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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"Jean-Baptiste-Frézal Charbonnier"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Jean-Baptiste-Frézal Charbonnier\nJean-Baptiste-Frézal Charbonnier (20 May 1842 – 16 March 1888) was a Catholic White Fathers missionary who was Vicar Apostolic of Tanganyika from January 1887 to March 1888.\nJean-Baptiste-Frézal Charbonnier was born on 20 May 1842 in La Canourgue, France.\nHe was ordained a priest of the White Fathers (Society of the Missionaries of Africa) on 22 May 1869.\nOn 3 October 1884 the \"Missions Catholiques\" announced that it was proposed to consecrate"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title:",
"Charbonnier\nCharbonnier is a surname, meaning \"someone who sales or makes charcoal\"\", and may refer to;\n- Jean-Baptiste Charbonnier (1764–1859), composer and organist\n- Gaëtan Charbonnier (born 1988), French footballer currently playing for Montpellier HSC\n- Georges Charbonnier, French writer\n- Janine Charbonnier (born 1926), French composer\n- Jean-Baptiste-Frézal Charbonnier (1842–1888), a Catholic missionary who was Vicar Apostolic of Tanganyika from January 1887 to March 1888\n- Jean"
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"represent the term to find more information about it from wikipedia (~1 paragraph)",
"Jean-Paul Desbiens"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title.",
"Jean-Paul Desbiens\nBrother Jean-Paul Desbiens, Frère Pierre-Jérôme, F.M.S., OC (March 7, 1927 – July 23, 2006) was a Quebec writer, journalist, teacher and member of the Catholic institute of Marist Brothers.\nHe was born at Métabetchouan in the Lac Saint-Jean region of Quebec in 1927. He joined the Marist order in 1944 and studied at the Université de Montréal and the Université Laval, graduating with a degree in philosophy in 1958. He began a teaching career in"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes.",
"the provincial head of his religious congregation for some time. He wrote many essays, and published his personal journal. He was named an Officer of the Order of Canada in 2006.\nHe died in Quebec City of a heart attack on July 23, 2006, after a long battle with lung cancer.\nReferences.\n- W. H. New, ed. \"Encyclopedia of Literature in Canada.\" Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2002: 288.\nExternal links.\n- \"Jean-Paul Desbiens"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"John Dear"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"John Dear\nJohn Dear (born August 15, 1959) is an American Catholic priest, Christian pacifist, vegetarianism advocate, author and lecturer, and a former member of the Society of Jesus. He has been arrested over 75 times in acts of nonviolent civil disobedience against war, injustice and nuclear weapons as part of his \"consistent ethic of nonviolence\". Dear has been nominated several times for the Nobel Peace Prize, in January 2008 by Archbishop Desmond Tutu and most recently with Leo Rebello for the 2015 award."
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"\" Oct 11, 1962, and \"The Dividing Wall\" Dec 6, 1963)\n- Irene Lang (\"Wet Saturday\" Sep 30, 1956)\n- Paul Langton (\"Fog Closing In\" Oct 7, 1956)\n- Jay Lanin (\"Ride the Nightmare\" Nov 29, 1962)\n- Louise Larabee (\"One More Mile To Go\" Apr 7, 1957)\n- John Larkin, two appearances (\"Dear Uncle George\" May 10, 1963 and \"The Evil of"
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"Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)",
"John E. Brooks"
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"represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"John E. Brooks\nJohn E. Brooks, S.J., (July 13, 1923 – July 2, 2012) was an American Jesuit priest who joined the Society of Jesus in 1950. He served from 1970 to 1994 as the 28th president of the College of the Holy Cross, in Worcester, Massachusetts.\nCareer.\nBefore becoming a priest, Brooks graduated from Boston Latin School in 1942, then enlisted in the U.S. Army Signal Corps in 1943, serving in the European Theater of Operations from 1944-46. He"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Sep – Leroy Randle Grumman\n- 18 Sep – Harry Crerar\n- 25 Sep – John C. H. Lee\n- 2 Oct – Van Wyck Brooks\n- 9 Oct – Josip Broz Tito\n- 16 Oct – Courtney Hodges\n- 23 Oct – Thomas E. Dewey\n- 30 Oct – Douglas MacArthur\n- 6 Nov – Harry S. Truman\n- 13 Nov – Joseph Stilwell\n- 20 Nov – Edgar Bergen\n- 27 Nov – Juan Perón\n- 4 Dec – Omar Bradley\n- 11 Dec –"
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[
"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"John Francis Regis"
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"represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"John Francis Regis\nJean-François Régis, known as Saint John Francis Regis and St. Regis, (31 January 1597 – 31 December 1640), was a French priest of the Society of Jesus, recognized as a saint by the Roman Catholic Church.\nLife.\nJean-François Régis was born 31 January 1597, in Fontcouverte, Aude, in the Languedoc region of southern France. His father, Jean Régis, had recently been ennobled as a result of service rendered during the Wars of the League. His"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it!",
"other. She entered the novitiate after she had met Father Jean-Pierre Etienne Terme in late March 1825 and confided in him her desire to become a religious. Couderc assumed a religious name when she became a novice.\nShe grew concerned with the welfare of female pilgrims visiting the shrine of Saint John Francis Regis and so decided to establish a religious congregation in order to deal with this issue. Couderc co-founded the Sisters of the Cenacle with Father Terme in 1826 and became its superior in 1828 - and when the"
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"Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)",
"John Nobili"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"John Nobili\nJohn Nobili, born Giovanni Pietro Antonio Nobili, (S.J.) (April 28, 1812 – March 1, 1856) was an Italian priest of the Society of Jesus. He was a missionary in the Oregon Territory and later founded Santa Clara College in California, United States.\nBorn in Rome in 1812, and educated at the Roman College. Nobili entered the Society of Jesus in 1828 and taught humanities in Jesuit colleges in Italy, notably the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome. He was ordained a priest"
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[
"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
")\n- Giovanni Brunelli (18 Sep 1856 – 21 Feb 1861 Died)\n- Salvatore Nobili Vitelleschi (21 Dec 1863 – 20 Nov 1871 Resigned)\n- Michele Seri-Molini (24 Nov 1871 – 13 Apr 1888 Died)\n- Egidio Mauri, O.P. (1 Jun 1888 – 12 Jun 1893 Appointed, Archbishop of Ferrara)\n- Giovanni Battista Scotti (18 May 1894 – 5 Dec 1916 Died)\n- Pacifico Fiorani (12 May 1917 – 22 Jun 1924 Died)\n- Monalduzio Leopardi ("
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"Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)",
"John of Parma"
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"represent this wikipedia passage to find its title",
"John of Parma\nThe Blessed John of Parma, O.F.M. (c. 1209 – 19 March 1289) was an Italian Franciscan friar, who served as one of the first Ministers General of the Order of Friars Minor (1247–1257). He was also a noted theologian of the period.\nLife.\nJohn was born about 1209 in the medieval commune of Parma in the northern Italian region of Emilia-Romagna; his family name was probably Buralli. Educated by an uncle, chaplain of the Church of St. Lazarus at Parma"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Parma Giovanni Antonio Neuschel and the Duchess of Parma Maria Luigia; she rented an apartment for that union to use and then on 18 January 1856 made use of an old convent that the Augustinian nuns first ran. The role of that union was for its members to aid women in difficult times.\nOn 1 May 1857 she - alongside eight companions - established her own religious congregation. In 1859 she made her solemn vows into her own order thus making her both a professed religious and the Superior of the congregation once the Rule"
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"represent this phrase to find its first wikipedia paragraph\n\n\nThe query could be 'Lady Magdalene's' and should be close to 'Lady Magdalene's\nLady Magdalene's is a film directed, written and produced by J. Neil Schulman and starring Nichelle Nichols (who also received an executive producer credit). The movie was J. Neil Schulman's debut as a director, and Nichelle Nichols's as a producer.\nPlot.\nJack Goldwater, an IRS agent on loan to the Federal Air Marshal Service, is relieved of field duty after insulting a powerful U.S. Senator, and finds himself exiled to a humiliating desk job in Nevada as the federal receiver managing' but very far from 'Bexhill. Our Lady of the Rosary Church was built in 1954, designed by Alex F. Watson from the architectural firm of Hannen & Markham, and cost £12,372. St Martha's Church was designed by Marshall Wood, cost £7,114 and was built from 11 August 1939 to 1940.\nSt Mary Magdalene's Church has three Sunday Masses: 6:00pm on Saturday, and 11:00am and 6:00pm on Sunday. Every week, Monday to Saturday, St Mary Magdalene's Church has a Mass at 10:00am. Our Lady of the Rosary'",
"John of Toledo"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"John of Toledo\nJohn of Toledo (died 1275) was an English Cistercian and Cardinal.\nLittle is known about John before 1244: He was born in England, had studied medicine in Toledo and acquired theological skills at an unknown place. He became a Cistercian monk in the French abbey of Clairvaux and together with other clerics while on the way to a synod in Rome, he was captured by the troops of Emperor Frederick II in 1241 and was his prisoner for about two years, together with another Cistercian, the"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Congregation of the Immaculate Conception\nThere are a number of Roman Catholic religious orders or congregations with Immaculate Conception in their name. Several of them are discussed here. There are links to articles on other ones in the \"See also\" section below. \nOrder of the Immaculate Conception of Our Lady (The Conceptionists).\nFounded in 1484 at Toledo, Spain, by Saint Beatrice of Silva, sister of Blessed Amadeus of Portugal. On the marriage of Princess Isabella of Portugal with King John II of Castile, Beatrice"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"John of Vercelli"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"John of Vercelli\nBlessed John of Vercelli, O.P. (Giovanni da Vercelli) ( 1205 – 30 November 1283), was the sixth Master General of the Dominican Order (1264-1283).\nEarly life and education.\nJohn was born in 1205 to the Garbella family in Mosso Santa Maria in the Province of Biella, in the Piedmont region of Italy. He did his initial studies in Paris (one could not graduate in the Arts before the age of 21, and only after a minimum of six years"
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"represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Hieronymus Masci, O.Min. and Master General John of Vercelli, OP, in bringing about a peace with King Alfonso of Castile. On August 5 he was granted the right to employ the services of the members of whatever religious order he wished in his Legation to France. On November 29, the Pope revised his instructions to the three Legates, in accordance with the wishes of the two kings, so that they would hold their meetings in Gascony. On June 9, 1279, Pope Nicholas threatened King Alfonso with severe penalties"
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"represent the term to find more information about it from wikipedia (~1 paragraph)",
"John of Wildeshausen"
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"represent the input",
"John of Wildeshausen\nJohn of Wildeshausen, O.P., also called Johannes Teutonicus (c. 1180 – 4 November 1252) was a German Dominican friar, who was made a bishop in Bosnia and later the fourth Master General of the Dominican Order.\nBiography.\nBiography Early life.\nJohn, a nobleman, was born in his family's castle in Wildeshausen, Westphalia about 1180, where he received his early education. When he was of age, he went to Bologna to advance his studies. The records show that he"
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"represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"freedom to follow their religion. They built their church, which opened on November 24, 1811. The church had to be closed again due to structural mistakes, making it unsafe. In 1824 the current church was finally built, without a tower. The tower was erected in 1910. \n\"The times of division between the religious communities are, thank God, over now\" was stated by R. Gryczan/H.Holtmann.\nAttractions Marketplace.\nIn the middle of Wildeshausen is the marketplace. The pointed gables of the surrounding"
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"represent this phrase to find its first wikipedia paragraph",
"Jordan of Saxony"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Jordan of Saxony\nThe Blessed Jordan of Saxony, O.P. (referred to in Latin as Jordanis, also known as de Alamania; c. 1190 – 1237), was one of the first leaders of the Dominican Order. His feast day is February 13.\nLife.\nJordan belonged to the noble German family of the Counts of Eberstein. He was born in the Castle of Borrenstrick, in the diocese of Paderborn. He began his studies in his native land, and was sent to complete them at the University of"
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"represent this text\n\nExamples:\n\n\"Howaldtswerke-Deutsche Werft\nHowaldtswerke-Deutsche Werft (often abbreviated HDW) is a German shipbuilding company, headquartered in Kiel. It is part of the ThyssenKrupp Marine Systems (TKMS) group, owned by ThyssenKrupp. The Howaldtswerke shipyard was founded in Kiel in 1838 and merged with Hamburg-based Deutsche Werft to form Howaldtswerke-Deutsche Werft (HDW) in 1968. The company's shipyard was formerly used by Friedrich Krupp Germaniawerft until the end of World War II.\nHistory.\nHDW was founded October 1, 1838\" == \"Howaldtswerke-Deutsche Werft\"",
"of the Camp David Presidential Retreat. He was the only military chaplain to attend the United Nations Millennium World Peace Summit of Religious and Spiritual leaders, was one of 100 religious leaders at the Sep 11, 1988, White House discussion with then President Bill Clinton on the way religion might combat violence in American schools, and represented the U.S. military at the 1999 Seventh World Assembly of the World Conference of Religions for Peace, in Amman, Jordan.\nResnicoff's February 2006 presentation on religion, the military, and church-"
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"Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)",
"Joseph Roger de Benoist"
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"Represent the following document",
"Joseph Roger de Benoist\nFather Joseph Roger de Benoist (2 August 1923 – 15 February 2017) was a French missionary, journalist, and historian. His main areas of study were French West Africa and the history of the Roman Catholic Church in sub-Saharan Africa, particularly in Senegal, where he lived for several decades.\nBiography.\nFather Joseph Roger de Benoist was part of the congregation of the White Fathers. He was born in Meudon and graduated from Lille Graduate School of Journalism with a doctorate in history"
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".\n- Lorelle Semley, \"To be Free and French: Citizenship in France's Atlantic Empire\"\n- Mark Hinchman, \"Portrait of an Island: The Architecture and Material Culture of Gorée ...\"\n- Joseph Roger de Benoist et Abdoulaye Camara, « Les signares et le patrimoine bâti de l'île », dans Abdoulaye Camara & Joseph Roger de Benoist, Histoire de Gorée, Maisonneuve & Larose, 2003"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"Joseph Werth"
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"represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"center of his diocese is at Novosibirsk, the capital of Siberia, where the cathedral stands. He has sent church workers to the largest cities of Siberia, as well as many towns with sizeable Catholic populations.\nJoseph Werth began studies for the priesthood clandestinely in Lithuania under the direction of a leader of the underground Jesuits, who also secretly accepted him into the Lithuanian Province of the Society of Jesus. Later he completed his studies at the seminary in Kaunas. In 1984 Father Werth became the first Roman Catholic priest ordained since"
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"represent this wikipedia passage to find its title.",
"- \"Suffragan Bishops of (Transfiguration at) Novosibirsk\n- Joseph Werth, S.J. (\"see above\" 2002.02.11 - ...), President of Conference of Catholic Bishops of Russia (2005.02 – 2011.01.19)\nStatistics.\nAs per 2014, it pastorally served 512,000 Catholics (2.0% of 25,600,000 total) on 2,000,000 km² in 70 parishes and 160 missions with 38 priests (19 diocesan, 19 religious), 1 deacon and 77 lay religious (20 brothers, 57 sisters).\nDependent churches include:"
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"Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)",
"Juan Everardo Nithard"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Juan Everardo Nithard\nJuan Everardo Nithard (\"Johann Eberhard Nithard\", in German) (Falkenstein (Upper Austria), 8 December 1607 – Rome, 1 February 1681) was an Austrian priest of the Society of Jesus, confessor of Mariana of Austria (Queen and Regent of Spain), cardinal, and \"valido\" (royal favorite) of Spain.\nBiography.\nBorn in a Catholic family in Tirol, at the age of 21 he entered the Society of Jesus and studied at the University of Graz"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Francisco Everardo Oliveira Silva (born 1965), best known by his stage name Tiririca, Brazilian actor\n- José Everardo Nava (born 1961), Mexican politician\n- Juan Everardo Nithard (1607–1681), Austrian priest\nAs surname.\n- Milton Castellanos Everardo (1920–2011), Mexican politician and lawyer"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page.",
"Juan García López-Rico"
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"represent this wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Juan García López-Rico\nSaint Juan García López-Rico (10 July 1561 – 14 February 1613) was a Spanish Roman Catholic priest from the Trinitarian Order who would establish a branch of his order which he named the Order of Discalced Carmelites. Later in his life he assumed the name of \"John Baptist of the Conception\".\nHe made it his mission to renew his order and he became known as a great reformer of the aims and structure of his order which he had applied to the new one that"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it:",
"he established. He was also a prolific writer on theological matters.\nHe was beatified in 1819 and was canonized in 1975.\nLife.\nJuan García López-Rico was born as the fifth of eight children in 1561 to Xixón and Isabel García Marcos López-Rico. He had eight siblings and three of his siblings entered into religious life. His religious calling manifested when he was fifteen.\nAt the age of fifteen he met Teresa of Avila - future saint. This awakened in him a calling to the"
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"Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)",
"Junípero Serra"
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"Represent this",
"Junípero Serra\nSaint Junípero Serra y Ferrer, O.F.M., (; , ) (November 24, 1713August 28, 1784) was a Roman Catholic Spanish priest and friar of the Franciscan Order who founded a mission in Baja California and the first nine of 21 Spanish missions in California from San Diego to San Francisco, in what was then Alta California in the Province of Las Californias, New Spain. Serra was beatified by Pope John Paul II on September 25, 1988, in the Vatican City. Pope Francis canonised him on September"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
".\nFrancis sent him to establish \"places\" for the friars in Gualdo Tadino and Viterbo. When St. Clare of Assisi was dying, Juniper consoled her. Juniper is buried at Ara Coeli Church at Rome. His feast day is celebrated on 29 January.\nSt. Junípero Serra (1713–1784), born \"Miquel Josep Serra i Ferrer\", took his religious name in honor of Brother Juniper when he was received into the Order.\nThe Legend of the Pig's Feet.\nSeveral stories about Juniper in the"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"Justo Pérez de Urbel"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Justo Pérez de Urbel\nJusto Pérez Santiago (August 7, 1895 – 1979) later known as Fray Justo Pérez de Urbel y Santiago O.S.B. was a Spanish Roman Catholic clergyman (Order of Saint Benedict) and medievalist, first abbot of the Monastery of the Holy Cross of the Valle de los Caídos, member of the Consejo Nacional del Movimiento (the first quasi-parliamentary assembly of Francoist Spain), later a Procurador en Cortes (member of the longer-lived Francoist assembly established after the end of the Spanish Civil War"
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"represent this wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Monastery of Santa María de Mezonzo\nThe Monastery of Santa María de Mezonzo is a Spanish religious building in Romanesque style in the parish of Santa María de Mezonzo, in the municipality of Vilasantar. Although it probably dates back to the time of the Kingdom of the Suebi, the current monastery was founded as a double convent by Abbot Reterico. According to Antonio López Ferreiro, the monastery was donated to the Asturian-Galician king Alfonso III el Magno in 870. Justo Pérez de Urbel, after comparing the names of the confirmatory"
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"Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)",
"Józef Cyrek"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Józef Cyrek\nJózef Cyrek (born 13 September 1904 in Bysina; d. 2 September 1940 at Auschwitz) was a Polish writer and Roman Catholic clergyman, member of the Society of Jesus involved in the religious publishing industry, who shortly after the Nazi invasion of Poland was arrested by the Gestapo, imprisoned at several places of detention, and lastly deported to the Auschwitz concentration camp where he was murdered.\nHe has in recent years been accorded the title of Servant of God and is in the process of being beatified by the"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Catholic Church.\nLife and death.\nCyrek was born at Bysina, a village some 34 km (21 miles) south of Cracow, on 13 September 1904 – when the area was under Austrian occupation – in the family of Józef Cyrek, a farmer, and his wife Barbara \"née\" Sobal who died when Cyrek was 18-months' old. Cyrek was thus from his earliest years inured to physical work having been obliged to help out with the agricultural work of the family. He went to school at Bysina"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page:",
"Kamp Abbey"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Kamp Abbey\nKamp Abbey (Kloster Kamp), also known as Altenkamp Abbey or Alt(en)feld Abbey (and in English formerly Camp Abbey) was the first Cistercian monastery founded in German territory, in the present town of Kamp-Lintfort in North Rhine-Westphalia.\nHistory.\nIt was founded in 1123 by Friedrich I, Archbishop of Cologne, and settled from Morimond Abbey. As the first Cistercian foundation in the region it attracted great endowments and became very wealthy and powerful. It was extremely active in the foundation of"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"17 Sep 2009 Retired)\n- Vincenzo Manzella (17 Sep 2009 – )\nBooks.\nBooks Reference Works.\n- (in Latin)\n- (in Latin)\n- pp. 946–947. (Use with caution; obsolete)\n- (in Latin)\n- (in Latin)\n- (in Latin)\nBooks Studies.\n- Kamp, Norbert (1975). \"Kirche und Monarchie im staufischen Königreich Sizilien: I. Prosopographische Grundlegung, Bistumer und Bischofe des Konigreichs 1194–1266: 3"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"Kappel Abbey"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Kappel Abbey\nKappel Abbey is a former Cistercian monks monastery located in Kappel am Albis in the Swiss canton of Zurich.\nFoundation of the abbey.\nKappel Abbey is first mentioned in 1185 by Bishop Hermann II of Constance. The abbey was founded by the Freiherr of Eschenbach. The name was derived from a chapel in which, according to a foundation legend, hermits used to live. In 1211, Pope Innocent III gave the monastery the \"Privilegium commune Cisterciense\". Between the 13th to 15th Centuries the Abbey received"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes.",
"for the region.\nThere was a nunnery at Kappel near Vestervig Abbey, and rumor had it that the monks built a tunnel that ran from the abbey to the nunnery, so that the canons could move back and forth without being seen. Local histories cite claims of brick work found under fields between the abbey and Kappel as evidence for the tunnel, but no serious excavations have been undertaken to prove or disprove the old story.\nReformation in Denmark.\nThe abbey was dissolved in 1536 when Denmark became officially Lutheran"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"Kasper Drużbicki"
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"represent this wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Kasper Drużbicki\nKasper Drużbicki or Gaspar Druzbicius (born probably in Drużbice in Ziemia Sieradzka in Poland, 1589; entered the Society of Jesus, 20 August 1609; died at Poznań, 2 April 1662) was a Polish Jesuit and ascetic writer.\nLife.\nA nobleman (Nałęcz coat-of-arms). After few years of teaching in Lublin, he became master of novices in Kraków, and subsequently rector of colleges of Kalisz, Ostroh, and, for the longest time, Poznań. He also established"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes.",
"Mancipium Mariae\nMancipium Mariae (Latin \"the slavery/a slave of Mary\") – a Christian devotion.\nIts rules, referring to older traditions, were formulated from the inspiration of Jesuit Kasper Drużbicki in following works:\n- Franciscus Phoenicius (Franciszek Stanisław Fenicki), \"Mariae mancipium\", Lublin 1632\n- Jan Chomentowski (Chomętowski), \"Pętko Panny Maryjej albo sposób oddawania się Błogosławionej Pannie Marii za sługę i niewolnika\", Lublin 1632\nIn ancient Rome \"mancipium\" meant the relation of subjection"
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"Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)",
"Kazimierz Dembowski"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Kazimierz Dembowski\nKazimierz Dembowski (3 August 1912 in Strzyżów – 10 August 1942 at Dachau) was a Polish Roman Catholic clergyman and member of the Society of Jesus involved in the religious publishing industry, who shortly after the German invasion of Poland was arrested by the Gestapo, imprisoned at several places of detention, and lastly deported to the Dachau concentration camp where he was murdered in a gas chamber. He is among 122 Polish martyrs whose beatification process was advanced in 2003.\nLife and death.\nDembowski was born in"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"- Józef Borkowski Dunin (1809-1843)\n- Frédéric Chopin (1810-1849), composer\n- Edward Dembowski (1822-1846), philosopher, journalist and activist\n- Piotr Michałowski (1800-1855), painter\n- Stanisław Moniuszko (1819-1872), composer\n- Stanisław Kostka Potocki (1755-1821), art patron, philosopher and intellectual\n- Andrzej Towiański (1799-1878), philosopher and Messianist religious leader\n- Kazimierz Władysław Wójcicki (1807-1879)"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph.",
"Kingswood Abbey"
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"Kingswood Abbey\nKingswood Abbey was a Cistercian abbey, located in the village of Kingswood near Wotton-under-Edge, Gloucestershire, England. The abbey was demolished during the Dissolution of the Monasteries, and all that remains is the gatehouse, a Grade 1 listed building. Through the gatehouse arch are a few houses and the small village primary school of Kingswood.\nHistory.\nKingswood Abbey was founded in 1139 by William of Berkeley, provost of Berkeley, in accordance with the wishes of his late uncle, Roger II"
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", such as Monkton Combe School, Prior Park College, Sidcot School which is associated with the Religious Society of Friends, Downside School which is a Roman Catholic public school in Stratton-on-the-Fosse, situated next to the Benedictine Downside Abbey, and Kingswood School, which was founded by John Wesley in 1748 in Kingswood near Bristol, originally for the education of the sons of the itinerant ministers (clergy) of the Methodist Church.\nEducation Further and higher education.\nA wide range of adult education and further"
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"represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its wikipedia page\n\nE.g.\nSkierniewice Voivodeship == Skierniewice Voivodeship\nSkierniewice Voivodeship () was a unit of administrative division and local government in Poland from 1975 to 1998, superseded by Łódź Voivodeship and Masovian Voivodeship. Its capital city was Skierniewice.\nMajor cities and towns (population in 1995).\n- Skierniewice (47,900)\n- Żyrardów (43,500)\n- Sochaczew (39,700)\n- Łowicz (31,500)\nSee also.\n- Voivodeships of Poland != Skierbieszów (rural, Zamość County, Lublin Voivodeship, 139.17 km, 5,604)\n- Skierniewice (urban, city county, Łódź Voivodeship, 32.6 km, 48,761)\n- Gmina Skierniewice (rural, Skierniewice County, Łódź Voivodeship, 131.67 km, 6,736)\n- Gmina Skoczów (urban-rural, Cieszyn County, Silesian Voivodeship, 63.27 km, 25,560)\n- Gmina Skoki (urban-rural, Wągrowiec County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, 198.52 km, 8,749)\n- Gmina Skołyszyn",
"Kirkstall Abbey"
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"Kirkstall Abbey\nKirkstall Abbey is a ruined Cistercian monastery in Kirkstall, north-west of Leeds city centre in West Yorkshire, England. It is set in a public park on the north bank of the River Aire. It was founded \"c.\"1152. It was disestablished during the Dissolution of the Monasteries under Henry VIII.\nThe picturesque ruins have been drawn and painted by artists such as J.M.W. Turner, Thomas Girtin and John Sell Cotman.\nKirkstall Abbey was acquired by Leeds Corporation as a gift from Colonel North"
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"Wedding... Live in Leeds. A live music drama starring Andrew Gower and Lacey Turner as fiancees Victor Frankenstein and Elizabeth Lavenza.\nOn 10 and 11 September 2011 the Kaiser Chiefs played two concerts at Kirkstall Abbey to a maximum audience of 10,000 on each day.\nThe BBC Television series \"Gunpowder\" (2017) used Kirkstall Abbey as a location.\nSee also.\n- Abbey House Museum\n- Architecture of Leeds\nExternal links.\n- Kirkstall Abbey official website\n- Kirkstall Abbey on Kirkstall Online community"
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"represent this phrase to find its first wikipedia paragraph",
"Kirkstead Abbey"
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"Kirkstead Abbey\nKirkstead Abbey is a former Cistercian monastery in Kirkstead, Lincolnshire, England.\nThe monastery was founded in 1139 by Hugh Brito, (or Hugh son of Eudo), lord of Tattershall, and was originally colonised by an abbot and twelve monks from Fountains Abbey in Yorkshire. The original site was not large enough however, and Robert, son of Hugh, found a better site a short distance away in 1187. The 1187 date is probably \"completion\" of the Abbey, as the architecture dates it"
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"to St. Mary. It was dissolved in 1536. Almost immediately after its founding it was redounded in the Benedictine order and by 1537 was of the Premonstratensian, before being finally suppressed in 1539.\nAfter the Dissolution in 1540 the property was given to Robert Dighton. \nThe earthwork remains of the nunnery and associated fishponds are still visible.\nIt was one of a number of monastic buildings along the sides of the Witham valley south of Lincoln. To its north is Tuphome Abbey and to the south is Kirkstead Abbey."
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"La Clarté-Dieu"
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"La Clarté-Dieu\nThe Abbey of La Clarté-Dieu was a Cistercian monastery located in Saint-Paterne-Racan, France. The abbey was founded in 1239 by the executors of Peter des Roches, Bishop of Winchester, as one of a pair, the other being Netley Abbey in Hampshire, England. The bishop had conceived the idea of founding a pair of monasteries some years before and had begun collecting the necessary endowments for them, but his death in 1238 prevented him from completing the project. The first monks"
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"several religious houses, including Netley Abbey (1236), also in Hampshire, Halesowen Abbey (1214) in Worcestershire and La Clarté-Dieu (1236) in his native France.\nIn 1222 the first inhabitants of the new monastery, under the leadership of Abbot Richard, arrived from Halesowen Abbey. They were not monks, instead they were canons regular belonging to the Premonstratensian order (also known as the 'white canons' from the colour of their robes and Norbertines from the name of their founder, St. Norbert)"
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"Lawrence of Brindisi"
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"Lawrence of Brindisi\nSaint Lawrence of Brindisi, O.F.M. Cap. (22 July 1559 – 22 July 1619), born Giulio Cesare Russo, was a Roman Catholic priest and a theologian as well as a member of the Order of Friars Minor Capuchin.\nHe was beatified on 1 June 1783 and was canonized as a saint on 8 December 1881. He was named a Doctor of the Church in 1959.\nBiography.\nGiulio Cesare Russo was born in Brindisi, Kingdom of Naples, to a family of Venetian merchants"
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"Brothers, Bo. Mabuhay, Carmona, 4116 Cavite; Tels (046) 430-1831; 430-2026\n- St. Lawrence de Brindisi House of Studies, Our Lady of Lourdes Parish, 4120 Tagaytay City; Tel. (046) 413-1260\n- St. Paul Seminary Foundation, Lalaan I, Silang, 4118 Cavite; Tel. (046) 414-2281\nReligious Congregations and Organizations.\nReligious Congregations and Organizations Religious Men.\n- Clerics Regular of Somasca (CRS)\n- Clerics"
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"Le Thoronet Abbey"
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"Le Thoronet Abbey\nLe Thoronet Abbey () is a former Cistercian abbey built in the late twelfth and early thirteenth century, now restored as a museum. It is sited between the towns of Draguignan and Brignoles in the Var Department of Provence, in southeast France. It is one of the three Cistercian abbeys in Provence, along with the Sénanque Abbey and Silvacane, that together are known as \"the Three Sisters of Provence.\"\nLe Thoronet Abbey is one of the best examples of the spirit of the Cistercian order"
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"of the cities. Sénanque Abbey was the first, established in the Luberon between 1148 and 1178. Le Thoronet Abbey was founded in a remote valley near Draguignan in 1160. Silvacane Abbey, on the Durance River at La Roque-d'Anthéron, was founded in 1175.\nFrance, Toulouse and Catalonia battle for Provence.\nIn the early 13th century a religious and political struggle in neighboring Languedoc upset the existing order in Provence. Pope Innocent III sent missionaries and then soldiers to suppress the Cathar religious movement in Languedoc. The"
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"Leopold Janauschek"
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"Leopold Janauschek\nLeopold Janauschek (13 October 1827 – 23 July 1898) was an Austrian Cistercian historian.\nLife.\nJanauschek was born at Brünn, Moravia. In 1846 he received the religious habit at the Cistercian Zwettl Abbey, Lower Austria, where he was professed in 1848. His superiors then sent him to their house of studies at Heiligenkreuz Abbey near Vienna, where he studied philosophy and theology. After his ordination to the priesthood he was made professor of history and canon law. His scholarly works attracted attention and"
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"religious orders reside in Heiligenkreuz Abbey. Other seminarians live at the Leopoldinum Seminary, also located at the monastery. The only traditional dormitory is the Pope John Paul II Student House, home to both lay and religious male students. St. Joseph of Carmel Other students, especially non-clergy students, find off-campus housing in the town of Heiligenkreuz.\nNotable people.\nNotable people Alumni.\n- Christian Feurstein, OCist (1983), Austrian monk and abbot of Rein Abbey\n- Leopold Janauschek, OCist, Austrian"
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"Lorenzo Ricci"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Lorenzo Ricci\nLorenzo Ricci, S.J. (August 2, 1703November 24, 1775) was an Italian Jesuit, elected the eighteenth Superior General of the Society of Jesus. He was also the last before the suppression of the Jesuits in 1773.\nEarly life and career.\nRicci was born in Florence, Italy, into one of the most ancient, and illustrious families of Tuscany. When very young, he was sent to Prato to the Jesuits Cicognini College. He entered the Society when he was scarcely fifteen, on"
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"financial straights when the British seized 1855 twelve of thirteen ships bound for Bordeaux with produce. The trading house in France went bankrupt due to his losses. His conduct was one of the causes that led to the downfall of his order.\nWhen Lorenzo Ricci, the Jesuit general, was informed of this, in 1757, he sent instructions to Lavalette to desist immediately. But Lavallette, in flagrant violation of Canon Law and his vow of obedience began to try and manipulate trading agreements with Dutch Merchants. Ricci sent three visitors"
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"Louis J. Gallagher"
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"Louis J. Gallagher\nLouis J. Gallagher, SJ (July 22, 1885 – August 1972) was an American Jesuit, known for his educational and literary work.\nBiography.\nBorn in Boston, Louis J. Gallagher entered the Society of Jesus on August 15, 1905, and was ordained as a priest in 1920, and worked for a while as the headmaster of Xavier High School in New York City (1921–22).\nIn the aftermath of the Russian famine of 1921, Gallagher went to Russia as the Assistant"
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", recipient of the 2010 World Statesman Award. \nSep 22, 2009\nAddress by Ivan Lewis on behalf of PM Gordon Brown\nThe Gordon Brown, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom received the 2009 World Statesman Award\nSep 22, 2009\nAddress by Muhtar Kent\nMuhtar Kent, Chairman & CEO, The Coca-Cola Company received the 2009 Appeal of Conscience Award\nSep 22, 2009\nAddress by Bernard J. Arnault\nBernard J. Arnault, Chairman & CEO, LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton received the 2009"
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"represent this phrase to find its first wikipedia paragraph",
"Louroux Abbey"
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"Louroux Abbey\nLouroux Abbey () was a Cistercian monastery located in Vernantes, Pays de la Loire, France.\nHistory.\nLouroux Abbey was founded in 1121 by the mother abbey of Cîteaux.\nThe church was consecrated on September 14, 1179 and the abbey was ruled by Cistercians until 1791.\nLouroux Abbey had as daughter abbeys (1134-1791), Bellebranche (1152-1686), (1172-1791), and Santa Maria della Vittoria (1277-1550).\nSee also."
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"Berry, monks, diocese of Bourges (Méry-ès-Bois, Cher)\n- Louroux Abbey (also Le Louroux Abbey), monks, diocese of Angers (Vernantes, Maine-et-Loire)\n- Lucelle Abbey (also Lützel Abbey), monks, diocese of Basle (1124–1790) (Lucelle, Haut-Rhin and Pleigne in Switzerland)\n- La Lum-Dieu Abbey or La Lumière-Dieu Abbey, also known as Fabas Abbey, nuns, diocese of Comminges (Fabas, Haute-"
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"Louth Park Abbey"
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"Louth Park Abbey\nLouth Park Abbey was a Cistercian abbey in Lincolnshire, England. It was founded in 1139 by the Bishop Alexander of Lincoln as a daughter-house of Fountains Abbey, Yorkshire.\nFounding.\nThe founder originally offered the monks a site on the Isle of Haverholme, but they were unhappy with the agricultural potential, and it was given to the order of Gilbert of Sempringham, who settled there in 1139. Alexander of Lincoln then gave the Cistercians a site within his own park at Louth instead."
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"Statute of Uses, which sought to recover royal fees based on land tenure. \nThe rising began on 1 October 1536 at St James' Church, Louth, after evensong, shortly after the closure of Louth Park Abbey. The stated aim of the uprising was to protest against the suppression of Catholic religious houses, not the rule of Henry VIII himself. The commissioners' registers were seized and burned. It quickly gained support in Horncastle, Market Rasen, Caistor and other nearby towns. John Raynes, the chancellor of the"
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"Luis Martín"
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"Luis Martín\nVery Rev. Luis Martín García, S.J. (19 August 1846 – 18 April 1906) was a Spanish Jesuit, elected the twenty-fourth Superior General of the Society of Jesus.\nEarly years and formation.\nThe third of six brothers, Martín was born of humble parentage. After primary education in his own village he entered the seminary of Burgos in 1858, where he spent six years. His intellectual inclination led him to join the Society of Jesus in 1864. He began his philosophy studies in Léon"
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"(14 Mar 1633 – 12 Dec 1652 Died)\n- Dionisio de Cimbrón, O. Cist. (23 Jun 1653 – 19 Sep 1661 Died)\n- Francisco de Loyola y Vergara, O.S.A. (15 Jul 1669 – Nov 1677 Died)\n- Antonio de Morales, O.P. (25 May 1682 – Dec 1683 Died)\n- Luis de Lemos y Usategui, O.S.A. (16 Sep 1686 – 27 Nov 1692 Resigned)\n- Martín de Híjar y Mendoza, O.S.A. (13 Apr 1693 – 15 May 1704 Died"
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"Léonce Bridoux"
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"represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it\n\n\nFor example, A Gun Fightin' Gentleman\nA Gun Fightin' Gentleman is a 1919 American Western film directed by John Ford and starring Harry Carey. Because only three reels of originally five or six are known to exist, this film is considered a partially lost film.\nPlot.\nAs described in a film magazine, ranch owner Cheyenne Harry (Carey) is the victim of a plot engineered by land speculator John Merritt (Sherry), who uses a doctored title to deprive Harry of his land holdings. Powerless in the face should be similar to A Gun Fightin' Gentleman",
"Léonce Bridoux\nLéonce Bridoux (15 January 1852 - 20 October 1890) was a Catholic missionary of the White Fathers who became the Vicar Apostolic of Tanganyika.\nEarly years.\nLéonce Bridoux was born on 15 January 1852 in Henin-Liétard, France.His father was Sub Saharan African and his mother was French.\nHe joined the White Fathers (Society of the Missionaries of Africa) in 1873.On 24 October 1874 he was ordained a priest of the White Fathers. Bridoux became Superior of the Major seminary of Carthage"
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"Bridoux\nBridoux is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:\n- Eugène Bridoux (1888–1955), French general\n- François-Augustin Bridoux (1813–1892), French engraver\n- Léonce Bridoux (1852–1890), French Roman Catholic bishop"
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"Løgum Abbey"
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"Løgum Abbey\nLøgum Abbey (; ) was a Cistercian monastery in the present town of Løgumkloster in North Schleswig in Denmark.\nHistory.\nLøgum Abbey was founded in 1173 by Bishop Stefan of Ribe who had previously been at Herrevad Abbey in Skåne, the first Cistercian foundation in Denmark. Løgum was in a sense a daughter house to Herrevad. The abbey was called \"Locus Dei\" in Latin (\"Guds sted\" in Danish), meaning \"God's place\" and dedicated to the Virgin Mary.\nThe"
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"scholars believe the Codex Runicus, a medieval attempt to use runes for writing the Law of Skåne (), was produced there.\nHerrevad Abbey over time became one of the largest and wealthiest monastic houses in Denmark, and certainly in Skåne, then part of Denmark. At its height, the abbey owned more than 400 income-producing properties. It enjoyed the support of the nobility and Denmark's royal family for generations.\nHerrevad established three daughter houses in Denmark - Holme Abbey, Tvis Abbey and Løgum Abbey -"
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"Manuel da Nóbrega"
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"represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it:\n\nFewshot example: \"Geikie Ridge\nGeikie Ridge () is a massive mountain ridge, long and wide, forming the divide between Dugdale Glacier and Murray Glacier in the Admiralty Mountains of Victoria Land, Antarctica. It was first charted by the British Antarctic Expedition, 1898–1900, under Carsten Borchgrevink, who named the high land between these glaciers \"Geikie Land\", after Sir Archibald Geikie (for whom Geikie Glacier and Geikie Inlet were also named). The generic \"Land\" has been changed to \"Ridge\", since it was not appropriate\" == \"Geikie Ridge\"",
"Manuel da Nóbrega\nManuel da Nóbrega (old spelling \"Manoel da Nóbrega\") (18 October 1517 – 18 October 1570) was a Portuguese Jesuit priest and first Provincial of the Society of Jesus in colonial Brazil. Together with José de Anchieta, he was very influential in the early history of Brazil and participated in the founding of several cities, such as Recife, Salvador, Rio de Janeiro, and São Paulo, as well as many Jesuit colleges and seminaries.\nEarly life.\nNóbrega was born on October"
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"represent this wikipedia passage to find its title.",
"the Canary Islands, and the father of Brazilian literature. Anchieta was also involved in the religious instruction and conversion to the Catholic faith of the Indian population. His efforts along with those of another Jesuit missionary, Manuel da Nóbrega, at Indian pacification were crucial to the establishment of stable colonial settlements in the colony.\nWith his book \"Arte de gramática da língua mais usada na costa do Brasil\", Anchieta became the first person to provide an orthography to the Old Tupi language most commonly spoken by the indigenous people of"
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"represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its wikipedia page",
"Manuel de Almeida"
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"Manuel de Almeida\nManuel de Almeida (sometimes Manoel de Almeida, 1580–1646) was a native of Viseu who entered at an early age into the Society of Jesus and went out as a missionary to India. He is noted to have travelled to Ethiopia and Eritrea and Lake Tana and built a number of churches and monasteries, particularly on the small islands of the lake.\nIn 1622, Almeida was selected by the general of his order as ambassador to the Emperor of Ethiopia, Susenyos. Accompanied by three companions, Almeida"
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"represent this wikipedia passage to find its title.\n\n\nExample:\nProvided: \"Michel Gbezera-Bria\nMichel Gbezera-Bria (born 1 January 1946) is a Central African politician and diplomat. He was Prime Minister of the Central African Republic from 1997 to 1999. He is currently the CAR Ambassador to France.\nEarly life.\nGbezera-Bria was born in Bossangoa on 1 January 1946. He is a member of the Baya ethnic group. He was educated at College Emile Gentil in Bangui and studied law in Brazzaville. Gbezera-Bria later studied economics at Institut d'administration publique in Caen\" Match: \"Michel Gbezera-Bria\"",
"1459 Appointed, Bishop of Guarda)\n- Juan Roderici (13 Jul 1459 – 27 Sep 1459 Appointed, Bishop of Coimbra)\n- Alvaro (17 Oct 1469 – )\n- João Manuel Ferras (9 Jan 1472 – 17 Mar 1477 Appointed, Bishop of Guarda)\n- Martin Pedro (28 Mar 1477 – 24 Sep 1477 Appointed, Bishop of Lamego)\n- Justo Baldini, O.S.B. (15 Mar 1479 – 1493 Died)\n- Fernando de Almeida (bishop) (Cotignus) (19 Jul 1493"
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"Marcel-Jacques Dubois"
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"Marcel-Jacques Dubois\nMarcel-Jacques Dubois (1920–2007) was a French academic and theologian of the Dominican Order and a naturalized citizen of Israel. He was linked to Bruno Hussar's \"House of Isaiah\" and involved in Relations between Catholicism and Judaism. He was professor of philosophy at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem (where he served as chairman of department) and was on the 1974 \"Commission of the Holy See for Religious Relations with the Jews.\" He had significance as an orthodox Dominican who rejected supersessionism."
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"counselor Ad Hoogendijk, a colleague of Gerd B. Achenbach. In 1989 she opened the philosophical practice center in Israel, \"Center Sophon\" in Jerusalem. In 1990 she opened the philosophical First-Aid Line, \"Philosophone\", for persons with existential problems and ethical challenges. In 2000 she received her Ph.D. degree. Her thesis, conducted by Marcel-Jacques Dubois and Maurice S. Friedman, described the life of central philosophers in order to find ways to help people by their autobiography.\nShe was an Editorial board member"
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"represent this phrase to find its first wikipedia paragraph\n\nE.g. 'Gerd Anthoff' == 'Gerd Anthoff\nGerd Anthoff (born 12 August 1946 in Munich, Germany) is a German television actor.' != 'at her job, and forms a perfect team with Berghammer (whom she occasionally teases for his set ways).\nNadine Richter, played by Katharina Abt, replaced Sabrina Lorenz in 2006.\nOther recurring characters include \"Wachtmeister\" Anton Pfeiffer (Udo Thomer), a clumsy and slightly idiotic uniformed policeman; Toni Rambold (Gerd Anthoff), an old schoolmate of Berghammer's who has become a (rather shady) entrepreneur in the construction business and who represents capitalism in the series; and Prälat Hinter (Michael Lerchenberg'",
"Maria Valtorta"
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"few pages and narrates the words spoken among the people present. The reputed visions also describe the many journeys of Jesus throughout the Holy Land and his conversations with people such as the apostles.\nPublication.\nMaria Valtorta was at first reluctant to have her notebooks published, but on the advice of her priests, Father Romualdo Migliorini and Corrado Berti of the Servite Order, agreed in 1947 to their publication.\nShortly after April 1947, Father Berti presented the first copy of the work to Pope Pius XII, who on"
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"represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"by Maria Valtorta between 1943 and 1947. During these years she reported visions of Jesus and Mary and claimed personal conversations with and dictations from Jesus. Her notebooks (published separately) include close to 700 detailed episodes in the life of Jesus, as an extension of the gospels.\nValtorta's handwritten episodes (which had no chronological order) were typed into separate pages by her priest and reassembled as a book. The first copy of the book was presented to Pope Pius XII, and the three Servite priests who attended the"
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"Marie-Joseph Lagrange"
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"represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Marie-Joseph Lagrange\nMarie-Joseph Lagrange (born Albert Marie-Henri Lagrange on 7 March 1855, in Bourg-en-Bresse, died on 10 March 1938, in Marseille) was a Catholic priest in the Dominican Order and founder of the École Biblique in Jerusalem.\nLife.\nAlbert Marie-Henri Lagrange was born 7 March 1855, in Bourg-en-Bresse, France. At the age of three, he received a blessing from the Curé d’Ars. After studies in the junior Seminary of"
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"Basilica of St-Étienne, next to the École Biblique.\nFurther reading.\n- Jean Guitton, \"Portrait du père Lagrange, celui qui a réconcilié la science et la foi\", Robert Laffont, 1992.\n- Bernard Montagnes, \"Marie-Joseph Lagrange - Une biographie critique\", Paris, Cerf, 2004.\nExternal links.\n- The Story of Father Marie-Joseph Lagrange: Founder of the Modern Catholic Bible Study \n- Marie-Joseph Lagrange on the Encyclopædia Britannica"
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"Marie-Madeleine de Chauvigny de la Peltrie"
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"Marie-Madeleine de Chauvigny de la Peltrie\nMarie-Madeleine de Chauvigny de la Peltrie (1603 – 18 November 1671) was a French woman who started the Order of Ursulines of Quebec.\nLife.\nMarie-Madeleine Chauvigny (also known as: de la Peltrie) was born in 1603 at Alençon, France, the daughter of Guillaume de Chauvigny, Sieur d’Alençon et de Vaubougon, and of Lady Jeanne Du Bouchet. With no male heir, Guillaume de Chauvigny tried to arrange aristocratic matches for his daughters."
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"Marie-Madeleine de Chauvigny de la Peltrie (1603–1671), Frenchwoman who helped to establish the Ursuline Order in Quebec\n- Marie Madeleine de Rochechouart de Mortemart (1645–1704), French abbess, better known as Gabrielle de Rochechouart\n- places\n- Sainte-Marie-Madeleine, Quebec, parish municipality in southwestern Quebec, Canada\n- Église Sainte-Marie-Madeleine, Roman Catholic church in Paris\nSee also.\n- Marie-Magdeleine, oratorio (Drame Sacré) in three acts and four parts by Jules"
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"Martin Delrio"
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"to those whose loyalty could be taken for granted. Martin seems to have lost his position as vice-chancellor. Another victim seem to have been the memoirs which Delrio composed in honour of his patron Don John of Austria and in ostensible imitation of Caesar's De Bello Gallico. These remained unpublished until the late nineteenth century.\nLife Jesuit career.\nOn 27 December 1579 Martin Delrio wrote from Maastricht to the Jesuit General Everard Mercurian seeking to join the Society of Jesus. Delrio professed a sincere conversion to the religious life,"
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".\nLife Political career.\nMartin Delrio was never destined for one of the religious orders. His family had originally destined him for a political career. His law degree from Salamanca was part of this requirement. The Spanish crown since the days of Catholic Monarchs had particularly valued such degrees. Equally valued were titles of nobility. A legacy left by Martin's grandfather was used to buy him the title of Lord of Aartselaar. On 7 September 1561, at the age of 10, Martin Delrio made his official entry, swearing"
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"represent this phrase to find its first wikipedia paragraph.",
"Martin de Porres"
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"Martin de Porres\nMartin de Porres Velázquez, O.P. (December 9, 1579 – November 3, 1639), was a Peruvian lay brother of the Dominican Order who was beatified in 1837 by Pope Gregory XVI and canonized in 1962 by Pope John XXIII. He is the patron saint of mixed-race people, barbers, innkeepers, public health workers, and all those seeking racial harmony.\nHe was noted for his work on behalf of the poor, establishing an orphanage and a children's hospital. He maintained an"
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"and Paul Cathedral where the Archbishop was presiding at Easter services. Although the Archbishop rescinded his order, Hardin left Holy Angels to found Martin Center, an educational and social justice center, at the close of 1969. Within a year, Schilling received permission from her religious community to work full-time at Martin Center as Education Coordinator.\nThe Martin Center.\nMartin Center was named for Martin Luther King Jr. and St. Martin de Porres, patron saint, within the Catholic Church, of poor and mixed race people."
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"María López de Rivas Martínez"
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"María López de Rivas Martínez\nBlessed María López de Rivas Martínez (18 August 1560 – 13 September 1640) was a Spanish Roman Catholic nun who was a professed member of the Discalced Carmelites. She adopted the name of María of Jesus when she became a nun.\nShe was beatified on 14 November 1976 and her cause for sainthood continues. A miracle needed for that is now under investigation.\nLife.\nMaría López de Rivas Martinez was born in Spain on 18 August 1560 into a life of wealth. Her"
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"Mary of Jesus\nMary of Jesus may refer to:\n- Mary (mother of Jesus), Mary of Nazareth, the mother of Jesus\n- Saint Marie-Eugénie de Jésus (1817–1898), founder of the congregation of the Religious of the Assumption\n- Venerable Mary of Jesus of Ágreda (1602 –1665), Franciscan abbess and spiritual writer\n- Blessed María López de Rivas Martínez (1560 – 1640), known as Mary of Jesus, Carmelite nun\n- Blessed Émilie d'Oultremont (1818–1878),"
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"Mazan Abbey"
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"represent the input\n\nFor example, Mekupelet\nMekupelet () (English name: Chocolate Log) is a bar of thinly folded milk chocolate produced in Israel since 1935 by 'Elite' now a subdivision of the Strauss Group. The Hebrew name means \"folded\". It is known for its crumbliness and thin flakes and has been compared to the British chocolate bar known as Cadbury Flake.\nMekupelet is exported to overseas markets. Mekupelet is also produced in a 'Mehadrin' version through the 'Magadim' factory of the Strauss Group.\nVariations. should be similar to Mekupelet",
"Mazan Abbey\nMazan Abbey was a Cistercian monastery in the village of Mazan-l'Abbaye in the \"département\" of the Ardèche in the region of Rhône-Alpes, France.\nIt was founded in 1120 from Bonnevaux Abbey, incorporating an already existing community of canons, and was the mother house of Le Thoronet Abbey (1136), Silvanès Abbey (1136), Bonneval Abbey (1147) and Sénanque Abbey (1148). It was plundered during the Hundred Years' War and again by the Huguenots, and revived"
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"?) (Saint-Ouen-l'Aumône, Val d'Oise)\n- Mazan Abbey, monks, diocese of Viviers (Mazan-l'Abbaye, Ardèche)\n- Mègemont Abbey, nuns, later monks, diocese of Clermont (Chassagne, Puy-de-Dôme)\n- Melleray Abbey (\"Abbaye Notre-Dame de Melleray\"), monks, diocese of Nantes (La Meilleraye-de-Bretagne, Loire-Atlantique)\n- Merci-Dieu Abbey, monks, diocese of Poitiers (La Roche-Posay"
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"Meaux Abbey"
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"Meaux Abbey\nMeaux Abbey (archaic, also referred to as \"Melsa\") was a Cistercian abbey founded in 1151 by William le Gros, 1st Earl of Albemarle (Count of Aumale), Earl of York and 4th Lord of Holderness, near Beverley in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England.\nA chronicle of its history was written by Thomas Burton, one of the abbots. The abbey owned the land of Wyke, which was purchased from it by King Edward I of England in 1293 to establish the town"
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"de Maulay. Besides his heir, Maulay had two other sons – Robert and Stephen, and a daughter, Hilary, who married Piers de Brus, son and heir of Piers de Brus, the Lord of Skelton. Maulay had endowed a chantry at Meaux Abbey in Yorkshire in memory of his wife. He also confirmed grants of lands to Eskdale Priory, a Grandmontine house founded by Isabella's father, and to Nostell Priory. Maulay was also a benefactor of the Knights of Saint Thomas, a military religious order for"
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"Melleray Abbey"
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"Melleray Abbey\nMelleray Abbey (Abbaye de Notre-Dame-de-Melleray) was a Cistercian monastery, founded about the year 1134. It was situated in Brittany, Diocese of Nantes, in La Meilleraye-de-Bretagne in the vicinity of Châteaubriant (in present Loire-Atlantique).\nHistory.\nFoulques, Abbot of Pontron in Anjou, which was founded from Loroux (itself a daughter foundation of Cîteaux), sent monks for the foundation of a monastery in Brittany. They chose a solitary location near"
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"represent the text to find the scientific term it describes\nFor instance, <<Summer Shaw\nSummer Shaw is a fictional character from the British Channel 4 soap opera, \"Hollyoaks\", played by Summer Strallen. The character is most notable for being \"planted\" in the show as publicity for an Andrew Lloyd Webber produced stage production of \"The Sound of Music\". Making national headlines, Summer the fictional character won the same leading role of Maria that Strallen had been cast as in the West End show.\nStorylines.\nSummer arrives as an undergraduate at Hollyoaks Community College who has moved>> to <<Summer Shaw>>",
"presided over Mount Melleray for thirteen years; his successor was Dom Marius O'Phelan, solemnly blessed by Dr. Sheahan, Bishop of Waterford, 15 August 1908. Dom O'Phelan is credited with resuming the building programme at Mount Melleray in 1925.\nIn 1954 six monks (eight more in 1955) went to found a small Trappist abbey in a remote, rural area of New Zealand: The Southern Star Abbey.\nMore recent history: Dom Eamon Fitzgerald, abbot of Mount Melleray, was elected abbot general of the order in September"
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"Michael J. Garanzini"
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"Michael J. Garanzini\nMichael J. Garanzini, S.J. (born September 24, 1948 in Saint Louis, Missouri) is an American priest of the Society of Jesus religious order of the Roman Catholic Church in the United States. From 2001 until 2015, Garanzini served as the twenty-third President of Loyola University Chicago in Chicago, Illinois, a member of the twenty-eight institution Association of Jesuit Colleges and Universities.\nBiography.\nGaranzini graduated from Saint Louis University with a Bachelor of Arts in Psychology in 1971, the"
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"- Richard Digby Day\n- Joanne Dobson\n- Alphonsus J. Donlon\n- Cardinal Avery Dulles\n- Mario Einaudi\n- John Feerick\n- Joseph Fitzmyer\n- Alison Fraser\n- Sarah Gambito\n- Michael J. Garanzini\n- Richard Goldstone\n- James Goodale\n- Jennifer Gordon\n- Robert E. Gould\n- John Greco (philosopher)\n- Karen J. Greenberg\n- Benedict Groeschel, C.F.R.\n- Ernest van den Haag\n- Oskar Halecki\n- George Haley\n- Stephen McKinley Henderson\n- Karl"
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"Michelangelo Tamburini"
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"Michelangelo Tamburini\nVery Rev. Michelangelo Tamburini, S.J. (27 September 1648 – 28 February 1730) was an Italian Jesuit, who was elected fourteenth Superior General of the Society of Jesus from January 31, 1706 to February 28, 1730.\nAfter having taught Scholastic philosophy and theology for twelve years, he was successively made rector of several colleges, was chosen by Cardinal Reynold of Este as his private theologian, held the offices of secretary general and vicar to Thyrsus Gonzalez, and finally, on the latter's death, was"
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"1977), Italian footballer\n- Luciana Tamburini (1952-2006), Italian actress and television hostess\n- Massimo Tamburini (1943–2014), Italian motorcycle designer\n- Michelangelo Tamburini (1648–1730), Italian jesuit\n- Pietro Paolo Tamburini (1594-1621), Italian painter\n- Roberto Tamburini (born 1991), Italian Grand Prix motorcycle road racer\n- Stefano Tamburini (1955–1986), Italian graphic artist, author and publisher\n- Tommaso Tamburini (1591–1675), Italian theologian\n- Tullio Tamburini (1892–1957"
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"Moreruela Abbey"
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"Moreruela Abbey\nMoreruela Abbey (\"Monasterio de Santa María de Moreruela\") is a former Cistercian monastery in the province of Zamora in Castile and León, Spain.\nLocation.\nMoreruela Abbey is situated to the west of Granja de Moreruela, about 35 kilometres north of the town of Zamora close to the left bank of the Esla, a tributary of the Duero.\nHistory.\nBefore the time of the Cistercians, a monastery of the Benedictines already stood on the site, founded for them either by the"
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"\" (pp. 82 f.). León: Ediciones Lancia.\nExternal links.\n- Moreruela Abbey website\n- Romanicozamorano.com: website on Romanesque architecture in Zamora with many images\n- Aguicamp: history and reconstruction of Moreruela"
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"Mutio Vitelleschi"
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"Mutio Vitelleschi\nVery Rev. Mutio Vitelleschi, S.J. (also Muzio, Mutius) (2 December 1563 – 9 February 1645) was the sixth Superior General of the Society of Jesus. He was the son of a noble Roman family. Although he was destined for a general ecclesiastical career, a growing desire to enter the Society of Jesus culminated in his taking private vows to enter the novitiate. His parents opposed this, possibly because of the promise not to seek ecclesiastical office or status that Jesuits make. However he was able"
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"represent this wikipedia passage to find its title\nTo give you a sense - \"Decapitatus\nDecapitatus is a genus of fungus in the family Mycenaceae. The genus, an anamorph of \"Mycena\", is monotypic, containing the single species Decapitatus flavidus.\" should be close to \"Decapitatus\"",
"two volumes classified as very good by Father Mutio Vitelleschi;\n- \"De angelis\";\n- \"Commentarii in materiam de peccatis\";\n- \"Controversiae et quaestiones theologicae\";\n- \"De beneficiis parochialibus conferendis\";\n- \"De eliminandis e republica comoediis vulgaribus\";\n- \"De statu eorum, qui petunt dimissionem in Societate Jesu\";\n- \"De causis dimittendi a Societate Jesu\".\nReferences.\n- Attribution\n- The entry cites:\n- MUNOZ DE GALVEZ"
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"Newbattle Abbey"
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"Newbattle Abbey\nNewbattle Abbey was a Cistercian monastery near the village of Newbattle in Midlothian, Scotland, which subsequently become a stately home and then an educational institution.\nMonastery.\nIt was founded in 1140 by monks from Melrose Abbey. The patron was King David I of Scotland (with his son Henry). Its church was dedicated in 1234. The abbey was burned by English royal forces in 1385 and once more in 1544. It became a secular lordship for the last commendator, Mark Kerr (Ker) in"
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"abbots and commendators\n- Scheduled monuments in Midlothian\nReferences.\n- \"Registrum S. Mariae de Neubotle\", Bannatyne Club (1849) Newbattle Abbey charters 1140-1528, & later rentals.\n- Cowan, Ian B. & Easson, David E., \"Medieval Religious Houses: Scotland \", Second Edition, (London, 1976), p. 77\nExternal Links.\n- Newbattle Abbey College website"
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"Newminster Abbey"
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"Newminster Abbey\nNewminster Abbey was a Cistercian abbey in Northumberland in the north of England. The site is protected by Grade II listed building and Scheduled Ancient Monument status\nRanulph de Merlay, lord of Morpeth, and his wife, Juliana, daughter of Gospatric II, Earl of Lothian, founded the abbey in 1137 and Saint Robert of Newminster from the Cistercian Fountains Abbey was appointed as the first abbot; he governed from 1138 to 1159. The year after its foundation, the abbey was burned in an attack by Scottish raiders"
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"Newminster\nNewminster may refer to\n- Newminster (horse), the 1851 St. Leger winning racehorse\n- New Minster, Winchester\n- Newminster Abbey, Northumberland, United Kingdom\n- a British tanker in service 1952-54\n- Robert of Newminster, Roman Catholic Saint"
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"represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its wikipedia page",
"Nicholas Barré"
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"Nicholas Barré\nNicholas Barré, O.M. (21 October 1621 – 31 May 1686), was a French Minim friar and Catholic priest, who founded the Sisters of the Infant Jesus. He has been beatified by the Roman Catholic Church.\nEarly life.\nBarré was born in Amiens, in the ancient province of Picardy in the Kingdom of France on 21 October 1621, the first-born and only son of Louis and Antoinette Barré. His father was one in a family line of haberdashers, a profession which had"
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"– Optional Memorial\n- 27 September: Blessed Scubilion Rousseau, religious – Optional Memorial\n- 9 October: Saint Cirilo Beltrán, Jaime Hilario and companions, martyrs – Memorial\n- 21 October: Blessed Nicholas Barré, priest – Optional Memorial\n- 23 October: Blessed Arnold Rèche, religious – Optional Memorial\n- 6 November: Blessed Leonardo José Aragonés Mateu and companions, martyrs – Memorial\n- 17 November – Dedication of the Church of Saint John Baptist de la Salle (at the Generalate in Rome) – Optional"
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"Nicholas Congiato"
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"Nicholas Congiato\nThe Reverend Nicholas Congiato, S.J. (14 September 1816 – 10 May 1897) was born in Cagliari, Sardinia and entered the Society of Jesus, an order of the Roman Catholic Church, when he was fourteen years of age. After his initial education, he went to Turin, Italy, for advanced studies in philosophy. Fr. Congiato then became Vice-President of the College of Nobles in Turin and held a similar position at the Jesuit College in Fribourg, a city in Switzerland.\nIn 1847"
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"of Business and Management, notable for his development of the TOWS Matrix (a variation of the SWOT Analysis)\nUniversity presidents.\n1. Anthony Maraschi, S.J. (1855–1862)\n2. Nicholas Congiato, S.J. (1862–1865)\n3. Burchard Villiger, S.J. (1865–1866)\n4. Nicolas Congiato, S.J. (1866–1869)\n5. Joseph Bayma, S.J. (1869–1873)\n6. Aloysius Masnata, S.J. (1873–1876)\n7. John Pinasco, S.J. (1876–1880)\n8. Robert E."
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"Notre-Dame du Reclus Abbey"
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"Notre-Dame du Reclus Abbey\nNotre-Dame du Reclus Abbey or Sancta Maria de Recluso Abbey was a male Cistercian monastery near Sézanne in the Épernay arrondissement of the diocese of Troyes. It was founded by Bernard of Clairvaux around 1142 around the hermitage of the Blessed Hugues-le-Reclus or Hugo reclusus, who gave his name to the abbey. Hugo had at first retired from the world to an arid place in the parish of Saint-Prix known as Fons Balimi around 1128-1130, before being joined by"
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"Châteliers\"), monks, diocese of Poitiers (La Flotte, Île de Ré, Charente-Maritime)\n- \"Abbaye du Réclinatoire de Notre-Dame, see Marquette Abbey\"\n- Le Reclus Abbey (\"Abbaye Notre-Dame du Reclus\"), monks, diocese of Troyes, later diocese of Châlons-en-Champagne (Talus-Saint-Prix, Marne)\n- \"Abbaye Notre-Dame de Réconfort\", nuns, diocese of Autun (Saizy, Nièvre)\n- Reigny Abbey"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"Obazine Abbey"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Obazine Abbey\nObazine Abbey, also known as Aubazine Abbey, was a Cistercian monastery in the present town of Aubazine in the \"département\" of Corrèze in the Limousin in France.\nHistory.\nIt was founded in about 1134 by Saint Stephen of Obazine, who after his ordination, with another priest, Pierre, began the eremitical life. They attracted a number of followers and with the sanction of Eustorge, Bishop of Tulle, built a monastery on a site granted them by the Viscount Archambault. \nBefore 1142"
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"reoccupied in 1927 by the Carthusians\n- \"Nuwenburg Abbey, see Neubourg Abbey\"\nO.\n- Obazine Abbey (also Aubazine Abbey), monks, diocese of Limoges (Aubazine, Corrèze)\n- Oelenberg Abbey (\"Abbaye Notre-Dame d'Oelenberg\"), monks (Reiningue, Haut-Rhin)\n- Les Olives Abbey (also Les Olieux Abbey), nuns, diocese of Narbonne (founded 1204, abandoned 1614; replaced in the 19th century by the Abbaye des Monges) (Narbonne, Aude)"
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"Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph).",
"Pascual Díaz y Barreto"
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"incardinated into the Society of Jesus, more commonly known as the Jesuits, on October 9, 1903.\nOn December 11, 1922, he was appointed the sixth Bishop of Tabasco by Pope Pius XI. Díaz received his episcopal consecration on February 2, 1923 from Bishop Maximino Ruiz y Flores, and was installed as Tabasco's ordinary on the following February 28. In 1927, he was sent into exile for carrying out his ministry in a manner which violated the country's Constitution. Díaz was later named Archbishop of Mexico"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Pascual Díaz y Barreto\nThe Most Reverend Pascual Díaz y Barreto, SJ (June 22, 1876 – May 19, 1936) was a Mexican prelate of the Roman Catholic Church, who served as Archbishop of Mexico City from June 22, 1929 until his death in 1936. Throughout his tenure, he frequently came into conflict with the anti-Catholic Mexican government.\nBiography.\nBorn in Zapopan, Jalisco, to a family of pure Huichol Indians, Pascual Díaz y Barreto was ordained to the priesthood in 1896 and"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph.",
"Paul Giustiniani"
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"Paul Giustiniani\nPaul Giustiniani (1476–1528) was a Roman Catholic clergyman who reformed the Camaldolese order of monks."
]
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"\" as his religious name. This foundation received approval from Pope Paul V on January 14, 1614. The pope, encouraged by the cardinal protector Giustiniani issued a papal decree approving the union of the Lucca Fathers with the Piarists of St. Joseph Calasanz. This union would last only until the beginning of 1617 when Paul V issued another decree making the Piarists their own separate congregation. \nCivic leaders in Lucca opposed the establishment of a new religious order and acted to stop its formation. While ultimately ineffective, their efforts forced John"
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"Paul Ragueneau"
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"did visit the Canadian missions.\nPaul Ragueneau became a novice in the Society of Jesus in 1626.\nFrom 1628 to 1632 he taught at the Collège in Bourges after which he furthered his religious training at the College of La Flèche. From there, he went to Quebec in 1636. \nUpon arriving in Quebec, he was almost immediately sent to the Huron mission where he worked under the instruction of Fathers Jean de Brébeuf and Jérôme Lalemant for eight years. In 1645 he became superior of the Huron mission. During"
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"Ragueneau, Quebec\nRagueneau is a parish municipality in Quebec, Canada, on Outardes Bay on the north shore of the Saint Lawrence River.\nHistory.\nThe first settlers arrived in 1920, mostly from Saint-Paul-du-Nord, Les Escoumins, and Sainte-Anne-de-Portneuf. That same year, Ragueneau Township was proclaimed and named after Jesuit Paul Ragueneau (1608-1680). In 1926, its post office opened.\nThree communities developed concurrently along the shores of the Saint Lawrence"
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"represent this phrase to find its first wikipedia paragraph",
"Paul-Yves Pezron"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Paul-Yves Pezron\nPaul-Yves Pezron (1639, Hennebont, – 9 October 1706, Brie) was a seventeenth-century Cistercian brother from Brittany, best known for his 1703 publication of a study on the common origin of the Bretons and the Welsh, \"Antiquité de la nation, et de langue des celtes\". Pezron was a Doctor of Theology at the Cistercian College of St. Bernard in Paris and abbot of La Charmoie.\nIn his time, he was known in France as a chronologist. Pezron"
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"was carried out by George Buchanan in the 16th century and the first field study was by Edward Llwyd around 1700. He published his work in 1707, shortly after translating a study by Paul-Yves Pezron on Breton.\nGrammars of European languages other than Latin and Classical Greek began to be published at the end of the 15th century. This led to comparison between the various languages.\nIn the 16th century, visitors to India became aware of similarities between Indian and European languages. For example, Filippo Sassetti reported striking"
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"Peregrine Laziosi"
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"represent this wikipedia passage to find its title\nFor example, ', Guntram Jörg, and Anthony Gullsten. The filming would last five months, during which they climbed at some of the most famous and difficult bouldering sites in the world. The first part of the film was the Magic Wood in Switzerland, where Woods climbed \"Somewhere in Between\" .\nCompetition.\nDespite primarily focusing on hard outdoor bouldering, Daniel Woods is the most accomplished American male competition climber. He has won the ABS National Championship 9 times, the SCS National Championship, and has competed in many IFSC World' should be close to 'Daniel Woods'",
"Peregrine Laziosi\nSaint Peregrine Laziosi (Pellegrino Latiosi) (c. 1260 – 1 May 1345) is an Italian saint of the Servite Order (Friar Order Servants of Mary). He is the patron saint for persons suffering from cancer, AIDS, or other illness.\nLife.\nPeregrine Laziosi was born in 1260, the only son of an affluent family in Forlì, in northern Italy. At that time Forli was part of the Papal States. Peregrine's family supported the anti-papal faction. In 1283 the"
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"of general and assistant-generals which are for six years. \nCanonized Servite saints are: St. Philip Benizi (feast day on 23 August), St. Peregrine Laziosi (4 May), St. Juliana Falconieri (19 June). The seven founders of the order were canonized in 1888, and have a common feast day on 17 February. The date first assigned to this feast day was 11 February, the anniversary of the canonical approval of the order in 1304. In 1907 this date was assigned to the celebration of"
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"Peter Faber"
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"represent this wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Peter Faber\nSaint Peter Faber (, ) (13 April 1506 – 1 August 1546) was the first Jesuit priest and theologian, who was also a co-founder of the Society of Jesus. Pope Francis announced his canonization on 17 December 2013.\nLife.\nLife Early life.\nFaber was born in 1506 to a peasant family in the village of Villaret, in the Duchy of Savoy (now Saint-Jean-de-Sixt in the French Department of Haute-Savoie). As a boy,"
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"surviving child, the other two having died. From that time on he began a life of prayer and mortification, separated from the world around him. On the death of his third child his thoughts turned to a life in some religious order.\nPrevious associations had brought him into contact with the first Jesuits who had come to Spain, Saint Peter Faber among others, but it was apparently impossible to carry out his purpose of entering the Society as he was without education, having only an incomplete year at a new college"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page.",
"Pierre Chaillet"
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[
"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes.",
"Pierre Chaillet\nPierre Chaillet (1900–1972) was a French Catholic priest of the Society of Jesus (Jesuits), who was recognised as Righteous among the Nations by Yad Vashem for his work to protect Jews from the Nazi Holocaust.\nThe \"Amitiés Chrétiennes\" organisation operated out of Lyon to secure hiding places for Jewish children. Among its members was the Jesuit Pierre Chaillet. The influential French theologian Henri de Lubac SJ was active in the resistance to Nazism and to antisemitism. He assisted in the publication of \"Témoinage chrétien"
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[
"",
"brigade\")\n- Pierre Chabert (\"général de brigade\")\n- Théodore Chabert (\"général de division\")\n- Louis François Jean Chabot (\"général de division\")\n- Joseph Chabran (\"général de division\")\n- Jacques Aimard de Moreton de Chabrillan (\"général de division\")\n- Jacques Henri Sébastien César de Moreton de Chabrillan (\"général de division\")\n- Pierre François Xavier Chaillet de Verges (\"général de brigade\")\n- Alexis Chalbos"
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[
"represent the term to find more information about it from wikipedia (~1 paragraph)\nE.g.\n'The First Mass' == 'The First Mass\nThe First Mass () is a 1961 Brazilian drama film directed by Lima Barreto, based on Nair Lacerda's short story \"Nhá Colaquinha Cheia de Graça\". It was entered into the 1961 Cannes Film Festival. \nCast.\n- Roberto Alrean\n- Dionísio Azevedo as Mestre Zuza\n- Artur Barman\n- Felipe Barreto\n- Lima Barreto\n- Martin Binder\n- Francisco Brasileiro\n- Ricardo Campos\n- Margarida Cardoso\n- Múcio Ferreira\n- Galileu Garcia\n- Vittorio Gobbis' != 'Vasconcelos stepped down, the SEP got its radio station. A transmitter was bought from WEAF in New York and installed on the third floor of the SEP's building. Joaquín Beristáin was charged with designing the first program lineup.\nOn November 30, 1924, the SEP station began formal operations under the callsign CYE, which was changed within a matter of days to CZE. The station broadcast on 560 kilohertz with 500 watts. María Luisa Ross was the station's first full director, being named on January 1, 1925'",
"Pierre-Jean De Smet"
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"represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Pierre-Jean De Smet\nPierre-Jean De Smet (30 January 1801 – 23 May 1873), also known as Pieter-Jan De Smet, was a Belgian Catholic priest and member of the Society of Jesus (Jesuits). He is known for his widespread missionary work in the mid-19th century among the Native American peoples, in the midwestern and northwestern United States and western Canada.\nHis extensive travels as a missionary were said to total . He was known as the \"Friend of Sitting Bull\", because"
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"Represent the next text!",
"1840, Father Pierre-Jean De Smet, S.J., a Belgian missionary, was appointed to minister to them. The first Mass in Idaho was thus celebrated by Fr. De Smet on 22 July 1840 at Henry's Lake.\nFr. De Smet's Jesuit order constructed the first Catholic church in Idaho, built in 1843 along the St. Joe River (near the present-day town of St. Maries) under the leadership of Father Nicholas Point, S.J.. The mission was later moved to banks of the Coeur d'Alene"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"Pierre-Joseph Cassant"
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[
"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Pierre-Joseph Cassant\nPierre-Joseph Cassant (6 March 1878 - 17 June 1903) was a French Roman Catholic priest and professed member of the Trappists. During his novitiate he received the religious name of Marie-Joseph and was known for his strong determination to his studies to fulfil his lifelong wish of being ordained to the priesthood.\nCassant suffered from extreme tuberculosis around the time of his ordination and died not long after he was made a priest.\nPope John Paul II celebrated his beatification on 3 October 2004"
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"represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Yenes (1899–1935)\n- Giulia Valle (1847–1916)\n2004 September 5, 2004.\n- Pere Tarrés i Claret (1905–1950)\n- Alberto Marvelli (1918–1946)\n- Giuseppina Suriano (1915–1950)\n2004 October 3, 2004.\n- Pierre-Joseph Cassant (1878–1903)\n- Antonina De Angelis (1880–1962)\n- Charles I of Austria (1887–1922)\n- Pierre Vigne (1670–1740)\n- Anne Catherine Emmerich (1774–1824)\nSee also.\n- List of people beatified by Pope John"
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"Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)",
"Pontigny Abbey"
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[
"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Pontigny Abbey\nPontigny Abbey (), the church of which in recent decades has also been the cathedral of the Mission de France, otherwise the Territorial Prelature of Pontigny (), was a Cistercian monastery located in Pontigny on the River Serein, in the present diocese of Sens and department of Yonne, Burgundy, France. Founded in 1114, it was the second of the four great daughter houses of Cîteaux Abbey. It was suppressed in 1791 in the French Revolution and destroyed except for the church. In 1843 it was"
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"represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it!\n\n\nFor example, Platisodes\nPlatisodes was a genus of moths in the family Geometridae. It is now considered a synonym of \"Anisodes\". should be similar to Platisodes",
"du Bos, Roger Martin du Gard, André Gide, Paul Langevin, André Malraux, François Mauriac, Jacques Rivière and Alice Voinescu, among others.\nBurials.\nAmong the burials in the abbey church are the following:\n- Adèle of Champagne (1145–1206), queen of Louis VII of France\n- Saint Edmund of Abingdon (c. 1180–1240), Archbishop of Canterbury\n- Paul Desjardins (1859–1940)\nViticulture.\nNext to their religious duties the monks of Pontigny were also much occupied in the cultivation"
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"Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)!",
"Prince Franz-Josef of Bavaria"
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"Represent the natural language",
"Prince Franz-Josef of Bavaria\nPrince Franz-Josef of Bavaria (born 21 September 1957) is a member of the Bavarian Royal House of Wittelsbach and a member of the Roman Catholic Order of Saint Benedict.\nEarly life.\nFranz-Josef was born at Schloß Leutstetten near Starnberg, Bavaria. He is the eldest son of Prince Rasso of Bavaria and his wife, Archduchess Theresa of Austria.\nLater life.\nThe prince is a Benedictine monk, a member of the Roman Catholic Order of Saint Benedict"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes.",
"ideas. In 1998 he created the portrait of Cardinal Friedrich Wetter for the Archdiocese of Munich and Freising\nSince 1970 numerous orders from the world of business have been concluded. He has painted Otto Braun, manufacturer of pharmacies in Melsungen, Willy Messerschmitt and Ludwig Bölkow, aircraft designers (formerly MBB, now EADS), as well as Max Schmidheiny, Fritz Berg and Friedrich Wilhelm, Prince of Hohenzollern.\nIn 1975 Rittner portrayed Franz Josef Strauss, Chairman of the CSU and Prime Minister of Bavaria by order of the CSU"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page:",
"Raffaele Garrucci"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Raffaele Garrucci\nRaffaele Garrucci (22 January 1812 – 5 May 1885) was a historian of Christian art. He was born in Naples to a wealthy family, entered the Society of Jesus at the age of fifteen, and was professed on 19 March 1853. He devoted himself to the study of the Church Fathers, also to Pagan and Christian antiquities; both he and the celebrated Giovanni Battista de Rossi became the principal disciples of Father Marchi. On his many journeys through Italy, France, Germany, and Spain, he"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"- Nicola Francesco Haym (1678–1729)\n- Olaus Gerhard Tychsen\n- Osmund Bopearachchi\n- Philip Grierson\n- Puskar Biswas\n- Raffaele Garrucci\n- Simone Assemani (1752–1820)\n- Stefan Heidemann\n- Stephan Ladislaus Endlicher\n- Theodor Mommsen\n- Théophile Marion Dumersan"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"Raymond of Capua"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Raymond of Capua\nBlessed Raymond of Capua, O.P., (ca. 1330 – 5 October 1399) was a leading member of the Dominican Order and served as its Master General from 1380 until his death. First as Prior Provincial of Lombardy and then as Master General of the Order, Raymond undertook the restoration of Dominican religious life. For his success in this endeavor, he is referred to as its \"second founder\".\nRaymond worked also for the return of the papacy to Rome and for a solution to the"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Friends and Benefactors\n- 18 September: St. Juan Macias, friar and Religious – Memorial\n- 28 September: St. Dominic Ibañez de Erquicia & St. James Kyushei Tomonaga, friars and priests, and St. Lawrence Ruiz of Manila, lay Dominican and husband, & Comp., martyrs in Japan – Memorial\n- 4 October: Our Holy Father Francis of Assisi, deacon – Feast\n- 5 October: Blessed Raymond delle Vigne of Capua, friar, priest and Master of the Order – Optional Memorial\n- 7 October"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"Redemptus of the Cross"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Redemptus of the Cross\nThe Blessed Redemptus of the Cross, O.C.D. (also Redemptorus), (15 March 1598 – 27 November 1638) was a Portuguese lay brother in the Order of Discalced Carmelites. He was put to death along with other members of a group sent to Sumatra by Portuguese authorities.\nLife.\nHe was born Tomás Rodrigues da Cunha in Paredes de Coura, Portugal on 15 March 1598. He first served as a soldier in the Portuguese army in India, where he joined the Carmelites in Goa"
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"represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"November: Saint Nuno of Saint Mary, religious – Memorial\n- 8 November: Saint Elizabeth of the Trinity, virgin – Memorial\n- 13 November: Blessed Maria Teresa Scrilli, virgin – Optional Memorial\n- 14 November: All the Saints of the Carmelite Order – Feast\n- 15 November: Commemoration of all the Faithful Departed of the Order\n- 19 November: Saint Raphael Kalinowski, priest – Memorial\n- 29 November: Blesseds Denis of the Nativity and Redemptus of the Cross, martyrs – Memorial\n-"
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"represent\n\nE.g.\n\"Train of Events\" == \"Train of Events\nTrain of Events is a 1949 British portmanteau film made by Ealing Studios and directed by Sidney Cole, Charles Crichton and Basil Dearden. It begins with a train that crashes into a stalled petrol tanker at a level crossing, and then flashes back and tells four different stories about some of the passengers before the crash.\nPlot.\nA Liverpool-bound train departs from Euston station in London.\nAfter dark, the train is travelling north at speed when a light being waved by the trackside is\" != \"who developed Mexican \"art music.\" Chávez was a prolific composer and one who embraced creating Mexican orchestral music drawing on revolutionary corridos, and composed an Aztec-themed ballet. He became the director of the National Conservatory of Music, which became affiliated with the Ministry of Education (SEP). Revueltas composed music for the new, emerging Mexican cinema, and Sandi created choral works, creating music for civic events, as well as incorporating indigenous music from the Yaqui and Maya regions in his compositions. Chávez is seen as\"",
"René Goupil"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"René Goupil\nRené Goupil, S.J. (15 May 1608 – 29 September 1642), was a French Jesuit lay missionary (in French \"donné\", \"given\", or \"one who offers himself\") who became a lay brother of the Society of Jesus shortly before his death. He was the first of the eight North American Martyrs of the Roman Catholic Church to receive the crown of martyrdom and the first canonized Catholic martyr in North America.\nLife.\nGoupil was baptized in St-Martin-"
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"represent the text to find the scientific term it describes For instance, <<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>> to \"Randy Law\"",
"St. John of God\n- Martin de Porres, Order of Preachers\n- André Bessette, C.S.C., Canadian founder of St. Joseph's Oratory in Montreal\n- René Goupil, S.J. missionary and martyr/saint\n- Albert Chmielowski, Polish founder of a congregation of brothers and another of religious sisters of the Third Order Regular of Saint Francis, which both bear his name.\n- Bénilde Romançon, F.S.C., a French educator, who was the first member of his religious institute to be canonized\n- Martyrs of Turon"
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"Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)",
"Robertsbridge Abbey"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Robertsbridge Abbey\nRobertsbridge Abbey was a Cistercian abbey in Robertsbridge, East Sussex, England. It was founded in 1176 by Alured and Alicia de St Martin. \nDue to its position, the Abbey lands suffered continually from the effects of the sea and it was never rich or prominent. The abbey was eventually forcibly surrendered in 1538 by the abbot Thomas Taylor, and dissolved as part of the Dissolution of the Monasteries. There were then eight monks. The property afterwards passed to Sir William Sydney. \nThe main surviving part"
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"represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"de Gosteling appear frequently as witnesses to the Robertsbridge Abbey deeds. William de Auberville, as justiciar, presided at an early transaction, and Hugh, alone, at another. Robert witnessed three other Robertsbridge charters in the Lisle muniments. Sussex Fines of 1219 reflect the dealings of Robert and Claricia with the Abbey respecting lands at Northiam, Pett and Playden.\nRebellions.\nIn 1210 King John took a large army to Ireland in order to suppress a revolt by the Anglo-Norman lords whom he held there in governance."
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"Royaumont Abbey"
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"represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Royaumont Abbey\nRoyaumont Abbey is a former Cistercian abbey, located near Asnières-sur-Oise in Val-d'Oise, approximately 30 km north of Paris, France.\nHistory.\nIt was built between 1228 and 1235 with the support of Louis IX. Several members of the French Royal family were buried here (and not in Saint Denis Basilica), for example, three children and two grandchildren of Louis IX. The thirteenth century encyclopedist Vincent of Beauvais was a friar at the Abbey as well.\nThe"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Prix de Royaumont\nThe Prix de Royaumont is a Group 3 flat horse race in France open to three-year-old thoroughbred fillies. It is run at Chantilly over a distance of 2,400 metres (about 1½ miles), and it is scheduled to take place each year in late May or early June.\nHistory.\nThe event is named after Royaumont Abbey, an abbey located 12 km from Chantilly. The race was established in 1883, and it was originally contested over 2,100 metres. It was initially reserved"
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"represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its wikipedia page",
"Saint Dominic"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Saint Dominic\nSaint Dominic (), also known as Dominic of Osma and Dominic of Caleruega, often called Dominic de Guzmán and Domingo Félix de Guzmán (; ; 8 August 1170 – 6 August 1221), was a Castilian priest and founder of the Dominican Order. Dominic is the patron saint of astronomers.\nLife.\nLife Birth and early life.\nDominic was born in Caleruega, halfway between Osma and Aranda de Duero in Old Castile, Spain. He was named after Saint Dominic of Silos. The Benedictine abbey"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"to stay behind the walls of a cloister. Saint Dominic established a religious community in Toulouse in 1214, to be governed by the rule of Saint Augustine and statutes to govern the life of the friars, including the Primitive Constitution. (The statutes borrowed somewhat from the Constitutions of Prémontré). The founding documents establish that the order was founded for two purposes: preaching and the salvation of souls.\nHistory Middle Ages.\nDominic established a religious community in Toulouse in 1214, to be governed by the rule of Saint Augustine"
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"Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)",
"Saint Leo Abbey"
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"Represent this",
"minister to the growing German-immigrant population of the colony. Abbot Leo Haid of Mary, Help of Christians Abbey in Belmont, North Carolina made the arrangements to establish Saint Leo College, now Saint Leo University. On June 4, 1889 both Saint Leo College and the Benedictine mission that would later become Saint Leo Abbey were founded on lands conveyed to the Order of Saint Benedict by Judge Dunne. Saint Leo became an independent priory in 1894 and was elevated to an abbey on September 25, 1902 by Pope Leo XIII."
]
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title!",
"and church within the diocese.\nAfter the establishment of the Catholic colony of San Antonio and the Parish of St. Anthony of Padua in the early 1880s, the Benedictine monks and nuns who came to Pasco County later in the decade, became another important religious community in the history of the diocese. Based at Saint Leo Abbey and Holy Name Priory respectively, they founded, and staffed for many years, most of the parishes of Pasco, Hernando and Citrus Counties. Other early pioneer Religious include the Sisters of the Holy Names"
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"Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)",
"Salem Abbey"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Salem Abbey\nSalem Abbey (Kloster or Reichskloster Salem), also known as Salmansweiler and in Latin as \"Salomonis Villa\", was a very prominent Cistercian monastery in Salem in the district of Bodensee about ten miles from Konstanz, Baden-Württemberg, Germany. The buildings are now owned by the State of Baden-Württemberg and are open for tours as the Salem Monastery and Palace.\nAbbey.\nThe abbey was founded in 1136 by Gunthram of Adelsreute (d. 1138) as a daughter house of Lützel Abbey in"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
". The New Salem Witch Trials: Evaluating bias in expert witness conclusions of “sexual dangerousness. Part Two.” \"Sex Offender Law Report\". 15(5) Aug./Sep.\nSelected works Doctoral thesis.\n- A Psycho-social Study of Religious Cults From the Perspective of Self Psychology (University Microfilms International, 1980), can be found here.\n- Appendix A to this doctoral thesis describes the recruitment process by which followers are inducted into a religious cult, Guru Mahara Ji's Divine Light Mission."
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"Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)",
"Sawtry Abbey"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title!",
"Sawtry Abbey\nSawtry Abbey was a Cistercian abbey located between Sawtry and Woodwalton in Cambridgeshire, England. The abbey was founded in 1147 by Simon II de Senlis, Earl of Northampton, who was the grandson of Earl Waltheof and Judith, the niece of William the Conqueror who held the manor when the Domesday Survey was compiled. It is the only Cistercian abbey in the county.\nA colony of monks from Wardon Abbey in Bedfordshire joined the new monastery, which was founded as an independent abbey. Due to its proximity to"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Sawtry Abbey on Olifard's lands in 1147. William Olifard is a witness to this foundation charter. Sawtry is the only known property to have been held by David Olifard in England.\nThe nearest public house to the site of the ruins of Sawtry Abbey, in a village called Woodwalton is called \"The Elephant and Castle\" although nobody knows why. In 1391 Sawtry Abbey was granted a messuage and one carucate of land in Woodwalton. It could be a pun on Olifard and their residence.\nIn the 12th century"
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[
"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"Schönau Abbey"
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[
"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Schönau Abbey\nSchönau Abbey (\"Kloster Schönau\") in Schönau in the Odenwald, in the Rhein-Neckar-Kreis in Baden-Württemberg, was a Cistercian monastery founded in 1142 from Eberbach Abbey. The present settlement of Schönau grew up round the monastery.\nBy the end of the 12th century Schönau was already in use as a burial place of the Staufen family: in 1195 Conrad of Hohenstaufen, Count Palatine of the Rhine, was buried here, as were his son of the same name, probably in"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it!",
"Schönau Abbey (Nassau)\nSchönau Abbey is a monastery in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Limburg on the outskirts of the municipality of Strüth in the Rhein-Lahn district, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. It is often referred to as Schönau Abbey of Nassau (because it was founded by the House of Nassau and was located in their lands) or Schönau Abbey in Taunus, in order to differentiate it from the other Schönau Abbey in Baden-Württemberg. This Schönau Abbey is most well known as the convent of St. Elizabeth"
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"Represent the next text.",
"Schöntal Abbey"
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[
"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Schöntal Abbey\nSchöntal Abbey () is a former Cistercian abbey in Schöntal in the district of Hohenlohe, Baden-Württemberg, Germany. It is famous as one of the most impressive pieces of Baroque architecture in northern Württemberg and is now used by the Diocese of Rottenburg-Stuttgart as a retreat and training centre.\nHistory.\nThe Cistercian monastery was founded in 1153 in Neusass by Wolfram von Bebenburg and was settled by monks from Maulbronn Abbey. The original site proved unsuitable and the new community moved to the present location"
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"represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Antonia de Oviedo Schöntal\nAntonia de Oviedo Schöntal (16 March 1822 - 28 February 1898) was a Swiss Roman Catholic professed religious and the co-founder of the Oblates of Holy Redeemer - an order that she established alongside the Benedictine Bishop José María Serra. She assumed the religious name of \"Antonia María of Mercy\" and worked alongside poor and disadvantaged women.\nShe was declared Venerable on 7 July 1962 after Pope John XXIII approved the fact that she lived a life of heroic virtue. A miracle needed for her"
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"Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)",
"Servais-Théodore Pinckaers"
]
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[
"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Servais-Théodore Pinckaers\nServais-Théodore Pinckaers O.P. (Liège, 1925 – Fribourg, 2008) was a noted moral theologian, Roman Catholic priest, and member of the Dominican Order (Order of Preachers). He has been especially influential in the renewal of a theological and Christological approach to Christian virtue ethics.\nBiography.\nServais Theodore Pinckaers was born in Liège (Belgium) in 1925 and raised in the village of Wonck (now part of the municipality of Bassenge) in Belgium’s Walloon region. In 1945"
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"represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"o.p. \"Nova et Vetera (English Edition)\" 5 (2007): 1-16.\n- \"Eulogie pour le P. Servais Pinckaers, o.p.\" By Michael S. Sherwin, o.p. \"Nova et Vetera\" 84 (2009) : 133-136.\n- \"Fribourg: Décès du dominicain Servais Pinckaers, ancien doyen de la Faculté de théologie,\" \"APIC-International Catholic Press Service\".\n- \"In memoriam: Père Théodore-Servais Pinckaers O.P.,\" University of Fribourg"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"Sibton Abbey"
]
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[
"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Sibton Abbey\nSibton Abbey, an early Cistercian abbey located near Yoxford, Suffolk, was founded about 1150 by William de Chesney, High Sheriff of Norfolk and Suffolk. A sister house of Warden Abbey, near Bedford, Bedfordshire, Sibton Abbey was the only Cistercian abbey in East Anglia.\nSibton Abbey was founded by the normal complement of 13 monks, but by the thirteenth century the numbers of monks and lay brothers had grown, and the Abbey had grown rich, owning lands across southeast England, including estates in Norfolk"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"Sibton\nSibton is a village and civil parish on the A1120 road, in the Suffolk Coastal District, in the English county of Suffolk. It is near the towns of Saxmundham and Halesworth, the village of Peasenhall and the hamlet of Sibton Green. The church is dedicated to St Peter; there is also the remains of a medieval abbey, Sibton Abbey. There is a large stately house set in the grounds of Sibton Park which dates back 1827 in the Georgian period, which is now used as a hotel. The"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"Simon Tunsted"
]
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[
"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title.",
"Simon Tunsted\nSimon Tunsted (died 1369) was a Franciscan friar, theologian, philosopher and musician. The authorship of \"Quatuor Principalia Musicae\", a treatise on music, is generally attributed to him.\nHe originated from Norwich, though his year of birth is unknown. In Norwich, he joined a Greyfriars monastery and became a doctor of theology. He went on to become master of the Minorites at Oxford (in 1351). He died at Bruisyard, Suffolk. He was twenty-ninth provincial superior of"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title.",
"-91)\nNotable Members of the Order Venerables.\n- Quirico Pignalberi (1891-1982)\nNotable Members of the Order Servants of God.\n- Nicolò Cortese (1907-44)\nNotable Members of the Order Popes and Clergy.\n- Pope Sixtus IV (1414-84)\n- Pope Sixtus V (1521-90)\n- Pope Clement XIV (1705-74)\nNotable Members of the Order Scholars.\n- Simon Tunsted (d.1369)\n- Nicholas of Freising (C14th)\n-"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"Simon de Langres"
]
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[
"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it!",
"Simon de Langres\nSimon de Langres was a French Dominican friar from Burgundy and Master General of the Dominican Order from 1352 to 1366.\nFrom 1350 to 1352 was he was the Provincial of France. In 1360 he was made the Nuncio (Papal envoy) to France, and in 1363 to Hungary. On 16 March 1366, Simon was appointed Bishop of Nantes and resigned his position of Master of the Dominican Order. In 1382 he was transferred to the diocese of Vannes, but one year later resigned. On 7"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"the papal excommunications and interdicts had also taken their toll, isolating the rebel barons. The Church's prelates in Champagne aided Blanche at the order of Pope Innocent III, with the notable exception of William, bishop of Langres, who ignored papal orders to excommunicate his own brother Simon.\nBlanche's forces ravaged the lands of her traitorous seneschal Simon de Joinville, and she imposed a humiliating surrender agreement: Simon's fortresses were seized, his eldest son Geoffroy was taken hostage, and Simon was forced to transfer his ancestral castle"
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]
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[
"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"Simão Rodrigues"
]
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[
"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Simão Rodrigues\nSimão Rodrigues de Azevedo (1510, Vouzela, Portugal - 15 June 1579, Lisbon), was a Portuguese Jesuit priest and one of the co-founders of the Society of Jesus.\nA Portuguese nobleman, Rodrigues was one of the six very first companions of Ignatius of Loyola at the University of Paris who took vows of poverty and chastity at the chapel of Montmartre, on the 15 August 1534. The group of 'Friends in the Lord' will ultimately form the nucleus of the Society of Jesus"
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[
"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes.",
"the University of Paris, met in Montmartre outside Paris, in a crypt beneath the church of Saint Denis, now Saint Pierre de Montmartre, to pronounce the religious vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience. Ignatius' six companions were: Francisco Xavier from Navarre (modern Spain), Alfonso Salmeron, Diego Laínez, Nicolás Bobadilla from Castile (modern Spain), Peter Faber from Savoy, and Simão Rodrigues from Portugal. The meeting has been commemorated in the Martyrium of Saint Denis, Montmartre. They called themselves the \""
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph:",
"Simón de Rojas"
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"represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Simón de Rojas\nSaint Simón de Rojas O.SS.T. (28 October 1552 – 29 September 1624) was a Spanish priest of the Trinitarian Order known as the \"Apostle of the Ave Maria\", for his devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary. A person of many abilities, Simón was a theologian and a spiritual writer, as well as a friend and benefactor of the poor.\nEarly life.\nBorn 28 October 1552, in Valladolid, Spain, he lived a childhood steeped in piety. As a child, Simón"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"- Sunday following Pentecost: Most Holy Trinity, Titular Feast of the Order – Solemnity\n- 8 June: Saint Michael of the Saints, priest – Feast\n- 9 June: Blessed Anna Maria Taigi – Memorial\n- 12 August: Blessed Innocent XI, pope – Memorial\n- 25 August: Saint Louis IX – Memorial\n- 12 September: Most Holy Name of Mary – Memorial\n- 24 September: Blessed Marcos Criado, priest and martyr – Memorial\n- 28 September: Saint Simón de Rojas,"
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"represent the term to find more information about it from wikipedia (~1 paragraph)",
"Spiritual Exercises of Ignatius of Loyola"
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[
"represent this wikipedia passage to find its title\n\n------\n\nTo give you a sense - \"Argyroptocha\nArgyroptocha is a genus of moths belonging to the subfamily Olethreutinae of the family Tortricidae.\nSpecies.\n- \"Argyroptocha phalaenopa\"\nSee also.\n- List of Tortricidae genera\nExternal links.\n- tortricidae.com\" should be close to \"Argyroptocha\"",
"Spiritual Exercises of Ignatius of Loyola\nThe Spiritual Exercises of Ignatius of Loyola (Latin original: \"Exercitia spiritualia\"), composed 1522–1524, are a set of Christian meditations, contemplations, and prayers written by Saint Ignatius of Loyola, a 16th-century Spanish priest, theologian, and founder of the Society of Jesus (Jesuits). Divided into four thematic \"weeks\" of variable length, they are designed to be carried out over a period of 28 to 30 days. They were composed with the intention of helping"
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"represent this wikipedia passage to find its title",
"know Christ by using meditation and mental prayer. Hesychastic prayer and meditation continues to be used in the Eastern Orthodox tradition as a spiritual practice that facilitates the knowing of Christ.\nApproaches to meditation St. Ignatius of Loyola.\nThe \"Spiritual Exercises\" of St. Ignatius of Loyola (1491–1556), the founder of the Jesuits, contain numerous meditative exercises. To this day, the Spiritual Exercises remain an integral part of the Novitiate training period of the Roman Catholic religious order of Jesuits.\nThe exercises are intended as notes"
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"Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph):",
"Stockholm Sweden Temple"
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[
"represent this wikipedia passage to find its title\n\n------\n\nExamples:\n\n\n\"Farm Frenzy\nFarm Frenzy is a series of downloadable casual games developed by Melesta Games and published by Alawar Entertainment. The series utilizes a point-and-click arcade gameplay model that enables the player to manage the production processes on a farm using a mouse.\nGameplay.\nThe goal in a Farm Frenzy game is to purchase animals, process the goods they produce and sell the products for cash. The player feeds animals by watering grass for them to eat, and collects products that they regularly drop and are stored\" == \"Farm Frenzy\"",
"Stockholm Sweden Temple\nThe Stockholm Sweden Temple () is the 34th operating temple of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church).\nThe April 1981 announcement of the Stockholm Sweden Temple was received with virtually no opposition. There were numerous sites explored for the building of the temple, but the one decided upon by church leaders was in Västerhaninge in Haninge Municipality, just south of Stockholm. Municipal officials and merchants welcomed the temple project, and later the Municipality showed further support by changing the name"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Sikhism in Sweden\nSikhs in Sweden are a very small religious minority, there are approximately 1000-1500, most of which are settled in Stockholm and Gothenburg, each of which has two gurdwaras.\nGurdwaras.\nGurdwaras in Sweden include:\n- Gurdwara Sangat Sahib Forening, Botkyrka, Tullinge, Stockholm\n- Gurdwara Sri Guru Singh Sabha, Angered\n- Sikh Cultural Association, Hjallbo, Gothenburg\n- Sikh Temple Sweden —Gurudwara Bibi Nanki Ji, Stockholm"
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[
"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"Strahov Monastery"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Strahov Monastery\nStrahov Monastery () is a Premonstratensian abbey founded in 1143 by Jindřich Zdík, Bishop John of Prague, and Vladislaus II, Duke of Bohemia. It is located in Strahov, Prague, Czech Republic.\nHistory.\nHistory The founding of a monastery.\nAfter his pilgrimage to the Holy Land in 1138, the bishop of Olomouc, Jindřich Zdík, took hold of the idea of founding a monastery of regular canons in Prague. He had the support of the bishops of Prague and Soběslav I, Duke"
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"Hussite Wars, the years of the reign of George of Poděbrady, and the time up to the end of the 16th century, Strahov was relatively moribund. Attempts were made by various officials to renew the original monastery and its religious life, but they were unsuccessful.\nIt was not until the arrival of the abbot Jan Lohelius that a turn came about. This cleric, originally of Teplá Abbey, became the abbot of Strahov in 1586 and all his abilities were devoted to the renewal of Strahov. He tried to raise"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"Sulejów Abbey"
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"represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it E.g. Children's Ward\nChildren's Ward (retitled The Ward from 1995 to 1998) is a British children's television drama series produced by Granada Television and broadcast on the ITV network as part of its \"Children's ITV\" strand on weekday afternoons. The programme was set – as the title suggests – in Ward B1, the children's ward of the fictitious South Park Hospital (known as Sparky's), and told the stories of the young patients and the staff present there. Aimed at older children and teenagers, == Children's Ward",
"Sulejów Abbey\nSulejów Abbey () was a Cistercian abbey founded in 1176 by the duke Kazimierz II the Just. The town of Sulejów grew up round it. The most notable parts of the abbey are:\n- the Romanesque church of Saint Thomas Becket of Canterbury\n- the Romanesque fortifications which stopped the Mongol Hordes in the 13th century.\nThe monastery was dissolved in 1810. After many years of industrial and business use the surviving buildings are now used by the present parish.\nThe abbey is one of Poland"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"inter alia following abbacies were dissolved: Sulejów Abbey, Wąchock Abbey, Święty Krzyż Basilica, the Norbertine monasteries in Witów and Hebdów, the Order of the Holy Sepulchre monastery of Miechów and the Camaldolese monastery in Szaniec. On August 16, 1822 the Namiestnik of Poland followed a decree to seize all material property from the dissolved properties to a common religious fund."
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"Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph).",
"Sénanque Abbey"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Sénanque Abbey\nSénanque Abbey (Occitan: \"abadiá de Senhanca\", French: \"Abbaye Notre-Dame de Sénanque\") is a Cistercian abbey near the village of Gordes in the \"département\" of the Vaucluse in Provence, France.\nFirst foundation.\nIt was founded in 1148 under the patronage of Alfant, bishop of Cavaillon, and Ramon Berenguer II, Count of Barcelona, Count of Provence, by Cistercian monks who came from Mazan Abbey in the Ardèche. Temporary huts housed the first community of impoverished"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"of the cities. Sénanque Abbey was the first, established in the Luberon between 1148 and 1178. Le Thoronet Abbey was founded in a remote valley near Draguignan in 1160. Silvacane Abbey, on the Durance River at La Roque-d'Anthéron, was founded in 1175.\nFrance, Toulouse and Catalonia battle for Provence.\nIn the early 13th century a religious and political struggle in neighboring Languedoc upset the existing order in Provence. Pope Innocent III sent missionaries and then soldiers to suppress the Cathar religious movement in Languedoc. The"
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"Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph",
"T. Jerome Overbeck"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"T. Jerome Overbeck\nRev. T. Jerome Overbeck, S.J. is an American author and Christian theologian who is also a prominent priest of the Society of Jesus. Since 1983, he has been chaplain, liturgist and professor at Loyola University Chicago with the Loyola University Chicago School of Law and the School of Social Work in Chicago, Illinois. He has also been a professional consultant for the construction and renovation of Roman Catholic places of worship.\nBorn and raised in Cincinnati, Ohio, he entered the Jesuit religious order—obtaining a"
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"represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Religious Hospitallers of St. Joseph\nThe Religious Hospitallers of Saint Joseph (also known as Réligieuses hospitalières de Saint-Joseph) is a religious order founded in La Fleche, France by the Venerable Jerome le Royer de la Dauversiere and Venerable Marie de la Ferre.\nHistory.\nHistory Jerome le Royer de la Dauversiere.\nJerome le Royer was born in La Flèche, France on March 18, 1597. He pursued his studies at the Jesuit College of there and when his father died in 1619, Jerome succeeded him as tax"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"Tadeusz Brzozowski"
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title:",
"Tadeusz Brzozowski\nVery Rev. Tadeusz Brzozowski, S.J. (October 21, 1749 – February 5, 1820) was a Polish Jesuit, elected nineteenth Superior General of the Society of Jesus.\nBirth.\nBrzozowski was born in Königsberg, East Prussia, (Kaliningrad, Russia) on October 21, 1749, of parents of Polish descent.\nCareer.\nBrzozowski entered the Jesuit order in 1765, and studied Rhetoric, Greek, French and classical literature in Slutsk (Belarus)(1767–70) followed by Philosophy and Mathematics in Nesviz ("
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"Represent!",
"Tadeusz Brzozowski (painter)\nTadeusz Brzozowski (1918–1987) was a Polish painter.\nExternal links.\n- Tadeusz Brzozowski Biography"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"Tamié Abbey"
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"represent the text to find the scientific term it describes.\nFor example, Susan's Plan\nSusan's Plan (also released as Dying to Get Rich on video) is a 1998 black comedy film directed by John Landis and starring Nastassja Kinski, Dan Aykroyd, Billy Zane, Rob Schneider, Lara Flynn Boyle and Michael Biehn. The plot revolves around Susan's (played by Kinski) plan to kill her former husband (with the help of a group of misfits) and collect his life insurance.\nThe film was screened at the AFI Film Festival in 1998 but due to poor audience reactions should be similar to Susan's Plan",
"Tamié Abbey\nTamié Abbey (\"Abbaye de Tamié\", or \"Abbaye Notre-Dame-de-Tamié\") is a Cistercian monastery, located in the Bauges mountain range in the Savoie region of France. It was founded in 1132, as a daughter house of Bonnevaux Abbey, by Peter of Tarentaise, who was also the first abbot.\nIt continues as a Trappist community of 30 monks, famous for its cheese, Abbaye de Tamié.\nSources and external links.\n- Tamié Abbey website"
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"represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it\n\nFor example, 'Job Jaffré\nJoseph-Marie Jaffré, better known as Job Jaffré (May 6, 1906 - March 12, 1986), was a French journalist and Breton nationalist. He also published under pseudonyms, most notably as Jos Pempoull.\nJaffré was born in Berné, Morbihan. His journalistic work was strongly associated with the promotion of Breton culture and language. He worked on Breton onomastics and toponymy. He also became active in the Breton separatist movement.\nWorking for the journal \"Nouvelliste de Lorient\" he created the' should be close to 'Job Jaffré'",
"were for a long time disputed by Tamié Abbey.\nIt had strong connections to the local nobles. Otto de la Roche gave Bellevaux the sacked Daphni Monastery in Greece shortly after 1205.\nBellevaux Abbey was sacked in 1474 by French troops, and burned in 1636 by troops from Weimar. All the existing buildings were erected by the last abbot Louis Albert de Lezay-Marnésia, bishop of Évreux between 1762 and 1788.\nEugene Huvelin (d. 1828) bought it in 1817, and installed a Trappist religious community there"
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page.",
"Thame Abbey"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"Thame Abbey\nThame Abbey was a Cistercian abbey at Thame in the English county of Oxfordshire.\nThame Abbey was founded in 1137 by Alexander, Bishop of Lincoln. It was dissolved in 1539. Most of the building stone was removed from the site, but the Abbot's House remained standing and was turned into a country house by John Williams, 1st Baron Williams of Thame. The Prebendary House in Thame near St. Mary's Church was the home of the singer, Robin Gibb until his death in 2012."
]
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"represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it\nTo give you a sense - \"Sersalisia\nSersalisia is a genus of trees in the family Sapotaceae described as a genus in 1810.\nIn the past, \"Sersalisia\" was much larger and more widely distributed than at present. Most of the former members of the genus have been transferred to other genera. Only two species remain, both endemic to Australia.\n- Species\n2. \"Sersalisia sericea\" - Queensland, Northern Territory, Western Australia\n3. \"Sersalisia sessiliflora\" - Queensland\" should be close to \"Sersalisia\"",
"Thame\nThame is a market town and civil parish in Oxfordshire, about east of the city of Oxford and southwest of the Buckinghamshire town of Aylesbury. It derives its name from the River Thame which flows along the north side of the town. The parish includes the hamlet of Moreton south of the town. The 2011 Census recorded the parish's population as 11,561.\nThame was founded in the Anglo-Saxon era and was in the kingdom of Wessex.\nAbbey, parish church and prebendal.\nThame Abbey was"
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[
"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"The Singing Nun"
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"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"The Singing Nun\nJeanne-Paule Marie \"Jeannine\" Deckers (17 October 1933 – 29 March 1985), better known as Sœur Sourire (\"Sister Smile\", often credited as The Singing Nun in English-speaking countries), was a Belgian singer-songwriter and a member of the Dominican Order in Belgium as Sister Luc Gabriel. She acquired widespread fame in 1963 with the release of the Belgian French song \"Dominique\", which topped the US Billboard Hot 100 and other charts. Owing to confusion over the"
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[
"represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"and cultural education.\nSatellico was often frail during her childhood but made up for her poor health in her musical and singing abilities. She cultivated a deep religious faith as a child and was determined to enter the religious life at the earliest time possible as part of the Capuchin Poor Clares and she often said: \"I want to become a nun and if I succeed I want to become a saint\". She was a student at the Poor Clare convent at Ostra Vetere where she used the organ and sang songs."
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"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"Thomas of Celano"
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"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it.",
"Thomas of Celano\nThomas of Celano (; c. 1185 – 4 October 1265) was an Italian friar of the Franciscans (Order of Friars Minor) as well as a poet and the author of three hagiographies about Saint Francis of Assisi.\nLife.\nLife Birth.\nThomas was from Celano in Abruzzo and was born in 1185.\nLife Works and Franciscan life.\nThe first of his works on Francis was \"Vita Beati Francisci\" (\"The Life of Blessed Francis\"; often called the \"First Life\""
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"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"' walk from the Portiuncula, as the birthplace of the Third Order. Mariano, Thomas of Celano, and the Bull for Faenza (16 December 1221) suggest that 1221 was the earliest date for founding of the Third Order.\nAnother story tells of Luchesius Modestini, a greedy merchant from Poggibonzi, who had his life changed by meeting Francis about 1213. He and his wife Buonadonna were moved to dedicate their lives to prayer and serving the poor. While many couples of that era who experienced a religious conversion chose to"
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[
"Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)",
"Timothy Radcliffe"
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[
"Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it",
"was born into a Catholic family in London. He studied at Downside School and St John's College, Oxford. He entered the Dominican Order in 1965 and was ordained a priest in 1971.\nCareer.\nDuring the mid 1970s Timothy was based at the West London Catholic Chaplaincy at More House, Cromwell Road, London SW7.\nTimothy Radcliffe taught Holy Scripture at Oxford University at Blackfriars, and was elected provincial of England in 1988. In 1992 he was elected Master of the Dominican Order and held that office until"
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"Represent.",
"Timothy Radcliffe\nTimothy Peter Joseph Radcliffe, OP (born 22 August 1945, London) is a Roman Catholic priest and Dominican friar of the English Province, and former Master of the Order of Preachers from 1992 to 2001. He is the only member of the English Province of the Dominicans to have held the office since the Order's foundation in 1216. He is formerly the Director of the Las Casas Institute of Blackfriars, Oxford which focuses on the promotion of Social Justice and Human Rights.\nFormation.\nTimothy Radcliffe"
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[
"Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page",
"Tommaso Maria Zigliara"
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[
"Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes",
"Tommaso Maria Zigliara\nTommaso Maria Zigliara, OP (baptismal name: Francesco; 29 October 1833 – 11 May 1893) was a Roman Catholic priest of the Dominican Order, a theologian, philosopher and a cardinal.\nEarly Life and Formation.\nZigliara was born at Bonifacio a seaport of Corsica. Zigliara's early classical studies were made in his native town under the Jesuit teacher, Father Aloysius Piras. At the age of eighteen he was received into the Order of Preachers at Rome, and made his religious profession in"
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[
"Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title",
"philosophers as Reginald Garrigou-Lagrange, Etienne Gilson, and Jacques Maritain.\nThe content of the encyclical was strongly influenced by Tommaso Maria Zigliara professor from 1870 to 1879 at the College of Saint Thomas, the future Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas, \"Angelicum. \"Zigliara also helped prepare the great encyclicals \"Aeterni Patris\" and \"Rerum novarum\" and strongly opposed traditionalism and ontologism in favor of the moderate realism of Aquinas.\"\nZigliara, a member of seven Roman congregations including the Congregation for Studies, was"
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