Kuno von Zähringen) (born in the 1170s; died 29 September 1227, probably in Bari) was a Cistercian monk and abbot, and Cardinal Bishop of Porto and Santa Rufina; he declined the papacy.\nInfancy.\nConrad was the second son of Count Egino IV of Urach and his wife Agnes, sister of Berthold V of Zähringen, in the early generations of the line of Dukes of Württemberg. His"
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[
"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"gave it permission to observe the ordinances of the Order of the Temple of Solomon. In July the Pope appears to have transferred all authority over the foundation of the order (and therefore its survival) to the papal legate Conrad of Urach.\nThe specific purpose of the founding was \"to promise aid and succour to Amaury de Montfort and his heirs, for the defence of his person and domains\" and as inquisitors for the \"seeking out and destruction of evil heretics and their lands and also of those who rebel against"
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"Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)",
"Croxden Abbey"
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[
"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title!",
"Croxden Abbey\nCroxden Abbey, also known as \"Abbey of the Vale of St. Mary at Croxden\", was a Cistercian abbey at Croxden, Staffordshire, United Kingdom. A daughter house of the abbey in Aunay-sur-Odon, Normandy, the abbey was founded by the de Verdun family in the 12th century. The abbey was dissolved in 1538.\nHistory.\nHistory Foundation and early history.\nIn 1176, Bertram de Verdun, the lord of the manor of Croxden, endowed a site for a new"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"should have been suppressed under the Suppression of Religious Houses Act 1535, which dictated all religious houses with a low annual income should be dissolved. The monks paid a fine of £100 for a royal licence to continue, until 1537 when the abbey was surrendered and the land and property sold off. The king granted the monks pensions, with the last abbot receiving an annual sum of £26 13s. 4d.\nHistory After dissolution.\nThe mid-13th-century chapel survived as the church for the parish of Croxden until 1886"
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"Represent the following document",
"David Granfield"
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"represent this wikipedia passage to find its title",
"David Granfield\nThe Reverend David Granfield (April 11, 1922 - July 31, 2010) was a Roman Catholic priest in the Order of Saint Benedict, associated with Saint Anselm's Abbey in Washington, DC, and a Professor Emeritus at The Catholic University of America's Columbus School of Law in Washington, DC. He is most well known as a canon lawyer for his exposition of the Catholic Church’s view on abortion. His text on the inner experience of law continues to be a resource at many law schools."
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"represent the text to find the scientific term it describes\nExamples:\n\n\"Ballads and Candles\nBallads and Candles is an album by Maddy Prior.\nIt was recorded from concert performances during a tour of Cambridge, London and Warwick in 1999/2000 and released on CD in 2000.\nThe songs are drawn from all of Maddy's career. June Tabor joins in for three songs from \"Silly Sisters\": \"Singing The Travels\" (that includes an extra verse not in the previous recording), \"My Husband's Got No Courage In Him\" and \"Doffing Mistress\". Maddy sings\" == \"Ballads and Candles\"",
"Monastic Interreligious Dialog\" review\n- David Granfield. The Inner Experience of Law: A Jurisprudence of Subjectivity. Washington, D.C Catholic University of America Press, 1988.\n- CUA Press link\n- \"Patrick Granfield: A Biographical Essay\", by David Granfield, in The Gift of the Church: a textbook on ecclesiology. Peter C. Phan, editor. Collegeville: Liturgical Press, 2000.\n- Google cache of \"BOOK REVIEW: A Brief, Liberal, Catholic Defense of Abortion\""
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"represent the term to find more information about it from wikipedia (~1 paragraph)",
"Didacus of Alcalá"
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"represent the text to find the scientific term it describes.",
"Didacus of Alcalá\nDidacus of Alcalá (), also known as Diego de San Nicolás, was a Spanish Franciscan lay brother who served as among the first group of missionaries to the newly conquered Canary Islands. He died at Alcalá de Henares on 12 November 1463 and is now honored by the Catholic Church as a saint.\nHistory.\nDidacus was born into a poor but pious family in the small village of San Nicolás del Puerto in the Kingdom of Seville. His parents gave him the name of Diego, a"
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[
"represent this wikipedia passage to find its title",
"built include that: Philip II wished to share the miracle of his son's recovery with his people; or the clockwork friar provided a portable model of \"how to pray\" which could be displayed around the kingdom.\nSee also.\n- San Diego, California\n- Mission San Diego de Alcalá\n- Alcalá de Henares\n- Franciscan Order\n- \"Noli Me Tangere\" (novel)\n- Incorruptibility\nExternal links.\n- Catholic Encyclopedia: \"St. Didacus\"\n- Catholic-Forum.com:"
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"Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph).",
"Dionisio Laurerio"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Dionisio Laurerio\nDionisio Laurerio (1497–1542) (also known as fra Dionisio di Benevento and as the Cardinal of San Marcello) was an Italian Roman Catholic cleric who was the superior general of the Servite Order from 1535 to 1542, a cardinal from 1539, and a bishop from 1540.\nBiography.\nBiography Early years, 1497–1535.\nDionisio Laurerio was born in Benevento in 1497. He was from a little-known family with links to the Pedicini family, a local patrician family. Both of his parents were originally"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"14 Jan 1540 Died)\n- Dionisio Neagrus Laurerio, O.S.M. (13 Feb 1540 – 17 Sep 1542 Died)\n- Cardinal Gregorio Cortese (Giovanni Andrea Cortese), O.S.B. (6 Nov 1542 – 21 Sep 1548 Died)\n- Giulio della Rovere (24 Sep 1548 – 18 Nov 1551 Appointed, Administrator of Novara)\n- Felice Tiranni (18 Nov 1551 – 1 Feb 1578 Died), reformer of religious life.\nOrdinaries Archdiocese of Urbino.\n\"Elevated: 7 July 1563\"br\n\"Latin Name:"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"Domenico Pignatelli di Belmonte"
]
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"represent this wikipedia passage to find its title",
"ordained priest as a member of the Congregation of Clerks Regular of the Divine Providence (The Theatines), as Father Domenico Pignatelli on 22 September 1753. He was appointed Lector of Sacred Canons in the House of Studies of SS. Apostoli, Naples, on 12 December 1755. Thereafter he was appointed, variously, Secretary to the Superior General, Superior of SS. Apostoli, Procurator General, and Co-Adjustor to Father Antonio Francesco Vezzosi, the Superior General of the Theatine Order, on 31 May 1774. He was"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"- Marcello Papiniano-Cusani (11 Feb 1754 – 16 Jun 1762 Resigned)\n- Serafino Filangeri, O.S.B. (23 Aug 1762 – 29 Jan 1776 Appointed, Archbishop of Naples)\n- Francesco Ferdinando Sanseverino, C.P.O. (15 Apr 1776 – 31 Mar 1793 Died)\n- Filippo López y Rojo, C.R. (17 Jun 1793 – 4 Sep 1801 Resigned)\nList of Archbishops of Palermo since 1800.\n- Cardinal Domenico Pignatelli di Belmonte, C.R. (29 Mar 1802 – 5 Feb 1803 Died)\n-"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"Donald Merrifield"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Fr. Merrifield was born in Los Angeles on November 14, 1928. He graduated from Inglewood High School. Fr. Merrifield received his bachelor's degree in physics from California Institute of Technology in 1950. He went on to obtain a master's degree in physics from University of Notre Dame in 1951 and his doctorate in physics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (M.I.T.) in 1962.\nBiography Career.\nDonald Merrifield entered the Society of Jesus in 1951 and was ordained a Roman Catholic priest in 1965 at Blessed Sacrament Catholic"
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"Represent",
"of Arts and Sciences in 1878. It is said that the naturalist Mary Philadelphia Merrifield learnt Swedish in order that she could correspond with him.\nWorks.\nHis principal work, \"Species, Genera et Ordines Algarum\" (4 vols., Lund, 1848–63), was a standard authority.\nFurther reading.\n- Theoria Systatis Plantarum; Accredit Familiarum Phanerogarum in Series Naturales Disposito, Secundum Structurae Normas et Evolutionis Gradus Instituta. Lund Apr-Sep 1858"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"Dunbrody Abbey"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title!",
"Dunbrody Abbey\nDunbrody Abbey is a former Cistercian monastery in County Wexford, Ireland. The cross-shaped church was built in the 13th century, and the tower was added in the 15th century. With a length of 59m the church is one of the longest in Ireland. The visitor centre is run by the current Marquess of Donegall and has one of only two full sized hedge mazes in Ireland.\nThe abbey was dissolved under Henry VIII. The last Abbot of Dunbrody was Alexander Devereux, who became Bishop of"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"great religious houses were dissolved, 1536–41; in County Wexford this included Glascarrig Priory, Clonmines Priory, Tintern Abbey, and Dunbrody Abbey.\nOn 23 October 1641, a major rebellion broke out in Ireland, and County Wexford produced strong support for Confederate Ireland. Oliver Cromwell and his English Parliamentarian Army arrived in 1649 in the county and captured it. The lands of the Irish and Anglo-Normans were confiscated and given to Cromwell's soldiers as payment for their service in the Parliamentarian Army. At Duncannon, in the south"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"Dundrennan Abbey"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Dundrennan Abbey\nDundrennan Abbey, in Dundrennan, Scotland, near to Kirkcudbright, was a Cistercian monastery in the Romanesque architectural style, established in 1142 by Fergus of Galloway, King David I of Scotland (1124–53), and monks from Rievaulx Abbey. Though extensively ruined (the transepts are the main surviving parts), Dundrennan is noted for the purity and restraint of its architecture, reflecting the austere Cistercian ideal. It is also built from very hard-weathering grey sandstone, so the original architectural forms and mouldings are well"
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"",
"- Henry Wemyss, 1529-1541\n- Adam Blackadder, 1541–1562\n- Edward Maxwell, 1562–1599\n- John Murray of Lochmaben, 1599–1606\nBibliography.\n- Thompson, Barbara, \"Monks and Other Officers of Dundrennan\", (Dundrennan Abbey; unpublished)\n- Watt, D.E.R. & Shead, N.F. (eds.), \"The Heads of Religious Houses in Scotland from the 12th to the 16th Centuries\", The Scottish Records Society, New Series, Volume 24, (Edinburgh, 2001), pp"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"Eastminster"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Eastminster\nEastminster (The Abbey of St. Mary de Graces) was a Cistercian abbey on Tower Hill in London, founded by Edward III in 1350 immediately outside the Roman London Wall and thus today in the E1 postcode district. Among its endowments was the reversion in 1350 given by King Edward which he owned of one of the four manors of Shere in the hamlet of Gomshall, Surrey which acquired the name Towerhill, due to its patronage of the abbey.\nNew Abbey was an alternative name for the site.\nIn"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Eastminster (ship)\nEastminster was an iron full-rigged ship built in Port Glasgow, Scotland, in 1876. She operated as an emigrant vessel.\n\"Eastminster\" was last seen departing Maryborough, Queensland, Australia, after ignoring a warning from the harbor pilot, heading out to sea in a rising gale on 17 February 1888, bound for Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia. \"Eastminster\" was presumed lost during a tropical cyclone that passed through the area immediately afterward. Her wreckage was reported on a"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"Eberbach Abbey"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Eberbach Abbey\nEberbach Abbey (German: Kloster Eberbach) is a former Cistercian monastery in Eltville in the Rheingau, Germany. On account of its Romanesque and early Gothic buildings it is considered one of the most significant architectural heritage sites in Hesse.\nIn the winter of 1985/86 some of the interior scenes of \"The Name of the Rose\" were filmed here. The abbey is a main venue of the annual Rheingau Musik Festival.\nHistory.\nHistory Abbey.\nThe first monastic house at the site was founded in"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"see Lower Saxony\"\nChristian religious houses in Germany arranged by state Hamburg.\n- \"see Schleswig-Holstein\"\nChristian religious houses in Germany arranged by state Hesse.\n- Eberbach Abbey, Eltville\n- Eibingen Abbey, Rüdesheim\n- Kloster Gnadenthal, Hünfelden\n- see List of Christian religious houses in Hesse\nChristian religious houses in Germany arranged by state Lower Saxony.\n- see List of Christian religious houses in Lower Saxony. This list also includes Bremen.\nChristian religious houses in Germany arranged by state Mecklenburg-Vorpommern"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"Ebrach Abbey"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Ebrach Abbey\nEbrach Abbey () is a former Cistercian monastery in Ebrach in \"Oberfranken\", Bavaria, Germany, now used as a young offenders' institution. \nHistory.\nHistory Abbey.\nThe abbey, dedicated to the Virgin Mary, Saint John the Evangelist and Saint Nicholas, was founded in 1126 or 1127, as the oldest house of the Cistercian order in Franconia. The founder, i.e. the provider of land, was a local noble named Berno. The involvement of other founders named in historic documents,"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"the establishment of a new monastery of that order. The first stone was laid on 1 August 1132 and in 1142 the buildings were completed. The abbey, like Ebrach, was dedicated to the Virgin Mary, Saint John the Evangelist and Saint Nicholas.\nThe first abbot was Adam (1141–80), who succeeded in gaining the support not only of the bishops of Bamberg but of the local nobility. In consequence the new abbey rapidly acquired extensive property and the cure of many parishes. Pope Eugene III and the emperors granted"
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"Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)",
"Edward J. Sponga"
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"",
"Edward J. Sponga\nEdward J. Sponga (February 12, 1918 – May 3, 2000) was a former Jesuit priest in the Society of Jesus. Sponga served as the 16th President of the University of Scranton from 1963 until 1965. Sponga made headlines when he left the priesthood in July 1968 in order to marry Mary Ellen Barrett, a divorced mother of three.\nEarly life and education.\nSponga was born in Philadelphia to Bartholomew and Adeline Sponga on February 12, 1918. He attended Roman Catholic High School and"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it.",
"time and dying a widow in 2012.\nDeath.\nSponga died on May 3, 2000. The Jesuits he left allowed him to be buried in the order's graveyard in Woodstock, Maryland. Marked only with the dates of his birth and death, his tombstone gives no indication of his one-time membership in the order.\nExternal links.\n- University of Scranton\n- University of Scranton Digital Services\n- Short Biography of Edward J. Sponga\n- University of Scranton Archival Material on Edward J. Sponga"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"Edward Knott"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Edward Knott\nEdward Knott, real name Matthew Wilson (1582–1656) was an English Jesuit controversialist, twice provincial of the Society of Jesus in England.\nLife.\nHe was born at Catchburn in the parish of Morpeth, Northumberland, After studying humanities in the college of the English Jesuits at St. Omer. he was on 10 October 1602 admitted an alumnus of the English College at Rome, under the assumed same of Edward Knott, which he retained through life. He was ordained priest on 27 March 1606. He"
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"represent this wikipedia passage to find its title.",
". Lately Principal, Harris Manchester College, University of Oxford, and Pro Vice-Chancellor, University of Oxford. For services to Education.\nUnited Kingdom Order of the British Empire Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE).\nMilitary\n- Captain Michael Bruce Knott, RN.\n- Colonel Michael Edward George Caldicott, MBE.\n- Colonel John Etherington, OBE.\n- Brigadier Simon Peter Hamilton, OBE.\n- Acting Brigadier Michael Robert Keating.\n- Colonel Francis Alexander James Piggott, OBE"
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[
"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"Egidio Mauri"
]
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"Represent this text",
"Egidio Mauri\nEgidio Mauri (9 December 1828 – 13 March 1896) was an Italian cardinal, since 1893 Archbishop of Ferrara, member of the Dominican Order."
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"2 Feb 1824 Died)\n- Timoteo Maria (Antonio) Ascensi, O.C.D. (24 May 1824 – 24 Apr 1827 Resigned)\n- Gabriele Ferretti (21 May 1827 – 29 Jul 1833 Appointed Titular Archbishop of Seleucia in Isauria)\n- Benedetto Cappelletti (29 Jul 1833 – 15 May 1834 Died)\n- Filippo de' Conti Curoli (30 Sep 1834 – 26 Jan 1849 Died)\n- Gaetano Carletti (28 Sep 1849 – 26 Jul 1867 Died)\n- Egidio Mauri, O.P. (22 Dec 1871"
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[
"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"Eustochia Smeralda Calafato"
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[
"",
"Eustochia Smeralda Calafato\nEustochia Smeralda Calafato (Messina, 25 March 25 1434 – Messina, 20 January 20 1485) is a Franciscan Italian Saint belonging to the Order of the Poor Clares. She is co-patroness of Messina, which is also the centre of her cultus.\nBiography.\nShe was born in the village of Santissima Annunziata, near Messina, Italy (for which reason she is often known as St. Eustochia of Messina). Most of what is known about her comes from the biography written two years"
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"",
"patron saint of Palermo.\n- John of Capistrano (1386–1456), was \"one of the greatest Franciscan preachers of the 15th century.\"\n- Francis of Paola (1416–1507), was a mendicant friar and the founder of the Roman Catholic Order of Minims.\n- Eustochia Smeralda Calafato (1434–1485), was a Franciscan abbess of Messina.\n- Andrew Avellino (1521–1608), was a Theologian, founder of monasteries, and friend of St. Charles Borromeo.\n- Benedict the Moor (1526–1589),"
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"",
"Everard Mercurian"
]
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[
"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Everard Mercurian\nVery Rev. Everard Mercurian, S.J. (1514 – 1 August 1580) was the fourth Superior General of the Society of Jesus.\nEarly life.\nBorn 'Lardinois' into a humble family in Marcourt, near La Roche-en-Ardenne in what is now the province of Luxembourg in 1514, in the south-east corner of what is now Belgium. This is the origin of his name, which he signed Everard de Marcour. After study in the University of Paris, he was ordained and"
]
]
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[
"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"during the St. Bartholomew's Day massacre. During these militant years he first conceived of the plan of his Counter Reformation bibliographical works, as he states in the introduction to the Bibliotheca selecta.\nLife Rome: Jesuit Secretary; Sweden, Poland, Russia: Apostolic Nuncio.\nWhen Borgia died, Possevino returned to Rome for the third Jesuit General Congregation and stayed on as the Latin secretary to Everard Mercurian, Jesuit general from 1572 until 1578. Pope Gregory XIII sent him to the court of King John III of Sweden in order"
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[
"represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its wikipedia page",
"Felix of Valois"
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[
"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Felix of Valois\nSaint Felix of Valois (April 16, 1127 – November 4, 1212) was a hermit and a co-founder (with Saint John of Matha) of the Trinitarian Order.\nLife.\nButler says that Felix was born in 1127. He was surnamed Valois because he was a native of the province of Valois. Tradition holds that he renounced his possessions and retired to a dense forest in the Diocese of Meaux, where he gave himself to prayer and contemplation. Much later sources sometimes identify"
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[
"represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"conflict.\nIn 1218 Peter Nolasco was inspired to establish a religious order for the redemption of captives seized by the Moors in Spain and on the seas. Its charism of the redemption of Christian captives was similar to that of the Order of the Most Holy Trinity established some twenty years earlier in France by saints John of Matha and Felix of Valois. Given that the Caliphate of Córdoba occupied a significant portion of the Iberian peninsula, the Mercedarians differed from the Trinitarians in that originally its membership held more knights than clerics. The"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"Ferdinando Ughelli"
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[
"",
"Ferdinando Ughelli\nFerdinando Ughelli (21 March 1595 – 19 May 1670) was an Italian Cistercian monk and church historian.\nBiography.\nHe was born in Florence. He entered the Cistercian Order and was sent to the Gregorian University in Rome, where he studied under the Jesuits Francesco Piccolomini and John de Lugo.\nHe filled many important posts in his order, being Abbot of Badia a Settimo near Florence, and, from 1638, Abbot of Tre Fontane in Rome. He was skilled in ecclesiastical history. To"
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[
"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes:",
"May 1935 - 21 Oct 1962 Died)\n- Vittorio Ottaviani (19 Dec 1962 - 10 Nov 1973 Appointed, Bishop of Marsi)\n- Umberto Florenzani (21 Dec 1973 - 30 Sep 1986 Appointed, Bishop of Anagni-Alatri)\n\"30 September 1986 United with and suppressed to the Diocese of Anagni to form the Diocese of Anagni-Alatri\"\nReferences.\n- Attribution\n- The entry cites:\n- Ferdinando Ughelli, \"Italia Sacra\" (Venice, 1722), I, 288;"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"Flaxley Abbey"
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[
"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Flaxley Abbey\nFlaxley Abbey is a former Cistercian monastery in England, now a Grade I listed manor and private residence, near the village of Flaxley in the Forest of Dean, Gloucestershire. It is the former seat of the Crawley-Boevey Baronets.\nHistory.\nHistory Foundation and background.\nFlaxley Abbey was founded in 1151 by Roger Fitzmiles, 2nd Earl of Hereford as a Cistercian monastery. It was allegedly founded on the spot where his father Milo, 1st Earl of Hereford was killed during a hunting in the Forest"
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"represent the text to find the scientific term it describes!",
"and history of the monastery and later Grade I estate of Flaxley Abbey. This book is considered to be culturally important as it is one of the rare cartularies of a religious abbey and manor house printed in the 19th century.\nOther works by Crawley-Boevey include \"A Scheme for the Protection and Conservation of Antient Buildings in and Around the City of Ahmedabad\" and \"The Jerusalam Garden Tomb\"\nFamily.\nArthur William was the son of Sir Martin Hyde Crawley-Boevey, 4th Baronet. of Flaxley Abbey"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"Fortanerius Vassalli"
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"represent the text to find the scientific term it describes.\n------\nExamples:\nProvided: \"Mehdi Méniri\nMehdi Méniri () (born June 29, 1977 in Metz, France) is a former Algerian football defender.\nCareer.\nDespite having been born in Metz, Méniri first played senior football for AS Nancy. He moved on to Troyes, with whom he played in the UEFA Cup after helping them become one of the winners of the 2001 UEFA Intertoto Cup, and in the summer of 2003 he finally went to play for FC Metz. After 3 seasons with FC Metz he signed with SC Bia\" Match: \"Mehdi Méniri\"",
"Fortanerius Vassalli\nFortanerius Vassalli (died October 1361) was an Italian Franciscan, who became Minister General of the Order of Friars Minor, and a cardinal a few weeks before he died. He died on the way to Avignon.\nHe held a wide variety of ecclesiastical posts. He was Patriarch of Grado. He attacked the Manfredi of Faenza. He was Archbishop of Ravenna (1348 in one source, stepping down as minister general, but in other sources 1342-7) and Patriarch of Venice. He was also"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Vassalli\nVassalli is a surname of Italian origin. People with that name include:\n- Fortanerius Vassalli (died 1361), Italian Franciscan\n- Giuliano Vassalli (1915-2009), Italian politician, lecturer and lawyer\n- Luigi Vassalli (1812-1887), Italian Egyptologist and patriot\n- Mikiel Anton Vassalli (1764-1829), Maltese writer\n- Sebastiano Vassalli (1941-2015), Italian writer\nSee also.\n- Liceo Vassalli Junior Lyceum, a school in Malta"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph!",
"Francesco Suriano"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it.",
"Francesco Suriano\nFrancesco Suriano (1445-after 1481) was an Italian friar of the Franciscan order, who wrote a guide for travel to the Holy Land.\nHe was born in 1445 to a noble family of Venice. He may have first travelled to Alexandria, Egypt in 1462, as a young man. At age 25, he entered the monastery of San Francesco della Vigna in Venice. His skills at travel may have played a role to his assignment as a guardian in the convent of Beirut, Lebanon in 1480-"
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"Emperor's death a secret, one major noble, Zasillus, immediately marched to the royal prison of Amba Geshen, freed Na'od, and proclaimed him Emperor. Another noble Tekle Kristos, who had remained at the Imperial court, championed Eskender's son Amda Seyon II as emperor. Although Tekle Kristos' forces defeated the followers of Zasillus, warfare continued through the realm.\nEuropean influence.\nEuropean influence was noticeable during his reign. In a manuscript written by Francesco Suriano (dated to 1482 by Somigli), Suriano describes"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"Francis Solanus"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Francis Solanus\nFrancisco Solano y Jiménez, O.F.M., (also known as Francis Solanus) (10 March 1549 – 14 July 1610) was a Spanish friar and missionary in South America, belonging to the Order of Friars Minor (the Franciscans), and is honored as a saint in the Roman Catholic Church.\nEarly life.\nHe was born 10 March 1549 in Montilla, the third child of Mateo Sánchez Solano and Ana Jiménez. He was educated by the Jesuits, but felt drawn to the poverty and penitential"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"baptismal integrity. It is said that Solanus predicted the devastating 1619 earthquake of Trujillo, Peru. He died at Lima.\nVeneration.\nSolanus was beatified by Pope Clement X in 1675, and canonized by Pope Benedict XIII in 1726. His feast is kept throughout the Franciscan Order on 24 July (except currently the United States, where it is celebrated on 14 July).\nFrancis Solanus is the patron saint of Montilla. The Parish Church of San Francisco Solano is built on the site of the former house where"
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"represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its wikipedia page",
"Francisco Coll Guitart"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Francisco Coll Guitart\nSaint Francisco Coll Guitart (Francesc Coll i Guitart in Catalan), 18 May 1812 – 2 April 1875) was a Spanish Roman Catholic priest of the Order of Preachers (Dominican Order) and founded the Dominican Sisters of the Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin.\nHe was beatified on 29 April 1979 and canonized as a saint of the Roman Catholic Church on 11 October 2009.\nLife.\nFrancisco Coll Guitart was born in Gombrèn (Ripoll) in 1812 as the tenth and last son of a"
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"Dominican Sisters of the Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin\nThe Dominican Sisters of the Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin (, , acronym D.A.) are a religious institute of pontificial right.\nThis congregation was established on 16 August 1856 at Vic, Catalonia, by the Dominican friar Francisco Coll Guitart (who was canonized by Pope Benedict XVI in 2009).\nThey are present in Europe (France, Italy and Spain), Africa (Cameroon, Ivory Coast, Rwanda), in Latin America (Argentina, Brazil, Chile"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"Franciszek Kareu"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Franciszek Kareu\nVery Rev. Franciszek Kareu, S.J. (10 December 1731, Orsha – 11 August 1802, Polatsk) was a Jesuit priest, missionary and teacher in the lands of today's Belarus. He was Temporary Vicar General of the Society of Jesus in Russia from 1799 to 1801. After Pope Pius VII's official approval of the Jesuits' existence in Russia, he was declared Superior General of the Society of Jesus (1801–1802)\nEarly years and formation.\nBorn of an English family settled in Grand Duchy of"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title.",
"in his native Polish. He was also a successful and well known preacher. In 1797 he was named Secretary of the Society and worked closely with Gabriel Lenkiewicz, Franciszek Kareu and Gabriel Gruber, the successive Vicars General of the Society in Russia. On their behalf he was keeping correspondence with the many ex-jesuits who wanted to rejoin the Order. At the Regional Congregation of 1802 he was made Assistant of the newly elected Superior General of the Jesuits in Russia, Gabriel Gruber.\nCareer Superior General.\nAt the death"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"Franz Jozef van Beeck"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Franz Jozef van Beeck\nFrans Jozef Van Beeck or Franz Jozef van Beeck, also known as Joep van Beeck (June 11, 1930 – October 12, 2011), was a Dutch author and Christian theologian who was also a prominent priest of the Society of Jesus.\nBorn in Helmond, Netherlands, he entered the Jesuit religious order in 1948 after studies at the Jesuit Aloysius College in The Hague. He received a doctorate in English from the University of Amsterdam in 1961 and was ordained to the Roman Catholic priesthood in"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Beek (b. 1987), Dutch pop singer\n- Willibrord van Beek (b. 1949), Dutch politician\n- Bontjes van Beek\n- Cato Bontjes van Beek (1920–1943), German resistance member\n- Van Beeck\n- Franz Jozef van Beeck (1930–2011), Dutch Jesuit theologian\n- Von Beeck\n- Peter von Beeck (died 1624), German (Aachen) historian\nSee also.\n- Beek (disambiguation)\n- Van der Beek, Dutch surname"
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"represent this phrase to find its first wikipedia paragraph\n\n\nE.g. Pas på svinget i Solby == Pas på svinget i Solby\nPas på svinget i Solby is a 1940 Danish family film directed by Lau Lauritzen Jr. and Alice O'Fredericks.\nCast.\n- Ludvig Brandstrup as Hauge\n- Berthe Qvistgaard as Marianne Hauge\n- Sigfred Johansen as Pastor Holger Lind\n- Maria Garland as Tante Marie\n- Jon Iversen as Biskoppen\n- Ingeborg Pehrson as Fru Augusta Larsen\n- Sigurd Langberg as Larsen\n- Thorkil Lauritzen as Tjener Christensen\n- Else Jarlbak as Biskoppens kone\n- Ib Schønberg as Doktor Gustav Berg != Helge Kjærulff-Schmidt\nHelge Kjærulff-Schmidt (22 February 1906 – 9 July 1982) was a Danish stage and film actor. He was father to Palle Kjærulff-Schmidt.\nFilmography.\n- \"Komtessen på Stenholt\" - 1939\n- \"En lille tilfældighed\" - 1939\n- \"Sommerglæder\" - 1940\n- \"En ganske almindelig pige\" - 1940\n- \"Pas på svinget i Solby\" - 1940\n- \"En forbryder\" - 1941\n- \"En mand af betydning\"",
"Franz Retz"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Franz Retz\nVery Rev. Franz Retz, S.J. (sometimes \"Francis Retz\") (13 September 1673 - 19 November 1750) was a Bohemian Jesuit, elected fifteenth Superior General of the Society of Jesus, which he governed from 7 March 1730 to 19 November 1750.\nFormation.\nAfter joining the Jesuits at the young age of 16 (in 1689) and doing his noviciate, he studied at the Faculty of Philosophy (1692–94) and Faculty of Theology (1700–03) of University of Olomouc. He obtained the"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title.",
"first mentioned in 1180 as „Rezze“ (Slavic; meaning \"small creek\").\nRudolf von Habsburg awarded Count Berthold of Rabenswalde (1278–1312) shire and sovereignty of Hardegg as a fiefdom. The count did not stay for long in Hardegg, and moved to Retz, where he founded the monastery of the Dominican Order (called \"Dominikanerkloster\"). The monastery was finished in 1295. Finally he founded the city of Retz around 1300.\nAround 1343 the preacher Franz von Retz was born. He reformed"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"Franz Xavier Wernz"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Franz Xavier Wernz\nFranz Xavier Wernz SJ (December 4, 1842 – August 19, 1914) was the twenty-fifth Superior General of the Society of Jesus (the Jesuit order). He was born in Rottweil, Württemberg (afterwards part of Germany). \nLife.\nWernz was the first of the eight children of parents with deep faith and piety. From an early age he had expressed his desire to be a Jesuit, perhaps influenced by the fact that his parish church in Rottweil had been a Jesuit"
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"Stella Matutina had a series of well known professors and educators; among them, hymnodist and hymnoogist Joseph Hermann Mohr, Franz Xavier Wernz, the General of the Jesuit Order; the Swiss theologian Hans Urs von Balthasar; Cardinal Franz Ehrle, Professor and Rector of Innsbruck University; Hugo Rahner; social reformer Pesch; Max Pribilla and Erich Przywara, liberal authors; Otto Faller, Papal advisor, scholar and superior; Johann Georg Hagen, Jesuit priest and astronomer; Niklaus Brantschen, Zen master, author, and founder of the"
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"represent this phrase to find its first wikipedia paragraph",
"François-Xavier Dumortier"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title!",
"François-Xavier Dumortier\nFrançois-Xavier Dumortier, S.J. (born 4 November 1948) is a French Roman Catholic priest. He was rector of the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome from 1 September 2010 to 1 September 2016, when he was succeeded by Nuno da Silva Gonçalves.\nBiography.\nFrançois-Xavier Dumortier was born on 4 November 1948 in Levroux, France, and entered the Society of Jesus at the age of 25. He was ordained as a priest in 1982, and made his final vows as a"
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"Quebec\n- François-Xavier Dumortier (born 1948), a French Roman Catholic priest\n- François-Xavier Fabre (1766–1837), a French painter of historical subjects\n- François-Xavier Garneau (1809–1866), a French Canadian notary, poet, civil servant and liberal\n- François-Xavier Lalanne (1927–2008), a French sculptor and engraver\n- François-Xavier Larue (1763–1855), a farmer, notary and political figure in Lower Canada\n- François-Xavier Lemieux (1811–1864), a"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"Gabriel Barletta"
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"",
"Gabriel Barletta\nGabriel Barletta or Gabriele da Barletta (Barletta, Italy, 15th century) was a Catholic preacher of the Dominican Order, whose sermons were widely published in Italy after his death. \nUsed across Italy, Barletta's sermons became synonymous with preaching: \"Nescit praedicare qui nescit barlettare\" (He who knows how to preach, knows how to \"Barletta\").\nHis best works:\n- \"Sermones quadragesimales et de sanctis\" (Holy Lenten Sermons)\n- \"Tabula super Bibliam\" ("
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"- Rosso Barletta DOC a red wine originating from close to the town\n- Amadeo Barletta Barletta (1894–1975), entrepreneur\n- Angelo Barletta (born 1977), footballer\n- Barbara Barletta (1952–2015), archaeologist\n- Gabriel Barletta (fl. 15th century), Catholic preacher\n- Heraclio Barletta, (1915-1959), politician\n- Lou Barletta (born 1956), American politician\n- Mario Barletta (born 1953), politician"
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"Gabriel Sagard"
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"represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it.",
"Gabriel Sagard\nGabriel Sagard, O.M.R., (\"fl.\" 1614–1636) was a French lay brother and Recollect friar, a reform branch of the Order of Friars Minor known for their strict poverty. He was among the first Christian missionaries to New France, and is notable for his writings on the colony and on the Hurons (or Wendat).\nSagard's origins, and the dates of his birth and death are obscure. Some historians say he was christened Théodat, others believe that Théodat was his religious name"
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"represent the text to find the scientific term it describes.\nExamples:\nProvided: \"Randy Law\nRandy Law is a former member of the Ohio House of Representatives, representing the 64th District for one term in the Ohio 126th General Assembly.\nExternal links.\n- https://web.archive.org/web/20100203140244/http://www.house.state.oh.us/index.php?option=com_displaymembers&task=detail&district=64\" Match: \"Randy Law\"",
", which, however, is less likely as his signature on his works is under the name of Gabriel (see illustration).\nSagard arrived in New France 28 June 1623. He was sent to accompany Father Nicholas Viel, where they joined four other members of their Order who had been there since 1615, led by Father Denis Jamet. In August, Sagard traveled to a Huron village on the southern shore of Lake Huron, where he began his missionary work and study of the Huron language. In July 1624,"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"Garendon Abbey"
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"Garendon Abbey\nGarendon Abbey was a Cistercian abbey located between Shepshed and Loughborough, in Leicestershire, United Kingdom.\nHistory.\nGarendon was founded by Robert de Beaumont, 2nd Earl of Leicester, in 1133, and was probably a daughter house of Waverley Abbey in Surrey. Garendon was one of a number of religious establishments founded or patronised by Robert. He endowed the abbey with 690 acres of land in Garendon, a Burgage tenement in Leicester and land at Dishley, Shepshed and Ringolthorpe.\nWithin a century of foundation"
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", probably at his Northamptonshire castle of Brackley, for his entrails were buried at the hospital in the town. He was received as a canon of Leicester on his deathbed, and buried to the north of the high altar of the great abbey he had founded and built. He left a written testament of which his son the third earl was an executor, as we learn in a reference dating to 1174.\nChurch patronage.\nRobert founded and patronised many religious establishments. He founded Leicester Abbey and Garendon Abbey in Leicestershire"
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"Giovanni Battista Audiffredi"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title.",
"Giovanni Battista Audiffredi\nGiovanni Battista Audiffredi (2 February 1714 – 4 July 1794) was an Italian Dominican scholar and scientist.\nLife.\nGiovanni Battista Audiffredi entered the Dominican Order, and soon attracted attention by his taste for books and his talent for the exact sciences. After being occupied in various houses as professor and bibliographer, he was at length transferred to the College of St. Thomas at the Dominican convent of Santa Maria sopra Minerva, the future Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas, \"Angelicum\". He was"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"at the College. Historian and theologian.\n- Vittorio Giovardi (1699–1785). After 1717 Theology studies.\n- Saint Giovanni Battista de Rossi. Studied theology at the College before 1721.\n- Antoine Brémond (1692-1755) Professor of Sacred Theology c. 1730. Later Master of the Order.\n- Giuseppe Agostino Orsi. 1732 Professor of Sacred Theology at the College.\n- Casto Innocenzio Ansaldi. 1733 studied at the College. Famed theologian and archaeologist.\n- Giovanni Battista Audiffredi. Taught theology at"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"Gnecchi-Soldo Organtino"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Gnecchi-Soldo Organtino\nGnecchi-Soldo Organtino (1530 – April 22, 1609) was an Italian missionary with Society of Jesus, of Nanban period (1543–1650). He is an example of Nanbanjin (Barbarians from the south, as the Occidental were called), who visited Japan at that period.\nWith a motive to promote Christianity in East Asia Organtino joined Society of Jesus, and he was sent to Japan in 1570 via Portuguese India and Portuguese Malacca. Earning a respect of Oda Nobunaga, Organtino built Nanban"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title.",
"local missionaries.\nChurch membership in Japan grew to 130,000 during Cabral's leadership, as a number of \"daimyo\" converted to Christianity in order to trade with Macau. However, the isolated Jesuit mission lacked funding. Cabral believed that the mission had been abandoned by God due to the sins of its members, and by 1576 had asked the General of the Society to let him return to Europe.\nA number of Jesuits, including Visitor to the Eastern Missions Alessandro Valignano and Father Gnecchi-Soldo Organtino, were opposed"
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"represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its wikipedia page\nThe query could be 'Kenneth Sandford' and should be close to 'Festival was established in 1994, he often performed and lectured for the festival's audiences and held master classes for its performers.\nBeginnings.\nKenneth Sandford was born Kenneth Parkin in Godalming, Surrey and raised in Sheffield, where his father became landlord of a pub. Sandford hoped to be an artist, studying painting at the College of Arts and Crafts in Sheffield, where he won a scholarship to the Royal College of Art in London. After he returned from service in the Royal Air Force during World War II,' but very far from 'Kenneth Cranham as James Reaper, a farmer at Sandford\n- Julia Deakin as Mary Porter, Roy's wife who runs a pub called The Crown at Sandford\n- Kevin Eldon as Sergeant Tony Fisher, Sandford Police\n- Martin Freeman as Met Sergeant, from the Metropolitan Police in London\n- Paul Freeman as Rev. Philip Shooter, a cleric in Sandford\n- Karl Johnson as Bob Walker, the oldest officer in the Sandford police\n- Lucy Punch as Eve Draper, an actress and a city council member at Sandford'",
"Gondon Abbey"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Gondon Abbey\nGondon Abbey (also Gondom; ; ) is a former Cistercian monastery in Monbahus, Lot-et-Garonne, Aquitaine, France, about 21 kilometres to the north-west of Villeneuve-sur-Lot.\nHistory.\nThe abbey was probably founded in 1123 with an endowment from the lords of Lauzun, as a daughter house of Cadouin Abbey, of the filiation of Pontigny. In 1147 the community became the mother house of Fontguilhem Abbey, founded in 1124, when it affiliated itself to the"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Oise)\n- Gondon Abbey (\"Abbaye de Gondon, Abbaye Saint-Pierre de Gondon\"), monks, diocese of Agen (Gondon-les-Montastruc, Monbahus, Lot-et-Garonne)\n- Gourdon Abbey (\"Abbaye de Gourdon, Abbaye de Léobard, or most commonly Abbaye nouvelle\"), monks, diocese of Cahors (Léobard, Lot)\n- La Grâce-Dieu Abbey (\"Abbaye de la Grâce-Dieu\"), in Franche-Comté, monks (1139-"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"Hautecombe Abbey"
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"Hautecombe Abbey\nHautecombe Abbey () is a former Cistercian monastery, later a Benedictine monastery, in Saint-Pierre-de-Curtille near Aix-les-Bains in Savoy, France. For centuries it was the burial place of the members of the House of Savoy. It is visited by 150,000 tourists yearly.\nHistory.\nThe origins of Hautecombe lie in a religious community which was founded about 1101 in a narrow valley (or \"combe\") near Lake Bourget by hermits from Aulps Abbey, near Lake"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it.",
"the sources). This geography of the habitat seems frozen until the end of the 19th century. In Aix, the nearby Abbey of Hautecombe owned a large area at the heights of Saint Simond.\nAt the beginning of the 16th century, the ancient church suffered a devastating fire. The Aix people requested the help of in order to rebuild. He was a seigneurial family member of the town, and was raised to the episcopal dignity. He was the Bishop of Albi, and an especially special advisor to the King"
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"Haymo of Faversham"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Haymo of Faversham\nHaymo of Faversham, O.F.M. ( ) was an English Franciscan scholar. His scholastic epithet was (Latin for \"Most Aristotelian among the Aristotelians\"), referring to his stature among the Scholastics during the Recovery of Aristotle amid the 12th- and 13th-century Renaissance. He acquired fame as a lecturer at the University of Paris and also as a preacher when he entered the Order of Friars Minor, probably in 1224 or 1225. He served as the Minister Provincial for England (1239–1240) and as the Minister"
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"represent this",
"General of the Order (1240–).\nLife.\nHaymo was born in Faversham, Kent. Thomas of Ecclestone tells us that he entered after having a vision of himself praying in the church in Faversham before the crucifix. A cord was lowered from heaven and he was drawn up to heaven by it. When Haymo saw the Friars Minor he recognised the cord and, after having asked the advice of the Dominican Master General Jordan of Saxony, Haymo and three others entered the Friars Minor at St. Denis, just"
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"Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)",
"Henri Lammens"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Henri Lammens\nHenri Lammens (1 Jul 1862 – 23 Apr 1937) was an Orientalist historian and Jesuit, who wrote on (in French) the early history of Islam.\nEducation and career as a Jesuit.\nBorn in Ghent, Belgium of Catholic Flemish stock, Henri Lammens joined the Society of Jesus in Beirut at the age of fifteen, and settled permanently in Lebanon. During his first eight years in Lebanon, Lammens mastered Arabic as well as Latin and Greek, and he studied philosophy at the Jesuit-"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"thinkers influenced by the Arabic Literary Renaissance and the French Revolution and who wished to shape the Tanzimat reforms, which were an attempt to introduce a constitutional monarchy with religious freedom to reverse the Ottoman state's creeping economic marginalisation and which would lead to the Young Turks and the Second Constitutional Era.\nAn influential follower of al-Bustani was the Belgian Jesuit historian, Henri Lammens, ordained as a priest in Beirut in 1893, who claimed that Greater Syria had since ancient times encompassed all the land between the Arab peninsula, Egypt"
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"represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its wikipedia page!",
"Herrenalb Abbey"
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"Herrenalb Abbey\nHerrenalb Abbey (; ) is a former Cistercian monastery in the present Bad Herrenalb in Baden-Württemberg, Germany.\nHistory.\nThe monastery was founded, probably in 1147 or 1148, by Count Berthold of Eberstein as a family monastery, although the foundation charter only survives in a corrupt copy of 1270. The new monastery was settled by monks from Neubourg Abbey in Alsace.\nThe \"Vogtei\" (advocacy or protective lordship) was the property of the founder and his family, but the abbey had"
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", Margrave of Baden-Baden (died 1435, but not buried here). An impressive sculptured panel of the Crucifixion from the abbey was removed from Bad Herrenalb to Schloss Eberstein in the Murg valley in the 19th century.\nReferences and external links.\n- Rückert, Peter; Schwarzmaier, Hansmartin: \"850 Jahre Kloster Herrenalb\". Stuttgart 2001,\n- Herrenalb Abbey in the database of Abbeys of Baden-Württemberg in the State Archives of Baden-Württemberg\n- Account of the abbey on the website of"
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"represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its wikipedia page.",
"Herrevad Abbey"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it!",
"Herrevad Abbey\nHerrevad Abbey (, ) was a Cistercian monastery near Ljungbyhed in Klippan Municipality, Scania, in the south of present-day Sweden, but formerly in Denmark until 1658. It is now a country house known as Herrevad Castle (, ).\nHistory.\nHerrevad Abbey was founded from Cîteaux Abbey in 1144 as Denmark's first Cistercian monastery with the support of Archbishop Eskil of Lund. Legend has it that Eskil fell ill while he was a student at Hildesheim University in Germany and was told he was"
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"and lay brothers were permitted to remain until the site was turned over to the crown in 1565 by Abbot Laurids, whose tombstone has been preserved inside the chapel at Herrevad Castle. The date of his death, 30 October 1572, is certainly among the latest of surviving heads of any religious house in Skåne. The abbey school continued to function until 1575.\nThe abbey church continued to hold Lutheran services until 1585 when it was determined that the church was superfluous.\nHerrevad was given to Sten Bille, a prominent nobleman"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph!",
"Hippolyte Hélyot"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Hippolyte Hélyot\nHippolyte Hélyot (1660–1716) was a Franciscan friar and priest of the Franciscan Third Order Regular and a major scholar of Church history, focusing on the history of the religious Orders.\nHe was born at Paris in January 1660, supposedly of English ancestry, and \nchristened Pierre at his birth. After spending his youth in study, he entered, in his twenty-fourth year, the friary of the Third Order Regular of St. Francis, founded in Picpus-—now part of Paris—-by his uncle, Jérôme Hélyot,"
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"represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it\n\nFor example, High Crimes\nHigh Crimes is a 2002 American legal thriller film directed by Carl Franklin and starring Ashley Judd and Morgan Freeman, reunited from the 1997 film \"Kiss the Girls\". The screenplay by Yuri Zeltser and Grace Cary Bickley is based on Joseph Finder's 1998 novel of the same name.\nPlot.\nAttorney Claire Kubik (Ashley Judd) and her woodworker husband Tom (James Caviezel) find their idyllic life in Marin County, California shattered when, during a Christmas shopping excursion in San Francisco's Union Square should be similar to High Crimes",
"insignia remains the double-barred Cross of the Order.\nSee also.\n- Order of the Holy Sepulchre\nSources.\n- Max Heimbucher, \"Orden und Kongregationen\" (Paderborn, 1908)\n- Francesca M. Steele, \"Convents of Great Britain\" (St. Louis, 1902)\n- Hippolyte Hélyot, \"Dict. des ordres relig.\" (Paris, 1859)\n- Joseph Gillow, \"Bibl. Dict. Eng. Cath.\", s. v. Hawley, Susan.\nExternal"
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"Represent",
"Holmcultram Abbey"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Holmcultram Abbey\nHolmcultram Abbey (alternatively Holm Cultram Abbey or Holme Cultram Abbey) was a Cistercian monastery in what is now the village of Abbeytown in Cumbria, United Kingdom. \nFounded in 1150 and dissolved in 1538, at the Dissolution, Holm Cultram remains a parish church and a place of worship.\nFoundation and Scots connections.\nThe Abbey was founded in 1150 by Cistercian monks from Melrose Abbey on land given by Alan of Allerdale. In territory formerly held by Scotland, the land was granted by Prince Henry and"
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"of Rosemount House, home of the Montgomery family, to the east side of the village.\nTradition says that Affreca founded the abbey in thanksgiving for a safe landing after a perilous journey at sea. The abbey was colonised with monks from Holmcultram in Cumberland, with which it maintained close ties in the early years. The construction of the stone church began almost immediately. In 1222 and again in 1237 abbots of Grey Abbey went on to become abbots of Holmcultram. The Latin name of the abbey is Iugum Dei, which"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"Honoré Laval"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Honoré Laval\nHonoré Laval, SS.CC., (born \"Louis-Jacques Laval\"; 5/6 February 1808 – 1 November 1880) was a French Catholic priest of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary (also known as the Picpus Fathers), a religious institute of the Roman Catholic Church, who evangelized the Gambier Islands.\nLife.\nLouis-Jacques Laval was born 6 January 6, 1807, in the small hamlet of Joimpy, Saint-Léger-des-Aubées in Eure-et"
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"represent this wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Hearts of Jesus and Mary. Other churches founded by the institute include Saint Joseph Catholic Church in Hilo and Maria Lanakila Catholic Church on Maui. Sacred Hearts Academy (K-12, girls) and St. Patrick's School (elementary, co-ed) in the Honolulu neighborhood of Kaimuki were both founded by the order.\nNotable members.\n- Peter Coudrin\n- Saint Damien de Veuster\n- Blessed Eustaquio van Lieshout\n- Henri Systermans\n- Joseph Hendricks\n- Honoré Laval\n- François Caret\n- Étienne Jérôme"
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"Represent the natural language",
"Horacio de la Costa"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Horacio de la Costa\nHoracio de la Costa (May 9, 1916 – March 20, 1977) was the first Filipino Provincial Superior of the Society of Jesus in the Philippines, and a recognized authority in Philippine and Asian culture and history.\nA brilliant writer, scholar, and historian, Horacio de la Costa was born in Maúban, Quezon on May 9, 1916 to Judge Sixto de la Costa and Emiliana Villamayor. Ordained a Jesuit priest at the age of 30, he became, at age 55, the"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"36-45. http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/15570274.2013.808036\nExternal links.\n- An article by Horacio De La Costa S.J. (archived from the original on 2002-04-02)\n- International Religious Freedom Reports Released by U.S. Department of State"
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"",
"Igriș Abbey"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Igriș Abbey\nIgriș Abbey (; (; ) is a former Cistercian monastery in Sânpetru Mare, Timiș County, Romania. The Igriș Abbey was founded in 1179 as a filial abbey of Pontigny. Here is attested the oldest library in the territory of present-day Romania.\nHere was buried king Andrew II of Hungary and his second wife, Yolanda de Courtenay.\nReferences.\n1. Magister Rogerius, Carmen miserabile\n2. Novák Lajos, \"Az egresi cisterci apátság története\" (\"History of the Cistercian Abbey"
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"represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"the Latin Empire proclaimed her father emperor, instead.\nYolanda maintained good relations with her husband's children from his first marriage. Her husband survived her. She was buried in the Igriș Abbey of the White Monks.\nMarriages and children.\nBy her marriage with Andrew II of Hungary (c. 1177 – 21 September 1235) she had:\n- Yolanda (c. 1215 – 12 October 1251), wife of King James I of Aragon\nSources.\n- Soltész, István: \"Árpád-házi királynék"
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"Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)",
"Isova"
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[
"represent this wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Isova\nIsova is a ruined Frankish monastery in the Peloponnese, Greece, which was built after the Fourth Crusade and inhabited by Cistercian monks.\nThe two surviving structures, unsignposted, near the modern town of Trypiti show strong Gothic influences. Together with the ruined churches of the Villehardouins at Andravida and the ruined monastery of Zaraka, the buildings are the best examples of surviving Gothic architecture in the Peloponnese."
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
".\" Scarecrow Press, 1999. .\nRegional history Europe Eastern Europe Southeast Europe Bulgaria.\n- Detrez, Raymond. \"Historical dictionary of Bulgaria.\" Scarecrow Press, 2006. .\n- Kumanov, Milen, Kolinka Isova. \"Istoricheska entsiklopediia Bulgariia.\" Trud, 2003. .\n- Frucht, Richard C. \"Encyclopedia of Eastern Europe: From the Congress of Vienna to the fall of communism.\" Garland Publishing, 2000. .\nRegional history Europe Eastern Europe Southeast Europe Cyprus.\n- Gascoigne, Bamber. \"Encyclopedia of Britain."
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"István Pongrácz"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"István Pongrácz\nIstván Pongrácz (1584-1619) was a Hungarian Jesuit priest, martyr and saint of the Catholic Church.\nBiography.\nFather István Pongrácz was born in Alvincz Castle in Principality of Transylvania, entered the Society of Jesus in 1602, and studied in Bohemia and Austria. He had been ordained for four years when he was sent to Kassa, Kingdom of Hungary, (today: \"Košice, Slovakia\") with fellow Jesuit Melchior Grodziecki.\nThe two Jesuits were working in small towns when they"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"before around 1590, when Franciscan friars took charge of the diocese reestablished in Bacău (1611) and first led by Bernardino Quirini. After 1644, more Jesuits from the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth settled in that country, founding a college in Cotnari and establishing a branch in Iaşi.\nAround that time, the ethnic Romanian Transylvanian intellectual Gheorghe Buitul joined the Jesuit order, the first member of his community to study in the Roman College of Rome, while the Transylvanian-born István Pongrácz was one of the Jesuits executed by Calvinists"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"Jacques Marquette"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes:",
"He came of an ancient family distinguished for its civic and military services. Marquette joined the Society of Jesus at age 17. He studied and taught in France for several years, the Jesuits assigned him to New France in 1666 as a missionary to the indigenous peoples of the Americas. Arriving at Quebec he was at once assigned to Trois-Rivières on the Saint Lawrence, where he assisted Gabriel Druillettes and, as preliminary to further work, devoted himself to the study of the local languages, and became fluent in six different"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Historical Museum.\nAfter the decline of the fur trade industry, other industries developed in the region, including logging, commercial fishing, and brownstone quarrying. Apostle Island Brownstone was used to construct the first Milwaukee County Courthouse. Since the mid-20th century, the primary industry has been tourism.\nHistory Early religious missions.\nAround 1665, Jesuit Father Claude Allouez and Father Jacques Marquette arrived and soon established a mission to the Ojibwe. Later, in 1835, Father Frederic Baraga established a Catholic church on the island, at the"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph.",
"Jacques Restout"
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[
"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Jacques Restout\nJacques Restout (c. 1650 – c. 1701) was a French painter of the Restout dynasty (the son of Marc Restout) and a Premonstratensian canon regular. Born in Caen, he was a student of Le Tellier and became prior of the abbaye de Moncets near Reims.\nWorks.\n- \"La Réforme de la Peinture\", Caen, J. Briard, 1681\n- \"Traité de l’harmonie des sons\"\n- Translation of Pausanias, surviving in manuscript form\n- Translation of a \"treatise"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"-gold \"boiseries\" of the grand salon, with their overdoors of the Four Continents painted by four painters who were providing tapestry cartoons for the looms at Aubusson: Jacques Dumont le Romain, Charles-Joseph Natoire, Charles Restout and Carle Van Loo, are now installed in the Israel Museum, Jerusalem. Books and manuscripts from his extensive library, dispersed at auction in 1754 and 1756, are recognizable from the arms surrounded by the collar of the Order of Saint-Louis and the motto \"Bellicae vitutis praemium\" stamped"
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[
"represent this phrase to find its first wikipedia paragraph",
"Jakob Rem"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Jakob Rem\nJakob Rem (June 1546 - 12 October 1618) was an Austrian member of the Society of Jesus, a Catholic evangelical organization, and an early member of the Congregation of Marian Fathers. He introduced the phrase \"Mater admirablis\" into the litany.\nCareer.\nJakob Rem was born in June 1546 in Bregenz, Austria.\nIn 1556 his family moved to Dillingen an der Donau, Bavaria.\nHe studied at the Jesuit secondary school in Dillingen. Soon after starting his university studies in 1566"
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[
"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title!",
"he asked for admission to the Jesuit order.\nHe was sent to Rome, and on 18 September 1566 began his first novitiate.\nIn Rome he met the Jesuit leaders Peter Canisius and Francis Borgia.\nHe was a fellow student of Stanislaus Kostka and Claudio Acquaviva.\nWhile in Rome Jakob Rem came to know of the Sodality of Our Lady, a Marian society that had been founded there a few years earlier.\nAfter completing his novitiate, in the autumn of 1568 Jakob Rem returned to Dillingen, where"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph.",
"Jean Bilhères de Lagraulas"
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[
"represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it\n\n------\n\nExample:\nProvided: \"Pál Dárdai\nPál Dárdai (born 16 March 1976) is a Hungarian retired footballer who played mainly as a defensive midfielder, and former coach of German Hertha BSC.\nIn a 20-year professional career, he played for over a decade with the same club, Hertha BSC, in Germany. With 286 Bundesliga appearances, he is the club's most capped player. Dárdai gained 61 caps for the Hungary national team in 12 years, and also worked as the country's manager.\nPlaying career.\nPlaying career Club.\" Match: \"Pál Dárdai\"",
"father was the \"seigneur\" of Lagraulas, Camicas and, probably, Billère.\nJean Bilhères de Lagraulas entered the Order of Saint Benedict at a young age. In 1473, he became Abbot of Pessan Abbey in Pessan.\nHe served as a royal counselor to Louis XI of France. Following the 1473 death of John V, Count of Armagnac, John II of Aragon claimed control of the Quatre-Vallées, which were also claimed by John V's sister. Louis XI sent Abbot Bilhères to the region,"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Jean Bilhères de Lagraulas\nJean Bilhères de Lagraulas or Jean Villier de la Grolaie, or Groslaye etc., also called the Cardinal of Saint-Denis (died 1499), was a French Roman Catholic abbot, bishop and from 1493 cardinal. He died as French ambassador in Rome, and is remembered for commissioning Michelangelo in 1498 to sculpt his \"Pietà\" for St. Peter's Basilica.\nBiography.\nJean Bilhères de Lagraulas was born in Gascony in 1435 or 1439, the son of a noble family. His"
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"Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)",
"Jean Dolbeau"
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[
"represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Jean Dolbeau\nJean Dolbeau, O.M.R., (12 March 1586 – 9 June 1652) was a Recollect friar, one of the four Recollects who were the first Catholic missionaries to northern New France, present day Canada. Dolbeau-Mistassini in Quebec is named for him.\nLife.\nJean Dolbeau, born in the ancient Province of Anjou, France (now the Department of Maine-et-Loire), entered the Recollects, a reform branch of the Order of Friars Minor, known for their strict poverty,"
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[
"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"overseeing the establishment of the mission in New France, Fathers Joseph Le Caron, Jean Dolbeau, and Brother Pacifique Duplessis [du Plessis] were chosen as missionaries to accompany Champlain. Although the Recollects were not the first religious order in New France (the Jesuits had been in Acadia since 1611), they were the first to enter and establish themselves as an order in the province of Quebec. Upon arrival the Recollet Fathers formed a conclave to divide the territory of Quebec. Jean Dolbeau was assigned the northern shore of the Saint"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"Jean de Menasce"
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[
"represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Jean de Menasce\nJean de Menasce (1902–1973) was a French Catholic priest, of the Dominican Order, as well as an author and academic. He came from Jewish Egyptian and French parentage. Over his lifetime he mastered fifteen languages, including Hebrew, Syriac, and Pahlavi. He was in the Catholic contingent among Jewish and Protestant leaders at an important post-war interfaith conference. Menasce wrote as a theologian, and as a scholar of Middle Eastern studies, especially regarding Judaism, and the Zoroastrian religion.\nEarly"
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"represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"the composer and pianist Jacques de Menasce.\nAfter the local lycée français, Jean de Menasce remained in Cairo studying at its French School of Law. Thereafter he continued his education in Europe, at Oxford University and at the Sorbonne. During the course of his student years, de Menasce had left behind his religious beliefs. \nAt Oxford's Balliol College, he was a classmate of the future novelist Graham Greene, who also would convert to Catholicism in 1926. Menasce translated into French works of the English poet T. S."
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