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23,156,688
Al-Hajj Salim Suwari
Sheikh Al-Hajj Salim Suwari was a 13th-century West African Soninke karamogo (Islamic scholar) who focused on the responsibilities of Muslim minorities residing in a non-Muslim society. He formulated an important theological rationale for peaceful coexistence with the non-Muslim ruling classes called the Suwarian tradition, which survives to this day despite the pressures of modernism.
[ "Philosophy" ]
2009-06-09T15:56:41Z
2009-06-09T16:00:59Z
8,970,409
La'cryma Christi
La'cryma Christi (Latin for "The Tears of Christ") was a Japanese visual kei rock band originally active from 1991 to 2007. At their peak, they were considered one of "the big four of visual kei" alongside Fanatic Crisis, Malice Mizer and Shazna. They reunited for a concert in 2009 at the V-Rock Festival, for their short reunion tour in 2010, and for a 15th anniversary tour in 2012.
[ "Concepts" ]
2007-01-17T15:56:19Z
2007-01-17T16:00:06Z
76,685,190
Jewish cemetery of Siret
The Jewish cemetery of Siret is cemetery in Siret, Romania. It is considered to be one of the oldest jewish cemeteries in eastern Europe. The oldest inscriptions indicate that the cemetery might have been in use around the year 1500. The cemetery stayed in use until the 19th century. In 2015 the cemetery was added to the list of historic monuments of Suceava County.
[ "Society", "Culture" ]
2024-04-20T12:43:50Z
2024-04-20T12:50:38Z
14,352,610
Nicholas Bacon (Ipswich MP)
Sir Nicholas Bacon (c. 1622–1687) was a Tory M.P. for Ipswich, between 16 March 1685 and his death in 1687. He served with Sir John Barker. He was the son of Nicholas Bacon of Shrubland Hall, Suffolk, and his wife Martha Bingham. He was educated at Emmanuel College, Cambridge before being admitted to Gray's Inn.
[ "Government" ]
2007-11-22T00:28:40Z
2007-11-22T00:29:59Z
65,481,481
Leidrad
Leidrad (or Leidrat, as he spelled it) was the bishop of Lyon from 797 and its first archbishop from 804 until 814. He was a courtier of Charlemagne before he was a bishop. As bishop, he helped resolve the adoptionist controversy. He also began a programme of building and renovation in his diocese, turning Lyon into a centre of learning. Of his writings, two letters and a treatise on baptism survive.
[ "History" ]
2020-10-02T23:51:20Z
2020-10-02T23:51:26Z
9,010,559
Glenn Rockowitz
Glenn Rockowitz (born May 27, 1970) is an American writer, filmmaker, comedian and voice actor. He lives in Seattle, Washington.
[ "Entertainment" ]
2007-01-19T23:42:58Z
2007-02-01T03:42:01Z
41,884,690
List of mines in Belgium
The following list of mines in Belgium is subsidiary to the lists of mines in Europe article and Lists of mines articles. This list contains working, defunct and future mines in the country and is organised by the primary mineral output(s) and province. For practical purposes stone, marble and other quarries may be included in this list. Operational mines are demarcated by bold typeface, future mines are demarcated in italics.
[ "Lists" ]
2014-02-08T19:53:47Z
2016-03-31T09:29:28Z
15,169,158
Jessica Skarratt
Jessica Skarratt is an Australian television presenter. She is a former presenter of the long running nature and science themed series Totally Wild. Skarratt has also presented Suns TV a television program that is carried by the Seven Network and is shown thirty minutes prior to Gold Coast Suns games in Queensland and Surfing Australia TV on TV4ME and four documentaries for Network Ten, along with making an appearance on the popular Thank God You're Here (as a guest interviewer, not as a contestant). On 9 February 2015, Jess Skarratt and Billy Bentley were confirmed as the new hosts for Couch Time. Off camera Jess is an experienced charity and corporate events MC.
[ "Mass_media" ]
2008-01-11T21:13:55Z
2008-01-30T01:23:11Z
17,633,535
Corpse Princess
Corpse Princess (Japanese: 屍姫, Hepburn: Shikabane Hime) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Yoshiichi Akahito. Premiering in Monthly Shōnen Gangan on April 12, 2005, the series centers on the "Corpse Princess" Makina Hoshimura, an undead girl who is hunting down 108 undead corpses in order to gain entry into heaven with the help of a secret society of anti-corpse Buddhist monks. Feel and Gainax partnered together to adapt the series into a thirteen episode anime series. The first season, Aka (赫, Red), aired on October 2, 2008 on AT-X and finished on December 25, 2008. A second season, Kuro (玄, Black), aired between January and March 2009.
[ "Technology" ]
2008-05-27T07:22:01Z
2008-05-27T07:31:47Z
5,709,425
Weapons Intelligence, Nonproliferation, and Arms Control Center
The Weapons Intelligence Non Proliferation and Arms Control Center (WINPAC) is a United States Intelligence Community office that provides assessments to "all types of foreign weapons threats." Among its tasks, WINPAC analyzes intelligence related to dual-use technology and export controls. WINPAC was created in 2001 in an effort to bring together experts on foreign weapons into one center. WINPAC was preceded by the Nonproliferation Center (NPC), a Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) office established in 1992 to improve support for non-proliferation policy. NPC was one of seven 'Centers' established in the 1990s to centralize expertise as a way to better analyse transnational threats.
[ "Law" ]
2006-06-25T22:30:17Z
2006-06-25T22:30:31Z
554,486
Thomas Chalmers
Thomas Chalmers (17 March 1780 – 31 May 1847), was a Scottish Presbyterian minister, professor of theology, political economist, and a leader of both the Church of Scotland and of the Free Church of Scotland. He has been called "Scotland's greatest nineteenth-century churchman". He served as Vice-president of the Royal Society of Edinburgh from 1835 to 1842. The New Zealand town of Port Chalmers was named after Chalmers. A bust of Chalmers is on display in the Hall of Heroes of the National Wallace Monument in Stirling.
[ "Mathematics" ]
2004-03-26T15:54:02Z
2004-05-08T20:11:14Z
67,226,350
Ikhlaq Butt
Ikhlaq Butt (born 21 September 1992) is a Pakistani cricketer. He played in seventeen first-class and eleven List A matches between 2012 and 2016. He made his Twenty20 debut on 7 February 2014, for Lahore Eagles in the 2013–14 National T20 Cup.
[ "Energy" ]
2021-03-27T10:38:59Z
2023-06-09T17:44:29Z
72,096,428
Istana Negara attempted shooting
On 25 October 2022, at around 7:00 am Western Indonesia Time (UTC+7), an attempted shooting occurred in front of the Istana Negara in Jakarta, Indonesia. A female assailant trespassed the Istana Negara security layer and attempted to shoot the President and/or Presidential Guard using an FN HP-DA Pistol. President of Indonesia Joko Widodo was not in the Istana Negara at the time of attack as he was visiting East Kalimantan and Nusantara. The assailant was apprehended immediately by the Presidential Guard (Paspampres) and Indonesian National Police on the scene and is currently detained at Metro Jaya Region Police HQ. On 26 October 2022, after the investigation and checking the databases, National Counter Terrorism Agency announced that the assailant is a Hizb-ut Tahrir Indonesia member, but her terror network affiliation is Darul Islam.
[ "Military" ]
2022-10-25T04:30:29Z
2022-10-25T04:33:23Z
3,135,541
Royal Brompton Hospital
Royal Brompton Hospital is the largest specialist heart and lung medical centre in the United Kingdom. It is managed by Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust.
[ "Life" ]
2005-11-11T17:56:02Z
2005-11-11T22:21:37Z
20,919,445
Paul Verhoeven (broadcaster)
Paul F. Verhoeven (born 15 January 1983) is an Australian broadcaster, writer, blogger and comedian, and the host of Steam Punks on ABC3.
[ "Mass_media" ]
2009-01-02T01:02:01Z
2009-01-02T01:03:15Z
35,802,068
List of Major National Historical and Cultural Sites in Jiangsu
This list is of Major Sites Protected for their Historical and Cultural Value at the National Level in the Province of Jiangsu, People's Republic of China.
[ "Lists" ]
2012-05-12T23:00:23Z
2012-05-13T18:20:40Z
77,799,501
Meysam Banitaba
Seyed Meysam Banitaba Khoram Abadi (born 30 March 1989) is an Iranian Paralympic judoka. He represented Iran at the 2024 Summer Paralympics.
[ "Sports" ]
2024-09-05T16:26:17Z
2024-09-05T17:03:47Z
69,133,137
Muhammad Jamal Saqr
Muhammad Jamal Saqr (Arabic: محمد جمال صقر) (born March 20, 1966) is an Egyptian writer, academic, and poet, specializing in Arabic language sciences, especially grammar, morphology and presentation. He works as an assistant professor at the Faculty of Dar al-Ulum at Cairo University.
[ "People" ]
2021-10-27T23:25:42Z
2021-10-28T01:16:44Z
43,845,296
QSI International School of Dili
QSI International School of Dili is a school located in Fatuhada, beside the Palm Spring estate in Dili, East Timor. It is one of a chain of schools operated by Quality Schools International The school has 112 students representing 20+ countries. The school has American-curriculum based classes ranging from preschool to secondary levels. It offers students the opportunity to learn and do extracurricular activities. It was accredited by the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools.
[ "Education" ]
2014-09-17T06:14:56Z
2014-09-17T13:11:39Z
38,440,904
Carol Morgan School
Carol Morgan School is a private international, college-preparatory school located in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. The school is formatted based on the American education system and is accredited by Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools.
[ "Education" ]
2008-06-07T06:10:13Z
2008-06-07T06:22:40Z
23,035,356
Academic job market
Academic job market refers to the pool of vacant teaching and administrative positions in Academia, i.e. in institutions of higher education such as universities and colleges, and also to the competition for these positions, and the mechanisms for advertising and filling them. This job market differs somewhat from other job markets because of such institutions as tenure. It is frequently a subject of debate relating to questions of openness, discrimination and reverse discrimination, and political interference. The Academic job market, like the structure of academic careers, operates somewhat differently in different countries.
[ "Knowledge" ]
2009-06-01T00:26:47Z
2009-06-01T00:30:25Z
62,102,950
Suppose a Kid from the Last Dungeon Boonies Moved to a Starter Town
Suppose a Kid from the Last Dungeon Boonies Moved to a Starter Town (Japanese: たとえばラストダンジョン前の村の少年が序盤の街で暮らすような物語, Hepburn: Tatoeba Rasuto Danjon Mae no Mura no Shōnen ga Joban no Machi de Kurasu Yō na Monogatari), abbreviated as LasDan (ラスダン, Rasudan), is a Japanese light novel series written by Toshio Satō and illustrated by Nao Watanuki. SB Creative released fifteen volumes under their GA Bunko label from February 2017 to July 2022. The light novel is licensed in North America by Yen Press and the English translation is done by Andrew Cunningham. A manga adaptation with art by Hajime Fusemachi was serialized online from September 2017 to August 2023 via Square Enix's online manga magazine Gangan Online. It has been collected in twelve tankōbon volumes.
[ "Technology" ]
2019-10-19T13:38:04Z
2019-10-19T13:38:40Z
6,866,735
Eric Neale
Eric William Neale (26 September 1910 – 1997) was a British car designer.
[ "Engineering" ]
2006-09-06T10:45:39Z
2006-09-06T10:46:03Z
77,304,218
Matthieu Valet
Matthieu Valet (born 4 January 1986) is a French politician of the National Rally who was elected member of the European Parliament in 2024. A former police officer, he served as deputy chief of the brigade anti-criminalité in Val-de-Marne and as spokesperson of the Independent Union of Police Commissioners. Before joining the National Rally, he sought to run for Renaissance in the 2022 legislative election, and was offered a candidacy in several constituencies. == References ==
[ "Politics" ]
2024-07-07T13:11:32Z
2024-07-21T21:19:48Z
57,074,214
Francis Chukwuemeka Eze
Francis Chukwuemeka Eze is a Nigerian physicist and researcher. He was the vice chancellor of Federal University of Technology, Owerri. He is a recipient of the Commonwealth Academy Staff Scholarship award, Association Commonwealth Universities, London, 1983; grantee, International Committee Science Unions, India, 1995. Member of Nigerian University Physics Series (secretary since 2002), Nigerian Institute Physics.
[ "People" ]
2018-04-09T08:01:19Z
2018-04-09T08:06:51Z
12,888,715
Xu Shao
Xu Shao (Chinese: 許劭; pinyin: Xǔ Shào) (150–195), courtesy name Zijiang, was a Chinese philosopher and politician who lived in the Eastern Han dynasty.
[ "Philosophy" ]
2007-08-22T12:35:13Z
2008-03-01T17:35:05Z
70,976,098
Wo Tin
Wo Tin (Chinese: 窩田) is a village of Mui Wo, on Lantau Island, Hong Kong.
[ "Geography" ]
2022-06-09T09:37:58Z
2022-10-21T08:43:07Z
13,263,898
List of canals in Canada
There exists a number of canals in Canada that are used as aqueducts, diversionary channels for power stations, and for shippings.
[ "Lists" ]
2007-09-14T16:04:32Z
2007-09-14T16:05:58Z
4,556,656
Weber v Ontario Hydro
Weber v Ontario Hydro, [1995] 2 S.C.R. 929 is a leading decision of the Supreme Court of Canada where the Court held that a labour arbitration board was a "court of competent jurisdiction" within the meaning of section 24(1) of the Charter, and could grant declarations and damages. Consequently, the board has exclusive jurisdiction over the matter, and so employees cannot bring suits concerning matters under a collective agreement to court.
[ "Energy" ]
2006-03-29T15:47:27Z
2006-03-29T15:48:22Z
2,940,659
BRA Transportes Aéreos
BRA Transportes Aéreos S/A was a Brazilian low-fare airline based in São Paulo, Brazil, which used to operate both domestic and international scheduled services, as well as charter flights. Its main base was São Paulo/Guarulhos International Airport. BRA was the third largest airline in Brazil with 4.19% of the domestic Brazilian market as of August 2006.
[ "Business" ]
2005-10-19T02:24:29Z
2005-10-19T02:28:35Z
67,850,046
Zhang Rongqiao
Zhang Rongqiao (Chinese: 张荣桥; born March 1966) is a Chinese physicist and aerospace engineer who is the chief designer of Tianwen-1, China's first mission to Mars.
[ "Knowledge" ]
2021-06-04T02:36:49Z
2021-06-04T02:38:01Z
32,435,043
List of dams and reservoirs in Pakistan
This page shows the province-wise list of dams and reservoirs in Pakistan. According to the International Commission on Large Dams, 73 dams and reservoirs in Pakistan are over 15 m (49 ft) in height. Tarbela Dam in Pakistan's Khyber Pakhtunkhwa is the largest earth-filled dam in the world and is the second largest by the structural volume. Mirani Dam is the largest dam in the world in terms of volume for flood protection with a floodstock of 588,690 cubic hectometers while Sabakzai Dam is the 7th largest with a floodstock of 23,638 cubic hectometers. On 21 January 2021, the government of Balochistan announced that it will build 16 new small dams in the Balochistan province.
[ "Lists" ]
2011-07-16T17:17:00Z
2011-07-16T17:43:21Z
4,507,925
Disappearance of Michael Dunahee
Michael Wayne Dunahee (May 12, 1986 – disappeared March 24, 1991) is a Canadian missing child who disappeared from the playground at Blanshard Park Elementary School in Victoria, British Columbia, on March 24, 1991, and has never been seen or found since. He was last seen that day around 12:30 pm at the playground as his mother, Crystal Dunahee, was participating in a women's flag football practice where his father was a spectator. Although he vanished metres (yards) from his parents, no witnesses to his disappearance have ever been identified. Michael's disappearance became one of the largest police investigations in Canadian history, and to this day, over 11,000 tips have been received by the police. However, despite a large number of tips and a CA$100,000 reward, police still do not have any solid leads in the case.
[ "Health" ]
2006-03-25T05:25:41Z
2006-03-25T05:28:58Z
71,498,816
Anthropology of technology
The anthropology of technology (AoT) is a unique, diverse, and growing field of study that bears much in common with kindred developments in the sociology and history of technology: first, a growing refusal to view the role of technology in human societies as the irreversible and predetermined consequence of a given technology's putative "inner logic"; and second, a focus on the social and cultural factors that shape a given technology's development and impact in a society. However, AoT defines technology far more broadly than the sociologists and historians of technology. AoT encompasses not only the study of the processes and products of modern science and engineering, but also the techniques of small-scale societies (such as basket-weaving and bow and arrow fabrication), and the technologies of the past recoverable only by archaeology. Methodologically, AoT shares much in common with Science and Technology Studies (STS), typically employing intensive fieldwork methodologies in order to grasp the social and cultural shaping of technological artifacts and systems. These may include a phenomenological approach: how people feel, see, sense, smell, and apprehend through the body as technology is practiced and the products used.
[ "Humanities" ]
2022-08-10T22:12:50Z
2022-08-10T22:15:35Z
71,285,585
Société Financière Française et Coloniale
The Société financière française et coloniale (SFFC, "French and Colonial Financial Company") was a French investment bank that was an active investor in colonial ventures, particularly in the 1920s. It was founded in 1920 by financier Octave Homberg, who led it until having to leave in stages in 1930-1931 following heavy losses. In 1949, the SFFC changed its name to Société financière pour la France et les pays d'Outre-Mer (SOFFO, "Financial Company for France and Overseas Lands"), which eventually merged into investment company Suez Industrie in 1998.
[ "Economy" ]
2022-07-13T13:01:07Z
2022-07-13T16:25:40Z
44,348,082
Ian Lockie Michael
Ian Lockie Michael (1915–2014) was a British academic who was the founding Vice-Chancellor of the University of Malawi.
[ "People" ]
2014-11-09T13:58:16Z
2014-11-09T14:08:01Z
16,973,017
United Kingdom administrative law
United Kingdom administrative law is part of UK constitutional law that is designed through judicial review to hold executive power and public bodies accountable under the law. A person can apply to the High Court to challenge a public body's decision if they have a "sufficient interest", within three months of the grounds of the cause of action becoming known. By contrast, claims against public bodies in tort or contract are usually limited by the Limitation Act 1980 to a period of 6 years. Almost any public body, or private bodies exercising public functions, can be the target of judicial review, including a government department, a local council, any Minister, the Prime Minister, or any other body that is created by law. The only public body whose decisions cannot be reviewed is Parliament, when it passes an Act.
[ "Law" ]
2008-04-17T06:03:32Z
2008-04-17T06:05:29Z
60,894,560
Khaled Al-Dosari
Khaled al-Dosari (Arabic: خالد الدوسري; born 11 August 1972) is a Saudi Arabian taekwondo practitioner. He competed in the men's +80 kg category in the 2000 Summer Olympics. He was defeated by Kim Kyong-hun of South Korea in the first round and then went on to defeat Carlos Delgado of Nicaragua and Milton Castro of Colombia in the repechage, before losing to Pascal Gentil of France in the bronze medal match. Al-Dosari was also the national flag bearer for Saudi Arabia at the Olympic opening ceremony.
[ "Sports" ]
2019-05-29T01:09:20Z
2019-05-29T01:10:48Z
49,469,509
Lovejoy's Hotel
Lovejoy's Hotel was a New York City hotel from the 1830s through 1870. It was located at the corner of Park Row and Beekman Street in a six-story building in the Civic Center neighborhood of Manhattan. The Astor House hotel was opposite it.
[ "Entities" ]
2016-02-18T06:02:24Z
2016-02-18T06:03:13Z
30,939,752
The Debt (2007 film)
Ha-Hov, aka HaChov, or in English, The Debt, is a 2007 Israeli drama-thriller film directed by Assaf Bernstein and starring Gila Almagor, Yuriy Chepurnov, and Oleg Drach, about three retired Mossad agents confronted by a challenge from their past. It was remade as the 2010 American/British film The Debt, mixing the Mengele and Eichmann stories.
[ "Information" ]
2011-02-19T14:44:50Z
2011-02-19T15:18:26Z
41,975,063
Gravitational instability
The key idea in explaining the way in which structures evolve in the universe is gravitational instability. If material is to be brought together to form structures, then a long-range force is required, and gravity is the only known possibility. (Although electromagnetism is a long-range force, charge neutrality demands that its influence is unimportant on large scales.) The basic picture is as follows. Suppose that at some initial time, say decoupling, there are small irregularities in the distribution of matter.
[ "Universe" ]
2014-02-18T04:31:40Z
2014-02-18T04:33:41Z
13,019,526
Reel Fishing
Reel Fishing is a series of fishing video games by Natsume Inc. The first game, Reel Fishing, was released for the PlayStation in 1996. Originally a localization of Victor Interactive Software's (now Marvelous Interactive) Fish Eyes series from Japan, Natsume Inc. has since diverged from that series to create their own games.
[ "Technology" ]
2007-08-30T14:54:08Z
2007-08-30T14:57:09Z
29,253,752
William Culican
William "Bill" Culican (21 August 1928 – 24 March 1984) was an Australian archaeologist and lecturer in biblical archaeology and pre-classical antiquity at the University of Melbourne.
[ "Humanities" ]
2010-10-18T23:57:51Z
2010-10-18T23:58:43Z
844,686
Quentin Keynes
Quentin George Keynes ( KAYNZ; 17 June 1921 – 26 February 2003) was an explorer, writer, filmmaker, and bibliophile. Keynes was born in London, the second son of Geoffrey Keynes and his wife Margaret, the daughter of George Howard Darwin who in turn was the son of Charles Darwin, making Keynes Darwin's great-grandson. He was also the nephew of the renowned economist, John Maynard Keynes. His older brother Richard was a physiologist, and younger brothers Milo and Stephen both writers. Keynes moved to the United States in 1939.
[ "Human_behavior" ]
2004-07-20T12:24:44Z
2004-12-17T14:58:02Z
72,283,065
Wang Wencai
Wang Wencai (Chinese: 王文采; pinyin: Wáng Wéncǎi; Wade–Giles: Wang Wen-Tsai; 5 June 1926 – 16 November 2022) was a Chinese plant taxonomist, and an academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences. He was a member of the China Democratic League.
[ "Knowledge" ]
2022-11-18T15:12:07Z
2022-11-18T15:14:17Z
53,244,683
Narifuri
narifuri is a Japanese fashion brand based in Tokyo. Its main concept is "fashion + bicycle," and the product lineup includes a variety of clothes from casual wear and cycling jerseys to formal suits, as well as accessories such as bags, wallets, and belts. The name narifuri is taken directly from the Japanese term narifuri (Kanji: “形振り”), an expression related to showing how one dresses and/or behaves. In keeping with the bicycle motif in the brand's design, narifuri's logo is a black knock-out of a bicycle pedal.
[ "Concepts" ]
2017-02-20T02:27:14Z
2017-02-20T02:28:09Z
17,110,329
Andative and venitive
In linguistics, andative and venitive (abbreviated AND and VEN) are a type of verbal deixis: verb forms which indicate 'going' or 'coming' motion, respectively, in reference to a particular location or person. Other terms sometimes seen are itive and ventive, or translocative and cislocative. They generally derive historically from the verbs go and come being reduced to auxiliary verbs or verbal affixes, and may in turn be grammaticalized to aspectual morphemes. Many languages of Siberia (such as Itelmen, Forest Nenets, Chukchi, Alyutor), California, West Africa (such as Akan), the Caucasus-Mideast-North Africa (Akkadian, Sumerian), and Oceania have such verb forms. A language with andative and venitive forms may also use them with a verb to carry, for example, to create the meanings of "bring" (venitive) and "take (away)" (andative).
[ "Science" ]
2008-04-25T09:42:19Z
2008-07-25T20:49:22Z
690,208
Trinovantum
Trinovantum is the name in medieval British legend that was given to London, according to Geoffrey of Monmouth's Historia Regum Britanniae, when it was founded by the exiled Trojan Brutus, who called it Troia Nova ("New Troy"), which was gradually corrupted to Trinovantum. The legend says that it was later rebuilt by King Lud, who named it Caer Lud ("Lud's Fort") after himself and that the name became corrupted to Kaer Llundain and finally London. The legend is part of the Matter of Britain. The name Trinovantum derives from the Iron Age tribe of the Trinovantes, who lived in Essex, Suffolk and part of Greater London and are mentioned by Julius Caesar in his account of his expeditions to Britain in 55 and 54 BC. In a later account of those expeditions by Orosius, they are referred to as civitas Trinovantum, "the nation of the Trinovantes", with Trinovantum in this case being in the genitive plural.
[ "History" ]
2004-05-30T01:13:26Z
2004-06-25T18:15:56Z
1,053,548
Viducasses
The Viducassēs (Gaulish: *Uiducassēs/Widucassēs) were a Gallic tribe dwelling in the modern Calvados department during the Iron Age and the Roman period.
[ "History" ]
2004-10-10T00:02:49Z
2004-11-28T16:26:06Z
33,616,597
The Magician's Wife
The Magician's Wife, published in 1997, was the last novel by the Northern Irish-Canadian writer Brian Moore. Set in 1856, it tells the story of a famous French magician (based on the real-life Jean-Eugene Robert-Houdin) who is despatched by Emperor Napoleon III to help France subdue the Arab population in war-torn Algeria.
[ "Nature" ]
2011-11-02T18:01:25Z
2011-11-02T18:02:12Z
52,578,436
Music of Final Fantasy XV
The music for the video game Final Fantasy XV, developed and published by Square Enix as the fifteenth mainline entry in the Final Fantasy series, was composed primarily by Yoko Shimomura. Having previously worked on the Kingdom Hearts series, among various other titles, Final Fantasy XV was her first project for the series. Shimomura was brought on board the project in 2006, when it was a spin-off title called Final Fantasy Versus XIII, and stayed in her role during the game's ten-year development cycle. Her music, based around themes of "friendship" and "filial bonds", incorporates multiple musical genres, such as orchestral, bossa nova, and American blues. Several tracks, including the main theme "Somnus", feature Latin lyrics written by the game's original director Tetsuya Nomura.
[ "Technology" ]
2016-12-13T21:01:05Z
2016-12-13T21:07:11Z
2,465,745
Steve Henifin
Silicon Knights was a Canadian video game developer. Founded in 1992 by Denis Dyack, the company was headquartered in St. Catharines, Ontario. They started developing for computers such as the Atari ST and IBM PC compatibles. After 1996, they moved to console titles. Dyack left Silicon Knights to form a new game studio, Precursor Games, after the loss of a court case against Epic Games over the game engine Unreal Engine 3.
[ "Technology" ]
2005-08-16T11:18:05Z
2005-08-31T16:32:38Z
34,170,392
Paul VI High School (Montreal)
Paul VI High School (French: École secondaire Paul VI) is a high school located in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It is a part of the English Montreal School Board. Prior to 1998 it was operated by the Montreal Catholic School Commission.
[ "Education" ]
2011-12-24T00:10:42Z
2011-12-24T00:12:17Z
70,804,316
Heroic (esports)
Heroic (stylized as HEROIC) is a Norwegian esports organization with teams competing in Counter-Strike 2, PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds, Sim racing and Rainbow Six Siege. The esports organization is best known for its Global Offensive team, and has made it to the playoffs of PGL Major Stockholm 2021, PGL Major Antwerp 2022 and Blast.tv Paris Major 2023. They also placed 2nd at IEM Rio Major 2022, losing to Outsiders in the grand finals.
[ "Information" ]
2022-05-17T05:12:50Z
2022-05-17T05:14:12Z
77,692,642
Khaznadar inscriptions
The Khaznadar inscriptions are approximately 120 Punic inscriptions, found in Carthage by Muhammad Khaznadar in the 1860s in Husainid Tunisia. In 1869 Heinrich von Maltzan noted that Khaznadar's museum contained more than 120 Punic inscriptions (2/3 Punic and 1/3 neo-Punic) found during Khaznadar's excavations in three different points around the ruins of Carthage. A number of the inscriptions were published in 1870 by von Maltzen in his 1870 Travels in the regencies of Tunis and Tripoli, and again in the following year by Julius Euting in his Punic stones.
[ "Language" ]
2024-08-23T01:16:22Z
2024-08-23T01:26:06Z
1,074,934
Hillclimbing
Hillclimbing, also known as hill climbing, speed hillclimbing, or speed hill climbing, is a branch of motorsport in which drivers compete against the clock to complete an uphill course. It is one of the oldest forms of motorsport, since the first known hillclimb at La Turbie near Nice, France, took place as long ago as 31 January 1897. The hillclimb held at Shelsley Walsh, in Worcestershire, England, is the world's oldest continuously staged motorsport event still staged on its original course, having been first run in 1905.
[ "Sports" ]
2004-10-17T00:14:20Z
2004-10-18T23:15:29Z
63,758,108
Tareg Hamedi
Tareg Ali Hamedi (Arabic: طارق حامدي; born 26 July 1998) is a Saudi Arabian karateka. He represented Saudi Arabia at the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, Japan. He won the silver medal in the men's +75 kg event after being disqualified for knocking out his opponent with an illegal kick. He is an eight-time medalist, including four gold medals, at the Asian Karate Championships. He is also a gold medalist at the 2021 Islamic Solidarity Games and a two-time bronze medalist at the Asian Games.
[ "Sports" ]
2020-04-24T16:30:06Z
2020-04-24T16:39:07Z
29,883,371
West v Secretary of State for Scotland
West v Secretary of State for Scotland 1992 SC 385 is a Scots administration law case dealing with judicial review. In its decision, the Inner House laid down the defining principles of judicial review in Scotland and the test for invoking the Court of Session's jurisdiction.
[ "Law" ]
2010-12-04T07:15:19Z
2010-12-04T07:16:00Z
36,723,232
Eugene Gano Hay
Eugene Gano Hay (March 26, 1853 – February 21, 1933) was a member of the Board of General Appraisers.
[ "Human_behavior" ]
2012-08-14T21:32:59Z
2012-08-14T21:33:11Z
16,455,155
Alba gu bràth
Alba gu bràth (pronounced [ˈal̪ˠapə kə ˈpɾaːx] ) is a Scottish Gaelic phrase used to express allegiance to Scotland (Alba). Idiomatically it translates into English as 'Scotland forever'. It has also been used on some Scotland Football National team shirts over the past few seasons. The phrase is parallel to the Irish Éirinn go Brách ('Ireland Forever'), Welsh language slogan Cymru am byth ('Wales forever'), the Breton Breizh da viken ('Brittany forever') or the Cornish language Kernow bys vyken ('Cornwall forever').
[ "Science" ]
2008-03-21T10:44:49Z
2008-03-23T22:20:26Z
43,905,012
Herat campaign of 1731
The Herat Campaign of 1731 took place when Nader Shah who had already successfully driven the Ottomans from western Iran and southern Azerbaijan had to cut his campaign short to deal with the revolt of the Abdalis of Herat who were provoked into bearing arms against their Persian overlords by Hussein Hotaki of Qandahar. The conflict resulted in the re-establishment of Persian rule over Herat.
[ "Military" ]
2014-09-21T17:43:22Z
2014-09-21T17:51:30Z
63,849,827
Citroën 19 19 Concept
The Citroën 19_19 Concept is a futuristic electric concept car developed by the French manufacturer Citroën presented on the occasion of its centenary.
[ "Engineering" ]
2020-05-03T21:53:06Z
2020-05-03T22:55:03Z
8,292,744
J. C. Adams
J. C. Adams (born June 6, 1970) is an American author, magazine editor, and reporter whose work focuses on the gay male pornographic industry, and a gay pornographic film director.
[ "Entertainment" ]
2006-12-06T04:36:35Z
2006-12-06T04:44:17Z
41,704,936
David R. Slavitt
David Rytman Slavitt (born March 23, 1935) is an American writer, poet, and translator, the author of more than 100 books. Slavitt has written a number of novels and numerous translations from Greek, Latin, and other languages. Slavitt wrote a number of popular novels under the pseudonym Henry Sutton, starting in the late 1960s. The Exhibitionist (1967) was a bestseller and sold over four million copies. He has also published popular novels under the names of David Benjamin, Lynn Meyer, and Henry Lazarus.
[ "Academic_disciplines" ]
2014-01-21T18:53:50Z
2014-01-21T19:09:56Z
39,193,215
Mohamed Talbi
Mohamed Talbi (Arabic: محمد الطالبي), (16 September 1921 – 1 May 2017) was a Tunisian author, professor, and Islamologist.
[ "Knowledge" ]
2013-04-23T04:21:34Z
2013-04-26T12:03:35Z
42,232,845
Israel Pliner
Israel Pliner (Russian: Израиль Израилевич Плинер, Izrail Izrailevich Pliner; 22 January 1896 – 14 November 1938) was a Soviet officer and high functionary of the Soviet secret police. Notable posts include deputy chief of the Gulag from 1935 to 1937 and chief administrator of the Gulag from 16 August 1937 to 16 November 1938.
[ "Human_behavior" ]
2014-03-18T04:47:19Z
2014-03-28T04:24:58Z
13,929,879
Knowledge and Decisions
Knowledge and Decisions is a non-fiction book by American economist Thomas Sowell. The book was initially published in 1980 by Basic Books and reissued in 1996. Sowell analyzes social and economic knowledge and how it is transmitted through society, and how that transmission affects decision making. The book's central theme of dispersed knowledge is drawn from F.A. Hayek's article "The Use of Knowledge in Society."
[ "Information" ]
2007-10-26T20:58:48Z
2007-10-26T21:13:13Z
2,468,076
Air Italy (2005–2018)
Air Italy S.p.A., operating as Air Italy was an Italian airline, headquartered in Milan. Using wet-leased aircraft from Boeing, it operated from 2005 to 2018, later as the main airline of Air Italy Group together with two other subsidiaries, Air Italy Egypt and Air Italy Polska, which both later ceased operation. After 2011, Air Italy was a fully integrated subsidiary of Meridiana, then known as Meridiana fly, and continued its operation under the Meridiana Brand but keeping its own AOC. On 28 February 2018, Air Italy reorganised with Meridiana to create the new Air Italy under the new ownership of Meridiana's parent company, AQA Holding.
[ "Business" ]
2005-08-16T18:38:31Z
2005-08-16T18:42:22Z
70,646,733
Naomi Ellenbogen
Dame Naomi Lisa Ellenbogen, Mrs Barklem (born 20 March 1970) is a British High Court Judge.
[ "Government" ]
2022-04-27T21:42:03Z
2022-04-27T21:42:37Z
25,673,409
Hanamaru Kindergarten
Hanamaru Kindergarten (はなまる幼稚園, Hanamaru Yōchien) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Yuto and published by Square Enix. The series follows Anzu, a kindergarten girl who is in love with her teacher and tries to win his affection but always fails. It has been adapted into an anime television series animated by Gainax and broadcast in Japan from January to March 2010.
[ "Technology" ]
2010-01-04T05:29:03Z
2010-01-04T07:48:39Z
75,709,414
Aleksandr Podushkin
Aleksandr Nikolaevich Podushkin (Александр Николаевич Подушкин, born March 19, 1953) is an archaeologist from Kazakhstan. He holds a doctorate in history and is a professor at the Southern Kazakhstan State Pedagogical Institute in Shymkent, Kazakhstan. Podushkin specializes on the archaeology of Southern Kazakhstan, and on the cultures of the Sakas, Sarmatians and Kangju in the 4th century BCE – 4th century CE. He has published four monographs and about ninety articles, some in collaboration with foreign scholars, such as Franz Grenet and Nicholas Sims-Williams.
[ "Humanities" ]
2024-01-03T08:09:07Z
2024-01-03T08:10:20Z
72,133,635
He Yaling
He Yaling (Chinese: 何雅玲; pinyin: Hé Yǎlíng; born September 1963) is a Chinese physicist and professor at Xi'an Jiaotong University, and an academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences. She was a representative of the 20th National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party. She was an alternate member of the 19th Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party and is an alternate member of the 20th Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party.
[ "Knowledge" ]
2022-10-29T14:07:28Z
2022-10-29T14:07:42Z
66,883,576
2020–2021 U.S. troop withdrawal from Afghanistan
The United States Armed Forces completed their withdrawal from Afghanistan on 30 August 2021, marking the end of the 2001–2021 war. In February 2020, the Trump administration and the Taliban signed the United States–Taliban deal in Doha, Qatar, which stipulated fighting restrictions for both the US and the Taliban, and in return for the Taliban's counter-terrorism commitments, provided for the withdrawal of all NATO forces from Afghanistan by 1 May 2021. Following the deal, the US dramatically reduced the number of air attacks on the Taliban at the detriment of the Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF) fighting the Taliban insurgency. The Biden administration's final decision in April 2021 was to begin the withdrawal on 1 May 2021, but the final pull-out of all US troops was delayed until September 2021, triggering the start of the collapse of the ANSF. This collapse led to the Taliban takeover of Kabul on 15 August 2021.
[ "Military" ]
2021-02-24T05:43:31Z
2021-02-24T05:46:56Z
81,837
The Crystal Palace
The Crystal Palace was a cast iron and plate glass structure, originally built in Hyde Park, London, to house the Great Exhibition of 1851. The exhibition took place from 1 May to 15 October 1851, and more than 14,000 exhibitors from around the world gathered in its 990,000-square-foot (92,000 m2) exhibition space to display examples of technology developed in the Industrial Revolution. Designed by Joseph Paxton, the Great Exhibition building was 1,851 feet (564 m) long, with an interior height of 128 feet (39 m), and was three times the size of St Paul's Cathedral. The 60,000 panes of glass were manufactured by the Chance Brothers. The 990,000-square-foot building with its 128-foot-high ceiling was completed in thirty-nine weeks.
[ "Entities" ]
2002-09-07T12:17:27Z
2002-09-07T12:28:29Z
400,401
List of airports in Poland
This is a list of airports in Poland, sorted by location, IATA and ICAO airport codes, passenger traffic and runway surface. An additional airport, slated to open in 2028, is planned for greater Warsaw. Warsaw Solidarity Airport, also known as Central Communication Port/Centralny Port Komunikacyjny Airport, will be 25 miles southwest of the national capital in Baranów.
[ "Lists" ]
2003-12-13T20:52:36Z
2003-12-13T21:03:27Z
30,008,566
Centrenergo
Centrenergo (Ukrainian: «Центренерго») is a major electric and thermal energy-producing company in central Ukraine and eastern Ukraine. The main activities of Centerenergo are the production of electricity supplied to the wholesale electricity market of Ukraine and the production of thermal energy. The company's share in the total electricity production of Ukraine is about 8%, in the structure of thermal generation - about 18%. It plays a significant role in maintaining and regulating the country's energy balance.
[ "Energy" ]
2010-12-11T12:25:54Z
2016-12-17T21:16:01Z
5,161,605
R v Andrews
R v Andrews, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 870 is a decision of the Supreme Court of Canada on the freedom of expression under section 2(b) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. It is a companion case to R v Keegstra. The Court upheld the criminal provision that prohibits communicating statements that wilfully promote hatred.
[ "Politics" ]
2006-05-16T02:09:39Z
2006-05-16T22:47:47Z
49,940,387
Medica Hospitals
Medica Hospitals is an Indian for-profit private hospital network in Eastern India providing multi-speciality and super-speciality healthcare facilities over the past few years. Beginning its journey with Medica North Bengal Clinic in Siliguri in 2008, the Group launched its flagship Hospital – Medica Superspecialty Hospital in Kolkata in 2010. In 2023, Nandakumar Jairam took over as the Chairman - Medica Group. In April 2024, Manipal Hospitals acquired 87% stake in Medica Synergie Hospitals with ₹1,400 crores investment.
[ "Life" ]
2016-03-25T12:02:28Z
2016-03-28T06:31:48Z
63,979,188
List of covered bridges in Kentucky
Below is a list of covered bridges in Kentucky. There are eleven surviving authentic covered bridges in the U.S. state of Kentucky, and they are all historic. A covered bridge is considered authentic not due to its age, but by its construction. An authentic bridge is constructed using trusses rather than other methods such as stringers, a popular choice for non-authentic covered bridges. There once were hundreds of these in Kentucky.
[ "Lists" ]
2020-05-16T23:43:41Z
2020-05-17T01:03:30Z
37,659,685
Su-Kam Power Systems
Su-Kam Power Systems Ltd. is an Indian power provider. The company offers power backup solutions for both domestic and industrial markets, with a focus on environmentally friendly energy sources such as solar power.
[ "Energy" ]
2012-11-16T12:34:24Z
2012-11-16T12:47:52Z
798,068
Saint Isaac's Cathedral
Saint Isaac's Cathedral or Isaakievskiy Sobor (Russian: Исаа́киевский Собо́р, romanized: Isaákiyevskiy Sobór) is a large architectural landmark cathedral that currently functions as a museum with occasional church services in Saint Petersburg, Russia. It is dedicated to Saint Isaac of Dalmatia, a patron saint of Peter the Great, who had been born on the feast day of that saint. It was originally built as a cathedral but was turned into a museum by the Soviet government in 1931 and has remained a museum ever since, with church services held in a side chapel since the 1990s. In 2017, the Governor of Saint Petersburg offered to transfer the cathedral back to the Russian Orthodox Church, but this was not accomplished due to the protests of St Petersburg citizens opposing the offer.
[ "Religion" ]
2004-07-08T23:43:56Z
2004-07-08T23:45:22Z
29,823
Thomas Hobbes
Thomas Hobbes ( HOBZ; 5 April 1588 – 4 December 1679) was an English philosopher. Hobbes is best known for his 1651 book Leviathan, in which he expounds an influential formulation of social contract theory. He is considered to be one of the founders of modern political philosophy. Hobbes was born prematurely due to his mother's fear of the Spanish Armada. His early life, overshadowed by his father's departure following a fight, was taken under the care of his wealthy uncle.
[ "Ethics" ]
2001-08-10T20:02:21Z
2001-12-07T09:33:58Z
20,369,786
Transmission Corporation of Andhra Pradesh
The Transmission Corporation of Andhra Pradesh (APTRANSCO) is the electric power transmission company of Andhra Pradesh state in India.
[ "Energy" ]
2008-11-24T05:56:49Z
2008-11-24T05:58:58Z
51,338,765
Kelly Fu
Kelly Fu Ka Lei (Chinese: 傅嘉莉; born 6 January 1985) is a Hong Kong-German actress and model. She is currently managed under the Television Broadcasts Limited (TVB).
[ "Concepts" ]
2016-08-16T07:12:05Z
2016-08-16T07:40:39Z
51,109,302
Shuliang He
Kong He (Chinese: 孔紇; pinyin: Kǒng Hé), (622 BC – 548 BC) also known as Shuliang He (Chinese: 叔梁紇; pinyin: Shūliáng Hé), was a scholar and military officer of the State of Lu. He was the son of the Lu political figure Bo Xia and the father of Kong Pi and Confucius.
[ "Philosophy" ]
2016-07-19T04:22:50Z
2016-07-19T04:23:45Z
88,577
Reagan Doctrine
The Reagan Doctrine was a United States strategy implemented by the Reagan Administration to overwhelm the global influence of the Soviet Union in the late Cold War. As stated by US President Ronald Reagan in his State of the Union address on February 6, 1985: "We must not break faith with those who are risking their lives—on every continent from Afghanistan to Nicaragua—to defy Soviet-supported aggression and secure rights which have been ours from birth." The doctrine was a centerpiece of United States foreign policy from the early 1980s until the end of the Cold War in 1991. Under the Reagan Doctrine, the United States provided overt and covert aid to anti-communist guerrillas and resistance movements in an effort to "roll back" Soviet-backed pro-communist governments in Africa, Asia, and Latin America. The doctrine was designed to diminish Soviet influence in these regions as part of the administration's overall strategy to win the Cold War.
[ "Law" ]
2002-09-21T02:57:17Z
2003-06-27T00:14:38Z
57,866,732
Rebecca Todd Peters
Rebecca Todd Peters is a feminist and Christian social ethicist who serves as a professor of Religious Studies at Elon University. Peters' scholarship focuses on questions related to economics, the environmental crisis, globalization, poverty, and women's access to abortion. She claimed to have felt God's presence while receiving both of her abortions.
[ "Ethics" ]
2018-07-10T01:01:47Z
2018-07-13T09:17:03Z
1,899,844
Jindal Steel and Power
Jindal Steel and Power Limited (JSPL) is an Indian steel company based in New Delhi. JSPL is a part of OP Jindal Group. In terms of tonnage, it is the third-largest private steel producer in India and the only private player in India to produce rails. The company manufactures and sells sponge iron, mild steel slabs, rails, mild steel, structural, hot rolled plates, iron ore pellets, and coils. Jindal Steel and Power set up the world's first coal-gasification based DRI plant at Angul, Odisha that uses the locally available high-ash coal and turns it into synthesis gas for steel making, reducing the dependence on imported coke-rich coal.
[ "Energy" ]
2005-05-17T13:35:43Z
2005-05-19T07:35:06Z
11,748,553
Daily Graphic (Ghana)
The Daily Graphic is a Ghanaian state-owned daily newspaper published in Accra, Ghana.
[ "Internet" ]
2007-06-13T15:54:32Z
2007-06-14T17:55:16Z
22,319,839
Water Warfare
Water Warfare, known in Japan as Bang Bang Kids (バンバン☆キッズ, Ban Ban☆Kizzu), is a first-person shooter video game by Hudson Soft for WiiWare. It is the second game in the genre to be released by Hudson Soft for WiiWare (after Onslaught). Involving combat with water guns, Hudson has described the family friendly game as a "first-person soaker", which holds up Hudson's core design philosophy that prohibits explicit violence between people playing a game.
[ "Technology" ]
2009-04-07T18:05:41Z
2009-04-07T18:09:19Z
71,563,897
Jiaobeijiu
Jiaobeijiu (Chinese: 交杯酒; lit. 'cross-cupped wine'), also known as Hejin (Chinese: 合卺; pinyin: héjǐn; lit. 'to join nuptial wine cup') in ancient times, is a traditional Chinese nuptial ceremonial rite where newlywed couples interlinking and crossing their arms to sip jiu (Chinese: 酒; lit. 'wine') from two separated cups to their future marital happiness, to promise their lifelong love and to make the vows of no separation in the presence of their guests. This nuptial ceremony can be traced back to the ancient times and already existed in the Qin dynasty; it is suggested that its earliest form had probably started in the late Neolithic period of China; since then, the rite was transmitted down from generation to generation.
[ "Philosophy" ]
2022-08-20T16:16:56Z
2022-08-20T16:17:25Z
78,067,999
List of statutory rules and orders of Northern Ireland, 1934
This is an incomplete list of statutory rules and orders of Northern Ireland during 1934. Statutory rules and orders were the predecessor of statutory rules and they formed the secondary legislation of Northern Ireland between 1922 and 1973.
[ "Law" ]
2024-10-07T20:51:15Z
2024-10-08T00:19:29Z
12,341,642
Murder on the Eurasia Express
Murder on the Eurasia Express is an interactive movie and adventure video game developed by System Sacom and published by Enix for the PlayStation in 1998. It was released exclusively in Japan and is the first game in the "Cinema Active" series, followed later by Love Story (2000) on the PlayStation 2. The game is presented entirely in live-action full motion video and stars several Japanese idols.
[ "Technology" ]
2007-07-20T07:46:01Z
2007-08-03T11:16:23Z
35,983,718
Thomas Bond Sprague
Thomas Bond Sprague FRSE FFA FIA LLD (29 March 1830 – 29 November 1920) was a British actuary, barrister and amateur mathematician who was the only person to have been President of both the Institute of Actuaries (1882–1886) in London and the Faculty of Actuaries (1894–1896) in Edinburgh, prior to their merger in 2010.
[ "Mathematics" ]
2012-05-30T15:19:37Z
2012-05-30T15:28:51Z
37,210,081
Emma Freedman
Emma Freedman is an Australian television and radio personality, currently working as a host, presenter and roving reporter across Seven Sport since 2021. Freedman grew up on the Mornington Peninsula in Melbourne. Freedman formerly co-hosted The Grill Team on Triple M Sydney. Prior to this, she was a weather presenter on Weekend Today and host of Sports Sunday on the Nine Network.
[ "Mass_media" ]
2012-10-04T00:30:25Z
2012-10-04T00:34:10Z
6,856,407
Tilda's yellow-shouldered bat
Tilda's yellow-shouldered bat (Sturnira tildae) is a bat species found in Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, French Guiana, Guyana, Peru, Suriname, Venezuela, and Trinidad and Tobago. == References ==
[ "Communication" ]
2006-09-05T17:43:22Z
2006-09-05T19:30:37Z
591,646
Honoré Flaugergues
Pierre-Gilles-Antoine-Honoré Flaugergues, usually known as Honoré Flaugergues (16 May 1755 in Viviers, Ardèche – 26 November 1835 or 20 November 1830) was a French astronomer.
[ "Humanities" ]
2004-04-12T07:43:43Z
2004-04-26T00:10:45Z
32,845,630
Rhodes' Tavern
Rhodes Tavern is the site of a historic tavern in the early history of Washington, D.C. It was located at 15th Street and F Street, Northwest, Washington, D.C.
[ "Entities" ]
2011-08-23T20:37:17Z
2011-08-23T20:40:26Z
2,104,429
Brewery Ommegang
Brewery Ommegang is a brewery located near Cooperstown, New York, United States, that specializes in Belgian-style ales.
[ "Food_and_drink" ]
2005-06-24T02:51:09Z
2005-06-24T02:52:42Z
6,505,466
Oenomaus (rebel slave)
Oenomaus was a Gallic gladiator, who escaped from the gladiatorial school of Lentulus Batiatus in Capua. Together with Spartacus, Crixus, Castus, and Gannicus, he became one of the leaders of rebellious slaves during the Third Servile War (73–71 BC) Oenomaus was involved in one of the first major successes of the slave army, the rout of the army of the praetor Gaius Claudius Glaber, who had tried to lay siege to the slave army near Mount Vesuvius. Oenomaus fell in an early battle, possibly during the winter of 73–72 BC when the slave armies were plundering cities and towns in the south of Italy.
[ "History" ]
2006-08-16T20:22:54Z
2006-09-24T07:51:07Z