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75,530,249 | 2024 in Morocco | Events in the year 2024 in Morocco.
Source: | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Events in the year 2024 in Morocco.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Source:",
"title": "Holidays"
}
] | Events in the year 2024 in Morocco. | 2023-12-10T13:37:59Z | 2023-12-10T13:59:48Z | [
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Year in Morocco",
"Template:Further",
"Template:Year in Africa",
"Template:Small",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Portal",
"Template:Years in Morocco"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2024_in_Morocco |
75,530,264 | Will Barnicoat | Will Barnicoat (born 24 March 2003) is a British track and field athlete and cross country runner. He was European U20 cross country champion in 2022, and became European U23 cross country champion in 2023.
Barnicoat runs for Aldershot, Farnham and District Athletics Club. He attended Cranleigh School, and the University of Birmingham, where he was a contemporary of Axel Vang Christensen. As a student, Barnicoat supplemented his income working as a pot washer at a branch of Gourmet Burger Kitchen.
In February 2022, he became the English National junior cross-country champion for the second time, having also been U17 champion before that. Later that year, he won the 2022 European Cross Country Championships U20 race in Turin.
He was a bronze medalist in the 2023 European Athletics U23 Championships – Men's 5000 metres in Espoo. In December 2023, he won the 2023 European Cross Country Championships U23 race in Brussels. He also claimed gold as part of the British squad which won the U23 team event. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Will Barnicoat (born 24 March 2003) is a British track and field athlete and cross country runner. He was European U20 cross country champion in 2022, and became European U23 cross country champion in 2023.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Barnicoat runs for Aldershot, Farnham and District Athletics Club. He attended Cranleigh School, and the University of Birmingham, where he was a contemporary of Axel Vang Christensen. As a student, Barnicoat supplemented his income working as a pot washer at a branch of Gourmet Burger Kitchen.",
"title": "Early and personal life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "In February 2022, he became the English National junior cross-country champion for the second time, having also been U17 champion before that. Later that year, he won the 2022 European Cross Country Championships U20 race in Turin.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "He was a bronze medalist in the 2023 European Athletics U23 Championships – Men's 5000 metres in Espoo. In December 2023, he won the 2023 European Cross Country Championships U23 race in Brussels. He also claimed gold as part of the British squad which won the U23 team event.",
"title": "Career"
}
] | Will Barnicoat is a British track and field athlete and cross country runner. He was European U20 cross country champion in 2022, and became European U23 cross country champion in 2023. | 2023-12-10T13:40:50Z | 2023-12-13T01:10:05Z | [
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox sportsperson",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Will_Barnicoat |
75,530,276 | Captured Hospital | Captured Hospital (in Japanese 大病院占拠 Dai byōin senkyo), also called "This hospital is like a birdcage", is a Nippon TV drama that aired from January 14, 2023 to March 18, 2023. The drama's protagonist is Arashi's Sho Sakurai.
It is an original suspense drama in which a detective on leave confronts the mysterious criminal armed group wearing demon masks that have taken hostages at a large hospital.
A sequel is scheduled to air in January 2024.
A general hospital in Kanagawa Prefecture, Kaiseido Hospital, is suddenly taken hostage by an armed group, called "Hyakki Yagyo", who protect their identities wearing oni masks. Yūko Musashi is a heart surgeon at the hospital. She is inside it during the hostage crisis. She is currently separated from her husband, police detective Saburo Musashi, with whom she has a daughter. Saburo Musashi is currently on leave and receiving psychological treatment at the hospital for a fatal incident in which he was involved the year before. Among the people there, there is also the Governor of the prefecture, Michie Nagato, and Yui Inaba, a former reporter, currently a video streamer in search for current affairs. Saburo has just ended his treatment, and is calling his wife, to no avail, when he hears a faint tick tock behind a closed door. As he opens it, a bomb goes off and the explosion throws him clear over to the other side of the hall. He recovers from the explosion, and reports the incident to police superintendent Izumi, when he is surrounded by a group of the mask-wearing captors, who attack him with gun-wielding drones. He manages to escape the drones, and reports the hostage situation, when he notices that his wife is there, among the taken. While this is happening, in another place, the armed group's leader starts streaming in their newly opened YouTube-like channel, which immediately starts gaining viewers. Saburo goes to the police's Field Command Headquarters, from where he starts a discussion with Blue Oni, the armed group's leader.
Saburo has to decipher riddles and clues given by Blue Oni, in order to continue with the hostage's release, only to uncover some dirty details of those people linked to those riddles and clues. As Saburo is on a time-limited search for things that will uncover truths about medical doctor Daisuke Tosa and others, his wife is trying to negotiate the release of nurse Shiori, who is ill, and other hostages. Saburo continues his mission of retrieving the information, but is late in relaying his findings to Blue Oni, which makes him angry. Saburo is in shock as Blue Oni reveals who he has been pointing a gun at this time: Yūko. Blue Oni urges Saburo to find out Governor Nagato's "sins", at the same time that it is shown that the Musashis' daughter, Emiri, has left the hotel where she was being protected by the police, and goes missing. As the story develops, so do the stories of the masked team, including Kiyoshi Hitachi (Gray Oni), a psychiatrist, and his daughter, Arisa (Peach Oni), and Minoru Sado, the hospital's Head of Surgery, who gets shot by the police's SIS sniper team, as he takes the place of Blue Oni at the entrance of the hospital, where Saburo has gone to negotiate. The story continues with Blue Oni showing images of an unconscious Emiri, who was taken by one of the members of the masked group, and has been locked in a freezer. With less than an hour's time, Saburo has to solve the riddle Blue Oni gives him and save his daughter. Reporter Yui Inaba, who has been behind the scenes relaying information about the hostage situation on her channel, has the biggest scoop, as she reveals the identity of a pair of the masked team on a live feed.
Cast information
Played by Sho Sakurai
Lieutenant in the Kanagawa Prefectural Police Department, detective First Investigative Division. His catch phrase is "You're lying." He is on leave from work due to the trauma during an event the year before, when he fired a gun at the criminal at a gas station, resulting in an explosion that claimed the criminal's life. Because of this, he becomes estranged from his wife Yūko and daughter Emiri. He is receiving psychological treatment at Kaiseido Hospital, when he encounters an armed group occupying the hospital and confronts them.
Played by Manami Higa
Saburo's estranged wife. She is a heart surgeon at Kaiseido Hospital. During a heart surgery operation, becomes hostage in the occupation incident, but she negotiates with the armed group's leader, Blue Oni, to have her patient released.
Played by Honoka Yoshida
Daughter of Saburo and Yūko. She is isolated in a hotel to ensure her safety during the hostage incident, but is revealed in social media as Musashi's daughter. Escaping from the hotel, she is abducted, but later rescued, due to Musashi's frantic pursuit and KSBC's audio analysis.
Cast information
Played by Sonim
Played by Mayu Miyamoto
Played by Gunpi (from the comedy duo Haru to Hikoki)
Played by Hiroyuki Hirayama
Played by Atsuro Watabe
Cast information
Played by Kanji Tsuda
Played by Yu Inaba
Played by Masanobu Sakata
Played by Hideyuki Kasahara
Played by Eriko Nakamura
Played by Kazunari Uryuu
Played by Kumi Kureshiro
Played by Mariko Tsutsui
Played by Rio Asumi
Played by Erina Masuda
An armed group masked with Oni masks, called Hyakki Yagyō, takes Kaiseido Hospital hostage.
Played by Fuma Kikuchi (Sexy Zone) and Atsuki Yamada (as a child)
Played by Shugo Oshinari
Played by Becky
Played by Sei Matobu
Played by Shuji Kashiwabara
Played by Kenji Mizuhashi
Played by Nana Asakawa
Played by Kanro Morita
Played by Yozuke Omizu (comic duo Rubber Girl)
Played by Jun Murakami
Played by Jin Shirasu | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Captured Hospital (in Japanese 大病院占拠 Dai byōin senkyo), also called \"This hospital is like a birdcage\", is a Nippon TV drama that aired from January 14, 2023 to March 18, 2023. The drama's protagonist is Arashi's Sho Sakurai.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "It is an original suspense drama in which a detective on leave confronts the mysterious criminal armed group wearing demon masks that have taken hostages at a large hospital.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "A sequel is scheduled to air in January 2024.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "A general hospital in Kanagawa Prefecture, Kaiseido Hospital, is suddenly taken hostage by an armed group, called \"Hyakki Yagyo\", who protect their identities wearing oni masks. Yūko Musashi is a heart surgeon at the hospital. She is inside it during the hostage crisis. She is currently separated from her husband, police detective Saburo Musashi, with whom she has a daughter. Saburo Musashi is currently on leave and receiving psychological treatment at the hospital for a fatal incident in which he was involved the year before. Among the people there, there is also the Governor of the prefecture, Michie Nagato, and Yui Inaba, a former reporter, currently a video streamer in search for current affairs. Saburo has just ended his treatment, and is calling his wife, to no avail, when he hears a faint tick tock behind a closed door. As he opens it, a bomb goes off and the explosion throws him clear over to the other side of the hall. He recovers from the explosion, and reports the incident to police superintendent Izumi, when he is surrounded by a group of the mask-wearing captors, who attack him with gun-wielding drones. He manages to escape the drones, and reports the hostage situation, when he notices that his wife is there, among the taken. While this is happening, in another place, the armed group's leader starts streaming in their newly opened YouTube-like channel, which immediately starts gaining viewers. Saburo goes to the police's Field Command Headquarters, from where he starts a discussion with Blue Oni, the armed group's leader.",
"title": "Plot"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Saburo has to decipher riddles and clues given by Blue Oni, in order to continue with the hostage's release, only to uncover some dirty details of those people linked to those riddles and clues. As Saburo is on a time-limited search for things that will uncover truths about medical doctor Daisuke Tosa and others, his wife is trying to negotiate the release of nurse Shiori, who is ill, and other hostages. Saburo continues his mission of retrieving the information, but is late in relaying his findings to Blue Oni, which makes him angry. Saburo is in shock as Blue Oni reveals who he has been pointing a gun at this time: Yūko. Blue Oni urges Saburo to find out Governor Nagato's \"sins\", at the same time that it is shown that the Musashis' daughter, Emiri, has left the hotel where she was being protected by the police, and goes missing. As the story develops, so do the stories of the masked team, including Kiyoshi Hitachi (Gray Oni), a psychiatrist, and his daughter, Arisa (Peach Oni), and Minoru Sado, the hospital's Head of Surgery, who gets shot by the police's SIS sniper team, as he takes the place of Blue Oni at the entrance of the hospital, where Saburo has gone to negotiate. The story continues with Blue Oni showing images of an unconscious Emiri, who was taken by one of the members of the masked group, and has been locked in a freezer. With less than an hour's time, Saburo has to solve the riddle Blue Oni gives him and save his daughter. Reporter Yui Inaba, who has been behind the scenes relaying information about the hostage situation on her channel, has the biggest scoop, as she reveals the identity of a pair of the masked team on a live feed.",
"title": "Plot"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "Cast information",
"title": "Cast"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "Played by Sho Sakurai",
"title": "Cast"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "Lieutenant in the Kanagawa Prefectural Police Department, detective First Investigative Division. His catch phrase is \"You're lying.\" He is on leave from work due to the trauma during an event the year before, when he fired a gun at the criminal at a gas station, resulting in an explosion that claimed the criminal's life. Because of this, he becomes estranged from his wife Yūko and daughter Emiri. He is receiving psychological treatment at Kaiseido Hospital, when he encounters an armed group occupying the hospital and confronts them.",
"title": "Cast"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "Played by Manami Higa",
"title": "Cast"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 9,
"text": "Saburo's estranged wife. She is a heart surgeon at Kaiseido Hospital. During a heart surgery operation, becomes hostage in the occupation incident, but she negotiates with the armed group's leader, Blue Oni, to have her patient released.",
"title": "Cast"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 10,
"text": "Played by Honoka Yoshida",
"title": "Cast"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 11,
"text": "Daughter of Saburo and Yūko. She is isolated in a hotel to ensure her safety during the hostage incident, but is revealed in social media as Musashi's daughter. Escaping from the hotel, she is abducted, but later rescued, due to Musashi's frantic pursuit and KSBC's audio analysis.",
"title": "Cast"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 12,
"text": "Cast information",
"title": "Cast"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 13,
"text": "Played by Sonim",
"title": "Cast"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 14,
"text": "Played by Mayu Miyamoto",
"title": "Cast"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 15,
"text": "Played by Gunpi (from the comedy duo Haru to Hikoki)",
"title": "Cast"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 16,
"text": "Played by Hiroyuki Hirayama",
"title": "Cast"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 17,
"text": "Played by Atsuro Watabe",
"title": "Cast"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 18,
"text": "Cast information",
"title": "Cast"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 19,
"text": "Played by Kanji Tsuda",
"title": "Cast"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 20,
"text": "Played by Yu Inaba",
"title": "Cast"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 21,
"text": "Played by Masanobu Sakata",
"title": "Cast"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 22,
"text": "Played by Hideyuki Kasahara",
"title": "Cast"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 23,
"text": "Played by Eriko Nakamura",
"title": "Cast"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 24,
"text": "Played by Kazunari Uryuu",
"title": "Cast"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 25,
"text": "Played by Kumi Kureshiro",
"title": "Cast"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 26,
"text": "Played by Mariko Tsutsui",
"title": "Cast"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 27,
"text": "Played by Rio Asumi",
"title": "Cast"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 28,
"text": "Played by Erina Masuda",
"title": "Cast"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 29,
"text": "An armed group masked with Oni masks, called Hyakki Yagyō, takes Kaiseido Hospital hostage.",
"title": "Cast"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 30,
"text": "Played by Fuma Kikuchi (Sexy Zone) and Atsuki Yamada (as a child)",
"title": "Cast"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 31,
"text": "Played by Shugo Oshinari",
"title": "Cast"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 32,
"text": "Played by Becky",
"title": "Cast"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 33,
"text": "Played by Sei Matobu",
"title": "Cast"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 34,
"text": "Played by Shuji Kashiwabara",
"title": "Cast"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 35,
"text": "Played by Kenji Mizuhashi",
"title": "Cast"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 36,
"text": "Played by Nana Asakawa",
"title": "Cast"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 37,
"text": "Played by Kanro Morita",
"title": "Cast"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 38,
"text": "Played by Yozuke Omizu (comic duo Rubber Girl)",
"title": "Cast"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 39,
"text": "Played by Jun Murakami",
"title": "Cast"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 40,
"text": "Played by Jin Shirasu",
"title": "Cast"
}
] | Captured Hospital, also called "This hospital is like a birdcage", is a Nippon TV drama that aired from January 14, 2023 to March 18, 2023. The drama's protagonist is Arashi's Sho Sakurai. It is an original suspense drama in which a detective on leave confronts the mysterious criminal armed group wearing demon masks that have taken hostages at a large hospital. A sequel is scheduled to air in January 2024. | 2023-12-10T13:43:18Z | 2023-12-31T11:06:36Z | [
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Captured_Hospital |
75,530,293 | National Guidance Committee | The National Guidance Committee (also known as the National Steering Committee; Arabic: لجنة التوجيه الوطني) was a Palestinian political organization formed in response to the Camp David Accords between Egypt and Israel in the late 1970s.
The committee was formed by representatives from nationalist groups, municipalities, trade unions, and professional syndicates officially in November 1978. Other members were journalists, students, welfare agencies, and the Supreme Islamic Council. The committee has been described as "the highest authority of the Palestinian people inside Palestine" at that time (as opposed to Palestinians in exile) and as "one of the first major expressions of indigenous Palestinian leadership" during the 1970s following Israeli occupation and the Camp David process.
Scholar Salim Tamari described the National Guidance Committee thus:
"The NGC...became the rallying coalition for Palestinians inside the oPt [occupied Palestinian territories] resisting the occupation....the NGC included prominent mayors and others representing a spectrum of the Palestinian national movement. Despite Israeli repression...one example being the deportation of Palestinian mayors from the oPt in 1980...the guiding framework of civil resistance embodied by the Palestinian National Front and the NGC were critical to the mass mobilization of the first intifada..."
Tamari also notes the left-leaning stance of the NGC in contrast to Fatah and "pro-Jordanian figures in the West Bank." The committee's headquarters were in the Federation of Professional Unions in Jerusalem.
Scholar Michael R. Fischbach describes the committee as "a major bridge between local Palestinian activities in the territories and the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) in exile." Other sources similarly point to the "coordination" between these groups. Fischbach also argues that "the establishment of the committee was an indication of the growing importance of the Occupied Territories in the wider PLO strategic thinking, as well as of its new generation of leaders."
The committee was repressed by Israeli occupying authorities, and they officially outlawed it in 1982.
Ibrahim Dakkak served as secretary-general of the organization. Bassam Shak'a and Haydar Abd Al-Shafi were other founding members. Samiha Khalil was elected to the committee in 1979, the only woman to serve in that capacity. Faisal al-Husseini was another prominent member. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The National Guidance Committee (also known as the National Steering Committee; Arabic: لجنة التوجيه الوطني) was a Palestinian political organization formed in response to the Camp David Accords between Egypt and Israel in the late 1970s.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The committee was formed by representatives from nationalist groups, municipalities, trade unions, and professional syndicates officially in November 1978. Other members were journalists, students, welfare agencies, and the Supreme Islamic Council. The committee has been described as \"the highest authority of the Palestinian people inside Palestine\" at that time (as opposed to Palestinians in exile) and as \"one of the first major expressions of indigenous Palestinian leadership\" during the 1970s following Israeli occupation and the Camp David process.",
"title": "Background"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Scholar Salim Tamari described the National Guidance Committee thus:",
"title": "Background"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "\"The NGC...became the rallying coalition for Palestinians inside the oPt [occupied Palestinian territories] resisting the occupation....the NGC included prominent mayors and others representing a spectrum of the Palestinian national movement. Despite Israeli repression...one example being the deportation of Palestinian mayors from the oPt in 1980...the guiding framework of civil resistance embodied by the Palestinian National Front and the NGC were critical to the mass mobilization of the first intifada...\"",
"title": "Background"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Tamari also notes the left-leaning stance of the NGC in contrast to Fatah and \"pro-Jordanian figures in the West Bank.\" The committee's headquarters were in the Federation of Professional Unions in Jerusalem.",
"title": "Background"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "Scholar Michael R. Fischbach describes the committee as \"a major bridge between local Palestinian activities in the territories and the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) in exile.\" Other sources similarly point to the \"coordination\" between these groups. Fischbach also argues that \"the establishment of the committee was an indication of the growing importance of the Occupied Territories in the wider PLO strategic thinking, as well as of its new generation of leaders.\"",
"title": "Background"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "The committee was repressed by Israeli occupying authorities, and they officially outlawed it in 1982.",
"title": "Background"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "Ibrahim Dakkak served as secretary-general of the organization. Bassam Shak'a and Haydar Abd Al-Shafi were other founding members. Samiha Khalil was elected to the committee in 1979, the only woman to serve in that capacity. Faisal al-Husseini was another prominent member.",
"title": "Background"
}
] | The National Guidance Committee was a Palestinian political organization formed in response to the Camp David Accords between Egypt and Israel in the late 1970s. | 2023-12-10T13:48:20Z | 2023-12-20T20:59:26Z | [
"Template:Lang-ar",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite journal",
"Template:Cite web"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Guidance_Committee |
75,530,304 | Bangladesh Energy and Power Research Council | Bangladesh Energy and Power Research Council (Bengali: বাংলাদেশ জ্বালানি ও বিদ্যুৎ গবেষণা কাউন্সিল) is a government agency responsible for providing funding and support to research institutions and Startup companies in the power sector. It provides long term planning and evaluation on the energy and power sector to the government. Md Mokabbir Hossain is the chairman of Bangladesh Energy and Power Research Council.
Bangladesh Energy and Power Research Council was established by passing the Bangladesh Energy and Power Research Council Act, 2015, in the parliament. The law had been approved by the cabinet of Bangladesh.
In May 2019, Subir Kishore Chowdhury was made chairman of Bangladesh Energy and Power Research Council replacing Shahin Ahmed Chowdhury.
In 2016, Bangladesh Energy and Power Research Council organized a seminar with Dhaka Stock Exchange to explore issuing debt instruments in Singapore to finance powerplants in Bangladesh. The State Minister of Power, Nasrul Hamid Bipu, spoke at the seminar. It announced plans to establish a laboratory at Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Bangladesh Energy and Power Research Council (Bengali: বাংলাদেশ জ্বালানি ও বিদ্যুৎ গবেষণা কাউন্সিল) is a government agency responsible for providing funding and support to research institutions and Startup companies in the power sector. It provides long term planning and evaluation on the energy and power sector to the government. Md Mokabbir Hossain is the chairman of Bangladesh Energy and Power Research Council.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Bangladesh Energy and Power Research Council was established by passing the Bangladesh Energy and Power Research Council Act, 2015, in the parliament. The law had been approved by the cabinet of Bangladesh.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "In May 2019, Subir Kishore Chowdhury was made chairman of Bangladesh Energy and Power Research Council replacing Shahin Ahmed Chowdhury.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "In 2016, Bangladesh Energy and Power Research Council organized a seminar with Dhaka Stock Exchange to explore issuing debt instruments in Singapore to finance powerplants in Bangladesh. The State Minister of Power, Nasrul Hamid Bipu, spoke at the seminar. It announced plans to establish a laboratory at Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology.",
"title": "History"
}
] | Bangladesh Energy and Power Research Council is a government agency responsible for providing funding and support to research institutions and Startup companies in the power sector. It provides long term planning and evaluation on the energy and power sector to the government. Md Mokabbir Hossain is the chairman of Bangladesh Energy and Power Research Council. | 2023-12-10T13:51:56Z | 2023-12-14T23:19:52Z | [
"Template:Infobox organization",
"Template:Lang-bn",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Bangladesh-org-stub"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bangladesh_Energy_and_Power_Research_Council |
75,530,308 | Makrany | Makrany (Belarusian: Макраны, Polish: Mokrany) is a village in the Brest Region in southwestern Belarus. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Makrany (Belarusian: Макраны, Polish: Mokrany) is a village in the Brest Region in southwestern Belarus.",
"title": ""
}
] | Makrany is a village in the Brest Region in southwestern Belarus. | 2023-12-10T13:52:32Z | 2023-12-10T15:51:46Z | [
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox settlement",
"Template:Lang-be",
"Template:Lang-pl"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Makrany |
75,530,317 | Mohammad Inam | Mohammad Inam (born 27 October 2000) is an Indian professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for I-League club Real Kashmir FC.
Born and brought up in Jammu & Kashmir, Inam started playing football at the age of 10. At the age of 15, Inam was invited by All India Football Federation for Asian Football Confederation U-16 trials. He gave the performance while representing Real Kashmir FC in U-15 years.
In September 2021, Mohammad Inam signed for Delhi FC. He featured a total of 5 matches in the I-League Qualifiers. He also featured Delhi FC in the 2021 Durand Cup. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Mohammad Inam (born 27 October 2000) is an Indian professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for I-League club Real Kashmir FC.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Born and brought up in Jammu & Kashmir, Inam started playing football at the age of 10. At the age of 15, Inam was invited by All India Football Federation for Asian Football Confederation U-16 trials. He gave the performance while representing Real Kashmir FC in U-15 years.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "In September 2021, Mohammad Inam signed for Delhi FC. He featured a total of 5 matches in the I-League Qualifiers. He also featured Delhi FC in the 2021 Durand Cup.",
"title": "Career"
}
] | Mohammad Inam is an Indian professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for I-League club Real Kashmir FC. | 2023-12-10T13:54:05Z | 2023-12-28T16:03:58Z | [
"Template:Infobox football biography",
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] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mohammad_Inam |
75,530,322 | Helena Jungwirth | Helena Jungwirth (21 March 1945 — 27 January 2023) was a Swedish mezzo-soprano opera singer. While training at the Music and Drama School in Stockholm, in 1969 she married the tenor Claes-Håkan Ahnsjö. In 1972, she made her debut at the Drottningholm Palace Theatre as Dorabella in Mozart's Così fan tutte. The following year, together with her husband she was engaged by the Bavarian State Opera in Munich where she went on to perform with success in a wide repertoire. In 1987, at the Berlin State Opera she sang the title role in Rossini's La Cenerentola. She was honoured with the title of Bayerische Kammersängerin (Bavarian Court Singer) in 1996.
Born in Stockholm on 21 March 1945, Jungwirth studied opera at Stockholm's Music and Drama School (Statens musikdramatiska skola) from 1969 to 1972. In 1969, she married the successful Swedish tenor Claes-Håkon Ahnsjö.
Jungwirth made her debut in 1972 at the Drottningholm Palace Theatre as Dorabella in Mozart's Così fan tutte in a production directed by Götz Friedrich, alongside her husband as Ferrando. From 1972 to 1973, she performed at the Royal Swedish Opera where she sang the title role in the premiere of Lars Johan Werle's opera Tintomara which was presented in connection with the company's 200th anniversary in 1973.
In 1973, as a result of her husband's engagement at the Bavarian State Opera in Munich, she also joined the company where she enjoyed considerable success. The couple performed the company's wide repertory for many years. Jungwirth's roles included Marcellina in Mozart's Le nozze di Figaro, Zulma in Rossini's L'italiana in Algeri, Ines in Verdi's Il trovatore and Siegrune in Wagner's Die Walküre.
Jungwirth performed the role of Cherubino in The Marriage of Figaro at the Glyndebourne Festival in 1974. In 1987, she was a guest performer at the Berlin State Opera in the title role of Rossini's La Cenerentola. She also performed at the Hamburg State Opera, the Bayreuth Festival and at London's Royal Opera House.
Helena Jungwirth died in the Planegg district of Munich on 27 January 2023. She is survived by her husband, her three sons Fredrik, Mattias, Sven, and their families.
In December 1996, Jungwirth was honoured with the title of Bayerische Kammersängerin. In presenting the award, the Bavarian minister of culture Hans Zehetmair recognized how in more than 1,400 performances over a period of 23 years, Jungwirth had impressed her audiences in her many roles with her stage presence, her dramatic flexibility and her confident vocal delivery. | [
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"title": "Life and career"
},
{
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"text": "Jungwirth made her debut in 1972 at the Drottningholm Palace Theatre as Dorabella in Mozart's Così fan tutte in a production directed by Götz Friedrich, alongside her husband as Ferrando. From 1972 to 1973, she performed at the Royal Swedish Opera where she sang the title role in the premiere of Lars Johan Werle's opera Tintomara which was presented in connection with the company's 200th anniversary in 1973.",
"title": "Life and career"
},
{
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"text": "In 1973, as a result of her husband's engagement at the Bavarian State Opera in Munich, she also joined the company where she enjoyed considerable success. The couple performed the company's wide repertory for many years. Jungwirth's roles included Marcellina in Mozart's Le nozze di Figaro, Zulma in Rossini's L'italiana in Algeri, Ines in Verdi's Il trovatore and Siegrune in Wagner's Die Walküre.",
"title": "Life and career"
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"text": "Helena Jungwirth died in the Planegg district of Munich on 27 January 2023. She is survived by her husband, her three sons Fredrik, Mattias, Sven, and their families.",
"title": "Life and career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "In December 1996, Jungwirth was honoured with the title of Bayerische Kammersängerin. In presenting the award, the Bavarian minister of culture Hans Zehetmair recognized how in more than 1,400 performances over a period of 23 years, Jungwirth had impressed her audiences in her many roles with her stage presence, her dramatic flexibility and her confident vocal delivery.",
"title": "Awards"
}
] | Helena Jungwirth was a Swedish mezzo-soprano opera singer. While training at the Music and Drama School in Stockholm, in 1969 she married the tenor Claes-Håkan Ahnsjö. In 1972, she made her debut at the Drottningholm Palace Theatre as Dorabella in Mozart's Così fan tutte. The following year, together with her husband she was engaged by the Bavarian State Opera in Munich where she went on to perform with success in a wide repertoire. In 1987, at the Berlin State Opera she sang the title role in Rossini's La Cenerentola. She was honoured with the title of Bayerische Kammersängerin in 1996. | 2023-12-10T13:54:55Z | 2023-12-22T11:04:47Z | [
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] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helena_Jungwirth |
75,530,367 | Fourth Upper Peru campaign | The Fourth Alto Perú campaign was an unsuccessful invasion in 1817 by the rebel United Provinces of the Río de la Plata, during the Argentine War of Independence, of Upper Peru (today Bolivia), which was still under control of Spanish troops.
The war between the Patriots in Argentina and the Royalists in Upper Peru (Bolivia) had been going on for 6 years. In early November 1816, the Royalists invaded Argentina, advancing with 3,000 men under the command of Pedro Antonio de Olañeta, Juan Guillermo de Marquieguy, and Field Marshal José de la Serna.
They gained a victory at the Battle of Yavi on 15 November 1816. At the beginning of 1817, José de la Serna continued his advance on Jujuy with 5,000 men and on 17 January, the vanguard commanded by Pedro Antonio Olañeta occupied San Salvador de Jujuy and waited for de la Serna to arrive with the bulk of the army. But their advance towards the south was harassed and detained by guerrilla groups commanded by Colonel Martín Miguel de Güemes. To make matters worst, de la Serna learned that José de San Martín and his Army of the Andes had crossed the Andes into Chile and defeated the royalist army there on 12 February. This left the Viceroyalty of Peru exposed to an invasion from Chile, so he had no choise but to withdraw.
Manuel Belgrano, commander of the Army of the North of the United Provinces of the Río de la Plata sent a small military division to Upper Peru under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Gregorio Aráoz de Lamadrid with the aim of hindering the Royal Army of Peru as much as possible.
This division managed to gain a victory at the Battle of la Tablada de Tolomosa (15 April) and advance as far as Chuquisaca. But there the Patriot division was repelled and defeated at the Battle of Sopachuy (12 June) and was forced to retreat to Tucuman, pursued by three royalist divisions. Nevertheless, the objective was achieved to turn back the Royalist invasion of 1816–17.
This was the fourth and last time that the Northern Army had tried to advance into Upper Peru, and again the campaign had ended in failure. The next years, Argentina descended into civil war and Upper Peru would remain under Royalist control until 1825, after the Battle of Ayacucho, won by Patriot troops from Colombia and Peru. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The Fourth Alto Perú campaign was an unsuccessful invasion in 1817 by the rebel United Provinces of the Río de la Plata, during the Argentine War of Independence, of Upper Peru (today Bolivia), which was still under control of Spanish troops.",
"title": ""
},
{
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"text": "The war between the Patriots in Argentina and the Royalists in Upper Peru (Bolivia) had been going on for 6 years. In early November 1816, the Royalists invaded Argentina, advancing with 3,000 men under the command of Pedro Antonio de Olañeta, Juan Guillermo de Marquieguy, and Field Marshal José de la Serna.",
"title": "The campaign"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "They gained a victory at the Battle of Yavi on 15 November 1816. At the beginning of 1817, José de la Serna continued his advance on Jujuy with 5,000 men and on 17 January, the vanguard commanded by Pedro Antonio Olañeta occupied San Salvador de Jujuy and waited for de la Serna to arrive with the bulk of the army. But their advance towards the south was harassed and detained by guerrilla groups commanded by Colonel Martín Miguel de Güemes. To make matters worst, de la Serna learned that José de San Martín and his Army of the Andes had crossed the Andes into Chile and defeated the royalist army there on 12 February. This left the Viceroyalty of Peru exposed to an invasion from Chile, so he had no choise but to withdraw.",
"title": "The campaign"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Manuel Belgrano, commander of the Army of the North of the United Provinces of the Río de la Plata sent a small military division to Upper Peru under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Gregorio Aráoz de Lamadrid with the aim of hindering the Royal Army of Peru as much as possible.",
"title": "The campaign"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "This division managed to gain a victory at the Battle of la Tablada de Tolomosa (15 April) and advance as far as Chuquisaca. But there the Patriot division was repelled and defeated at the Battle of Sopachuy (12 June) and was forced to retreat to Tucuman, pursued by three royalist divisions. Nevertheless, the objective was achieved to turn back the Royalist invasion of 1816–17.",
"title": "The campaign"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "This was the fourth and last time that the Northern Army had tried to advance into Upper Peru, and again the campaign had ended in failure. The next years, Argentina descended into civil war and Upper Peru would remain under Royalist control until 1825, after the Battle of Ayacucho, won by Patriot troops from Colombia and Peru.",
"title": "Results"
}
] | The Fourth Alto Perú campaign was an unsuccessful invasion in 1817 by the rebel United Provinces of the Río de la Plata, during the Argentine War of Independence, of Upper Peru, which was still under control of Spanish troops. | 2023-12-10T14:00:31Z | 2023-12-14T12:21:26Z | [
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75,530,375 | 2023 Open de Limoges – Doubles | Oksana Kalashnikova and Marta Kostyuk were the reigning champions, but Kostyuk did not participate this year. Kalashnikova partners Maia Lumsden. | [
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"text": "Oksana Kalashnikova and Marta Kostyuk were the reigning champions, but Kostyuk did not participate this year. Kalashnikova partners Maia Lumsden.",
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] | Oksana Kalashnikova and Marta Kostyuk were the reigning champions, but Kostyuk did not participate this year. Kalashnikova partners Maia Lumsden. | 2023-12-10T14:02:01Z | 2023-12-17T20:21:42Z | [
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75,530,390 | 2024 in American soccer | The 2024 season will be the 112th season of competitive soccer in the United States. The season will begin with Friendlies for the USMNT and USWNT in January. USMNT will complete in 2023–24 CONCACAF Nations League and 2024 Copa América MLS clubs will compete in CONCACAF Champions Cup USWNT will compete in CONCACAF W Gold Cup
Goals are current as of January 20, 2024, after the match against Slovenia.
Goals are current as of January 1, 2024.
Note: the table below has no impact on playoff qualification and is used solely for determining host of the MLS Cup, certain CCL spots, the Supporters' Shield trophy, seeding in the 2024 Canadian Championship, and 2024 MLS draft. The conference tables are the sole determinant for teams qualifying for the playoffs.
teams in bold are still active in the competition | [
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75,530,424 | 1984 Worthing Borough Council election | The 1984 Worthing Borough Council election took place on 3 May 1984 to elect members of Worthing Borough Council in West Sussex, England. This was on the same day as other local elections. | [
{
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"text": "The 1984 Worthing Borough Council election took place on 3 May 1984 to elect members of Worthing Borough Council in West Sussex, England. This was on the same day as other local elections.",
"title": ""
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] | The 1984 Worthing Borough Council election took place on 3 May 1984 to elect members of Worthing Borough Council in West Sussex, England. This was on the same day as other local elections. | 2023-12-10T14:09:33Z | 2023-12-10T15:51:22Z | [
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] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1984_Worthing_Borough_Council_election |
75,530,441 | Joel Cunningham (footballer) | Joel Cunningham (born 21 August 1996) is a Jamaican footballer who captains Arnett Gardens in the Jamaica Premier League and plays as a defender.
Born in Spanish Town, Jamaica, Cunningham made name for himself at Wolmer's Boys’ School in Kingston, Jamaica. Cunningham moved to Howard University's soccer team Howard Bison in 2015.
Cunningham signed for D.C. United U-23 after leaving Howard in 2018. After 2 years in D.C. Cunningham moved to Iceland, signing with KFF in 2020.
Cunningham returned to Jamaica in 2022 signing with Arnett Gardens.
Cunningham has represented Jamaica at the under-20 level. | [
{
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"title": ""
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"text": "Born in Spanish Town, Jamaica, Cunningham made name for himself at Wolmer's Boys’ School in Kingston, Jamaica. Cunningham moved to Howard University's soccer team Howard Bison in 2015.",
"title": "Career"
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"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Cunningham signed for D.C. United U-23 after leaving Howard in 2018. After 2 years in D.C. Cunningham moved to Iceland, signing with KFF in 2020.",
"title": "Career"
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{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Cunningham returned to Jamaica in 2022 signing with Arnett Gardens.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
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"text": "Cunningham has represented Jamaica at the under-20 level.",
"title": "Career"
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] | Joel Cunningham is a Jamaican footballer who captains Arnett Gardens in the Jamaica Premier League and plays as a defender. | 2023-12-10T14:12:17Z | 2023-12-22T23:09:30Z | [
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75,530,445 | Granly Speedway Arena | Granly Speedway Arena is a speedway track in Esbjerg, Denmark. The track is located on the Tinghedevej 9 road, about 16 kilometres east of the town and is adjacent to the Vestjysk Motocross Club. The stadium hosts the speedway team known as the Esbjerg Speedway Klub, who race in the Danish Speedway League and have been champions of Denmark 11 times, as of 2023.
Founded in 1929, Esbjerg Motor Sport bought a piece of moorland at the Korskro Inn, during the spring of 1946. After construction the stadium opened with an attendance of 6,000 spectators on 7 July 1946.
The year of 1955 proved significant because speedway was moved to the Esbjerg Athletic Stadium due to financial problems. The track remained open however and was extended in size during 1955. Speedway returned in 1970 and the venue hosted the 1972 Danish Individual Speedway Championship.
In 1975, the site was entirely rebuilt into the Esbjerg Motor Center or Korskro Motor Center, which included two standard speedway tracks in addition to one longtrack and one smaller 80cc track. The venue opened on 1 May 1977. The venue held the 1978 Danish final and soon hosted a major international event; the 1982 Individual Long Track World Championship (which attracted over 20,000 people).
In 1984, further developments took place with the speedway track rotating 90 degrees and the mapping of a motocross circuit. The following year it hosted the 1985 Individual Long Track World Championship.
The longtrack was later demolished but further Danish Championship finals were held on the speedway track in 2005, 2010, 2011 and 2018. In-between in 2014, the stadium was renamed the Granly Speedway Arena. | [
{
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"title": ""
},
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"text": "The year of 1955 proved significant because speedway was moved to the Esbjerg Athletic Stadium due to financial problems. The track remained open however and was extended in size during 1955. Speedway returned in 1970 and the venue hosted the 1972 Danish Individual Speedway Championship.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "In 1975, the site was entirely rebuilt into the Esbjerg Motor Center or Korskro Motor Center, which included two standard speedway tracks in addition to one longtrack and one smaller 80cc track. The venue opened on 1 May 1977. The venue held the 1978 Danish final and soon hosted a major international event; the 1982 Individual Long Track World Championship (which attracted over 20,000 people).",
"title": "History"
},
{
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"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "The longtrack was later demolished but further Danish Championship finals were held on the speedway track in 2005, 2010, 2011 and 2018. In-between in 2014, the stadium was renamed the Granly Speedway Arena.",
"title": "History"
}
] | Granly Speedway Arena is a speedway track in Esbjerg, Denmark. The track is located on the Tinghedevej 9 road, about 16 kilometres east of the town and is adjacent to the Vestjysk Motocross Club. The stadium hosts the speedway team known as the Esbjerg Speedway Klub, who race in the Danish Speedway League and have been champions of Denmark 11 times, as of 2023. | 2023-12-10T14:12:32Z | 2023-12-14T22:55:04Z | [
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75,530,480 | Sagol Kāngjei | Sagol Kangjei (Meitei for 'polo'), also known as Sakol Kangchei, Shakol Kangchei, Shagol Kangjei, is a traditional Meitei game, resembling hockey, played on a Sagol (Meitei for 'horse') with a long-handled Kangjei (Meitei for 'hockey stick'), or Kang-hu (Meitei for 'mallet/hockey stick') and a Kangdrum (Meitei for 'polo ball'), usually in a Kangjeibung (Meitei for 'Polo Ground'). It is the predecessorial as well as traditional form of modern polo in the intangible cultural heritage of Meitei civilization.
Sagol Kangjei (Meitei for 'horse hockey') is considered to be one of the three types of Kangjei (or hockey), with the other two types being Khong Kangjei (Meitei for 'field hockey') and Mukna Kangjei (Meitei for 'wrestling and hockey'), which are the traditional sports of Meitei people, being played since time immemorial.
In accordance to Cheitharol Kumbaba, the Royal Chronicle of Manipur Kingdom, Sagol Kangjei was used as an instrument of diplomacy, politics as well as palace intrigues.
In Meitei language (officially called Manipuri), "Sagol" (Meitei: ꯁꯒꯣꯜ) means horse, and "Kangjei" (Meitei: ꯀꯥꯡꯖꯩ) means a mallet or a long-handled wooden headed hammer, used to strike a ball.
In accordance to the Kangjeirol (Meitei: ꯀꯥꯡꯖꯩꯔꯣꯜ), an ancient Meitei language text, the Sagol Kangjei (Meitei: ꯁꯒꯣꯜ ꯀꯥꯡꯖꯩ) was played during the reign of King Ningthou Kangba (Meitei: ꯅꯤꯡꯊꯧ ꯀꯥꯡꯕ) (1405-1397/1359 BCE) of Kangleipak (Meitei for 'Manipur'). King Kangba organized the sport tournament to be played by his official subjects on horseback.
During the reign of King Khagemba (Meitei: ꯈꯥꯒꯦꯝꯕ) (1597-1652 CE) in Kangleipak (Meitei: ꯀꯪꯂꯩꯄꯥꯛ), Sagol Kangjei was popularized, along with the upgradation as well as revision of a set of rules and regulations for the game.
Sagol Kangjei (Meitei: ꯁꯒꯣꯜ ꯀꯥꯡꯖꯩ) was introduced to the British officers at Cachar (Meitei: ꯀꯁꯥꯔ) in Assam by Sir Chandrakirti Singh (1834-44 CE), the then ruler of Manipur Kingdom.
In ancient Meitei mythology and folklore, the sport of Sagol Kangjei was played by ancient Meitei gods led by Marjing (Meitei: ꯃꯥꯔꯖꯤꯡ) and Thangjing (Meitei: ꯊꯥꯡꯖꯤꯡ).
Every player rides on a Manipuri pony (alias Meitei horse), having an average height of 4 to 5 feet.
The Kangjei (Meitei for 'hockey stick') or Kang-hu (Meitei for 'mallet/hockey stick') is made of seasoned cane. It has a narrow angled wooden head, which is fixed at its striking end.
The Kangdrum (Meitei for 'polo ball') is made of bamboo roots. It is generally 14 inches in circumference.
Sagol Kangjei (Meitei: ꯁꯒꯣꯜ ꯀꯥꯡꯖꯩ) is traditionally played between two teams, which are referred to as the northern team and the southern team. Both of the teams have seven players each.
Each player has to occupy a certain position in the polo field, which are as follows: pun-ngakchun(g) (Meitei for 'full back'), pun-ngakchun(g) (Meitei for 'half back'), pulluk (Meitei for 'left wing'), langjei (Meitei for 'centre'), pulluk (Meitei for 'right wing'), punjen(g) (Meitei for 'inner') and pun-jenchun(g) (Meitei for 'inner').
A kokyet (Meitei for 'headgear'), held by a khadangchet (Meitei for 'chin strap') is used as a headdress.
The players wear a short-sleeved jacket having the same colour for its whole team.
The Guinness World Records stated:
“Polo can be traced to origins in Manipur state in 3,100 BC, when it was played as 'Sagol Kangjei'.”
Manipur Statehood Day Women's Polo Tournament (Meitei: ꯃꯅꯤꯄꯨꯔ ꯁ꯭ꯇꯦꯠꯍꯨꯗ ꯗꯦ ꯋꯨꯃꯦꯟ'ꯁ ꯄꯣꯂꯣ ꯇꯨꯔꯅꯥꯃꯦꯟ꯭ꯠ) is the first and the only international women's polo tournament ever organized in India.
Manipur International Polo (Meitei: ꯃꯅꯤꯄꯨꯔ ꯄꯣꯂꯣ ꯏꯟꯇꯔꯅꯦꯁ꯭ꯅꯦꯜ ꯇꯨꯔꯅꯥꯃꯦꯟ꯭ꯠ) is participated by multiple nations including but not limited to Argentina, Australia, Canada, Egypt, France, Germany, Haiti, India, Kenya, Mongolia, Morocco, Poland, South Africa, Thailand, United Kingdom, United States and Uruguay, competing with the team of players from Manipur. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Sagol Kangjei (Meitei for 'polo'), also known as Sakol Kangchei, Shakol Kangchei, Shagol Kangjei, is a traditional Meitei game, resembling hockey, played on a Sagol (Meitei for 'horse') with a long-handled Kangjei (Meitei for 'hockey stick'), or Kang-hu (Meitei for 'mallet/hockey stick') and a Kangdrum (Meitei for 'polo ball'), usually in a Kangjeibung (Meitei for 'Polo Ground'). It is the predecessorial as well as traditional form of modern polo in the intangible cultural heritage of Meitei civilization.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Sagol Kangjei (Meitei for 'horse hockey') is considered to be one of the three types of Kangjei (or hockey), with the other two types being Khong Kangjei (Meitei for 'field hockey') and Mukna Kangjei (Meitei for 'wrestling and hockey'), which are the traditional sports of Meitei people, being played since time immemorial.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "In accordance to Cheitharol Kumbaba, the Royal Chronicle of Manipur Kingdom, Sagol Kangjei was used as an instrument of diplomacy, politics as well as palace intrigues.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "In Meitei language (officially called Manipuri), \"Sagol\" (Meitei: ꯁꯒꯣꯜ) means horse, and \"Kangjei\" (Meitei: ꯀꯥꯡꯖꯩ) means a mallet or a long-handled wooden headed hammer, used to strike a ball.",
"title": "Etymology "
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "In accordance to the Kangjeirol (Meitei: ꯀꯥꯡꯖꯩꯔꯣꯜ), an ancient Meitei language text, the Sagol Kangjei (Meitei: ꯁꯒꯣꯜ ꯀꯥꯡꯖꯩ) was played during the reign of King Ningthou Kangba (Meitei: ꯅꯤꯡꯊꯧ ꯀꯥꯡꯕ) (1405-1397/1359 BCE) of Kangleipak (Meitei for 'Manipur'). King Kangba organized the sport tournament to be played by his official subjects on horseback.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "During the reign of King Khagemba (Meitei: ꯈꯥꯒꯦꯝꯕ) (1597-1652 CE) in Kangleipak (Meitei: ꯀꯪꯂꯩꯄꯥꯛ), Sagol Kangjei was popularized, along with the upgradation as well as revision of a set of rules and regulations for the game.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "Sagol Kangjei (Meitei: ꯁꯒꯣꯜ ꯀꯥꯡꯖꯩ) was introduced to the British officers at Cachar (Meitei: ꯀꯁꯥꯔ) in Assam by Sir Chandrakirti Singh (1834-44 CE), the then ruler of Manipur Kingdom.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "In ancient Meitei mythology and folklore, the sport of Sagol Kangjei was played by ancient Meitei gods led by Marjing (Meitei: ꯃꯥꯔꯖꯤꯡ) and Thangjing (Meitei: ꯊꯥꯡꯖꯤꯡ).",
"title": "Mythology and religion "
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "Every player rides on a Manipuri pony (alias Meitei horse), having an average height of 4 to 5 feet.",
"title": "Sagol "
},
{
"paragraph_id": 9,
"text": "The Kangjei (Meitei for 'hockey stick') or Kang-hu (Meitei for 'mallet/hockey stick') is made of seasoned cane. It has a narrow angled wooden head, which is fixed at its striking end.",
"title": "Kangjei and other equipments "
},
{
"paragraph_id": 10,
"text": "The Kangdrum (Meitei for 'polo ball') is made of bamboo roots. It is generally 14 inches in circumference.",
"title": "Kangjei and other equipments "
},
{
"paragraph_id": 11,
"text": "Sagol Kangjei (Meitei: ꯁꯒꯣꯜ ꯀꯥꯡꯖꯩ) is traditionally played between two teams, which are referred to as the northern team and the southern team. Both of the teams have seven players each.",
"title": "Players and teams "
},
{
"paragraph_id": 12,
"text": "Each player has to occupy a certain position in the polo field, which are as follows: pun-ngakchun(g) (Meitei for 'full back'), pun-ngakchun(g) (Meitei for 'half back'), pulluk (Meitei for 'left wing'), langjei (Meitei for 'centre'), pulluk (Meitei for 'right wing'), punjen(g) (Meitei for 'inner') and pun-jenchun(g) (Meitei for 'inner').",
"title": "Players and teams "
},
{
"paragraph_id": 13,
"text": "A kokyet (Meitei for 'headgear'), held by a khadangchet (Meitei for 'chin strap') is used as a headdress.",
"title": "Uniforms "
},
{
"paragraph_id": 14,
"text": "The players wear a short-sleeved jacket having the same colour for its whole team.",
"title": "Uniforms "
},
{
"paragraph_id": 15,
"text": "The Guinness World Records stated:",
"title": "International recognition"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 16,
"text": "“Polo can be traced to origins in Manipur state in 3,100 BC, when it was played as 'Sagol Kangjei'.”",
"title": "International recognition"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 17,
"text": "Manipur Statehood Day Women's Polo Tournament (Meitei: ꯃꯅꯤꯄꯨꯔ ꯁ꯭ꯇꯦꯠꯍꯨꯗ ꯗꯦ ꯋꯨꯃꯦꯟ'ꯁ ꯄꯣꯂꯣ ꯇꯨꯔꯅꯥꯃꯦꯟ꯭ꯠ) is the first and the only international women's polo tournament ever organized in India.",
"title": "International recognition"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 18,
"text": "Manipur International Polo (Meitei: ꯃꯅꯤꯄꯨꯔ ꯄꯣꯂꯣ ꯏꯟꯇꯔꯅꯦꯁ꯭ꯅꯦꯜ ꯇꯨꯔꯅꯥꯃꯦꯟ꯭ꯠ) is participated by multiple nations including but not limited to Argentina, Australia, Canada, Egypt, France, Germany, Haiti, India, Kenya, Mongolia, Morocco, Poland, South Africa, Thailand, United Kingdom, United States and Uruguay, competing with the team of players from Manipur.",
"title": "International recognition"
}
] | Sagol Kangjei, also known as Sakol Kangchei, Shakol Kangchei, Shagol Kangjei, is a traditional Meitei game, resembling hockey, played on a Sagol with a long-handled Kangjei, or Kang-hu and a Kangdrum, usually in a Kangjeibung. It is the predecessorial as well as traditional form of modern polo in the intangible cultural heritage of Meitei civilization. Sagol Kangjei is considered to be one of the three types of Kangjei, with the other two types being Khong Kangjei and Mukna Kangjei, which are the traditional sports of Meitei people, being played since time immemorial. In accordance to Cheitharol Kumbaba, the Royal Chronicle of Manipur Kingdom, Sagol Kangjei was used as an instrument of diplomacy, politics as well as palace intrigues. | 2023-12-10T14:16:22Z | 2023-12-30T17:15:03Z | [
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75,530,483 | 2024 in Moldova | Events from the year 2024 in Moldova. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Events from the year 2024 in Moldova.",
"title": ""
}
] | Events from the year 2024 in Moldova. | 2023-12-10T14:16:34Z | 2023-12-10T14:48:01Z | [
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75,530,497 | A. A. Crawford | A. A. Crawford (1833–1897) was a state legislator in North Carolina. He served in the North Carolina House of Representatives from Granville County from 1868–1870. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "A. A. Crawford (1833–1897) was a state legislator in North Carolina. He served in the North Carolina House of Representatives from Granville County from 1868–1870.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] | A. A. Crawford (1833–1897) was a state legislator in North Carolina. He served in the North Carolina House of Representatives from Granville County from 1868–1870. | 2023-12-10T14:18:25Z | 2023-12-26T16:45:40Z | [
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75,530,506 | Abbie Donnelly | Abbie Donnelly (born 2 September 1996) is a British track and field athlete and cross country runner. She was a bronze medalist in the individual and gold medalist in the team event at the 2023 European Cross Country Championships.
From Lincolnshire, Donnelly had an early start to athletics as her sister Laura were taken along as children to attend Lincoln Wellington Athletics Club by her father, who was a keen middle-distance runner. She became the English schools cross country champion in 2015.
In 2018, Donnelly was part of the Great Britain U23 team that won the bronze medal at the 2018 European Cross Country Championships, held in Tilburg, Netherlands. She then won gold as part of the British women's senior team at the 2019 European Cross Country Championships in Lisbon.
Donnelly was the highest European finisher at the 2023 World Athletics Cross Country Championships in Bathurst, New South Wales, in February 2023, as she finished 24th overall.
Donnelly finished third in the Big Half in London in September 2023, a result that qualified her for the World Road Running Championships in Riga later that year. In Riga, she finished 25th overall in the half marathon, and the British team won a bronze medal in the event.
In December 2023, Donnelly was a bronze medalist in the individual and gold medalist in the team event, at the 2023 European Cross Country Championships.
Donnelly graduated in History from the University of Loughborough in 2019 and began a PHD at the University. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Abbie Donnelly (born 2 September 1996) is a British track and field athlete and cross country runner. She was a bronze medalist in the individual and gold medalist in the team event at the 2023 European Cross Country Championships.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "From Lincolnshire, Donnelly had an early start to athletics as her sister Laura were taken along as children to attend Lincoln Wellington Athletics Club by her father, who was a keen middle-distance runner. She became the English schools cross country champion in 2015.",
"title": "Early life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "In 2018, Donnelly was part of the Great Britain U23 team that won the bronze medal at the 2018 European Cross Country Championships, held in Tilburg, Netherlands. She then won gold as part of the British women's senior team at the 2019 European Cross Country Championships in Lisbon.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Donnelly was the highest European finisher at the 2023 World Athletics Cross Country Championships in Bathurst, New South Wales, in February 2023, as she finished 24th overall.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Donnelly finished third in the Big Half in London in September 2023, a result that qualified her for the World Road Running Championships in Riga later that year. In Riga, she finished 25th overall in the half marathon, and the British team won a bronze medal in the event.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "In December 2023, Donnelly was a bronze medalist in the individual and gold medalist in the team event, at the 2023 European Cross Country Championships.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "Donnelly graduated in History from the University of Loughborough in 2019 and began a PHD at the University.",
"title": "Personal life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] | Abbie Donnelly is a British track and field athlete and cross country runner. She was a bronze medalist in the individual and gold medalist in the team event at the 2023 European Cross Country Championships. | 2023-12-10T14:20:51Z | 2023-12-26T18:51:18Z | [
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75,530,524 | 1986 Worthing Borough Council election | The 1986 Worthing Borough Council election took place on 8 May 1986 to elect members of Worthing Borough Council in West Sussex, England. This was on the same day as other local elections. | [
{
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"text": "The 1986 Worthing Borough Council election took place on 8 May 1986 to elect members of Worthing Borough Council in West Sussex, England. This was on the same day as other local elections.",
"title": ""
}
] | The 1986 Worthing Borough Council election took place on 8 May 1986 to elect members of Worthing Borough Council in West Sussex, England. This was on the same day as other local elections. | 2023-12-10T14:25:51Z | 2023-12-10T15:50:18Z | [
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75,530,534 | Yehuda Karni | Yehuda Karni (Wolowski) (1884 - 1949) was a Hebrew poet, journalist, editor, and translator. He was a recipient of the Bialik Prize in 1944. His poems about Jerusalem made a unique contribution to modern Hebrew poetry.
He was born in Pinsk, in Belarus (then within the Jewish pale of settlement within the Russian Empire), in 1884, the son of Leah and Ezriel Zelig Wolowski, a diligent merchant, owner of forests and sawmills, and a public figure. He received a Jewish and general education. Karni began publishing poems at a very young age, initially in Hebrew and later in Yiddish and Russian as well. He was an active and dedicated member of the Zionist movement, elected as a delegate to the Zionist Congresses on behalf of the "Poale Zion" movement.
Karni combined journalistic writing, both in Hebrew and Yiddish, with his role as the secretary of the Zionist Center in Vilnius, Russia, during the years 1907–1908. His journalistic writing included poems, articles, reviews, and essays. He became known as a Hebrew poet laureate after Bialik published Karni's poem "Yesh Na'ara Tamara" in the "Hashiloah" magazine in 1908. Karni often contributed to the Zionist magazine "HaOlam" and briefly worked for the editorial team of a publication in Odessa, where he stayed for a short time and became acquainted with the group of Hebrew writers centered around Bialik and his associates.
In 1921, he immigrated to the Land of Israel. During his early years in the country, he worked in Haifa and later moved to Tel Aviv. Initially in Israel, he worked as a clerk. Starting in 1924, he joined the newspaper "Haaretz," first as a reporter and later as a regular contributor and editorial team member. Among other contributions, he is considered a contributor to the renewal of the term "Kolnoa" (Cinema in Hebrew) in 1930 (for a brief period, talking films were referred to as Shma-Noa meaning, sound-motion pictures"). In Tel Aviv, he was part of the local Bohemian scene of artists and poets including Avraham Shlonsky, Isaac Frenkel, Natan Alterman and others who frequented cafes.
During his work at "Haaretz," Karni published numerous lists, comments, short political poems, articles, and essays. His enthusiastic and bewildered Zionist poetry, which he brought with him from Eastern Europe, underwent a profound change in the Land of Israel. He wrote poetry that grasped the stony landscape of the land. His Jerusalem poems held a prominent place in his work. He attempted to capture the essence of Jerusalem: the earthly and stony aspect on one side, and the messianic Jewish aspect on the other. His writing style was traditional and somewhat archaic, and he did not connect with the new wave in Hebrew poetry brought by Shlonsky, Alterman, Goldberg, Retzsh, and others. Karni turned to expressionist writing when describing the landscapes of the land of Israel.
After his death, streets were named after him in Ramot Aviv Bet neighborhood Tel Aviv and Ramot neighborhood in Jerusalem.
He was buried in Trumpeldor Cemetery, in Tel Aviv.
"Abraham Kriv, a Poet Emerges, Thirty Years to the Song of Yehuda Karni," in "Ma'azanim" Vol. 2 (year 1979), pp. 224–227. | [
{
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"text": "Yehuda Karni (Wolowski) (1884 - 1949) was a Hebrew poet, journalist, editor, and translator. He was a recipient of the Bialik Prize in 1944. His poems about Jerusalem made a unique contribution to modern Hebrew poetry.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "He was born in Pinsk, in Belarus (then within the Jewish pale of settlement within the Russian Empire), in 1884, the son of Leah and Ezriel Zelig Wolowski, a diligent merchant, owner of forests and sawmills, and a public figure. He received a Jewish and general education. Karni began publishing poems at a very young age, initially in Hebrew and later in Yiddish and Russian as well. He was an active and dedicated member of the Zionist movement, elected as a delegate to the Zionist Congresses on behalf of the \"Poale Zion\" movement.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Karni combined journalistic writing, both in Hebrew and Yiddish, with his role as the secretary of the Zionist Center in Vilnius, Russia, during the years 1907–1908. His journalistic writing included poems, articles, reviews, and essays. He became known as a Hebrew poet laureate after Bialik published Karni's poem \"Yesh Na'ara Tamara\" in the \"Hashiloah\" magazine in 1908. Karni often contributed to the Zionist magazine \"HaOlam\" and briefly worked for the editorial team of a publication in Odessa, where he stayed for a short time and became acquainted with the group of Hebrew writers centered around Bialik and his associates.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "In 1921, he immigrated to the Land of Israel. During his early years in the country, he worked in Haifa and later moved to Tel Aviv. Initially in Israel, he worked as a clerk. Starting in 1924, he joined the newspaper \"Haaretz,\" first as a reporter and later as a regular contributor and editorial team member. Among other contributions, he is considered a contributor to the renewal of the term \"Kolnoa\" (Cinema in Hebrew) in 1930 (for a brief period, talking films were referred to as Shma-Noa meaning, sound-motion pictures\"). In Tel Aviv, he was part of the local Bohemian scene of artists and poets including Avraham Shlonsky, Isaac Frenkel, Natan Alterman and others who frequented cafes.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "During his work at \"Haaretz,\" Karni published numerous lists, comments, short political poems, articles, and essays. His enthusiastic and bewildered Zionist poetry, which he brought with him from Eastern Europe, underwent a profound change in the Land of Israel. He wrote poetry that grasped the stony landscape of the land. His Jerusalem poems held a prominent place in his work. He attempted to capture the essence of Jerusalem: the earthly and stony aspect on one side, and the messianic Jewish aspect on the other. His writing style was traditional and somewhat archaic, and he did not connect with the new wave in Hebrew poetry brought by Shlonsky, Alterman, Goldberg, Retzsh, and others. Karni turned to expressionist writing when describing the landscapes of the land of Israel.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "After his death, streets were named after him in Ramot Aviv Bet neighborhood Tel Aviv and Ramot neighborhood in Jerusalem.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "He was buried in Trumpeldor Cemetery, in Tel Aviv.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "\"Abraham Kriv, a Poet Emerges, Thirty Years to the Song of Yehuda Karni,\" in \"Ma'azanim\" Vol. 2 (year 1979), pp. 224–227.",
"title": "Further reading"
}
] | Yehuda Karni (Wolowski) was a Hebrew poet, journalist, editor, and translator. He was a recipient of the Bialik Prize in 1944. His poems about Jerusalem made a unique contribution to modern Hebrew poetry. | 2023-12-10T14:28:06Z | 2023-12-12T10:42:57Z | [
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75,530,535 | Mandokoro Shigesaburō | Mandokoro Shigesaburō (政所 重三郎, 1884-????) was a Japanese educator active in Japanese Taiwan. He was a bureaucrat in the Taiwan Governor-General's Office as well as head of the cities of Kagi, Shinchiku, and finally Karenkō Prefecture.
Mandokoro Shigesaburō was born in February, 1884 in Shintotsukawa village, Kabato District, Hokkaido to a tondenhei family.
Mandokoro graduated from Tokyo Higher Normal School in 1909 and received his teacher's certificate. He subsequently served on the teaching staff of the Aomori Prefectural Normal School, the Tochigi Prefectural Girls' High School, and the Ōkura Higher School of Commerce.
In October 1919, Mandokoro passed the advanced administration exam (高等文官試験).
After taking up employment in Japanese Taiwan, Mandokoro served on the Taichū Prefecture board of education among other posts. He retired in 1936. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Mandokoro Shigesaburō (政所 重三郎, 1884-????) was a Japanese educator active in Japanese Taiwan. He was a bureaucrat in the Taiwan Governor-General's Office as well as head of the cities of Kagi, Shinchiku, and finally Karenkō Prefecture.",
"title": ""
},
{
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"text": "Mandokoro Shigesaburō was born in February, 1884 in Shintotsukawa village, Kabato District, Hokkaido to a tondenhei family.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Mandokoro graduated from Tokyo Higher Normal School in 1909 and received his teacher's certificate. He subsequently served on the teaching staff of the Aomori Prefectural Normal School, the Tochigi Prefectural Girls' High School, and the Ōkura Higher School of Commerce.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "In October 1919, Mandokoro passed the advanced administration exam (高等文官試験).",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "After taking up employment in Japanese Taiwan, Mandokoro served on the Taichū Prefecture board of education among other posts. He retired in 1936.",
"title": "Biography"
}
] | Mandokoro Shigesaburō was a Japanese educator active in Japanese Taiwan. He was a bureaucrat in the Taiwan Governor-General's Office as well as head of the cities of Kagi, Shinchiku, and finally Karenkō Prefecture. | 2023-12-10T14:28:08Z | 2023-12-14T12:53:10Z | [
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75,530,541 | Zonitoides pellati | Zonitoides pellati is an extinct species of small, air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Gastrodontidae.
This species was originally found in Eocene strata about Épernay, France. | [
{
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"text": "Zonitoides pellati is an extinct species of small, air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Gastrodontidae.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "This species was originally found in Eocene strata about Épernay, France.",
"title": "Distribution"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
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] | Zonitoides pellati is an extinct species of small, air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Gastrodontidae. | 2023-12-10T14:29:42Z | 2023-12-11T09:36:33Z | [
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75,530,551 | 1987 Worthing Borough Council election | The 1987 Worthing Borough Council election took place on 7 May 1987 to elect members of Worthing Borough Council in West Sussex, England. This was on the same day as other local elections. | [
{
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"text": "The 1987 Worthing Borough Council election took place on 7 May 1987 to elect members of Worthing Borough Council in West Sussex, England. This was on the same day as other local elections.",
"title": ""
}
] | The 1987 Worthing Borough Council election took place on 7 May 1987 to elect members of Worthing Borough Council in West Sussex, England. This was on the same day as other local elections. | 2023-12-10T14:32:38Z | 2023-12-10T15:49:18Z | [
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] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1987_Worthing_Borough_Council_election |
75,530,554 | William Crawford (Louisiana politician) | William Crawford was a state legislator in Louisiana. He served in the Louisiana House of Representatives from Rapides Parish from 1870-1875. The Wheeler Compromise unseated him in April 1875. He owned land. He was a Republican. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "William Crawford was a state legislator in Louisiana. He served in the Louisiana House of Representatives from Rapides Parish from 1870-1875. The Wheeler Compromise unseated him in April 1875. He owned land. He was a Republican.",
"title": ""
}
] | William Crawford was a state legislator in Louisiana. He served in the Louisiana House of Representatives from Rapides Parish from 1870-1875. The Wheeler Compromise unseated him in April 1875. He owned land. He was a Republican. | 2023-12-10T14:32:54Z | 2023-12-11T00:18:37Z | [
"Template:Reflist",
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] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Crawford_(Louisiana_politician) |
75,530,555 | David Hellard | David Hellard is an English ultramarathon runner broadcaster and entrepreneur. He covers competition and athlete interviews on Golden Trail TV and web series which include Chasing dreams and has been the host of Bad Boy Running podcast since 2015.
He co-founded zipcube in 2013, an online marketplace for meeting rooms and events, winning 2014 Start Up of the Year at Thinking Digital and The Mass Challenge Gold Award in 2015. He left to launch Caffeine Bullet, an energy chew for endurance sports which was featured on Dragons’ Den in 2022, receiving investment from Steven Bartlett and Peter Jones.
In 2014 he formed the UK Obstacle Race team Inov-8 OCR (later British Military Fitness Race Team) with Jon Albon, Ross Macdonald and Clare Miller.
In 2015, he received a Point of Light Award from British Prime Minister David Cameron for raising over £100, 000 for Street Children. He represented England in the Beer Mile World Championships, Britain in the Snowshoeing World Championships. His personal worst record at 4:11 during marathon of Afghanistan.
In 2016, he finished as the first Brit in the Marathon Des Sables to raise money for street children, one of the hardest ultra marathons in the world. He set the fastest time known for London UnderRound marathon with a time of 3hrs, 20 mins and 18 sec in 2016 and leading the London Marathon for 400 meters. He also won the inaugural Somaliland Marathon. | [
{
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},
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"text": "In 2014 he formed the UK Obstacle Race team Inov-8 OCR (later British Military Fitness Race Team) with Jon Albon, Ross Macdonald and Clare Miller.",
"title": "Career"
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{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "In 2015, he received a Point of Light Award from British Prime Minister David Cameron for raising over £100, 000 for Street Children. He represented England in the Beer Mile World Championships, Britain in the Snowshoeing World Championships. His personal worst record at 4:11 during marathon of Afghanistan.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "In 2016, he finished as the first Brit in the Marathon Des Sables to raise money for street children, one of the hardest ultra marathons in the world. He set the fastest time known for London UnderRound marathon with a time of 3hrs, 20 mins and 18 sec in 2016 and leading the London Marathon for 400 meters. He also won the inaugural Somaliland Marathon.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
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"title": "External links"
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] | David Hellard is an English ultramarathon runner broadcaster and entrepreneur. He covers competition and athlete interviews on Golden Trail TV and web series which include Chasing dreams and has been the host of Bad Boy Running podcast since 2015. | 2021-07-31T14:54:39Z | 2023-12-14T19:03:03Z | [
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75,530,563 | Ereck Gono | Ereck Gono is a Zimbabwean politician who was elected to the National Assembly of Zimbabwe in the 2023 general election for the constituency of Lobengula Magwegwe as a member of the Citizens Coalition for Change. On 3 October 2023, he and fourteen other CCC MPs were recalled as MPs following a letter by Sengezo Tshabangu, who claimed to be the interim Secretary-General of the party. Gono and other MPs disputed the cessation of their CCC party membership and registered to contest the by-elections in their constituencies on 9 December 2023. On 7 December 2023, two days before the by-elections, Gono and the other recalled MPs were barred from contesting the by-elections. | [
{
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"text": "Ereck Gono is a Zimbabwean politician who was elected to the National Assembly of Zimbabwe in the 2023 general election for the constituency of Lobengula Magwegwe as a member of the Citizens Coalition for Change. On 3 October 2023, he and fourteen other CCC MPs were recalled as MPs following a letter by Sengezo Tshabangu, who claimed to be the interim Secretary-General of the party. Gono and other MPs disputed the cessation of their CCC party membership and registered to contest the by-elections in their constituencies on 9 December 2023. On 7 December 2023, two days before the by-elections, Gono and the other recalled MPs were barred from contesting the by-elections.",
"title": ""
}
] | Ereck Gono is a Zimbabwean politician who was elected to the National Assembly of Zimbabwe in the 2023 general election for the constituency of Lobengula Magwegwe as a member of the Citizens Coalition for Change. On 3 October 2023, he and fourteen other CCC MPs were recalled as MPs following a letter by Sengezo Tshabangu, who claimed to be the interim Secretary-General of the party. Gono and other MPs disputed the cessation of their CCC party membership and registered to contest the by-elections in their constituencies on 9 December 2023. On 7 December 2023, two days before the by-elections, Gono and the other recalled MPs were barred from contesting the by-elections. | 2023-12-10T14:34:39Z | 2023-12-10T14:35:11Z | [
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75,530,575 | 1988 Worthing Borough Council election | The 1988 Worthing Borough Council election took place on 5 May 1988 to elect members of Worthing Borough Council in West Sussex, England. This was on the same day as other local elections. | [
{
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"text": "The 1988 Worthing Borough Council election took place on 5 May 1988 to elect members of Worthing Borough Council in West Sussex, England. This was on the same day as other local elections.",
"title": ""
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] | The 1988 Worthing Borough Council election took place on 5 May 1988 to elect members of Worthing Borough Council in West Sussex, England. This was on the same day as other local elections. | 2023-12-10T14:38:23Z | 2023-12-31T10:32:00Z | [
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75,530,576 | Arab Thought Forum | This article is about the Jerusalem-based Arab Thought Forum ("Al-Multaqa"), not to be confused with the Amman-based Arab Thought Forum (Arabic: منتدى الفكر العربي).
The Arab Thought Forum (Arabic: ملتقى الفكر العربي; also known as Al-Multaqa) was a Palestinian civil society organization active in the fields of politics, development, and the arts.
Arab Thought Forum was founded in Jerusalem in 1977 and was closely affiliated with the National Guidance Committee; it was also generally considered supportive of the PLO.
The Forum aimed to "resist relations of dependence imposed by Israel on the Palestinian economy." It also sponsored one of the first literature festivals in the West Bank. In later years, its areas of focus have been described as including "the future of Jerusalem, democratization and nation building, and development."
Leading figures in the original formation of the Forum included Mahdi Abd al Hadi and Ibrahim Dakkak. Haydar Abd Al Shafi was another prominent member. | [
{
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"title": ""
},
{
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"text": "The Arab Thought Forum (Arabic: ملتقى الفكر العربي; also known as Al-Multaqa) was a Palestinian civil society organization active in the fields of politics, development, and the arts.",
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},
{
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"text": "Arab Thought Forum was founded in Jerusalem in 1977 and was closely affiliated with the National Guidance Committee; it was also generally considered supportive of the PLO.",
"title": "Background"
},
{
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"text": "The Forum aimed to \"resist relations of dependence imposed by Israel on the Palestinian economy.\" It also sponsored one of the first literature festivals in the West Bank. In later years, its areas of focus have been described as including \"the future of Jerusalem, democratization and nation building, and development.\"",
"title": "Background"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Leading figures in the original formation of the Forum included Mahdi Abd al Hadi and Ibrahim Dakkak. Haydar Abd Al Shafi was another prominent member.",
"title": "Background"
}
] | This article is about the Jerusalem-based Arab Thought Forum ("Al-Multaqa"), not to be confused with the Amman-based Arab Thought Forum. The Arab Thought Forum was a Palestinian civil society organization active in the fields of politics, development, and the arts. | 2023-12-10T14:38:35Z | 2023-12-14T20:01:46Z | [
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75,530,577 | Zonitoides apneus | Zonitoides apneus is an extinct species of small, air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Gastrodontidae.
This species was originally found in France. | [
{
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"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "This species was originally found in France.",
"title": "Distribution"
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] | Zonitoides apneus is an extinct species of small, air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Gastrodontidae. | 2023-12-10T14:38:52Z | 2023-12-11T09:36:27Z | [
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75,530,585 | Dinner Music (Rotary Connection album) | Dinner Music is a 1870 studio album by American psychedelic soul group Rotary Connection, released by Cadet Records. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Dinner Music is a 1870 studio album by American psychedelic soul group Rotary Connection, released by Cadet Records.",
"title": ""
}
] | Dinner Music is a 1870 studio album by American psychedelic soul group Rotary Connection, released by Cadet Records. | 2023-12-10T14:39:56Z | 2023-12-11T05:50:55Z | [
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75,530,641 | 1990 Worthing Borough Council election | The 1990 Worthing Borough Council election took place on 3 May 1990 to elect members of Worthing Borough Council in West Sussex, England. This was on the same day as other local elections. | [
{
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"text": "The 1990 Worthing Borough Council election took place on 3 May 1990 to elect members of Worthing Borough Council in West Sussex, England. This was on the same day as other local elections.",
"title": ""
}
] | The 1990 Worthing Borough Council election took place on 3 May 1990 to elect members of Worthing Borough Council in West Sussex, England. This was on the same day as other local elections. | 2023-12-10T14:45:09Z | 2023-12-10T15:47:00Z | [
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] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1990_Worthing_Borough_Council_election |
75,530,665 | Zonitoides cesseyensis | Zonitoides cesseyensis is an extinct species of small, air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Gastrodontidae.
This species was originally found in France. | [
{
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"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "This species was originally found in France.",
"title": "Distribution"
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] | Zonitoides cesseyensis is an extinct species of small, air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Gastrodontidae. | 2023-12-10T14:48:43Z | 2023-12-11T09:36:29Z | [
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75,530,677 | 1991 Worthing Borough Council election | The 1991 Worthing Borough Council election took place on 2 May 1991 to elect members of Worthing Borough Council in West Sussex, England. This was on the same day as other local elections. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The 1991 Worthing Borough Council election took place on 2 May 1991 to elect members of Worthing Borough Council in West Sussex, England. This was on the same day as other local elections.",
"title": ""
}
] | The 1991 Worthing Borough Council election took place on 2 May 1991 to elect members of Worthing Borough Council in West Sussex, England. This was on the same day as other local elections. | 2023-12-10T14:51:18Z | 2023-12-10T15:46:37Z | [
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75,530,678 | Igor Baryshnikov | Igor Lazarevich Baryshnikov (Russian: Игорь Лазаревич Барышников; born January 20, 1959) is a Russian engineer, a social activist from the Kaliningrad Oblast, who in 2023 was sentenced to 7.5 years in prison under dissemination of knowingly false information about the actions of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation, despite a serious illness.
June 22, 2023 Judge Olga Balandina handed down the verdict.
On August 7, 2023, Igor Baryshnikov's mother, Yevgenia Veniaminovna (1926 — 2023), died in Sovetsk, whose condition worsened sharply after her son was arrested. She was a victim of the Holocaust, as a child she was able to escape from the Nazis in Polotsk, and all her relatives were killed. Igor was not allowed to attend the funeral.
Memorial recognized Igor Baryshnikov as a political prisoner. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Igor Lazarevich Baryshnikov (Russian: Игорь Лазаревич Барышников; born January 20, 1959) is a Russian engineer, a social activist from the Kaliningrad Oblast, who in 2023 was sentenced to 7.5 years in prison under dissemination of knowingly false information about the actions of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation, despite a serious illness.",
"title": ""
},
{
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"text": "June 22, 2023 Judge Olga Balandina handed down the verdict.",
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},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "On August 7, 2023, Igor Baryshnikov's mother, Yevgenia Veniaminovna (1926 — 2023), died in Sovetsk, whose condition worsened sharply after her son was arrested. She was a victim of the Holocaust, as a child she was able to escape from the Nazis in Polotsk, and all her relatives were killed. Igor was not allowed to attend the funeral.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Memorial recognized Igor Baryshnikov as a political prisoner.",
"title": ""
}
] | Igor Lazarevich Baryshnikov is a Russian engineer, a social activist from the Kaliningrad Oblast, who in 2023 was sentenced to 7.5 years in prison under dissemination of knowingly false information about the actions of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation, despite a serious illness. June 22, 2023 Judge Olga Balandina handed down the verdict. On August 7, 2023, Igor Baryshnikov's mother, Yevgenia Veniaminovna, died in Sovetsk, whose condition worsened sharply after her son was arrested. She was a victim of the Holocaust, as a child she was able to escape from the Nazis in Polotsk, and all her relatives were killed. Igor was not allowed to attend the funeral. Memorial recognized Igor Baryshnikov as a political prisoner. | 2023-12-10T14:51:35Z | 2024-01-01T00:09:36Z | [
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75,530,686 | Clapton Moor | Clapton Moor is a 40-hectare (99-acre) Avon Wildlife Trust nature reserve and part of the Gordano Valley, Clapton Moor, Middle Bridge and rhynes Site of Nature Conservation Interest in Somerset, England.
Clapton Moor is located in the Gordano Valley, North Somerset. Precisely, north of Clevedon lane, in between the two villages of Weston-in-Gordano and Clapton-in-Gordano. The moor lies within the borders of the Clapton-in-Gordano civil parish.
Access to the reserve is restricted for non-permit holders, but a public footpath passes through the reserve from Clapton Drove to Clevedon lane. There is a path which leads to a bird hide in the south of the reserve, and a bridge across a large rhyne near the eastern boundary.
Clapton Moor consists of flat, peaty, low-lying fields of wet meadows with hedgerows and ditches throughout. The south-east of the moor consists of fields of rough and wet grassland which is often grazed by cattle. The grassland of the moor is kept wet by several rhynes, some of which are deep and steep, some of the rhynes are filled with dense reed beds. There is tall grassland along the boundaries of the southern fields. A large rhyne runs along the northern boundary of the reserve.
The Gordano valley (including Clapton Moor) was likely to be formed by erosion of the extensive alluvial deposits which extend from the moor to Avonmouth. Clapton Moor was historically part of an estuary of the Severn.
Although Clapton Moor is located near ancient sites like Cadbury Camp, and Clapton-in-Gordano (in which a hoard of Roman coins dated 253-270 AD were discovered), the moor itself was of very low importance, being unmentioned in literature up until the 18th century.
In the 1700s, trapping of wildfowl took place at Clapton Moor, indicated by a duck decoy constructed in the northern part of the moor.
The land making up the nature reserve was purchased in the early 2000s by the Avon Wildlife Trust, with funding and support from various trusts, charities, and donations from the general public.
In 2003, in partnership with Bristol Zoo Gardens, the Avon Wildlife Trust launched a conservation project to re-introduce the nationally scarce greater water parsnip to Clapton Moor, its former stronghold, via planting manually pollinated seeds acquired from other native water parsnip populations across England.
The initial project which took place in 2003 was unsuccessful, failing to re-introduce the water parsnip to Clapton Moor, with the seeds taken from Southlake Moor failing to germinate.
In 2005, with cooperation from the Norfolk Greater Water Parsnips Biodiversity Action Plan team, the Bristol Zoo horticulture team managed to germinate seeds which were collected from Cantley Marsh.
In 2006, 60 greater water parsnip seeds were prepared for re-introduction to Clapton Moor.
"The reasons for the rapid population decline and failure to produce seed are not clear. It might be changes in weather, in rhyne management, or modern agricultural practices reducing the number of insect pollinators." -Tim McGrath, Head of Nature Reserves of the AWT
It is not clear whether the Greater Water Parsnip has been successfully reintroduced to Clapton Moor.
in Early 2006, the AWT strongly objected to plans to create a site for flying model aircraft on the territory of a former dumping ground off Weston Drove, 160 metres (520 ft) from the Clapton Moor Nature Reserve.
Avon Wildlife Trust claimed that the model aircraft with their resemblance to birds of prey would disturb nesting birds and frighten others away from the area.
The Avon Model Radio Aero Club, which had already been using the site for 3 years prior, replied saying that the club only flies model aircraft within the boundaries of their own site, and not over the nature reserve. The club also said that they be happy with one year of planning permission, and for a study to be carried out to see if there would be an impact on wading birds.
The North Somerset Council planning officers recommended a one year planning consent to be agreed under certain conditions, such as not allowing more than 4 aircraft to fly at any one time, and for restrictions on the weight and wingspan of the aircraft.
The Avon Model Radio Aero Club eventually received a construction permit to the site, with strict conditions concerning the nearby wildlife at the Clapton and Weston Moors.
In April of 2018, with funding from a Biffa Award grant, the AWT started a project to begin work on Clapton moor and Weston moor to restore wetland habitat for Lapwing, the population of which had decreased by ~90% in the area. The project would in-turn also create habitat for other wildlife.
“Where once we’d see and hear the unique call of lapwings above us in this landscape, these wading birds are now rarely seen. We’re now working hard on our Weston Moor and Clapton Moor nature reserves to create the habitat that will not only bring them back, but will also benefit other plants and wildlife which flourish in wetland areas.” - Eric Heath, AWT Head of Land Management.
the work included: cooperation with a local farmer to manage grass height, digging of shallow dips in the grassland to provide a place for lapwings to nest, hedge-laying, removal of trees to increase visibility of the landscape and to reduce perching sites for potential predators.
The several rhynes which run through the site serve as an important habitat for many species of bird, such as wintering wildfowl and breeding waders. northern lapwing, common redshank, and common snipe arrive to the reserve during spring and summer to breed.
Water level control structures in the rhynes are used to artificially change water levels to provide attractive conditions for various species, a high water table is maintained during summer, and the moor is intentionally flooded during winter to attract wildfowl and waders.
Rare plant species can be found growing in the rhynes, such as Hydrocharis morsus-ranae, Ranunculus lingua, and Potamogeton coloratus.
Buzzard, peregrine and hobby have been observed at the reserve, often seen chasing Swallows and Swift that also live off the moor. Barn Owls have been observed on the site as well, hunting small rodents in the tall grass near the southern boundary of the reserve.
Clapton Moor is also noted for its dragonflies, such as the Sympetrum sanguineum, and Brachytron pratense species.
The Clapton Circuit, created by the Avon Wildlife Trust, is a 3.4-mile (5.5 km) recreational circular walk offering panoramic views and passing various points of interest in and around Clapton-in-Gordano. Starting and ending at the Black Horse Pub in the village, the walk features Clapton Moor as it runs along the eastern boundary of the nature reserve and past a path leading to a bird hide overlooking the moor. The circuit is supported by YANSEC and the North Somerset Council. | [
{
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"title": ""
},
{
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"text": "Clapton Moor is located in the Gordano Valley, North Somerset. Precisely, north of Clevedon lane, in between the two villages of Weston-in-Gordano and Clapton-in-Gordano. The moor lies within the borders of the Clapton-in-Gordano civil parish.",
"title": ""
},
{
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"text": "Access to the reserve is restricted for non-permit holders, but a public footpath passes through the reserve from Clapton Drove to Clevedon lane. There is a path which leads to a bird hide in the south of the reserve, and a bridge across a large rhyne near the eastern boundary.",
"title": ""
},
{
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"text": "Clapton Moor consists of flat, peaty, low-lying fields of wet meadows with hedgerows and ditches throughout. The south-east of the moor consists of fields of rough and wet grassland which is often grazed by cattle. The grassland of the moor is kept wet by several rhynes, some of which are deep and steep, some of the rhynes are filled with dense reed beds. There is tall grassland along the boundaries of the southern fields. A large rhyne runs along the northern boundary of the reserve.",
"title": "Geography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "The Gordano valley (including Clapton Moor) was likely to be formed by erosion of the extensive alluvial deposits which extend from the moor to Avonmouth. Clapton Moor was historically part of an estuary of the Severn.",
"title": "Geography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "Although Clapton Moor is located near ancient sites like Cadbury Camp, and Clapton-in-Gordano (in which a hoard of Roman coins dated 253-270 AD were discovered), the moor itself was of very low importance, being unmentioned in literature up until the 18th century.",
"title": "History"
},
{
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"text": "In the 1700s, trapping of wildfowl took place at Clapton Moor, indicated by a duck decoy constructed in the northern part of the moor.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "The land making up the nature reserve was purchased in the early 2000s by the Avon Wildlife Trust, with funding and support from various trusts, charities, and donations from the general public.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "In 2003, in partnership with Bristol Zoo Gardens, the Avon Wildlife Trust launched a conservation project to re-introduce the nationally scarce greater water parsnip to Clapton Moor, its former stronghold, via planting manually pollinated seeds acquired from other native water parsnip populations across England.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 9,
"text": "The initial project which took place in 2003 was unsuccessful, failing to re-introduce the water parsnip to Clapton Moor, with the seeds taken from Southlake Moor failing to germinate.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 10,
"text": "In 2005, with cooperation from the Norfolk Greater Water Parsnips Biodiversity Action Plan team, the Bristol Zoo horticulture team managed to germinate seeds which were collected from Cantley Marsh.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 11,
"text": "In 2006, 60 greater water parsnip seeds were prepared for re-introduction to Clapton Moor.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 12,
"text": "\"The reasons for the rapid population decline and failure to produce seed are not clear. It might be changes in weather, in rhyne management, or modern agricultural practices reducing the number of insect pollinators.\" -Tim McGrath, Head of Nature Reserves of the AWT",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 13,
"text": "It is not clear whether the Greater Water Parsnip has been successfully reintroduced to Clapton Moor.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 14,
"text": "in Early 2006, the AWT strongly objected to plans to create a site for flying model aircraft on the territory of a former dumping ground off Weston Drove, 160 metres (520 ft) from the Clapton Moor Nature Reserve.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 15,
"text": "Avon Wildlife Trust claimed that the model aircraft with their resemblance to birds of prey would disturb nesting birds and frighten others away from the area.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 16,
"text": "The Avon Model Radio Aero Club, which had already been using the site for 3 years prior, replied saying that the club only flies model aircraft within the boundaries of their own site, and not over the nature reserve. The club also said that they be happy with one year of planning permission, and for a study to be carried out to see if there would be an impact on wading birds.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 17,
"text": "The North Somerset Council planning officers recommended a one year planning consent to be agreed under certain conditions, such as not allowing more than 4 aircraft to fly at any one time, and for restrictions on the weight and wingspan of the aircraft.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 18,
"text": "The Avon Model Radio Aero Club eventually received a construction permit to the site, with strict conditions concerning the nearby wildlife at the Clapton and Weston Moors.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 19,
"text": "In April of 2018, with funding from a Biffa Award grant, the AWT started a project to begin work on Clapton moor and Weston moor to restore wetland habitat for Lapwing, the population of which had decreased by ~90% in the area. The project would in-turn also create habitat for other wildlife.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 20,
"text": "“Where once we’d see and hear the unique call of lapwings above us in this landscape, these wading birds are now rarely seen. We’re now working hard on our Weston Moor and Clapton Moor nature reserves to create the habitat that will not only bring them back, but will also benefit other plants and wildlife which flourish in wetland areas.” - Eric Heath, AWT Head of Land Management.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 21,
"text": "the work included: cooperation with a local farmer to manage grass height, digging of shallow dips in the grassland to provide a place for lapwings to nest, hedge-laying, removal of trees to increase visibility of the landscape and to reduce perching sites for potential predators.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 22,
"text": "The several rhynes which run through the site serve as an important habitat for many species of bird, such as wintering wildfowl and breeding waders. northern lapwing, common redshank, and common snipe arrive to the reserve during spring and summer to breed.",
"title": "Flora and fauna"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 23,
"text": "Water level control structures in the rhynes are used to artificially change water levels to provide attractive conditions for various species, a high water table is maintained during summer, and the moor is intentionally flooded during winter to attract wildfowl and waders.",
"title": "Flora and fauna"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 24,
"text": "Rare plant species can be found growing in the rhynes, such as Hydrocharis morsus-ranae, Ranunculus lingua, and Potamogeton coloratus.",
"title": "Flora and fauna"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 25,
"text": "Buzzard, peregrine and hobby have been observed at the reserve, often seen chasing Swallows and Swift that also live off the moor. Barn Owls have been observed on the site as well, hunting small rodents in the tall grass near the southern boundary of the reserve.",
"title": "Flora and fauna"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 26,
"text": "Clapton Moor is also noted for its dragonflies, such as the Sympetrum sanguineum, and Brachytron pratense species.",
"title": "Flora and fauna"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 27,
"text": "The Clapton Circuit, created by the Avon Wildlife Trust, is a 3.4-mile (5.5 km) recreational circular walk offering panoramic views and passing various points of interest in and around Clapton-in-Gordano. Starting and ending at the Black Horse Pub in the village, the walk features Clapton Moor as it runs along the eastern boundary of the nature reserve and past a path leading to a bird hide overlooking the moor. The circuit is supported by YANSEC and the North Somerset Council.",
"title": "The Clapton Circuit"
}
] | Clapton Moor is a 40-hectare (99-acre) Avon Wildlife Trust nature reserve and part of the Gordano Valley, Clapton Moor, Middle Bridge and rhynes Site of Nature Conservation Interest in Somerset, England. Clapton Moor is located in the Gordano Valley, North Somerset. Precisely, north of Clevedon lane, in between the two villages of Weston-in-Gordano and Clapton-in-Gordano. The moor lies within the borders of the Clapton-in-Gordano civil parish. Access to the reserve is restricted for non-permit holders, but a public footpath passes through the reserve from Clapton Drove to Clevedon lane. There is a path which leads to a bird hide in the south of the reserve, and a bridge across a large rhyne near the eastern boundary. | 2023-12-10T14:52:34Z | 2023-12-22T21:07:06Z | [
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75,530,689 | Zonitoides choukoutienensis | Zonitoides choukoutienensis is an extinct species of small, air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Gastrodontidae.
This species was originally found in Heibei, China | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Zonitoides choukoutienensis is an extinct species of small, air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Gastrodontidae.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "This species was originally found in Heibei, China",
"title": "Distribution"
}
] | Zonitoides choukoutienensis is an extinct species of small, air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Gastrodontidae. | 2023-12-10T14:54:17Z | 2023-12-11T09:36:31Z | [
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75,530,698 | 1992 Worthing Borough Council election | The 1992 Worthing Borough Council election took place on 7 May 1992 to elect members of Worthing Borough Council in West Sussex, England. This was on the same day as other local elections. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The 1992 Worthing Borough Council election took place on 7 May 1992 to elect members of Worthing Borough Council in West Sussex, England. This was on the same day as other local elections.",
"title": ""
}
] | The 1992 Worthing Borough Council election took place on 7 May 1992 to elect members of Worthing Borough Council in West Sussex, England. This was on the same day as other local elections. | 2023-12-10T14:57:16Z | 2023-12-10T15:44:32Z | [
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] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1992_Worthing_Borough_Council_election |
75,530,699 | Brian Bennett (cricketer) | Brian Bennett (born 10 November 2003) is a Zimbabwean cricketer who made his first-class debut for Mountaineers in the 2017–18 Logan Cup on 11 December 2022.
Bennett got his first international call up during the Irish tour of Zimbabwe in 2023–24 and made his T20I debut on 7 December 2023. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Brian Bennett (born 10 November 2003) is a Zimbabwean cricketer who made his first-class debut for Mountaineers in the 2017–18 Logan Cup on 11 December 2022.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Bennett got his first international call up during the Irish tour of Zimbabwe in 2023–24 and made his T20I debut on 7 December 2023.",
"title": "Career"
}
] | Brian Bennett is a Zimbabwean cricketer who made his first-class debut for Mountaineers in the 2017–18 Logan Cup on 11 December 2022. | 2023-12-10T14:57:19Z | 2023-12-15T02:13:55Z | [
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] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brian_Bennett_(cricketer) |
75,530,719 | Zonitoides cretaceus | Zonitoides cretaceus is an extinct species of small, air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Gastrodontidae.
This species was originally found in Shantung, China | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Zonitoides cretaceus is an extinct species of small, air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Gastrodontidae.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "This species was originally found in Shantung, China",
"title": "Distribution"
}
] | Zonitoides cretaceus is an extinct species of small, air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Gastrodontidae. | 2023-12-10T15:02:19Z | 2023-12-10T15:05:13Z | [
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75,530,720 | William H. Crews | William H. Crews (1845–?) was a justice of the peace and state legislator in North Carolina. A Republican, he served in North Carolina House of Representatives from 1874–1877 and in 1893. His son William H. Crews Jr. served in the same seat in 1895 and 1897.
He was a Republican. He signed a letter of protest over the expulsion from the House of J. Williams Thorne.
He introduced a resolution respecting Frederick Douglass after his death. It passed and controversy followed as Democrats claimed George Washington and Robert E. Lee had been slighted. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "William H. Crews (1845–?) was a justice of the peace and state legislator in North Carolina. A Republican, he served in North Carolina House of Representatives from 1874–1877 and in 1893. His son William H. Crews Jr. served in the same seat in 1895 and 1897.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "He was a Republican. He signed a letter of protest over the expulsion from the House of J. Williams Thorne.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "He introduced a resolution respecting Frederick Douglass after his death. It passed and controversy followed as Democrats claimed George Washington and Robert E. Lee had been slighted.",
"title": ""
}
] | William H. Crews (1845–?) was a justice of the peace and state legislator in North Carolina. A Republican, he served in North Carolina House of Representatives from 1874–1877 and in 1893. His son William H. Crews Jr. served in the same seat in 1895 and 1897. He was a Republican. He signed a letter of protest over the expulsion from the House of J. Williams Thorne. He introduced a resolution respecting Frederick Douglass after his death. It passed and controversy followed as Democrats claimed George Washington and Robert E. Lee had been slighted. | 2023-12-10T15:02:22Z | 2023-12-26T18:20:23Z | [
"Template:Reflist",
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] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_H._Crews |
75,530,731 | Prince Dubeko Sibanda | Prince Dubeko Sibanda is a Zimbabwean politician who was elected in the 2018 general election to represent the constituency of Binga North in the National Assembly as a member of the MDC Alliance. He was recalled as an MP by MDC-T Secretary General Douglas Mwonzora in October 2020. Sibanda joined the Citizens Coalition for Change and won the seat back in a by-election on 26 March 2022.
Sibanda was re-elected the MP for Binga North in the 2023 general election. Shortly afterwards, Sibanda and a group of CCC MPs were recalled by Sengezo Tshabangu, who claimed to be the interim Secretary-General of the party. Sibanda registered to stand in the by-election in his constituency scheduled for 9 December 2023, but was barred from contesting by the Harare High Court. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Prince Dubeko Sibanda is a Zimbabwean politician who was elected in the 2018 general election to represent the constituency of Binga North in the National Assembly as a member of the MDC Alliance. He was recalled as an MP by MDC-T Secretary General Douglas Mwonzora in October 2020. Sibanda joined the Citizens Coalition for Change and won the seat back in a by-election on 26 March 2022.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Sibanda was re-elected the MP for Binga North in the 2023 general election. Shortly afterwards, Sibanda and a group of CCC MPs were recalled by Sengezo Tshabangu, who claimed to be the interim Secretary-General of the party. Sibanda registered to stand in the by-election in his constituency scheduled for 9 December 2023, but was barred from contesting by the Harare High Court.",
"title": ""
}
] | Prince Dubeko Sibanda is a Zimbabwean politician who was elected in the 2018 general election to represent the constituency of Binga North in the National Assembly as a member of the MDC Alliance. He was recalled as an MP by MDC-T Secretary General Douglas Mwonzora in October 2020. Sibanda joined the Citizens Coalition for Change and won the seat back in a by-election on 26 March 2022. Sibanda was re-elected the MP for Binga North in the 2023 general election. Shortly afterwards, Sibanda and a group of CCC MPs were recalled by Sengezo Tshabangu, who claimed to be the interim Secretary-General of the party. Sibanda registered to stand in the by-election in his constituency scheduled for 9 December 2023, but was barred from contesting by the Harare High Court. | 2023-12-10T15:04:06Z | 2023-12-12T21:34:21Z | [
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] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prince_Dubeko_Sibanda |
75,530,746 | 2021 Doha Diamond League | The 2021 Doha Diamond League was the 23rd edition of the annual outdoor track and field meeting in Doha, Qatar. Held on 28 May 2021 at the Khalifa International Stadium, it was the second leg of the 2019 IAAF Diamond League – the highest level international track and field circuit.
The meeting was highlighted by Faith Kipyegon's 1:58.26 victory in the 800 metres, done in an unusual negative split of 60.8 seconds for the first lap followed by 57.4 seconds for the final lap.h
Athletes competing in the Diamond League disciplines earned extra compensation and points which went towards qualifying for the Diamond League finals in Zürich. First place earned 8 points, with each step down in place earning one less point than the previous, until no points are awarded in 9th place or lower.
"Diamond League Meeting Suhaim bin Hamad Stadium, Doha (QAT) 28 MAY 2021". World Athletics. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The 2021 Doha Diamond League was the 23rd edition of the annual outdoor track and field meeting in Doha, Qatar. Held on 28 May 2021 at the Khalifa International Stadium, it was the second leg of the 2019 IAAF Diamond League – the highest level international track and field circuit.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The meeting was highlighted by Faith Kipyegon's 1:58.26 victory in the 800 metres, done in an unusual negative split of 60.8 seconds for the first lap followed by 57.4 seconds for the final lap.h",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Athletes competing in the Diamond League disciplines earned extra compensation and points which went towards qualifying for the Diamond League finals in Zürich. First place earned 8 points, with each step down in place earning one less point than the previous, until no points are awarded in 9th place or lower.",
"title": "Results"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "\"Diamond League Meeting Suhaim bin Hamad Stadium, Doha (QAT) 28 MAY 2021\". World Athletics.",
"title": "References"
}
] | The 2021 Doha Diamond League was the 23rd edition of the annual outdoor track and field meeting in Doha, Qatar. Held on 28 May 2021 at the Khalifa International Stadium, it was the second leg of the 2019 IAAF Diamond League – the highest level international track and field circuit. The meeting was highlighted by Faith Kipyegon's 1:58.26 victory in the 800 metres, done in an unusual negative split of 60.8 seconds for the first lap followed by 57.4 seconds for the final lap.h | 2023-12-10T15:07:18Z | 2024-01-01T00:41:47Z | [
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75,530,753 | Zonitoides schaireri | Zonitoides schaireri is an extinct species of small, air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Gastrodontidae.
Fossils of this species were originally found in Pannonian strata in the Vienna Basin, Austria. | [
{
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"text": "Zonitoides schaireri is an extinct species of small, air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Gastrodontidae.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Fossils of this species were originally found in Pannonian strata in the Vienna Basin, Austria.",
"title": "Distribution"
}
] | Zonitoides schaireri is an extinct species of small, air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Gastrodontidae. | 2023-12-10T15:08:59Z | 2023-12-11T06:35:06Z | [
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75,530,762 | Hey, Love | [] | 2023-12-10T15:12:02Z | 2023-12-10T22:42:06Z | [
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||
75,530,765 | List of The Eminence in Shadow characters | This is a list of characters of the light novel series The Eminence in Shadow.
The Numbers are those recruited by the Seven Shadows with superior skills to serve as the organization's combat force assets. Their enumeration starts from 8 and continues onward, with the latest mentioned number recently reaching 666 (in the English release, 712 in the Japanese release). There are two groups of numbers within the organization. The Named numbers and the regular numbers.
Numbers members whose abilities were recognized by the Seven Shadows and serve as their direct subordinates after being granted a Greek letter like them, based on certain numbers in recognition of their abilities on the ranks from Theta (Θ/θ) to Omega (Ω/ω).
Nameless infantry who has above average capabilities with fierce training to become the best warriors. However, they do have earn the right to challenge the "Named Numbers" to obtain their position by defeating a gatekeeper. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "This is a list of characters of the light novel series The Eminence in Shadow.",
"title": ""
},
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"title": "Main characters"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The Numbers are those recruited by the Seven Shadows with superior skills to serve as the organization's combat force assets. Their enumeration starts from 8 and continues onward, with the latest mentioned number recently reaching 666 (in the English release, 712 in the Japanese release). There are two groups of numbers within the organization. The Named numbers and the regular numbers.",
"title": "Shadow Garden"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Numbers members whose abilities were recognized by the Seven Shadows and serve as their direct subordinates after being granted a Greek letter like them, based on certain numbers in recognition of their abilities on the ranks from Theta (Θ/θ) to Omega (Ω/ω).",
"title": "Shadow Garden"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Nameless infantry who has above average capabilities with fierce training to become the best warriors. However, they do have earn the right to challenge the \"Named Numbers\" to obtain their position by defeating a gatekeeper.",
"title": "Shadow Garden"
}
] | This is a list of characters of the light novel series The Eminence in Shadow. | 2023-12-10T15:12:39Z | 2023-12-26T16:38:28Z | [
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75,530,766 | Arab Thought Forum (Amman) | The Arab Thought Forum in Amman, Jordan is a non-governmental organization functioning as a think tank, concerned with intellectual, cultural, and developmental issues in the Arab world. It has a particular focus on issues of Arab nationalism and Arab unity. | [
{
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"title": ""
}
] | The Arab Thought Forum in Amman, Jordan is a non-governmental organization functioning as a think tank, concerned with intellectual, cultural, and developmental issues in the Arab world. It has a particular focus on issues of Arab nationalism and Arab unity. | 2023-12-10T15:12:51Z | 2023-12-10T15:26:51Z | [
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75,530,778 | Michael Herman Løvenskiold | Michael Herman Løvenskiold (15 October 1751 - 19 April 1807) was a Danish landowner, district governor (amtmand]] and chamberlain. He owned Løvenborg and Vognserup at Holbæk.
Løvenskiold was born on 15 November 1751 at Aggersvold, the son ofbaron Severin Løvenskiold (1719-76) and Magdalene C. H. Numsen (1731-96). He earned a law degree from the University of Copenhagen in 1772. He later worked as an assistant (auskultant) in Rentekammeret.
In 1781, Køvensjiold was appointed district governor (amtmand) of Holbæk County. In 1793, he was also appointed district governor of Kalundborg, Sæbygårds and Dragsholm counties. He was also respinsible for overseeing the royal holdings in Odsherred.
In 1774, he was created chamberlain (kammerherre). In 1803, he was created a White Knight.
After the father's death in 1776, Løvenskiold's mother charged him with managing Vognserup. In 1776-80, he kept a detailed journal of the operations. In 1678, Løvenskiold's mother transgerred ownershop of Vogneserup and Løvenborg to him.
Both as a landholder and as district governor, he took a profound interest in the living conditions of the tenant farmers. He imrpoved their living conditions, implemented reforms and constructed schools for their children. He also adopted a critical approach to the ruthless way many of his peer's treated the peasants on their land. In 1795, he was made a member of the hoveri (mandatory work) commission ofr Zealand-Funen. From 2 October 1795 to 8 November 1797, he kept a detailed diary of the work in the commission. In one case, he mentions how it takes "the patience of an angel" not not beat up a fellow landholder for his brutal treatment of the peasants.
On 18 May 1774, he married Frederikke Juliane Marie Knuth (1755-1804). She was a daguhter of count Eggert Christopher Knuth til Knuthenborg (1722-76) and Maria von Numsen (1734-65).
He died on 19 April 1807 and is buried at Nørre Jernløse graveyard. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Michael Herman Løvenskiold (15 October 1751 - 19 April 1807) was a Danish landowner, district governor (amtmand]] and chamberlain. He owned Løvenborg and Vognserup at Holbæk.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Løvenskiold was born on 15 November 1751 at Aggersvold, the son ofbaron Severin Løvenskiold (1719-76) and Magdalene C. H. Numsen (1731-96). He earned a law degree from the University of Copenhagen in 1772. He later worked as an assistant (auskultant) in Rentekammeret.",
"title": "Early life and education"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "In 1781, Køvensjiold was appointed district governor (amtmand) of Holbæk County. In 1793, he was also appointed district governor of Kalundborg, Sæbygårds and Dragsholm counties. He was also respinsible for overseeing the royal holdings in Odsherred.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "In 1774, he was created chamberlain (kammerherre). In 1803, he was created a White Knight.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "After the father's death in 1776, Løvenskiold's mother charged him with managing Vognserup. In 1776-80, he kept a detailed journal of the operations. In 1678, Løvenskiold's mother transgerred ownershop of Vogneserup and Løvenborg to him.",
"title": "Landowner"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "Both as a landholder and as district governor, he took a profound interest in the living conditions of the tenant farmers. He imrpoved their living conditions, implemented reforms and constructed schools for their children. He also adopted a critical approach to the ruthless way many of his peer's treated the peasants on their land. In 1795, he was made a member of the hoveri (mandatory work) commission ofr Zealand-Funen. From 2 October 1795 to 8 November 1797, he kept a detailed diary of the work in the commission. In one case, he mentions how it takes \"the patience of an angel\" not not beat up a fellow landholder for his brutal treatment of the peasants.",
"title": "Landowner"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "On 18 May 1774, he married Frederikke Juliane Marie Knuth (1755-1804). She was a daguhter of count Eggert Christopher Knuth til Knuthenborg (1722-76) and Maria von Numsen (1734-65).",
"title": "Personal life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "He died on 19 April 1807 and is buried at Nørre Jernløse graveyard.",
"title": "Personal life"
}
] | Michael Herman Løvenskiold was a Danish landowner, district governor (amtmand]] and chamberlain. He owned Løvenborg and Vognserup at Holbæk. | 2023-12-10T15:15:38Z | 2023-12-11T09:33:28Z | [
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75,530,799 | Frederick L. Pratt | Frederick L. Pratt (August 6, 1928 – September 27, 2021) was an American politician. He served as a Democratic member of the New Hampshire House of Representatives.
Pratt was born in Woburn, Massachusetts. He attended Keith Academy and Bentley College, earning his bachelor's degree in accounting. He served in the United States Navy.
Pratt served in the New Hampshire House of Representatives from 1963 to 1964.
Pratt died in September 2021, at the age of 93. | [
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"text": "Pratt was born in Woburn, Massachusetts. He attended Keith Academy and Bentley College, earning his bachelor's degree in accounting. He served in the United States Navy.",
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"text": "Pratt served in the New Hampshire House of Representatives from 1963 to 1964.",
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"text": "Pratt died in September 2021, at the age of 93.",
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{
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] | Frederick L. Pratt was an American politician. He served as a Democratic member of the New Hampshire House of Representatives. | 2023-12-10T15:21:06Z | 2023-12-10T21:23:16Z | [
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75,530,801 | Nigerian Fulfulde | Nigerian Fulfulde, also known as Hausa States Fulfulde, Fula, or Fulani is a variety of the Fula language spoken by the Fulani people in Nigeria, particularly in the Northern region of Nigeria. It belongs to the West Atlantic branch of the Niger-Congo language family. Phonologically, Nigerian Fulfulde exhibits a system of vowel harmony and a relatively simple consonant inventory, including stops, fricatives, and nasal sounds.
The syntax of Nigerian Fulfulde is characterized by a subject-verb-object (SVO) word order, but it is flexible due to the use of extensive nominal and verbal agreement markers. These markers convey information about gender, number, and person, playing a crucial role in indicating grammatical relationships within sentences. The language employs a complex system of noun classes, which impacts both nominal and verbal concord.
Word order in Nigerian Fulfulde is subject to pragmatic and contextual factors, allowing for variations in emphasis and focus. It often employs topic-comment structures, with the topic appearing at the beginning of the sentence and the comment providing additional information. Additionally, the language features extensive use of proverbs, idioms, and metaphors, reflecting the cultural characteristics of the Fulani people.
In terms of sociolinguistics, Nigerian Fulfulde is used in various domains, including everyday communication, traditional ceremonies, and religious contexts.
Nigerian Fulfulde has 40–50% intelligibility with Adamawa Fulfulde and is most similar to Central-Eastern Niger Fulfulde. Until recently in 2011 it adopted the Latin alphabet, and since 2003 is also written using the Arabic script with the Ajami variant used to write the language.
Nigerian Fulfulde is thought to have originated by some time in 16th and 17th century with the arrival of Fulani pastoralists into Nigeria from Senegambia. As they migrated, they gradually settled in various parts of present-day Nigeria.
The Fulani's movement into Nigeria was influenced by factors such as environmental changes, the search for pasture for their cattle, and interactions with diverse ethnic groups.
By the 19th century the language became widespread across northern regions of Nigeria and in the late 19th century was spread by military conquest by Usman dan Fodio. Nigerian Fulfulde also spread throughout Nigeria by immigration and pastoralists groups moving throughout the Sahel region in search of water for their pastures. | [
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"title": ""
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{
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"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Word order in Nigerian Fulfulde is subject to pragmatic and contextual factors, allowing for variations in emphasis and focus. It often employs topic-comment structures, with the topic appearing at the beginning of the sentence and the comment providing additional information. Additionally, the language features extensive use of proverbs, idioms, and metaphors, reflecting the cultural characteristics of the Fulani people.",
"title": ""
},
{
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"text": "In terms of sociolinguistics, Nigerian Fulfulde is used in various domains, including everyday communication, traditional ceremonies, and religious contexts.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Nigerian Fulfulde has 40–50% intelligibility with Adamawa Fulfulde and is most similar to Central-Eastern Niger Fulfulde. Until recently in 2011 it adopted the Latin alphabet, and since 2003 is also written using the Arabic script with the Ajami variant used to write the language.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "Nigerian Fulfulde is thought to have originated by some time in 16th and 17th century with the arrival of Fulani pastoralists into Nigeria from Senegambia. As they migrated, they gradually settled in various parts of present-day Nigeria.",
"title": "Origins"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "The Fulani's movement into Nigeria was influenced by factors such as environmental changes, the search for pasture for their cattle, and interactions with diverse ethnic groups.",
"title": "Origins"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "By the 19th century the language became widespread across northern regions of Nigeria and in the late 19th century was spread by military conquest by Usman dan Fodio. Nigerian Fulfulde also spread throughout Nigeria by immigration and pastoralists groups moving throughout the Sahel region in search of water for their pastures.",
"title": "Origins"
}
] | Nigerian Fulfulde, also known as Hausa States Fulfulde, Fula, or Fulani is a variety of the Fula language spoken by the Fulani people in Nigeria, particularly in the Northern region of Nigeria. It belongs to the West Atlantic branch of the Niger-Congo language family. Phonologically, Nigerian Fulfulde exhibits a system of vowel harmony and a relatively simple consonant inventory, including stops, fricatives, and nasal sounds. The syntax of Nigerian Fulfulde is characterized by a subject-verb-object (SVO) word order, but it is flexible due to the use of extensive nominal and verbal agreement markers. These markers convey information about gender, number, and person, playing a crucial role in indicating grammatical relationships within sentences. The language employs a complex system of noun classes, which impacts both nominal and verbal concord. Word order in Nigerian Fulfulde is subject to pragmatic and contextual factors, allowing for variations in emphasis and focus. It often employs topic-comment structures, with the topic appearing at the beginning of the sentence and the comment providing additional information. Additionally, the language features extensive use of proverbs, idioms, and metaphors, reflecting the cultural characteristics of the Fulani people. In terms of sociolinguistics, Nigerian Fulfulde is used in various domains, including everyday communication, traditional ceremonies, and religious contexts. Nigerian Fulfulde has 40–50% intelligibility with Adamawa Fulfulde and is most similar to Central-Eastern Niger Fulfulde. Until recently in 2011 it adopted the Latin alphabet, and since 2003 is also written using the Arabic script with the Ajami variant used to write the language. | 2023-12-10T15:21:20Z | 2023-12-26T04:01:59Z | [
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75,530,811 | Sika Henry | Sika Henry is an American triathlete and ultramarathoner. When she completed the Challenge Cancun event in 2021, Henry became the first female African-American professional triathlete. She has advocated for increased representation in the sport. | [
{
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] | Sika Henry is an American triathlete and ultramarathoner. When she completed the Challenge Cancun event in 2021, Henry became the first female African-American professional triathlete. She has advocated for increased representation in the sport. | 2023-12-10T15:24:28Z | 2023-12-11T18:55:41Z | [
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75,530,814 | Zonitoides sepultus | Zonitoides sepultus is an extinct species of small, air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Gastrodontidae.
Fossils of this species were originally found in Upper Pleistocene strata in Slovakia. | [
{
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},
{
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"text": "Fossils of this species were originally found in Upper Pleistocene strata in Slovakia.",
"title": "Distribution"
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] | Zonitoides sepultus is an extinct species of small, air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Gastrodontidae. | 2023-12-10T15:24:50Z | 2023-12-11T09:36:35Z | [
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75,530,822 | Joseph W. Buckwalter | Joseph Warren Buckwalter (February 22, 1850 – May 3, 1911) was an American politician from Pennsylvania. He served as a member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives, representing Perry County from 1893 to 1896.
Joseph Warren Buckwalter was born on February 22, 1850, in Wallace Township, Pennsylvania, to Henry A. Buckwalter. In 1852, his family moved to Juniata Township, Perry County, Pennsylvania. He attended common schools and Mt. Dempsey Academy, New Bloomfield Academy and Landisburg Academy.
Buckwalter was a teacher for five years in the winter and farmed in the summers. He worked in mercantile business for six years and had a general store in Newport. He also worked as a commercial salesman and supervised a farm he owned in Miller Township.
Buckwalter was a Republican. He was secretary of the school board in his township. He was a census enumerator for two districts in Perry County. He was a member of the Perry County Republican Committee. He served as a member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives, representing Perry County from 1893 to 1896. He later worked as a farmer.
Buckwalter married Kate Boyer of Newport. They had three sons and two daughters.
Buckwalter died on May 3, 1911, at his home in Miller Township, near Logania. He was interred at Newport Cemetery in Newport. | [
{
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"text": "Joseph Warren Buckwalter (February 22, 1850 – May 3, 1911) was an American politician from Pennsylvania. He served as a member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives, representing Perry County from 1893 to 1896.",
"title": ""
},
{
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"text": "Joseph Warren Buckwalter was born on February 22, 1850, in Wallace Township, Pennsylvania, to Henry A. Buckwalter. In 1852, his family moved to Juniata Township, Perry County, Pennsylvania. He attended common schools and Mt. Dempsey Academy, New Bloomfield Academy and Landisburg Academy.",
"title": "Early life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Buckwalter was a teacher for five years in the winter and farmed in the summers. He worked in mercantile business for six years and had a general store in Newport. He also worked as a commercial salesman and supervised a farm he owned in Miller Township.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Buckwalter was a Republican. He was secretary of the school board in his township. He was a census enumerator for two districts in Perry County. He was a member of the Perry County Republican Committee. He served as a member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives, representing Perry County from 1893 to 1896. He later worked as a farmer.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Buckwalter married Kate Boyer of Newport. They had three sons and two daughters.",
"title": "Personal life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "Buckwalter died on May 3, 1911, at his home in Miller Township, near Logania. He was interred at Newport Cemetery in Newport.",
"title": "Personal life"
}
] | Joseph Warren Buckwalter was an American politician from Pennsylvania. He served as a member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives, representing Perry County from 1893 to 1896. | 2023-12-10T15:25:31Z | 2023-12-21T03:10:33Z | [
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75,530,837 | Manos Zacharias | Manos Zacharias (Greek: Μάνος Ζαχαρίαςc; born 9 July 1922) is a Greek film director and actor who was active in Greek and Soviet cinematography.
Zacharias was born on 9 July 1922 in Athens, in the area of Thisio. His father was a chemist and his mother was a teacher. He studied at the University of Athens in the chemistry department and during 1941 and 1944 he was a member of EPON.
In 1945, with a scholarship from the French Institute, he left for studies in Paris on the ship " Mataroa" together with other young people who later excelle Kostas Axelos, Memos Makris etc. He studied cinema at IDHEK and attended theater courses. In 1956, after a competition, he studied at the Mosfilm school in Moscow. With the end of his studies he worked as a director at Mosfilm. In 1971 he took over the artistic direction of Mosfilm's Third Studio. As a director he made seven feature films and three short films. In 1979 he returned to Greece and from 1981 took over the field of cinema at the Ministry of Culture until 1990.
He met and married his wife Olga and they had two daughters, Lena and Masha. He turned 100 in 2022.
In 2004, the 45th Thessaloniki Film Festival screened Zacharias' film One of the Execution Squad (1968) as part of the tribute A Director Passionate about Greece.
In 2008, the 49th Thessaloniki Film Festival paid tribute to Manos Zacharias under the title The traveler of memory, in the context of which Zacharias' films The Truth for the Children of Greece (1948), Morning Route (1959), The Mops (1960) were screened ), Night Passenger (1962), End and Beginning (1963), I'm a Soldier, Mom (1966), One of the Firing Squad (1968), City of First Love (1970), Corner of Arbat and Bouboulinas (1972), Alias Lukacs (1977) as well as the documentary The Story of My Years - Manos Zacharias (2005) by Stelios Charalambopoulos. | [
{
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"text": "Manos Zacharias (Greek: Μάνος Ζαχαρίαςc; born 9 July 1922) is a Greek film director and actor who was active in Greek and Soviet cinematography.",
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},
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"text": "Zacharias was born on 9 July 1922 in Athens, in the area of Thisio. His father was a chemist and his mother was a teacher. He studied at the University of Athens in the chemistry department and during 1941 and 1944 he was a member of EPON.",
"title": "Life and career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "In 1945, with a scholarship from the French Institute, he left for studies in Paris on the ship \" Mataroa\" together with other young people who later excelle Kostas Axelos, Memos Makris etc. He studied cinema at IDHEK and attended theater courses. In 1956, after a competition, he studied at the Mosfilm school in Moscow. With the end of his studies he worked as a director at Mosfilm. In 1971 he took over the artistic direction of Mosfilm's Third Studio. As a director he made seven feature films and three short films. In 1979 he returned to Greece and from 1981 took over the field of cinema at the Ministry of Culture until 1990.",
"title": "Life and career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "He met and married his wife Olga and they had two daughters, Lena and Masha. He turned 100 in 2022.",
"title": "Life and career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "In 2004, the 45th Thessaloniki Film Festival screened Zacharias' film One of the Execution Squad (1968) as part of the tribute A Director Passionate about Greece.",
"title": "Tribute"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "In 2008, the 49th Thessaloniki Film Festival paid tribute to Manos Zacharias under the title The traveler of memory, in the context of which Zacharias' films The Truth for the Children of Greece (1948), Morning Route (1959), The Mops (1960) were screened ), Night Passenger (1962), End and Beginning (1963), I'm a Soldier, Mom (1966), One of the Firing Squad (1968), City of First Love (1970), Corner of Arbat and Bouboulinas (1972), Alias Lukacs (1977) as well as the documentary The Story of My Years - Manos Zacharias (2005) by Stelios Charalambopoulos.",
"title": "Tribute"
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{
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"title": "References"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] | Manos Zacharias is a Greek film director and actor who was active in Greek and Soviet cinematography. | 2023-12-10T15:29:18Z | 2023-12-16T06:35:35Z | [
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75,530,839 | Zonitoides silvanus | Zonitoides silvanus is an extinct species of small, air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Gastrodontidae.
Fossils of this species were originally found in Germany | [
{
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"text": "Zonitoides silvanus is an extinct species of small, air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Gastrodontidae.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Fossils of this species were originally found in Germany",
"title": "Distribution"
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] | Zonitoides silvanus is an extinct species of small, air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Gastrodontidae. | 2023-12-10T15:29:40Z | 2023-12-11T09:36:37Z | [
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75,530,846 | Artem Odyntsov | Artem Yuriyovych Odyntsov (Ukrainian: Одинцов Артем Юрійович; born 9 November 2000) is a Ukrainian professional footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for Kisvárda.
He was signed by Kisvárda in 2019. In his first season he played for the U19 team. He made his first team debut on 19 September 2020 in the Hungarian Cup against Kecskéd KSK. He made his Hungarian first division debut as a substitute in the 82nd minute, replacing Dávid Dombó against Paks on 9 May 2021. He played a total of 10 matches for Kisvárda first team out of which he did not concede a goal on 6 matches. At the end of the 2021-2022 season, Kisvárda qualified for the first time in their history to an international cup. Odincov defended Kisvárda's goal in all four matches in the Europa Conference League qualifiers against Kairat Almaty and Molde.
On 16 June 2023, he signed for Diósgyőr. He made his debut in a competitive match for Diósgyőr, against Kecskemét in the Hungarian first division on 1 October 2023.
In an interview, Odincov mentioned that he has a Hungarian wife and a child called Maxim. For now, he only has Ukrainian citizenship, but the player plans to become a Hungarian citizen soon. | [
{
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"text": "Artem Yuriyovych Odyntsov (Ukrainian: Одинцов Артем Юрійович; born 9 November 2000) is a Ukrainian professional footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for Kisvárda.",
"title": ""
},
{
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"text": "He was signed by Kisvárda in 2019. In his first season he played for the U19 team. He made his first team debut on 19 September 2020 in the Hungarian Cup against Kecskéd KSK. He made his Hungarian first division debut as a substitute in the 82nd minute, replacing Dávid Dombó against Paks on 9 May 2021. He played a total of 10 matches for Kisvárda first team out of which he did not concede a goal on 6 matches. At the end of the 2021-2022 season, Kisvárda qualified for the first time in their history to an international cup. Odincov defended Kisvárda's goal in all four matches in the Europa Conference League qualifiers against Kairat Almaty and Molde.",
"title": "Kisvárda"
},
{
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"text": "On 16 June 2023, he signed for Diósgyőr. He made his debut in a competitive match for Diósgyőr, against Kecskemét in the Hungarian first division on 1 October 2023.",
"title": "Diósgyőr"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "In an interview, Odincov mentioned that he has a Hungarian wife and a child called Maxim. For now, he only has Ukrainian citizenship, but the player plans to become a Hungarian citizen soon.",
"title": "Personal life"
}
] | Artem Yuriyovych Odyntsov is a Ukrainian professional footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for Kisvárda. | 2023-12-10T15:32:44Z | 2023-12-27T17:57:14Z | [
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75,530,853 | Buckwalter | Buckwalter may refer to: | [
{
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75,530,859 | Zonitoides subradiatulus | Zonitoides subradiatulus is an extinct species of small, air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Gastrodontidae.
Fossils of this species were originally found in Ukraine. | [
{
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"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Fossils of this species were originally found in Ukraine.",
"title": "Distribution"
}
] | Zonitoides subradiatulus is an extinct species of small, air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Gastrodontidae. | 2023-12-10T15:34:16Z | 2023-12-10T15:34:16Z | [
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75,530,921 | 25th Iris Awards (Spain) | The 25th Iris Awards ceremony, presented by the Academy of Television and Audiovisual Arts and Sciences, will take place at the Gran Teatro Caixabank Príncipe Pío in Madrid on 16 January 2023.
The ceremony was originally scheduled for 21 November 2023, coinciding with the World Television Day. The Academy of Television and Audiovisual Arts and Sciences disclosed the nominations on 10 July 2023. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The 25th Iris Awards ceremony, presented by the Academy of Television and Audiovisual Arts and Sciences, will take place at the Gran Teatro Caixabank Príncipe Pío in Madrid on 16 January 2023.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The ceremony was originally scheduled for 21 November 2023, coinciding with the World Television Day. The Academy of Television and Audiovisual Arts and Sciences disclosed the nominations on 10 July 2023.",
"title": "Background"
}
] | The 25th Iris Awards ceremony, presented by the Academy of Television and Audiovisual Arts and Sciences, will take place at the Gran Teatro Caixabank Príncipe Pío in Madrid on 16 January 2023. | 2023-12-10T15:43:32Z | 2023-12-10T15:56:16Z | [
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75,530,924 | Zonitoides suevicus | Zonitoides suevicus is an extinct species of small, air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Gastrodontidae.
Fossils of this species were originally found in Germany. | [
{
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"text": "Zonitoides suevicus is an extinct species of small, air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Gastrodontidae.",
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},
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"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Fossils of this species were originally found in Germany.",
"title": "Distribution"
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] | Zonitoides suevicus is an extinct species of small, air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Gastrodontidae. | 2023-12-10T15:44:14Z | 2023-12-10T15:44:14Z | [
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75,530,935 | Borgu Fulfulde | Borgu Fulfulde, also known as Borgu Fulani, Benin-Togo Fulfulde, Fulbe-Borgu, or Peul is a variety of the Fula language a West Atlantic language part of the Niger-Congo language family, it is spoken primarily in the Borgou Department of Benin, spanning Nigeria, other parts of Benin, as well as Togo and parts of Burkina Faso.
Phonologically, Borgu Fulfulde exhibits a system of vowel and consonant sounds, with a notable presence of glottalized and nasalized consonants. Morphologically, the language is agglutinative, forming words through the addition of prefixes and suffixes to root morphemes. The grammatical structure is characterized by a system of noun class agreement, where various affixes indicate the gender and number of nouns.
Word order in Borgu Fulfulde typically follows a subject-object-verb (SOV) pattern, and the language employs postpositions rather than prepositions for expressing spatial and temporal relationships. Syntactically, it features a system of verb conjugations that indicate tense, aspect, and mood. Borgu Fulfulde traditionally uses the Latin alphabet for written communication, although in some regions, an adapted version of the Arabic script or Ajami is also employed.
The presence of Borgu Fulfulde in Benin can be attributed to historical migrations and interactions among the Fula people. The Fula, also known as Fulani, are a nomadic or semi-nomadic ethnic group spread across West Africa. They have a long history of migration and have settled in various regions over time.
Fula communities gradually migrated to the Borgu region, which spans parts of Nigeria, Benin, and Niger. This movement could have been influenced by factors such as search for pastureland for their livestock, trade opportunities, or escaping conflicts. As they settled in the Borgu region, the Fula people adapted to local conditions, leading to the development of Borgu Fulfulde, a variety of the Fula language specific to the region. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Borgu Fulfulde, also known as Borgu Fulani, Benin-Togo Fulfulde, Fulbe-Borgu, or Peul is a variety of the Fula language a West Atlantic language part of the Niger-Congo language family, it is spoken primarily in the Borgou Department of Benin, spanning Nigeria, other parts of Benin, as well as Togo and parts of Burkina Faso.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Phonologically, Borgu Fulfulde exhibits a system of vowel and consonant sounds, with a notable presence of glottalized and nasalized consonants. Morphologically, the language is agglutinative, forming words through the addition of prefixes and suffixes to root morphemes. The grammatical structure is characterized by a system of noun class agreement, where various affixes indicate the gender and number of nouns.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Word order in Borgu Fulfulde typically follows a subject-object-verb (SOV) pattern, and the language employs postpositions rather than prepositions for expressing spatial and temporal relationships. Syntactically, it features a system of verb conjugations that indicate tense, aspect, and mood. Borgu Fulfulde traditionally uses the Latin alphabet for written communication, although in some regions, an adapted version of the Arabic script or Ajami is also employed.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "The presence of Borgu Fulfulde in Benin can be attributed to historical migrations and interactions among the Fula people. The Fula, also known as Fulani, are a nomadic or semi-nomadic ethnic group spread across West Africa. They have a long history of migration and have settled in various regions over time.",
"title": "Origins"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Fula communities gradually migrated to the Borgu region, which spans parts of Nigeria, Benin, and Niger. This movement could have been influenced by factors such as search for pastureland for their livestock, trade opportunities, or escaping conflicts. As they settled in the Borgu region, the Fula people adapted to local conditions, leading to the development of Borgu Fulfulde, a variety of the Fula language specific to the region.",
"title": "Origins"
}
] | Borgu Fulfulde, also known as Borgu Fulani, Benin-Togo Fulfulde, Fulbe-Borgu, or Peul is a variety of the Fula language a West Atlantic language part of the Niger-Congo language family, it is spoken primarily in the Borgou Department of Benin, spanning Nigeria, other parts of Benin, as well as Togo and parts of Burkina Faso. Phonologically, Borgu Fulfulde exhibits a system of vowel and consonant sounds, with a notable presence of glottalized and nasalized consonants. Morphologically, the language is agglutinative, forming words through the addition of prefixes and suffixes to root morphemes. The grammatical structure is characterized by a system of noun class agreement, where various affixes indicate the gender and number of nouns. Word order in Borgu Fulfulde typically follows a subject-object-verb (SOV) pattern, and the language employs postpositions rather than prepositions for expressing spatial and temporal relationships. Syntactically, it features a system of verb conjugations that indicate tense, aspect, and mood. Borgu Fulfulde traditionally uses the Latin alphabet for written communication, although in some regions, an adapted version of the Arabic script or Ajami is also employed. | 2023-12-10T15:46:19Z | 2023-12-26T03:58:40Z | [
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75,530,948 | Santa Maria Street | The Santa Maria Street (Portuguese: Rua de Santa Maria) is a street of medieval origin in the historic centre of Guimarães, being for many centuries the most important street in Guimarães and home to some of its elite.
The street currently connects the Oliveira and the São Paio Square to the Carmo Square. It is already referred to by the name “Rua de Santa Maria” in documents that date to the 12th century, although its upper section was given the old name of Rua da Infesta (Infesta Street).
Along its route there are various notable architectural and cultural testimonies of the past: | [
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"text": "The Santa Maria Street (Portuguese: Rua de Santa Maria) is a street of medieval origin in the historic centre of Guimarães, being for many centuries the most important street in Guimarães and home to some of its elite.",
"title": ""
},
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"text": "The street currently connects the Oliveira and the São Paio Square to the Carmo Square. It is already referred to by the name “Rua de Santa Maria” in documents that date to the 12th century, although its upper section was given the old name of Rua da Infesta (Infesta Street).",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Along its route there are various notable architectural and cultural testimonies of the past:",
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}
] | The Santa Maria Street is a street of medieval origin in the historic centre of Guimarães, being for many centuries the most important street in Guimarães and home to some of its elite. The street currently connects the Oliveira and the São Paio Square to the Carmo Square. It is already referred to by the name “Rua de Santa Maria” in documents that date to the 12th century, although its upper section was given the old name of Rua da Infesta. Along its route there are various notable architectural and cultural testimonies of the past: Convent of Santa Clara, a 16th century boroque style convent now used as the câmara municipal of Guimarães.
Raul Brandão Library, built in 1834, it was the former house of Raul Brandão and is currently used as the municipal library of Guimarães.
Casa do Arco, it was built in the end of the 15th century, Manuel I once slept here after coming from a trip to Santiago de Compostela. Other historical figures like king Miguel I the painter Auguste Roquemont also spent some nights here with the last one living here in the 1830s.
House of the Peixotos, built in the 1700s, it was a noble family’s house.
House of the Valadares de Carvalho, one of the oldest buildings that are still standing on that street, it was built in the 15th century, it was a noble family’s house.
House of Senhora Aninhas, the house where the “mother and protector of the students of Guimarães” lived, and one of the 5 locations where the Pregão is declaimed.
The house where Mário de Vasconcelos Cardoso was born. | 2023-12-10T15:48:13Z | 2023-12-27T23:54:07Z | [
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75,530,972 | Zonitoides wenzi | Zonitoides wenzi is an extinct species of small, air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Gastrodontidae.
Fossils of this species were originally found in Spain. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Zonitoides wenzi is an extinct species of small, air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Gastrodontidae.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Fossils of this species were originally found in Spain.",
"title": "Distribution"
}
] | Zonitoides wenzi is an extinct species of small, air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Gastrodontidae. | 2023-12-10T15:53:26Z | 2023-12-11T09:36:39Z | [
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75,530,995 | Soundtrack 2 | Soundtrack #2 (Korean: 사운드트랙 #2) is a 2023 South Korean web series written by Jung Hye-seung, and directed by Choi Jung-kyu and Kim Hee-won. It is produced by Red Nine Pictures and Xanadu Entertainment, and starring Noh Sang-hyun, Keum Sae-rok and Son Jeong-hyuk. It aired on Disney+ from December 6 to 20, 2023, in selected territories, and received mixed reviews from critics.
The series is an indirect follow-up of Soundtrack #1, which was released in 2022. However, it follows a completely different plot.
The series was announced by Disney+ consisting of six episodes. The principal photography of the series commenced in 2023, with Noh Sang-hyun and Keum Sae-rok joining the cast. The teaser and trailer for the series were released in November 2023.
Carmen Chin of NME rated the series 3 out of 5 stars in her review. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Soundtrack #2 (Korean: 사운드트랙 #2) is a 2023 South Korean web series written by Jung Hye-seung, and directed by Choi Jung-kyu and Kim Hee-won. It is produced by Red Nine Pictures and Xanadu Entertainment, and starring Noh Sang-hyun, Keum Sae-rok and Son Jeong-hyuk. It aired on Disney+ from December 6 to 20, 2023, in selected territories, and received mixed reviews from critics.",
"title": ""
},
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"text": "The series is an indirect follow-up of Soundtrack #1, which was released in 2022. However, it follows a completely different plot.",
"title": ""
},
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"text": "The series was announced by Disney+ consisting of six episodes. The principal photography of the series commenced in 2023, with Noh Sang-hyun and Keum Sae-rok joining the cast. The teaser and trailer for the series were released in November 2023.",
"title": "Production"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Carmen Chin of NME rated the series 3 out of 5 stars in her review.",
"title": "Reception"
}
] | Soundtrack #2 is a 2023 South Korean web series written by Jung Hye-seung, and directed by Choi Jung-kyu and Kim Hee-won. It is produced by Red Nine Pictures and Xanadu Entertainment, and starring Noh Sang-hyun, Keum Sae-rok and Son Jeong-hyuk. It aired on Disney+ from December 6 to 20, 2023, in selected territories, and received mixed reviews from critics. The series is an indirect follow-up of Soundtrack #1, which was released in 2022. However, it follows a completely different plot. | 2023-12-10T15:56:22Z | 2023-12-31T09:28:32Z | [
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75,531,009 | Vijay Sharma (politician) | Vijay Sharma is an Indian politician who is serving as Deputy Chief Minister Of Chhattisgarh along with Arun Sao in the Ministry Of Vishnu Deo Sai. He is the member of Chhattisgarh Legislative Assembly from Kawardha Assembly constituency. He is the General Secretary of Bharatiya Janata Party, Chhattisgarh and previously served as the President of Bharatiya Janata Yuva Morcha, Chattisgarh.
Sharma completed the Master of Science degree in Physics honors from Pandit Ravishankar Shukla University, Raipur in 1996 and Master of Computers Applications degree from Madhya Pradesh Bhoj Open University, Bhopal in 2001. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Vijay Sharma is an Indian politician who is serving as Deputy Chief Minister Of Chhattisgarh along with Arun Sao in the Ministry Of Vishnu Deo Sai. He is the member of Chhattisgarh Legislative Assembly from Kawardha Assembly constituency. He is the General Secretary of Bharatiya Janata Party, Chhattisgarh and previously served as the President of Bharatiya Janata Yuva Morcha, Chattisgarh.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Sharma completed the Master of Science degree in Physics honors from Pandit Ravishankar Shukla University, Raipur in 1996 and Master of Computers Applications degree from Madhya Pradesh Bhoj Open University, Bhopal in 2001.",
"title": "Education"
}
] | Vijay Sharma is an Indian politician who is serving as Deputy Chief Minister Of Chhattisgarh along with Arun Sao in the Ministry Of Vishnu Deo Sai. He is the member of Chhattisgarh Legislative Assembly from Kawardha Assembly constituency. He is the General Secretary of Bharatiya Janata Party, Chhattisgarh and previously served as the President of Bharatiya Janata Yuva Morcha, Chattisgarh. | 2023-12-10T15:59:57Z | 2023-12-31T18:58:13Z | [
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75,531,016 | Sopachuy | Sopachuy is the seat of the homonymous municipality located in the Tomina Province in the Chuquisaca Department of Bolivia. At the time of the 2001 census it had 7241 inhabitants.
Sopachuy was founded on 30 october 1581, and was the site of the Battle of Sopachuy (1817).
19°29′S 64°28′W / 19.483°S 64.467°W / -19.483; -64.467 | [
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"text": "Sopachuy is the seat of the homonymous municipality located in the Tomina Province in the Chuquisaca Department of Bolivia. At the time of the 2001 census it had 7241 inhabitants.",
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"text": "Sopachuy was founded on 30 october 1581, and was the site of the Battle of Sopachuy (1817).",
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] | Sopachuy is the seat of the homonymous municipality located in the Tomina Province in the Chuquisaca Department of Bolivia. At the time of the 2001 census it had 7241 inhabitants. Sopachuy was founded on 30 october 1581, and was the site of the Battle of Sopachuy (1817). | 2023-12-10T16:01:38Z | 2023-12-11T09:34:40Z | [
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75,531,017 | 1966 FIFA World Cup qualification (CONMEBOL – Group 1) | The three teams in this group played against each other on a home-and-away basis. Uruguay won the group and qualified for the 1966 FIFA World Cup, held in England.
Uruguay qualified.
Head coach: Ondino Viera
Head coach: Marcos Calderon
Head coach: Rafael Franco
There were 23 goals scored in 6 matches, for an average of 3.83 goals per match. | [
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"text": "The three teams in this group played against each other on a home-and-away basis. Uruguay won the group and qualified for the 1966 FIFA World Cup, held in England.",
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},
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"text": "Uruguay qualified.",
"title": "Matches"
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"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Head coach: Ondino Viera",
"title": "Team stats"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Head coach: Marcos Calderon",
"title": "Team stats"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Head coach: Rafael Franco",
"title": "Team stats"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "There were 23 goals scored in 6 matches, for an average of 3.83 goals per match.",
"title": "Goalscorers"
}
] | The three teams in this group played against each other on a home-and-away basis. Uruguay won the group and qualified for the 1966 FIFA World Cup, held in England. | 2023-12-10T16:01:49Z | 2023-12-26T21:47:20Z | [
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75,531,034 | Libyan genocide | The Libyan genocide, also known in Libya as Shar (Arabic: شر, lit. 'Evil'), was the genocide of Libyan Arabs and the systematic destruction of Libyan culture, particularly during and after the Second Italo-Senussi War between 1929 and 1934. During this period, between 83,000 and 125,000 Libyans were killed by Italian colonial authorities under Benito Mussolini. Over 25% of the population of Cyrenaica had been killed, resulting in a population decline from 225,000 to 142,000 civilians. However, the total number of Libyan deaths during the entire Italian colonial period is estimated to be much higher, with estimates placing the number at 250,000–300,000, 500,000 and up to 750,000.
This period was marked by a brutal campaign characterized by widespread major Italian war crimes, including ethnic cleansing, mass killings, forced displacement, forced death marches, settler colonialism, the use of chemical weapons, the use of concentration camps, mass executions of civilians and refusing to take prisoners of war and instead executing surrendering combatants. The indigenous population, particularly the nomadic Bedouin tribes, faced extreme violence and suppression in an attempt to quell Senussi resistance to colonial rule. The Italian military killed half of the Bedouin population of Libya between 1928 and 1932.
The genocide was based on a racist and fascist colonial plan to incite settler colonialism and settle poor Italian peasants in Libya. About 110,000 Libyan civilians were forced to march from their homes to the harsh Libyan desert and were then interned in Italian concentration camps in Libya. Between 60,000 and 70,000 mostly rural people, including women and children, and their 600,000 animals died of diseases and were starved to death.
News about the genocide was heavily suppressed by Fascist Italy, evidence was largely destroyed, making remaining files in Italian concentration camps in Libya difficult to find even after the end of Fascist rule in Italy in 1945. The history that Libyans recorded in their Arabic oral history has remained hidden and unexplored in systematic fashion. As a result, Italian colonization and atrocities in Ethiopia are better studied and more well known than Libyan cases. It was not until 2008 that Italy apologized for its killing, destruction and repression of the Libyan people during its colonization of Libya, and stated that this was a "complete and moral acknowledgement of the damage inflicted on Libya by Italy during the colonial era".
In Libya, the death in the camps during the genocide is commonly referred to as "Shar" (Arabic: شر, lit. 'Evil'), an Arabic word meaning "evil". The term is derived from the Qur'an, as the opposite of good. This was primarily because the survivors of Italian Fascism in the concentration camps viewed their ordeal as an evil, hence identifying evil as a proper term to describe the horror of the genocide.
During the Italian invasion of Libya in 1911, the Italians were portrayed as the liberators of Libya from Ottoman rule, concurrently concealing any evidence of repression campaigns and massacres during the war, such as the ones following the battle and massacre at Shar al-Shatt. On the other side, the Arabs were described as 'beasts' that needed to be civilized by the Europeans. Reportedly, both Italian officers and men had declared that "we must destroy the Arabs". Official reports into the atrocities emphasized racial hatred, vindictiveness and "psychological flaws" as their underlying causes. Such brutal Italian war crimes in Libya were primarily associated with the Fascist era, as well as the Italian Liberal regime, albeit in a less systematic manner. Upon gaining entry in Libya, Italy promptly initiated racist and discriminatory practices of class division, including the construction of concentration camps, where approximately 50,000 Libyans lost their lives during the 1930s. Libya was of strategic importance to Italy, thus prompting the latter to annex the former as its "Fourth Shore" to allow Italians an expanded trade route area which greatly benefited Italy.
On 20 June 1930, Italian military officer Pietro Badoglio called for the annihilation of the entire population of Cyrenaica, and wrote to General Rodolfo Graziani: "As for overall strategy, it is necessary to create a significant and clear separation between the controlled population and the rebel formations. I do not hide the significance and seriousness of this measure, which might be the ruin of the subdued population...But now the course has been set, and we must carry it out to the end, even if the entire population of Cyrenaica must perish".
According to Melvin Page and Penny Sonneberg, Benito Mussolini was the person ultimately responsible for "putting 80,000 Libyans in concentration camps, blocking and poisoning wells, building a network of garrisons in troubled areas, bombing villages with mustard gas, killing and confiscating hundreds of thousands of sheep and camels, and constructing a 200-mile barbed wire fence between Libya and Egypt to prevent rebel border crossings",
By 1931, more than half of the population of Cyrenaica were confined to 15 Italian concentration camps where many died as result of overcrowding, lack of water, food and medicine. The Italian government experimented poison gas in violation of the 1925 Geneva Protocol against chemical and biological warfare. Badoglio had the Air Force use chemical warfare against the Bedouin rebels in the desert. This caused the nomadic way of life of the Bedouin to decline. Cyrenaica had a population of about 200,000 in 1911 during the Ottoman period, however it declined to 142,000 by 1931, with 40,000 dead and 20,000 in exile in Egypt. Historian Ilan Pappé estimates that between 1928 and 1932 the Italian military "killed half the Bedouin population (directly or through disease and starvation in camps)." Italian colonial authorities committed ethnic cleansing by forcibly expelling 100,000 Eastern Libyan Bedouins, half the population of Cyrenaica, from their settlements that were given to Italian colonist settlers. Less than 40,000 Libyan survivors left Italian refugee camps, following their release in 1934.
A direct link has been established between the Libyan genocide and The Holocaust. Italian-sponsored Arabic language publications from the colonial period reveal that there have been several visits to Libya by Nazi German officials who perceived the Italian fascists' settlement methods as "successful". According to historian Ali Abdullatif Ahmida, the extreme violence carried out against Libyans by Italian fascists became a model for what German Nazis would end up doing on European soil.
Nazi German Field Marshal Hermann Goring made an official visit to Tripoli in April 1939, where he met with the Italian colonial governor general of Libya, Italo Balbo. In 1939, Schutzstaffel chief Heinrich Himmler also made an official visit to Libya to see for himself the results on the ground. He was the organizer of the concentration camps and he conceived the idea of the Final Solution: The Holocaust.
After coming to power in Libya in 1969, Muammar Gaddafi claimed that half of Libya's total population had died during Italian colonialism, amounting up to 750,000 Libyans. During the Allied administration of Libya prior to independence, the United Nations estimated that 250,000 to 300,000 Libyan natives died under the Italians between 1912 and 1942. According to historian Denis Mack Smith, about 20,000 Libyans died in concentration camps, and perhaps 100,000 nomadic Bedouins (half the Bedouin population) died overall. Ali Abdullatif Ahmida estimates that 500,000 Libyans were killed out of a total population of 1,500,000.
An exact number of victims of the genocide can not be determined because there are very few remaining documents on death marches and concentration camps in Italian archives. This is due to the fact that evidence regarding the genocide was largely destroyed by Italian colonial authorities. Additionally, news about genocide was heavily suppressed by the Italian state. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The Libyan genocide, also known in Libya as Shar (Arabic: شر, lit. 'Evil'), was the genocide of Libyan Arabs and the systematic destruction of Libyan culture, particularly during and after the Second Italo-Senussi War between 1929 and 1934. During this period, between 83,000 and 125,000 Libyans were killed by Italian colonial authorities under Benito Mussolini. Over 25% of the population of Cyrenaica had been killed, resulting in a population decline from 225,000 to 142,000 civilians. However, the total number of Libyan deaths during the entire Italian colonial period is estimated to be much higher, with estimates placing the number at 250,000–300,000, 500,000 and up to 750,000.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "This period was marked by a brutal campaign characterized by widespread major Italian war crimes, including ethnic cleansing, mass killings, forced displacement, forced death marches, settler colonialism, the use of chemical weapons, the use of concentration camps, mass executions of civilians and refusing to take prisoners of war and instead executing surrendering combatants. The indigenous population, particularly the nomadic Bedouin tribes, faced extreme violence and suppression in an attempt to quell Senussi resistance to colonial rule. The Italian military killed half of the Bedouin population of Libya between 1928 and 1932.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The genocide was based on a racist and fascist colonial plan to incite settler colonialism and settle poor Italian peasants in Libya. About 110,000 Libyan civilians were forced to march from their homes to the harsh Libyan desert and were then interned in Italian concentration camps in Libya. Between 60,000 and 70,000 mostly rural people, including women and children, and their 600,000 animals died of diseases and were starved to death.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "News about the genocide was heavily suppressed by Fascist Italy, evidence was largely destroyed, making remaining files in Italian concentration camps in Libya difficult to find even after the end of Fascist rule in Italy in 1945. The history that Libyans recorded in their Arabic oral history has remained hidden and unexplored in systematic fashion. As a result, Italian colonization and atrocities in Ethiopia are better studied and more well known than Libyan cases. It was not until 2008 that Italy apologized for its killing, destruction and repression of the Libyan people during its colonization of Libya, and stated that this was a \"complete and moral acknowledgement of the damage inflicted on Libya by Italy during the colonial era\".",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "In Libya, the death in the camps during the genocide is commonly referred to as \"Shar\" (Arabic: شر, lit. 'Evil'), an Arabic word meaning \"evil\". The term is derived from the Qur'an, as the opposite of good. This was primarily because the survivors of Italian Fascism in the concentration camps viewed their ordeal as an evil, hence identifying evil as a proper term to describe the horror of the genocide.",
"title": "Etymology"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "During the Italian invasion of Libya in 1911, the Italians were portrayed as the liberators of Libya from Ottoman rule, concurrently concealing any evidence of repression campaigns and massacres during the war, such as the ones following the battle and massacre at Shar al-Shatt. On the other side, the Arabs were described as 'beasts' that needed to be civilized by the Europeans. Reportedly, both Italian officers and men had declared that \"we must destroy the Arabs\". Official reports into the atrocities emphasized racial hatred, vindictiveness and \"psychological flaws\" as their underlying causes. Such brutal Italian war crimes in Libya were primarily associated with the Fascist era, as well as the Italian Liberal regime, albeit in a less systematic manner. Upon gaining entry in Libya, Italy promptly initiated racist and discriminatory practices of class division, including the construction of concentration camps, where approximately 50,000 Libyans lost their lives during the 1930s. Libya was of strategic importance to Italy, thus prompting the latter to annex the former as its \"Fourth Shore\" to allow Italians an expanded trade route area which greatly benefited Italy.",
"title": "Prelude"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "On 20 June 1930, Italian military officer Pietro Badoglio called for the annihilation of the entire population of Cyrenaica, and wrote to General Rodolfo Graziani: \"As for overall strategy, it is necessary to create a significant and clear separation between the controlled population and the rebel formations. I do not hide the significance and seriousness of this measure, which might be the ruin of the subdued population...But now the course has been set, and we must carry it out to the end, even if the entire population of Cyrenaica must perish\".",
"title": "Genocide"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "According to Melvin Page and Penny Sonneberg, Benito Mussolini was the person ultimately responsible for \"putting 80,000 Libyans in concentration camps, blocking and poisoning wells, building a network of garrisons in troubled areas, bombing villages with mustard gas, killing and confiscating hundreds of thousands of sheep and camels, and constructing a 200-mile barbed wire fence between Libya and Egypt to prevent rebel border crossings\",",
"title": "Genocide"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "By 1931, more than half of the population of Cyrenaica were confined to 15 Italian concentration camps where many died as result of overcrowding, lack of water, food and medicine. The Italian government experimented poison gas in violation of the 1925 Geneva Protocol against chemical and biological warfare. Badoglio had the Air Force use chemical warfare against the Bedouin rebels in the desert. This caused the nomadic way of life of the Bedouin to decline. Cyrenaica had a population of about 200,000 in 1911 during the Ottoman period, however it declined to 142,000 by 1931, with 40,000 dead and 20,000 in exile in Egypt. Historian Ilan Pappé estimates that between 1928 and 1932 the Italian military \"killed half the Bedouin population (directly or through disease and starvation in camps).\" Italian colonial authorities committed ethnic cleansing by forcibly expelling 100,000 Eastern Libyan Bedouins, half the population of Cyrenaica, from their settlements that were given to Italian colonist settlers. Less than 40,000 Libyan survivors left Italian refugee camps, following their release in 1934.",
"title": "Genocide"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 9,
"text": "A direct link has been established between the Libyan genocide and The Holocaust. Italian-sponsored Arabic language publications from the colonial period reveal that there have been several visits to Libya by Nazi German officials who perceived the Italian fascists' settlement methods as \"successful\". According to historian Ali Abdullatif Ahmida, the extreme violence carried out against Libyans by Italian fascists became a model for what German Nazis would end up doing on European soil.",
"title": "Link to The Holocaust"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 10,
"text": "Nazi German Field Marshal Hermann Goring made an official visit to Tripoli in April 1939, where he met with the Italian colonial governor general of Libya, Italo Balbo. In 1939, Schutzstaffel chief Heinrich Himmler also made an official visit to Libya to see for himself the results on the ground. He was the organizer of the concentration camps and he conceived the idea of the Final Solution: The Holocaust.",
"title": "Link to The Holocaust"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 11,
"text": "After coming to power in Libya in 1969, Muammar Gaddafi claimed that half of Libya's total population had died during Italian colonialism, amounting up to 750,000 Libyans. During the Allied administration of Libya prior to independence, the United Nations estimated that 250,000 to 300,000 Libyan natives died under the Italians between 1912 and 1942. According to historian Denis Mack Smith, about 20,000 Libyans died in concentration camps, and perhaps 100,000 nomadic Bedouins (half the Bedouin population) died overall. Ali Abdullatif Ahmida estimates that 500,000 Libyans were killed out of a total population of 1,500,000.",
"title": "Death toll"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 12,
"text": "An exact number of victims of the genocide can not be determined because there are very few remaining documents on death marches and concentration camps in Italian archives. This is due to the fact that evidence regarding the genocide was largely destroyed by Italian colonial authorities. Additionally, news about genocide was heavily suppressed by the Italian state.",
"title": "Death toll"
}
] | The Libyan genocide, also known in Libya as Shar, was the genocide of Libyan Arabs and the systematic destruction of Libyan culture, particularly during and after the Second Italo-Senussi War between 1929 and 1934. During this period, between 83,000 and 125,000 Libyans were killed by Italian colonial authorities under Benito Mussolini. Over 25% of the population of Cyrenaica had been killed, resulting in a population decline from 225,000 to 142,000 civilians. However, the total number of Libyan deaths during the entire Italian colonial period is estimated to be much higher, with estimates placing the number at 250,000–300,000, 500,000 and up to 750,000. This period was marked by a brutal campaign characterized by widespread major Italian war crimes, including ethnic cleansing, mass killings, forced displacement, forced death marches, settler colonialism, the use of chemical weapons, the use of concentration camps, mass executions of civilians and refusing to take prisoners of war and instead executing surrendering combatants. The indigenous population, particularly the nomadic Bedouin tribes, faced extreme violence and suppression in an attempt to quell Senussi resistance to colonial rule. The Italian military killed half of the Bedouin population of Libya between 1928 and 1932. The genocide was based on a racist and fascist colonial plan to incite settler colonialism and settle poor Italian peasants in Libya. About 110,000 Libyan civilians were forced to march from their homes to the harsh Libyan desert and were then interned in Italian concentration camps in Libya. Between 60,000 and 70,000 mostly rural people, including women and children, and their 600,000 animals died of diseases and were starved to death. News about the genocide was heavily suppressed by Fascist Italy, evidence was largely destroyed, making remaining files in Italian concentration camps in Libya difficult to find even after the end of Fascist rule in Italy in 1945. The history that Libyans recorded in their Arabic oral history has remained hidden and unexplored in systematic fashion. As a result, Italian colonization and atrocities in Ethiopia are better studied and more well known than Libyan cases. It was not until 2008 that Italy apologized for its killing, destruction and repression of the Libyan people during its colonization of Libya, and stated that this was a "complete and moral acknowledgement of the damage inflicted on Libya by Italy during the colonial era". | 2023-12-10T16:05:35Z | 2023-12-24T10:58:43Z | [
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75,531,065 | Tish (2023 documentary) | Tish is a British 2023 documentary film directed by Paul Sng. The film details the life and work of Newcastle social documentary photographer Tish Murtha. The film was critically acclaimed.
Tish Murtha was best known for her work documenting the working class area of Elswick, in the west end of Newcastle in the late 1970s. At that time Elswick was considered “the worst square mile in England” for its poverty and deprivation. She lived in the area and was able to gain the trust of those she photographed. Her series Youth Unemployment and Elswick Kids were particularly important in bringing her work to a wider audience. After a period living and working in London in the mid-1980s, she returned to Newcastle but struggled to find work and funding in the 1990s and 2000s. She died suddenly of a brain aneurysm in relative obscurity and poverty in March 2013, one day before her 57th birthday.
Her daughter Ella Murtha is custodian of her comprehensive archive of photographs, correspondence and other material and was involved in promoting her work through exhibitions and monographs of her work. Director Paul Sng was involved in editing two books of social documentary photography; Invisible Britain: Portrait of Hope and Resilience in 2018 and The Separated Isle: Invisible Britain in 2021 and Ella Murtha wrote a blurb for him. Sng contacted Ella Murtha and asked if she had considered making a documentary about her mother. She was initially opposed to the project, but met Sng in Newcastle. They bonded over their status as only children. She has one proviso, that her mothers politics would be central to the documentary. The film was produced in the northeast of England with producer Jennifer Corcoran of Freya Films and cinematographer, Hollie Galloway from Middlesbrough.
The film features interviews with Ella and her family members, friends, mentors and photography contemporaries such as David Hurn and Chris Killip. There was no contemporary film footage of Murtha available, so the film features extensive use of Murtha's correspondence and writing, read by actress Maxine Peake. The film features recreations of Murtha working in her dark room, which was filmed in a disused Marks & Spencers shop in Darlington. The set had previously been used for Ricky Gervais's sitcom After Life, production designer Richard Drew was a fan of Murtha's work and adapted the set for the documentary. Murtha, played by Shin-Fei Chen, is only ever seen from behind in the reconstructions.
The film was part crowdfunded through a Kickstarter campaign, with £45,000 raised from 850 contributors and £75,000 of support from Screen Scotland in association with BBC England and BBC arts. Support was also provided from the BFI Doc Society Fund.
The film premiered, opening the Sheffield documentary festival on 14 June 2023, and went on general release in the United Kingdom on 17 November 2023.
The film received universally positive reviews and currently holds a 100% rating on Rotten Tomatoes from 9 reviews. Writing for The Arts Desk, Graham Fuller described it as "one of the best British films of 2023". and Peter Bradshaw writing in the Guardian said it "was a tremendous, humane tribute to a real artist" The film featured inThe Guardian’s top 50 films of 2023 at number 46 and made number 10 on the Financial Times best films of 2023. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Tish is a British 2023 documentary film directed by Paul Sng. The film details the life and work of Newcastle social documentary photographer Tish Murtha. The film was critically acclaimed.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Tish Murtha was best known for her work documenting the working class area of Elswick, in the west end of Newcastle in the late 1970s. At that time Elswick was considered “the worst square mile in England” for its poverty and deprivation. She lived in the area and was able to gain the trust of those she photographed. Her series Youth Unemployment and Elswick Kids were particularly important in bringing her work to a wider audience. After a period living and working in London in the mid-1980s, she returned to Newcastle but struggled to find work and funding in the 1990s and 2000s. She died suddenly of a brain aneurysm in relative obscurity and poverty in March 2013, one day before her 57th birthday.",
"title": "Background"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Her daughter Ella Murtha is custodian of her comprehensive archive of photographs, correspondence and other material and was involved in promoting her work through exhibitions and monographs of her work. Director Paul Sng was involved in editing two books of social documentary photography; Invisible Britain: Portrait of Hope and Resilience in 2018 and The Separated Isle: Invisible Britain in 2021 and Ella Murtha wrote a blurb for him. Sng contacted Ella Murtha and asked if she had considered making a documentary about her mother. She was initially opposed to the project, but met Sng in Newcastle. They bonded over their status as only children. She has one proviso, that her mothers politics would be central to the documentary. The film was produced in the northeast of England with producer Jennifer Corcoran of Freya Films and cinematographer, Hollie Galloway from Middlesbrough.",
"title": "Production"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "The film features interviews with Ella and her family members, friends, mentors and photography contemporaries such as David Hurn and Chris Killip. There was no contemporary film footage of Murtha available, so the film features extensive use of Murtha's correspondence and writing, read by actress Maxine Peake. The film features recreations of Murtha working in her dark room, which was filmed in a disused Marks & Spencers shop in Darlington. The set had previously been used for Ricky Gervais's sitcom After Life, production designer Richard Drew was a fan of Murtha's work and adapted the set for the documentary. Murtha, played by Shin-Fei Chen, is only ever seen from behind in the reconstructions.",
"title": "Production"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "The film was part crowdfunded through a Kickstarter campaign, with £45,000 raised from 850 contributors and £75,000 of support from Screen Scotland in association with BBC England and BBC arts. Support was also provided from the BFI Doc Society Fund.",
"title": "Production"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "The film premiered, opening the Sheffield documentary festival on 14 June 2023, and went on general release in the United Kingdom on 17 November 2023.",
"title": "Production"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "The film received universally positive reviews and currently holds a 100% rating on Rotten Tomatoes from 9 reviews. Writing for The Arts Desk, Graham Fuller described it as \"one of the best British films of 2023\". and Peter Bradshaw writing in the Guardian said it \"was a tremendous, humane tribute to a real artist\" The film featured inThe Guardian’s top 50 films of 2023 at number 46 and made number 10 on the Financial Times best films of 2023.",
"title": "Reception"
}
] | Tish is a British 2023 documentary film directed by Paul Sng. The film details the life and work of Newcastle social documentary photographer Tish Murtha. The film was critically acclaimed. | 2023-12-10T16:10:17Z | 2023-12-14T00:10:48Z | [
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75,531,069 | KGWO | KGWO may refer to: | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "KGWO may refer to:",
"title": ""
}
] | KGWO may refer to: KGWO (FM), a radio station licensed to serve Ogallala, Nebraska, United States
Greenwood–Leflore Airport | 2023-12-10T16:10:37Z | 2023-12-10T16:10:37Z | [
"Template:Disambiguation"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KGWO |
75,531,075 | Marshall F. Keen | Marshall F. Keen (born February 16, 1933) is an American politician. He served as a Republican member of the Georgia House of Representatives.
Keen was born in Bibb County, Georgia. He attended Georgia Tech.
Keen served in the Georgia House of Representatives from 1969 to 1970.
Category:1933 births Category:Living people Category:People from Bibb County, Georgia Category:Republican Party members of the Georgia House of Representatives Category:20th-century American politicians Category:Georgia Tech alumni | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Marshall F. Keen (born February 16, 1933) is an American politician. He served as a Republican member of the Georgia House of Representatives.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Keen was born in Bibb County, Georgia. He attended Georgia Tech.",
"title": "Life and career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Keen served in the Georgia House of Representatives from 1969 to 1970.",
"title": "Life and career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Category:1933 births Category:Living people Category:People from Bibb County, Georgia Category:Republican Party members of the Georgia House of Representatives Category:20th-century American politicians Category:Georgia Tech alumni",
"title": "References"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] | Marshall F. Keen is an American politician. He served as a Republican member of the Georgia House of Representatives. | 2023-12-10T16:12:09Z | 2023-12-10T20:52:35Z | [
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75,531,077 | Kandaghat Assembly constituency | Kandaghat Assembly constituency was an assembly constituency in the India state of Himachal Pradesh. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Kandaghat Assembly constituency was an assembly constituency in the India state of Himachal Pradesh.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] | Kandaghat Assembly constituency was an assembly constituency in the India state of Himachal Pradesh. | 2023-12-10T16:12:22Z | 2023-12-18T20:11:47Z | [
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] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kandaghat_Assembly_constituency |
75,531,085 | Eva Nielsen (artist) | Eva Nielsen (born 1983) is a French-Danish visual artist who currently lives and works in Paris. She is known for mixing screen-printing techniques with oil and ink on canvas to create large paintings of contemporary suburban landscapes.
After a BA in Modern History and Literature, Eva Nielsen received her MFA from Beaux-Arts de Paris in 2009 with a one-year Socrates scholarship at Central Saint Martins, London (2008). Upon graduation she was the recipient of the Prix des Amis des Beaux-Arts / Thaddeus Ropac Prize (2009) offering support and exhibition opportunities to young artists, followed by the Art Collector Prize in 2014. Her work has been shown in institutions such as Mac/Val, BNKR München, Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions (LACE), Louis Vuitton Foundation, Kunsthal Charlottenburg. Her work was included in the 16th Lyon Biennale of Contemporary Art: Manifesto of Fragility.
In subsequent years, Eva Nielsen's work has been short-listed for AWARE and Meurice prizes in 2017 and nominated for the 23rd Foundation Pernod Ricard Prize in 2022. She was the recipient of LVMH Métiers d'Art Grant and Residency program in 2021, allowing her to work closely with artisanal silk and leather printing techniques. In 2023, she was the recipient of BMW Group's Art Makers Program with French curator Marianne Derrien to create a series of works with a focus on the Camargue territory, with solo exhibitions at Rencontres photographiques d'Arles and Paris Photo (2023).
Eva Nielsen teaches at Beaux-Arts de Paris since 2022 and has been represented by The Pill Gallery since 2015.
Eva Nielsen uses silk-screen printing in her paintings in order to fragment and rearrange imagery from built environment, abandoned suburbia and desolate infrastructures. The hybridity of her gesture has been described as both "human and mechanical, producing a sensitive complexity". French art critic Anaël Pigeat wrote in 2012 that this contributes to a fragmentation on the painting's surface that acts "literally and metaphorically as projection surfaces, windows on the world both concealing and revealing". In 2014 she was cited by Arts Magazine among the forerunners of the "new wave" in French painting centered around a shared "spectral quality". According to art ciritic Clément Dirié, by using screen-printing, emphasizing negative space and blur, "Eva Nielsen offers traps for the eye, receptacles to project yourself into cognitive instruments against which we measure ourselves". In her "Insolare" series, combining "optical and hydrogeological phenomena with exposure to light, a technique used in screen-printing", Nielsen references "the incredible complexity of loss in nature".
Eva Nielsen's solo exhibitions include:
Her work has been included in institutional group shows such as | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Eva Nielsen (born 1983) is a French-Danish visual artist who currently lives and works in Paris. She is known for mixing screen-printing techniques with oil and ink on canvas to create large paintings of contemporary suburban landscapes.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "After a BA in Modern History and Literature, Eva Nielsen received her MFA from Beaux-Arts de Paris in 2009 with a one-year Socrates scholarship at Central Saint Martins, London (2008). Upon graduation she was the recipient of the Prix des Amis des Beaux-Arts / Thaddeus Ropac Prize (2009) offering support and exhibition opportunities to young artists, followed by the Art Collector Prize in 2014. Her work has been shown in institutions such as Mac/Val, BNKR München, Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions (LACE), Louis Vuitton Foundation, Kunsthal Charlottenburg. Her work was included in the 16th Lyon Biennale of Contemporary Art: Manifesto of Fragility.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "In subsequent years, Eva Nielsen's work has been short-listed for AWARE and Meurice prizes in 2017 and nominated for the 23rd Foundation Pernod Ricard Prize in 2022. She was the recipient of LVMH Métiers d'Art Grant and Residency program in 2021, allowing her to work closely with artisanal silk and leather printing techniques. In 2023, she was the recipient of BMW Group's Art Makers Program with French curator Marianne Derrien to create a series of works with a focus on the Camargue territory, with solo exhibitions at Rencontres photographiques d'Arles and Paris Photo (2023).",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Eva Nielsen teaches at Beaux-Arts de Paris since 2022 and has been represented by The Pill Gallery since 2015.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Eva Nielsen uses silk-screen printing in her paintings in order to fragment and rearrange imagery from built environment, abandoned suburbia and desolate infrastructures. The hybridity of her gesture has been described as both \"human and mechanical, producing a sensitive complexity\". French art critic Anaël Pigeat wrote in 2012 that this contributes to a fragmentation on the painting's surface that acts \"literally and metaphorically as projection surfaces, windows on the world both concealing and revealing\". In 2014 she was cited by Arts Magazine among the forerunners of the \"new wave\" in French painting centered around a shared \"spectral quality\". According to art ciritic Clément Dirié, by using screen-printing, emphasizing negative space and blur, \"Eva Nielsen offers traps for the eye, receptacles to project yourself into cognitive instruments against which we measure ourselves\". In her \"Insolare\" series, combining \"optical and hydrogeological phenomena with exposure to light, a technique used in screen-printing\", Nielsen references \"the incredible complexity of loss in nature\".",
"title": "Work"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "Eva Nielsen's solo exhibitions include:",
"title": "Exhibitions"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "Her work has been included in institutional group shows such as",
"title": "Exhibitions"
}
] | Eva Nielsen is a French-Danish visual artist who currently lives and works in Paris. She is known for mixing screen-printing techniques with oil and ink on canvas to create large paintings of contemporary suburban landscapes. | 2023-12-10T16:13:52Z | 2023-12-26T14:39:56Z | [
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75,531,086 | Martha Araújo (athlete) | Martha Valeria Araújo Sinisterra (born 12 May 1996) is a Colombian athlete competing in the combined events. She represented her country at the 2023 World Championships in Budapest without finishing the competition. In addition, she has won multiple medals on regional level. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Martha Valeria Araújo Sinisterra (born 12 May 1996) is a Colombian athlete competing in the combined events. She represented her country at the 2023 World Championships in Budapest without finishing the competition. In addition, she has won multiple medals on regional level.",
"title": ""
}
] | Martha Valeria Araújo Sinisterra is a Colombian athlete competing in the combined events. She represented her country at the 2023 World Championships in Budapest without finishing the competition. In addition, she has won multiple medals on regional level. | 2023-12-10T16:14:02Z | 2023-12-14T14:46:00Z | [
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75,531,097 | Enat Party | Enat Party (Amharic: እናት ፓርቲ) is a political party in Ethiopia founded in 2019. After its registration by National Election Board of Ethiopia (NEBE), the party grew its popularity behind the Prosperity Party and Ethiopian Citizens for Social Justice and emerged as opposition group. According to the party's Deputy President Seife Selassie Ayalew, "Enat party proposes a philosophy comprised of conservatism, social democracy and liberalism". In addition to these ideologies, Enat holds its position of historical form of Ethiopian nationalism with moderate Western political philosophies.
Enat Party was established in 2019 with Getnet Worku serving the first secretary general. The party was registered as a political party by the National Election Board of Ethiopia (NEBE) in January 2021, becoming the biggest party behind the Prosperity Party and Ethiopian Citizens for Social Justice with 583 candidates. According to its Deputy President Seife Selassie Ayalew, "Enat party proposes a philosophy comprised of conservatism, social democracy and liberalism". It does not believe in single political and economic philosophy. The party stemmed its ideology from historical background of Ethiopian nationalism embraced by the Western nations.
The party is the one of the most prime parties positioning itself as an opposition along with All Ethiopian Unity Party (AEUP), Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Party (EPRP), Amhara Ghinoians Movement and One Ethiopia Democratic Party. On 6 March 2023, Enat Party announced that it did not hold party congress auditorium because of the government repression pressured hindrance toward the party's access to logistics. According to the party, three reservations were cancelled. The first one was public venue supposed to be under the Ministry of Culture and Sports in Sidist Kilo area, the second was in Kirkos district through the arrangement of Political Parties Joint Council but was shortly cancelled within 48 hours before party congress that was supposed to be attended by 700 participants across the country. The party did not specify the reason behind the cancellation. The third one was seemingly due to the government threat to broaden its political space. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Enat Party (Amharic: እናት ፓርቲ) is a political party in Ethiopia founded in 2019. After its registration by National Election Board of Ethiopia (NEBE), the party grew its popularity behind the Prosperity Party and Ethiopian Citizens for Social Justice and emerged as opposition group. According to the party's Deputy President Seife Selassie Ayalew, \"Enat party proposes a philosophy comprised of conservatism, social democracy and liberalism\". In addition to these ideologies, Enat holds its position of historical form of Ethiopian nationalism with moderate Western political philosophies.",
"title": ""
},
{
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"text": "Enat Party was established in 2019 with Getnet Worku serving the first secretary general. The party was registered as a political party by the National Election Board of Ethiopia (NEBE) in January 2021, becoming the biggest party behind the Prosperity Party and Ethiopian Citizens for Social Justice with 583 candidates. According to its Deputy President Seife Selassie Ayalew, \"Enat party proposes a philosophy comprised of conservatism, social democracy and liberalism\". It does not believe in single political and economic philosophy. The party stemmed its ideology from historical background of Ethiopian nationalism embraced by the Western nations.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The party is the one of the most prime parties positioning itself as an opposition along with All Ethiopian Unity Party (AEUP), Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Party (EPRP), Amhara Ghinoians Movement and One Ethiopia Democratic Party. On 6 March 2023, Enat Party announced that it did not hold party congress auditorium because of the government repression pressured hindrance toward the party's access to logistics. According to the party, three reservations were cancelled. The first one was public venue supposed to be under the Ministry of Culture and Sports in Sidist Kilo area, the second was in Kirkos district through the arrangement of Political Parties Joint Council but was shortly cancelled within 48 hours before party congress that was supposed to be attended by 700 participants across the country. The party did not specify the reason behind the cancellation. The third one was seemingly due to the government threat to broaden its political space.",
"title": "History"
}
] | Enat Party is a political party in Ethiopia founded in 2019. After its registration by National Election Board of Ethiopia (NEBE), the party grew its popularity behind the Prosperity Party and Ethiopian Citizens for Social Justice and emerged as opposition group. According to the party's Deputy President Seife Selassie Ayalew, "Enat party proposes a philosophy comprised of conservatism, social democracy and liberalism". In addition to these ideologies, Enat holds its position of historical form of Ethiopian nationalism with moderate Western political philosophies. | 2023-12-10T16:15:02Z | 2023-12-18T22:54:49Z | [
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75,531,101 | World Dwarf Games | The World Dwarf Games (WDG) are a multi-sport event for athletes of short stature. The WDG have been held every four years since 1993 and are the world's largest sporting event exclusively for athletes with skeletal dysplasia. Many Paralympians with growth disorders start their sports careers here.
In 1986, the first international competition for people of short stature was held. In 1993, 10 organizations united and launched the first World Dwarf Games. These were held in Chicago in the United States of America. The associations of these 10 countries then collectively founded the IDSF (International Dwarf Sport Federation), which has since supported a host association organizing the WDG every four years in its country. The WDG aims to motivate people under 1.50 meters from around the world to participate in sports. Individuals with short stature can participate in the Paralympic Games, but only in events such as athletics, swimming, and weightlifting. During the WDG, athletes have the opportunity to participate in a wider range of sports, including soccer, basketball, floor hockey, volleyball, athletics, swimming, boccia, archery, table tennis, badminton, and weightlifting.
At the most recent event in 2023 on the campus of the German Sport University and in the Müngersdorf Sportpark in Cologne, over 500 people from 25 countries participated, with over 2,000 fans attending the event. This edition was originally planned for 2021 but had to be postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The next event is scheduled for 2027 in Australia.
The event's growth is attributed to the increased visibility of disability sports following the 2012 Paralympics. The event promotes inclusion, recognizing abilities over disabilities, and has inspired athletes like Ellie Simmonds, a gold medal-winning swimmer, Claire Keefer, a Paralympic weightlifter and Jahmani Swanson, a Harlem Globetrotter. The Games provide a platform for aspiring Paralympians.
The International Dwarf Sports Federation oversees the organization of the World Dwarf Games. Its objective traces the historical development of dwarf participation in sports, spotlighting initial challenges such as exclusion and low self-esteem. Affiliated with the IDSF, Dwarf Sport organizations, including DAAA, DAAUK, IDSF, and their global counterparts, aim to provide Little People with equal opportunities in sports, yielding positive impacts on inclusion, self-esteem, and a sense of achievement.
16 Country:
16 sports:
The International Dwarf Sports Federation – IDSF, the organisation responsible for the organisation of the World Dwarf Games maintains affiliations and relationships with the following organizations:
The event has attracted international media attention, with various international TV teams reporting and several documentaries produced to raise awareness. This broad media coverage has contributed to increasing awareness and recognition of the World Dwarf Games in the Netherlands and beyond, including:
In the UK, the BBC has widely covered several editions. In Australia, the Australian Broadcasting Company has often widely covered the WDG. In Canada, news outlets like the CDC have covered local athletes. In 2023 Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau sent a message of support to Canada's participating athletes. In the Netherlands, there has traditionally been significant media attention devoted to the World Dwarf Games (WDG). Various media channels, including NOS, extensively covered the event in 2013, 2017 as well as 2023. In Belgium, the WDG was covered in Gazet van Antwerpen and Het Nieuwsblad.
The WDG have been featured in a number of episodes on the American television series Little People, Big World on TLC. The show, centered around the dwarf members of the Roloff family, has included a number of episodes where members of the family have participated in WDG events. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The World Dwarf Games (WDG) are a multi-sport event for athletes of short stature. The WDG have been held every four years since 1993 and are the world's largest sporting event exclusively for athletes with skeletal dysplasia. Many Paralympians with growth disorders start their sports careers here.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "In 1986, the first international competition for people of short stature was held. In 1993, 10 organizations united and launched the first World Dwarf Games. These were held in Chicago in the United States of America. The associations of these 10 countries then collectively founded the IDSF (International Dwarf Sport Federation), which has since supported a host association organizing the WDG every four years in its country. The WDG aims to motivate people under 1.50 meters from around the world to participate in sports. Individuals with short stature can participate in the Paralympic Games, but only in events such as athletics, swimming, and weightlifting. During the WDG, athletes have the opportunity to participate in a wider range of sports, including soccer, basketball, floor hockey, volleyball, athletics, swimming, boccia, archery, table tennis, badminton, and weightlifting.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "At the most recent event in 2023 on the campus of the German Sport University and in the Müngersdorf Sportpark in Cologne, over 500 people from 25 countries participated, with over 2,000 fans attending the event. This edition was originally planned for 2021 but had to be postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The next event is scheduled for 2027 in Australia.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "The event's growth is attributed to the increased visibility of disability sports following the 2012 Paralympics. The event promotes inclusion, recognizing abilities over disabilities, and has inspired athletes like Ellie Simmonds, a gold medal-winning swimmer, Claire Keefer, a Paralympic weightlifter and Jahmani Swanson, a Harlem Globetrotter. The Games provide a platform for aspiring Paralympians.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "The International Dwarf Sports Federation oversees the organization of the World Dwarf Games. Its objective traces the historical development of dwarf participation in sports, spotlighting initial challenges such as exclusion and low self-esteem. Affiliated with the IDSF, Dwarf Sport organizations, including DAAA, DAAUK, IDSF, and their global counterparts, aim to provide Little People with equal opportunities in sports, yielding positive impacts on inclusion, self-esteem, and a sense of achievement.",
"title": "International Dwarf Sports Federation"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "16 Country:",
"title": "Previous events"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "16 sports:",
"title": "Previous events"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "The International Dwarf Sports Federation – IDSF, the organisation responsible for the organisation of the World Dwarf Games maintains affiliations and relationships with the following organizations:",
"title": "Affiliations"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "The event has attracted international media attention, with various international TV teams reporting and several documentaries produced to raise awareness. This broad media coverage has contributed to increasing awareness and recognition of the World Dwarf Games in the Netherlands and beyond, including:",
"title": "Media"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 9,
"text": "In the UK, the BBC has widely covered several editions. In Australia, the Australian Broadcasting Company has often widely covered the WDG. In Canada, news outlets like the CDC have covered local athletes. In 2023 Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau sent a message of support to Canada's participating athletes. In the Netherlands, there has traditionally been significant media attention devoted to the World Dwarf Games (WDG). Various media channels, including NOS, extensively covered the event in 2013, 2017 as well as 2023. In Belgium, the WDG was covered in Gazet van Antwerpen and Het Nieuwsblad.",
"title": "Media"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 10,
"text": "The WDG have been featured in a number of episodes on the American television series Little People, Big World on TLC. The show, centered around the dwarf members of the Roloff family, has included a number of episodes where members of the family have participated in WDG events.",
"title": "Media"
}
] | The World Dwarf Games (WDG) are a multi-sport event for athletes of short stature. The WDG have been held every four years since 1993 and are the world's largest sporting event exclusively for athletes with skeletal dysplasia. Many Paralympians with growth disorders start their sports careers here. | 2023-12-10T16:15:44Z | 2023-12-12T01:49:52Z | [
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75,531,112 | Ishwar Sahu | Ishwar Sahu (born 1981) is an Indian politician, rickshaw puller and laborer who is serving as member of Chhattisgarh Legislative Assembly elected from Saja Assembly constituency. He is a member of the Bharatiya Janata Party, Chhattisgarh.
Sahu is educated till Class 5.
Sahu’s son was murdered in a riot. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Ishwar Sahu (born 1981) is an Indian politician, rickshaw puller and laborer who is serving as member of Chhattisgarh Legislative Assembly elected from Saja Assembly constituency. He is a member of the Bharatiya Janata Party, Chhattisgarh.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Sahu is educated till Class 5.",
"title": "Education"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Sahu’s son was murdered in a riot.",
"title": "Personal life"
}
] | Ishwar Sahu is an Indian politician, rickshaw puller and laborer who is serving as member of Chhattisgarh Legislative Assembly elected from Saja Assembly constituency. He is a member of the Bharatiya Janata Party, Chhattisgarh. | 2023-12-10T16:17:43Z | 2023-12-15T19:25:17Z | [
"Template:Cite web"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ishwar_Sahu |
75,531,126 | Central-Eastern Niger Fulfulde | Central-Eastern Niger Fulfulde is a variety of the Fula language a Niger–Congo language predominantly spoken in the Central and Eastern regions of Niger, particularly among the Fulani people. The linguistic structure of this language exhibits distinct features, including a Subject-Verb-Object (SVO) word order. Prepositions and postpositions are utilized in the language to convey spatial relationships. Genitives, articles, adjectives, numerals, and relatives follow noun heads, contributing to the overall complexity of sentence structures. The language employs a question-word-final pattern, placing question words at the end of interrogative sentences. Additionally, there is a specific set of affixes, comprising one prefix and nine suffixes, which play a crucial role in marking number and subject in verbs.
Word order nuances are significant, as it distinguishes subjects, objects, indirect objects, given and new information, as well as topics and comments within sentences. Furthermore, verb affixes are essential for indicating number and subject, with their usage being obligatory. Class marking with participles is also mandatory in Central-Eastern Niger Fulfulde.
The language exhibits both middle and passive voice constructions, allowing for a nuanced expression of actions and their agents. Causatives are incorporated to denote actions that are caused or induced by external factors. Phonologically, the language adheres to a combination of consonant-vowel (CV), consonant-vowel-consonant (CVC), consonant-vowel-vowel (CVV), and consonant-vowel-vowel-consonant (CVVC) structures. Importantly, Central-Eastern Niger Fulfulde is nontonal, meaning that pitch variations do not play a distinctive role in conveying meaning, in contrast to tonal languages where pitch differences can alter the meaning of a word.
Central-Eastern Niger Fulfulde is spoken by the Wodaabe people and is culturally distinct from other varieties of Fula, with many loanwords from Hausa used. Most speakers also speak Hausa. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Central-Eastern Niger Fulfulde is a variety of the Fula language a Niger–Congo language predominantly spoken in the Central and Eastern regions of Niger, particularly among the Fulani people. The linguistic structure of this language exhibits distinct features, including a Subject-Verb-Object (SVO) word order. Prepositions and postpositions are utilized in the language to convey spatial relationships. Genitives, articles, adjectives, numerals, and relatives follow noun heads, contributing to the overall complexity of sentence structures. The language employs a question-word-final pattern, placing question words at the end of interrogative sentences. Additionally, there is a specific set of affixes, comprising one prefix and nine suffixes, which play a crucial role in marking number and subject in verbs.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Word order nuances are significant, as it distinguishes subjects, objects, indirect objects, given and new information, as well as topics and comments within sentences. Furthermore, verb affixes are essential for indicating number and subject, with their usage being obligatory. Class marking with participles is also mandatory in Central-Eastern Niger Fulfulde.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The language exhibits both middle and passive voice constructions, allowing for a nuanced expression of actions and their agents. Causatives are incorporated to denote actions that are caused or induced by external factors. Phonologically, the language adheres to a combination of consonant-vowel (CV), consonant-vowel-consonant (CVC), consonant-vowel-vowel (CVV), and consonant-vowel-vowel-consonant (CVVC) structures. Importantly, Central-Eastern Niger Fulfulde is nontonal, meaning that pitch variations do not play a distinctive role in conveying meaning, in contrast to tonal languages where pitch differences can alter the meaning of a word.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Central-Eastern Niger Fulfulde is spoken by the Wodaabe people and is culturally distinct from other varieties of Fula, with many loanwords from Hausa used. Most speakers also speak Hausa.",
"title": ""
}
] | Central-Eastern Niger Fulfulde is a variety of the Fula language a Niger–Congo language predominantly spoken in the Central and Eastern regions of Niger, particularly among the Fulani people. The linguistic structure of this language exhibits distinct features, including a Subject-Verb-Object (SVO) word order. Prepositions and postpositions are utilized in the language to convey spatial relationships. Genitives, articles, adjectives, numerals, and relatives follow noun heads, contributing to the overall complexity of sentence structures. The language employs a question-word-final pattern, placing question words at the end of interrogative sentences. Additionally, there is a specific set of affixes, comprising one prefix and nine suffixes, which play a crucial role in marking number and subject in verbs. Word order nuances are significant, as it distinguishes subjects, objects, indirect objects, given and new information, as well as topics and comments within sentences. Furthermore, verb affixes are essential for indicating number and subject, with their usage being obligatory. Class marking with participles is also mandatory in Central-Eastern Niger Fulfulde. The language exhibits both middle and passive voice constructions, allowing for a nuanced expression of actions and their agents. Causatives are incorporated to denote actions that are caused or induced by external factors. Phonologically, the language adheres to a combination of consonant-vowel (CV), consonant-vowel-consonant (CVC), consonant-vowel-vowel (CVV), and consonant-vowel-vowel-consonant (CVVC) structures. Importantly, Central-Eastern Niger Fulfulde is nontonal, meaning that pitch variations do not play a distinctive role in conveying meaning, in contrast to tonal languages where pitch differences can alter the meaning of a word. Central-Eastern Niger Fulfulde is spoken by the Wodaabe people and is culturally distinct from other varieties of Fula, with many loanwords from Hausa used. Most speakers also speak Hausa. | 2023-12-10T16:19:58Z | 2023-12-26T04:01:04Z | [
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75,531,129 | The Mysteries of Joy Rio | “The Mysteries of the Joy Rio” is a work of short fiction by Tennessee Williams. Written in 1941, the work first appeared in the collection Hard Candy: A Book of Stories (1954), published by New Directions.
“The Mysteries of the Joy Rio” is told in third-person omniscient point-of-view. The narrative is presented in four sections. The story opens in a clock repair shop, owned by Pablo Gonzales. Now 40-year-old, the shop was bequeathed to him by his late mentor and lover Emiel Kroger, an elderly German-American watch repairman. Twenty years ago he engaged the 19-year-old Pablo Gonzales and fell in love with his protege.The relationship had been an affectionate one when Kroger died three years later. Pablo mourns the loss of his mentor. Pablo, a skilled repairman, runs the business successfully.
Pablo routinely walks to an old opera house, now serving as a run-down movie theatre which features cartoons and Westerns: the Joy Rio theatre. The establishment attracts mostly children and young adolescents. In Mr. Kroger's day, before he met Pablo, the upper gallery of the Joy Rio was notorious as a venue for gay men and youth. Mr. Kroger at times partook of these sexual gatherings. With its notoriety, the management closed the gallery, and it remained blocked with a “Keep Out” warning for years. In attending these showings furtively, Pablo is aware that he is seeking to emulate Mr. Kroger's experiences and assuage his loneliness. Pablo discovers he has terminal cancer; the treatments continue for a year and his health deteriorates.
On one visit to the theatre, Pablo accidentally interrupts a sexual encounter between the teenage theatre usher and his girlfriend in the public restroom. Enraged, the boy threatens to beat him, and Pablo in a panic flees to the off-limits upper gallery. In the darkened stairway, he is beckoned to by a dim figure. The voice of Emiel Kroger commands him to approach. Taking him by the arm, the apparition leads him into the recesses of the gallery. There Kroger comforts and reassures Pablo, and in whose arms Pablo peacefully dies.
The story was written in 1941 while Williams was residing in New Orleans, Louisiana, and collected first in Hard Candy: A Book of Stories (1954).
Williams's short story “Hard Candy”, begun in 1949 and completed in 1953, is a variation on the narrative and themes presented in “The Mysteries of Joy Rio.”
Literary critic Dennis Vannatta includes “The Miracles of Joy Rio” among the works of short fiction of Williams’ mature period “that shows the author in complete command of his powers as a short story writer.” Vannatta adds that the story “evinces masterly gifts and a unique vision.” Novelist Gore Vidal simply calls the story “wonderfully crazed.”
With the emergence of Williams’ maturity as a fiction writer, and shortly before his first success as a playwright, the topic of homosexuality began to appear - implicitly yet unmistakable - in his short fiction. Literary critic Dennis Vannatta observes that “beginning with “The Mysteries of Joy Rio,” homosexuality becomes a frequent and important theme in his short stories.”
"[H]omosexuality is but one very real manifestation of a broader phenomenon in Williams’s work: the need for love and companionship and the difficulties of finding them in a world that grinds up the sensitive, the wounded, and the fugitive. This is the theme of 'The Mysteries of Joy Rio'..."—Literary critic Dennis Vannatta in Tennessee Williams: A Study of the Short Fiction (1988)
The “Joy Rio” of the story, once a miniature yet stylish grand opera house, has been converted to “a third-rate cinema” offering B movies. It is here that the focal character, Pablo Gonzalez, seeks to test the “theory” conveyed to him by his now deceased mentor and lover, Emiel Kroger:
It was his theory...that the soul becomes intolerably burdened with lies that have to be told to the world in order to be permitted to live, and that unless this burden is relieved by entire honesty with some one person, who is trusted and adored, the soul will finally collapse beneath its weight of falsity.
In his Memoirs (1975), Williams acknowledged that his treatment of homosexuality would cause “significant embarrassment” among his publishers, he declined “to dissimulate” the details of his personal life in his short fiction. | [
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"text": "“The Mysteries of the Joy Rio” is a work of short fiction by Tennessee Williams. Written in 1941, the work first appeared in the collection Hard Candy: A Book of Stories (1954), published by New Directions.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "“The Mysteries of the Joy Rio” is told in third-person omniscient point-of-view. The narrative is presented in four sections. The story opens in a clock repair shop, owned by Pablo Gonzales. Now 40-year-old, the shop was bequeathed to him by his late mentor and lover Emiel Kroger, an elderly German-American watch repairman. Twenty years ago he engaged the 19-year-old Pablo Gonzales and fell in love with his protege.The relationship had been an affectionate one when Kroger died three years later. Pablo mourns the loss of his mentor. Pablo, a skilled repairman, runs the business successfully.",
"title": "Plot"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Pablo routinely walks to an old opera house, now serving as a run-down movie theatre which features cartoons and Westerns: the Joy Rio theatre. The establishment attracts mostly children and young adolescents. In Mr. Kroger's day, before he met Pablo, the upper gallery of the Joy Rio was notorious as a venue for gay men and youth. Mr. Kroger at times partook of these sexual gatherings. With its notoriety, the management closed the gallery, and it remained blocked with a “Keep Out” warning for years. In attending these showings furtively, Pablo is aware that he is seeking to emulate Mr. Kroger's experiences and assuage his loneliness. Pablo discovers he has terminal cancer; the treatments continue for a year and his health deteriorates.",
"title": "Plot"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "On one visit to the theatre, Pablo accidentally interrupts a sexual encounter between the teenage theatre usher and his girlfriend in the public restroom. Enraged, the boy threatens to beat him, and Pablo in a panic flees to the off-limits upper gallery. In the darkened stairway, he is beckoned to by a dim figure. The voice of Emiel Kroger commands him to approach. Taking him by the arm, the apparition leads him into the recesses of the gallery. There Kroger comforts and reassures Pablo, and in whose arms Pablo peacefully dies.",
"title": "Plot"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "The story was written in 1941 while Williams was residing in New Orleans, Louisiana, and collected first in Hard Candy: A Book of Stories (1954).",
"title": "Background"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "Williams's short story “Hard Candy”, begun in 1949 and completed in 1953, is a variation on the narrative and themes presented in “The Mysteries of Joy Rio.”",
"title": "Background"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "Literary critic Dennis Vannatta includes “The Miracles of Joy Rio” among the works of short fiction of Williams’ mature period “that shows the author in complete command of his powers as a short story writer.” Vannatta adds that the story “evinces masterly gifts and a unique vision.” Novelist Gore Vidal simply calls the story “wonderfully crazed.”",
"title": "Critical appraisal"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "With the emergence of Williams’ maturity as a fiction writer, and shortly before his first success as a playwright, the topic of homosexuality began to appear - implicitly yet unmistakable - in his short fiction. Literary critic Dennis Vannatta observes that “beginning with “The Mysteries of Joy Rio,” homosexuality becomes a frequent and important theme in his short stories.”",
"title": "Theme"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "\"[H]omosexuality is but one very real manifestation of a broader phenomenon in Williams’s work: the need for love and companionship and the difficulties of finding them in a world that grinds up the sensitive, the wounded, and the fugitive. This is the theme of 'The Mysteries of Joy Rio'...\"—Literary critic Dennis Vannatta in Tennessee Williams: A Study of the Short Fiction (1988)",
"title": "Theme"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 9,
"text": "The “Joy Rio” of the story, once a miniature yet stylish grand opera house, has been converted to “a third-rate cinema” offering B movies. It is here that the focal character, Pablo Gonzalez, seeks to test the “theory” conveyed to him by his now deceased mentor and lover, Emiel Kroger:",
"title": "Theme"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 10,
"text": "It was his theory...that the soul becomes intolerably burdened with lies that have to be told to the world in order to be permitted to live, and that unless this burden is relieved by entire honesty with some one person, who is trusted and adored, the soul will finally collapse beneath its weight of falsity.",
"title": "Theme"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 11,
"text": "In his Memoirs (1975), Williams acknowledged that his treatment of homosexuality would cause “significant embarrassment” among his publishers, he declined “to dissimulate” the details of his personal life in his short fiction.",
"title": "Theme"
}
] | “The Mysteries of the Joy Rio” is a work of short fiction by Tennessee Williams. Written in 1941, the work first appeared in the collection Hard Candy: A Book of Stories (1954), published by New Directions. | 2023-12-10T16:20:21Z | 2023-12-15T14:22:30Z | [
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75,531,132 | Trinity Ruins Christmas: The Musical | Trinity Ruins Christmas: The Musical is a holiday album by American drag performer Trinity the Tuck, released via the label Producer Entertainment Group on November 17, 2023. She released the album in conjunction with the book Trinity Ruins Christmas: The Chronicles of Sister Mary Kuntz, co-written by Jason Michael Snow, as well as a Christmas ornament. The book was inspired by A Christmas Carol and the Grinch, and illustrates the album's story arc. Among guests on the album are Trinity's fellow RuPaul's Drag Race contestants Alaska Thunderfuck, Ginger Minj, Jimbo, Manila Luzon, and Kylie Sonique Love.
Trinity Ruins Christmas was inspired by Charles Dickens' 1843 novella A Christmas Carol and the Grinch. Trinity the Tuck has described the project as "a queer version" of A Christmas Carol. Drew Louis oversaw production and writing of the album, which features songs co-written by Louis, Jayelle Gerber, and Trinity the Tuck. Guests on the album include Trinity's fellow RuPaul's Drag Race contestants Alaska Thunderfuck, Ginger Minj, Jimbo, Manila Luzon, and Kylie Sonique Love, as well as Aria B Cassadine from the television series Queen of the Universe.
Credits adapted from AllMusic | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Trinity Ruins Christmas: The Musical is a holiday album by American drag performer Trinity the Tuck, released via the label Producer Entertainment Group on November 17, 2023. She released the album in conjunction with the book Trinity Ruins Christmas: The Chronicles of Sister Mary Kuntz, co-written by Jason Michael Snow, as well as a Christmas ornament. The book was inspired by A Christmas Carol and the Grinch, and illustrates the album's story arc. Among guests on the album are Trinity's fellow RuPaul's Drag Race contestants Alaska Thunderfuck, Ginger Minj, Jimbo, Manila Luzon, and Kylie Sonique Love.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Trinity Ruins Christmas was inspired by Charles Dickens' 1843 novella A Christmas Carol and the Grinch. Trinity the Tuck has described the project as \"a queer version\" of A Christmas Carol. Drew Louis oversaw production and writing of the album, which features songs co-written by Louis, Jayelle Gerber, and Trinity the Tuck. Guests on the album include Trinity's fellow RuPaul's Drag Race contestants Alaska Thunderfuck, Ginger Minj, Jimbo, Manila Luzon, and Kylie Sonique Love, as well as Aria B Cassadine from the television series Queen of the Universe.",
"title": "Composition"
},
{
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"text": "Credits adapted from AllMusic",
"title": "Personnel"
}
] | Trinity Ruins Christmas: The Musical is a holiday album by American drag performer Trinity the Tuck, released via the label Producer Entertainment Group on November 17, 2023. She released the album in conjunction with the book Trinity Ruins Christmas: The Chronicles of Sister Mary Kuntz, co-written by Jason Michael Snow, as well as a Christmas ornament. The book was inspired by A Christmas Carol and the Grinch, and illustrates the album's story arc. Among guests on the album are Trinity's fellow RuPaul's Drag Race contestants Alaska Thunderfuck, Ginger Minj, Jimbo, Manila Luzon, and Kylie Sonique Love. | 2023-12-10T16:20:44Z | 2023-12-22T02:59:01Z | [
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75,531,136 | Izzy Fry | Izzy Fry (born 4 May 2000) is a British track and field athlete and cross country runner.
Fry attended Park House School in Newbury, Berkshire.
A member of Newbury Athletic Club, Fry finished fourth in the 5000m at the 2019 European Athletics U20 Championships in Boras, Sweden in 2019. In March 2020, she reached the number one in the world junior cross country rankings and straddled that with top-10 finishes at the 2019 and 2021 European Cross Country Championships in the age-group category events, winning gold as part of the women's U20 team in Lisbon in 2019. She also finished fourth at the 2020 UK National Championships over 5000m.
Fry became World University Cross Country champion in March 2022, in Aveiro, Portugal. She was also part of a gold medal-winning a British squad in the team event. Later that year, she finished third at the NI International Cross Country event, in Belfast.
Fry's 2023 was severely hampered by a serious foot injury which she received in the spring and missed the entire track season. She was selected for the 2023 European Cross Country Championships in Brussels in December 2023. She finished tenth overall, and won gold as part of the successful British squad which won the team event. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Izzy Fry (born 4 May 2000) is a British track and field athlete and cross country runner.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Fry attended Park House School in Newbury, Berkshire.",
"title": "Early life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "A member of Newbury Athletic Club, Fry finished fourth in the 5000m at the 2019 European Athletics U20 Championships in Boras, Sweden in 2019. In March 2020, she reached the number one in the world junior cross country rankings and straddled that with top-10 finishes at the 2019 and 2021 European Cross Country Championships in the age-group category events, winning gold as part of the women's U20 team in Lisbon in 2019. She also finished fourth at the 2020 UK National Championships over 5000m.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Fry became World University Cross Country champion in March 2022, in Aveiro, Portugal. She was also part of a gold medal-winning a British squad in the team event. Later that year, she finished third at the NI International Cross Country event, in Belfast.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Fry's 2023 was severely hampered by a serious foot injury which she received in the spring and missed the entire track season. She was selected for the 2023 European Cross Country Championships in Brussels in December 2023. She finished tenth overall, and won gold as part of the successful British squad which won the team event.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] | Izzy Fry is a British track and field athlete and cross country runner. | 2023-12-10T16:22:38Z | 2023-12-13T01:04:34Z | [
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75,531,152 | Museum of Historical Treasures of Ukraine | The Treasury of the National Museum of the History of Ukraine (formerly the Museum of Historical Treasures of Ukraine) is a museum that serves as a branch of the National Museum of the History of Ukraine. The exposition focuses on historical and artistic artefacts made of precious metals and gemstones. It is located on the territory of the National Reserve "Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra.
The branch was established by government order in 1963 under the name "Golden Chamber" as a division of the State Historical Museum of the Ukrainian SSR. The initial collection was created in accordance with the order to transfer works of precious metals and gemstones from twenty museum institutions. The newly established museum facility was adapted in building No. 12 (Kovnirivsky Building) on the territory of the [State Historical and Cultural Preserve "Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra"|Kyiv Pechersk Lavra], the former monastery bakery, and bookstore.
The branch was opened to visitors on 4 January 1969.
In addition to transferred [exhibits], a significant contribution to the creation of the Museum of Historical Treasures was made by collections of finds (in total, over 30,000 items) received from the Institute of Archaeology of the Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR.
In 2004, repairs were carried out, and the exhibition was updated. The building was thoroughly renovated, and the branch received modern exhibition and storage equipment.
On 16 November 2015, the collective of the branch publicly expressed disagreement with the orders and the new structure of the National Museum of the History of Ukraine, as well as the liquidation of the status of the MIKU collection, considering the decisions of the then director of the National Museum of the History of Ukraine, to be erroneous and could lead to irreversible consequences.
In 2021, the branch was renamed from "Museum of Historical Treasures of Ukraine" to "Treasury of the National Museum of the History of Ukraine". | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The Treasury of the National Museum of the History of Ukraine (formerly the Museum of Historical Treasures of Ukraine) is a museum that serves as a branch of the National Museum of the History of Ukraine. The exposition focuses on historical and artistic artefacts made of precious metals and gemstones. It is located on the territory of the National Reserve \"Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The branch was established by government order in 1963 under the name \"Golden Chamber\" as a division of the State Historical Museum of the Ukrainian SSR. The initial collection was created in accordance with the order to transfer works of precious metals and gemstones from twenty museum institutions. The newly established museum facility was adapted in building No. 12 (Kovnirivsky Building) on the territory of the [State Historical and Cultural Preserve \"Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra\"|Kyiv Pechersk Lavra], the former monastery bakery, and bookstore.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The branch was opened to visitors on 4 January 1969.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "In addition to transferred [exhibits], a significant contribution to the creation of the Museum of Historical Treasures was made by collections of finds (in total, over 30,000 items) received from the Institute of Archaeology of the Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "In 2004, repairs were carried out, and the exhibition was updated. The building was thoroughly renovated, and the branch received modern exhibition and storage equipment.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "On 16 November 2015, the collective of the branch publicly expressed disagreement with the orders and the new structure of the National Museum of the History of Ukraine, as well as the liquidation of the status of the MIKU collection, considering the decisions of the then director of the National Museum of the History of Ukraine, to be erroneous and could lead to irreversible consequences.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "In 2021, the branch was renamed from \"Museum of Historical Treasures of Ukraine\" to \"Treasury of the National Museum of the History of Ukraine\".",
"title": "History"
}
] | The Treasury of the National Museum of the History of Ukraine is a museum that serves as a branch of the National Museum of the History of Ukraine. The exposition focuses on historical and artistic artefacts made of precious metals and gemstones. It is located on the territory of the National Reserve "Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra. | 2023-12-10T16:25:43Z | 2023-12-31T00:49:46Z | [
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75,531,156 | The Golden Wire | The Golden Wire is the third solo album by the English musician Andy Summers, released in 1989. Summers promoted the album with a North American tour. "A Piece of Time" was nominated for a Grammy Award, in the "Best Rock Instrumental Performance" category.
The album was produced by Summers and David Hentschel. Summers remained more interested in jazz and instrumental music than in rock music. Paul McCandless played saxophone or oboe on some of the tracks. Najma Akhtar sang on "Piya Tose", the only track on the album with vocals.
The New York Times wrote that "the music embraces an array of styles from jazz-rock in the mystical mode of the Mahavishnu Orchestra to pastoral reveries that have a floating new-age ambiance." The Orlando Sentinel stated that the album "delves deeper into New Age and world-music sounds." Trouser Press praised the "much-needed rhythmic muscle and textural variety."
The Edmonton Journal called the album "a high density blend of dreamy effects and rhythmic forces that draw comparison with the two records Summers recorded with Robert Fripp in the early 80's." The Chicago Tribune stated that the Summers "drifts from brief encounters with the echo unit that gave the Police their trademark sound to samplings of rhythms from around the globe." The Times deemed The Golden Wire "all pleasantly aimless and rather academic."
AllMusic wrote that "the textures here have more in common with his work as guitarist for the Police, though his playing is better highlighted in this solo context." | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The Golden Wire is the third solo album by the English musician Andy Summers, released in 1989. Summers promoted the album with a North American tour. \"A Piece of Time\" was nominated for a Grammy Award, in the \"Best Rock Instrumental Performance\" category.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The album was produced by Summers and David Hentschel. Summers remained more interested in jazz and instrumental music than in rock music. Paul McCandless played saxophone or oboe on some of the tracks. Najma Akhtar sang on \"Piya Tose\", the only track on the album with vocals.",
"title": "Production"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The New York Times wrote that \"the music embraces an array of styles from jazz-rock in the mystical mode of the Mahavishnu Orchestra to pastoral reveries that have a floating new-age ambiance.\" The Orlando Sentinel stated that the album \"delves deeper into New Age and world-music sounds.\" Trouser Press praised the \"much-needed rhythmic muscle and textural variety.\"",
"title": "Critical reception"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "The Edmonton Journal called the album \"a high density blend of dreamy effects and rhythmic forces that draw comparison with the two records Summers recorded with Robert Fripp in the early 80's.\" The Chicago Tribune stated that the Summers \"drifts from brief encounters with the echo unit that gave the Police their trademark sound to samplings of rhythms from around the globe.\" The Times deemed The Golden Wire \"all pleasantly aimless and rather academic.\"",
"title": "Critical reception"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "AllMusic wrote that \"the textures here have more in common with his work as guitarist for the Police, though his playing is better highlighted in this solo context.\"",
"title": "Critical reception"
}
] | The Golden Wire is the third solo album by the English musician Andy Summers, released in 1989. Summers promoted the album with a North American tour. "A Piece of Time" was nominated for a Grammy Award, in the "Best Rock Instrumental Performance" category. | 2023-12-10T16:26:40Z | 2023-12-10T17:14:19Z | [
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75,531,200 | Sri Lankan blackouts | Sri Lankan blackouts may refer to: | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Sri Lankan blackouts may refer to:",
"title": ""
}
] | Sri Lankan blackouts may refer to: 2020 Sri Lankan blackouts
2023 Sri Lankan blackouts | 2023-12-10T16:32:31Z | 2023-12-10T16:34:37Z | [
"Template:Disambiguation"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sri_Lankan_blackouts |
75,531,201 | List of acts of the 54th New Zealand Parliament | This is a list of acts passed during the 54th New Zealand Parliament (27 November 2023 onwards), the first parliament of the Sixth National Government of New Zealand (2023–present). For lists of earlier acts, see Lists of acts of the New Zealand Parliament.
This is a list of acts passed during the 54th New Zealand Parliament in 2023. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "This is a list of acts passed during the 54th New Zealand Parliament (27 November 2023 onwards), the first parliament of the Sixth National Government of New Zealand (2023–present). For lists of earlier acts, see Lists of acts of the New Zealand Parliament.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "This is a list of acts passed during the 54th New Zealand Parliament in 2023.",
"title": "2023"
}
] | This is a list of acts passed during the 54th New Zealand Parliament, the first parliament of the Sixth National Government of New Zealand (2023–present). For lists of earlier acts, see Lists of acts of the New Zealand Parliament. | 2023-12-10T16:32:49Z | 2023-12-26T04:18:57Z | [
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75,531,222 | 1994 Worthing Borough Council election | The 1994 Worthing Borough Council election took place on 5 May 1994 to elect members of Worthing Borough Council in West Sussex, England. This was on the same day as other local elections.
Following the results of the election, the Liberal Democrats took control of the council for the first time in the council's history. | [
{
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"text": "The 1994 Worthing Borough Council election took place on 5 May 1994 to elect members of Worthing Borough Council in West Sussex, England. This was on the same day as other local elections.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Following the results of the election, the Liberal Democrats took control of the council for the first time in the council's history.",
"title": ""
}
] | The 1994 Worthing Borough Council election took place on 5 May 1994 to elect members of Worthing Borough Council in West Sussex, England. This was on the same day as other local elections. Following the results of the election, the Liberal Democrats took control of the council for the first time in the council's history. | 2023-12-10T16:37:29Z | 2023-12-10T16:39:21Z | [
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] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1994_Worthing_Borough_Council_election |
75,531,256 | 2024 FC Dallas season | The 2024 FC Dallas season will be the Major League Soccer club's 29th season and third under head coach Nico Estévez. FC Dallas will also participate in the fourth edition of the Leagues Cup and the 109th edition of the U.S. Open Cup.
As of December 18, 2023. Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
Western Conference
Kickoff times are in CDT (UTC-05) unless shown otherwise | [
{
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"text": "The 2024 FC Dallas season will be the Major League Soccer club's 29th season and third under head coach Nico Estévez. FC Dallas will also participate in the fourth edition of the Leagues Cup and the 109th edition of the U.S. Open Cup.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "As of December 18, 2023. Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.",
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"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Western Conference",
"title": "Competitions"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Kickoff times are in CDT (UTC-05) unless shown otherwise",
"title": "Competitions"
}
] | The 2024 FC Dallas season will be the Major League Soccer club's 29th season and third under head coach Nico Estévez. FC Dallas will also participate in the fourth edition of the Leagues Cup and the 109th edition of the U.S. Open Cup. | 2023-12-10T16:42:15Z | 2023-12-20T23:32:09Z | [
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75,531,257 | Thomas Alison (painter) | Thomas Alison (1860–1931) was a Scottish painter whose main period of activity was 1880–1914. Principally known for Landscape painting, he also produced portraits and other works. He lived in Dalkeith, Midlothian, and also worked in Spain.
Thomas Alison was born in Dalkeith on 11 October 1860, eldest son of the Thomas Alison, draper and his wife, Margaret Pearson. His father lived at Rosehill in Eskbank, a neighbourhood of Dalkeith, in which town he had a draper's store along with another similar store in nearby Musselburgh. His father held a number of positions at various times in Dalkeith, including member of the Board of Trustees, which governed the town until the adoption of the General Police Act in 1878 and, later, Chief Magistrate (under that Act) of Dalkeith and then Provost of Dalkeith 1881–1884. He was also Returning Officer, Town Clerk and Justice of the Peace.
His brother, James Pearson Alison was an architect, principally practising in Roxburghshire with offices in Hawick. Another brother, John Pearson Alison, was a farmer at D'Arcy, Midlothian.
He trained as painter at the Royal Scottish Academy (RSA) in Edinburgh, where he exhibited landscape paintings of Cousland (Midlothian) and St Mary's Loch (Selkirkshire) in 1881 and 1882; also a portrait of his father entitled Thomas Alison, Esq., Chief Magistrate of Dalkeith.
He won two silver medals in 1881, for exhibits at the RSA, and in 1882 won a gold prize in a national competition of the works of schools of Art for an oil figure painted from an antique,
He was a member of the Life School in the RSA (where fine art was taught until the school moved to the newly formed of Edinburgh College of Art in 1907), winning a prize for the second best Painting from Life, in 1881.
After training as a painter, Thomas Alison pursued this as his occupation. As well as the RSA, he exhibited at the Society of Scottish Artists (SSA), the Fine Art Exhibition in the Albert Institute, Dundee, amongst others. Among his works that were exhibited were Crichton Castle, A Red Deer Calf among the Rushes, A Sketching Club and In Rothesay Bay. By 1895 he was charging 8 guineas (£8 8s) for some works. He gained a high reputation as a portrait painter, his commissions including a portrait of Thomas Sturrock, Town Clerk of Dalkeith, hung in the Municipal Buildings, Dalkeith, and a portrait of the Earl of Stair.
He continued to live in the family home at Rosehill and participated in local life. He was Secretary of the Buccleuch Street Literary Society and Treasurer of the Industrial Department of the Dalkeith Horticultural and Industrial Society. He was a member of the Town Council of Dalkeith from 1904 to 1920, being continuously elected every three years. This culminated in his election as Provost of Dalkeith 1918 to 1920. He also served for a number of years as a member of the Parish Council of the civil parish of Dalkeith.
He died at Rosehill, Dalkeith on 26 August 1931 (aged 70) and is buried at Dalkeith. | [
{
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"text": "Thomas Alison (1860–1931) was a Scottish painter whose main period of activity was 1880–1914. Principally known for Landscape painting, he also produced portraits and other works. He lived in Dalkeith, Midlothian, and also worked in Spain.",
"title": ""
},
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"text": "Thomas Alison was born in Dalkeith on 11 October 1860, eldest son of the Thomas Alison, draper and his wife, Margaret Pearson. His father lived at Rosehill in Eskbank, a neighbourhood of Dalkeith, in which town he had a draper's store along with another similar store in nearby Musselburgh. His father held a number of positions at various times in Dalkeith, including member of the Board of Trustees, which governed the town until the adoption of the General Police Act in 1878 and, later, Chief Magistrate (under that Act) of Dalkeith and then Provost of Dalkeith 1881–1884. He was also Returning Officer, Town Clerk and Justice of the Peace.",
"title": "Family"
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{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "His brother, James Pearson Alison was an architect, principally practising in Roxburghshire with offices in Hawick. Another brother, John Pearson Alison, was a farmer at D'Arcy, Midlothian.",
"title": "Family"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "He trained as painter at the Royal Scottish Academy (RSA) in Edinburgh, where he exhibited landscape paintings of Cousland (Midlothian) and St Mary's Loch (Selkirkshire) in 1881 and 1882; also a portrait of his father entitled Thomas Alison, Esq., Chief Magistrate of Dalkeith.",
"title": "Painting"
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"text": "He won two silver medals in 1881, for exhibits at the RSA, and in 1882 won a gold prize in a national competition of the works of schools of Art for an oil figure painted from an antique,",
"title": "Painting"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "He was a member of the Life School in the RSA (where fine art was taught until the school moved to the newly formed of Edinburgh College of Art in 1907), winning a prize for the second best Painting from Life, in 1881.",
"title": "Painting"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "After training as a painter, Thomas Alison pursued this as his occupation. As well as the RSA, he exhibited at the Society of Scottish Artists (SSA), the Fine Art Exhibition in the Albert Institute, Dundee, amongst others. Among his works that were exhibited were Crichton Castle, A Red Deer Calf among the Rushes, A Sketching Club and In Rothesay Bay. By 1895 he was charging 8 guineas (£8 8s) for some works. He gained a high reputation as a portrait painter, his commissions including a portrait of Thomas Sturrock, Town Clerk of Dalkeith, hung in the Municipal Buildings, Dalkeith, and a portrait of the Earl of Stair.",
"title": "Painting"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "He continued to live in the family home at Rosehill and participated in local life. He was Secretary of the Buccleuch Street Literary Society and Treasurer of the Industrial Department of the Dalkeith Horticultural and Industrial Society. He was a member of the Town Council of Dalkeith from 1904 to 1920, being continuously elected every three years. This culminated in his election as Provost of Dalkeith 1918 to 1920. He also served for a number of years as a member of the Parish Council of the civil parish of Dalkeith.",
"title": "Later Life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "He died at Rosehill, Dalkeith on 26 August 1931 (aged 70) and is buried at Dalkeith.",
"title": "Later Life"
}
] | Thomas Alison (1860–1931) was a Scottish painter whose main period of activity was 1880–1914. Principally known for Landscape painting, he also produced portraits and other works. He lived in Dalkeith, Midlothian, and also worked in Spain. | 2023-12-10T16:42:23Z | 2023-12-17T23:45:01Z | [
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75,531,271 | 1995 Worthing Borough Council election | The 1995 Worthing Borough Council election took place on 4 May 1995 to elect members of Worthing Borough Council in West Sussex, England. This was on the same day as other local elections. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The 1995 Worthing Borough Council election took place on 4 May 1995 to elect members of Worthing Borough Council in West Sussex, England. This was on the same day as other local elections.",
"title": ""
}
] | The 1995 Worthing Borough Council election took place on 4 May 1995 to elect members of Worthing Borough Council in West Sussex, England. This was on the same day as other local elections. | 2023-12-10T16:45:37Z | 2023-12-10T16:45:37Z | [
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] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1995_Worthing_Borough_Council_election |
75,531,278 | The Angel in the Alcove | “The Angel in the Alcove” is a work of short fiction by Tennessee Williams first appearing in the collection One Arm and Other Stories, published by New Directions in 1948.
Portions of this story were dramatized in Williams’s 1977 play Vieux Carré .
“The Angel in the Alcove" takes place in a rundown rooming house in the French Quarter of New Orleans. The story is told from a first-person point-of-view, in which the unnamed 20-year-old narrator is a struggling writer. The clientele of the establishment are often destitute, and few can pay their rent regularly. The narrator lives in a garret in the attic, leading a life of quiet desperation.
The landlady is pathologically suspicious of her tenants, monitoring their comings and goings to insure they do not abscond owing debts. She informs them that her cousin (or nephew) is the local police captain. She is particularly hostile towards the narrator, whom she suspects of committing nocturnal crimes in the Quarter: he suffers under her frequent interrogations. One penurious tenant, the widow Mrs. Wayne, is an expert raconteur and uses her talents to momentarily enchant the lady lady; by this method, she procures free meals in the kitchen.
When the narrator retreats to his garret at night, an apparition appears in the alcove of the window shortly before he goes to sleep. The figure is that of his deceased grandmother, who had provided him with unconditional love and monetary support. He is comforted by these nocturnal visitations. One night the narrator is awakened by a figure kneeling over his bed: it is the tubercular artist who lives in an adjoining room. The artist declares his ardent love, and the narrator permits him to perform fellatio, after which the ill man withdraws.
A conflict that unfolds between the landlady and the sick and alienated artist. Knowing he is dying, he attempts to conceal this reality by complaining that his bedding is infested with bedbugs. The landlady, inspecting the bedclothes, discovers that the sheets are flecked with tiny droplets of blood discharged from his diseased lungs. She ridicules him. His violent outburst leads to the artists’ dismissal from the rooming house. The landlady burns the mattress in the incinerator.
Shortly after this incident, the narrator discovers that the apparition in the alcove has ceased to appear. Nonetheless, he finds he can peacefully fall asleep each night. He takes this as an omen to leave the rooming house, and he quickly abandons his residence, evading the landlady by exiting via the fire escape at night.
“The Angel in the Alcove” was written in Santa Monica, California in October 1943 and first published in the collection One Arm and Other Stories (1948). This “memory story” is told by Williams’s “semi-autobiographical narrator” concerning events in his youth living in a tenement building in the French Quarter in the 1930s.
The short story is the partial basis for William's unsuccessful play Vieux Carré (1977).
Literary critic Dennis Vannatat reports that “The Angel in the Alcove” is among a number of stories by Williams that involve “the interpolation of the supernatural into a realist context” or simply “magic realism.”
Stories concerned with “sexual and spiritual liberation would obviously be attractive to Williams, and most of his stories reflect some aspect of this theme.” Literary critic Signi Falk places the story among Williams’s key thematic interests:
Stories about derelicts, often sexual deviates, are treated by Williams with sympathy and understanding…one scene describes an early experience in homosexual love between the writer and moribund tubercular [artist].”
The vital importance of his relationship with his paternal grandmother presented as the “Angel” of the story, who sustains him in his suffering while living in his wretched garret. Falk writes:
The "Angel" is the memory of the grandmother who befriended, with both money and love, the young Williams who resisted conventional and boring employment as a shoe clerk so that he could write.
Falk notes that Williams memorialized his grandmother in the dramatization of the story in Vieux Carre (1977), in which “she appears in a picture that is partially spotlighted, as was that of the absent father in The Glass Menagerie (1944). | [
{
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"text": "“The Angel in the Alcove” is a work of short fiction by Tennessee Williams first appearing in the collection One Arm and Other Stories, published by New Directions in 1948.",
"title": ""
},
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"text": "Portions of this story were dramatized in Williams’s 1977 play Vieux Carré .",
"title": ""
},
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"text": "“The Angel in the Alcove\" takes place in a rundown rooming house in the French Quarter of New Orleans. The story is told from a first-person point-of-view, in which the unnamed 20-year-old narrator is a struggling writer. The clientele of the establishment are often destitute, and few can pay their rent regularly. The narrator lives in a garret in the attic, leading a life of quiet desperation.",
"title": "Plot"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "The landlady is pathologically suspicious of her tenants, monitoring their comings and goings to insure they do not abscond owing debts. She informs them that her cousin (or nephew) is the local police captain. She is particularly hostile towards the narrator, whom she suspects of committing nocturnal crimes in the Quarter: he suffers under her frequent interrogations. One penurious tenant, the widow Mrs. Wayne, is an expert raconteur and uses her talents to momentarily enchant the lady lady; by this method, she procures free meals in the kitchen.",
"title": "Plot"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "When the narrator retreats to his garret at night, an apparition appears in the alcove of the window shortly before he goes to sleep. The figure is that of his deceased grandmother, who had provided him with unconditional love and monetary support. He is comforted by these nocturnal visitations. One night the narrator is awakened by a figure kneeling over his bed: it is the tubercular artist who lives in an adjoining room. The artist declares his ardent love, and the narrator permits him to perform fellatio, after which the ill man withdraws.",
"title": "Plot"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "A conflict that unfolds between the landlady and the sick and alienated artist. Knowing he is dying, he attempts to conceal this reality by complaining that his bedding is infested with bedbugs. The landlady, inspecting the bedclothes, discovers that the sheets are flecked with tiny droplets of blood discharged from his diseased lungs. She ridicules him. His violent outburst leads to the artists’ dismissal from the rooming house. The landlady burns the mattress in the incinerator.",
"title": "Plot"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "Shortly after this incident, the narrator discovers that the apparition in the alcove has ceased to appear. Nonetheless, he finds he can peacefully fall asleep each night. He takes this as an omen to leave the rooming house, and he quickly abandons his residence, evading the landlady by exiting via the fire escape at night.",
"title": "Plot"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "“The Angel in the Alcove” was written in Santa Monica, California in October 1943 and first published in the collection One Arm and Other Stories (1948). This “memory story” is told by Williams’s “semi-autobiographical narrator” concerning events in his youth living in a tenement building in the French Quarter in the 1930s.",
"title": "Background"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "The short story is the partial basis for William's unsuccessful play Vieux Carré (1977).",
"title": "Background"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 9,
"text": "Literary critic Dennis Vannatat reports that “The Angel in the Alcove” is among a number of stories by Williams that involve “the interpolation of the supernatural into a realist context” or simply “magic realism.”",
"title": "Theme"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 10,
"text": "Stories concerned with “sexual and spiritual liberation would obviously be attractive to Williams, and most of his stories reflect some aspect of this theme.” Literary critic Signi Falk places the story among Williams’s key thematic interests:",
"title": "Theme"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 11,
"text": "Stories about derelicts, often sexual deviates, are treated by Williams with sympathy and understanding…one scene describes an early experience in homosexual love between the writer and moribund tubercular [artist].”",
"title": "Theme"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 12,
"text": "The vital importance of his relationship with his paternal grandmother presented as the “Angel” of the story, who sustains him in his suffering while living in his wretched garret. Falk writes:",
"title": "Theme"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 13,
"text": "The \"Angel\" is the memory of the grandmother who befriended, with both money and love, the young Williams who resisted conventional and boring employment as a shoe clerk so that he could write.",
"title": "Theme"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 14,
"text": "Falk notes that Williams memorialized his grandmother in the dramatization of the story in Vieux Carre (1977), in which “she appears in a picture that is partially spotlighted, as was that of the absent father in The Glass Menagerie (1944).",
"title": "Theme"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 15,
"text": "",
"title": "Theme"
}
] | “The Angel in the Alcove” is a work of short fiction by Tennessee Williams first appearing in the collection One Arm and Other Stories, published by New Directions in 1948. Portions of this story were dramatized in Williams’s 1977 play Vieux Carré . | 2023-12-10T16:45:51Z | 2023-12-11T09:35:50Z | [
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75,531,291 | Carles Soler Perdigó | Carles Soler Perdigo was a Spanish Roman Catholic prelate. He was auxiliary bishop of Barcelona from 1991 to 2001 and bishop of Girona from 2001 to 2008. | [
{
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"text": "Carles Soler Perdigo was a Spanish Roman Catholic prelate. He was auxiliary bishop of Barcelona from 1991 to 2001 and bishop of Girona from 2001 to 2008.",
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] | Carles Soler Perdigo was a Spanish Roman Catholic prelate. He was auxiliary bishop of Barcelona from 1991 to 2001 and bishop of Girona from 2001 to 2008. | 2023-12-10T16:47:08Z | 2023-12-11T09:22:09Z | [
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75,531,338 | 1996 Worthing Borough Council election | The 1996 Worthing Borough Council election took place on 2 May 1996 to elect members of Worthing Borough Council in West Sussex, England. This was on the same day as other local elections. | [
{
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"text": "The 1996 Worthing Borough Council election took place on 2 May 1996 to elect members of Worthing Borough Council in West Sussex, England. This was on the same day as other local elections.",
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] | The 1996 Worthing Borough Council election took place on 2 May 1996 to elect members of Worthing Borough Council in West Sussex, England. This was on the same day as other local elections. | 2023-12-10T16:54:29Z | 2023-12-10T16:54:29Z | [
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75,531,403 | Municipality of Kupres | Municipality of Kupres (Croatian: Općina Kupres) is a municipality in Canton 10 of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, an entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Its seat is in Kupres. According to the 2013 census, it had a population of 5,057.
According to the 2013 census, the population of Kupres was 5,057. | [
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] | Municipality of Kupres is a municipality in Canton 10 of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, an entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Its seat is in Kupres. According to the 2013 census, it had a population of 5,057. | 2023-12-10T17:05:02Z | 2023-12-11T01:55:13Z | [
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75,531,420 | H. E. Boyd | H. E. Boyd (February 23, 1888 – December 1952), also known as Hugh Boyd, was an American politician. He served as a Democratic member of the Florida House of Representatives.
Boyd was born in DeSoto County.
Boyd served in the Florida House of Representatives in 1941.
Boyd died in December 1952, at the age of 64. | [
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"title": "Life and career"
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{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "",
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] | H. E. Boyd, also known as Hugh Boyd, was an American politician. He served as a Democratic member of the Florida House of Representatives. | 2023-12-10T17:07:21Z | 2023-12-14T13:49:19Z | [
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75,531,424 | Accompany | Accompany is an album by American singer-songwriter Michael Nau, released on December 8, 2023, through Karma Chief Records. It received acclaim from critics.
Accompany received a score of 84 out of 100 on review aggregator Metacritic based on four critics' reviews, indicating "universal acclaim". | [
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"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Accompany received a score of 84 out of 100 on review aggregator Metacritic based on four critics' reviews, indicating \"universal acclaim\".",
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] | Accompany is an album by American singer-songwriter Michael Nau, released on December 8, 2023, through Karma Chief Records. It received acclaim from critics. | 2023-12-10T17:08:34Z | 2023-12-10T17:52:24Z | [
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75,531,436 | Gehrwin Assembly constituency | Gehrwin Assembly constituency was an assembly constituency in the India state of Himachal Pradesh. | [
{
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"text": "Gehrwin Assembly constituency was an assembly constituency in the India state of Himachal Pradesh.",
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] | Gehrwin Assembly constituency was an assembly constituency in the India state of Himachal Pradesh. | 2023-12-10T17:09:34Z | 2023-12-18T20:11:14Z | [
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75,531,448 | Sunni Assembly constituency | Sunni Assembly constituency was an assembly constituency in the India state of Himachal Pradesh. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Sunni Assembly constituency was an assembly constituency in the India state of Himachal Pradesh.",
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] | Sunni Assembly constituency was an assembly constituency in the India state of Himachal Pradesh. | 2023-12-10T17:11:19Z | 2023-12-18T20:19:00Z | [
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] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunni_Assembly_constituency |
75,531,453 | Le Père Jacques (The Wood Gatherer) | Le Père Jacques (The Wood Gatherer), original title in French: Le Père Jacques (Oncle Jacques), is an oil on canvas painting by the French painter Jules Bastien-Lepage, created in in 1881. Exhibited at the Salon of 1882, in Paris, the work is now held at the Milwaukee Art Museum.
The painting is a genre scene which represents an old man carrying a heavy load of wood on his back, in a forest where a little girl precedes him, busy picking tiny flowers. The man was actually a friend of the painter's family and the child his granddaughter. This composition is constructed from several oppositions: the one of the horizontal branches of the bundle carried on his back by the old man and the vertical trunks of the forest trees; the one of the protagonists, the old man and the young child, with their postures varying between fatigue and joyful carelessness, and the dark colors of the old man's clothing blending into the decor, and the blue of the little girl's dress in a complementary shade with the orange present throughout the autumn undergrowth. The blue is already present in the sky glimpsed through the trees of the hillside. The palette is completed by the green leaves of the foreground, reinforcing a final opposition between life and death in the foliage, in the old age and the youth of the protagonists, like their gazes show, with the old man staring straight towards the viewer, and the child looking away, since she is busy picking flowers.
The painting seems to reflect the influence in the artist of both the impressionist painters and a more conventional academic approach to nature, which earned him critical acclaim. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Le Père Jacques (The Wood Gatherer), original title in French: Le Père Jacques (Oncle Jacques), is an oil on canvas painting by the French painter Jules Bastien-Lepage, created in in 1881. Exhibited at the Salon of 1882, in Paris, the work is now held at the Milwaukee Art Museum.",
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{
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"text": "The painting is a genre scene which represents an old man carrying a heavy load of wood on his back, in a forest where a little girl precedes him, busy picking tiny flowers. The man was actually a friend of the painter's family and the child his granddaughter. This composition is constructed from several oppositions: the one of the horizontal branches of the bundle carried on his back by the old man and the vertical trunks of the forest trees; the one of the protagonists, the old man and the young child, with their postures varying between fatigue and joyful carelessness, and the dark colors of the old man's clothing blending into the decor, and the blue of the little girl's dress in a complementary shade with the orange present throughout the autumn undergrowth. The blue is already present in the sky glimpsed through the trees of the hillside. The palette is completed by the green leaves of the foreground, reinforcing a final opposition between life and death in the foliage, in the old age and the youth of the protagonists, like their gazes show, with the old man staring straight towards the viewer, and the child looking away, since she is busy picking flowers.",
"title": "Description"
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{
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"text": "The painting seems to reflect the influence in the artist of both the impressionist painters and a more conventional academic approach to nature, which earned him critical acclaim.",
"title": "Description"
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] | Le Père Jacques, original title in French: Le Père Jacques, is an oil on canvas painting by the French painter Jules Bastien-Lepage, created in in 1881. Exhibited at the Salon of 1882, in Paris, the work is now held at the Milwaukee Art Museum. | 2023-12-10T17:11:35Z | 2023-12-14T18:34:38Z | [
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75,531,467 | Stradom, Częstochowa | Stradom is a district of Częstochowa, Poland, located in the southern part of the city. | [
{
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"text": "Stradom is a district of Częstochowa, Poland, located in the southern part of the city.",
"title": ""
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] | Stradom is a district of Częstochowa, Poland, located in the southern part of the city. | 2023-12-10T17:13:20Z | 2023-12-10T17:26:13Z | [
"Template:Short description",
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75,531,484 | Santiago Armesilla | Santiago Armesilla (born January 1982) is a Spanish political analyst, who hosts the political show on YouTube which shares his name. He has also published books such as Karl Marx y la cuestión nacional española. Politically, Armesilla has been described as on the traditionalist side of Spanish communism.
Armesilla is known for his panhispanism, being a primary speaker at the First International Congress on Hispanidad. Due to his panhispanic views Armesilla has a strong stance against the Anglosphere.
Armesilla was born in 1982 in Madrid. He graduated from the Complutense University of Madrid with a doctorate in Political and Social Economy in the Framework of Globalization. He spent a year and a half in Argentina through a postdoctoral scholarship from CONICET.
Armesilla is a researcher at the Euro-Mediterranean University Institute.
Armesilla has been said, by ABC to be grouped among Hispanic communists who are conservative in the customs they hold but radically anti-capitalist in the political and economic spheres, with Miguel Riera, director of the publishing house El Viejo Topo, stating that the red-brown label means very little and applies to figures as disparate as “Manolo Monereo, Ana Iris Simón or Santiago Armesilla.” | [
{
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"text": "Santiago Armesilla (born January 1982) is a Spanish political analyst, who hosts the political show on YouTube which shares his name. He has also published books such as Karl Marx y la cuestión nacional española. Politically, Armesilla has been described as on the traditionalist side of Spanish communism.",
"title": ""
},
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{
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"text": "Armesilla was born in 1982 in Madrid. He graduated from the Complutense University of Madrid with a doctorate in Political and Social Economy in the Framework of Globalization. He spent a year and a half in Argentina through a postdoctoral scholarship from CONICET.",
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"text": "Armesilla has been said, by ABC to be grouped among Hispanic communists who are conservative in the customs they hold but radically anti-capitalist in the political and economic spheres, with Miguel Riera, director of the publishing house El Viejo Topo, stating that the red-brown label means very little and applies to figures as disparate as “Manolo Monereo, Ana Iris Simón or Santiago Armesilla.”",
"title": "Views"
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] | Santiago Armesilla is a Spanish political analyst, who hosts the political show on YouTube which shares his name. He has also published books such as Karl Marx y la cuestión nacional española. Politically, Armesilla has been described as on the traditionalist side of Spanish communism. Armesilla is known for his panhispanism, being a primary speaker at the First International Congress on Hispanidad. Due to his panhispanic views Armesilla has a strong stance against the Anglosphere. | 2023-12-10T17:17:43Z | 2023-12-11T02:22:04Z | [
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75,531,488 | Lisiniec | Lisiniec is a district of Częstochowa, Poland, located in the western part of the city. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Lisiniec is a district of Częstochowa, Poland, located in the western part of the city.",
"title": ""
}
] | Lisiniec is a district of Częstochowa, Poland, located in the western part of the city. | 2023-12-10T17:18:11Z | 2023-12-10T17:19:35Z | [
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] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lisiniec |
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