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33,021,702 | Jewish Cemetery, Wiślica | Jewish Cemetery in Wiślica is the cemetery of the Jewish community which lived in Wiślica, Poland, until 1942. The cemetery was created in the 17th century. It is located in the northwest part of the village, near the Złota street, on a woody terrain. The cemetery was destroyed during and after the Second World War. In the 1980s, a narrow asphalt road, linking the Złota street to the village's bypass, was built in the middle of the necropolis. | [
"Society",
"Culture"
] | 2011-09-08T12:57:27Z | 2011-09-09T09:59:48Z |
12,261,645 | Kefeli Mosque | The Kefeli Mosque (Turkish: Kefeli Câmîi, meaning "the mosque of the Caffariotes", after the inhabitants of the city of Caffa in Crimea, or also Kefeli Mescidi, where Mescit is the Turkish word for a small mosque) is a former Eastern Orthodox church, later jointly officiated by Roman Catholics and Armenians, and finally converted into a mosque by the Ottomans. The Catholic Church was dedicated to Saint Nicholas. Its date of dedication as an Eastern Orthodox church is unknown, but it is commonly identified with the 9th-century Monastery of Manuel (Greek: Μονὴ τοῦ Μανουήλ). The interest of Kefeli Mosque arises because it repurposes the early Christian basilica form during the later Byzantine period. | [
"Religion"
] | 2007-07-15T13:07:50Z | 2007-07-15T13:08:57Z |
3,654,271 | Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer | Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer is a 2007 American superhero film, and sequel to the 2005 film Fantastic Four. Both films are based on the Fantastic Four comic book and were directed by Tim Story. The film stars Ioan Gruffudd, Jessica Alba, Chris Evans, and Michael Chiklis as the title characters, with Julian McMahon, Kerry Washington, Andre Braugher, Beau Garrett, Doug Jones and Laurence Fishburne in supporting roles. The plot follows the Fantastic Four (and Doctor Doom) as they confront, and later ally with, the Silver Surfer to save Earth from Galactus. The film was released on June 15, 2007 to generally mixed reviews and grossed over $301 million worldwide, but earned less than its predecessor which grossed $333.5 million worldwide. | [
"Nature"
] | 2006-01-08T06:10:26Z | 2006-01-08T06:11:51Z |
65,969,463 | Valentina (French singer) | Valentina Tronel (born 6 April 2009), known as simply Valentina, is a French pop singer best known for winning the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2020. In 2016, she took part in the French version of The Voice Kids. Since 2018, she has been part of the child musical group Kids United Nouvelle Génération, with whom she has recorded the albums Au bout de nos rêves (2018) and L'Hymne de la vie (2019). She represented France in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2020 with the song "J'imagine", and went on to win the competition, becoming the first French entrant to win the Junior Eurovision Song Contest. | [
"History"
] | 2020-11-29T17:53:57Z | 2020-11-29T18:03:44Z |
1,075,246 | Assyrian siege of Jerusalem | The Assyrian siege of Jerusalem (circa 701 BC) was an aborted siege of Jerusalem, then capital of the Kingdom of Judah, carried out by Sennacherib, king of the Neo-Assyrian Empire. The siege concluded Sennacharib's campaign in the Levant, in which he attacked the fortified cities and devastated the countryside of Judah in a campaign of subjugation. Sennacherib besieged Jerusalem, but did not capture it. Sennacherib's Annals describe how the king trapped Hezekiah of Judah in Jerusalem "like a caged bird" and later returned to Assyria when he received tribute from Judah. In the Hebrew Bible, Hezekiah is described as paying 300 talents of silver and 30 talents of gold to Assyria. | [
"Military"
] | 2004-10-17T02:47:25Z | 2004-10-17T03:13:03Z |
40,848,407 | A. Kent Kingston | Andrew Kent Kingston is editor of the Signs of the Times (Australian magazine), a former presenter and producer of the Record InFocus Christian news magazine TV program (2009–2015), and assistant editor of RECORD, the official news magazine of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. | [
"Mass_media"
] | 2013-10-21T03:22:20Z | 2013-10-21T03:26:06Z |
31,681,041 | Murat Bosporus | Özgür Bakar (born 16 December 1979), better known by his ring name Murat Bosporus, is a German-Turkish professional wrestler. He is best known for his work on the German independent circuit. | [
"Sports"
] | 2011-05-05T03:12:41Z | 2011-05-05T03:13:35Z |
2,140,034 | Germain Grisez | Germain Gabriel Grisez (September 30, 1929 – February 1, 2018) was a French-American philosopher. Grisez's development of ideas from Thomas Aquinas has redirected Catholic thought and changed the way it has engaged with secular moral philosophy. In 'The First Principle of Practical Reason: A Commentary on the Summa Theologiae, I-II, Q. 94, A. 2' (1965), Grisez attacked the neo-scholastic interpretation of Aquinas as holding that moral norms are derived from methodologically antecedent knowledge of human nature. | [
"Ethics"
] | 2005-06-29T23:04:51Z | 2005-06-29T23:06:45Z |
33,973,342 | Sedat Bornovalı | Sedat Bornovalı (born 31 May 1970 in Istanbul) is an art historian (PhD), interpreter and professional tourist guide in Italian, English and Turkish. As an art historian, Dr. Bornovali has contributed to several publications and projects. As a tour guide and interpreter he has served several religious leaders, including Pope Benedict XVI, the Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I of Constantinople, as well as several statesmen, including Presidents Giorgio Napolitano, Abdullah Gül and Recep Tayyip Erdoğan. Dr. Bornovali is also coordinating the restoration and renovation of the Istanbul Italian Society's Garibaldi House (Società Operaia Italiana di Mutuo Soccorso) in Beyoğlu. | [
"Academic_disciplines"
] | 2011-12-06T12:46:06Z | 2011-12-06T13:04:48Z |
51,516,846 | 5 September 2016 Syria bombings | On 5 September 2016, suicide bombers simultaneously exploded in the Syrian cities of Tartus, Homs, Damascus, and Hasakah. A car bomb detonated on a coastal highway in Tartus, killing more than five people, followed by a suicide bomber exploding in the crowd gathering in the area. A car bomb then hit a Syrian Army checkpoint in the Zahra district of Homs and killed two soldiers. A motorcycle bomb detonated near an Asayish checkpoint in Hasakah and killed at least five people, with an explosion in the capital city of Damascus following soon after. == References == | [
"Military"
] | 2016-09-05T08:02:04Z | 2016-09-05T08:03:20Z |
76,708,868 | George K. Home | George K. Home was chief of police of the Los Angeles Police Department for one year, two months, and 23 days from 1919 to 1920. Home's administration coincided with the beginning of Prohibition and the coattendant increase in smuggling and associated crime. He is best remembered for hiring Harry J. Raymond and Herbert "Brute" Kittle, both of whom were charged with multiple crimes of their own, which reduced their effectiveness as law enforcement officers. Home later became "chief narcotic enforcement officer" for the state of California. | [
"Government"
] | 2024-04-22T21:47:35Z | 2024-05-27T06:19:09Z |
31,349,130 | Hospital Sírio-Libanês | The Hospital Sírio-Libanês (Syrian-Lebanese Hospital) is a Brazilian private hospital, located in the Bela Vista neighborhood, in the central region of São Paulo. The hospital was founded by the large Syrian and Lebanese community of São Paulo in 1965. It is one of the most well-known health facilities in Brazil due to the high quality of care. In 2024 it was ranked among the top 100 best hospitals in the world by a survey of specialists and patients, being the second best in Brazil. | [
"Life"
] | 2011-03-31T09:55:39Z | 2011-03-31T11:09:53Z |
11,968,105 | Fort Bunker Hill | Fort Bunker Hill was one of seven temporary earthwork forts part of the Civil War Defenses of Washington, D.C., during the Civil War built in the Northeast quadrant of the city at the beginning of the Civil War by the Union Army to protect the city from the Confederate Army. From west to east, the forts were: Fort Slocum, Fort Totten, Fort Slemmer, Fort Bunker Hill, Fort Saratoga, Fort Thayer and Fort Lincoln. Unlike other forts, today very little remains of the structure. | [
"Entities"
] | 2007-06-27T00:06:21Z | 2007-06-27T00:07:35Z |
63,806,030 | Kevin Leahy (archaeologist) | Kevin Anthony Leahy (born 1946) is a British archaeologist and small finds specialist. He is the National Finds Adviser for early-medieval metalwork for the Portable Antiquities Scheme. He was elected as a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London on 8 May 1987. Leahy was involved in the research and publication of the Staffordshire Hoard. | [
"Humanities"
] | 2020-04-29T13:22:52Z | 2022-04-23T10:47:00Z |
18,410,312 | Pierre-Ludovic Duclos | Pierre-Ludovic Duclos-Lasnier, commonly referred to as Pierre-Ludovic Duclos, (born January 8, 1986) is a Canadian former professional tour tennis player. In 2014 he was sentenced to six-years in prison for attempting to have a sexual encounter with a 13-year-old girl. Duclos has appeared in six ATP World Tour main draw matches, winning one of two singles matches and one of three in doubles. He has also captured four ATP Challenger events, all in doubles. | [
"Health"
] | 2008-07-12T17:40:34Z | 2008-07-12T18:02:42Z |
7,710,805 | Packaging engineering | Packaging engineering, also package engineering, packaging technology and packaging science, is a broad topic ranging from design conceptualization to product placement. All steps along the manufacturing process, and more, must be taken into account in the design of the package for any given product. Package engineering is an interdisciplinary field integrating science, engineering, technology and management to protect and identify products for distribution, storage, sale, and use. It encompasses the process of design, evaluation, and production of packages. It is a system integral to the value chain that impacts product quality, user satisfaction, distribution efficiencies, and safety. | [
"Engineering"
] | 2006-10-31T15:01:27Z | 2006-10-31T15:24:58Z |
38,911,457 | Egyptian Petroleum Research Institute | The Egyptian Petroleum Research Institution (EPRI) is a governmental organization in Egypt founded by the presidential decree 541 in 1974. It is under the umbrella of the Ministry of Scientific Research and Technology, to help advance the development of studies and applications within the oil sector, and to find solutions to both long and short term technical problems. To effectively carry out this role the Ministry of petroleum is authorized for up to 50% of the EPRI's board of director shares; the Minister of Petroleum and Mineral Resources and Development is the head of the EPRI board, other members who are appointed by him to support and back the EPRI mission. | [
"Knowledge"
] | 2013-03-25T01:26:08Z | 2013-03-25T02:25:59Z |
70,865,303 | 2022 European Karate Championships – Men's 84 kg | The Men's 84 kg competition at the 2022 European Karate Championships was held from 25 to 28 May 2022. | [
"Sports"
] | 2022-05-25T02:24:33Z | 2022-05-25T02:56:39Z |
46,629,208 | Real Goods | Real Goods Trading Corporation (commonly referred to as Real Goods) is a retail and wholesale e-commerce business located in Ukiah, California, that sells renewable energy systems and resources for people interested in living off the grid or with a low environmental impact. | [
"Energy"
] | 2015-05-06T19:02:02Z | 2016-02-06T20:14:21Z |
2,208,292 | Neoevolutionism | Neoevolutionism as a social theory attempts to explain the evolution of societies by drawing on Charles Darwin's theory of evolution while discarding some dogmas of the previous theories of social evolutionism. Neoevolutionism is concerned with long-term,
evolutionary social change and with the regular patterns of development that may be seen in unrelated, widely separated cultures. | [
"Humanities"
] | 2005-07-10T21:10:43Z | 2005-07-10T21:16:12Z |
1,811,842 | List of Nobel laureates by country | This is a list of Nobel Prize laureates by country. Listings for Economics refer to the related Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences. The Nobel Prizes and the Prize in Economic Sciences have been awarded 577 times to 889 recipients, of which 26 awards (all Peace Prizes) were to organizations. Due to some recipients receiving multiple awards, the total number of recipients is 860 individuals and 22 organizations. The present list ranks laureates under the country/countries that are stated by the Nobel Prize committee on its website. | [
"Lists"
] | 2005-04-28T20:47:27Z | 2005-04-28T20:55:11Z |
7,500,573 | Bedegraine | Bedegraine is a location featured in some tellings of the Arthurian legend. Its chief importance is as the site of a battle where King Arthur solidifies his reign in a victory over rebel kings. Bedegraine is first mentioned in the French Prose Merlin, a work eventually incorporated into the Lancelot-Grail cycle. The Merlin refers to Bedegraine as the chief city of Britain and Carmeliard, the kingdom of Guinevere and Leodegrance, and describes Arthur's victory over the rebels there. Though his force is outnumbered by the rebels led by King Lot, Arthur carries the day with the secret aid of the French kings Ban and Bors. | [
"History"
] | 2006-10-18T13:52:39Z | 2006-10-18T13:53:30Z |
44,862,479 | Jupiter (band) | Jupiter is a Japanese visual kei symphonic metal band, formed in 2013 by four of the five members of Versailles. After several personnel changes, guitarists Hizaki and Teru remain the only original members, with drummer Daisuke and vocalist Kuze completing the current lineup. | [
"Concepts"
] | 2014-12-28T04:03:43Z | 2014-12-28T04:28:43Z |
56,301,927 | William DeMeo | William DeMeo is an American actor. He is known for his acting roles in Analyze That, First Kill and The Sopranos. He also played the role of Sammy Gravano in the 2018 film Gotti. | [
"Entertainment"
] | 2018-01-14T10:50:47Z | 2018-01-14T10:54:49Z |
5,433,447 | Church of Our Saviour, Copenhagen | The Church of Our Saviour (Danish: Vor Frelsers Kirke; [vɒ ˈfʁælsɐs ˈkiɐ̯kə]) is a baroque church in Copenhagen, Denmark, most famous for the external spiral winding staircase that can be climbed to the top, offering extensive views over central Copenhagen. It is also noted for its carillon, which plays melodies every hour from 8 am to midnight. | [
"Religion"
] | 2006-06-05T12:09:50Z | 2006-06-05T12:46:08Z |
2,681,496 | Such a Long Journey (film) | Such a Long Journey is a 1998 Indo-Canadian English language film based on the novel of the same name written by Rohinton Mistry. The film is directed by Sturla Gunnarsson with a screenplay by Sooni Taraporevala. The film received twelve Genie Awards nominations including the Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Actor. The film was screened at the Toronto International Film Festival. | [
"Information"
] | 2005-09-15T05:23:44Z | 2005-09-15T05:23:58Z |
34,715,043 | Krimstock hearing | A Krimstock hearing is an administrative law proceeding that offers vehicle owners the opportunity to recover possession of a vehicle confiscated by the New York City Police Department (NYPD) during an arrest. Police have authority to impound vehicles used as an instrument of a crime, and later to seek permanent ownership of these vehicles in civil forfeiture actions. Such forfeiture actions, like the Krimstock administrative hearings, are entirely separate from any criminal charges the vehicle owner may face stemming from his or her arrest. At the hearing, the NYPD must demonstrate (1) that it followed proper procedure in arresting the person and taking the vehicle, (2) that it is likely to win the civil forfeiture action, and (3) that returning the vehicle would cause a danger to the public. If the NYPD fails to demonstrate one of these three things, the vehicle is returned to its owner pending the outcome of the separate civil forfeiture action. | [
"Law"
] | 2012-02-13T02:10:21Z | 2012-02-13T02:17:56Z |
11,671 | Fick's laws of diffusion | Fick's laws of diffusion describe diffusion and were first posited by Adolf Fick in 1855 on the basis of largely experimental results. They can be used to solve for the diffusion coefficient, D. Fick's first law can be used to derive his second law which in turn is identical to the diffusion equation. Fick's first law: Movement of particles from high to low concentration (diffusive flux) is directly proportional to the particle's concentration gradient. Fick's second law: Prediction of change in concentration gradient with time due to diffusion. A diffusion process that obeys Fick's laws is called normal or Fickian diffusion; otherwise, it is called anomalous diffusion or non-Fickian diffusion. | [
"Science"
] | 2001-12-24T10:57:09Z | 2002-02-25T15:51:15Z |
61,070,355 | Wood Street Police Station, London | Wood Street is a street in the City of London, the historic centre and primary financial district of London. It originates in the south at a junction with Cheapside; heading north it crosses Gresham Street and London Wall. The northernmost end runs alongside The Postern, part of the Barbican estate, stopping at Andrewes House. Today Wood Street lies within the wards of Bassishaw (north of Gresham Street) and Cheap (south of Gresham Street). | [
"Government"
] | 2019-06-18T09:11:44Z | 2019-06-18T09:11:44Z |
45,343 | Erich Fromm | Erich Seligmann Fromm (; German: [fʁɔm]; March 23, 1900 – March 18, 1980) was a German-American social psychologist, psychoanalyst, sociologist, humanistic philosopher, and democratic socialist. He was a German Jew who fled the Nazi regime and settled in the United States. He was one of the founders of The William Alanson White Institute of Psychiatry, Psychoanalysis and Psychology in New York City and was associated with the Frankfurt School of critical theory. | [
"Ethics"
] | 2002-03-21T17:41:42Z | 2002-03-21T17:42:47Z |
14,504,559 | Takashima Tomonosuke | Viscount Takashima Tomonosuke (高島 鞆之助, 18 December 1844 – 11 January 1916) was a samurai of Satsuma Domain, general in the early Imperial Japanese Army, and a cabinet minister in Meiji period Japan. Part of Sophia University in Tokyo is located on the site of his house. | [
"Time"
] | 2007-11-30T23:42:36Z | 2008-01-03T14:15:54Z |
22,048,430 | Church of St Demetrius, Boboshevo | The Church of St Demetrius (Bulgarian: Църква Свети Димитър) is a Bulgarian church dating from the Late Middle Ages near the town of Boboshevo, Kyustendil Province. | [
"Religion"
] | 2009-03-19T10:57:14Z | 2009-03-19T17:33:40Z |
4,050,996 | Crodowaldo Pavan | Crodowaldo Pavan (Portuguese pronunciation: [kɾodoˈvawdu paˈvɐ̃]; 1 December 1919 – 3 April 2009) was a Brazilian biologist and geneticist, and a scientific leader in Brazil. | [
"Knowledge"
] | 2006-02-12T17:45:28Z | 2006-02-12T17:45:57Z |
1,268,035 | Puget Sound Energy | Puget Sound Energy, Inc. (PSE) is an energy utility company based in the U.S. state of Washington that provides electrical power and natural gas to the Puget Sound region. The utility serves electricity to more than 1.2 million customers in Island, King, Kitsap, Kittitas, Pierce, Skagit, Thurston, and Whatcom counties, and provides natural gas to 877,000 customers in King, Kittitas, Lewis, Pierce, Snohomish and Thurston counties. The company's electric and natural gas service area spans 6,000 square miles (16,000 km2). | [
"Energy"
] | 2004-12-12T02:33:44Z | 2004-12-12T02:34:27Z |
35,783,604 | 10 May 2012 Damascus bombings | The 10 May 2012 Damascus bombings were carried out using a pair of car bombs allegedly detonated by suicide bombers outside a military intelligence complex in Damascus, Syria. Combined, the perpetrators detonated more than 1,000 kilograms (2,200 lb) of explosives, tearing the facade off of a 10-story building. With 55 people confirmed dead and almost 400 others injured, the attack was the deadliest bombing until then in the Syrian Civil War, though later outpaced by other events. | [
"Military"
] | 2012-05-11T02:49:23Z | 2012-05-11T02:50:06Z |
25,026,073 | Strecker Memorial Laboratory | Strecker Memorial Laboratory is a historic building at Southpoint Park on Roosevelt Island in New York City. Built in 1892 to serve as a laboratory for City Hospital, it was "the first institution in the nation for pathological and bacteriological research". The project was funded by the Strecker family. The building was designed by architects Frederick Clarke Withers and Walter Dickson in the Romanesque Revival style with large arched windows to provide plenty of natural lighting and ventilation. On the first floor were an autopsy room and an office, while the floor above housed laboratories where specimens were examined. | [
"Geography"
] | 2009-11-09T22:27:03Z | 2009-11-15T09:26:49Z |
47,658,137 | More Than Two | More Than Two is a non-fiction book about consensual non-monogamous relationships. The first edition, More Than Two: A Practical Guide to Ethical Polyamory, written by Franklin Veaux and Eve Rickert, was published in 2014 by Thorntree Press, a publishing company founded by the authors. It included a foreword by Janet Hardy, co-author of The Ethical Slut. A new foreword by Jessica Fern, author of Polysecure, was added to the eighth printing in 2022. In February 2024, Rickert announced that she had acquired the rights to the book and that a new edition, More Than Two, Second Edition: Cultivating Nonmonogamous Relationships with Kindness and Integrity, written with co-author Andrea Zanin, would be published September of that year by her publishing company, Thornapple Press. | [
"Ethics"
] | 2015-08-29T02:17:33Z | 2015-08-29T08:33:47Z |
22,237,545 | Offshore Helicopter Services | Offshore Helicopter Services (OHS), previously known as Babcock MCS Offshore and Bond Offshore Helicopters, is a British helicopter operator, specialising in providing offshore helicopter transportation services to North Sea offshore platforms
OHS operates a mixed fleet of helicopters on behalf of a small number of energy industry customers. Annually they transport around 200,000 passengers to and from offshore oil and gas platforms from bases at Aberdeen and Sumburgh airports. OHS also operates two specialist Search and Rescue (SAR) aircraft to support the Oil and Gas industry. These two AW139 helicopters are based at Aberdeen airport and equipped with specialist search and rescue equipment and provide 24-hour SAR coverage for the central North Sea. Bond Offshore Helicopters became a Babcock International Group company when Babcock acquired the Avincis group in May 2014. | [
"Business"
] | 2009-04-01T16:22:17Z | 2009-04-01T16:35:41Z |
26,980,556 | Rachel Korn | Rachel (Rokhl) Häring Korn (Yiddish: רחל קאָרן, 15 January 1898 – 9 September 1982) was a Polish-born Canadian Yiddish language poet and author. In total, she published eight collections of poetry and two of prose. Seymour Mayne characterized her in 1985, three years after her death, as "the first major woman poet in Canadian literature." | [
"Society",
"Culture"
] | 2010-04-16T21:18:35Z | 2010-04-16T21:19:12Z |
12,168,560 | Mouselike pipistrelle | The mouselike pipistrelle (Hypsugo musciculus) is a species of vesper bat in the family Vespertilionidae. It is found in Cameroon, Republic of the Congo, Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Gabon. Its natural habitats are subtropical and tropical dry and moist lowland forests. It is the only species in the genus Hypsugo known to exist in sub-Saharan Africa; all others have been reclassified into the genera Neoromicia or Nycticeinops. However, its exact taxonomic placement remains uncertain. | [
"Communication"
] | 2007-07-09T19:51:26Z | 2007-07-19T19:28:47Z |
960,578 | Bevelle | Spira is the fictional world of the Square role-playing video games Final Fantasy X and X-2. Spira is the first Final Fantasy world to feature consistent, all-encompassing spiritual and mythological influences within the planet's civilizations and their inhabitants' daily lives. The world of Spira itself is different from the mainly European-style worlds found in previous Final Fantasy games, being much more closely modeled on a setting influenced by the South Pacific, Thailand and Japan, most notably with respect to its vegetation, topography and architecture. The creation of Spira includes distinct ethnic minorities including a portrayal of the fictional Al Bhed language that is prevalent throughout the game's dialogue. The backstory and concept behind the dark religious themes of Final Fantasy X were a central theme to the story and their ultimate resolution was well received. | [
"Technology"
] | 2004-09-05T18:58:10Z | 2004-09-05T19:00:13Z |
78,072,154 | English prosody | Prosody is important in English. It
conveys many pragmatic functions relating to speech
acts, attitude, turn-taking, topic structure, information structure and more. It also
helps mark lexical identity, grammatical
structure, semantic elements, and more. The component features of English prosody --- pitch, loudness,
duration, voice qualities, and so on --- are the same
as those of other languages. However the ways that these combine
and the meanings of those combinations are often unique to English. | [
"Education"
] | 2024-10-08T02:57:21Z | 2024-10-08T03:09:20Z |
6,856,064 | Short-headed broad-nosed bat | The short-headed broad-nosed bat (Platyrrhinus brachycephalus) is a bat species found in Bolivia, northwestern Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, French Guiana, Guyana, Peru, Suriname and Venezuela. == References == | [
"Communication"
] | 2006-09-05T17:14:00Z | 2006-09-05T17:14:30Z |
882,504 | Bernard Arnault | Bernard Jean Étienne Arnault (French: [bɛʁnaʁ ʒɑ̃ etjɛn aʁno]; born 5 March 1949) is a French businessman, investor and art collector. He is the founder, chairman and CEO of LVMH, the world's largest luxury goods company. Arnault is one of the richest individuals in the world, with an estimated net worth of US$199.7 billion as of September 2024, according to Forbes and US$208 billion according to Bloomberg Billionaires Index. Arnault was raised in a devoutly Catholic household. He pursued Engineering at École polytechnique, graduating in 1971. | [
"Concepts"
] | 2004-08-07T00:06:09Z | 2004-08-07T00:27:28Z |
70,198,375 | Kawachidera temple ruins | The Kawachi-dera ruins (河内寺廃寺跡, Kawachidera Haiji ato), is an archaeological site with the ruins of an Asuka period Buddhist temple located in the Kawachi neighborhood of the city of Higashiōsaka, Osaka, Japan. The temple no longer exists, but the temple grounds were designated as a National Historic Site in 2008 with the area under protection expanded in 2016. | [
"Time"
] | 2022-03-01T13:35:59Z | 2022-03-01T19:26:06Z |
1,609,553 | Walk on Water (film) | Walk on Water (original Hebrew title: ללכת על המים; English transliteration: Lalekhet Al HaMayim) is a 2004 Israeli film directed by Eytan Fox and starring Lior Ashkenazi, Knut Berger, and Caroline Peters. The screenplay was written by Gal Uchovsky. Most of the dialogue is in English, although there is much in Hebrew and German. Its name derives in part from Jesus' walking on water. | [
"Information"
] | 2005-03-15T14:03:01Z | 2005-03-15T14:21:18Z |
12,537,382 | Jones's roundleaf bat | Jones's roundleaf bat (Hipposideros jonesi) is a species of bat in the family Hipposideridae. It is endemic to southern West Africa. Its natural habitats are subtropical or tropical dry forest, savanna, subtropical or tropical dry lowland grassland, rocky areas, and caves and other subterranean habitats. | [
"Communication"
] | 2007-07-30T23:16:00Z | 2007-12-11T14:49:11Z |
2,357,952 | Thomas Berry | Thomas Berry, CP (November 9, 1914 – June 1, 2009) was a Catholic priest, cultural historian, and scholar of the world's religions, especially Asian traditions. Later, as he studied Earth history and evolution, he called himself a "geologian". He rejected the label "theologian" or "ecotheologian" as too narrow and not descriptive of his cultural studies in history of religions. He was drawn early on to respond to the growing ecological and climate crisis and proposed the need for a "New Story" of evolution in 1978. In this essay he suggested that a deep understanding of the history and functioning of the evolving universe is a necessary inspiration and guide for our own effective functioning as individuals and as a species. | [
"Ethics"
] | 2005-08-01T23:56:16Z | 2005-08-13T01:38:37Z |
38,898,371 | Fatih Üçüncü | Fatih Üçüncü (born 14 March 1989 in Samsun, Turkey) is a male wrestler from Turkey competing in the 55 kg division of Greco–Roman style. He is a member of Ankara ASKİ SK since 2008. Üçüncü began with wrestling in 2000. He won the bronze medal at the 2012 European Wrestling Championships in Belgrade, Serbia and repeated his same success at the 2013 European Wrestling Championships held in Tbilisi, Georgia. | [
"Sports"
] | 2013-03-23T18:06:42Z | 2013-03-23T18:07:43Z |
23,827,939 | Tomb of Min Ziqian | The Tomb of Min Ziqian (Chinese: 闵子骞墓; pinyin: Mǐn Zǐqiān Mù) is a memorial to Min Sun (courtesy name Ziqian, 536 BCE-? ), a disciple of Confucius and the fourth of the 24 Confucian paragons of filial piety. The memorial is located in Jinan, the capital of Shandong Province, China. While the memorial is designed as a classical Confucian tomb with an ancestral temple, a spirit way, and a burial mound, the actual burial place of Min Sun is not known. Only some of Min Sun's clothes may have been buried at the Jinan site. | [
"Philosophy"
] | 2009-08-01T20:40:10Z | 2009-08-01T20:42:00Z |
26,894,208 | Life-cycle greenhouse gas emissions of energy sources | Greenhouse gas emissions are one of the environmental impacts of electricity generation. Measurement of life-cycle greenhouse gas emissions involves calculating the global warming potential (GWP) of energy sources through life-cycle assessment. These are usually sources of only electrical energy but sometimes sources of heat are evaluated. The findings are presented in units of global warming potential per unit of electrical energy generated by that source. The scale uses the global warming potential unit, the carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e), and the unit of electrical energy, the kilowatt hour (kWh). | [
"Energy"
] | 2010-04-09T17:41:51Z | 2010-04-09T17:45:32Z |
76,451,119 | Christ in the Garden of Olives | Christ in the Garden of Olives is an oil on canvas painting created in 1840 by French painter Théodore Chassériau. It was executed following a commission from the Ministry of the Interior. The large format painting was presented at the Salon of Paris, in 1840. After a transfer from the church of Saint-Jean-d'Angély, in Charente-Maritime, it was moved to the Museum of Fine Arts of Lyon. | [
"Society",
"Culture"
] | 2024-03-26T23:27:17Z | 2024-03-26T23:27:33Z |
47,778,240 | South London Coroner's Court | The Coroner's Court for South London is located on the 2nd Floor of Davis House in Croydon. The offices of the Coroner for South London are located at the same address. The court covers the London Boroughs of Bexley, Bromley, Croydon and Sutton. == References == | [
"Government"
] | 2015-09-10T18:38:12Z | 2015-09-10T18:40:37Z |
47,073,725 | Euro First Air - Canarias Cargo | Euro First Air - Canarias Cargo, also known as EFA - Canarias Cargo or simply Canarias Cargo, was an airline based in Las Palmas, Canary Islands, Spain. | [
"Business"
] | 2015-06-25T04:51:32Z | 2015-06-25T08:17:20Z |
26,206,891 | Namık Kemal | Namık Kemal (Ottoman Turkish: نامق كمال, romanized: Nâmıḳ Kemâl, pronounced [ˈnaː.mɯk ce.ˈmal]; 21 December 1840 – 2 December 1888) was an Ottoman writer, poet, democrat, intellectual, reformer, journalist, playwright, and political activist who was influential in the formation of the Young Ottomans and their struggle for governmental reform in the Ottoman Empire during the late Tanzimat period, which would lead to the First Constitutional Era in the Empire in 1876. Kemal was particularly significant for championing the notions of freedom and fatherland in his numerous plays and poems, and his works would have a powerful impact on the establishment of and future reform movements in Turkey, as well as other former Ottoman territories. He is often regarded as being instrumental in redefining Western concepts like natural rights and constitutional government. | [
"Language"
] | 2006-01-20T19:19:59Z | 2006-02-28T14:24:51Z |
24,473,080 | Satvinder S. Juss | Satvinder Singh Juss FRSA, is a British academic and professor. He is professor of law at King's College London and a barrister-at-law in Gray's Inn. He has published widely on the subjects of migration and international human rights law. | [
"Government"
] | 2009-09-25T21:26:04Z | 2009-10-01T00:31:38Z |
619,915 | Pinky Lee | Pincus Leff (May 2, 1907 – April 3, 1993), better known as Pinky Lee, was an American burlesque comic, actor and host of the children's television program The Pinky Lee Show in the early 1950s. | [
"Society",
"Culture"
] | 2004-04-26T14:02:49Z | 2004-04-27T01:52:48Z |
437,009 | Lagenorhynchus | Lagenorhynchus is a genus of oceanic dolphins in the infraorder Cetacea, presently containing six extant species. However, there is consistent molecular evidence that the genus is polyphyletic and several of the species are likely to be moved to other genera. In addition, the extinct species Lagenorhynchus harmatuki is also classified in this genus. | [
"Communication"
] | 2004-01-21T00:12:00Z | 2004-03-25T16:07:34Z |
462,365 | Bullfrog Productions | Bullfrog Productions Limited was a British video game developer based in Guildford, England. Founded in 1987 by Peter Molyneux and Les Edgar, the company gained recognition in 1989 for their third release, Populous, and is also well known for titles such as Theme Park, Theme Hospital, Magic Carpet, Syndicate and Dungeon Keeper. Bullfrog's name was derived from an ornament in the offices of Edgar's and Molyneux's other enterprise, Taurus Impact Systems, Bullfrog's precursor where Molyneux and Edgar were developing business software. Bullfrog Productions was founded as a separate entity after Commodore mistook Taurus for a similarly named company. Electronic Arts, Bullfrog's publisher, acquired the studio in January 1995. | [
"Technology"
] | 2004-02-09T19:16:24Z | 2004-03-10T16:41:58Z |
261,240 | Shōwa era | The Shōwa era (昭和時代, Shōwa jidai, [ɕoːwadʑidai] ) is a historical period of Japanese history corresponding to the reign of Emperor Shōwa (commonly known in English as Emperor Hirohito) from December 25, 1926, until his death on January 7, 1989. It was preceded by the Taishō era and succeeded by the Heisei era. The pre-1945 and post-war Shōwa periods are almost completely different states: the pre-1945 Shōwa era (1926–1945) concerns the Empire of Japan, and post-1945 Shōwa era (1945–1989) concerns the State of Japan. Before 1945, Japan moved into political totalitarianism, ultranationalism and statism, culminating in Japan's invasion of China in 1937, part of a global period of social upheavals and conflicts such as the Great Depression and the Pacific War. Defeat in the Pacific War brought about radical change in Japan. | [
"Time"
] | 2003-07-05T00:45:24Z | 2003-07-05T00:54:58Z |
25,026,038 | Smallpox Hospital | The Smallpox Hospital, sometimes referred to as the Renwick Smallpox Hospital and later the Maternity and Charity Hospital Training School, was a
hospital located on Roosevelt Island in Manhattan, New York City. Originally designed by architect James Renwick Jr., the 100-bed hospital opened in 1856, when the area was known as Blackwell's Island. A century after it opened, the hospital was closed, and the building eventually fell into disrepair. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1972 and designated a New York City Landmark four years later, the only ruin in the city with that designation. After the completion of an ongoing $4.5 million stabilization project, the Smallpox Hospital ruins will be open to the public. | [
"Geography"
] | 2009-11-09T22:25:23Z | 2009-11-15T09:26:05Z |
1,664,760 | Lucky Starr and the Moons of Jupiter | Lucky Starr and the Moons of Jupiter is the fifth novel in the Lucky Starr series, six juvenile science fiction novels by Isaac Asimov that originally appeared under the pseudonym Paul French. The novel was first published by Doubleday & Company in August 1957. It is the only novel by Asimov set in the Jovian system. | [
"Universe"
] | 2005-03-29T14:27:15Z | 2007-05-14T15:13:41Z |
68,067,451 | Elland Brewery | Elland Brewery is an independent brewery based in Elland, West Yorkshire, England. Founded as ‘Eastwood and Sanders Fine Ales’ in 2002, after the amalgamation of The West Yorkshire Brewery and The Barge and Barrel Brewing Company, it was renamed as Elland Brewery in 2006 and has been trading under that banner ever since. They have a catalogue of regular draught beers which are produced year round, as well as several popular seasonal beers which are produced at certain times of the year. Being a West Yorkshire based brewery, their beers are most widely available in the North of England but the popularity of the beers means they are often found at beer festivals in more remote locations. Despite their traditionalism, the brewers have a preference for using foreign hops (largely from the U.S., New Zealand and Germany); this is especially true of their seasonal brews, which are often considered more 'edgy' than their regular ales, but just as popular. | [
"Food_and_drink"
] | 2021-06-28T10:52:58Z | 2021-06-28T11:14:20Z |
10,244,037 | Jinnah Postgraduate Medical Centre | The Jinnah Postgraduate Medical Centre (J.P.M.C., also known as Jinnah Hospital, Karachi) is located at Rafiqui Shaheed Road in Karachi Cantonment area of Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan. In 2015, approximately one million patients visit the hospital complex annually and it is considered one of the biggest government-operated hospitals in Karachi. | [
"Life"
] | 2007-03-24T21:21:57Z | 2007-03-27T17:29:07Z |
74,856,420 | List of things named after King Fahad | This is a list of things named after kings of Saudi Arabia. | [
"Science"
] | 2023-09-19T05:07:56Z | 2023-09-19T05:19:54Z |
5,410,205 | Kristina M. Johnson | Kristina M. Johnson (born May 7, 1957) is an American professorial electrical engineer, business executive and academic administrator. She is an elected member of the National Academy of Engineering. She previously served as the 13th chancellor of the State University of New York from 2017 to 2020 and the 16th president of Ohio State University from 2020 to 2023. She has knowledge in the development of optoelectronic processing systems, 3-D imaging, and color-management systems. | [
"Technology"
] | 2006-06-03T20:18:05Z | 2006-06-03T20:20:09Z |
42,973,746 | Peter Luck | Peter Anthony Luck (5 January 1944 – 6 September 2017) was an Australian author, TV journalist, producer and presenter. | [
"Mass_media"
] | 2014-06-05T12:45:47Z | 2014-06-05T16:24:50Z |
62,722,955 | List of bridges in Mozambique | == Major bridges ==
This table presents a non-exhaustive list of the road and railway bridges with spans greater than 100 metres (328 ft) or total lengths longer than 500 metres (1,640 ft). | [
"Lists"
] | 2020-01-02T17:11:50Z | 2020-02-29T08:03:26Z |
4,544,746 | Gothic Chapel (Peterhof) | Gothic Chapel in Peterhof is an Orthodox church in the name of Saint Alexander Nevsky situated in the Alexandria Park of Petergof, Russia. It was designed at the request of Nicholas I of Russia by Karl Friedrich Schinkel in Gothic Revival style in 1829 and consecrated in July 1834. Prior to the Russian Revolution of 1917 this Gothic structure functioned as the private family church of the House of Romanov. The church, complementing the Alexandria Park Cottage, a summer residence built by Adam Menelaws in 1826–1829, was erected in 1831–1834 under direction of Adam Menelaws and Ludwig Charlemagne. The sculptor Vasily Demut-Malinovsky designed 43 copper figures lining the walls. | [
"Religion"
] | 2006-03-28T15:24:31Z | 2006-03-28T15:25:12Z |
47,162,645 | Amarna letter EA 6 | Amarna Letter EA6 is a correspondence from Burra-Buriyaš to Nimmuwarea(Amenhotep III) the king of Egypt. According to one source, this letter concerns gifts between two kings. The letter is part of a series of correspondences from Babylonia to Egypt, which run from EA2 to EA4 and EA6 to EA14. EA1 and EA5 are from Egypt to Babylonia. The inscription is translated as follows:
Say to Nimmuwarea the king of Egypt my brother Thus Burra-Buriyaš the king of Karaduniyaš your brother For me all goes well For you your household your wives your sons your country your magnates your horses your chariots may all go well. | [
"Language"
] | 2015-07-05T22:57:46Z | 2015-07-06T04:00:57Z |
7,813,639 | Boxberg Power Station | Boxberg Power Station (in German commonly referred as Kraftwerk Boxberg) is a lignite-fired power station with three units at Boxberg, near Weißwasser, Saxony, Eastern Germany. Since the late 2012, it has a capacity of 2,575 MW. In 2001, it was acquired by Vattenfall Europe, a subdivision of Vattenfall. The power station was sold by Vattenfall to the Czech energy group EPH and its financial partner PPF Investments on 30 September 2016. | [
"Energy"
] | 2006-11-07T00:57:35Z | 2006-11-07T00:58:24Z |
30,888,861 | Aomatsuba Incident | The Aomatsuba Incident (青松葉事件, Aomatsuba jiken) took place from February 13 to 18, 1868 in Nagoya Castle, central Japan. The Aomatsuba Incident was the oppression of the Sabaku party (sabaku ha) that occurred in the Owari Domain from February 13 to 18, 1868. Immediately after returning to the Owari domain from Kyoto, Tokugawa Yoshikatsu (徳川義勝), the 14th lord of the domain, received an imperial order with charges of "adultery" (姦徒誅鋤). The accused subjects ranged from senior vassals to general feudal retainers, with 14 decapitations and 20 other punishments. There are various theories about the background of the imperial decree. | [
"Time"
] | 2011-02-16T07:18:22Z | 2011-02-18T16:50:55Z |
22,428,328 | List of National Treasures of Japan (castles) | The Japanese Sengoku period from the mid-15th to early 17th century was a time of nearly continual military conflict. Powerful military lords known as daimyōs, such as Oda Nobunaga, Toyotomi Hideyoshi or Tokugawa Ieyasu, struggled to unify Japan. During the Sengoku period, because of constant warfare, many fortifications and castles were built. Archetypal Japanese castle construction is a product of the Momoyama period and early Edo period. A new era of castle construction began when the daimyo Nobunaga built Azuchi Castle from 1576 to 1579. | [
"Lists"
] | 2009-04-16T01:28:31Z | 2009-04-16T02:07:38Z |
7,678,313 | Cabinet of Kazimierz Marcinkiewicz | Cabinet of Kazimierz Marcinkiewicz was appointed on 31 October 2005 and passed the vote of confidence in parliament on 10 November 2005. It was supported by 272 votes with 187 votes against (no abstentions). This minority government was ruled by politicians of Law and Justice and some independents e.g. Zbigniew Religa. | [
"Politics"
] | 2006-10-29T14:50:17Z | 2006-10-29T14:51:04Z |
70,064,306 | Peter Miles (mass murderer) | The Osmington shooting was a familicide in Osmington, Western Australia, on 11 May 2018, in which Peter Miles, a 61-year-old retired high school farm manager, shot dead his wife, daughter, and four grandchildren, before calling police and then committing suicide. It was the worst shooting incident in Australia since the Port Arthur massacre of 1996. | [
"Health"
] | 2022-02-13T20:31:28Z | 2022-02-13T21:22:19Z |
57,795,959 | Patricia's disk-winged bat | Patricia's disk-winged bat (Thyroptera wynneae) is a species of disk-winged bat found in South America. | [
"Communication"
] | 2018-06-30T02:48:39Z | 2018-06-30T02:49:05Z |
72,426,984 | Itami temple ruins | The Itami temple ruins (伊丹廃寺跡, Itami Haiji ato), is an archaeological site with the ruins of a Hakuhō period Buddhist temple located in the Midorigaoka neighborhood of the city of Itami, Hyōgo, Japan. The name of the temple is unknown, and no structures remain, but the temple grounds were designated as a National Historic Site in 1966. | [
"Time"
] | 2022-12-06T08:30:24Z | 2022-12-06T08:30:55Z |
43,316,048 | Bernard Tompkins | Bernard Tompkins (February 6, 1904 – February 7, 1965) was an American lawyer and politician from New York. | [
"Society",
"Culture"
] | 2014-07-16T16:15:56Z | 2014-07-17T15:01:14Z |
71,871,268 | Louis Clarke (antiquarian) | Louis Colville Gray Clarke (1881–1960) was an antiquarian, archaeologist, collector and curator. He was curator of the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of Cambridge from 1922 to 1937 and then director of Fitzwilliam Museum from 1937 to 1946. He was a fellow of Trinity Hall, Cambridge. == References == | [
"Humanities"
] | 2022-09-29T10:55:43Z | 2022-09-29T11:16:32Z |
8,875,183 | Kumadori | Kumadori (隈取) is the stage makeup worn by kabuki actors, mostly when performing kabuki plays in the aragoto style. The term also applies to a painting method in which two brushes are used simultaneously, one for the color and the other used to create shading or other details. Kumadori makeup generally consists of brightly coloured stripes or patterns over a white foundation, the colours and patterns symbolising aspects of the character. Though kumadori was originated and developed extensively by members of the Ichikawa Danjūrō family of actors, some conventions are creations of the Onoe Kikugorō line. | [
"Concepts"
] | 2007-01-11T20:21:38Z | 2007-02-09T12:59:59Z |
1,506,137 | Arnobius the Younger | Arnobius the Younger (Latin: Arnobius Junior) was a Christian priest or bishop in Gaul, who wrote from Rome around the year 460. He is the author of a mystical and allegorical commentary on the Psalms, first published by Erasmus in 1522, and by him attributed to the elder Arnobius. It has been frequently reprinted, and in the edition of De la Barre, 1580, is accompanied by some notes on the Gospels by the same author. More recently, CCSL 25 has produced a critical edition of his commentary. To him has sometimes been ascribed the anonymous treatise, Arnobii catholici et Serapionis conflictus de Deo trino et uno ... de gratiae liberi arbitrii concordia, which was probably written by a follower of Augustine. | [
"History"
] | 2005-02-14T21:45:37Z | 2005-07-05T13:57:41Z |
2,002,856 | Nolwenn Leroy | Nolwenn Le Magueresse (French pronunciation: [nolwɛn lə maɡəʁɛs]; born 28 September 1982), known by her stage name Nolwenn Leroy (pronounced [nolwɛn ləʁwa]), is a French singer-songwriter, musician, and actress. Originally classically trained (violin and opera singing), she rose to fame after winning the second season of the French television music competition Star Academy in 2002. She has since recorded eight studio albums and scored two number one singles, "Cassé" and "Nolwenn Ohwo! ", on the French charts. In 2012, her album Bretonne was certified two times diamond for sales exceeding one million copies. | [
"History"
] | 2005-06-06T21:15:05Z | 2005-06-06T21:17:12Z |
27,846,009 | Mustafa Letter | The Mustafa Letter (Norwegian: Mustafa-brevet) was a controversial letter that the leader of the Progress Party, Carl I. Hagen, used in the electoral campaign for the 1987 Norwegian local elections. The letter was signed Mohammad Mustafa, a Muslim immigrant to Norway, but the media soon proved the letter to be false. The letter became controversial, both in the manner it was used by Hagen, and the claim of it being a fraud. | [
"Politics"
] | 2010-06-25T13:10:11Z | 2010-06-30T07:26:52Z |
2,539,693 | James Burton (Egyptologist) | James Burton (22 September 1786 – 22 February 1862) (formerly Haliburton and latterly Haliburton) was the British Egyptologist who mapped the Valley of the Kings; and was the first modern person to enter KV5; and discovered the Karnak king list; and discovered TT391. | [
"Humanities"
] | 2005-08-25T22:21:07Z | 2005-10-10T00:50:42Z |
49,943,226 | Siobhan O'Sullivan | Siobhan O'Sullivan (19 March 1974 – 17 June 2023) was an Australian political scientist and political theorist. She was an associate professor in the School of Social Sciences, University of New South Wales. Her research focused, among other things, on animal welfare policy and the welfare state. She was the author of Animals, Equality and Democracy (2011, Palgrave Macmillan) and a coauthor of Getting Welfare to Work (2015, Oxford University Press) and Buying and Selling the Poor (2022, Sydney University Press). She co-edited Contracting-out Welfare Services (2015, Wiley) and The Political Turn in Animal Ethics (2016, Rowman & Littlefield International). | [
"Mass_media"
] | 2016-03-25T16:47:14Z | 2016-03-25T17:20:20Z |
4,566,709 | Greater false vampire bat | The greater false vampire bat (Lyroderma lyra) is a species of bat in the family Megadermatidae, the false vampire bats. It is native to Asia. It is also known as the Indian false vampire bat or greater false-vampire | [
"Communication"
] | 2006-03-30T11:49:49Z | 2006-03-30T11:50:12Z |
63,751,245 | Theatre on Nassau Street | The Theatre on Nassau Street, or The New Theatre, was probably the first purpose-built theatre in Manhattan. | [
"Entities"
] | 2020-04-24T00:17:59Z | 2020-04-24T01:52:45Z |
38,052,277 | Breton soccer teams in New York | Stade Brestois New York is a soccer team gathering and made up of members of the Breton community in New York City. Organized by the BZH New York association, it was formerly called the Merlus de New York, until some players merged into the new team in 2011-2012. Sponsored by the professional French team Stade Brestois 29, the team plays seven a side by opposition to the eleven a side team of Stade Breton. The former and the latter are two teams playing at two levels. | [
"History"
] | 2012-12-28T22:47:50Z | 2012-12-28T22:49:13Z |
32,799,789 | Tarzan: The Greystoke Legacy | Tarzan: The Greystoke Legacy is a 2011 young adult novel by Andy Briggs that reboots the Tarzan book series to the present day. The novel was published in the United Kingdom by Faber and Faber, and in the United States by Open Road Media. It has also been distributed in Canada. | [
"Nature"
] | 2011-08-19T15:38:44Z | 2011-08-19T16:23:18Z |
64,241,809 | Antiochus cylinder | The Antiochus cylinder is a devotional cylinder written in traditional Akkadian by Antiochus I Soter, c. 250 BCE. Discovered in Borsippa, it is now located in the British Museum (BM 36277). The text has been translated as follows:
Antiochus, the great king, the mighty king, king of the world, king of Babylon, king of (all) countries, caretaker of Esagila and Ezida, foremost son of Seleucus, the king, the Macedonian, king of Babylon, am I. When I desired to build Esagila and Ezida, the (first) bricks of Esagila and Ezida in the land of Hatti with my pure hand(s) I moulded with fine quality oil and for the laying of the foundation of Esagila and Ezida I transported them. In the month of Addaru, on the 20th day, of year 43,note I laid the foundation of Ezida, the true temple, the temple of Nabû, which is in Borsippa. | [
"Language"
] | 2020-06-11T05:57:06Z | 2020-06-11T05:57:29Z |
1,097,923 | Sarah Kernochan | Sarah Marshall Kernochan ( KAIR-nə-ken; born December 30, 1947) is an American documentarian, film director, screenwriter and novelist. She is the recipient of several prestigious awards, including two Academy Awards (Documentary Feature for Marjoe in 1973 and Documentary Short Subject for Thoth in 2002) | [
"Entertainment"
] | 2004-10-24T07:40:37Z | 2004-10-24T07:54:17Z |
26,263,238 | Milo Rimbaldi | The following is a partial list of characters from the TV series, Alias. | [
"Information"
] | 2010-02-19T21:36:43Z | 2012-04-01T17:26:53Z |
1,045,457 | Finding Neverland (film) | Finding Neverland is a 2004 biographical film directed by Marc Forster and written by David Magee, based on the 1998 play The Man Who Was Peter Pan by Allan Knee. The film stars Johnny Depp, Kate Winslet, Julie Christie, Radha Mitchell, and Dustin Hoffman, with Freddie Highmore in a supporting role. Finding Neverland was released on October 29, 2004. It was a box office success, grossing $116.8 million worldwide. The film earned seven nominations at the 77th Academy Awards, including Best Picture, Best Adapted Screenplay, and Best Actor for Depp, and won for Best Original Score. | [
"Internet"
] | 2004-10-06T22:13:08Z | 2004-10-06T22:13:49Z |
62,564,222 | Chen Zijiang | Chen Zijiang (Chinese: 陈子江; born October 1959) is a Chinese reproductive medicine expert currently serving as vice-president of Shandong University and dean of the Cheeloo College of Medicine, Shandong University. | [
"Knowledge"
] | 2019-12-12T05:31:55Z | 2019-12-12T21:54:31Z |
43,296,189 | Tai Po Hospital | Tai Po Hospital, located in Tai Po, Hong Kong, provides assessment, extended-care and integrated rehabilitation services to elderly, chronically-ill and acute psychiatric patients. It is also one of three designated spinal cord injury rehabilitation centres in Hong Kong. The hospital began providing medical services in 1998. | [
"Life"
] | 2014-07-14T07:22:03Z | 2014-07-14T07:27:45Z |
2,372,861 | Provand's Lordship | Provand's Lordship is a medieval historic house museum in Glasgow, Scotland, located in the Townhead area at the top of Castle Street within sight of Glasgow Cathedral and next to the St Mungo Museum of Religious Life and Art. | [
"Life"
] | 2005-08-03T21:40:32Z | 2005-08-03T21:59:48Z |
41,452,719 | Ludwig Blum | Ludwig Blum (24 July 1891 – 28 July 1974) was a Moravian-born Israeli painter. He emigrated to Israel in 1923, as part of the Third Aliyah, and became known as "the painter of Jerusalem". | [
"Society",
"Culture"
] | 2013-12-25T00:27:23Z | 2013-12-25T00:37:15Z |
2,979,267 | National Inclusion Project | National Inclusion Project (formerly the Bubel/Aiken Foundation) is a non-profit organization, founded in 2003 by Clay Aiken and Diane Bubel, dedicated to promoting the inclusion of children with disabilities in activities with their non-disabled peers. By providing services and financial assistance, the Project supports communities and programs in creating awareness and opportunities for full inclusion where barriers break and doors open. Its goal is to create an environment for children where inclusion is embraced. On August 5, 2009, in an open letter from the founders, Clay Aiken and Diane Bubel stated "As we realized the impact the Foundation has already made, it became apparent that even bigger accomplishments could be on the horizon. To that end, we along with the rest of the Board decided that a new name for the Foundation would establish long-term credibility and stability. | [
"Health"
] | 2005-10-23T15:21:48Z | 2005-10-23T15:51:27Z |
68,597,883 | Mohammadreza Kheirollahzadeh | Mohammadreza Kheirollahzadeh Varzi (born 20 January 1993), also known as Mohammadreza Kheirollahzadeh, is an Iranian Paralympic judoka. At the 2020 Summer Paralympics, he won gold in the Men's +100 kg event. | [
"Sports"
] | 2021-08-29T23:14:10Z | 2021-08-30T18:48:08Z |
515,986 | Joseph Klausner | Joseph Gedaliah Klausner (Hebrew: יוסף גדליה קלוזנר; 20 August 1874 – 27 October 1958), was a Lithuanian-born Israeli historian and professor of Hebrew literature. He was the chief redactor of the Encyclopedia Hebraica. He was a candidate for president in the first Israeli presidential election in 1949, losing to Chaim Weizmann. Klausner was the great uncle of Israeli author Amos Oz. | [
"Society",
"Culture"
] | 2004-03-09T21:28:52Z | 2004-03-09T21:31:21Z |
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