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# Mara Mattuschka Mara Mattuschka (born 22 May 1959) is an Austrian avant-garde filmmaker. ## Life Mattuschka was born in Sofia in Bulgaria in 1959. At the age of 17, in 1976, she moved to Vienna to study Ethnology and Linguistics. In 1983, she entered Maria Lassnig's masterclass in animation and painting at the University of Applied Arts Vienna and started making her first short films. Her graduation film Der Einzug des Rokoko ins Inselreich der Huzis caused a small scandal at the university in 1989, because it mixed animation, theatre, performance, music and fine arts. She graduated in 1990. From 1997 until 2001 she taught arts at Braunschweig University of Art in Germany. She also taught at University of Art and Design Linz. In the 2000s she started working with the dance ensemble Liquid Loft and Chris Haring. Her first feature film was made in 2012. In 2006, the film festival Vienna Independent Shorts dedicated a retrospective to her work. Filmarchiv Austria showed a retrospective of her work for her 60th birthday in 2019. She lives in Vienna. ## Style In most of her films, she appears herself as her alter ego "Mimi Minus" and in various other identities. ## Filmography - Nabelfabel (1984) - Kugelkopf (1985) - Der Untergang der Titania (1985) - Cerolax II (1985) - Die Schule der Ausschweifung (1986) - Parasympathica (1986) - Pascal - Gödel (1986) - Kaiser Schnitt (1986) - Es hat mich sehr gefreut (1987) - Les Miserables (1987) - Der Einzug des Rokoko ins Inselreich der Huzis (1989) - Loading Ludwig (1989, with Michael Petrov) - Der Schöne, die Biest (1993) - S. O. S. Extraterrestria (1993) - Suvlaki ist Babylon: Komm, iss mit mir (1995) - Unternehmen Arschmaschine (1997, with Gabriele Szekatsch) - Plasma (2004) - Legal Errorist (2005, with Chris Haring) - Königin der Nacht (Mozart Minute 20) (2006) - Part Time Heroes (2007, with Chris Haring) - Running Sushi (2008, with Chris Haring) - Burning Palace (2009, with Chris Haring) - Ovid Tum (2012, with Reinhard Jud) - Perfect Garden (2013) - Phaidros (2018)
enwiki/61461045
enwiki
61,461,045
Mara Mattuschka
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mara_Mattuschka
2024-11-04T20:34:38Z
en
Q1345827
35,367
{{short description|Austrian avant-garde filmmaker (born 1959)}} [[File:Mara_Mattuschka.jpg|thumb|Mara Mattuschka, ca. 1980]] '''Mara Mattuschka''' (born 22 May 1959)<ref>{{Cite book|title=Animation: A World History: Volume II: The Birth of a Style - The Three Markets|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0azMCgAAQBAJ&pg=PA197 |last=Bendazzi|first=Giannalberto|publisher=CRC Press|year=2015|isbn=9781317519904|location=|pages=}}</ref> is an [[Austria]]n ''[[avant-garde]]'' filmmaker. == Life == Mattuschka was born in [[Sofia]] in [[Bulgaria]] in 1959. At the age of 17, in 1976, she moved to [[Vienna]] to study [[Ethnology]] and [[Linguistics]]. In 1983, she entered [[Maria Lassnig]]'s masterclass in animation and painting at the [[University of Applied Arts Vienna]] and started making her first short films. Her graduation film ''Der Einzug des Rokoko ins Inselreich der Huzis'' caused a small scandal at the university in 1989, because it mixed animation, theatre, performance, music and fine arts. She graduated in 1990. From 1997 until 2001 she taught arts at [[Braunschweig University of Art]] in Germany. She also taught at [[University of Art and Design Linz]].<ref name=":0">{{Cite web|url=https://www.filmarchiv.at/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/Retrospektive-Mara-Mattuschka.pdf|title=Retrospektive Mara Mattuschka. 5.bis 21. Juni 2019|last=|first=|date=|website=Filmarchiv Austria|archive-url=|archive-date=|access-date=2019-08-06}}</ref><ref name=":1">{{Cite web|url=https://www.fro.at/%c2%93mara-mattuschka%c2%94-%c2%96-portrait-einer-kuenstlerin-17/|title=X_XY (Un)gelöst und (Un)erhört! - MARA MATTUSCHKA Portrait einer Künstlerin #17|last=|first=|date=2017-03-27|website=Radio FRO|language=de-DE|archive-url=|archive-date=|access-date=2019-08-07}}</ref><ref name=":2">{{Cite web|url=http://www.asifa.at/austria/mara-mattuschka/|title=Mara Mattuschka|last=|first=|date=|website=Asifa Austria|language=de-DE|archive-url=|archive-date=|access-date=2019-08-07}}</ref> In the 2000s she started working with the dance ensemble [[Liquid Loft]] and [[Chris Haring]]. Her first feature film was made in 2012.<ref name=":0" /> In 2006, the film festival [[Vienna Independent Shorts]] dedicated a retrospective to her work.<ref name=":1" /> [[Filmarchiv Austria]] showed a retrospective of her work for her 60th birthday in 2019.<ref name=":0" /> She lives in [[Vienna]].<ref name=":2" /> == Style == In most of her films, she appears herself as her alter ego "Mimi Minus" and in various other identities.<ref name=":0" /> == Filmography == * ''Nabelfabel'' (1984) * ''Kugelkopf'' (1985) * ''Der Untergang der Titania'' (1985) * ''Cerolax II'' (1985) * ''Die Schule der Ausschweifung'' (1986) * ''Parasympathica'' (1986) * ''Pascal - Gödel'' (1986) * ''Kaiser Schnitt'' (1986) * ''Es hat mich sehr gefreut'' (1987) * ''Les Miserables'' (1987) * ''Der Einzug des Rokoko ins Inselreich der Huzis'' (1989) * ''Loading Ludwig'' (1989, with Michael Petrov) * ''Der Schöne, die Biest'' (1993) * ''S. O. S. Extraterrestria'' (1993) * ''Suvlaki ist Babylon: Komm, iss mit mir'' (1995) * ''Unternehmen Arschmaschine'' (1997, with [[Gabriele Szekatsch]]) * ''Plasma'' (2004) * Legal Errorist (2005, with Chris Haring) * ''Königin der Nacht (Mozart Minute 20)'' (2006) * ''Part Time Heroes'' (2007, with Chris Haring) * ''Running Sushi'' (2008, with Chris Haring) * ''Burning Palace'' (2009, with Chris Haring) * ''Ovid Tum'' (2012, with [[Reinhard Jud]]) * ''Perfect Garden'' (2013) * ''Phaidros'' (2018) == References == {{Reflist}} == External links == * {{IMDb name|0560510}} {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Mattuschka, Mara}} [[Category:1959 births]] [[Category:Animated film directors]] [[Category:Women animated film directors]] [[Category:Austrian women film directors]] [[Category:Austrian experimental filmmakers]] [[Category:Living people]] [[Category:Film people from Vienna]] [[Category:Academic staff of the Braunschweig University of Art]] [[Category:Bulgarian emigrants to Austria]] [[Category:Austrian film directors]]
1,255,410,128
[]
false
# Pterolophia siamana Pterolophia siamana is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Stephan von Breuning in 1970.
enwiki/53028889
enwiki
53,028,889
Pterolophia siamana
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pterolophia_siamana
2023-10-24T09:46:07Z
en
Q14739708
21,385
{{short description|Species of beetle}} {{Speciesbox | taxon = Pterolophia siamana | authority = Breuning, 1970 | synonyms = }} '''''Pterolophia siamana''''' is a species of [[beetle]] in the family [[Cerambycidae]]. It was described by [[Stephan von Breuning (entomologist)|Stephan von Breuning]] in 1970.<ref>[https://www.biolib.cz/en/taxon/id548005/ BioLib.cz - ''Pterolophia siamana'']. Retrieved on 8 September 2014.</ref> ==References== {{Reflist}} {{Taxonbar|from=Q14739708}} [[Category:Pterolophia|siamana]] [[Category:Beetles described in 1970]] {{Pterolophia-stub}}
1,181,641,270
[{"title": "Scientific classification", "data": {"Domain": "Eukaryota", "Kingdom": "Animalia", "Phylum": "Arthropoda", "Class": "Insecta", "Order": "Coleoptera", "Suborder": "Polyphaga", "Infraorder": "Cucujiformia", "Family": "Cerambycidae", "Tribe": "Pteropliini", "Genus": "Pterolophia", "Species": "P. siamana"}}, {"title": "Binomial name", "data": {"Binomial name": "Pterolophia siamana \u00b7 Breuning, 1970"}}]
false
# Mkrtich Armen Mkrtich Harutyunyan (Armenian: Մկրտիչ Գրիգորի Հարությունյան), known by the pen name Mkrtich Armen (Armenian: Մկրտիչ Արմեն; December 14, 1906 in Alexandropol – December 22, 1972 in Yerevan) was a Soviet and Armenian writer and poet. ## Biography He was born in Alexandropol (modern-day Gyumri) to a family of artisans, and studied at the Gerasimov Institute of Cinematography in Moscow. He wrote novels and short stories that made him famous in his native Armenia and in the wider Soviet Union. His magnum opus is the 1935 novel Heghnar aghbyur (The Fountain of Heghnar), which was later made into a film. He fell out of favor with the authorities, was deported to Siberia, and later released. He published an account of camp life in 1964 and died eight years later in Yerevan.
enwiki/38989613
enwiki
38,989,613
Mkrtich Armen
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mkrtich_Armen
2025-03-21T15:22:21Z
en
Q11023392
34,278
{{Short description|Soviet Armenian writer (1906–1972)}} {{One source|date=September 2013}} {{Infobox person | name = Mkrtich Armen | native_name = | native_name_lang = | image = Mkrtich Armen's Plaque, Yerevan.jpg | image_size = | alt = | caption = Mkrtich Armen's plaque in Yerevan | birth_name = Mkrtich Harutyunyan | birth_date = December 14, 1906 | birth_place = [[Gyumri]], [[Armenia]] | death_date = {{death date and age|1972|12|22|1906|12|14}} | death_place = [[Yerevan]], | death_cause = | occupation = Writer, poet | nationality = | years_active = | partner = | children = }} '''Mkrtich Harutyunyan''' ({{langx|hy|Մկրտիչ Գրիգորի Հարությունյան}}), known by the pen name '''Mkrtich Armen''' ({{langx|hy|Մկրտիչ Արմեն}}; December 14, 1906 in [[Gyumri|Alexandropol]] – December 22, 1972 in [[Yerevan]]) was a Soviet and Armenian writer<ref>[http://www.bibliomonde.com/auteur/mkrtitch-armen-2075.html Bibliomonde]</ref> and poet. ==Biography== He was born in Alexandropol (modern-day [[Gyumri]]) to a family of artisans, and studied at the [[Gerasimov Institute of Cinematography]] in [[Moscow]]. He wrote novels and short stories that made him famous in his native Armenia and in the wider [[Soviet Union]]. His [[Masterpiece|magnum opus]] is the 1935 novel ''Heghnar aghbyur'' (''The Fountain of Heghnar''), which was later made into a film.{{citation needed|date=September 2013}} He fell out of favor with the authorities, was deported to [[Siberia]], and later released.{{When|date=September 2013}} He published an account of camp life in 1964 and died eight years later in [[Yerevan]].{{citation needed|date=September 2013}} ==References== {{Reflist}} {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Armen, Mkrtich}} [[Category:1906 births]] [[Category:1972 deaths]] [[Category:20th-century Armenian novelists]] [[Category:Soviet male writers]] [[Category:Soviet novelists]] [[Category:People from Gyumri]] [[Category:Recipients of the Order of the Red Banner of Labour]] [[Category:Armenian male novelists]] [[Category:Armenian novelists]] {{Armenia-writer-stub}}
1,281,635,346
[{"title": "Mkrtich Armen", "data": {"Born": "Mkrtich Harutyunyan \u00b7 December 14, 1906 \u00b7 Gyumri, Armenia", "Died": "December 22, 1972 (aged 66) \u00b7 Yerevan", "Occupation(s)": "Writer, poet"}}]
false
# Lavilleneuve Lavilleneuve (French pronunciation: [lavilnœv]) is a commune in the Haute-Marne department in north-eastern France.
enwiki/15787586
enwiki
15,787,586
Lavilleneuve
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lavilleneuve
2024-08-25T12:23:01Z
en
Q667597
96,374
{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2023}} {{about|the commune in Bourbonne-les-Bains|other uses|Villeneuve (disambiguation)}} {{Infobox French commune |name = Lavilleneuve |commune status = [[Communes of France|Commune]] |arrondissement = Langres |canton = Bourbonne-les-Bains |INSEE = 52277 |postal code = 52140 |mayor = Charlotte Roger<ref>{{cite web|title=Répertoire national des élus: les maires|url=https://www.data.gouv.fr/fr/datasets/r/2876a346-d50c-4911-934e-19ee07b0e503|publisher=data.gouv.fr, Plateforme ouverte des données publiques françaises|date=13 September 2022|language=fr}}</ref> |term = 2020&ndash;2026 |intercommunality = Grand Langres |coordinates = {{coord|48.0397|5.5106|format=dms|display=inline,title}} |elevation m = 340 |elevation min m = |elevation max m = |area km2 = 5.15 |population = {{France metadata Wikidata|population_total}} |population date = {{France metadata Wikidata|population_as_of}} |population footnotes = {{France metadata Wikidata|population_footnotes}} }} '''Lavilleneuve''' ({{IPA|fr|lavilnœv}}) is a [[Communes of France|commune]] in the [[Haute-Marne]] [[Departments of France|department]] in north-eastern [[France]]. ==See also== *[[Communes of the Haute-Marne department]] ==References== {{reflist}} {{commons category}} {{Haute-Marne communes}} {{authority control}} [[Category:Communes of Haute-Marne]] {{HauteMarne-geo-stub}}
1,242,179,616
[{"title": "Lavilleneuve", "data": {"Country": "France", "Region": "Grand Est", "Department": "Haute-Marne", "Arrondissement": "Langres", "Canton": "Bourbonne-les-Bains", "Intercommunality": "Grand Langres"}}, {"title": "Government", "data": {"\u2022 Mayor (2020\u20132026)": "Charlotte Roger", "Area1": "5.15 km2 (1.99 sq mi)", "Population (2022)": "57", "\u2022 Density": "11/km2 (29/sq mi)", "Time zone": "UTC+01:00 (CET)", "\u2022 Summer (DST)": "UTC+02:00 (CEST)", "INSEE/Postal code": "52277 /52140", "Elevation": "340 m (1,120 ft)"}}]
false
# Gertrudes Altschul Gertrudes Altschul is German-born Brazilian photographer. Her work is in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA). ## Life Born to a Jewish family in 1904, Altschul fled the Nazi regime by immigrating to São Paulo in 1939. Working with her husband Leon, the couple made their living by creating handmade decorative flowers for women's clothing. She joined a photo club in 1952 and was part of a modern photography movement at the time. She is one of the earliest female photographers whose work was recognized. The photo club, Foto Cine Clube Bandeirante (FCCB), was well-known for giving amateur photographers opportunities to explore their art. Like other FCCB members at the time, her photographs focused heavily on urban settings, light, and shapes, Altschul's work also was influenced by her career studying botanical structures. Through the club, her photograph Linhas e Tons (Lines and Tones) was widely shared with photographers in the 1950s. In addition to these themes, some of Altschul's contact sheets show use of studio setups, called “table-tops.” She was the only woman with a considerable body of work created during the height of FCCB's influence. In 2021 - 2022, her work was exhibited at the MoMA. and São Paulo Museum of Art (MASP). After developing bone cancer, Altschul died in 1962. ## Collections Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) ## Exhibitions ### Museum of Modern Art (MoMa) 2017: Making Space:Women Artists and Postwar Abstraction 2019-2020: 409: Abstract Lens, Fall 2019–Fall 2020 2021: Fotoclubismo: Brazilian Modernist Photography, 1946–1964 ### Sao Paolo Museum of Art 2021-2022: Gertrudes Altschul, Filigree
enwiki/79519992
enwiki
79,519,992
Gertrudes Altschul
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gertrudes_Altschul
2025-03-28T20:51:31Z
en
Q77288081
22,777
'''Gertrudes Altschul''' is German-born Brazilian photographer. Her work is in the collection of the [[Museum of Modern Art]] (MoMA).<ref name=":2" /> == Life == Born to a Jewish family in 1904, Altschul fled the [[Nazi Germany|Nazi regime]] by immigrating to [[São Paulo]] in 1939. Working with her husband Leon, the couple made their living by creating handmade decorative flowers for women's clothing.<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal |last=Kupfer |first=Paula |date=2016-12-20 |title=Gertrudes Altschul and the Foto Cine Clube Bandeirante: Modern Photography and Femininity in 1950s São Paulo |url=https://academicworks.cuny.edu/hc_sas_etds/136/ |journal=Theses and Dissertations}}</ref> She joined a photo club in 1952 and was part of a modern photography movement at the time. She is one of the earliest female photographers whose work was recognized.<ref name=":1">{{Cite web |title=Brazil's unknown modernist photographers – DW – 05/08/2021 |url=https://www.dw.com/en/discovering-brazils-unknown-modernist-photographers/a-57374296 |access-date=2025-03-21 |website=dw.com |language=en}}</ref> The photo club, [[:es:Foto_Cine_Club_Bandeirante|Foto Cine Clube Bandeirante]] (FCCB), was well-known for giving amateur photographers opportunities to explore their art.<ref name=":2">{{Cite web |title=Gertrudes Altschul {{!}} MoMA |url=https://www.moma.org/artists/49197-gertrudes-altschul |access-date=2025-03-22 |website=The Museum of Modern Art |language=en}}</ref> Like other FCCB members at the time, her photographs focused heavily on urban settings, light, and shapes, Altschul's work also was influenced by her career studying botanical structures.<ref name=":1" /> Through the club, her photograph ''Linhas e Tons'' (''Lines and Tones'') was widely shared with photographers in the 1950s.<ref name=":2" /> In addition to these themes, some of Altschul's contact sheets show use of studio setups, called “table-tops.”<ref name=":0" /> She was the only woman with a considerable body of work created during the height of FCCB's influence.<ref name=":0" /> In 2021 - 2022, her work was exhibited at the MoMA. and [[São Paulo Museum of Art]] (MASP).<ref>{{Cite news |last=Yorker |first=The New |date=2021-05-07 |title=Mid-Century Brazilian Photography, at MOMA |url=https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2021/05/17/mid-century-brazilian-photography-at-moma |access-date=2025-03-22 |work=The New Yorker |language=en-US |issn=0028-792X}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Gertrudes Altschul, Filigree - Sao Paolo Museum of Art |url=https://masp.org.br/en/exhibitions/gertrudes-altschul}}</ref> After developing bone cancer, Altschul died in 1962.<ref name=":0" /> == Collections == Museum of Modern Art (MoMA)<ref name=":2" /> == Exhibitions == === Museum of Modern Art (MoMa) === 2017: ''Making Space:Women Artists and Postwar Abstraction'' 2019-2020: ''409: Abstract Lens, Fall 2019–Fall 2020'' 2021: ''Fotoclubismo: Brazilian Modernist Photography, 1946–1964'' === Sao Paolo Museum of Art === 2021-2022: ''Gertrudes Altschul, Filigree'' == References == <references /> == Further reading == [https://primo.getty.edu/primo-explore/fulldisplay?vid=GRI&docid=GETTY_ALMA21218981910001551&context=L <nowiki>Gertrudes Altschul : filigree / edited and curated by Adriano Pedrosa, Tomás Toledo ; texts by Abigail Lapin Dardashti [and seven others] ; translation, Georgia Fleury Reynolds., 2021</nowiki>] [[Category:Brazilian photographers]] [[Category:1904 births]] [[Category:1962 deaths]] [[Category:Brazilian people of German-Jewish descent]]
1,282,823,518
[]
false
# Losten Losten is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: - Basil H. Losten (1930–2024), American Catholic bishop - Lotta Losten (born 1981), Swedish actress, designer, and photographer
enwiki/55728369
enwiki
55,728,369
Losten
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Losten
2024-09-20T03:50:57Z
en
Q45098502
5,123
'''Losten''' is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: * [[Basil H. Losten]] (1930–2024), American Catholic bishop * [[Lotta Losten]] (born 1981), Swedish actress, designer, and photographer ==See also== {{srt}} * [[Loston (disambiguation)]] * [[Lotten]] {{surname}}
1,246,632,653
[]
false
# Institute for Tropical Biology and Conservation The Institute for Tropical Biology and Conservation (ITBC), in Bahasa Malaysia: Institut Biologi Tropika dan Pemuliharaan (IBTP) is a research institute of Universiti Malaysia Sabah in Kota Kinabalu, Sabah, Malaysia. Founded in 1996, its objectives have been to promote and carry out research on the biodiversity of tropical flora and fauna, especially of the Malaysian state of Sabah, and to build resources that facilitate this, such as technical laboratories for DNA analysis, organic chemistry, and microscopy, and the "Borneensis" natural history collection focusing on native flora and fauna. The institute has had three directors: the founding director, entomologist Prof. Dr. Maryati Mohamed (1996–2008), zoologist Prof. Dr. Abdul Hamid Ahmad (2008–2012), and the current director, organic chemist Prof. Dr. Charles S. Vairappan. ITBC publishes the open-access, online Journal of Tropical Biology and Conservation.
enwiki/45328566
enwiki
45,328,566
Institute for Tropical Biology and Conservation
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Institute_for_Tropical_Biology_and_Conservation
2024-08-29T17:38:44Z
en
Q19646161
24,217
{{Short description|Malaysian research institute}} {{More citations needed|date=April 2015}} The '''Institute for Tropical Biology and Conservation''' ('''ITBC'''), in [[Bahasa Malaysia]]: Institut Biologi Tropika dan Pemuliharaan (IBTP) is a research institute of [[Universiti Malaysia Sabah]] in [[Kota Kinabalu]], [[Sabah]], [[Malaysia]]. Founded in 1996, its objectives have been to promote and carry out research on the [[biodiversity]] of tropical flora and fauna, especially of the Malaysian state of Sabah, and to build resources that facilitate this, such as technical laboratories for DNA analysis, organic chemistry, and microscopy, and the "Borneensis" natural history collection focusing on native flora and fauna. The institute has had three directors: the founding director, entomologist Prof. Dr. Maryati Mohamed (1996–2008),<ref>{{cite book|editor1-last=Sajise|editor1-first=Percy E.|editor2-last=Ticsay|editor2-first=Mariliza V.|editor3-last=Saguiguit|editor3-first=Gil C.|title=Moving forward : Southeast Asian perspectives on climate change and biodiversity|date=2010|publisher=Institute of Southeast Asian Studies|location=Singapore|isbn=978-9812309785}}</ref> zoologist Prof. Dr. Abdul Hamid Ahmad (2008–2012), and the current director, organic chemist Prof. Dr. Charles S. Vairappan. ITBC publishes the open-access, online ''Journal of Tropical Biology and Conservation''. ==References== {{Reflist}} ==External links== * [https://www.ums.edu.my/ibtpv2/ Website of ITBC] * [https://www.ums.edu.my/ibtpv2/en/publication/jtbc-new Website of the ''Journal of Tropical Biology and Conservation''] {{coord missing|Malaysia}} {{authority control}} [[Category:Universiti Malaysia Sabah]] [[Category:Biological research institutes]] [[Category:Research institutes in Malaysia]] [[Category:Research institutes established in 1996]] {{Malaysia-org-stub}}
1,242,953,172
[]
false
# Pleșoiu Pleșoiu is a commune in Olt County, Oltenia, Romania. It is composed of seven villages: Arcești, Arcești-Cot, Cocorăști, Doba, Pleșoiu, Schitu din Deal and Schitu din Vale.
enwiki/18801738
enwiki
18,801,738
Pleșoiu
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ple%C8%99oiu
2020-05-26T12:30:41Z
en
Q12725038
47,546
{{otheruses}} {{redirect|Cocorăști|the villages in Prahova County|Cocorăștii Colț}} {{Infobox Romanian subdivision |type = commune |county = Olt |population_total = auto |map_caption = Location in Olt County |name=Pleșoiu |image_map = Plesoiu jud Olt.png |coordinates = {{coord|44|28|N|24|16|E|region:RO|display=it}} }} '''Pleșoiu''' is a [[Commune in Romania|commune]] in [[Olt County]], [[Oltenia]], [[Romania]]. It is composed of seven villages: Arcești, Arcești-Cot, Cocorăști, Doba, Pleșoiu, Schitu din Deal and Schitu din Vale. ==References== {{Reflist}} {{Olt County}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Plesoiu}} [[Category:Communes in Olt County]] [[Category:Localities in Oltenia]] {{Olt-geo-stub}}
958,947,776
[{"title": "Ple\u0219oiu", "data": {"Country": "Romania", "County": "Olt", "Population (2021-12-01)": "2,785", "Time zone": "EET/EEST (UTC+2/+3)", "Vehicle reg.": "OT"}}]
false
# Laila Ajjawi Laila Ajjawi (Arabic: ليلى عجاوي, born June 9, 1990) is an activist, graffiti artist, muralist, and digital artist based in Jordan. She is of Palestinian descent, and was born and raised in a Palestinian refugee camp outside of Irbid, Jordan. Her work highlights women living in the Middle East, with a focus on refugees facing discrimination and limited resources in their countries of residence. She has created murals with Women on Walls, a public art project based in Egypt aimed at empowering women through street art. ## Early life and education Ajjawi was born in a Palestinian refugee camp outside of Irbid, Jordan. She is the oldest of six children, and her father is a construction worker. Her family built their house on the site where her paternal grandparents resettled during the Nakba. While her family has cultural ties to Jenin, both of Laila's parents were born and raised in refugee camps. Her interest in street art began when she was 17 years old after being commissioned to paint a mural for a kindergarten. Ajjawi attended Yarmouk University and studied biomedical physics. ## Career Ajjawi completed her first piece in 2014 in the Ras Al Ain Gallery at a workshop organized by the Women on Walls. Ajjawi's primary source of income comes from the humanitarian sector, and she has worked as a site supervisor in a refugee camp. She took the humanitarian route as a response to the Syrian crisis, saying her work with Syrian refugees has widened her knowledge of "social life and humanity." Ajjawi's art highlights issues such as gender-based violence, a lack of women's representation in the workforce, and the ongoing discrimination of Palestinian refugees. She paints murals of strong women, as a means to show other women and refugees that they can take control of their lives, despite legal and social opposition. She is strategic in the colors she uses in her art, and uses cool-toned colors to promote a sense of peace and calm. Ajjawi has discussed the potential difficulties that including political content in her works could cause, and has stated that her art is focused more on social issues, especially women's rights. Ajjawi has accumulated numerous awards for her art, writing, and short film. One notable work is her 2014 mural Look At My Mind, which she created as part of the Women on Walls project. Look At My Mind questions societal focus on women's appearances. Other works include a 2021 mural in Irbid titled My country's daughter, and a mural completed in 2023 in celebration of International Women's Day. Ajjawi has partnered with other leaders that focus on women's empowerment as well. In 2015, she painted a mural for SheFighter, Lina Khalifeh's women-only martial arts training studio in Amman, Jordan.
enwiki/50008270
enwiki
50,008,270
Laila Ajjawi
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laila_Ajjawi
2024-11-26T10:26:41Z
en
Q23772260
50,545
{{short description|Palestinian street artist}} {{Infobox artist | name = Laila Ajjawi | image = | image_size = | alt = | caption = | native_name = ليلى عجاوي | native_name_lang = ar | birth_name = | birth_date = {{Birth year and age|1990}} | birth_place = [[Irbid Camp]], [[Jordan]] | alma_mater = [[Yarmouk University]] | known_for = | notable_works = | style = [[Street art]] | movement = [[Graffiti]] | awards = <!-- {{awd|award|year|title|role|name}} (optional) --> | signature = | signature_type = | signature_size = | signature_alt = | elected = | patrons = | memorials = | website = {{Facebook|id=Laila.ajjawi|name=Laila Ajjawi Art}} | module = }} '''Laila Ajjawi''' (Arabic: ليلى عجاوي, born June 9, 1990<ref name=":0" />) is an activist, graffiti artist, muralist, and digital artist based in Jordan.<ref name=":0">{{cite web|last1=Prachi|first1=Gupta|url=http://www.cosmopolitan.com/politics/news/a50015/this-palestinian-refugee-graffiti-artist-empowers-girls-with-street-art/|website=Cosmopolitan|accessdate=December 15, 2015|title=This Woman Is Using Graffiti to Change the Way Her Country Thinks About Girls: Laila Ajjawi is determined to make positive change within her impoverished community.|date=14 December 2015 }}</ref> She is of [[Palestinians|Palestinian]] descent, and was born and raised in a [[Palestinian refugee camps|Palestinian refugee camp]] outside of [[Irbid]], Jordan. Her work<ref name=":1">{{cite web|last1=Froelich|first1=Paula|url=https://nypost.com/2015/05/07/womens-rights-isis-and-freedom-jordanian-street-art-expresses-its-frustration/|website=NY Post|title=Women's rights, ISIS, and freedom: Jordanian street art expresses its frustration|date=7 May 2015 }}</ref> highlights women living in the Middle East, with a focus on refugees facing discrimination and limited resources in their countries of residence. She has created murals with [[Women on Walls]], a public art project based in Egypt aimed at empowering women through street art. == Early life and education == Ajjawi was born in a Palestinian refugee camp outside of Irbid, Jordan. She is the oldest of six children, and her father is a construction worker. Her family built their house on the site where her paternal grandparents resettled during the [[Nakba]]. While her family has cultural ties to [[Jenin]], both of Laila's parents were born and raised in refugee camps.<ref name=":0" /> Her interest in [[street art]] began when she was 17 years old after being commissioned to paint a mural for a kindergarten.<ref name=":3">{{Cite news |date=2023-10-09 |title=Creating Art in a Refugee Camp: How Palestinian Street Artist Laila Ajjawi is Using Art to Improve the Lives of Refugees |url=https://www.gqmiddleeast.com/culture/refugee-camp-palestine-laila-ajjawi |access-date=2024-04-19 |work=GQ Middle East |language=en-US}}</ref> Ajjawi attended [[Yarmouk University]] and studied biomedical physics.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1" /> == Career == Ajjawi completed her first piece in 2014 in the Ras Al Ain Gallery at a workshop organized by the Women on Walls.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2016-01-07 |title=Artist channels feminist, Palestinian identity through graffiti |url=https://jordantimes.com/news/local/artist-channels-feminist-palestinian-identity-through-graffiti |access-date=2024-04-19 |website=Jordan Times |language=en}}</ref> Ajjawi's primary source of income comes from the humanitarian sector, and she has worked as a site supervisor in a refugee camp.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":2">[https://www.mythogynist.com/volumes/volume-1-winter-2016/laila-ajjawi/ Jordanian graffiti artist]</ref> She took the humanitarian route as a response to the [[Syrian civil war|Syrian crisis]], saying her work with [[Refugees of the Syrian civil war|Syrian refugees]] has widened her knowledge of "social life and humanity."<ref name=":2" /> Ajjawi's art highlights issues such as [[Gender-related violence|gender-based violence]], a lack of women's representation in the workforce, and the ongoing discrimination of Palestinian refugees. She paints murals of strong women, as a means to show other women and refugees that they can take control of their lives, despite legal and social opposition.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":2" /> She is strategic in the colors she uses in her art, and uses cool-toned colors to promote a sense of peace and calm.<ref name=":3" /> Ajjawi has discussed the potential difficulties that including political content in her works could cause, and has stated that her art is focused more on social issues, especially women's rights.<ref name=":4" /> Ajjawi has accumulated numerous awards for her art, writing, and short film.<ref name=":0" /> One notable work is her 2014 mural ''Look At My Mind'', which she created as part of the Women on Walls project.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1" /><ref name=":2" /> ''Look At My Mind'' questions societal focus on women's appearances.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2021-05-16 |title=Meet Laila Ajjawi – the Palestinian street artist graffitiing for women's rights in the Middle East |url=https://www.azeemamag.com/stories/lailaajjawi |access-date=2024-05-20 |website=AZEEMA |language=en-US}}</ref> Other works include a 2021 mural in Irbid titled ''My country's daughter'', <ref>{{Cite web |date=2022-12-15 |title=Graffiti in Jordan, at the intersection of art and hip-hop |url=https://www.jordannews.jo/Section-125/All/Graffiti-in-Jordan-at-the-intersection-of-art-and-hip-hop-25752 |access-date=2024-05-20 |website=Jordan News |language=en}}</ref> and a mural completed in 2023 in celebration of [[International Women's Day]].<ref name=":4">{{Cite web |title=Assembly 2023 Report from Jordan |url=https://afsc.org/sites/default/files/2023-12/2023_afsc_jordan_assembly_report.pdf |access-date=2024-05-20 |publisher=American Friends Service Committee}}</ref> Ajjawi has partnered with other leaders that focus on [[women's empowerment]] as well. In 2015, she painted a mural for SheFighter, [[Lina Khalifeh]]'s women-only martial arts training studio in [[Amman|Amman, Jordan]].<ref name=":0" /> ==References== {{reflist}} {{authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Ajjawi, Laila}} [[Category:Women graffiti artists]] [[Category:Living people]] [[Category:21st-century Palestinian women artists]] [[Category:21st-century Palestinian artists]] [[Category:Year of birth missing (living people)]] [[Category:Women muralists]] {{Graffiti-stub}} {{Palestine-painter-stub}}
1,259,657,358
[{"title": "Laila Ajjawi", "data": {"Born": "1990 (age 34\u201335) \u00b7 Irbid Camp, Jordan", "Alma mater": "Yarmouk University", "Style": "Street art", "Movement": "Graffiti", "Website": "Laila Ajjawi Art on Facebook"}}]
false
# Ivan Timofeevich Kokorev Ivan Timofeevich Kokorev (Russian Иван Тимофеевич Кокорев) (September 6, 1825 - June 14, 1853) was a Russian writer. The son of a freed serf, Kokorev's stories and essays began appearing in the 1840s, but he did not become well known until he began his association with the journal Moskvityanin in 1849. His stories "Sibirka" (1847) and "Savvushka" (1852) were successful, but he is best remembered for his essays collected under the title Moskva sorokovykh godov ('Moscow of the [eighteen] forties'); the collection Ocherki i rasskazy ('Essays and stories') came out posthumously in 1857. He was considered one of the "Moscow patriots" and inveighed against the introduction of foreign words and customs. Apollon Grigoryev wrote in his memoirs of "the clearly-talented and likable sketches of the late I. T. Kokorev."
enwiki/16735417
enwiki
16,735,417
Ivan Timofeevich Kokorev
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ivan_Timofeevich_Kokorev
2024-03-05T16:12:53Z
en
Q4227367
18,172
{{Short description|Russian writer}} {{Infobox writer <!-- for more information see [[:Template:Infobox writer/doc]] --> | image = | imagesize = 160px | caption = | birth_date = {{birth date|1825|9|6}} | birth_place = [[Zaraysk]], [[Russia]] | death_date = {{death date and age|1853|6|14|1825|9|6}} | death_place = [[Moscow]], [[Russia]] }} '''Ivan Timofeevich Kokorev''' ([[Russian language|Russian]] Иван Тимофеевич Кокорев) (September 6, 1825 - June 14, 1853) was a Russian writer. The son of a freed serf, Kokorev's stories and essays began appearing in the 1840s, but he did not become well known until he began his association with the journal ''[[Moskvityanin]]'' in 1849. His stories "Sibirka" (1847) and "Savvushka" (1852) were successful, but he is best remembered for his essays collected under the title ''Moskva sorokovykh godov'' ('Moscow of the [eighteen] forties'); the collection ''Ocherki i rasskazy'' ('Essays and stories') came out posthumously in 1857. He was considered one of the "Moscow patriots" and inveighed against the introduction of foreign words and customs. [[Apollon Grigoryev]] wrote in his memoirs of "the clearly-talented and likable sketches of the late I. T. Kokorev."<ref>Grigoryev, ''My Literary and Moral Wanderings'', p. 63.</ref> ==Notes== <references/> ==References== * [http://brocgaus.ru/text/052/388.htm Brockhaus and Efron bio] (in Russian) * [http://www.hrono.info/biograf/bio_k/kokorev_it.html brief bio on Khronos page] (in Russian) * Grigoryev, Apollon, ''My Literary and Moral Wanderings'', tr. Ralph E. Matlaw (New York: Dutton, 1962). {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Kokorev, Ivan Timofeevich}} [[Category:1825 births]] [[Category:1853 deaths]] [[Category:Essayists from the Russian Empire]] [[Category:Short story writers from the Russian Empire]]
1,211,986,214
[{"title": "Ivan Timofeevich Kokorev", "data": {"Born": "September 6, 1825 \u00b7 Zaraysk, Russia", "Died": "June 14, 1853 (aged 27) \u00b7 Moscow, Russia"}}]
false
# Pua novaezealandiae Pua novaezealandiae is a species of spiders in the family Anapidae. It is the only species in the genus Pua. It is found only in New Zealand. ## Taxonomy This species was described in 1959 by Ray Forster from male and female specimens. The holotype is stored in Canterbury Museum. ## Description The male is recorded at 0.82mm in length whereas the female is 0.90mm. ## Distribution This species is known from the North Island and South Island of New Zealand. ## Conservation status Under the New Zealand Threat Classification System, this species is listed as "Not Threatened".
enwiki/53372639
enwiki
53,372,639
Pua novaezealandiae
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pua_novaezealandiae
2025-02-25T22:43:47Z
en
Q2422554
45,297
{{Short description|Species of spider}} {{Speciesbox | status = NT | status_system = NZTCS |taxon = Pua novaezealandiae |image =Pua novaezealandiae.jpg |image_caption = |parent_authority = [[Raymond Robert Forster|Forster]], 1959<ref name=WSC_g1910/> |authority = Forster, 1959<ref name=WSC_g1910/> }} '''''Pua novaezealandiae''''' is a [[species]] of [[spider]]s in the family [[Anapidae]]. It is the only species in the genus '''''Pua'''''. It is found only in [[New Zealand]].<ref name=WSC_g1910/> ==Taxonomy== This species was described in 1959 by [[Ray Forster]] from male and female specimens. The holotype is stored in [[Canterbury Museum, Christchurch|Canterbury Museum]].<ref name=":1">{{Cite journal |last=Forster |first=R.R. |date=1959 |title=The spiders of the family Symphytognathidae |url=https://wsc.nmbe.ch/reference/3324 |journal=Transactions and Proceedings of the Royal Society of New Zealand |volume=86 |issue=3/4 |pages=269–329}}</ref> ==Description== The male is recorded at 0.82mm in length whereas the female is 0.90mm.<ref name=":1" /> ==Distribution== This species is known from the [[North Island]] and [[South Island]] of New Zealand.<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal |last1=Rix |first1=Michael |last2=Harvey |first2=Mark |date=2010-02-22 |title=The spider family Micropholcommatidae (Arachnida: Araneae: Araneoidea): a relimitation and revision at the generic level |url=http://zookeys.pensoft.net/articles.php?id=2154 |journal=ZooKeys |issue=36 |pages=1–321 |doi=10.3897/zookeys.36.306 |doi-access=free |bibcode=2010ZooK...36....1R |issn=1313-2970|hdl=2440/86515 |hdl-access=free }}</ref> ==Conservation status== Under the [[New Zealand Threat Classification System]], this species is listed as "Not Threatened".<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Sirvid |first1=P. J. |last2=Vink |first2=C. J. |last3=Fitzgerald |first3=B. M. |last4=Wakelin |first4=M. D. |last5=Rolfe |first5=J. |last6=Michel |first6=P. |date=2020-01-01 |title=Conservation status of New Zealand Araneae (spiders), 2020 |url=https://www.doc.govt.nz/globalassets/documents/science-and-technical/nztcs34entire.pdf |journal=New Zealand Threat Classification Series |language=English |volume=34 |pages=1–37}}</ref> ==References== {{Reflist|refs= <ref name=WSC_g1910>{{citation |title=Gen. ''Pua'' Forster, 1959 |work=World Spider Catalog |publisher=Natural History Museum Bern |url=http://www.wsc.nmbe.ch/genus/1910 |accessdate=2017-03-03 }}</ref> }} {{Taxonbar|from1=Q2422554|from2=Q2148348}} [[Category:Anapidae]] [[Category:Endemic spiders of New Zealand]] [[Category:Spiders described in 1959]] {{anapidae-stub}}
1,277,653,008
[{"title": "Conservation status", "data": {"Conservation status": "\u00b7 Not Threatened (NZ TCS)"}}, {"title": "Scientific classification", "data": {"Domain": "Eukaryota", "Kingdom": "Animalia", "Phylum": "Arthropoda", "Subphylum": "Chelicerata", "Class": "Arachnida", "Order": "Araneae", "Infraorder": "Araneomorphae", "Family": "Anapidae", "Genus": "Pua \u00b7 Forster, 1959", "Species": "P. novaezealandiae"}}, {"title": "Binomial name", "data": {"Binomial name": "Pua novaezealandiae \u00b7 Forster, 1959"}}]
false
# Mkrtchyan Mkrtchyan or Mkrtchian (Armenian: Մկրտչյան, pronounced [məkəɾtˈtʃʰjɑn]) is an Armenian surname. Notable people with the surname include: - Aghvan Mkrtchyan (born 1981), Armenian football defender - Armen Mkrtchyan (born 1973), Armenian wrestler - Arthur Mkrtchyan (born 1973), retired Armenian football defender - Artur Mkrtchyan (1959–1992), the First Chairman of Supreme Council of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic - Karlen Mkrtchyan (born 1988), Armenian football midfielder - Levon Mkrtchyan (born 1953), Armenian director known for documentaries - Lilit Mkrtchian (born 1982), Armenian grandmaster and four-time Armenian Women's champion - Frunzik (Mher) Mkrtchyan (1930–1993), Soviet Armenian actor, named a People's Artist of the Soviet Union in 1984 - Samvel Mkrtchyan (1959–2014), Armenian translator, editor and writer - Susanna Mkrtchyan (born 1949), Armenian professor and founder of Wikimedia Armenia
enwiki/35674006
enwiki
35,674,006
Mkrtchyan
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mkrtchyan
2024-11-10T23:10:37Z
en
Q37197919
7,828
'''Mkrtchyan''' or '''Mkrtchian''' ({{langx|hy|Մկրտչյան}}, {{IPA|hy|məkəɾtˈtʃʰjɑn|pron}}) is an Armenian surname. Notable people with the surname include: * [[Aghvan Mkrtchyan]] (born 1981), Armenian football defender * [[Armen Mkrtchyan]] (born 1973), Armenian wrestler * [[Arthur Mkrtchyan]] (born 1973), retired Armenian football defender * [[Artur Mkrtchyan]] (1959–1992), the First Chairman of Supreme Council of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic * [[Karlen Mkrtchyan]] (born 1988), Armenian football midfielder * [[Levon Mkrtchyan]] (born 1953), Armenian director known for documentaries * [[Lilit Mkrtchian]] (born 1982), Armenian grandmaster and four-time Armenian Women's champion * [[Frunzik Mkrtchyan|Frunzik (Mher) Mkrtchyan]] (1930–1993), Soviet Armenian actor, named a People's Artist of the Soviet Union in 1984 * [[Samvel Mkrtchyan]] (1959–2014), Armenian translator, editor and writer * [[Susanna Mkrtchyan]] (born 1949), Armenian professor and founder of Wikimedia Armenia ==See also== * [[Makran]] * [[Mkrtich]] * [[Ter-Mkrtychyan]] {{surname}} [[Category:Armenian-language surnames]]
1,256,650,484
[]
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# Lavin Lavin is a former municipality in the district of Inn in the Swiss canton of Graubünden. On 1 January 2015 the former municipalities of Lavin and Susch merged into the municipality of Zernez. ## History Lavin is first mentioned in the 12th century as Lawinis. ## Geography Lavin had an area, as of 2006, of 46.2 km2 (17.8 sq mi). Of this area, 19.9% is used for agricultural purposes, while 18.3% is forested. Of the rest of the land, 0.6% is settled (buildings or roads) and the remainder (61.2%) is non-productive (rivers, glaciers or mountains). The former municipality is located in the Sur Tasna sub-district of the Inn district on the left bank of the Inn river. It is the capital of the sub-district. It consists of the linear village of Lavin. ## Demographics Lavin had a population (as of 2014) of 221. As of 2008, 8.5% of the population was made up of foreign nationals. Over the last 10 years the population has grown at a rate of 7.2%. As of 2000, the gender distribution of the population was 46.9% male and 53.1% female. The age distribution, as of 2000, in Lavin is; 18 children or 10.3% of the population are between 0 and 9 years old. 14 teenagers or 8.0% are 10 to 14, and 12 teenagers or 6.9% are 15 to 19. Of the adult population, 15 people or 8.6% of the population are between 20 and 29 years old. 20 people or 11.5% are 30 to 39, 25 people or 14.4% are 40 to 49, and 22 people or 12.6% are 50 to 59. The senior population distribution is 14 people or 8.0% of the population are between 60 and 69 years old, 25 people or 14.4% are 70 to 79, there are 7 people or 4.0% who are 80 to 89, and there are 2 people or 1.1% who are 90 to 99. In the 2007 federal election the most popular party was the SPS which received 46.8% of the vote. The next three most popular parties were the SVP (26.1%), the FDP (15.5%) and the CVP (6.1%). The entire Swiss population is generally well educated. In Lavin about 87.7% of the population (between age 25-64) have completed either non-mandatory upper secondary education or additional higher education (either university or a Fachhochschule). Lavin has an unemployment rate of 0.71%. As of 2005, there were 20 people employed in the primary economic sector and about 8 businesses involved in this sector. 2 people are employed in the secondary sector and there is 1 business in this sector. 50 people are employed in the tertiary sector, with 9 businesses in this sector. The historical population is given in the following table: | year | population | | ---- | ---------- | | 1835 | 359 | | 1850 | 367 | | 1900 | 249 | | 1950 | 242 | | 1970 | 155 | | 1990 | 184 | | 2000 | 174 | ## Languages Most of the population (as of 2000) speaks Rhaeto-Romance (75.9%), with German being second most common (23.0%) and Portuguese being third ( 0.6%). By the 19th Century there was a German-speaking minority in Lavin. However the majority speak the Vallader Romansh dialect. Between 1880 and 1941 the Romansh speaking percentage remained the same (83%). In the last decades the Romansh speaking percentage has decreased. In 1990 91% of the population understood Romansh, though some spoke it as a second language, and in 2000 it was 86%. | Languages | Census 1980 | Census 1980 | Census 1990 | Census 1990 | Census 2000 | Census 2000 | | Languages | Number | Percent | Number | Percent | Number | Percent | | ---------- | ----------- | ----------- | ----------- | ----------- | ----------- | ----------- | | German | 33 | 18.13% | 38 | 20.65% | 40 | 22.99% | | Romanish | 147 | 80.77% | 145 | 78.80% | 132 | 75.86% | | Population | 182 | 100% | 184 | 100% | 174 | 100% | ## Heritage sites of national significance The abandoned village of Gonda is listed as a Swiss heritage site of national significance. Gonda was first mentioned about 1160 and by the 17th Century was abandoned. In 1983 it was restored.
enwiki/4299427
enwiki
4,299,427
Lavin
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lavin
2024-05-08T12:26:50Z
en
Q65557
79,344
{{Other uses}} {{Infobox Swiss town | subject_name = Lavin | image_photo = Lavin 1.jpg | municipality_type = former | imagepath_coa = Lavin wappen.svg|pixel_coa= | languages = | canton = Graubünden | iso-code-region = CH-GR | district = [[Inn District, Switzerland|Inn]] |coordinates = {{coord|46|46|N|10|06|E|display=inline,title}} | postal_code = 7543 | municipality_code = 3743 | area = 46.18 | elevation = 1412|elevation_description= | population = 221 | populationof = Dec 2014 | popofyear = 2014 | website = www.lavin.ch | mayor = |mayor_asof=|mayor_party= | mayor_title = |list_of_mayors = | places = | demonym = | neighboring_municipalities= [[Ardez]], [[Gaschurn]] (AT-8), [[Guarda, Switzerland|Guarda]], [[Klosters-Serneus]], [[Susch]], [[Zernez]] | twintowns = |}} [[File:Lavin bridge.jpg|thumb|right|270px|Lavin old wooden bridge]] '''Lavin''' is a former [[municipalities of Switzerland|municipality]] in the district of [[Inn District, Switzerland|Inn]] in the [[Switzerland|Swiss]] [[Cantons of Switzerland|canton]] of [[Graubünden]]. On 1 January 2015 the former municipalities of Lavin and [[Susch]] merged into the municipality of [[Zernez]].<ref>[http://www.bfs.admin.ch/bfs/portal/de/index/infothek/nomenklaturen/blank/blank/gem_liste/03.html Amtliches Gemeindeverzeichnis der Schweiz] published by the Swiss Federal Statistical Office {{in lang|de}} accessed 27 April 2016</ref> ==History== Lavin is first mentioned in the 12th century as ''Lawinis''.<ref name=HDS/> ==Geography== [[File:Verstanclahorn.jpg|thumb|left|Verstanclahorn mountain near Lavin]] [[File:ETH-BIB-Lavin-LBS H1-010225.tif|thumb|Aerial view (1947)]] Lavin had an area, {{as of|2006|lc=on}}, of {{convert|46.2|km2|sqmi|abbr=on}}. Of this area, 19.9% is used for agricultural purposes, while 18.3% is forested. Of the rest of the land, 0.6% is settled (buildings or roads) and the remainder (61.2%) is non-productive (rivers, glaciers or mountains).<ref name=SFSO/> The former municipality is located in the Sur Tasna sub-district of the Inn district on the left bank of the [[Inn (river)|Inn]] river. It is the capital of the sub-district. It consists of the [[linear village]] of Lavin. ==Demographics== Lavin had a population (as of 2014) of 221. {{as of|2008}}, 8.5% of the population was made up of foreign nationals.<ref name=Population/> Over the last 10 years the population has grown at a rate of 7.2%.<ref name=SFSO>[http://www.bfs.admin.ch/bfs/portal/en/index/regionen/02/key.html Swiss Federal Statistical Office] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160105172441/http://www.bfs.admin.ch/bfs/portal/en/index/regionen/02/key.html |date=2016-01-05 }} accessed 12-Oct-2009</ref> {{as of|2000}}, the gender distribution of the population was 46.9% male and 53.1% female.<ref name=GR_Numbers>[http://www.gr.ch/DE/institutionen/verwaltung/dvs/awt/dienstleistungen/volkswirtschaftlichegrundlagen/Seiten/default.aspx Graubunden in Numbers] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090924000647/http://www.gr.ch/DE/institutionen/verwaltung/dvs/awt/dienstleistungen/volkswirtschaftlichegrundlagen/Seiten/default.aspx |date=2009-09-24 }} {{in lang|de}} accessed 21 September 2009</ref> The age distribution, {{as of|2000|lc=on}}, in Lavin is; 18 children or 10.3% of the population are between 0 and 9 years old. 14 teenagers or 8.0% are 10 to 14, and 12 teenagers or 6.9% are 15 to 19. Of the adult population, 15 people or 8.6% of the population are between 20 and 29 years old. 20 people or 11.5% are 30 to 39, 25 people or 14.4% are 40 to 49, and 22 people or 12.6% are 50 to 59. The senior population distribution is 14 people or 8.0% of the population are between 60 and 69 years old, 25 people or 14.4% are 70 to 79, there are 7 people or 4.0% who are 80 to 89, and there are 2 people or 1.1% who are 90 to 99.<ref name=Population>[http://www.gr.ch/DE/institutionen/verwaltung/dvs/awt/dienstleistungen/volkswirtschaftlichegrundlagen/Seiten/Bevoelkerung.aspx Graubunden Population Statistics] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090827132227/http://www.gr.ch/DE/institutionen/verwaltung/dvs/awt/dienstleistungen/volkswirtschaftlichegrundlagen/Seiten/Bevoelkerung.aspx |date=2009-08-27 }} {{in lang|de}} accessed 21 September 2009</ref> In the [[2007 Swiss federal election|2007 federal election]] the most popular party was the [[Social Democratic Party of Switzerland|SPS]] which received 46.8% of the vote. The next three most popular parties were the [[Swiss People's Party|SVP]] (26.1%), the [[Free Democratic Party of Switzerland|FDP]] (15.5%) and the [[Christian Democratic People's Party of Switzerland|CVP]] (6.1%).<ref name=SFSO/> The entire Swiss population is generally well educated. In Lavin about 87.7% of the population (between age 25-64) have completed either non-mandatory [[Education in Switzerland#Secondary|upper secondary education]] or additional higher education (either university or a ''[[Fachhochschule]]'').<ref name=SFSO/> Lavin has an unemployment rate of 0.71%. {{as of|2005}}, there were 20 people employed in the [[Primary sector of the economy|primary economic sector]] and about 8 businesses involved in this sector. 2 people are employed in the [[Secondary sector of the economy|secondary sector]] and there is 1 business in this sector. 50 people are employed in the [[Tertiary sector of the economy|tertiary sector]], with 9 businesses in this sector.<ref name=SFSO/> The historical population is given in the following table:<ref name=HDS>{{HDS|1522|Lavin}}</ref> {| class="wikitable" |- ! year ! population |- | 1835 | 359 |- | 1850 | 367 |- | 1900 | 249 |- | 1950 | 242 |- | 1970 | 155 |- | 1990 | 184 |- | 2000 | 174 |- |} ==Languages== Most of the population ({{as of|2000|lc=on}}) speaks [[Romansh language|Rhaeto-Romance]] (75.9%), with German being second most common (23.0%) and Portuguese being third ( 0.6%).<ref name=SFSO/> By the 19th Century there was a German-speaking minority in Lavin. However the majority speak the [[Vallader]] Romansh dialect. Between 1880 and 1941 the Romansh speaking percentage remained the same (83%). In the last decades the Romansh speaking percentage has decreased. In 1990 91% of the population understood Romansh, though some spoke it as a second language, and in 2000 it was 86%. {| class="wikitable" |+ Languages in Lavin |----- ! rowspan="2" | Languages !! colspan="2" | Census 1980 !! colspan="2" | Census 1990 !! colspan="2" | Census 2000 |----- ! Number !! Percent !! Number !! Percent !! Number !! Percent |----- |[[German language|German]] || align=right | 33 || align=right | 18.13% || align=right | 38 || align=right | 20.65% || align=right | 40 || align=right | 22.99% |----- |[[Romansh language|Romanish]] || align=right | 147 || align=right | 80.77% || align=right | 145 || align=right | 78.80% || align=right | 132 || align=right | 75.86% |----- |'''Population''' || align=right | 182 || align=right | 100% || align=right | 184 || align=right | 100% || align=right | 174 || align=right | 100% |} ==Heritage sites of national significance== {{Commons category|Lavin}} The abandoned village of ''Gonda'' is listed as a Swiss [[Swiss inventory of cultural property of national and regional significance|heritage site of national significance]].<ref>[http://www.bevoelkerungsschutz.admin.ch/internet/bs/de/home/themen/kgs/kgs_inventar.html Swiss inventory of cultural property of national and regional significance] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090501142322/http://www.bevoelkerungsschutz.admin.ch/internet/bs/de/home/themen/kgs/kgs_inventar.html |date=2009-05-01 }} 21.11.2008 version, {{in lang|de}} accessed 12-Oct-2009</ref> Gonda was first mentioned about 1160 and by the 17th Century was abandoned. In 1983 it was restored.<ref name=HDS/> ==References== {{Reflist|colwidth=30em}} {{Engadin villages}} {{Authority control}} [[Category:Zernez]] [[Category:Former municipalities of Graubünden]] [[Category:Cultural property of national significance in Graubünden]] [[Category:Populated places on the Inn (river)]] [[Category:Silvretta Alps]]
1,222,868,933
[{"title": "Lavin", "data": {"Country": "Switzerland", "Canton": "Graub\u00fcnden", "District": "Inn"}}, {"title": "Area", "data": {"\u2022 Total": "46.26 km2 (17.86 sq mi)", "Elevation": "1,412 m (4,633 ft)"}}, {"title": "Population (Dec 2014)", "data": {"\u2022 Total": "221", "\u2022 Density": "4.8/km2 (12/sq mi)", "Time zone": "UTC+01:00 (Central European Time)", "\u2022 Summer (DST)": "UTC+02:00 (Central European Summer Time)", "Postal code(s)": "7543", "SFOS number": "3743", "ISO 3166 code": "CH-GR", "Surrounded by": "Ardez, Gaschurn (AT-8), Guarda, Klosters-Serneus, Susch, Zernez", "Website": "www.lavin.ch \u00b7 SFSO statistics"}}]
false
# Malvern Gardens Malvern Gardens is a small, upper-middle class neighborhood in the West End of Richmond, Virginia.
enwiki/50191526
enwiki
50,191,526
Malvern Gardens
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malvern_Gardens
2025-02-22T18:29:18Z
en
Q24060902
56,807
{{unreferenced|date=April 2016}} {{Use mdy dates|date=February 2025}} {{Use American English|date=January 2025}} {{Infobox settlement | name = Malvern Gardens | settlement_type = [[Neighborhoods of Richmond, Virginia|Neighborhood of Richmond]] | image_skyline = Malvern-Gardens.jpg | image_caption = Detached colonial homes in Malvern Gardens. | subdivision_type = Country | subdivision_name = [[United States]] | subdivision_type1 = State | subdivision_name1 = [[Virginia]] | subdivision_type2 = City | subdivision_name2 = [[Richmond, Virginia|Richmond]] | coordinates = {{coord|37|34|01.5|N|77|29|12.0|W|display=inline,title}} | population_density_km2 = auto | timezone1 = [[Eastern Daylight Time]] | utc_offset1 = −04:00 | timezone1_DST = [[Eastern Standard Time (North America)|Eastern Standard Time]] | utc_offset1_DST = −05:00 | postal_code_type = [[ZIP code]] | postal_code = 23231 | area_code = 804 | iso_code = 1 }} '''Malvern Gardens''' is a small, upper-middle class neighborhood in the [[West End (Richmond, Virginia)|West End]] of [[Richmond, Virginia]]. == External links == * [https://www.google.com/maps/place/Malvern+Gardens,+Richmond,+VA/data=!4m2!3m1!1s0x89b1140bbfa59e9f:0xb0f6c24d0614bcf6?sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwizi4-Ig5LMAhXHpx4KHd8wAngQ8gEIGzAA Boundaries of Malvern Gardens] {{geographic location | title = '''Nearby Neighborhoods in Richmond, Virginia''' | Center = Malvern Gardens | North = [[Sauer's Gardens]] | Northeast = [[Sauer's Gardens]] | East = [[Sauer's Gardens]] | Southeast = [[Museum District, Richmond, Virginia|Museum District]] | South = [[Patterson Plan]] | Southwest = [[Mary Munford]] | West = [[Colonial Place, Richmond|Colonial Place]] | Northwest = [[The Shops at Willow Lawn|Willow Lawn]] }} {{Richmond, Virginia neighborhoods}} [[Category:Neighborhoods in Richmond, Virginia]] {{Virginia-stub}}
1,277,107,493
[{"title": "Malvern Gardens", "data": {"Country": "United States", "State": "Virginia", "City": "Richmond", "Time zone": "UTC\u221204:00 (Eastern Daylight Time)", "\u2022 Summer (DST)": "UTC\u221205:00 (Eastern Standard Time)", "ZIP code": "23231", "Area code": "804", "ISO 3166 code": "1"}}]
false
# Louis Turgeon Louis Turgeon (French pronunciation: [lwi tyʁʒɔ̃]; April 10, 1762 – September 26, 1827) was a notary, seigneur and political figure in Lower Canada. He was born in Beaumont, in the French colony of Canada in 1762, studied at the Petit Séminaire de Québec, articled as a notary and was licensed to practice in 1792. He set up his office at Saint-Charles near Quebec City. He was named a justice of the peace in Quebec district in 1794. In 1804, he was elected to the Legislative Assembly of Lower Canada for Hertford, usually supporting the parti canadien; he was reelected in 1808 and then in 1816. He served in the local militia during the War of 1812, becoming lieutenant-colonel in 1821. In 1818, he resigned his seat when he was appointed to the Legislative Council of Lower Canada. He had inherited part of the seigneury of Beaumont in 1768 when his mother died; by 1819, he had become principal seigneur for Beaumont. He died in Saint-Charles in 1827. His daughter Marie-Ermine married Louis-Michel Viger. His cousin Joseph-Ovide Turgeon also served in the legislative assembly.
enwiki/7211664
enwiki
7,211,664
Louis Turgeon
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Turgeon
2024-12-19T14:12:34Z
en
Q6688292
11,987
{{short description|Canadian politician}} {{Use Canadian English|date=January 2023}} '''Louis Turgeon''' ({{IPA|fr|lwi tyʁʒɔ̃}}; April 10, 1762 &ndash; September 26, 1827) was a [[civil law notary|notary]], [[seigneurial system of New France|seigneur]] and political figure in [[Lower Canada]]. He was born in [[Beaumont, Quebec|Beaumont]], in the French colony of [[Canada (New France)|Canada]] in 1762, studied at the [[Petit Séminaire de Québec]], articled as a notary and was licensed to practice in 1792. He set up his office at [[Saint-Charles, Quebec|Saint-Charles]] near [[Quebec City]]. He was named a [[justice of the peace]] in Quebec district in 1794. In 1804, he was elected to the [[Legislative Assembly of Lower Canada]] for [[Hertford County, Quebec|Hertford]], usually supporting the [[parti canadien]]; he was reelected in 1808 and then in 1816. He served in the local militia during the [[War of 1812]], becoming lieutenant-colonel in 1821. In 1818, he resigned his seat when he was appointed to the [[Legislative Council of Lower Canada]]. He had inherited part of the seigneury of Beaumont in 1768 when his mother died; by 1819, he had become principal seigneur for Beaumont. He died in Saint-Charles in 1827. His daughter Marie-Ermine married [[Louis-Michel Viger]]. His cousin [[Joseph-Ovide Turgeon]] also served in the legislative assembly. ==External links== *{{QuebecMNAbio|turgeon-louis-5661}} *{{Cite DCB|3178}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Turgeon, Louis}} [[Category:1762 births]] [[Category:1827 deaths|Turgeon, Joseph-Ovide]] [[Category:Lawyers in Lower Canada and Canada East]] [[Category:Members of the Legislative Assembly of Lower Canada]] [[Category:Members of the Legislative Council of Lower Canada]] [[Category:Petit Séminaire de Québec alumni]] [[Category:Canadian justices of the peace]]
1,263,940,159
[]
false
# List of protected areas of Ethiopia National parks and other protected areas cover 17% of Ethiopia's land area. They include: ## National parks | National Park | Region | Established | Area | Image | Coordinates | Administered by | | ------------------------------- | ---------------------------- | ----------- | --------------------------------------- | ----- | ----------------------------------------------- | ------------------- | | Abijatta-Shalla National Park | Oromia | 1963 | 887 square kilometres (342 sq mi) | | 7°31′46″N 38°31′07″E / 7.529554°N 38.518681°E | Federal Government | | Alitash National Park | Amhara | 2006 | 2,666 square kilometres (1,029 sq mi) | | 12°06′32″N 35°33′13″E / 12.108911°N 35.553571°E | Federal Government | | Arsi Mountains National Park | Oromia | 2011 | 10,876 square kilometres (4,199 sq mi) | | | Regional Government | | Awash National Park | Oromia and Afar | 1958 | 850 square kilometres (330 sq mi) | | 9°04′42″N 39°59′36″E / 9.078332°N 39.993255°E | Federal Government | | Bejimiz National Park | Benishangul-Gumuz and Amhara | 2015 | not reported | | | Regional Government | | Borana National Park | Oromia and Somali | 2017 | 45,366 square kilometres (17,516 sq mi) | | 04°07′N 38°34′E / 4.117°N 38.567°E | Regional Government | | Bale Mountains National Park | Oromia | 1962 | 2,200 square kilometres (850 sq mi) | | 6°53′09″N 39°44′05″E / 6.885713°N 39.734817°E | Federal Government | | Chebera Churchura National Park | South West Ethiopia | 1997 | 1,190 square kilometres (460 sq mi) | | 6°53′14″N 36°38′11″E / 6.887221°N 36.636336°E | Regional Government | | Dati Wolel National Park | Oromia | 1998 | 431 square kilometres (166 sq mi) | | | Regional Government | | Didessa National Park | Benishangul-Gumuz | 2017 | Not reported | | | Regional Government | | Gambela National Park | Gambela | 1966 | 5,061 square kilometres (1,954 sq mi) | | 8°00′17″N 34°03′51″E / 8.004614°N 34.064153°E | Federal Government | | Geralle National Park | Somali | 1998 | 3,558 square kilometres (1,374 sq mi) | | 4°21′56″N 40°57′44″E / 4.365541°N 40.962177°E | Regional Government | | Gibe Sheleko National Park | South Ethiopia | 2001 | 360 square kilometres (140 sq mi) | | | Regional Government | | Kafta Sheraro National Park | Tigray | 1999 | 5,000 square kilometres (1,900 sq mi) | | 14°14′47″N 36°43′58″E / 14.24641°N 36.73279°E | Federal Government | | Loka-Abaya National Park | Sidama | 2001 | 500 square kilometres (190 sq mi) | | | Regional Government | | Mao-Komo National Park | Benishangul-Gumuz and Oromia | 2016 | not reported | | | Regional Government | | Mago National Park | South Ethiopia | 1974 | 1,942 square kilometres (750 sq mi) | | 5°31′08″N 36°20′38″E / 5.518792°N 36.343935°E | Regional Government | | Maze National Park | South Ethiopia | 1997 | 202 square kilometres (78 sq mi) | | 6°26′29″N 37°11′19″E / 6.441527°N 37.188633°E | Regional Government | | Nech Sar National Park | South Ethiopia | 1966 | 750 square kilometres (290 sq mi) | | 5°56′01″N 37°40′53″E / 5.933518°N 37.681282°E | Federal Government | | Omo National Park | South Ethiopia | 1980 | 4,068 km2 (1,571 sq mi) | | 6°0′N 35°50′E / 6.000°N 35.833°E | Federal Government | | Simien Mountains National Park | Amhara | 1959 | 412 square kilometres (159 sq mi) | | 13°18′23″N 38°15′51″E / 13.306512°N 38.264118°E | Federal Government | | Yangudi Rassa National Park | Afar | 1969 | 4,731 square kilometres (1,827 sq mi) | | 10°32′16″N 40°52′40″E / 10.537726°N 40.877762°E | Federal Government | ### Proposed national parks - Afar Depression National Park - Blue Nile Gorges National Park - Dessa Forest National Park - Donkoro Chaka National Park - Lake Abbe National Park - Malka Guba National Park - Ogaden Desert National Park ## Wildlife reserves - Aledeghi Wildlife Reserve - Awash-West Wildlife Reserve - Chelbi Wildlife Reserve (Chelbi or Stephanie) - Degodi Lark Reserve - Gewane Wildlife Reserve - Guassa Community Conservation Area - Indeltu (Shebelle) Gorges Reserve - Mille-Serdo Wildlife Reserve - Shire Wildlife Reserve - Tama Community Conservation Area (Tama Wildlife Reserve) ## Sanctuaries - Babile Elephant Sanctuary - Kuni-Muktar Mountain Nyala Sanctuary - Senkelle Swayne's Hartebeest Sanctuary - Yabelo Wildlife Sanctuary ### Proposed sanctuaries - Liben Plain Sanctuary - Tullo Lafto-Sadden Wildlife Sanctuary ## Controlled hunting areas - Afdem-Gewane Controlled Hunting Area - Akobo Controlled Hunting Area - Awash West Controlled Hunting Area - Boyo Swamp Controlled Hunting Area - Dabus Valley Controlled Hunting Area - Eastern Hararghe Controlled Hunting Area - Erer-Gota Controlled Hunting Area - Mizan-Teferi Controlled Hunting Area - Murule Controlled Hunting Area - Omo West Controlled Hunting Area - Segen Valley Controlled Hunting Area - Tedo Controlled Hunting Area ## National forest priority areas - Abelti Gibie National Forest Priority Area - Abey-Albasa National Forest Priority Area - Abobo-Gog National Forest Priority Area - Aloshie-Batu National Forest Priority Area - Anferara-Wadera National Forest Priority Area - Arba-Minch National Forest Priority Area - Arero National Forest Priority Area - Babiya-Fola National Forest Priority Area - Belete Gera National Forest Priority Area - Bonga National Forest Priority Area - Bore-Anferara National Forest Priority Area - Bulki-Melakoza National Forest Priority Area - Butajira National Forest Priority Area - Chato-Sengi-Dengeb National Forest Priority Area - Chilalo-Gallema National Forest Priority Area - Chilimo-Gaji National Forest Priority Area - Deme-Laha National Forest Priority Area - Dengego-Melka Jedbu National Forest Priority Area - Desa-A National Forest Priority Area - Dindin-Arbagugu National Forest Priority Area - Dire-Gerbicha National Forest Priority Area - Dodola-Adaba-Lajo National Forest Priority Area - Gara Muleta National Forest Priority Area - Gebre Dima National Forest Priority Area - Gedo National Forest Priority Area - Gergeda National Forest Priority Area - Gidole-Kemba National Forest Priority Area - Godere National Forest Priority Area - Goro-Bele National Forest Priority Area - Gumburda-Grakaso National Forest Priority Area - Gura Ferda National Forest Priority Area - Harena-Kokosa National Forest Priority Area - Jalo-Addes National Forest Priority Area - Jarso-Gursum National Forest Priority Area - Jibat National Forest Priority Area - Jorgo-Wato National Forest Priority Area - Kahatasa-Guangua National Forest Priority Area - Komto-Waga-Tsige National Forest Priority Area - Konchi National Forest Priority Area - Kubayo National Forest Priority Area - Megada National Forest Priority Area - Mena-Angetu National Forest Priority Area - Menagesha-Suba National Forest Priority Area - Munesa-Shashemene National Forest Priority Area - Negele (Mankubssa) National Forest Priority Area - Sekela Mariam National Forest Priority Area - Sele Anderacha National Forest Priority Area - Sheka National Forest Priority Area - Sibu-Tole-Kobo National Forest Priority Area - Sigmo-Geba National Forest Priority Area - Tiro-Boter-Becho National Forest Priority Area - Wof-Washa National Forest Priority Area - Yabelo National Forest Priority Area - Yayu National Forest Priority Area - Yegof-Erike National Forest Priority Area - Yeki National Forest Priority Area - Yerer National Forest Priority Area ## International designations ### UNESCO-MAB Biosphere Reserves - Kafa Biosphere Reserve - Lake Tana Biosphere Reserve - Majang Forest Biosphere Reserve - Sheka Forest Biosphere Reserve - Yayu Biosphere Reserve ### World Heritage Sites - Bale Mountains National Park - Simien National Park
enwiki/1888461
enwiki
1,888,461
List of protected areas of Ethiopia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_protected_areas_of_Ethiopia
2025-03-26T14:55:48Z
en
Q1429402
115,801
{{short description|None}} [[File:Ethiopia Protected Areas map - National Parks and Sanctuaries.svg|right|thumb|200px|Map of National park and Sanctuaries located in Ethiopia]] [[National park]]s and other protected areas cover 17% of [[Ethiopia]]'s land area.<ref name="unep">UNEP-WCMC (2022). Protected Area Profile for Ethiopia from the World Database of Protected Areas. Accessed 27 February 2022. [https://www.protectedplanet.net/en/country/ETH]</ref> They include:<ref name="EWCA">{{cite web |url=http://www.ewca.gov.et/en/other_protected_areas_in_ethiopia |title=Protected Wildlife Areas of Ethiopia |publisher=[[Ethiopian Wildlife Conservation Authority]] |date=7 October 2016 |access-date=7 October 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161009165040/http://www.ewca.gov.et/en/other_protected_areas_in_ethiopia |archive-date=9 October 2016 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Kebbede|first=Girma|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6z4lDwAAQBAJ&q=Protected+Wildlife+Areas+of+Ethiopia|title=Environment and Society in Ethiopia|date=2016-10-04|publisher=Taylor & Francis|isbn=978-1-315-46428-2|language=en}}</ref> ==National parks== {| class="wikitable sortable" style="width:100%;" |- !width="25%" align="left" | National Park !width="10%" align="left" | Region !width="10%" align="left" | Established !width="20%" align="left" | Area !width="10%" align="left" class="unsortable" | Image !width="10%" align="left" class="unsortable" | Coordinates !width="15%" align="left" | Administered by |- | align="center"|[[Abijatta-Shalla National Park]] || [[Oromia Region|Oromia]] || 1963 || {{convert|887|km2|sqmi}} || [[File:Lake Shalla Landscape.jpg|150px]] || {{coord|7.529554|N|38.518681|E|display=inline|format=dms|type:landmark_region:ET_scale:10000|name=Abijata Lakes National Park}} || [[Government of Ethiopia|Federal Government]] |- | align="center"|[[Alitash National Park]] || [[Amhara Region|Amhara]] || 2006 || {{convert|2666|km2|sqmi}} || || {{coord|12.108911|N|35.553571|E|display=inline|format=dms|type:landmark_region:ET_scale:10000|name=Alatish National Park}} || [[Government of Ethiopia|Federal Government]] |- | align="center"|[[Arsi Mountains National Park]] || [[Oromia Region|Oromia]] || 2011 || {{convert|10876|km2|sqmi}} || || || [[Regions of Ethiopia|Regional Government]] |- | align="center"|[[Awash National Park]] || [[Oromia Region|Oromia]] and [[Afar Region|Afar]] || 1958 || {{convert|850|km2|sqmi}} || [[File:Parc national d'Awash-Ethiopie-Chutes d'eau (3).jpg|150px]] || {{coord|9.078332|N|39.993255|E|display=inline|format=dms|type:landmark_region:ET_scale:10000|name=Awash National Park}} || [[Government of Ethiopia|Federal Government]] |- | align="center"|[[Bejimiz National Park]] || [[Benishangul-Gumuz Region|Benishangul-Gumuz]] and [[Amhara Region|Amhara]] || 2015 || not reported || || || [[Regions of Ethiopia|Regional Government]] |- | align="center"|[[Borana National Park]] || [[Oromia Region|Oromia]] and [[Somali Region|Somali]] || 2017 || {{convert|45366|km2|sqmi}} || [[File: El Sod (11606130484).jpg|center|150px]]|| {{coords|04|07|N|38|34|E}} || [[Regions of Ethiopia|Regional Government]] |- | align="center"|[[Bale Mountains National Park]] || [[Oromia Region|Oromia]] || 1962 || {{convert|2200|km2|sqmi}} || [[File:Bale Mountns.jpg|150px]] || {{coord|6.885713|N|39.734817|E|display=inline|format=dms|type:landmark_region:ET_scale:10000|name=Bale Mountains National Park}} || [[Government of Ethiopia|Federal Government]] |- | align="center"|[[Chebera Churchura National Park]] || [[South West Ethiopia Peoples' Region|South West Ethiopia]]|| 1997 || {{convert|1190|km2|sqmi}} || [[File:A picture of Chebera Churchura National Park landscape.jpg|150px]] || {{coord|6.887221|N|36.636336|E|display=inline|format=dms|type:landmark_region:ET_scale:10000|name=Chebera Churchura National Park}} || [[Regions of Ethiopia|Regional Government]] |- | align="center"|[[Dati Wolel National Park]] || [[Oromia Region|Oromia]] || 1998 || {{convert|431|km2|sqmi}} || || || [[Regions of Ethiopia|Regional Government]] |- | align="center"|[[Didessa National Park]] || [[Benishangul-Gumuz Region|Benishangul-Gumuz]] || 2017 || Not reported || || || [[Regions of Ethiopia|Regional Government]] |- | align="center"|[[Gambela National Park]] || [[Gambela Region|Gambela]] || 1966 || {{convert|5061|km2|sqmi}} || || {{coord|8.004614|N|34.064153|E|display=inline|format=dms|type:landmark_region:ET_scale:10000|name=Gambela National Park}} || [[Government of Ethiopia|Federal Government]] |- | align="center"|[[Geralle National Park]] || [[Somali Region|Somali]] || 1998 || {{convert|3558|km2|sqmi}} || || {{coord|4.365541|N|40.962177|E|display=inline|format=dms|type:landmark_region:ET_scale:10000|name=Geraille National Park}} || [[Regions of Ethiopia|Regional Government]] |- | align="center"|[[Gibe Sheleko National Park]] || [[South Ethiopia Regional State|South Ethiopia]]|| 2001 || {{convert|360|km2|sqmi}} || || || [[Regions of Ethiopia|Regional Government]] |- | align="center"|[[Kafta Sheraro National Park]] || [[Tigray Region|Tigray]] || 1999 || {{convert|5000|km2|sqmi}} || || {{coord|14.24641|N|36.73279|E|display=inline|format=dms|type:landmark_region:ET_scale:10000|name=Kafeto Shiraro National Park}} || [[Government of Ethiopia|Federal Government]] |- | align="center"|[[Loka-Abaya National Park]] || [[Sidama Region|Sidama]]|| 2001 || {{convert|500|km2|sqmi}} || || || [[Regions of Ethiopia|Regional Government]] |- | align="center"|[[Mao-Komo National Park]] || [[Benishangul-Gumuz Region|Benishangul-Gumuz]] and [[Oromia Region|Oromia]] || 2016 || not reported || || || [[Regions of Ethiopia|Regional Government]] |- | align="center"|[[Mago National Park]] || [[South Ethiopia Regional State|South Ethiopia]]|| 1974 || {{convert|1942|km2|sqmi}} || [[File:Mago Park.JPG|150px]] || {{coord|5.518792|N|36.343935|E|display=inline|format=dms|type:landmark_region:ET_scale:10000|name=Mago National Park}} || [[Regions of Ethiopia|Regional Government]] |- | align="center"|[[Maze National Park]] || [[South Ethiopia Regional State|South Ethiopia]] || 1997 || {{convert|202|km2|sqmi}} || || {{coord|6.441527|N|37.188633|E|display=inline|format=dms|type:landmark_region:ET_scale:10000|name=Maze National Park}} || [[Regions of Ethiopia|Regional Government]] |- | align="center"|[[Nechisar National Park|Nech Sar National Park]] || [[South Ethiopia Regional State|South Ethiopia]]|| 1966 || {{convert|750|km2|sqmi}} || [[File:Nechisar National Park.JPG|150px]] || {{coord|5.933518|N|37.681282|E|display=inline|format=dms|type:landmark_region:ET_scale:10000|name=Nech Sar National Park}} || [[Government of Ethiopia|Federal Government]] |- | align="center"|[[Omo National Park]] ||[[South Ethiopia Regional State|South Ethiopia]]||1980 || 4,068&nbsp;km<sup>2</sup> (1,571 sq mi) || [[File:Omo River 02.jpg|150px]] || {{coord|6|0|N|35|50|E|format=dms|display=inline,title}} ||[[Government of Ethiopia|Federal Government]] |- | align="center"|[[Simien Mountains National Park]] || [[Amhara Region|Amhara]] || 1959 || {{convert|412|km2|sqmi}} || [[File:Semien Mountains_02.jpg|150px]] ||{{coord|13.306512|N|38.264118|E|display=inline|format=dms|type:landmark_region:ET_scale:10000|name=Simien Mountains National Park}} || [[Government of Ethiopia|Federal Government]] |- | align="center"|[[Yangudi Rassa National Park]] || [[Afar Region|Afar]] || 1969 || {{convert|4731|km2|sqmi}} || [[File:Parc national de Yangudi Rassa-Gazelle de Soemmerring (3).jpg|150px]] || {{coord|10.537726|N|40.877762|E|display=inline|format=dms|type:landmark_region:ET_scale:10000|name=Yangudi Rassa National Park}} || [[Government of Ethiopia|Federal Government]] |- |} ===Proposed national parks=== * [[Afar Depression|Afar Depression National Park]] * Blue Nile Gorges National Park * Dessa Forest National Park * Donkoro Chaka National Park * [[Lake Abbe|Lake Abbe National Park]] * Malka Guba National Park * Ogaden Desert National Park ==Wildlife reserves== [[File:Ethiopia Protected Areas map - Wildlife Reserves.svg|thumb|right|200px|The Locations of Wildlife Reserves of Ethiopia]] * [[Aledeghi Wildlife Reserve]] * [[Awash-West Wildlife Reserve]] * [[Chelbi Wildlife Reserve]] (Chelbi or Stephanie) * [[Degodi Lark Reserve]] * [[Gewane Wildlife Reserve]] * [[Guassa Community Conservation Area]] * Indeltu (Shebelle) Gorges Reserve * [[Mille-Serdo Wildlife Reserve]] * [[Shire Wildlife Reserve]] * [[Tama Community Conservation Area]] (Tama Wildlife Reserve) ==Sanctuaries== * [[Babile Elephant Sanctuary]] * [[Kuni-Muktar Mountain Nyala Sanctuary]] * [[Senkelle Swayne's Hartebeest Sanctuary]] * [[Yabelo Wildlife Sanctuary]] ===Proposed sanctuaries=== * [[Liben Plain Sanctuary]] * [[Tullo Lafto-Sadden Wildlife Sanctuary]] ==Controlled hunting areas== * Afdem-Gewane Controlled Hunting Area * Akobo Controlled Hunting Area * Awash West Controlled Hunting Area * Boyo Swamp Controlled Hunting Area * Dabus Valley Controlled Hunting Area * Eastern Hararghe Controlled Hunting Area * Erer-Gota Controlled Hunting Area * Mizan-Teferi Controlled Hunting Area * Murule Controlled Hunting Area * Omo West Controlled Hunting Area * Segen Valley Controlled Hunting Area * Tedo Controlled Hunting Area ==National forest priority areas== * Abelti Gibie National Forest Priority Area * Abey-Albasa National Forest Priority Area * Abobo-Gog National Forest Priority Area * Aloshie-Batu National Forest Priority Area * Anferara-Wadera National Forest Priority Area * Arba-Minch National Forest Priority Area * Arero National Forest Priority Area * Babiya-Fola National Forest Priority Area * Belete Gera National Forest Priority Area * Bonga National Forest Priority Area * Bore-Anferara National Forest Priority Area * Bulki-Melakoza National Forest Priority Area * Butajira National Forest Priority Area * Chato-Sengi-Dengeb National Forest Priority Area * Chilalo-Gallema National Forest Priority Area * Chilimo-Gaji National Forest Priority Area * Deme-Laha National Forest Priority Area * Dengego-Melka Jedbu National Forest Priority Area * Desa-A National Forest Priority Area * Dindin-Arbagugu National Forest Priority Area * Dire-Gerbicha National Forest Priority Area * Dodola-Adaba-Lajo National Forest Priority Area * Gara Muleta National Forest Priority Area * Gebre Dima National Forest Priority Area * Gedo National Forest Priority Area * Gergeda National Forest Priority Area * Gidole-Kemba National Forest Priority Area * Godere National Forest Priority Area * Goro-Bele National Forest Priority Area * Gumburda-Grakaso National Forest Priority Area * Gura Ferda National Forest Priority Area * [[Harena-Kokosa National Forest Priority Area]] * Jalo-Addes National Forest Priority Area * Jarso-Gursum National Forest Priority Area * Jibat National Forest Priority Area * Jorgo-Wato National Forest Priority Area * Kahatasa-Guangua National Forest Priority Area * Komto-Waga-Tsige National Forest Priority Area * Konchi National Forest Priority Area * Kubayo National Forest Priority Area * Megada National Forest Priority Area * [[Mena-Angetu National Forest Priority Area]] * Menagesha-Suba National Forest Priority Area * Munesa-Shashemene National Forest Priority Area * Negele (Mankubssa) National Forest Priority Area * Sekela Mariam National Forest Priority Area * Sele Anderacha National Forest Priority Area * [[Sheka Forest|Sheka National Forest Priority Area]] * Sibu-Tole-Kobo National Forest Priority Area * Sigmo-Geba National Forest Priority Area * Tiro-Boter-Becho National Forest Priority Area * Wof-Washa National Forest Priority Area * Yabelo National Forest Priority Area * Yayu National Forest Priority Area * Yegof-Erike National Forest Priority Area * Yeki National Forest Priority Area * Yerer National Forest Priority Area ==International designations== ===UNESCO-MAB Biosphere Reserves=== *[[Kafa Biosphere Reserve]] *[[Lake Tana Biosphere Reserve]] *[[Majang Forest Biosphere Reserve]] *[[Sheka Forest|Sheka Forest Biosphere Reserve]] *[[Yayu Biosphere Reserve]] ===World Heritage Sites=== * [[Bale Mountains National Park]] * [[Simien National Park]] ==See also== {{Commons category|National parks of Ethiopia}} * [[Wildlife of Ethiopia]] * [[Ministry of Culture and Tourism (Ethiopia)]] ==References== {{Reflist}} ==External links== * [http://www.ewca.gov.et Ethiopian Wildlife Conservation Authority] {{National Parks of Ethiopia}} {{Africa in topic|List of national parks of}} [[Category:Ethiopia geography-related lists|Protected areas]] [[Category:Lists of national parks|Ethiopia]] [[Category:Protected areas of Ethiopia|*]] [[Category:Lists of tourist attractions in Ethiopia|Protected areas]] [[Category:Lists of protected areas by country|Ethiopia]] [[Category:National parks of Ethiopia| ]]
1,282,458,481
[]
false
# Panoquina lucas Panoquina lucas, the purple-washed skipper, is a species of grass skipper in the butterfly family Hesperiidae. It is found in the Caribbean Sea, Central America, North America, and South America. The MONA or Hodges number for Panoquina lucas is 4121. ## Subspecies These two subspecies belong to the species Panoquina lucas: - Panoquina lucas lucas (Fabricius, 1793) - Panoquina lucas woodruffi Watson, 1937
enwiki/57237833
enwiki
57,237,833
Panoquina lucas
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panoquina_lucas
2023-01-22T00:46:43Z
en
Q21320525
42,208
{{Short description|Species of butterfly}} {{Speciesbox | image = Purple-washed skipper (Panoquina lucas lucas).jpg | genus = Panoquina | species = lucas | authority = ([[Johan Christian Fabricius|Fabricius]], 1793) | synonyms = {{Species list | Goniloba sylvicola | Herrich-Schäffer, 1865 | Panoquina sylvicola | (Herrich-Schäffer, 1865) }} | synonyms_ref = <ref name=itis/> }} '''''Panoquina lucas''''', the '''purple-washed skipper''', is a species of [[grass skipper]] in the [[butterfly]] family [[Hesperiidae]]. It is found in the [[Caribbean Sea]], Central America, North America, and South America.<ref name=itis/><ref name=gbif/><ref name=buglink/> The MONA or Hodges number for ''Panoquina lucas'' is 4121.<ref name=mpg/> ==Subspecies== These two subspecies belong to the species ''Panoquina lucas'': * ''Panoquina lucas lucas'' <small>(Fabricius, 1793)</small> * ''Panoquina lucas woodruffi'' <small>Watson, 1937</small> ==References== {{Reflist|refs= <ref name=itis> {{Cite web| title=''Panoquina lucas'' Report | url=https://www.itis.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=706560 | website=Integrated Taxonomic Information System | accessdate=2019-09-23 }}</ref> <ref name=mpg> {{Cite web| title=North American Moth Photographers Group, ''Panoquina lucas'' | url=http://mothphotographersgroup.msstate.edu/species.php?hodges=4121 | accessdate=2019-09-23 }}</ref> <ref name=gbif> {{Cite web| title=''Panoquina lucas'' | url=https://www.gbif.org/species/4301351 | website=GBIF | accessdate=2019-09-23 }}</ref> <ref name=buglink> {{Cite web| title=''Panoquina lucas'' species Information | url=https://bugguide.net/node/view/28456 | website=BugGuide.net | accessdate=2019-09-23 }}</ref> }} ==Further reading== {{refbegin}} * {{Cite report | title = Annotated taxonomic checklist of the Lepidoptera of North America, North of Mexico | date = 2016 | last1 = Pohl | first1 = Greg | last2 = Patterson | first2 = Bob | last3 = Pelham | first3 = Jonathan | url = https://www.researchgate.net/publication/302570819 | doi = 10.13140/RG.2.1.2186.3287| doi-access = free }} {{refend}} ==External links== {{refbegin}} * {{Commons category-inline|Panoquina lucas}} {{refend}} {{Taxonbar|from=Q21320525}} [[Category:Panoquina]] [[Category:Articles created by Qbugbot]] [[Category:Butterflies described in 1793]] {{hesperiinae-stub}}
1,135,003,421
[{"title": "Scientific classification", "data": {"Domain": "Eukaryota", "Kingdom": "Animalia", "Phylum": "Arthropoda", "Class": "Insecta", "Order": "Lepidoptera", "Family": "Hesperiidae", "Genus": "Panoquina", "Species": "P. lucas"}}, {"title": "Binomial name", "data": {"Binomial name": "Panoquina lucas \u00b7 (Fabricius, 1793)"}}, {"title": "Synonyms", "data": {"Synonyms": "- Goniloba sylvicola Herrich-Sch\u00e4ffer, 1865 - Panoquina sylvicola (Herrich-Sch\u00e4ffer, 1865)"}}]
false
# José Regalo José Alberto Teixeira Regalo (born 22 November 1963) is a Portuguese long-distance runner. He competed in the men's 5000 metres at the 1988 Summer Olympics.
enwiki/55764771
enwiki
55,764,771
José Regalo
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jos%C3%A9_Regalo
2024-12-03T02:46:32Z
en
Q42903176
24,758
{{short description|Portuguese long-distance runner}} {{Use dmy dates|date=April 2020}} {{Infobox sportsperson | name = José Regalo | full_name = José Alberto Teixeira Regalo | image = | caption = | nationality = Portuguese | sport = Long-distance running | event = 5000 metres | club = | collegeteam = | birth_date = {{birth date and age|1963|11|22|df=yes}} | birth_place = | death_date = | death_place = | height = | weight = }} '''José Alberto Teixeira Regalo''' (born 22 November 1963) is a Portuguese [[long-distance running|long-distance runner]]. He competed in the [[Athletics at the 1988 Summer Olympics – Men's 5000 metres|men's 5000 metres]] at the [[1988 Summer Olympics]].<ref name="SportsRef">{{cite Sports-Reference |url=https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/re/jose-regalo-1.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200418064315/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/re/jose-regalo-1.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=18 April 2020 |title=José Regalo Olympic Results |accessdate=10 November 2017}}</ref> ==References== {{reflist}} {{authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Regalo, Jose}} [[Category:1963 births]] [[Category:Living people]] [[Category:Athletes (track and field) at the 1988 Summer Olympics]] [[Category:Portuguese male long-distance runners]] [[Category:Olympic athletes for Portugal]] [[Category:Place of birth missing (living people)]] [[Category:20th-century Portuguese sportsmen]] {{Portugal-athletics-bio-stub}}
1,260,883,824
[{"title": "Jos\u00e9 Regalo", "data": {"Full name": "Jos\u00e9 Alberto Teixeira Regalo", "Nationality": "Portuguese", "Born": "22 November 1963"}}, {"title": "Sport", "data": {"Sport": "Long-distance running", "Event": "5000 metres"}}]
false
# List of awards and nominations received by Manju Warrier Manju Warrier is an Indian actress and dancer who primarily appears in Malayalam films. She is one of the most successful leading actresses in Malayalam cinema. Warrier won the National Film Award – Special Mention for her performance as Bhadra in Kannezhuthi Pottum Thottu. She also won the Kerala State Film Award for Best Actress for her performance as Anjali in Ee Puzhayum Kadannu, along with six Filmfare Awards for Best Actress, a record in that category. ## National Film Awards | Year | Category | Film | Result | | ---- | ------------------------------ | ------------------------- | ------ | | 1999 | Special Mention (Feature Film) | Kannezhuthi Pottum Thottu | Won | ## Kerala State Film Awards | Year | Category | Film | Result | | ---- | ------------ | ------------------- | ------ | | 1996 | Best Actress | Ee Puzhayum Kadannu | Won | ## Filmfare Awards South | Year | Category | Film | Result | | ---- | -------------------------------- | ---------------------------- | --------- | | 1996 | Best Actress (Malayalam) | Ee Puzhayum Kadannu | Won | | 1997 | Best Actress (Malayalam) | Kaliyattam & Aaram Thamburan | Won | | 1998 | Best Actress (Malayalam) | Kanmadam | Won | | 1999 | Best Actress (Malayalam) | Pathram | Won | | 2014 | Best Actress (Malayalam) | How Old Are You | Won | | 2015 | Best Actress (Malayalam) | Rani Padmini | Nominated | | 2016 | Best Actress (Malayalam) | Karinkunnam 6's | Nominated | | 2017 | Best Actress (Malayalam) | Udaharanam Sujatha | Nominated | | 2017 | Critics Best Actress (Malayalam) | Udaharanam Sujatha | Won | | 2018 | Best Actress (Malayalam) | Aami | Won | | 2024 | Best Actress (Malayalam) | Ayisha | Nominated | ## Kerala Film Critics Association Awards | Year | Category | Film | Result | | ---- | -------------------- | ----------------------------------------------- | ------ | | 1996 | Best Actress | Sallapam, Ee Puzhayum Kadannu, Thooval Kottaram | Won | | 1999 | Special Jury Mention | Kannezhuthi Pottum Thottu | Won | | 2017 | Best Actress | Udaharanam Sujatha & C/O Saira Banu | Won | | 2019 | Best Actress | Prathi Poovankozhi | Won | ## Screen Videocon Awards | Year | Category | Film | Result | | ---- | ------------------------ | --------------------------------------------------- | ------ | | 1996 | Best Actress (Malayalam) | Ee Puzhayum Kadannu | Won | | 1997 | Best Actress (Malayalam) | Aaram Thampuran & Krishnagudiyil Oru Pranayakalathu | Won | ## South Indian International Movie Awards | Year | Category | Film | Result | | ---- | ------------------------------ | ---------------------------- | --------- | | 2014 | Best Actress (Malayalam) | How Old Are You | Won | | 2016 | Best Actress (Malayalam) | Vettah | Nominated | | 2017 | Best Actress (Malayalam) | Udaharanam Sujatha | Nominated | | 2019 | Best Actress (Malayalam) | Lucifer & Prathi Poovankozhi | Won | | 2019 | Best Actress (Tamil) | Asuran | Nominated | | 2019 | Best Actress – Critics (Tamil) | Asuran | Won | ## Asianet Film Awards | Year | Category | Film | Result | | ---- | -------------------------- | ------------------------------------- | --------- | | 1998 | Best Actress | Kanmadam | Won | | 1999 | Best Actress | Kannezhuthi Pottum Thottu and Pathram | Won | | 2014 | Best Actress | How Old Are You? | Won | | 2015 | Best Actress | Rani Padmini and Ennum Eppozhum | Nominated | | 2016 | Best Actress | Vettah | Won | | 2017 | Best Actress | Udaharanam Sujatha and C/O Saira Banu | Nominated | | 2018 | Best Actress | Aami and Odiyan | Won | | 2019 | Best Actress | Prathi Poovankozhi | Nominated | | 2019 | Most Popular Tamil Actress | Asuran | Won | ## Vanitha Film Awards | Year | Category | Film | Result | | ---- | ------------ | ---------------------------- | ------ | | 2015 | Best Actress | How Old Are You? | Won | | 2017 | Best Actress | Karinkunnam 6's | Won | | 2018 | Best Actress | Udaharanam Sujatha | Won | | 2019 | Best Actress | Aami & Odiyan | Won | | 2020 | Best Actress | Prathi Poovankozhi & Lucifer | Won | ## Asiavision Awards | Year | Category | Film | Result | | ---- | ------------ | ------------------------ | --------- | | 2014 | Best Actress | How Old Are You? | Won | | 2015 | Best Actress | Rani Padmini | Nominated | | 2016 | Best Actress | Vettah & Karinkunnam 6's | Won | | 2017 | Best Actress | Udaharanam Sujatha | Won | | 2018 | Best Actress | Aami | Won | ## IIFA Utsavam | Year | Category | Film | Result | | ---- | ------------ | -------------- | --------- | | 2015 | Best Actress | Ennum Eppozhum | Nominated | | 2016 | Best Actress | Vettah | Nominated | ## North American Film Awards | Year | Category | Film | Result | | ---- | ------------ | ------------------------ | ------ | | 2017 | Best Actress | Vettah & Karinkunnam 6's | Won | | 2018 | Best Actress | Udaharanam Sujatha | Won | ## Other Awards | Year | Award | Category | Film | Result | | ---- | ------------------------------------- | -------------------------------------- | ----------------------------------- | --------- | | 1996 | Film Fans Awards | Best Actress | Thooval Kottaram | Won | | 2014 | Mangalam Film Awards | Best Actress | How Old Are You? | Won | | 2014 | Kerala Sangeetha Nataka Akademi Award | Kuchipudi | — | Won | | 2014 | Manorama Awards | Newsmaker of the Year | — | Won | | 2016 | Janmabhumi Awards | Best Actress | Vettah | Won | | 2017 | Anand TV Awards | Best Actress | Vettah & Karinkunnam 6's | Won | | 2017 | Movie Street Film Excellence Awards | Best Actress | Udaharanam Sujatha & C/O Saira Banu | Won | | 2017 | Asianet Comedy Awards | Best Actress | Udaharanam Sujatha & C/O Saira Banu | Nominated | | 2018 | Flowers Indian Film Awards | Best Actress | Aami & Udaharanam Sujatha | Won | | 2019 | Nana Film Awards | Best Actress | Aami | Won | | 2019 | Behindwoods Gold Medals | Best Actress (Malayalam) | Lucifer | Won | | 2019 | Behindwoods Gold Medals | Best Actress – Special Mention (Tamil) | Asuran | Won | | 2020 | JFW Movie Awards | Best Actress | Asuran | Won | | 2022 | Mazhavil Entertainment Awards | Best Entertainer Actress | Prathi Poovankozhi | Won |
enwiki/63967863
enwiki
63,967,863
List of awards and nominations received by Manju Warrier
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_awards_and_nominations_received_by_Manju_Warrier
2025-03-08T17:14:29Z
en
Q96388833
193,940
{{short description|None}} {| class="infobox" style="width:22em; text-align:left; font-size:90%; vertical-align:middle; background:#eef;" |+ <span style="font-size: 10pt">'''List of awards received by [[Manju Warrier]]'''</span> |- style="background:white;" | colspan="3" style="text-align:center;" | [[File:Dileep manju.jpg|225px]] |- | colspan="3" | {| class="collapsible collapsed" style="width:100%;" ! colspan="3" style="background:#d9e8ff; text-align:center;"| Awards and nominations |- style="background:#d9e8ff; text-align:center;" !style="vertical-align: middle;"| Award | style="background:#cec; font-size:9pt; width:60px;"| Wins | style="background:#ecc; font-size:9pt; width:60px;"| Nominations |- | style="text-align:left;"| ;[[National Film Awards]] |{{won|1}} |{{nom|1}} |- | style="text-align:left;"| ;[[Kerala State Film Awards]] |{{won|1}} |{{nom|1}} |- | style="text-align:left;"| ;[[Filmfare Awards South]] |{{won|7}} |{{nom|9}} |- | style="text-align:left;"| ;[[Kerala Film Critics Association Awards]] |{{won|4}} |{{nom|4}} |- | style="text-align:left;"| ;[[Screen Awards#History|Screen Videocon Awards]] |{{won|2}} |{{nom|2}} |- | style="text-align:left;"| ;[[South Indian International Movie Awards]] |{{won|3}} |{{nom|6}} |- | style="text-align:left;"| ;[[Asianet Film Awards]] |{{won|6}} |{{nom|9}} |- | style="text-align:left;"| ;[[Vanitha Film Awards]] |{{won|5}} |{{nom|5}} |- | style="text-align:left;"| ;[[Asiavision Awards]] |{{won|4}} |{{nom|5}} |- | style="text-align:left;"| ;[[IIFA Utsavam]] |{{won|0}} |{{nom|2}} |- | style="text-align:left;"| ;North American Film Awards |{{won|2}} |{{nom|2}} |- | style="text-align:left;"| ;Other Awards |{{won|11}} |{{nom|12}} |} |- style="background-color:#d9e8ff;" | colspan="3" style="text-align:center;" | '''Totals''' |- | {{won|Wins}} | colspan="2" width=50 {{won|46}} |- | {{nom|Nominations}} | colspan="2" width=50 {{nom|59}} |- |- style="background:#d9e8ff;" | colspan="3" style="font-size: smaller; text-align:center;" | |} '''[[Manju Warrier]]''' is an Indian actress and dancer who primarily appears in [[Malayalam]] films. She is one of the most successful leading actresses in [[Malayalam cinema]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://caravanmagazine.in/reportage/manju-warrier-malayalam-cinema-female-superstar-back-to-work|title=How Malayalam cinema's only female superstar got back to work|first=Leena Gita|last=Reghunath|website=The Caravan|access-date=2020-05-15|archive-date=2019-03-29|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190329161240/https://caravanmagazine.in/reportage/manju-warrier-malayalam-cinema-female-superstar-back-to-work|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.firstpost.com/entertainment/manju-warrier-nayanthara-jyothika-female-stars-are-marching-to-a-different-but-no-less-successful-beat-4025507.html|title=Manju Warrier, Nayanthara, Jyothika: Female stars are marching to a different, but no less successful, beat|date=9 September 2017|website=Firstpost|access-date=15 May 2020|archive-date=28 May 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180528052146/https://www.firstpost.com/entertainment/manju-warrier-nayanthara-jyothika-female-stars-are-marching-to-a-different-but-no-less-successful-beat-4025507.html|url-status=live}}</ref> Warrier won the [[National Film Award – Special Mention (feature film)|National Film Award – Special Mention]] for her performance as Bhadra in ''[[Kannezhuthi Pottum Thottu]]''. She also won the [[Kerala State Film Award for Best Actress]] for her performance as Anjali in ''[[Ee Puzhayum Kadannu]]'', along with six [[Filmfare Award for Best Actress – Malayalam|Filmfare Awards for Best Actress]], a record in that category.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.pvv.ntnu.no/~kailasan/news/rahman_bags_12th_filmfare_award.htm |title=Rahman bags 12th Filmfare award |publisher=Pvv.ntnu.no |accessdate=19 October 2013 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20131020130651/http://www.pvv.ntnu.no/~kailasan/news/rahman_bags_12th_filmfare_award.htm |archivedate=20 October 2013 }}</ref> == [[National Film Awards]] == {| class="wikitable" |- ! Year !! Category !! Film !! Result |- | 1999 || [[National Film Award – Special Mention (feature film)|Special Mention (Feature Film)]] || ''[[Kannezhuthi Pottum Thottu]]'' || {{Won}} |} == [[Kerala State Film Awards]] == {| class="wikitable" |- ! Year !! Category !! Film !! Result |- | 1996 || [[Kerala State Film Award for Best Actress|Best Actress]] || ''[[Ee Puzhayum Kadannu]]'' || {{Won}}<ref>{{cite web|title=State Film Awards (1991–99)|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160303234157/http://www.prd.kerala.gov.in/stateawards3.htm|archive-date=3 March 2016|url=http://www.prd.kerala.gov.in/stateawards3.htm|publisher=[[Kerala State Chalachitra Academy]]|access-date=23 September 2021}}</ref> |} == [[Filmfare Awards South]] == {| class="wikitable" |- ! Year !! Category !! Film !! Result |- | 1996 || rowspan="8" | [[Filmfare Award for Best Actress – Malayalam|Best Actress (Malayalam)]] || ''[[Ee Puzhayum Kadannu]]'' || {{Won}}<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.filmfare.com:80/site/october97/south3e.htm|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/19991103180423/http://www.filmfare.com/site/october97/south3e.htm|archive-date=3 November 1999|title=Filmfare – South Special|date=3 November 1999|access-date=23 September 2021|url-status=dead}}</ref> |- | 1997 || ''[[Kaliyattam]]'' & ''[[Aaram Thamburan]]''|| {{Won}}<ref>{{cite web|url=https://archive.org/details/45thFilmfareSouthBestActresses|archive-url=https://archive.today/20170205073121/https://archive.org/details/45thFilmfareSouthBestActresses|url-status=dead|title=45th Filmfare South Best Actresses : Santosh : Free Download & Stream…|date=5 February 2017|archive-date=5 February 2017|access-date=23 September 2021}}</ref> |- | 1998 || ''[[Kanmadam]]'' || {{Won}}<ref>{{cite web|url=https://archive.org/download/46thFilmfareAwardsSouthWinners/46th%20Filmfare%20Awards%20south%20winners.jpg |title=Photo |website=ia601501.us.archive.org |format=JPG|access-date=23 September 2021 }}</ref> |- | 1999 || ''[[Pathram]]'' || {{Won}}<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.pvv.ntnu.no/~kailasan/news/rahman_bags_12th_filmfare_award.htm|title=Rahman bags 12th Filmfare award|website=pvv.ntnu.no|access-date=23 September 2021|archive-date=20 October 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131020130651/http://www.pvv.ntnu.no/~kailasan/news/rahman_bags_12th_filmfare_award.htm|url-status=live}}</ref> |- | 2014 || ''[[How Old Are You? (film)|How Old Are You]]'' || {{Won}}<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.dekhnews.com/62nd-filmfare-awards-south-winners-name-list-malayalam-tamil-telugu-kannada|title=62nd Filmfare Awards South Winners Name List Malayalam Tamil Telugu Kannada|work=Dekh News|access-date=23 September 2021|archive-date=26 October 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221026175625/https://dekhnews.com/62nd-filmfare-awards-south-winners-name-list-malayalam-tamil-telugu-kannada/|url-status=usurped}}</ref> |- | 2015 || ''[[Rani Padmini (film)|Rani Padmini]]'' || {{Nom}}<ref>{{cite news|url=https://m.filmfare.com/features/nominations-of-the-63rd-britannia-filmfare-awards-south-13750.amp|title=Nominations for the 63rd Britannia Filmfare Awards (South)|date=7 June 2016|access-date=23 September 2021|work=Filmfare News|archive-date=10 December 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211210161737/https://m.filmfare.com/features/nominations-of-the-63rd-britannia-filmfare-awards-south-13750.amp|url-status=live}}</ref> |- | 2016 || ''[[Karinkunnam 6's]]'' || {{Nom}}<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.indiatoday.in/amp/movies/regional-cinema/story/64th-filmfare-awards-south-2017-full-nominations-list-983224-2017-06-17|title=64th Filmfare Awards South 2017: Here is the full nominations' list|date=17 June 2017|work=India Today|access-date=23 September 2021|archive-date=10 December 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211210150012/https://www.indiatoday.in/amp/movies/regional-cinema/story/64th-filmfare-awards-south-2017-full-nominations-list-983224-2017-06-17|url-status=live}}</ref> |- | rowspan="2" | 2017 || rowspan="2" | ''[[Udaharanam Sujatha]]'' || {{Nom}}<ref>{{cite news | url=https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/entertainment/telugu/movies/news/65th-jio-filmfare-awards-south-2018-official-list-of-nominations/articleshow/64478687.cms | title=65th Jio Filmfare Awards South 2018: Official list of nominations | work=Times Of India | date=6 June 2018 | access-date=23 September 2021 | archive-date=8 October 2018 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181008194657/https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/entertainment/telugu/movies/news/65th-jio-filmfare-awards-south-2018-official-list-of-nominations/articleshow/64478687.cms | url-status=live }}</ref> |- | [[Filmfare Critics Award for Best Actress – Malayalam|Critics Best Actress (Malayalam)]]|| {{Won}}<ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.newindianexpress.com/amp/story/entertainment/tamil/2018/jun/17/65th-filmfare-awards-south-heres-a-full-list-of-winners-1829417.html | title=65th Filmfare Awards (South): Here's a full list of winners | work=The New Indian Express | date=17 June 2018 | access-date=23 September 2021 | archive-date=22 October 2022 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221022133436/https://www.newindianexpress.com/entertainment/tamil/2018/jun/17/65th-filmfare-awards-south-heres-a-full-list-of-winners-1829417.amp | url-status=live }}</ref> |- | 2018 || [[Filmfare Award for Best Actress – Malayalam|Best Actress (Malayalam)]] || ''[[Aami]]'' || {{Won}}<ref>{{cite news |url=https://indianexpress.com/article/entertainment/regional/filmfare-awards-south-2019-the-complete-list-of-winners-kgf-yash-dhanush-dulquer-salmaan-ram-charan-6179256/lite |title=Filmfare Awards South 2019: The complete list of winners |date=22 December 2019 |access-date=23 September 2021 |work=The Indian Express |archive-date=18 May 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210518073100/https://indianexpress.com/article/entertainment/regional/filmfare-awards-south-2019-the-complete-list-of-winners-kgf-yash-dhanush-dulquer-salmaan-ram-charan-6179256/lite/ |url-status=live }}</ref> |- | 2024 || [[Filmfare Award for Best Actress – Malayalam|Best Actress (Malayalam)]] || ''[[Ayisha]]'' || {{nom}} <ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.hindustantimes.com/entertainment/telugu-cinema/filmfare-awards-south-2024-full-winners-list-nanis-dasara-siddharths-chithha-win-big-101722757273293.html |title=Filmfare Awards South 2024 full winners list: Nani's Dasara, Siddharth's Chithha win big |website=[[Hindustan Times]] |access-date=7 August 2024}}</ref> |} == [[Kerala Film Critics Association Awards]] == {| class="wikitable" |- ! Year !! Category !! Film !! Result |- |1996 || [[Kerala Film Critics Association Award for Best Actress|Best Actress]] || ''[[Sallapam]]'', ''[[Ee Puzhayum Kadannu]]'', ''[[Thooval Kottaram]]'' || {{Won}}<ref name="Critics Awards">[https://www.keralafilmcritics.com/2020/10/film-critics-awards-complete-list-from.html "കേരള ഫിലിം ക്രിട്ടിക്‌സ് അവാര്‍ഡ് 1977 – 2012"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230125200724/https://www.keralafilmcritics.com/2020/10/film-critics-awards-complete-list-from.html |date=2023-01-25 }}. Kerala Film Critics Association. Retrieved 25 January 2023.</ref> |- |1999 || Special Jury Mention || ''[[Kannezhuthi Pottum Thottu]]'' || {{Won}}<ref name="Critics Awards"/> |- |2017 || rowspan="2" | [[Kerala Film Critics Association Award for Best Actress|Best Actress]] || ''[[Udaharanam Sujatha]] &'' ''[[C/O Saira Banu]]''|| {{Won}}<ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/kerala/film-critics-awards-announced/article23621153.ece/amp | title=Film critics awards announced | work=The Hindu | date=20 April 2018 | access-date=23 September 2021 | archive-date=4 November 2020 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201104060458/https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/kerala/film-critics-awards-announced/article23621153.ece/amp/ | url-status=live }}</ref> |- | 2019 || ''[[Prathi Poovankozhi]]'' || {{Won}}<ref>{{cite news | url=https://english.mathrubhumi.com/mobile/movies-music/movie-news/kerala-film-critics-award-2019-nivin-pauly-manju-warrier-bag-top-honours-1.5145037 | title=Kerala Film Critics Award 2019: Nivin Pauly, Manju Warrier bag top honours | date=20 October 2020 | access-date=23 September 2021 | work=English Mathrubhumi News }}{{Dead link|date=June 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> |} == [[Screen Awards#History|Screen Videocon Awards]] == {| class="wikitable" |- ! Year !! Category !! Film !! Result |- | 1996 || rowspan="2" | Best Actress (Malayalam) || ''[[Ee Puzhayum Kadannu]]'' || {{Won}} |- |1997 || ''[[Aaram Thampuran]] &'' ''[[Krishnagudiyil Oru Pranayakalathu]]''|| {{Won}} |} == [[South Indian International Movie Awards]] == {| class="wikitable" |- ! Year !! Category !! Film !! Result |- | 2014 || rowspan="4" | [[SIIMA for Best Actress - Malayalam|Best Actress (Malayalam)]] || ''[[How Old Are You? (film)|How Old Are You]]'' || {{Won}}{{Citation needed|date=June 2023}} |- | 2016 || ''[[Vettah]]'' || {{Nom}} |- | 2017 || ''[[Udaharanam Sujatha]]'' || {{Nom}}<ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.firstpost.com/entertainment/siima-awards-2018-nominations-vijays-mersal-leads-with-nine-nods-followed-by-vikram-vedha-4976241.html | title=SIIMA Awards 2018 nominations: Vijay's Mersal leads with nine nods, followed by Vikram Vedha | date=16 August 2018 | access-date=23 September 2021 | archive-date=18 September 2018 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180918090208/https://www.firstpost.com/entertainment/siima-awards-2018-nominations-vijays-mersal-leads-with-nine-nods-followed-by-vikram-vedha-4976241.html | url-status=live }}</ref> |- | rowspan="3" |2019 || ''[[Lucifer (2019 Indian film)|Lucifer]]'' & ''[[Prathi Poovankozhi]]''|| {{Won}}<ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.onmanorama.com/entertainment/entertainment-news/2021/09/20/siima-awards-malayalam-winners-list-2019-2020-films.html | title=SIIMA awards: Check out Malayalam winners of 2019 and 2020 | work=Manorama News Online | date=20 September 2021 | access-date=23 September 2021 | archive-date=6 October 2021 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211006205331/https://www.onmanorama.com/entertainment/entertainment-news/2021/09/20/siima-awards-malayalam-winners-list-2019-2020-films.html | url-status=live }}</ref> |- | Best Actress (Tamil) || rowspan="2"| ''[[Asuran (2019 film)|Asuran]]'' || {{Nom}}<ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.thehansindia.com/amp/cinema/siima-awards-2020-2021-check-out-the-nominations-ceremony-date-and-time-of-this-most-awaited-gala-event-707033 | title=SIIMA Awards 2020 & 2021: Check Out The Nominations, Ceremony Date And Time Of This Most Awaited Gala Event | work=The Hans India | date=18 September 2021 | access-date=23 September 2021 | archive-date=18 September 2021 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210918200600/https://www.thehansindia.com/amp/cinema/siima-awards-2020-2021-check-out-the-nominations-ceremony-date-and-time-of-this-most-awaited-gala-event-707033 | url-status=live }}</ref> |- | Best Actress – Critics (Tamil) || {{Won}}<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.sify.com/movies/soorarai-pottru-and-asuran-wins-big-at-siima-2020-and-2021-news-tamil-vjuflkcdfiiji.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210921074856/https://www.sify.com/movies/soorarai-pottru-and-asuran-wins-big-at-siima-2020-and-2021-news-tamil-vjuflkcdfiiji.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=September 21, 2021 | title='Soorarai Pottru' and 'Asuran' wins big at SIIMA 2020 and 2021 | date=21 September 2021 | access-date=23 September 2021 | work=Sify News}}</ref> |} == [[Asianet Film Awards]] == {| class="wikitable" |- ! Year !! Category !! Film !! Result |- | 1998 || rowspan="8" | Best Actress || ''[[Kanmadam]]'' || {{Won}}{{Citation needed|date=December 2024}} |- | 1999 || ''[[Kannezhuthi Pottum Thottu]]'' and ''[[Pathram]]''|| {{Won}}{{Citation needed|date=December 2024}} |- | 2014 || ''[[How Old Are You? (film)|How Old Are You?]]'' || {{Won}}<ref>{{cite web | url=https://techuloid.com/winners-17th-asianet-film-awards-2015 | title=Winners of 17th Asianet Film Awards 2015 | work=Techloid | date=11 January 2015 | access-date=23 September 2021 | archive-date=17 September 2021 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210917195030/https://techuloid.com/winners-17th-asianet-film-awards-2015/ | url-status=live }}</ref> |- | 2015 || ''[[Rani Padmini (film)|Rani Padmini]]'' and ''[[Ennum Eppozhum]]''|| {{Nom}} |- | 2016 || ''[[Vettah]]'' || {{Won}}{{Citation needed|date=June 2023}} |- | 2017 || ''[[Udaharanam Sujatha]]'' and ''[[C/O Saira Banu]]''|| {{Nom}} |- | 2018 || ''[[Aami]]'' and ''[[Odiyan]]''|| {{Won}} |- |rowspan="2" | 2019 ||''[[Prathi Poovankozhi]]'' || {{Nom}} |- | Most Popular Tamil Actress || [[Asuran (2019 film)|''Asuran'']]|| {{Won}}<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.exchange4media.com/amp/industry-briefing-news/uyare-wins-best-film-award-at-22nd-asianet-film-awards-2020-102592.html | title=Uyare wins best film award at 22nd Asianet Film Awards 2020 | access-date=23 September 2021 | work=Exchange 4 Media | date=10 February 2020 | archive-date=27 October 2022 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221027180527/https://www.exchange4media.com/amp/industry-briefing-news/uyare-wins-best-film-award-at-22nd-asianet-film-awards-2020-102592.html | url-status=live }}</ref> |} == [[Vanitha Film Awards]] == {| class="wikitable" |- ! Year !! Category !! Film !! Result |- | 2015 || rowspan="5" | Best Actress || ''[[How Old Are You? (film)|How Old Are You?]]'' || {{Won}}<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.vinodadarshan.com/2015/03/winners-of-vanitha-film-awards-2015.html?m=1 |title=Winners of Vanitha Film Awards, 2015 |access-date=23 September 2021 |work=Vinodadarshan |archive-date=26 October 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221026182322/https://www.vinodadarshan.com/2015/03/winners-of-vanitha-film-awards-2015.html?m=1 |url-status=live }}</ref> |- | 2017 || ''[[Karinkunnam 6's]]'' || {{Won}}<ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.onmanorama.com/entertainment/entertainment-news/vanitha-film-awards-mohanlal-manju-warrier-win.amp.html | title=Vanitha-Cera film awards 2017: Mohanlal, Manju Warrier win top honors | date=8 February 2017 | access-date=23 September 2021 | work=Onmaorama | archive-date=26 October 2022 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221026200517/https://www.onmanorama.com/entertainment/entertainment-news/vanitha-film-awards-mohanlal-manju-warrier-win.amp.html | url-status=live }}</ref> |- | 2018 || ''[[Udaharanam Sujatha]]'' || {{Won}}<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.vinodadarshan.com/2018/02/winners-of-vanitha-film-awards-2018-list.html?m=1|title=Vanitha Film Awards 2018 : Winner's List|work=Vinodadarshan|access-date=23 September 2021|archive-date=25 September 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210925125920/https://www.vinodadarshan.com/2018/02/winners-of-vanitha-film-awards-2018-list.html?m=1|url-status=live}}</ref> |- | 2019 || ''[[Aami]] &'' ''[[Odiyan]]''|| {{Won}}<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.onmanorama.com/entertainment/entertainment-news/2019/03/02/vanitha-film-awards-winners-list-live-show-kochi.html |title=Vanitha Film Awards: Mohanlal wins Best Actor, Manju Warrier is Best Actress |date=2 March 2019 |access-date=23 September 2021 |work=Onmanorama |archive-date=12 August 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210812164614/https://www.onmanorama.com/entertainment/entertainment-news/2019/03/02/vanitha-film-awards-winners-list-live-show-kochi.html |url-status=live }}</ref> |- | 2020 || ''[[Prathi Poovankozhi]]'' & ''[[Lucifer (2019 Indian film)|Lucifer]]''|| {{Won}}<ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.onmanorama.com/entertainment/entertainment-news/2020/02/09/vanitha-film-awards-2020-winners-list-madhuri-jacqueline-kochi.html | title=Vanitha film awards 2020: Mohanlal wins best actor, Manju Warrier is best actress | date=9 February 2020 | work=Onmanorama | access-date=23 September 2021 | archive-date=28 September 2021 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210928051410/https://www.onmanorama.com/entertainment/entertainment-news/2020/02/09/vanitha-film-awards-2020-winners-list-madhuri-jacqueline-kochi.html | url-status=live }}</ref> |} == [[Asiavision Awards]] == {| class="wikitable" |- ! Year !! Category !! Film !! Result |- | 2014 || rowspan="5" | Best Actress || ''[[How Old Are You? (film)|How Old Are You?]]'' || {{Won}} |- | 2015 || ''[[Rani Padmini (film)|Rani Padmini]]''|| {{Nom}} |- | 2016 || ''[[Vettah]]'' & ''[[Karinkunnam 6's]]''|| {{Won}}<ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.onmanorama.com/entertainment/entertainment-news/asiavision-movie-awards-2016-nivin-pauly-manju-warrier-mohanlal.amp.html | title=Asiavision Movie Awards 2016 announced: and the winners are. | date=16 November 2016 | work=Onmaorama | access-date=23 September 2021 | archive-date=10 June 2022 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220610104843/https://www.onmanorama.com/entertainment/entertainment-news/asiavision-movie-awards-2016-nivin-pauly-manju-warrier-mohanlal.amp.html | url-status=live }}</ref> |- | 2017 || ''[[Udaharanam Sujatha]]'' || {{Won}}{{Citation needed|date=June 2023}} |- | 2018 || ''[[Aami]]'' || {{Won}}<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.vinodadarshan.com/2019/02/asiavision-movie-awards-2018-winners.html?m=1 | title=Winners of Asiavision Movie Awards 2018 – Complete List | access-date=23 September 2021 | work=Vinodadarshan | archive-date=27 October 2022 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221027174046/https://www.vinodadarshan.com/2019/02/asiavision-movie-awards-2018-winners.html?m=1 | url-status=live }}</ref> |} == [[IIFA Utsavam]] == {| class="wikitable" |- ! Year !! Category !! Film !! Result |- | 2015 || rowspan="2" | Best Actress || ''[[Ennum Eppozhum]]'' || {{Nom}} |- | 2016 || ''[[Vettah]]'' || {{Nom}} |} == North American Film Awards == {| class="wikitable" |- ! Year !! Category !! Film !! Result |- | 2017 || rowspan="2" | Best Actress || ''[[Vettah]]'' & ''[[Karinkunnam 6's]]''|| {{Won}}<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.nafaawards.com/winners |title=The Winners of NAFA Awards 2017 |work=NAFA Website |access-date=23 September 2021 |archive-date=15 October 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211015223525/http://nafaawards.com/winners |url-status=live }}</ref> |- | 2018 || ''[[Udaharanam Sujatha]]'' || {{Won}}<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.nafaawards.com/winners2018 |title=The Winners of NAFA Awards 2018 |work=NAFA Website |access-date=23 September 2021 |archive-date=3 June 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200603202247/http://www.nafaawards.com/winners2018 |url-status=live }}</ref> |} == Other Awards == {| class="wikitable" |- ! Year !! Award !! Category !! Film !! Result |- | 1996 || Film Fans Awards || rowspan="2" | Best Actress || ''[[Thooval Kottaram]]'' || {{won}} |- | rowspan="3" | 2014 || Mangalam Film Awards || | ''[[How Old Are You? (film)|How Old Are You?]]'' || {{Won}} |- || [[Kerala Sangeetha Nataka Akademi Award]] || [[Kuchipudi]] || {{N/A}} || {{Won}}<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.keralaculture.org/dance-a-ksna/466|title=Kerala Sangeetha Nataka Akademi Award: Dance|publisher=Department of Cultural Affairs, Government of Kerala|access-date=26 February 2023|archive-date=27 February 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230227050002/http://www.keralaculture.org/dance-a-ksna/466|url-status=live}}</ref> |- || [[Manorama Awards]] || Newsmaker of the Year || {{N/A}} || {{Won}}{{Citation needed|date=December 2024}} |- | 2016 || Janmabhumi Awards || rowspan="6" | Best Actress || ''[[Vettah]]'' || {{Won}} |- | rowspan=3|2017 || Anand TV Awards || ''[[Vettah]]'' & ''[[Karinkunnam 6's]]''|| {{Won}} |- | Movie Street Film Excellence Awards || rowspan="2"| ''[[Udaharanam Sujatha]] &'' ''[[C/O Saira Banu]]''|| {{Won}}<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.onmanorama.com/entertainment/entertainment-news/2018/02/05/fahadh-manju-aishwarya-corner-movie-street-film-excellence-awards.html |title=Fahad Manju Aiswaraya Corner Movie Street Film Awards |date=5 February 2018 |access-date=23 September 2021 |work=Online Manorama News |archive-date=11 April 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210411002623/https://www.onmanorama.com/entertainment/entertainment-news/2018/02/05/fahadh-manju-aishwarya-corner-movie-street-film-excellence-awards.html |url-status=live }}</ref> |- | Asianet Comedy Awards || {{Nom}} |- | 2018 || Flowers Indian Film Awards || ''[[Aami]] &'' ''[[Udaharanam Sujatha]]''|| {{Won}}<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.vinodadarshan.com/2018/05/flowers-indian-film-awards-2018-winners.html?m=1 |title=Flowers Indian Film Awards : 2018 Winners |work=www.vinodadarshan.com |access-date=23 September 2021 |archive-date=27 October 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221027174337/https://www.vinodadarshan.com/2018/05/flowers-indian-film-awards-2018-winners.html?m=1 |url-status=live }}</ref> |- | rowspan="3" |2019 || Nana Film Awards || ''[[Aami]]'' || {{Won}} |- | rowspan="2" | Behindwoods Gold Medals || Best Actress (Malayalam) || ''[[Lucifer (2019 Indian film)|Lucifer]]'' || {{Won}} |- | Best Actress – Special Mention (Tamil) || rowspan="2" | ''[[Asuran (2019 film)|Asuran]]'' || {{Won}} |- | 2020 || JFW Movie Awards || Best Actress || {{Won}}<ref>{{cite news | url=https://jfwonline.com/article/twin-birds-presents-jfw-movie-awards-2020-an-unforgettable-night-with-impeccable-style-and-substance/amp | title=Twin Birds Presents JFW Movie Awards 2020: An Unforgettable Night With Impeccable Style And Substance | work=JFW Online | access-date=23 September 2021 | archive-date=17 November 2021 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211117010420/https://jfwonline.com/article/twin-birds-presents-jfw-movie-awards-2020-an-unforgettable-night-with-impeccable-style-and-substance/amp/ | url-status=live }}</ref> |- | 2022 || Mazhavil Entertainment Awards || Best Entertainer Actress || ''[[Prathi Poovankozhi]]'' || {{Won}}<ref>{{cite news|url=https://totalreporter.com/mazhavil-entertainment-awards-2022-winners-telecast-date-time-and-more-details/|title=Mazhavil Entertainment Awards 2022 Winners, Telecast Date, Time and More Details|work=totalreporter.com|access-date=2022-09-08|archive-date=2022-09-08|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220908140450/https://totalreporter.com/mazhavil-entertainment-awards-2022-winners-telecast-date-time-and-more-details/|url-status=live}}</ref> |} == References == {{reflist}} [[Category:Lists of awards received by Indian actor|Warrier, Manju]]
1,279,449,518
[{"title": "List of awards received by Manju Warrier", "data": {"Award": "Wins \u00b7 Nominations", "National Film Awards": "1 \u00b7 1", "Kerala State Film Awards": "1 \u00b7 1", "Filmfare Awards South": "7 \u00b7 9", "Kerala Film Critics Association Awards": "4 \u00b7 4", "Screen Videocon Awards": "2 \u00b7 2", "South Indian International Movie Awards": "3 \u00b7 6", "Asianet Film Awards": "6 \u00b7 9", "Vanitha Film Awards": "5 \u00b7 5", "Asiavision Awards": "4 \u00b7 5", "IIFA Utsavam": "0 \u00b7 2", "North American Film Awards": "2 \u00b7 2", "Other Awards": "11 \u00b7 12", "Wins": "46", "Nominations": "59"}}]
false
# Puceul Puceul (French pronunciation: [pysœl] ⓘ; Breton: Puñsel) is a commune in the Loire-Atlantique department in western France. ## Population | Year | Pop. | ±% p.a. | | ------------- | ----- | ------- | | 1968 | 685 | — | | 1975 | 609 | −1.67% | | 1982 | 580 | −0.69% | | 1990 | 599 | +0.40% | | 1999 | 630 | +0.56% | | 2007 | 915 | +4.78% | | 2012 | 1,026 | +2.32% | | 2017 | 1,128 | +1.91% | | Source: INSEE | | |
enwiki/15810603
enwiki
15,810,603
Puceul
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Puceul
2024-10-23T01:25:58Z
en
Q764315
85,844
{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2023}} {{Infobox French commune |name = Puceul |native name = Puñsel |commune status = Commune |image = Puceul église.jpg |image coat of arms = Blason ville fr Puceul (Loire-Atlantique).svg |arrondissement = Châteaubriant-Ancenis |canton = Guémené-Penfao |INSEE = 44138 |postal code = 44390 |mayor = Claire Theveniau<ref>{{cite web|title=Répertoire national des élus: les maires|url=https://www.data.gouv.fr/fr/datasets/r/2876a346-d50c-4911-934e-19ee07b0e503|publisher=data.gouv.fr, Plateforme ouverte des données publiques françaises|date=13 September 2022|language=fr}}</ref> |term = 2020&ndash;2026 |intercommunality = CC de Nozay |coordinates = {{coord|47.5228|-1.6156|format=dms|display=inline,title}} |elevation min m = 26 |elevation max m = 82 |area km2 = 20.09 |population = {{France metadata Wikidata|population_total}} |population date = {{France metadata Wikidata|population_as_of}} |population footnotes = {{France metadata Wikidata|population_footnotes}} }} '''Puceul''' ({{IPA|fr|pysœl|-|LL-Q150 (fra)-Pom445-Puceul.wav}}; {{langx|br|Puñsel}}) is a [[Communes of France|commune]] in the [[Loire-Atlantique]] [[Departments of France|department]] in western [[France]]. ==Population== {{Historical populations |source = INSEE<ref name=pophist>[https://www.insee.fr/fr/statistiques/4515315?geo=COM-44138#ancre-POP_T1 Population en historique depuis 1968], INSEE</ref> |percentages = pagr |align = none |1968 |685 |1975 |609 |1982 |580 |1990 |599 |1999 |630 |2007 |915 |2012 |1026 |2017 |1128 }} ==See also== *[[Communes of the Loire-Atlantique department]] ==References== {{Reflist}} {{commons category}} {{Loire-Atlantique communes}} {{authority control}} [[Category:Communes of Loire-Atlantique]] {{LoireAtlantique-geo-stub}}
1,252,810,686
[{"title": "Puceul Pu\u00f1sel", "data": {"Country": "France", "Region": "Pays de la Loire", "Department": "Loire-Atlantique", "Arrondissement": "Ch\u00e2teaubriant-Ancenis", "Canton": "Gu\u00e9men\u00e9-Penfao", "Intercommunality": "CC de Nozay"}}, {"title": "Government", "data": {"\u2022 Mayor (2020\u20132026)": "Claire Theveniau", "Area1": "20.09 km2 (7.76 sq mi)", "Population (2022)": "1,124", "\u2022 Density": "56/km2 (140/sq mi)", "Time zone": "UTC+01:00 (CET)", "\u2022 Summer (DST)": "UTC+02:00 (CEST)", "INSEE/Postal code": "44138 /44390", "Elevation": "26\u201382 m (85\u2013269 ft)"}}]
false
# Los Navalmorales Los Navalmorales is a municipality located in the province of Toledo, Castile-La Mancha, Spain. According to the 2006 census (INE), the municipality has a population of 2636 inhabitants.
enwiki/13143792
enwiki
13,143,792
Los Navalmorales
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Los_Navalmorales
2024-08-09T00:19:17Z
en
Q1610108
63,974
{{Infobox settlement <!-- See Template:Infobox settlement for additional fields and descriptions --> | type = [[municipalities of Spain|municipality]] | coordinates = | official_name = Los Navalmorales | nickname = | image_skyline= Los Navalmorales, vista 4.jpg | image_caption = View of Los Navalmorales from east of the town. | image_flag = Bandera de Los Navalmorales.svg | image_shield = Escudo de Los Navalmorales.svg | image_map = | map_caption = | subdivision_type = [[List of sovereign states|Country]] | subdivision_name = [[Spain]] | subdivision_type1 = [[Autonomous communities of Spain|Autonomous community]] | subdivision_name1 = [[Castile-La Mancha]] | subdivision_type2 = [[Provinces of Spain|Province]] | subdivision_name2 = [[Toledo (province)|Toledo]] | subdivision_type3 = [[List of municipalities in Toledo|Municipality]] | subdivision_name3 = Los Navalmorales | leader_title = | leader_name = | area_magnitude = | area_total_km2 = 105 | area_land_km2 = | area_water_km2 = | elevation_m = 579 | population_note = | population_as_of = {{Spain metadata Wikidata|population_as_of}} | population_footnotes = {{Spain metadata Wikidata|population_footnotes}} | population_total = {{Spain metadata Wikidata|population_total}} | population_density_km2 = auto | timezone = [[Central European Time|CET]] | utc_offset = +1 | timezone_DST = [[Central European Summer Time|CEST]] | utc_offset_DST = +2 | latitude = | longitude = | website = | footnotes = | }} '''Los Navalmorales''' is a municipality located in the [[Toledo (province)|province of Toledo]], [[Castile-La Mancha]], [[Spain]]. According to the 2006 [[census]] ([[Instituto Nacional de Estadística (Spain)|INE]]), the municipality has a population of 2636 inhabitants. ==References== {{reflist}} {{Municipalities in Toledo}} {{coord|39|43|N|4|38|W|display=title|region:ES_type:city_source:GNS-enwiki}} {{authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Navalmorales, Los}} [[Category:Municipalities in the Province of Toledo]] {{CastileLaMancha-geo-stub}}
1,239,386,842
[{"title": "Los Navalmorales", "data": {"Country": "Spain", "Autonomous community": "Castile-La Mancha", "Province": "Toledo", "Municipality": "Los Navalmorales"}}, {"title": "Area", "data": {"\u2022 Total": "105 km2 (41 sq mi)", "Elevation": "579 m (1,900 ft)"}}, {"title": "Population (2018)", "data": {"\u2022 Total": "2,567", "\u2022 Density": "24/km2 (63/sq mi)", "Time zone": "UTC+1 (CET)", "\u2022 Summer (DST)": "UTC+2 (CEST)"}}]
false
# Lucius Verginius Tricostus Esquilinus Lucius Verginius Tricostus Esquilinus was a Roman politician of the fifth and fourth centuries BC. ## Family His grandfather Opiter Verginius Tricostus Esquilinus was consul in 478 BC, and his father Proculus Verginius Tricostus was consul in 435 BC and 434 BC. ## Career In 402 BC, Verginius was elected consular tribune; his colleagues were Gaius Servilius Ahala, Quintus Servilius Fidenas, Quintus Sulpicius Camerinus Cornutus, Aulus Manlius Vulso Capitolinus and Manius Sergius Fidenas. The war against Veii was continued: the town of Anxur having been taken by the enemy, the war was extended by the sudden arrival of the Veientanes and the Falisci. Because of the defeat, with the aid of the Senate, Ahala forced the college of tribunes to abdicate in favor of a new college. In the year 401 Verginius was accused and condemned because he had not brought help when his colleague Servilius had asked him before Veii.
enwiki/76161553
enwiki
76,161,553
Lucius Verginius Tricostus Esquilinus
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucius_Verginius_Tricostus_Esquilinus
2024-04-13T06:17:03Z
en
Q1238031
22,456
{{Short description|Roman politician in 5th and 4th centuries BC}} '''Lucius Verginius Tricostus Esquilinus''' was a Roman politician of the fifth and fourth centuries BC.<ref name=":2">{{Cite book |last=Broughton |first=Robert S. |title=The Magistrates of the Roman Republic Vol.1 509 BC - 100 BC |publisher=New York: The American Philological Association |language=EN}}</ref><ref name=":1">{{Cite book |last=Livy |title=V.11}}</ref><ref name=":0">{{Cite book |last=Livy |first=Titus |title=Ab Urbe Condita Vol. 8-9}}</ref> ==Family== His grandfather [[Opiter Verginius Tricostus Esquilinus (consul 478 BC)|Opiter Verginius Tricostus Esquilinus]] was [[consul]] in 478 BC, and his father [[Proculus Verginius Tricostus]] was consul in 435 BC and 434 BC. ==Career== In 402 BC, Verginius was elected [[consular tribune]]; his colleagues were [[Gaius Servilius Ahala (consular tribune 408 BC)|Gaius Servilius Ahala]], [[Quintus Servilius Fidenas]], [[Quintus Sulpicius Camerinus Cornutus (consular tribune)|Quintus Sulpicius Camerinus Cornutus]], [[Aulus Manlius Vulso Capitolinus]] and [[Manius Sergius Fidenas]]. The war against [[Veii]] was continued: the town of [[Terracina|Anxur]] having been taken by the enemy, the war was extended by the sudden arrival of the Veientanes and the [[Falisci]].<ref name=":2" /> Because of the defeat, with the aid of the Senate, Ahala forced the [[collegium|college]] of tribunes to abdicate in favor of a new college.<ref name=":0" /> In the year 401 Verginius was accused and condemned because he had not brought help when his colleague Servilius had asked him before Veii.<ref name=":1" /> ==References== {{Reflist}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Verginius Tricostus Esquilinus, Lucius}} [[Category:5th-century BC Romans]] [[Category:4th-century BC Romans]] [[Category:Roman consular tribunes]] [[Category:Verginii]] {{AncientRome-bio-stub}}
1,218,690,914
[]
false
# Malak Salman Shehzada Malak Salman Shehzada is a politician from the Awami National Party (ANP), and an activist against violence against girls in Pakistan. He has contributed to girls' education in many underprivileged areas in the FATA. Currently, he is leading ANP Germany. Shehzada writes articles for various publications, and is active on social media. Shehzada was once attacked by unknown armed assailants in Timergara, Pakistan. He narrowly escaped.
enwiki/54768972
enwiki
54,768,972
Malak Salman Shehzada
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malak_Salman_Shehzada
2023-06-04T21:42:20Z
en
Q37994819
39,585
{{short description|Pakistani politician}} {{Multiple issues| {{Orphan|date=December 2018}} {{BLP sources|date=October 2021}} }} {{Use dmy dates|date=December 2020}} '''Malak Salman Shehzada''' is a politician from the [[Awami National Party]] (ANP), and an activist against [[violence against girls]] in Pakistan. He has contributed to girls' education in many underprivileged areas in the [[Federally Administered Tribal Areas|FATA]].<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.mashriqtv.pk/E-Paper/Peshawar/2017-04-16/page-3/detail-17 |title=Daily Mashriq |access-date=5 August 2017 |archive-date=6 August 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170806024449/http://www.mashriqtv.pk/E-Paper/Peshawar/2017-04-16/page-3/detail-17 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.dailyazadiswat.net/epaper/2017/04/16/page8/details.htm?d5.gif |title=Archived copy |access-date=5 August 2017 |archive-date=5 August 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170805183503/http://www.dailyazadiswat.net/epaper/2017/04/16/page8/details.htm?d5.gif |url-status=dead }}</ref> Currently, he is leading ANP Germany.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.benaqaabnews.com/%D8%A7%DB%92-%D8%A7%D9%8A%D9%86-%D9%BE%D9%8A-%D8%AF%DB%90-%D8%AF-%D8%A8%D8%A7%D8%A8%D8%A7-%D8%B3%D9%88%DA%86-%D9%84%D8%B1%D9%88%D9%86%DA%A9%D9%8A-%DA%A9%D8%B3%D8%A7%D9%86%D9%88-%D8%AA%D9%87-%D9%BC/ |title=اے اين پي دې د بابا سوچ لرونکي کسانو ته ټکټ ورکړي،سلمان شهزاده &#124; Benaqaab News |access-date=5 August 2017 |archive-date=5 August 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170805181505/http://www.benaqaabnews.com/%D8%A7%DB%92-%D8%A7%D9%8A%D9%86-%D9%BE%D9%8A-%D8%AF%DB%90-%D8%AF-%D8%A8%D8%A7%D8%A8%D8%A7-%D8%B3%D9%88%DA%86-%D9%84%D8%B1%D9%88%D9%86%DA%A9%D9%8A-%DA%A9%D8%B3%D8%A7%D9%86%D9%88-%D8%AA%D9%87-%D9%BC/ |url-status=dead }}</ref> Shehzada writes articles for various publications, and is active on social media.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.thevoicetimes.com/education-in-khyber-pakhtunkhwa/ |title=The destiny of Education in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan |access-date=5 August 2017 |archive-date=24 June 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170624123610/http://www.thevoicetimes.com/education-in-khyber-pakhtunkhwa/ |url-status=dead }}</ref> Shehzada was once attacked by unknown armed assailants in [[Timergara]], Pakistan. He narrowly escaped.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.dailyazadiswat.net/epaper/2017/04/29/page8/details.htm?d1.gif |title=Archived copy |access-date=5 August 2017 |archive-date=5 August 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170805191510/http://www.dailyazadiswat.net/epaper/2017/04/29/page8/details.htm?d1.gif |url-status=dead }}</ref> == References == {{reflist}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Shehzda, Malak}} [[Category:Living people]] [[Category:Awami National Party politicians]] [[Category:Year of birth missing (living people)]] {{Pakistan-politician-stub}}
1,158,564,104
[]
false
# Louis Somers Louis Somers (28 May 1909 – 7 February 1965) was a Belgian footballer. He played in four matches for the Belgium national football team from 1928 to 1930.
enwiki/68637497
enwiki
68,637,497
Louis Somers
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Somers
2024-12-02T22:56:12Z
en
Q3263126
29,061
{{short description|Belgian footballer}} {{Use dmy dates|date=September 2021}} {{Infobox football biography |name = Louis Somers |image = |caption = |fullname = |birth_date = {{birth date|1909|5|28|df=yes}} |birth_place = |death_date = {{death date and age|1965|2|7|1909|5|28|df=yes}} |death_place = |nationalteam1 = [[Belgium national football team|Belgium]] |nationalyears1 = 1928–1930 |nationalcaps1 = 4 |nationalgoals1 = 0 }} '''Louis Somers''' (28 May 1909 &ndash; 7 February 1965) was a Belgian [[association football|footballer]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.worldfootball.net/player_summary/louis-somers/ |title=Louis Somers |work=worldfootball.net |access-date=3 September 2021}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.national-football-teams.com/player/62541/Louis_Somers.html |title=Louis Somers |work=National Football Teams |access-date=3 September 2021}}</ref> He played in four matches for the [[Belgium national football team]] from 1928 to 1930.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://static.belgianfootball.be/project/publiek/jrinternl/speler_PH_156.htm#itop |title=Louis Somers |work=Royal Belgian Football Association |access-date=3 September 2021}}</ref> ==References== {{reflist}} ==External links== * {{sports links}} {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Somers, Louis}} [[Category:1909 births]] [[Category:1965 deaths]] [[Category:Belgian men's footballers]] [[Category:Belgium men's international footballers]] [[Category:Place of birth missing]] [[Category:Men's association football players not categorized by position]] [[Category:20th-century Belgian sportsmen]] {{Belgium-footy-bio-stub}}
1,260,848,711
[{"title": "Louis Somers", "data": {"Date of birth": "28 May 1909", "Date of death": "7 February 1965 (aged 55)"}}, {"title": "International career", "data": {"Years": "Team \u00b7 Apps \u00b7 (Gls)", "1928\u20131930": "Belgium \u00b7 4 \u00b7 (0)"}}]
false
# Institutional Protection Service The Institutional Protection Service (Spanish: Servicio de Protección Institucional) is a service branch of the Panamanian Public Forces. The Institutional Protection Service was organized in March 1990 to assume the functions previously assigned to the former presidential guard. Based in Panama City, attached to the Ministry of the Presidency. He is in charge of providing protection to the Panamanian authorities such as the President of the Republic of Panama, the Ministers, Ex-Presidents and the Ex-Vice Presidents in charge of the Presidency of the Republic, as provided in this Decree Law; as well as contributing to the maintenance of internal public order, peace, citizen security, protecting public spaces and buildings. It was created through Decree Law No. 2 of July 8, 1999. Some of its functions also include the protection of the banks of the Panama Canal and surveillance of public spaces such as the Cinta Costera and Calzada de Amador. It has approximately more than 2,000 units that are distributed in 3 different company groups. ## Organic Structure As part of this organization they have the political and executive level, coordination level, advisory level, supervisory level, support level and within the operational level they have 3 groups which are: - The Presidential Protection group: This has the responsibility of providing protection and escorting Important Persons. - The Presidential Guard Battalion: This other has the responsibility of ensuring the security of the facilities, as well as the protocol of honor, the custody of the banks of the Canal, the security of different facilities where official events or presidential summits are held. Organized into the Presidential Band and 5 companies, the 5th historical. - The Special Anti-Terrorism Group (G.E.A.T): The latter is a group of special forces under the command of the President of the Republic. ## Training In terms of training, there is an Integral Training and Training Academy, in which the personnel are trained and remain in constant training, which has allowed the professional level of the units to be raised, maintaining constant cooperation with the rest of the Public Force, where he has participated in various exercises, such as the last Panamax event, held in the country; Many of the units that make up the Institution have received training in Central, South American and European countries. The Institutional Protection Service has been a model for the creation of similar Institutions in other Central American countries.
enwiki/63247623
enwiki
63,247,623
Institutional Protection Service
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Institutional_Protection_Service
2025-02-12T22:35:56Z
en
Q16630689
34,926
{{distinguish|Institutional Protection Scheme}} {{Infobox law enforcement agency | agencyname = Institutional Protection Service | nativename = ''Servicio de Protección Institucional'' | commonname = | abbreviation = SPI | patch = File:Panama_SPI_emblem.png | patchcaption = Panama SPI emblem | imagesize = | motto = ''Democracia Orden Constitucional'' | mottotranslated = Democracy and Constitutional Order | formedmonthday = | formedyear = 1990 | country = Panama | countryabbr = | national = | paramilitary = | constitution1 = Decree Law No. 2, 1999<ref name="act"/> | speciality1 = protection | minister1name = | minister1pfo = | chief1name = Julio Cesar Jean-Louis Garrido<ref>{{cite web |title=Honorable Señor Julio Cesar Jean-Louis Garrido – Director General del SPI. |url=https://www.spi.gob.pa/Quienes-Somos&prev=search |website=SPI |publisher=[[Government of Panama]] |access-date=February 29, 2020}}</ref> | chief1position = Director General | oversightbody = Ministry of the Presidency | parentagency = [[Panamanian Public Forces]] | child1agency = | website = {{url|www.spi.gob.pa}} | headquarters = [[Panama City]] | footnotes = | reference = }} The '''Institutional Protection Service''' ({{langx|es|Servicio de Protección Institucional}}) is a service branch of the [[Panamanian Public Forces]]. The Institutional Protection Service was organized in March 1990 to assume the functions previously assigned to the former presidential guard. Based in [[Panama City]], attached to the Ministry of the Presidency. He is in charge of providing protection to the Panamanian authorities such as the [[President of the Republic of Panama]], the Ministers, Ex-Presidents and the Ex-Vice Presidents in charge of the Presidency of the Republic, as provided in this Decree Law; as well as contributing to the maintenance of internal public order, peace, citizen security, protecting public spaces and buildings. It was created through Decree Law No. 2 of July 8, 1999.<ref name="act">{{cite act|url=https://docs.panama.justia.com/federales/decretos-leyes/2-de-1999-jul-10-1999.pdf|title=Organico del Servicio de Proteccion Institucional|index=2|date=8 July 1999|lang=es}}</ref> Some of its functions also include the protection of the banks of the [[Panama Canal]] and surveillance of public spaces such as the [[Cinta Costera]] and [[Amador Causeway|Calzada de Amador]]. It has approximately more than 2,000 units that are distributed in 3 different company groups.<ref>{{cite book |title=Worldwide Government Directory with Intergovernmental Organizations 2013 |date=2013 |publisher=CQ Press |isbn=1452299374 |page=1249 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CQWhAQAAQBAJ}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=Cambio de mando en el SPI |access-date=February 29, 2020 |work=Crítica |date=July 5, 2019|url=https://www.critica.com.pa/sucesos/cambio-de-mando-en-el-spi-552624|language=es}}</ref> ==Organic Structure== As part of this organization they have the political and executive level, coordination level, advisory level, supervisory level, support level and within the operational level they have 3 groups which are: *'''The Presidential Protection group''': This has the responsibility of providing protection and escorting Important Persons. *'''The Presidential Guard Battalion''': This other has the responsibility of ensuring the security of the facilities, as well as the protocol of honor, the custody of the banks of the Canal, the security of different facilities where official events or presidential summits are held. Organized into the Presidential Band and 5 companies, the 5th historical. *'''The Special Anti-Terrorism Group (G.E.A.T)''': The latter is a group of special forces under the command of the President of the Republic. ==Training== In terms of training, there is an Integral Training and Training Academy, in which the personnel are trained and remain in constant training, which has allowed the professional level of the units to be raised, maintaining constant cooperation with the rest of the Public Force, where he has participated in various exercises, such as the last Panamax event, held in the country; Many of the units that make up the Institution have received training in Central, South American and European countries. The Institutional Protection Service has been a model for the creation of similar Institutions in other Central American countries. ==References== {{reflist}} [[Category:1990 establishments in South America]] [[Category:Law enforcement in Panama]] ==External links== *{{Official website|https://www.spi.gob.pa}} {{Panama-stub}}
1,275,416,293
[{"title": "Institutional Protection Service \u00b7 Servicio de Protecci\u00f3n Institucional", "data": {"Abbreviation": "SPI", "Motto": "Democracia Orden Constitucional \u00b7 Democracy and Constitutional Order"}}, {"title": "Agency overview", "data": {"Formed": "1990"}}, {"title": "Jurisdictional structure", "data": {"Operations jurisdiction": "Panama", "Constituting instrument": "- Decree Law No. 2, 1999", "Specialist jurisdiction": "- Protection of international or domestic VIPs, protection of significant state assets."}}, {"title": "Operational structure", "data": {"Overseen by": "Ministry of the Presidency", "Headquarters": "Panama City", "Agency executive": "- Julio Cesar Jean-Louis Garrido, Director General", "Parent agency": "Panamanian Public Forces"}}, {"title": "Website", "data": {"Website": "www.spi.gob.pa"}}]
false
# Lamballe Terre et Mer Lamballe Terre et Mer (Breton: Douar ha Mor Lamballe) is the communauté d'agglomération, an intercommunal structure, centred on the town of Lamballe-Armor. It is located in the Côtes-d'Armor department, in the Brittany region, northwestern France. Created in 2017, its seat is in Lamballe-Armor. Its area is 912.9 km2. Its population was 67,875 in 2019, of which 16,688 in Lamballe-Armor proper. ## Composition The communauté d'agglomération consists of the following 38 communes: 1. Andel 2. La Bouillie 3. Bréhand 4. Coëtmieux 5. Éréac 6. Erquy 7. Hénanbihen 8. Hénansal 9. Hénon 10. Jugon-les-Lacs-Commune-Nouvelle 11. La Malhoure 12. Lamballe-Armor 13. Landéhen 14. Lanrelas 15. Moncontour 16. Noyal 17. Penguily 18. Plédéliac 19. Plémy 20. Plénée-Jugon 21. Pléneuf-Val-André 22. Plestan 23. Plurien 24. Pommeret 25. Quessoy 26. Quintenic 27. Rouillac 28. Saint-Alban 29. Saint-Denoual 30. Saint-Glen 31. Saint-Rieul 32. Saint-Trimoël 33. Sévignac 34. Tramain 35. Trébry 36. Trédaniel 37. Trédias 38. Trémeur
enwiki/72266264
enwiki
72,266,264
Lamballe Terre et Mer
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lamballe_Terre_et_Mer
2025-03-09T02:31:40Z
en
Q28024456
39,892
{{Infobox French subdivision | type = CA | name = Guingamp-Paimpol Agglomération | image_map = | map_caption = Location within the department | INSEE = 22 | creation = 2017 | nbcomm = 38 | seat = [[Lamballe-Armor]] | president = | population = 67875 | population_as_of = 2019 | area = 912.9 | website = {{url|https://www.lamballe-terre-mer.bzh/}} | coordinates = {{coord|48|26|N|02|27|W|display=it}} }} '''Lamballe Terre et Mer''' ({{langx|br|Douar ha Mor Lamballe}}) is the ''[[communauté d'agglomération]]'', an [[Communes of France#Intercommunality|intercommunal]] structure, centred on the [[Communes of France|town]] of [[Lamballe-Armor]]. It is located in the [[Côtes-d'Armor]] [[departments of France|department]], in the [[Brittany (administrative region)|Brittany]] [[regions of France|region]], northwestern [[France]]. Created in 2017, its seat is in Lamballe-Armor.<ref name=BANATIC>[https://www.banatic.interieur.gouv.fr/intercommunalite/200069391-ca-lamballe-terre-et-mer CA Lamballe Terre et Mer (N° SIREN : 200069391)], BANATIC. Retrieved 11 November 2024.</ref> Its area is 912.9&nbsp;km<sup>2</sup>. Its population was 67,875 in 2019, of which 16,688 in Lamballe-Armor proper.<ref name=comp>[https://www.insee.fr/fr/statistiques/1405599?geo=EPCI-200069391+COM-22093 Comparateur de territoire], [[Institut national de la statistique et des études économiques|INSEE]]. Retrieved 16 November 2022.</ref> ==Composition== The communauté d'agglomération consists of the following 38 communes:<ref name=BANATIC/><ref name="insee">{{cite web|url=https://www.insee.fr/fr/metadonnees/geographie/intercommunalite/200069391-lamballe-terre-et-mer|publisher=[[Institut national de la statistique et des études économiques|INSEE]]|title=Intercommunalité : Communauté d'agglomération Lamballe Terre et Mer|access-date=11 November 2024}}</ref> {{div col|colwidth=15em}} #[[Andel, Côtes-d'Armor|Andel]] #[[La Bouillie]] #[[Bréhand]] #[[Coëtmieux]] #[[Éréac]] #[[Erquy]] #[[Hénanbihen]] #[[Hénansal]] #[[Hénon, Côtes-d'Armor|Hénon]] #[[Jugon-les-Lacs-Commune-Nouvelle]] #[[La Malhoure]] #[[Lamballe-Armor]] #[[Landéhen]] #[[Lanrelas]] #[[Moncontour, Côtes-d'Armor|Moncontour]] #[[Noyal]] #[[Penguily]] #[[Plédéliac]] #[[Plémy]] #[[Plénée-Jugon]] #[[Pléneuf-Val-André]] #[[Plestan]] #[[Plurien]] #[[Pommeret]] #[[Quessoy]] #[[Quintenic]] #[[Rouillac, Côtes-d'Armor|Rouillac]] #[[Saint-Alban, Côtes-d'Armor|Saint-Alban]] #[[Saint-Denoual]] #[[Saint-Glen]] #[[Saint-Rieul]] #[[Saint-Trimoël]] #[[Sévignac]] #[[Tramain]] #[[Trébry]] #[[Trédaniel]] #[[Trédias]] #[[Trémeur]] {{div col end}} ==References== {{Reflist}} {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Lamballe Terre et Mer}} [[Category:Agglomeration communities in France|Lamballe]] [[Category:Intercommunalities of Côtes-d'Armor|Lamballe]] {{CôtesArmor-geo-stub}}
1,279,527,714
[{"title": "Guingamp-Paimpol Agglom\u00e9ration", "data": {"Country": "France", "Region": "Brittany", "Department": "C\u00f4tes-d'Armor", "No. of communes": "38", "Established": "2017", "Seat": "Lamballe-Armor", "Area": "912.9 km2 (352.5 sq mi)", "Population (2019)": "67,875", "\u2022 Density": "74/km2 (190/sq mi)", "Website": "www.lamballe-terre-mer.bzh"}}]
false
# Panoquina hecebolus Panoquina hecebolus, the hecebolus skipper, is a species of grass skipper in the butterfly family Hesperiidae. It is found in North America. The MONA or Hodges number for Panoquina hecebolus is 4120.
enwiki/57289522
enwiki
57,289,522
Panoquina hecebolus
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panoquina_hecebolus
2021-02-16T23:24:55Z
en
Q13996829
41,124
{{Short description|Species of butterfly}} {{Speciesbox | image = Panoquina hecebolus cropped.jpg | genus = Panoquina | species = hecebolus | authority = (Scudder, 1872) | synonyms = {{Species list | Pamphila parilis | Mabille, 1891 }} | synonyms_ref = <ref name=itis/> }} '''''Panoquina hecebolus''''', the '''hecebolus skipper''', is a species of [[grass skipper]] in the [[butterfly]] family [[Hesperiidae]]. It is found in North America.<ref name=itis/><ref name=gbif/><ref name=buglink/> The MONA or Hodges number for ''Panoquina hecebolus'' is 4120.<ref name=mpg/> ==References== {{Reflist|refs= <ref name=itis> {{Cite web| title=''Panoquina hecebolus'' Report | url=https://www.itis.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=706559 | website=Integrated Taxonomic Information System | accessdate=2019-09-24 }}</ref> <ref name=mpg> {{Cite web| title=North American Moth Photographers Group, ''Panoquina hecebolus'' | url=http://mothphotographersgroup.msstate.edu/species.php?hodges=4120 | accessdate=2019-09-24 }}</ref> <ref name=gbif> {{Cite web| title=''Panoquina hecebolus'' | url=https://www.gbif.org/species/1943591 | website=GBIF | accessdate=2019-09-24 }}</ref> <ref name=buglink> {{Cite web| title=''Panoquina hecebolus'' species Information | url=https://bugguide.net/node/view/857675 | website=BugGuide.net | accessdate=2019-09-24 }}</ref> }} ==Further reading== {{refbegin}} * {{Cite report | title = Annotated taxonomic checklist of the Lepidoptera of North America, North of Mexico | date = 2016 | last1 = Pohl | first1 = Greg | last2 = Patterson | first2 = Bob | last3 = Pelham | first3 = Jonathan | url = https://www.researchgate.net/publication/302570819 | doi = 10.13140/RG.2.1.2186.3287| doi-access = free }} {{refend}} {{Taxonbar|from=Q13996829}} [[Category:Panoquina]] [[Category:Articles created by Qbugbot]] {{hesperiinae-stub}}
1,007,200,030
[{"title": "Scientific classification", "data": {"Domain": "Eukaryota", "Kingdom": "Animalia", "Phylum": "Arthropoda", "Class": "Insecta", "Order": "Lepidoptera", "Family": "Hesperiidae", "Genus": "Panoquina", "Species": "P. hecebolus"}}, {"title": "Binomial name", "data": {"Binomial name": "Panoquina hecebolus \u00b7 (Scudder, 1872)"}}, {"title": "Synonyms", "data": {"Synonyms": "- Pamphila parilis Mabille, 1891"}}]
false
# Laird Super Solution The Laird LC-DW300 and LC-DW500 Super Solution aka "Sky Buzzard" was a racing biplane built in the early 1930s by Matty Laird for the Cleveland Speed Foundation, Laird was already famous in the air racing circuit. It had a large radial engine and an extremely faired windshield. Other than being a biplane, it was similar in appearance to the Gee Bee, a more famous racer from the period. It was an advanced design for the time because of the relatively clean aerodynamic construction and tight engine cowling. The Super Solution was the first winner of the Bendix Trophy race from Burbank to Cleveland where it was flown by Maj. James H. Doolittle. ## Development Construction of the Super Solution started on 8 July 1931. The aircraft was complete and test flown at Ashborn Field in Chicago by 22 August 1931. Further changes were made by the Christopher Bros. in Wichita, Kansas in 1932, such as raising the seat, installing a sliding canopy, and adding retractable landing gear. ## Design Two engines were used in the Solution, the second being a geared variant that allowed a lower propeller rpm with a larger propeller. The engines ran with high-compression pistons and "doped" leaded fuel. Both produced over 500 hp from the standard 375 hp P&W R-985 Wasp Jr. S2A engine of the day. ## Operational history Initial flight tests proved the aircraft required more rudder area to maintain stability and the fixed pitch propeller needed to be adjusted to allow takeoffs under a mile in length. - 1931 National Air Races piloted by Jimmy Doolittle wins the Bendix Trophy at a 223 mph average speed. - 1931 Thompson Trophy - Trial runs prove difficult, with aileron reversal occurring at speed. The main wing spar crushed from race loads, requires steel patches. Doolittle drops out of the race with engine trouble due to a scuffed piston.[3] - 1931 In October, Doolittle flies the Super Solution on a flight between Ottawa, Ontario, Washington D.C., and Mexico City, setting a new speed record between the capitals of 12 hours, 36 minutes. - 1932 In August, the Shell Oil sponsored Solution is test flown by Doolittle with new retractable gear. The aircraft is damaged in a gear-up landing, and Doolittle switches to the Gee Bee R-1. The Solution is shipped to Shell Oil in St.Louis, then later donated to the Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum by the Swallow Aircraft Company in 1948. ## On display - The EAA has a Super Solution replica in their museum in Oshkosh, Wisconsin. It was presented in 1981 by Jimmy Doolittle and Mattie Laird.[4] - Jim Moss of Washington state built the only flying reproduction, which is currently on display at Fantasy of Flight in Polk City, Florida. ## Specifications (Laird Super Solution) Data from Sport Aviation General characteristics - Capacity: 1 - Length: 19 ft 6 in (5.94 m) - Wingspan: 21 ft (6.4 m) - Wing area: 112 sq ft (10.4 m2) - Empty weight: 1,580 lb (717 kg) - Gross weight: 2,842 lb (1,289 kg) - Fuel capacity: 112 U.S. gallons (420 L; 93 imp gal) - Powerplant: 1 × Pratt & Whitney Wasp Junior S2A 9-cylinder air-cooled radial piston engine, 535 hp (399 kW) running on doped fuel with high compression pistons - Propellers: 2-bladed variable-pitch propeller Performance - Wing loading: 27.16 lb/sq ft (132.6 kg/m2)
enwiki/1009828
enwiki
1,009,828
Laird Super Solution
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laird_Super_Solution
2024-12-24T00:58:36Z
en
Q6474087
51,939
{{Short description|1930s airplane}} {{Infobox aircraft | name=Laird Super Solution | image=Laird Solution.jpg | caption=Laird Super Solution replica at the [[EAA Aviation Museum]] | type=[[Racing aircraft]] | national_origin=[[United States of America]] | manufacturer=[[E. M. Laird Airplane Company]] | designer=[[Emil Matthew Laird|E. M. Matty Laird]], [[Raoul J. Hoffman]] | first_flight=22 August 1931 | introduction= | retired= | status=under restoration | primary_user= | more_users= <!--Limited to three in total; separate using <br /> --> | produced= <!--years in production--> | number_built=1 | program cost= <!--Total program cost--> | unit cost= <!--Incremental or flyaway cost for military or retail price for commercial aircraft--> | developed_from=[[Laird Solution]] | variants= }} The '''Laird LC-DW300 and LC-DW500 Super Solution''' aka '''"Sky Buzzard"''' was a racing [[biplane]] built in the early 1930s by [[Emil Matthew Laird|Matty Laird]] for the Cleveland Speed Foundation, Laird was already famous in the [[air race|air racing circuit]]. It had a large [[radial engine]] and an extremely [[Aircraft fairing|faired]] windshield. Other than being a biplane, it was similar in appearance to the [[Gee Bee R-1|Gee Bee]], a more famous racer from the period. It was an advanced design for the time because of the relatively clean aerodynamic construction and tight engine [[cowling]].<ref>{{cite journal|journal=Sport Aviation|date=February 1959}}</ref> The Super Solution was the first winner of the [[Bendix Trophy]] race from [[Burbank, California|Burbank]] to [[Cleveland]] where it was flown by Maj. [[James Harold Doolittle|James H. Doolittle]]. ==Development== Construction of the Super Solution started on 8 July 1931. The aircraft was complete and test flown at Ashborn Field in Chicago by 22 August 1931. Further changes were made by the Christopher Bros. in [[Wichita, Kansas]] in 1932, such as raising the seat, installing a sliding canopy, and adding retractable landing gear.<ref>{{cite web|title=Laird Super Solution|url=http://www.airracinghistory.freeola.com/aircraft/Laird%20Super%20Solution.htm|accessdate=19 June 2011}}</ref> ==Design== Two engines were used in the Solution, the second being a geared variant that allowed a lower propeller rpm with a larger propeller. The engines ran with high-compression pistons and "doped" leaded fuel. Both produced over 500&nbsp;hp from the standard 375&nbsp;hp P&W R-985 Wasp Jr. S2A engine of the day. ==Operational history== Initial flight tests proved the aircraft required more rudder area to maintain stability and the fixed pitch propeller needed to be adjusted to allow takeoffs under a mile in length. *1931 [[National Air Races]] piloted by [[Jimmy Doolittle]] wins the [[Bendix Trophy]] at a 223&nbsp;mph average speed. *1931 [[Thompson Trophy]] - Trial runs prove difficult, with aileron reversal occurring at speed. The main wing spar crushed from race loads, requires steel patches. Doolittle drops out of the race with engine trouble due to a scuffed piston.<ref>{{cite web|title=Laird Super Solution|url=http://www.airracinghistory.freeola.com/aircraft/Laird%20Super%20Solution.htm|accessdate=22 June 2011}}</ref> *1931 In October, Doolittle flies the Super Solution on a flight between [[Ottawa|Ottawa, Ontario]], [[Washington D.C.]], and [[Mexico City]], setting a new speed record between the capitals of 12 hours, 36 minutes. *1932 In August, the [[Shell Oil]] sponsored Solution is test flown by Doolittle with new retractable gear. The aircraft is damaged in a gear-up landing, and Doolittle switches to the [[Gee Bee R-1]]. The Solution is shipped to Shell Oil in St.Louis, then later donated to the Smithsonian's [[National Air and Space Museum]] by the [[Swallow Aircraft Company]] in 1948. == On display == *The [[Experimental Aircraft Association|EAA]] has a Super Solution replica in their museum in [[Oshkosh, Wisconsin]]. It was presented in 1981 by Jimmy Doolittle and Mattie Laird.<ref>{{cite web|title=Laird Super Solution Replica|url=https://www.eaa.org/eaa-museum/museum-collection/aircraft-collection-folder/1931-laird-super-solution-replica---nr12048|accessdate=20 June 2011}}</ref> *Jim Moss of Washington state built the only flying reproduction, which is currently on display at [[Fantasy of Flight]] in Polk City, Florida. ==Specifications (Laird Super Solution) == {{Aircraft specs |ref=Sport Aviation<!-- for giving the reference for the data --> |prime units?=kts<!-- imp or kts first for US aircraft, and UK aircraft pre-metrification, met(ric) first for all others. You MUST choose a format, or no specifications will show --> <!-- General characteristics --> |genhide= |crew= |capacity=1 |length m= |length ft=19 |length in=6 |length note= |span m= |span ft=21 |span in= |span note= |height m= |height ft= |height in= |height note= |wing area sqm= |wing area sqft=112 |wing area note= |aspect ratio=<!-- give where relevant eg sailplanes --> |airfoil= |empty weight kg= |empty weight lb=1580 |empty weight note= |gross weight kg= |gross weight lb=2842 |gross weight note= |max takeoff weight kg= |max takeoff weight lb= |max takeoff weight note= |fuel capacity={{convert|112|u.s.gal}} |more general= <!-- Powerplant --> |eng1 number=1 |eng1 name=[[Pratt & Whitney Wasp Junior S2A]] |eng1 type=9-cylinder air-cooled radial piston engine |eng1 hp=535<!-- prop engines --> |eng1 note=running on doped fuel with high compression pistons |prop blade number=2 |prop name=variable-pitch propeller |prop dia m=<!-- propeller aircraft --> |prop dia ft=<!-- propeller aircraft --> |prop dia in=<!-- propeller aircraft --> |prop note= <!-- Performance --> |perfhide= |max speed kmh= |max speed mph= |max speed kts= |max speed note= |cruise speed kmh= |cruise speed mph= |cruise speed kts= |cruise speed note= |stall speed kmh=<!-- aerobatic --> |stall speed mph=<!-- aerobatic --> |stall speed kts= |stall speed note= |never exceed speed kmh= |never exceed speed mph= |never exceed speed kts= |never exceed speed note= |range km= |range miles= |range nmi= |range note= |endurance=<!-- if range unknown --> |ceiling m= |ceiling ft= |ceiling note= |g limits=<!-- aerobatic --> |roll rate=<!-- aerobatic --> |glide ratio=<!-- sailplanes --> |climb rate ms= |climb rate ftmin= |climb rate note= |time to altitude= |lift to drag= |wing loading kg/m2= |wing loading lb/sqft=27.16 |wing loading note= |power/mass= |thrust/weight= |more performance= |avionics= }} ==References== {{Reflist}} ==External links== {{Commons category|Laird Solution}} *[http://www.airracinghistory.freeola.com/aircraft/Laird%20Super%20Solution.htm The Laird Super Solution page] from the [http://www.air-racing-history.com/ Air Racing History website] {{Laird Aircraft}} {{Authority control}} [[Category:Laird aircraft|Super Solution]] [[Category:1930s United States sport aircraft]] [[Category:Single-engined tractor aircraft]] [[Category:Biplanes]] [[Category:Racing aircraft]] [[Category:Aircraft first flown in 1931]]
1,264,880,499
[{"title": "General information", "data": {"Type": "Racing aircraft", "National origin": "United States of America", "Manufacturer": "E. M. Laird Airplane Company", "Designer": "E. M. Matty Laird, Raoul J. Hoffman", "Status": "under restoration", "Number built": "1"}}, {"title": "History", "data": {"First flight": "22 August 1931", "Developed from": "Laird Solution"}}]
false
# Margaret Waterchief Margaret Waterchief was a Blackfoot elder and Anglican priest. A member of the Siksika Nation and the Piikani Nation, Waterchief attended the St. Cyprian's Anglican Residential School in Piikani until the age of 17. As a residential school student she was discouraged from speaking the Blackfoot language and was prevented from seeing her family, who lived nearby, beyond a few hours each Saturday. After graduating she relocated to Siksika, where she met and married Raymond Waterchief, with whom she had 10 children. Both struggled with alcoholism. Following Raymond's death in 1976 at the age of 42, Waterchief drank for several years before getting sober and turning more actively to the Anglican church. She served as a counsellor for those also dealing with alcoholism and as a lay Anglican pastor. Waterchief was ordained as an Anglican minister in 1994 at the age of 62. She was the first Indigenous woman to be ordained within Anglican Diocese of Calgary. Waterchief was an advocate for underprivileged and vulnerable people, working for several years with the Calgary Urban Projects Society. A lifetime member of the Anglican Church Women, she played an instrumental role in establishing a day care centre on the Siksika reserve. She also served as a member of the Siksika Band Council for 16 years, after being elected in 1967. Waterchief died on July 19, 2020, at the age of 88, in Strathmore, Alberta, as a result of complications related to COVID-19 during the COVID-19 pandemic in Alberta.
enwiki/65341642
enwiki
65,341,642
Margaret Waterchief
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margaret_Waterchief
2024-12-14T05:29:33Z
en
Q99432805
34,055
{{Short description|Blackfoot elder and Anglican priest (died 2020)}} '''Margaret Waterchief''' was a [[Blackfoot Confederacy|Blackfoot]] elder and [[Anglican priest]]. A member of the [[Siksika Nation]] and the [[Piikani Nation]], Waterchief attended the St. Cyprian's Anglican Residential School in [[Piikani]] until the age of 17.<ref name="ThomObit" /> As a [[Canadian Indian residential school system|residential school]] student she was discouraged from speaking the [[Blackfoot language]] and was prevented from seeing her family, who lived nearby, beyond a few hours each Saturday.<ref name="Bergman">{{cite journal |last1=Bergman |first1=Brian |title=Going Through the Golgotha |journal=Maclean's |date=12 April 2004 |pages=26–28 |url=https://archive.macleans.ca/article/2004/4/12/going-through-golgotha |accessdate=17 September 2020}}</ref> After graduating she relocated to Siksika, where she met and married Raymond Waterchief, with whom she had 10 children.<ref name="ThomObit" /> Both struggled with [[alcoholism]]. Following Raymond's death in 1976 at the age of 42, Waterchief drank for several years before getting sober and turning more actively to the Anglican church. She served as a counsellor for those also dealing with alcoholism and as a lay Anglican pastor.<ref name="Bergman" /> Waterchief was [[ordained]] as an Anglican minister in 1994 at the age of 62.<ref name="Bergman" /><ref name="Leask" /> She was the first Indigenous woman to be ordained within [[Anglican Diocese of Calgary]].<ref name="Gardner">{{cite news |last1=Gardner |first1=Matt |title=Remembering Margaret Waterchief: 'I saw in her the beauty of our people' |url=https://www.anglicanjournal.com/remembering-margaret-waterchief-i-saw-in-her-the-beauty-of-our-people/ |work=Anglican Journal |date=24 July 2020}}</ref> Waterchief was an advocate for underprivileged and vulnerable people, working for several years with the Calgary Urban Projects Society.<ref name="Leask" /><ref name="Bergman" /> A lifetime member of the Anglican Church Women, she played an instrumental role in establishing a day care centre on the Siksika reserve.<ref name="ThomObit">{{cite web |title=Obituary for Reverend Margaret Waterchief |url=https://www.thomsfuneralhome.com/obituary/ReverendMargaret-Waterchief |publisher=Thom's Funeral Home And Reception Centre |accessdate=17 September 2020 |language=en |date=19 July 2020}}</ref> She also served as a member of the Siksika Band Council for 16 years, after being elected in 1967.<ref name="ThomObit" /> Waterchief died on July 19, 2020, at the age of 88, in [[Strathmore, Alberta]], as a result of complications related to [[COVID-19]] during the [[COVID-19 pandemic in Alberta]].<ref name="Gardner" /><ref name="Massiah">{{cite news |last1=Massiah |first1=Monique |title=Impact Of COVID-19 In Strathmore |url=https://strathmorenow.com/stories/impact-of-covid-19-in-strathmore |accessdate=17 September 2020 |work=Strathmore Now |language=en-gb }}{{Dead link|date=October 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref><ref name="Leask">{{cite news |last1=Leask |first1=Keith |title=Stephen's Backpacks loses mentor and close friend |url=https://www.discoverairdrie.com/local/stephens-backpacks-loses-mentor-and-close-friend |accessdate=17 September 2020 |work=DiscoverAirdrie.com |date=27 July 2020 |language=en-gb}}</ref> ==References== {{reflist}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Waterchief, Margaret}} [[Category:1930s births]] [[Category:2020 deaths]] [[Category:Piikani Nation people]] [[Category:Siksika Nation people]] [[Category:Women Anglican clergy]] [[Category:21st-century Canadian Anglican priests]] [[Category:Deaths from the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada]] {{Canada-reli-bio-stub}}
1,263,014,561
[]
false
# Pseudosphex leovazquezae Pseudosphex leovazquezae is a moth of the subfamily Arctiinae. It was described by Pérez and Sánchez in 1986. It is found in southern Texas, Mexico and Guatemala. Adults are on wing from September to November in Texas.
enwiki/42059648
enwiki
42,059,648
Pseudosphex leovazquezae
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pseudosphex_leovazquezae
2024-02-17T15:25:19Z
en
Q16757911
33,182
{{Short description|Species of moth}} {{Speciesbox | image = Abrochia leovazquezae . Arctiidae. Ctenuchinae (7257137130).jpg | image_caption = | taxon = Pseudosphex leovazquezae | authority = (Pérez & Sánchez, 1986) | synonyms = *''Abrochia leovazquezae'' <small>Pérez & Sánchez, 1986</small> }} '''''Pseudosphex leovazquezae''''' is a [[moth]] of the subfamily [[Arctiinae (moth)|Arctiinae]]. It was described by Pérez and Sánchez in 1986. It is found in southern [[Texas]],<ref>{{cite web |url=http://mothphotographersgroup.msstate.edu/species.php?hodges=8276.2 |title= 930454.00 – 8276.2 – ''Pseudosphex leovazquezae'' – (Pérez & Sánchez, [1986]) |website=North American Moth Photographers Group |publisher=Mississippi State University |accessdate=August 29, 2019}}</ref> [[Mexico]] and [[Guatemala]].<ref>{{cite web |last=Savela |first=Markku |url=https://www.nic.funet.fi/pub/sci/bio/life/insecta/lepidoptera/ditrysia/noctuoidea/arctiidae/ctenuchinae/pseudosphex/#leovazquezae |title=''Pseudosphex leovazquezae'' (Pérez & Sánchez, 1986) |website=Lepidoptera and Some Other Life Forms |accessdate=August 29, 2019}}</ref> Adults are on wing from September to November in Texas.<ref>{{cite web |last=Quinn |first=Mike |date=February 21, 2019 |url=http://bugguide.net/node/view/671822 |title=Species ''Pseudosphex leovazquezae'' - Hodges#8276.2 |website=BugGuide |accessdate=August 29, 2019}}</ref> ==References== {{Reflist}} {{Taxonbar|from=Q16757911}} [[Category:Pseudosphex]] [[Category:Moths described in 1986]] {{Euchromiina-stub}}
1,208,448,814
[{"title": "Scientific classification", "data": {"Domain": "Eukaryota", "Kingdom": "Animalia", "Phylum": "Arthropoda", "Class": "Insecta", "Order": "Lepidoptera", "Superfamily": "Noctuoidea", "Family": "Erebidae", "Subfamily": "Arctiinae", "Genus": "Pseudosphex", "Species": "P. leovazquezae"}}, {"title": "Binomial name", "data": {"Binomial name": "Pseudosphex leovazquezae \u00b7 (P\u00e9rez & S\u00e1nchez, 1986)"}}, {"title": "Synonyms", "data": {"Synonyms": "- Abrochia leovazquezae P\u00e9rez & S\u00e1nchez, 1986"}}]
false
# Mohammad-Hadi Ma'refat Mohammad-Hadi Ma'refat (1931 in Karbala – 2007 in Qom) was a Shi'a scholar, clergyman, researcher on Quranic studies and interpretation, and the founder and former president of Tamhid Cultural Institute. He is the descendant of Shaykh Abd-al-'Ali Meysi, the author of Risalah Meysiyyah. He was a member of "Society of Seminary Teachers of Qom" and he held the title of Ayatollah. He had many influential works in the field of Quranic studies such as "Al-Tamhid fi al-'Ulum al-Quran", "Siyanah Al-Quran min-al-Tahrif", "Al-Tafsir wa-al-Mufassirun fi Thawbah al-Qashib", and "Tafsir al-Athari al-Jami". He is buried in Fatima Masumeh Shrine in the city of Qom. ## Education He first attended the Islamic seminary of Karbala. He finished advanced courses of Islamic jurisprudence (Fiqh) and the Principles of Islamic jurisprudence there. He moved to Najaf to study the courses of Ayatollah Abu al-Qasim al-Khoei; then, he moved to "Qom Seminary". Ma'refat attended the courses of Ayatollah Mirza Hashem Amoli and then officially started teaching in the Qom Seminary. ## Works Mohammad-Hadi Ma'refat has many works in the field of interpretation (Tafsir) and Quranic studies. Some of his outstanding works are as follows: - Siyanah Al-Quran min-al-Tahrif - Al-Tamhid fi al-'Ulum al-Quran - Talkhis al-Tamhid - Introduction to the Sciences of the Qur'an (English translation of Talkhis al-Tamhid Translated by Salim Rossier, Mansoor Limba; Abridged and introduced by Mohammad Saeed Bahamanpuor - Al-Tafsir wa-al-Mufassirun fi Thawbah al-Qashib (two volumes) - Tafsir al-Athari al-Jami' - Shubahat wa Rudud Hawl al-Quran - Shubahat Wa rudud Hawl al-Quran al-Karim - Quranic Studies - The History of Quran - Teachings on Quranic Studies - Tanasukh al-Arwah - Wilayah al-Faqih; 'Ab'aduha wa Hududuha - Wilayat Faqih (Guardianship of the Islamic Jurist) - Civil Society - Malikiyyah al-'Ardh - Tamhid al-Qawa'id - Hadith la-ta'ad - Hadith man Zada fi Salateh
enwiki/50120063
enwiki
50,120,063
Mohammad-Hadi Ma'refat
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mohammad-Hadi_Ma%27refat
2024-06-03T15:36:58Z
en
Q23779741
31,623
{{Short description|Iranian Ayatollah (1931-2007)}} {{More citations needed|date=April 2016}} '''Mohammad-Hadi Ma'refat''' (1931 in [[Karbala]] – 2007 in [[Qom]]) was a [[Shi'a]] scholar, clergyman, researcher on Quranic studies and interpretation, and the founder and former president of Tamhid Cultural Institute. He is the descendant of Shaykh Abd-al-'Ali Meysi, the author of ''Risalah Meysiyyah''. He was a member of "[[Society of Seminary Teachers of Qom]]" and he held the title of [[Ayatollah]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.jameehmodarresin.org/index.php/azae-jameeh/azae-sabeq/154-marefat/61-2014-02-02-06-35-15 |title=پایگاه اطلاع رسانی جامعه مدرسین حوزه علمیه قم - زندگینامه حضرت آیت الله محمد هادی معرفت(ره) |website=Jameehmodarresin.org |date= |accessdate=2016-04-11 |archive-date=2015-09-21 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150921160806/http://www.jameehmodarresin.org/index.php/azae-jameeh/azae-sabeq/154-marefat/61-2014-02-02-06-35-15 |url-status=dead }}</ref> He had many influential works in the field of Quranic studies such as "''Al-Tamhid fi al-'Ulum al-Quran''", "''Siyanah Al-Quran min-al-Tahrif''", "''Al-Tafsir wa-al-Mufassirun fi Thawbah al-Qashib''", and "''Tafsir al-Athari al-Jami''". He is buried in [[Fatima Masumeh Shrine]] in the city of [[Qom]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://iqna.ir/en/news/1520862/ayatollah-marefat-initiated-a-quranic-research-movement-in-islamic-world|title=Ayatollah Marefat Initiated a Quranic Research Movement in Islamic World|publisher=}}</ref> ==Education== He first attended the [[Islamic seminary]] of [[Karbala]]. He finished advanced courses of Islamic [[jurisprudence]] (Fiqh) and the [[Principles of Islamic jurisprudence]] there. He moved to [[Najaf]] to study the courses of Ayatollah [[Abu al-Qasim al-Khoei]]; then, he moved to "[[Qom Seminary]]". Ma'refat attended the courses of Ayatollah [[Mirza Hashem Amoli]] and then officially started teaching in the Qom Seminary. ==Works== Mohammad-Hadi Ma'refat has many works in the field of interpretation ([[Tafsir]]) and [[Quranic studies]]. Some of his outstanding works are as follows:<ref>{{cite web |author= |url=http://islamicdoc.org/namayeh/manabe-namaye/manabe-marefat.html |title=نمایه آثار علامه معرفت (ره) - مرکز اطلاعات و مدارک اسلامی |website=Islamicdoc.org |date= |accessdate=2016-04-11 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160418231303/http://islamicdoc.org/namayeh/manabe-namaye/manabe-marefat.html |archive-date=2016-04-18 |url-status=dead }}</ref> *''Siyanah Al-Quran min-al-Tahrif'' *''Al-Tamhid fi al-'Ulum al-Quran'' *''Talkhis al-Tamhid'' *''Introduction to the Sciences of the Qur'an'' (English translation of ''Talkhis al-Tamhid'' Translated by Salim Rossier, Mansoor Limba; Abridged and introduced by Mohammad Saeed Bahamanpuor *''Al-[[Tafsir]] wa-al-Mufassirun fi Thawbah al-Qashib'' (two volumes) *''[[Tafsir]]'' ''al-Athari al-Jami''' *''Shubahat wa Rudud Hawl al-Quran'' *''Shubahat Wa rudud Hawl al-Quran al-Karim'' *''Quranic Studies'' *''The History of [[Quran]]'' *''Teachings on Quranic Studies'' *''Tanasukh al-Arwah'' *''Wilayah al-Faqih; 'Ab'aduha wa Hududuha'' *''Wilayat Faqih ([[Guardianship of the Islamic Jurist]])'' *''Civil Society'' *''Malikiyyah al-'Ardh'' *''Tamhid al-Qawa'id'' *''[[Hadith]]'' ''la-ta'ad'' *''[[Hadith]]'' ''man Zada fi Salateh'' ==References== {{Reflist}} {{authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Marefat, Mohammad-Hadi}} [[Category:1931 births]] [[Category:2007 deaths]] [[Category:Iranian Shia clerics]] [[Category:Iranian Shia scholars of Islam]] [[Category:Society of Seminary Teachers of Qom members]] {{Islam-bio-stub}}
1,227,079,473
[]
false
# Lucius Veturius Philo (consul 220 BC) Lucius Veturius Philo (d. 210 BC) was a Roman statesman who served as consul in 220 BC, dictator in 217 BC (during the Second Punic War), and censor (magistrate in charge of the census and other matters) in 210 BC. Irregularities were found in his appointment as dictator and he resigned after fourteen days. He was a member of the gens Veturia. He was the father of another Lucius Veturius Philo, who served as consul in 206 BC (and praetor peregrinus in 209, assigned the province of Gaul). Philo died in 210 BC, while serving as censor, before he had the chance to enter the senate or "transact any public business whatsoever". The other censor, Publius Licinius Crassus, immediately resigned the censorship upon the death of his colleague.
enwiki/39669947
enwiki
39,669,947
Lucius Veturius Philo (consul 220 BC)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucius_Veturius_Philo_(consul_220_BC)
2023-10-11T03:34:04Z
en
Q1439387
28,875
{{Infobox officeholder |name =Lucius Veturius Philo |title=[[Roman Consul|Consul]] of the [[Roman Republic]] |term=220 BC | alongside = [[Marcus Valerius Laevinus]], [[Quintus Mucius Scaevola (praetor 215 BC)|Quintus Mucius Scaevola]] and Quintus Lutatius Catullus | predecessor = [[Publius Cornelius Scipio Asina]] and [[Marcus Minucius Rufus (consul 221 BC)|Marcus Minucius Rufus]] | successor = [[Lucius Aemilius Paullus (consul 219 BC)|Lucius Aemilius Paullus]] and [[Marcus Livius Salinator]] | title2=[[Roman dictator|Dictator]] of the [[Roman Republic]] | term2=217 BC | title3=[[Roman censor|Censor]] of the [[Roman Republic]] | term3=210 BC }} '''Lucius Veturius Philo''' (d. 210 BC) was a [[Roman Republic|Roman]] [[Politician|statesman]] who served as [[Roman Consul|consul]] in 220 BC, [[Roman dictator|dictator]] in 217 BC (during the [[Second Punic War]]), and [[Roman censor|censor]] (magistrate in charge of the census and other matters) in 210 BC. Irregularities were found in his appointment as dictator and he resigned after fourteen days.<ref name="Livy2006">{{cite book|title=[[Ab Urbe Condita Libri]]|author=Livy|author-link=Livy|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=2006|location=Oxford|page=103}}</ref><ref name="Kaplan1977">{{cite book|last=Kaplan|first=Arthur|title=Dictatorships and ultimate decrees in the early Roman Republic, 501-202 B.C.|series=Studies in classical civilization|year=1977|publisher=Revisionist Press|location=New York|isbn=978-0-87700-251-2|page=123}}</ref> He was a member of the ''[[gens Veturia]]''. He was the father of another [[Lucius Veturius Philo (consul 206 BC)|Lucius Veturius Philo]], who served as consul in 206 BC (and praetor peregrinus in 209, assigned the province of Gaul).<ref>Livy, [[s:From the Founding of the City/Book 27#6|27.6]]</ref><ref>Livy, [[s:From the Founding of the City/Book 27#10|27.10]]</ref> Philo died in 210 BC, while serving as censor, before he had the chance to enter the senate or "transact any public business whatsoever". The other censor, Publius Licinius Crassus, immediately resigned the censorship upon the death of his colleague.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Fasti Capitolini (1) - translation|url=http://www.attalus.org/translate/fasti2.html#p62|access-date=2021-04-15|website=www.attalus.org}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Livy|url=https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/From_the_Founding_of_the_City/Book_27|title=From the Founding of the City}}</ref> ==References== {{Reflist}} {{s-start}} {{S-off}} {{s-bef|before=[[Publius Cornelius Scipio Asina]]|before2=[[Marcus Minucius Rufus (consul 221 BC)|Marcus Minucius Rufus]]}} {{s-ttl|title=[[List of Roman Republican consuls|Roman consul]]|years=220 BC|with=[[Gaius Lutatius Catulus (consul 220 BC)|Gaius Lutatius Catulus]]}} {{s-aft|after=[[Lucius Aemilius Paullus (consul 219 BC)|Lucius Aemilius Paullus]]|after2=[[Marcus Livius Salinator]]}} {{s-bef|before=[[Publius Furius Philus]]|before2=[[Marcus Atilius Regulus (consul 227 BC)|Marcus Atilius Regulus]]}} {{s-ttl|title=[[List of censors of the Roman Republic|Roman censor]]|years=210 BC|with=[[Publius Licinius Crassus Dives (censor)|Publius Licinius Crassus Dives]]}} {{s-aft|after=[[Marcus Cornelius Cethegus (censor)|Marcus Cornelius Cethegus]]|after2=[[Publius Sempronius Tuditanus]]}} {{s-end}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Veturius Philo, Lucius consul 534 AUC}} [[Category:Year of birth unknown]] [[Category:Year of death unknown]] [[Category:3rd-century BC Roman consuls]] [[Category:Ancient Roman dictators]] [[Category:Veturii|Philo, Lucius]] [[Category:Ancient Roman censors]] [[Category:Ancient Roman patricians]] [[Category:Roman people of the Second Punic War]]
1,179,589,111
[{"title": "Consul of the Roman Republic", "data": {"Consul of the Roman Republic": "In office \u00b7 220 BC", "Preceded by": "Publius Cornelius Scipio Asina and Marcus Minucius Rufus", "Succeeded by": "Lucius Aemilius Paullus and Marcus Livius Salinator"}}, {"title": "Dictator of the Roman Republic", "data": {"Dictator of the Roman Republic": "In office \u00b7 217 BC"}}, {"title": "Censor of the Roman Republic", "data": {"Censor of the Roman Republic": "In office \u00b7 210 BC"}}]
false
# Nacharovo Nacharovo (Russian: Начарово; Bashkir: Нажар, Najar) is a rural locality (a village) in Nizhnekaryshevsky Selsoviet, Baltachevsky District, Bashkortostan, Russia. The population was 268 as of 2010. There are 7 streets. ## Geography Nacharovo is located 30 km south of Starobaltachevo (the district's administrative centre) by road. Zilyazekulevo is the nearest rural locality.
enwiki/60980130
enwiki
60,980,130
Nacharovo
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nacharovo
2024-11-06T12:43:55Z
en
Q1054255
49,993
{{Infobox settlement |official_name = Nacharovo |other_name = |native_name = Начарово |native_name_lang = ru |nickname = |settlement_type = Village |image_skyline = |image_caption = |pushpin_map = Russia Bashkortostan#Russia |pushpin_label_position = |pushpin_mapsize = |pushpin_map_caption = |subdivision_type = Country |subdivision_name = [[Russia]] |subdivision_type1 = [[List of regions of Russia|Region]] |subdivision_name1 = [[Bashkortostan]] |subdivision_type2 = [[Counties of Russia|County]] |subdivision_name2 = |subdivision_type3 = [[Districts of Russia|District]] |subdivision_name3 = [[Baltachevsky District]] |subdivision_type4 = [[List of municipalities of Russia|Municipality]] |subdivision_name4 = | population_as_of = | population_footnotes = | population_total = |timezone1 = |utc_offset1 = +5:00 |timezone1_DST = |utc_offset1_DST = |postal_code_type = |postal_code = |elevation_m = |elevation_footnotes = |coordinates = {{coord|55|48|N|55|54|E|display=inline}}<ref>[https://mapdata.ru/bashkortostan/baltachevskiy-rayon/ Карта Балтачевского района Башкортостана]</ref> }} '''Nacharovo''' ({{langx|ru|links=no|Начарово}}; {{langx|ba|Нажар}}, ''Najar'') is a [[types of inhabited localities in Russia|rural locality]] (a [[Village#Russia|village]]) in Nizhnekaryshevsky Selsoviet, [[Baltachevsky District]], [[Bashkortostan]], Russia. The population was 268 as of 2010.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://bashstat.gks.ru/wps/wcm/connect/rosstat_ts/bashstat/resources/2f055a804e303140ba45fe3bf8d20d64/%D0%A7%D0%B8%D1%81%D0%BB%D0%B5%D0%BD%D0%BD%D0%BE%D1%81%D1%82%D1%8C+%D0%BD%D0%B0%D1%81%D0%B5%D0%BB%D0%B5%D0%BD%D0%B8%D1%8F+%D0%BF%D0%BE+%D0%BD%D0%B0%D1%81%D0%B5%D0%BB%D0%B5%D0%BD%D0%BD%D1%8B%D0%BC+%D0%BF%D1%83%D0%BD%D0%BA%D1%82%D0%B0%D0%BC+%D0%A0%D0%B5%D1%81%D0%BF%D1%83%D0%B1%D0%BB%D0%B8%D0%BA%D0%B8+%D0%91%D0%B0%D1%88%D0%BA%D0%BE%D1%80%D1%82%D0%BE%D1%81%D1%82%D0%B0%D0%BD.pdf |title=Всероссийская перепись населения 2010 года. Численность населения по населённым пунктам Республики Башкортостан |access-date=2019-06-07 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190517104742/http://bashstat.gks.ru/wps/wcm/connect/rosstat_ts/bashstat/resources/2f055a804e303140ba45fe3bf8d20d64/%D0%A7%D0%B8%D1%81%D0%BB%D0%B5%D0%BD%D0%BD%D0%BE%D1%81%D1%82%D1%8C+%D0%BD%D0%B0%D1%81%D0%B5%D0%BB%D0%B5%D0%BD%D0%B8%D1%8F+%D0%BF%D0%BE+%D0%BD%D0%B0%D1%81%D0%B5%D0%BB%D0%B5%D0%BD%D0%BD%D1%8B%D0%BC+%D0%BF%D1%83%D0%BD%D0%BA%D1%82%D0%B0%D0%BC+%D0%A0%D0%B5%D1%81%D0%BF%D1%83%D0%B1%D0%BB%D0%B8%D0%BA%D0%B8+%D0%91%D0%B0%D1%88%D0%BA%D0%BE%D1%80%D1%82%D0%BE%D1%81%D1%82%D0%B0%D0%BD.pdf |archive-date=2019-05-17 |url-status=dead }}</ref> There are 7 streets. == Geography == Nacharovo is located 30 km south of [[Starobaltachevo, Baltachevsky District, Republic of Bashkortostan|Starobaltachevo]] (the district's administrative centre) by road. Zilyazekulevo is the nearest rural locality.<ref>[http://allroutes.ru/rasstoyanie_nacharovo_starobaltachevo Расстояние от Начарова до Старобалтачева]</ref> == References == {{reflist}} {{Rural localities in Baltachevsky District}} {{Authority control}} [[Category:Rural localities in Baltachevsky District]] {{Baltachevsky-geo-stub}}
1,255,745,084
[{"title": "Nacharovo \u041d\u0430\u0447\u0430\u0440\u043e\u0432\u043e", "data": {"Country": "Russia", "Region": "Bashkortostan", "District": "Baltachevsky District", "Time zone": "UTC+5:00"}}]
false
# Love (1952 film) Love (Swedish: Kärlek) is a 1952 Swedish drama film directed by Gustaf Molander and starring Sven Lindberg, Doris Svedlund and Victor Sjöström. It was shot at the Råsunda Studios in Stockholm. The film's sets were designed by the art director Nils Svenwall. ## Cast - Sven Lindberg as Einar Brandt, priest - Doris Svedlund as Inga Tomasson - Erik Strandmark as Anton Tomasson - Victor Sjöström as Bishop - Anders Henrikson as Sylvester Andreasson - Hugo Björne as Andersson, parish clerk - Gunnel Lindblom as Rebecka Andersson - Kolbjörn Knudsen as Brandéus, dean - Jarl Kulle as Wilhelm Andreasson - Märta Dorff as Selma Danielsson - Torsten Lilliecrona as Johan Johansson - Jan Molander as Sofus, fisherman - Axel Högel as Simon, fisherman - Josua Bengtson as Fisherman - Wiktor Andersson as Shoemaker - Emmy Albiin as Hanna - Anders Andelius as Emrik Danielsson, Selma's son - Mats Björne as Member of boat's crew - Elsa Ebbesen as Ms. Mattsson - Mona Geijer-Falkner as Malin - Karin Högel as Woman at accident site - Börje Mellvig as Dr. Holm - Björn Montin as Olle, a boy in church - Björn Näslund as Rolf, member of the trawler's crew - Gösta Qvist as Man at accident site - Walter Sarmell as Member of the trawler's crew ## Bibliography - Qvist, Per Olov & von Bagh, Peter. Guide to the Cinema of Sweden and Finland. Greenwood Publishing Group, 2000.
enwiki/71514757
enwiki
71,514,757
Love (1952 film)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Love_(1952_film)
2024-12-22T01:32:18Z
en
Q10551775
40,719
{{Short description|1952 film}} {{Infobox film | name = Love | image = File:Love (1952 film).jpg | caption = | director = [[Gustaf Molander]] | producer = [[Allan Ekelund]] | based_on = {{based on|''Kærlighed''<br>1926 play|[[Kaj Munk]]}} | writer = [[Rune Lindström (screenwriter)|Rune Lindström]] <br> Gustaf Molander | starring = [[Sven Lindberg]] <br> [[Doris Svedlund]] <br> [[Victor Sjöström]] | music = [[Lars-Erik Larsson]] | cinematography = [[Åke Dahlqvist]] | editing = [[Gösta Lewin]] | studio = [[Svensk Filmindustri]] | distributor = Svensk Filmindustri | released = {{Film date|1952|12|22|df=yes}} | runtime = 106 minutes | country = Sweden | language = [[Swedish language|Swedish]] | budget = | gross = }} '''''Love''''' (Swedish: '''''Kärlek''''') is a 1952 Swedish [[drama film]] directed by [[Gustaf Molander]] and starring [[Sven Lindberg]], [[Doris Svedlund]] and [[Victor Sjöström]].<ref>Qvist & Von Bagh p.115</ref> It was shot at the [[Råsunda Studios]] in [[Stockholm]]. The film's sets were designed by the [[art director]] [[Nils Svenwall]]. ==Plot== {{no plot|date= May 2024}} ==Cast== * [[Sven Lindberg]] as Einar Brandt, priest * [[Doris Svedlund]] as Inga Tomasson * [[Erik Strandmark]] as Anton Tomasson * [[Victor Sjöström]] as Bishop * [[Anders Henrikson]] as Sylvester Andreasson * [[Hugo Björne]] as Andersson, parish clerk * [[Gunnel Lindblom]] as Rebecka Andersson * [[Kolbjörn Knudsen]] as Brandéus, dean * [[Jarl Kulle]] as Wilhelm Andreasson * [[Märta Dorff]] as Selma Danielsson * [[Torsten Lilliecrona]] as Johan Johansson * [[Jan Molander]] as Sofus, fisherman * [[Axel Högel]] as Simon, fisherman * [[Josua Bengtson]] as Fisherman * [[Wiktor Andersson]] as Shoemaker * [[Emmy Albiin]] as Hanna * [[Anders Andelius]] as Emrik Danielsson, Selma's son * [[Mats Björne]] as Member of boat's crew * [[Elsa Ebbesen]] as Ms. Mattsson * [[Mona Geijer-Falkner]] as Malin * [[Karin Högel]] as Woman at accident site * [[Börje Mellvig]] as Dr. Holm * [[Björn Montin]] as Olle, a boy in church * [[Björn Näslund]] as Rolf, member of the trawler's crew * [[Gösta Qvist]] as Man at accident site * [[Walter Sarmell]] as Member of the trawler's crew == References == {{Reflist}} == Bibliography == * Qvist, Per Olov & von Bagh, Peter. ''Guide to the Cinema of Sweden and Finland''. Greenwood Publishing Group, 2000. == External links == * {{IMDb title|0044813}} {{Gustaf Molander}} [[Category:1952 films]] [[Category:Swedish drama films]] [[Category:1952 drama films]] [[Category:1950s Swedish-language films]] [[Category:Films directed by Gustaf Molander]] [[Category:Swedish black-and-white films]] [[Category:1950s Swedish films]] [[Category:Films scored by Lars-Erik Larsson]] {{1950s-Sweden-film-stub}}
1,264,449,687
[{"title": "Love", "data": {"Directed by": "Gustaf Molander", "Written by": "Rune Lindstr\u00f6m \u00b7 Gustaf Molander", "Based on": "K\u00e6rlighed \u00b7 1926 play \u00b7 by Kaj Munk", "Produced by": "Allan Ekelund", "Starring": "Sven Lindberg \u00b7 Doris Svedlund \u00b7 Victor Sj\u00f6str\u00f6m", "Cinematography": "\u00c5ke Dahlqvist", "Edited by": "G\u00f6sta Lewin", "Music by": "Lars-Erik Larsson", "Production \u00b7 company": "Svensk Filmindustri", "Distributed by": "Svensk Filmindustri", "Release date": "- 22 December 1952", "Running time": "106 minutes", "Country": "Sweden", "Language": "Swedish"}}]
false
# List of places historically in Lancashire This is a list of places within the historic county of Lancashire, England. It lists places within geographical Lancashire, rather than the 1974 creation of administrative/ceremonial Lancashire. See List of places in Lancashire for places within the ceremonial county. ## A - Abbey Village - Abbeystead - Abram - Accrington - Acre - Adlington - Ainsdale - Aintree - Aldcliffe - Aldingham - Allerton - Allithwaite - Altham - Ancoats - Anderton - Anglezarke - Appley Bridge - Arkholme - Ashton-in-Makerfield - Ashton-under-Lyne - Askam and Ireleth - Aspden - Aspull - Astley - Atherton - Audenshaw - Aughton ## B - Bacup - Backbarrow - Balderstone - Bamber Bridge - Banks - Bardsea - Barley - Barrow-in-Furness - Barrow Nook - Barrowford - Barton (Preston) - Barton (West Lancashire) - Barton-upon-Irwell - Baxenden - Belmont - Belthorn - Beswick - Bickerstaffe - Biggar - Billinge - Billington - Birchwood - Birkdale - Bispham - Bispham Green - Blackamoor - Blackley - Blacko - Blackrod - Blackburn - Blackpool - Bleasdale - Blundellsands - Bold - Bold Heath - Bolton - Bolton-le-Sands - Bootle - Borwick - Bretherton - Brierfield - Brindle - Brinscall - Brockhall - Broughton-in-Amounderness - Broughton-in-Furness - Burnley - Burscough - Bury - Burtonwood ## C - Cadishead - Calder Vale - Cantsfield - Cark - Carnforth - Cartmel - Castlefield - Catforth - Caton - Chadderton - Chapeltown - Charnock Richard - Chatburn - Childwall - Chipping - Chingle Hall - Chorley - Chorlton-cum-Hardy - Chowbent - Church - Churchtown (Garstang) - Churchtown (Southport) - Claughton-on-Brock - Claughton (Lancaster) - Clayton-le-Dale - Clayton-le-Moors - Clayton-le-Woods - Clayton Brook - Cleveleys - Clifton (Fylde) - Clifton (Salford) - Clitheroe - Cliviger - Clowbridge - Cockerham - Collyhurst - Colne - Conder Green - Coniston - Coppull - Copster Green - Corner Row - Cottam - Cottontree - Coupe Green - Cowan Bridge - Crawshawbooth - Croft - Cronton - Crosby - Crossens - Croston - Croxteth - Cuerden - Culcheth ## D - Dalton - Dalton-in-Furness - Darwen - Davyhulme - Dendron - Denton - Didsbury - Dinckley - Ditton - Dolphinholme - Downholland Cross - Droylsden ## E - Earlestown - Eccles - Eccleston (Chorley) - Eccleston (St Helens) - Edenfield - Edgworth - Ellel - Elswick - Esprick - Euxton ## F - Facit - Failsworth - Fallowfield - Farington - Farleton - Farnworth - Far Sawrey - Feniscowles - Fleetwood - Flixton - Flookburgh - Ford - Formby - Forton - Foulridge - Foxfield - Freshfield - Freckleton - Fulwood ## G - Galgate - Garston - Garstang - Garswood - Glasson Dock - Glazebury - Glazebrook - Gleaston - Golborne - Goosnargh - Grange over Sands - Great Altcar - Great Eccleston - Great Harwood - Great Sankey - Greenhalgh - Greenodd - Gregson Lane - Gressingham - Grimsargh ## H - Haggate - Haigh - Hale - Halewood - Halsall - Halton - Hambleton - Haskayne - Haslingden - Haverthwaite - Hawkshead - Haydock - Heapey - Heath Charnock - Heaton Chapel - Heaton Mersey - Heaton Moor - Heaton Norris - Helmshore - Hesketh Bank - Hest Bank - Heyrod - Heysham - Heywood - Higham - Higher Walton - Higher Wheelton - Hightown - Hindley - Hoddlesden - Hoghton - Hollins Green - Holmeswood - Hornby - Horwich - Hough Green - Howick Cross - Hulme - Huncoat - Hundred End - Hunt's Cross - Hutton - Huyton ## I - Ince Blundell - Ince-in-Makerfield - Inglewhite - Ingol - Inskip - Irlam ## K - Kearsley - Kenyon - Kirkby - Kirkby-in-Furness - Kirkham - Knott End-on-Sea - Knowsley ## L - Lancaster - Laneshaw Bridge - Langho - Larbreck - Lathom - Lea - Lea Town - Leece - Lees - Leigh - Levenshulme - Leyland - Lindal-in-Furness - Litherland - Little Altcar - Little Crosby - Little Eccleston - Little Harwood - Little Lever - Littleborough - Liverpool - Longridge - Longton - Lostock Hall - Lower Darwen - Lowton - Lunt - Lydiate - Lytham ## M - Maghull - Manchester - Marshside - Mawdesley - Melling (Lancaster) - Melling (West Derby) - Mellor - Mellor Brook - Mere Brow - Middleton (Rochdale) - Middleton (Morecambe) - Midge Hall - Miles Platting - Milnrow - Morecambe - Moss Side (Leyland) - Moss Side (Manchester) - Moss Side (Fylde) - Mossley - Much Hoole - Myerscough ## N - Near Sawrey - Nelson - Nether Burrow - Nether Kellet - Netherton - Newbiggin - Newburgh - Newby Bridge - Newchurch (Rossendale) - Newchurch in Pendle - Newton Heath - Newton-in-Furness - Newton-le-Willows - Newton-with-Scales ## O - Oakenshaw - Oldham - Old Trafford - Ormskirk - Orrell (Wigan) - Orrell (Bootle) - Osbaldeston - Oswaldtwistle - Over Kellet - Overton - Overtown - Over Wyre ## P - Padiham - Parbold - Pemberton - Pendlebury - Pendleton - Penketh - Penwortham - Pickup Bank - Pilling - Pleasington - Poulton-le-Fylde - Preesall - Prescot - Preston - Prestwich - Priest Hutton ## Q - Quernmore ## R - Radcliffe - Rainford - Rainhill - Rampside - Ramsbottom - Ramsgreave - Rawtenstall - Read - Reddish - Ribbleton - Ribchester - Riley Green - Rishton - Risley - Rivington - Roby - Roby Mill - Rochdale - Rossendale - Royton - Rufford - Rusholme ## S - Sabden - St Annes - St Helens - Salesbury - Salford - Salwick - Samlesbury - Satterthwaite - Scales - Scarisbrick - Scorton - Seaforth - Sefton - Shaw and Crompton - Shawforth - Shevington - Shirdley Hill - Silverdale - Simonswood - Singleton - Skelmersdale - Slyne - Sollom - South Turton - Southport - Speke - Squires Gate - Staining - Standish - Staveley-in-Cartmel - Stockbridge Village - Stretford - Stubbins - Sunderland Point - Swarthmoor - Swinton ## T - Tarbock - Tarleton - Tatham - Tewitfield - Thistleton - Thornton (Amounderness) - Thornton (West Derby) - Thurnham - Tockholes - Todmorden - Torver - Tottington - Tottleworth - Trawden - Tunstall - Tyldesley ## U - Ulnes Walton - Ulverston - Upholland - Urmston - Urswick ## W - Waddicar - Walney Island - Walton-le-Dale - Wardle - Warrington - Warton (Fylde) - Warton (Lancaster) - Waterfoot - Waterloo - Wavertree - Weeton - Wesham - Westhoughton - Wennington - Whalley - Whalley Range (Blackburn) - Whalley Range (Manchester) - Wheelton - Whiston - Whitefield - Whitechapel - White Coppice - Whitestake - Whittington - Whittle-le-Woods - Whitworth - Widnes - Wigan - Wilpshire - Windle - Winewall - Winmarleigh - Winwick - Wiswell - Withington - Withnell - Withnell Fold - Woodplumpton - Woolston - Woolton - Worsley - Worsthorne - Worthington - Wray - Wrea Green - Wrightington ## Y - Yealand Conyers - Yealand Redmayne - Yealand Storrs
enwiki/35216825
enwiki
35,216,825
List of places historically in Lancashire
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_places_historically_in_Lancashire
2024-10-25T21:42:34Z
en
Q6633507
78,266
{{Short description|none}} {{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}} This is a '''list of places within the [[historic counties of England|historic county]] of [[Lancashire]]''', England. It lists places within geographical Lancashire, rather than the 1974 creation of administrative/ceremonial Lancashire. See [[List of places in Lancashire]] for places within the ceremonial county.[[File:Historical and current boundaries of Lancashire.png|thumb|The boundaries of the historic county (red) compared to the ceremonial county (green)]][[File:Map of Historic Lancashire.jpg|thumb|The historic county of Lancashire|none]]{{compact ToC|side=yes|top=yes|center=Yes}} __NOTOC__ ==A== {{flatlist|*[[Abbey Village]] *[[Abbeystead]] *[[Abram, Greater Manchester|Abram]] *[[Accrington]] *[[Acre, Lancashire|Acre]] *[[Adlington, Lancashire|Adlington]] *[[Ainsdale]] *[[Aintree]] *[[Aldcliffe]] *[[Aldingham]] *[[Allerton,_Liverpool|Allerton]] *[[Allithwaite]] *[[Altham, Lancashire|Altham]] *[[Ancoats]] *[[Anderton, Lancashire|Anderton]] *[[Anglezarke]] *[[Appley Bridge]] *[[Arkholme]] *[[Ashton-in-Makerfield]] *[[Ashton-under-Lyne]] *[[Askam and Ireleth]] *[[Aspden]] *[[Aspull]] *[[Astley, Greater Manchester|Astley]] *[[Atherton, Greater Manchester|Atherton]] *[[Audenshaw]] *[[Aughton, Lancashire|Aughton]]}} ==B== {{flatlist|*[[Bacup, Lancashire|Bacup]] *[[Backbarrow]] *[[Balderstone, Lancashire|Balderstone]] *[[Bamber Bridge]] *[[Banks, Lancashire|Banks]] *[[Bardsea]] *[[Barley, Lancashire|Barley]] *[[Barrow-in-Furness]] *[[Barrow Nook]] *[[Barrowford]] *[[Barton, Preston|Barton]] {{small|(Preston)}} *[[Barton, West Lancashire|Barton]] {{small|(West Lancashire)}} *[[Barton-upon-Irwell]] *[[Baxenden]] *[[Belmont, Lancashire|Belmont]] *[[Belthorn]] *[[Beswick, Greater Manchester|Beswick]] *[[Bickerstaffe]] *[[Biggar, Cumbria|Biggar]] *[[Billinge, Merseyside|Billinge]] *[[Billington, Lancashire|Billington]] *[[Birchwood, Cheshire|Birchwood]] *[[Birkdale, Southport|Birkdale]] *[[Bispham, Blackpool|Bispham]] *[[Bispham Green]] *[[Blackamoor, Lancashire|Blackamoor]] *[[Blackley]] *[[Blacko]] *[[Blackrod]] *[[Blackburn]] *[[Blackpool]] *[[Bleasdale]] *[[Blundellsands]] *[[Bold,_St_Helens|Bold]] *[[Bold Heath]] *[[Bolton]] *[[Bolton-le-Sands]] *[[Bootle]] *[[Borwick]] *[[Bretherton]] *[[Brierfield, Lancashire|Brierfield]] *[[Brindle, Lancashire|Brindle]] *[[Brinscall]] *[[Brockhall, Lancashire|Brockhall]] *[[Broughton, Lancashire|Broughton-in-Amounderness]] *[[Broughton-in-Furness]] *[[Burnley]] *[[Burscough]] *[[Bury, Greater Manchester|Bury]] *[[Burtonwood]]}} ==C== {{flatlist|*[[Cadishead]] *[[Calder Vale]] *[[Cantsfield]] *[[Cark]] *[[Carnforth]] *[[Cartmel]] *[[Castlefield]] *[[Catforth]] *[[Caton, Lancashire|Caton]] *[[Chadderton]] *[[Chapeltown, Lancashire|Chapeltown]] *[[Charnock Richard]] *[[Chatburn]] *[[Childwall]] *[[Chipping, Lancashire|Chipping]] *[[Chingle Hall]] *[[Chorley]] *[[Chorlton-cum-Hardy]] *[[Chowbent]] *[[Church, Lancashire|Church]] *[[Churchtown, Lancashire|Churchtown]] {{small|(Garstang)}} *[[Churchtown, Merseyside|Churchtown]] {{small|(Southport)}} *[[Claughton-on-Brock]] *[[Claughton, Lancaster|Claughton]] {{small|(Lancaster)}} *[[Clayton-le-Dale]] *[[Clayton-le-Moors]] *[[Clayton-le-Woods]] *[[Clayton Brook]] *[[Cleveleys]] *[[Clifton, Lancashire|Clifton]] {{small|(Fylde)}} *[[Clifton, Greater Manchester|Clifton]] {{small|(Salford)}} *[[Clitheroe]] *[[Cliviger]] *[[Clowbridge]] *[[Cockerham]] *[[Collyhurst]] *[[Colne]] *[[Conder Green]] *[[Coniston, Cumbria|Coniston]] *[[Coppull]] *[[Copster Green]] *[[Corner Row]] *[[Cottam, Lancashire|Cottam]] *[[Cottontree]] *[[Coupe Green]] *[[Cowan Bridge]] *[[Crawshawbooth]] *[[Croft, Cheshire|Croft]] *[[Cronton]] *[[Crosby, Merseyside|Crosby]] *[[Crossens]] *[[Croston]] *[[Croxteth]] *[[Cuerden]] *[[Culcheth]]}} ==D== {{flatlist|*[[Dalton, Lancashire|Dalton]] *[[Dalton-in-Furness]] *[[Darwen]] *[[Davyhulme]] *[[Dendron, Cumbria|Dendron]] *[[Denton, Greater Manchester|Denton]] *[[Didsbury]] *[[Dinckley]] *[[Ditton,_Cheshire|Ditton]] *[[Dolphinholme]] *[[Downholland Cross]] *[[Droylsden]]}} ==E== {{flatlist|*[[Earlestown]] *[[Eccles, Greater Manchester|Eccles]] *[[Eccleston, Lancashire|Eccleston]] {{small|(Chorley)}} *[[Eccleston, St Helens|Eccleston]] {{small|(St Helens)}} *[[Edenfield]] *[[Edgworth]] *[[Ellel,_Lancashire|Ellel]] *[[Elswick, Lancashire|Elswick]] *[[Esprick]] *[[Euxton]]}} ==F== {{flatlist|*[[Facit, Lancashire|Facit]] *[[Failsworth]] *[[Fallowfield]] *[[Farington]] *[[Farleton, Lancashire|Farleton]] *[[Farnworth]] *[[Near_and_Far Sawrey|Far Sawrey]] *[[Feniscowles]] *[[Fleetwood]] *[[Flixton,_Greater_Manchester|Flixton]] *[[Flookburgh]] *[[Ford, Merseyside|Ford]] *[[Formby]] *[[Forton,_Lancashire|Forton]] *[[Foulridge]] *[[Foxfield, Cumbria|Foxfield]] *[[Freshfield]] *[[Freckleton]] *[[Fulwood, Lancashire|Fulwood]]}} ==G== {{flatlist|*[[Galgate]] *[[Garston,_Liverpool|Garston]] *[[Garstang]] *[[Garswood]] *[[Glasson Dock]] *[[Culcheth_and_Glazebury|Glazebury]] *[[Rixton-with-Glazebrook|Glazebrook]] *[[Gleaston]] *[[Golborne]] *[[Goosnargh]] *[[Grange over Sands]] *[[Great Altcar]] *[[Great Eccleston]] *[[Great Harwood]] *[[Great Sankey]] *[[Greenhalgh, Lancashire|Greenhalgh]] *[[Greenodd]] *[[Gregson Lane]] *[[Gressingham]] *[[Grimsargh]]}} ==H== {{flatlist|*[[Haggate]] *[[Haigh, Greater Manchester|Haigh]] *[[Hale,_Halton|Hale]] *[[Halewood]] *[[Halsall]] *[[Halton, Lancashire|Halton]] *[[Hambleton, Lancashire|Hambleton]] *[[Haskayne]] *[[Haslingden]] *[[Haverthwaite]] *[[Hawkshead]] *[[Haydock]] *[[Heapey]] *[[Heath Charnock]] *[[Heaton Chapel]] *[[Heaton Mersey]] *[[Heaton Moor]] *[[Heaton Norris]] *[[Helmshore]] *[[Hesketh Bank]] *[[Hest Bank]] *[[Heyrod]] *[[Heysham]] *[[Heywood, Greater Manchester|Heywood]] *[[Higham, Lancashire|Higham]] *[[Higher Walton, Lancashire|Higher Walton]] *[[Higher Wheelton]] *[[Hightown, Merseyside|Hightown]] *[[Hindley, Greater Manchester|Hindley]] *[[Hoddlesden]] *[[Hoghton]] *[[Hollins Green]] *[[Holmeswood]] *[[Hornby, Lancashire|Hornby]] *[[Horwich]] *[[Hough Green]] *[[Howick Cross]] *[[Hulme]] *[[Huncoat]] *[[Hundred End]] *[[Hunt's Cross]] *[[Hutton, Lancashire|Hutton]] *[[Huyton]]}} ==I== {{flatlist| *[[Ince Blundell]] *[[Ince-in-Makerfield]] *[[Inglewhite]] *[[Ingol]] *[[Inskip, Lancashire|Inskip]] *[[Irlam]] }} ==K== {{flatlist|*[[Kearsley]] *[[Kenyon, Cheshire|Kenyon]] *[[Kirkby, Merseyside|Kirkby]] *[[Kirkby-in-Furness]] *[[Kirkham, Lancashire|Kirkham]] *[[Knott End-on-Sea]] *[[Knowsley,_Merseyside|Knowsley]]}} ==L== {{flatlist| *[[Lancaster, England|Lancaster]] *[[Laneshaw Bridge]] *[[Langho]] *[[Larbreck]] *[[Lathom]] *[[Lea, Lancashire|Lea]] *[[Lea Town]] *[[Leece]] *[[Lees, Greater Manchester|Lees]] *[[Leigh, Greater Manchester|Leigh]] *[[Levenshulme]] *[[Leyland, Lancashire|Leyland]] *[[Lindal-in-Furness]] *[[Litherland]] *[[Little Altcar]] *[[Little Crosby]] *[[Little Eccleston]] *[[Little Harwood]] *[[Little Lever]] *[[Littleborough, Greater Manchester|Littleborough]] *[[Liverpool]] *[[Longridge]] *[[Longton, Lancashire|Longton]] *[[Lostock Hall]] *[[Lower Darwen]] *[[Lowton]] *[[Lunt]] *[[Lydiate]] *[[Lytham St Annes|Lytham]] }} ==M== {{flatlist| *[[Maghull]] *[[Manchester]] *[[Marshside, Merseyside|Marshside]] *[[Mawdesley]] *[[Melling, Lancashire|Melling]] {{small|(Lancaster)}} *[[Melling, Merseyside|Melling]] {{small|(West Derby)}} *[[Mellor, Lancashire|Mellor]] *[[Mellor Brook]] *[[Mere Brow]] *[[Middleton, Greater Manchester|Middleton]] {{small|(Rochdale)}} *[[Middleton, Lancashire|Middleton]] {{small|(Morecambe)}} *[[Midge Hall]] *[[Miles Platting]] *[[Milnrow]] *[[Morecambe]] *[[Moss Side, South Ribble|Moss Side]] {{small|(Leyland)}} *[[Moss Side]] {{small|(Manchester)}} *[[Moss Side, Fylde|Moss Side]] {{small|(Fylde)}} *[[Mossley]] *[[Much Hoole]] *[[Myerscough, Lancashire|Myerscough]] }} ==N== {{flatlist|*[[Near_and_Far_Sawrey|Near Sawrey]] *[[Nelson, Lancashire|Nelson]] *[[Nether Burrow]] *[[Nether Kellet]] *[[Netherton, Merseyside|Netherton]] *[[Newbiggin, Furness|Newbiggin]] *[[Newburgh,_Lancashire|Newburgh]] *[[Newby Bridge]] *[[Newchurch, Lancashire|Newchurch]] {{small|(Rossendale)}} *[[Newchurch in Pendle]] *[[Newton Heath]] *[[Newton-in-Furness]] *[[Newton-le-Willows]] *[[Newton-with-Scales]]}} ==O== {{flatlist|*[[Oakenshaw, Lancashire|Oakenshaw]] *[[Oldham]] *[[Old_Trafford_(area)|Old Trafford]] *[[Ormskirk]] *[[Orrell, Greater Manchester|Orrell]] {{small|(Wigan)}} *[[Orrell, Merseyside|Orrell]] {{small|(Bootle)}} *[[Osbaldeston]] *[[Oswaldtwistle]] *[[Over Kellet]] *[[Overton, Lancashire|Overton]] *[[Overtown, Lancashire|Overtown]] *[[Over Wyre]]}} ==P== {{flatlist|*[[Padiham]] *[[Parbold]] *[[Pemberton, Greater Manchester|Pemberton]] *[[Pendlebury]] *[[Pendleton, Lancashire|Pendleton]] *[[Penketh]] *[[Penwortham]] *[[Pickup Bank]] *[[Pilling]] *[[Pleasington]] *[[Poulton-le-Fylde]] *[[Preesall]] *[[Prescot]] *[[Preston, Lancashire|Preston]] *[[Prestwich]] *[[Priest Hutton]]}} ==Q== {{flatlist| *[[Quernmore]] }} ==R== {{flatlist|*[[Radcliffe, Greater Manchester|Radcliffe]] *[[Rainford]] *[[Rainhill]] *[[Rampside]] *[[Ramsbottom]] *[[Ramsgreave]] *[[Rawtenstall]] *[[Read, Lancashire|Read]] *[[Reddish]] *[[Ribbleton]] *[[Ribchester]] *[[Riley Green (hamlet)|Riley Green]] *[[Rishton]] *[[Risley,_Warrington|Risley]] *[[Rivington]] *[[Roby, Merseyside|Roby]] *[[Roby Mill]] *[[Rochdale]] *[[Rossendale Valley|Rossendale]] *[[Royton]] *[[Rufford, Lancashire|Rufford]] *[[Rusholme]]}} ==S== {{flatlist|*[[Sabden]] *[[Lytham St Annes|St Annes]] *[[St Helens, Merseyside|St Helens]] *[[Salesbury]] *[[City of Salford|Salford]] *[[Salwick]] *[[Samlesbury]] *[[Satterthwaite]] *[[Scales, South Lakeland|Scales]] *[[Scarisbrick]] *[[Scorton, Lancashire|Scorton]] *[[Seaforth, Merseyside|Seaforth]] *[[Sefton, Merseyside|Sefton]] *[[Shaw and Crompton]] *[[Shawforth]] *[[Shevington]] *[[Shirdley Hill]] *[[Silverdale, Lancashire|Silverdale]] *[[Simonswood]] *[[Singleton, Lancashire|Singleton]] *[[Skelmersdale]] *[[Slyne]] *[[Sollom]] *[[South Turton]] *[[Southport]] *[[Speke]] *[[Squires Gate, Blackpool|Squires Gate]] *[[Staining, Lancashire|Staining]] *[[Standish, Greater Manchester|Standish]] *[[Staveley-in-Cartmel]] *[[Stockbridge Village]] *[[Stretford]] *[[Stubbins]] *[[Sunderland Point]] *[[Swarthmoor]] *[[Swinton, Greater Manchester|Swinton]]}} ==T== {{flatlist| *[[Tarbock]] *[[Tarleton]] *[[Tatham, Lancashire|Tatham]] *[[Tewitfield]] *[[Thistleton, Lancashire|Thistleton]] *[[Thornton, Lancashire|Thornton]] {{small|(Amounderness)}} *[[Thornton, Merseyside|Thornton]] {{small|(West Derby)}} *[[Thurnham, Lancashire|Thurnham]] *[[Tockholes]] *[[Todmorden]] *[[Torver]] *[[Tottington, Greater Manchester|Tottington]] *[[Tottleworth]] *[[Trawden]] *[[Tunstall, Lancashire|Tunstall]] *[[Tyldesley]] }} ==U== {{flatlist| *[[Ulnes Walton]] *[[Ulverston]] *[[Upholland]] *[[Urmston]] *[[Urswick]] }} ==W== {{flatlist|*[[Waddicar]] *[[Walney Island]] *[[Walton-le-Dale]] *[[Wardle, Greater Manchester|Wardle]] *[[Warrington]] *[[Warton, Fylde|Warton]] {{small|(Fylde)}} *[[Warton, Lancaster|Warton]] {{small|(Lancaster)}} *[[Waterfoot, Rossendale|Waterfoot]] *[[Waterloo, Merseyside|Waterloo]] *[[Wavertree]] *[[Weeton, Lancashire|Weeton]] *[[Wesham]] *[[Westhoughton]] *[[Wennington, Lancashire|Wennington]] *[[Whalley, Lancashire|Whalley]] *[[Whalley Range, Blackburn|Whalley Range]] {{small|(Blackburn)}} *[[Whalley Range, Manchester|Whalley Range]] {{small|(Manchester)}} *[[Wheelton]] *[[Whiston, Merseyside|Whiston]] *[[Whitefield, Greater Manchester|Whitefield]] *[[Whitechapel, Lancashire|Whitechapel]] *[[White Coppice]] *[[Whitestake]] *[[Whittington, Lancashire|Whittington]] *[[Whittle-le-Woods]] *[[Whitworth, Lancashire|Whitworth]] *[[Widnes]] *[[Wigan]] *[[Wilpshire]] *[[Windle,_St_Helens|Windle]] *[[Winewall]] *[[Winmarleigh]] *[[Winwick, Cheshire|Winwick]] *[[Wiswell]] *[[Withington]] *[[Withnell]] *[[Withnell Fold]] *[[Woodplumpton]] *[[Woolston,_Cheshire|Woolston]] *[[Woolton]] *[[Worsley]] *[[Worsthorne]] *[[Worthington, Greater Manchester|Worthington]] *[[Wray, Lancashire|Wray]] *[[Wrea Green]] *[[Wrightington]]}} ==Y== {{flatlist| *[[Yealand Conyers]] *[[Yealand Redmayne]] *[[Yealand Storrs]] }} [[Category:History of Lancashire]] [[Category:Lists of places in former English counties|Lancashire]] [[Category:Lancashire-related lists|Places Historically]]
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[]
false
# Lohengrin (film) Lohengrin is a 1936 Italian comedy film directed by Nunzio Malasomma and starring Vittorio De Sica, Sergio Tofano and Mimi Aylmer. It was shot at the Pisorno Studios in Tirrenia. The film's sets were designed by the art directors Arnaldo Foresti and Alfredo Montori. ## Cast - Vittorio De Sica as Alfredo - Sergio Tofano as Giulio - Mimi Aylmer as Lia - Giuditta Rissone as Marianna - Cesare Zoppetti as Ravellini - Giulio Oppi as Lohengrin - Luigi Almirante as Edmondo - Rosina Anselmi as Cesira - Federico Collino as L'autista - Franco Coop as Sebastiano - il maggiodormo - Anna Maria Dossena as Adele - Renato Navarrini as Il direttore dell'hotel - Vinicio Sofia as Il venditore di mobili ## Bibliography - Chiti, Roberto & Poppi, Roberto. I film: Tutti i film italiani dal 1930 al 1944. Gremese Editore, 2005. - Goble, Alan. The Complete Index to Literary Sources in Film. Walter de Gruyter, 1999.
enwiki/77054124
enwiki
77,054,124
Lohengrin (film)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lohengrin_(film)
2024-08-03T22:19:59Z
en
Q3836468
30,501
{{short description|1936 film}} {{Infobox film | name = Lohengrin | image = Lohengrin (1936) De Sica e Rissone.png | caption =[[Giuditta Rissone]] and Vittorio De Sica | director = [[Nunzio Malasomma]] | producer = Enrico Ventura | writer = [[Aldo De Benedetti]] <br> [[Fritz Eckardt]] <br> Nunzio Malasomma | narrator = | starring = [[Vittorio De Sica]] <br> [[Sergio Tofano]] <br> [[Mimi Aylmer]] | music = [[Salvatore Allegra]] | cinematography = [[Arturo Gallea]] | editing = [[Eraldo Da Roma]] | studio = Ventura Film | distributor = Consorzio EIA | released = {{Film date|1936}} | runtime = 75 minutes | country = Italy | language = [[Italian language|Italian]] | budget = | gross = }} '''''Lohengrin''''' is a 1936 Italian [[comedy film]] directed by [[Nunzio Malasomma]] and starring [[Vittorio De Sica]], [[Sergio Tofano]] and [[Mimi Aylmer]].<ref>Goble p.112</ref> It was shot at the [[Pisorno Studios]] in [[Tirrenia]].<ref> Chiti & Poppi p.197</ref> The film's sets were designed by the [[art director]]s Arnaldo Foresti and [[Alfredo Montori]]. ==Cast== * [[Vittorio De Sica]] as Alfredo * [[Sergio Tofano]] as Giulio * [[Mimi Aylmer]] as Lia * [[Giuditta Rissone]] as Marianna * [[Cesare Zoppetti]] as Ravellini * Giulio Oppi as Lohengrin * [[Luigi Almirante]] as Edmondo * [[Rosina Anselmi]] as Cesira * [[Federico Collino]] as L'autista * [[Franco Coop]] as Sebastiano - il maggiodormo * [[Anna Maria Dossena]] as Adele * [[Renato Navarrini]] as Il direttore dell'hotel * [[Vinicio Sofia]] as Il venditore di mobili == References == <references/> == Bibliography == * Chiti, Roberto & Poppi, Roberto. ''I film: Tutti i film italiani dal 1930 al 1944''. Gremese Editore, 2005. * Goble, Alan. ''The Complete Index to Literary Sources in Film''. Walter de Gruyter, 1999. == External links == * {{IMDb title|0027903}} {{Nunzio Malasomma }} [[Category:1936 films]] [[Category:Italian comedy films]] [[Category:1936 comedy films]] [[Category:1930s Italian-language films]] [[Category:Films directed by Nunzio Malasomma]] [[Category:1930s Italian films]] [[Category:Films shot at Tirrenia Studios]] {{1930s-Italy-film-stub}}
1,238,445,136
[{"title": "Lohengrin", "data": {"Directed by": "Nunzio Malasomma", "Written by": "Aldo De Benedetti \u00b7 Fritz Eckardt \u00b7 Nunzio Malasomma", "Produced by": "Enrico Ventura", "Starring": "Vittorio De Sica \u00b7 Sergio Tofano \u00b7 Mimi Aylmer", "Cinematography": "Arturo Gallea", "Edited by": "Eraldo Da Roma", "Music by": "Salvatore Allegra", "Production \u00b7 company": "Ventura Film", "Distributed by": "Consorzio EIA", "Release date": "- 1936", "Running time": "75 minutes", "Country": "Italy", "Language": "Italian"}}]
false
# Lahey Lahey is a surname. Notable people with this surname include: - Alex Lahey (born 1992), Australian musician - Benjamin Lahey, American psychologist - Frank Lahey (1880–1953), American physician - John C. Lahey (born 1953), American architect - John L. Lahey (born 1946), president of Quinnipiac University - Lyle Lahey (1931–2013), American political cartoonist - May Darlington Lahey (1889–1984), Australian-American lawyer and judge - Raymond Lahey (born 1940), Canadian Catholic bishop - Romeo Lahey (1887–1968), Australian businessman - Tim Lahey (born 1982), American baseball player - Vida Lahey (1882–1968), Australian artist - Nathaniel "Nate" Lahey, fictional character played by Billy Brown (List of How to Get Away with Murder characters) - Isaac Lahey, fictional character played by Daniel Sharman (List of Teen Wolf secondary characters)
enwiki/61493392
enwiki
61,493,392
Lahey
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lahey
2024-01-28T10:41:50Z
en
Q37505432
6,751
'''Lahey''' is a surname. Notable people with this surname include: *[[Alex Lahey]] (born 1992), Australian musician *[[Benjamin Lahey]], American psychologist *[[Frank Lahey]] (1880–1953), American physician *[[John C. Lahey]] (born 1953), American architect *[[John L. Lahey]] (born 1946), president of Quinnipiac University *[[Lyle Lahey]] (1931–2013), American political cartoonist *[[May Darlington Lahey]] (1889–1984), Australian-American lawyer and judge *[[Raymond Lahey]] (born 1940), Canadian Catholic bishop *[[Romeo Lahey]] (1887–1968), Australian businessman *[[Tim Lahey]] (born 1982), American baseball player *[[Vida Lahey]] (1882–1968), Australian artist *Nathaniel "Nate" Lahey, fictional character played by [[Billy Brown (actor)|Billy Brown]] ([[List of How to Get Away with Murder characters]]) *Isaac Lahey, fictional character played by [[Daniel Sharman]] ([[List of Teen Wolf secondary characters]]) ==See also== *[[Lahey Health]], a health service organization in Massachusetts *[[Lahey Hospital & Medical Center]], a teaching hospital of Tufts University School of Medicine {{surname}}
1,199,960,180
[]
false
# Marc Hom Marc Hom is a Danish fashion photographer whose work consists of celebrity, portrait, fashion, and advertising photography. ## Biography Marc Hom was born in 1967 in Copenhagen, Denmark. He studied photography at the Københavns Tekniske Skole in Denmark and moved to New York City in 1989. After completing over a year of freelance work with established New York-based photographers, he was commissioned to do a photo book for the Vienna Ballet. Hom spent the next six months in Vienna photographing the ballet's principal dancers and directors and compiled a book of 80 images. Upon completion of the assignment, he returned to New York and began working with the late Liz Tilberis and Fabien Baron of Harper's Bazaar. This marked his introduction into the world of fashion photography and his establishment as a renowned photographer in the fashion world. ## Photography Marc Hom has shot advertising campaigns for fashion brands such as Gucci, Max Mara, and Genny. His work has appeared in various publications such as W Magazine, Harper's Bazaar, Vanity Fair, British Vogue, Men's Vogue, Talk, The Face, The New Yorker, French Arena, Esquire, and The New York Times Magazine. His celebrity portfolio includes Iggy Pop, Cher, Faye Dunaway, Aretha Franklin, Christopher Walken, Alexander McQueen, Nino Cerruti, Vivienne Westwood, Polly Mellen, Johnny Depp, Julian Schnabel, Gwyneth Paltrow, and Anne Rice. ## Photo Books Portraits by Marc Hom, teNeues 2006
enwiki/23514201
enwiki
23,514,201
Marc Hom
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marc_Hom
2021-04-27T09:40:59Z
en
Q6755622
27,477
{{short description|Danish fashion photographer}} {{BLP primary sources|date=July 2009}} '''Marc Hom''' is a Danish [[fashion photography|fashion photographer]] whose work consists of celebrity, [[portrait]], fashion, and advertising photography. ==Biography== Marc Hom was born in 1967 in [[Copenhagen]], Denmark.<ref name=Amazon>Marc Hom [https://www.amazon.com/Marc-Hom-Portraits-Lauren-Bacall/dp/3832791612 Portraits on Amazon]</ref> He studied photography at the [[Københavns Tekniske Skole]] in Denmark and moved to New York City in 1989.<ref name=Bio>[http://www.trishsouth.com/SITE/Photographers/Marc_Hom/Biography Marc Hom's Biography] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090726000907/http://www.trishsouth.com/SITE/Photographers/Marc_Hom/Biography/ |date=2009-07-26 }}</ref> After completing over a year of freelance work with established New York-based photographers, he was commissioned to do a [[photo book]] for the Vienna Ballet. Hom spent the next six months in [[Vienna]] photographing the ballet's principal dancers and directors and compiled a book of 80 images. Upon completion of the assignment, he returned to New York and began working with the late [[Liz Tilberis]] and [[Fabien Baron]] of ''[[Harper's Bazaar]]''. This marked his introduction into the world of fashion photography and his establishment as a renowned photographer in the fashion world.<ref name=Bio/> ==Photography== Marc Hom has shot advertising campaigns for fashion brands such as [[Gucci]], [[Max Mara]], and [[Genny]]. His work has appeared in various publications such as ''[[W Magazine]]'', ''[[Harper's Bazaar]]'', ''[[Vanity Fair (magazine)|Vanity Fair]]'', ''[[British Vogue]]'', ''[[Men's Vogue]]'', ''[[Talk (magazine)|Talk]]'', ''[[The Face (magazine)|The Face]]'', ''[[The New Yorker]]'', French ''[[Arena (magazine)|Arena]]'', ''[[Esquire (magazine)|Esquire]]'', and ''[[The New York Times Magazine]]''. His celebrity portfolio includes [[Iggy Pop]], [[Cher]], [[Faye Dunaway]], [[Aretha Franklin]], [[Christopher Walken]], [[Alexander McQueen]], [[Nino Cerruti]], [[Vivienne Westwood]], Polly Mellen, [[Johnny Depp]], [[Julian Schnabel]], [[Gwyneth Paltrow]], and [[Anne Rice]].<ref name=Bio/> ==Photo Books== ''Portraits'' by Marc Hom, [[teNeues]] 2006 <ref name=Amazon/> ==References== {{reflist}} ==External links== *[https://www.atrbute.com/divisions/photography/portfolios/marc-hom Marc Hom at ATRBUTE] {{Authority control (arts)}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Hom, Marc}} [[Category:20th-century Danish photographers]] [[Category:21st-century Danish photographers]] [[Category:Danish photographers]] [[Category:Living people]] [[Category:Year of birth missing (living people)]]
1,020,127,256
[]
false
# Ptereleotris hanae Ptereleotris hanae, commonly known as the blue gudgeon dartfish or blue hana goby, is a species of dartfish native to the western Pacific Ocean. It is a reef inhabitant, being found at depths of from 3 to 50 metres (9.8 to 164.0 ft), though usually no shallower than 6 metres (20 ft). It inhabits burrows made by alpheid shrimp, but unlike the Amblyeleotris gobies who normally associate with these shrimp, this species has no interactions with their shrimp hosts. This species can reach a length of 12 centimetres (4.7 in) TL. It can also be found in the aquarium trade.
enwiki/20596150
enwiki
20,596,150
Ptereleotris hanae
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ptereleotris_hanae
2023-12-09T14:49:16Z
en
Q1844498
34,392
{{Short description|Species of fish}} {{Speciesbox | image = HanaHZyg.jpg | status = | status_system = | status_ref = | taxon = Ptereleotris hanae | authority = ([[David Starr Jordan|D. S. Jordan]] & [[John Otterbein Snyder|Snyder]], 1901) | synonyms = * ''Vireosa hanae'' <small>D. S. Jordan & Snyder, 1901</small> }} '''''Ptereleotris hanae''''', commonly known as the''' blue gudgeon dartfish''' or '''blue hana goby''', is a [[species]] of [[dartfish]] native to the western [[Pacific Ocean]]. It is a [[reef]] inhabitant, being found at depths of from {{convert|3|to|50|m|ft}}, though usually no shallower than {{convert|6|m|ft}}. It inhabits burrows made by [[alpheid]] shrimp, but unlike the ''[[Amblyeleotris]]'' gobies who normally associate with these shrimp, this species has no interactions with their shrimp hosts. This species can reach a length of {{convert|12|cm|in}} [[fish measurement|TL]]. It can also be found in the [[aquarium]] trade.<ref>{{FishBase | genus = Ptereleotris | species = hanae| month = December| year = 2013}}</ref> ==References== {{Reflist}} ==External links== {{Commons category|Ptereleotris hanae}} * {{SealifePhotos|277122}} {{Taxonbar|from=Q1844498}} [[Category:Ptereleotris|hanae]] [[Category:Fish described in 1901]] [[Category:Taxa named by David Starr Jordan]] {{Gobiidae-stub}}
1,189,073,782
[{"title": "Scientific classification", "data": {"Domain": "Eukaryota", "Kingdom": "Animalia", "Phylum": "Chordata", "Class": "Actinopterygii", "Order": "Gobiiformes", "Family": "Gobiidae", "Genus": "Ptereleotris", "Species": "P. hanae"}}, {"title": "Binomial name", "data": {"Binomial name": "Ptereleotris hanae \u00b7 (D. S. Jordan & Snyder, 1901)"}}, {"title": "Synonyms", "data": {"Synonyms": "- Vireosa hanae D. S. Jordan & Snyder, 1901"}}]
false
# Los Molinos (Sobrarbe) Los Molinos is a locality located in the municipality of El Pueyo de Araguás, in Huesca province, Aragon, Spain. As of 2020, it has a population of 14. ## Geography Los Molinos is located 112km northeast of Huesca.
enwiki/68880146
enwiki
68,880,146
Los Molinos (Sobrarbe)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Los_Molinos_(Sobrarbe)
2021-10-03T20:22:29Z
en
Q32012373
35,874
{{Infobox settlement |name = Los Molinos |native_name = |official_name = |nickname = |settlement_type = Locality |motto = |image_skyline = |imagesize = |image_caption = |image_flag = |flag_size = |image_seal = |seal_size = |image_map = |mapsize = |map_caption = |pushpin_map = #Spain Aragon#Spain |pushpin_label = Los Molinos |pushpin_label_position = left |pushpin_mapsize = |pushpin_map_caption = |subdivision_type = [[List of sovereign states|Country]] |subdivision_name = {{ESP}} |subdivision_type1 = [[Autonomous communities of Spain|Autonomous community]] |subdivision_name1 = {{flag|Aragon}} |subdivision_type2 = [[Provinces of Spain|Province]] |subdivision_name2 = [[Province of Huesca]] |subdivision_type3 = [[Municipalities of Spain|Municipality]] |subdivision_name3 = [[El Pueyo de Araguás]] |government_footnotes = |government_type = |leader_title = |leader_name = |established_title = |established_date = |area_magnitude = |unit_pref = |area_footnotes = |area_total_km2 = |area_land_km2 = |population_as_of = |population_footnotes = |population_note = |population_total = 14 |population_density_km2 = |timezone = |utc_offset = |coordinates = {{coord|42|26|58|N|0|12|20|E|display=inline,title}} |elevation_footnotes = |elevation_m = 812 |elevation_ft = |postal_code_type = Postal code |postal_code = |area_code = |blank_name = |blank_info = |website = |footnotes = }} '''Los Molinos''' is a locality located in the municipality of [[El Pueyo de Araguás]], in [[Province of Huesca|Huesca]] province, [[Aragon]], [[Spain]]. As of 2020, it has a population of 14.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ine.es/nomen2/index.do|lang=es|title=Nomenclátor: Población del Padrón Continuo por Unidad Poblacional|publisher=Instituto Nacional de Estadística (España)|accessdate=3 October 2021}}</ref> == Geography == Los Molinos is located 112km northeast of [[Huesca]]. ==References== {{reflist}} [[Category:Populated places in the Province of Huesca]] {{huesca-geo-stub}}
1,048,018,391
[{"title": "Los Molinos", "data": {"Country": "Spain", "Autonomous community": "Aragon", "Province": "Province of Huesca", "Municipality": "El Pueyo de Aragu\u00e1s", "Elevation": "812 m (2,664 ft)"}}, {"title": "Population", "data": {"\u2022 Total": "14"}}]
false
# Pongal River The Pongal River is a river of Espírito Santo state in eastern Brazil.
enwiki/23795553
enwiki
23,795,553
Pongal River
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pongal_River
2023-02-17T13:44:56Z
en
Q7227787
20,573
{{Infobox river | name = Pongal River | image = | image_size = | image_caption = | source1_location = [[Espírito Santo]] state | mouth_location = | subdivision_type1 = Country | subdivision_name1 = [[Brazil]] | length = | source1_elevation = | mouth_elevation = | discharge1_avg = | basin_size = }} The '''Pongal River''' is a river of [[Espírito Santo]] state in eastern [[Brazil]]. ==See also== *[[List of rivers of Espírito Santo]] ==References== *[https://www.gifex.com/imapa/americas/md_Espirito_Santo_brazil.pdf Brazilian Ministry of Transport] {{coord|-20.7642|-40.6629|display=title|format=dms|region:BR_type:river}} [[Category:Rivers of Espírito Santo]] {{EspiritoSanto-river-stub}}
1,139,909,494
[{"title": "Location", "data": {"Country": "Brazil"}}, {"title": "Physical characteristics", "data": {"\u2022 location": "Esp\u00edrito Santo state"}}]
false
# NFP–Labour Coalition NFP–Labour Coalition was the coalition of the National Federation Party and Fiji Labour Party under the leadership of Timoci Bavadra, formed in 1987 to contest that year's general election. The coalition won the election with 28 seats in the House of Representatives to the Alliance Party's 24 seats, ending the Alliance Party's 21-year rule in Fiji. In April 1987, swearing in of the Fiji Labour Party and NFP coalition Government Ministers took place. Some prominent names were (Senator)  Jai Ram Reddy – Attorney General,  Finance Minister –  Mahendra Chaudhry, Education Minister – Dr. Tupeni Baba, Foreign Affairs Minister – Krishna Datt etc. There was a real optimism in the country and the majority of people were looking forward to the new Government carrying out its policies of social justice and good governance but the government lasted only a month when it was deposed by the military coup of 1987.
enwiki/11646358
enwiki
11,646,358
NFP–Labour Coalition
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NFP%E2%80%93Labour_Coalition
2024-09-27T02:12:27Z
en
Q6953804
32,797
{{DEFAULTSORT:NFP-Labour Coalition (Fiji)}} [[Category:Defunct political parties in Fiji| ]] [[Category:Political parties established in 1987]] [[Category:Political parties disestablished in 1987]] '''NFP–Labour Coalition''' was the coalition of the [[National Federation Party]] and [[Fiji Labour Party]] under the leadership of [[Timoci Bavadra]], formed in 1987 to contest that year's [[1987 Fijian general election|general election]].<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |title=Timeline |url=https://www.fijilabourparty.org/about-4 |access-date=2024-07-24 |website=Fiji Labour Party |language=en}}</ref> The coalition won the election with 28 seats in the [[House of Representatives of Fiji|House of Representatives]] to the [[Alliance Party (Fiji)|Alliance Party]]'s 24 seats, ending the Alliance Party's 21-year rule in Fiji. In April 1987, swearing in of the Fiji Labour Party and NFP coalition Government Ministers took place. Some prominent names were (Senator)  [[Jai Ram Reddy]] – Attorney General,  Finance Minister –  [[Mahendra Chaudhry]], Education Minister – [[Tupeni Baba|Dr. Tupeni Baba]], Foreign Affairs Minister – [[Krishna Datt]] etc.<ref name=":0" /> There was a real optimism in the country and the majority of people were looking forward to the new Government carrying out its policies of social justice and good governance but the government lasted only a month when it was deposed by the [[1987 Fijian coups d'état|military coup of 1987]].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Fiji - 1987 Coup - Apr |url=https://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/oceania/fiji-politics-1987-1.htm |access-date=2024-07-24 |website=www.globalsecurity.org}}</ref> == See also == * [[Elections in Fiji]] * [[Politics of Fiji]] == References == <references />{{Political parties in Fiji}}{{Fiji-party-stub}}
1,247,991,606
[]
false
# Irakli Mtsituri Irakli Mtsituri (born 13 August 1995) is a Georgian freestyle wrestler. In 2019, he won one of the bronze medals in the men's 92 kg event at the 2019 World Wrestling Championships held in Nur-Sultan, Kazakhstan. Earlier that year, he also won a bronze medal in the 92 kg event at the 2019 European Wrestling Championships held in Bucharest, Romania. ## Major results | Year | Tournament | Location | Result | Event | | ---- | ---------------------- | ---------------------- | ------ | --------------- | | 2019 | European Championships | Bucharest, Romania | 3rd | Freestyle 92 kg | | 2019 | World Championships | Nur-Sultan, Kazakhstan | 3rd | Freestyle 92 kg |
enwiki/63637564
enwiki
63,637,564
Irakli Mtsituri
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irakli_Mtsituri
2024-12-27T01:24:34Z
en
Q63089630
43,711
{{short description|Georgian freestyle wrestler}} {{Infobox sportsperson | honorific_prefix = | name = Irakli Mtsituri | honorific_suffix = | image = Irakli Mtsituri 3.JPG | image_size = <!-- only when absolutely necessary --> | alt = | caption = Irakli Mtsituri at the [[2021 World Wrestling Championships]] in Oslo, Norway | headercolor = | textcolor = <!-- Personal information --> | native_name = | native_name_lang = | birth_name = <!-- if different than name --> | full_name = <!-- if different than name/birth_name --> | nickname = | nationality = <!-- will not display if national_team is defined --> | national_team = <!-- only for the country represented in international competition --> | ethnicity = | citizenship = | birth_date = {{birth date and age|df=yes|1995|8|13}} | birth_place = | death_date = <!-- {{death date and age|death year|death month|death day|birth year|birth month|birth day}} --> | death_place = | resting_place = | resting_place_coordinates = | monuments = | residence = | hometown = | education = | alma_mater = | occupation = | years_active = | employer = | agent = | height = {{convert|171|cm|ft in|abbr=on}} | weight = <!-- X kg, X lb, or X st Y lb (automatic conversion) plus optional year and reference --> | spouse = | life_partner = | other_interests = | website = <!-- {{URL|www.example.com}} --> | module = <!-- Sport --> | country = Georgia | sport = [[Amateur wrestling]] | position = | disability = | disability_class = | weight_class = | weight_class_type = | rank = | event = [[Freestyle wrestling|Freestyle]] | event_type = | universityteam = | collegeteam = | league = | league_type = | club = | team = | turnedpro = | turnedpro_type = | partner = | former_partner = | coach = | retired = | coaching = | module2 = <!-- Achievements and titles --> | worlds = | regionals = | nationals = | olympics = | paralympics = | commonwealth = | highestranking = | pb = <!-- Medal record --> | show-medals = | medaltemplates = {{Medal|Sport| Men's [[freestyle wrestling]] }} {{Medal|Country| {{GEO}} }} {{Medal|Competition| [[World Wrestling Championships|World Championships]] }} {{Medal|Bronze| [[2019 World Wrestling Championships|2019 Nur-Sultan]] | [[2019 World Wrestling Championships – Men's freestyle 92 kg|92 kg]] }} {{Medal|Competition| [[European Wrestling Championships|European Championships]] }} {{Medal|Bronze| [[2019 European Wrestling Championships|2019 Bucharest]] | [[2019 European Wrestling Championships – Men's freestyle 92 kg|92 kg]] }} {{Medal|Competition| [[World U23 Wrestling Championships|World U23 Championships]] }} {{Medal|Bronze| [[2017 World U23 Wrestling Championship|2017 Bydgoszcz]] | 86 kg }} {{Medal|Competition| European U23 Championship }} {{Medal|Silver| [[2018 European U23 Wrestling Championship|2018 Istanbul]] | 92 kg }} | medaltemplates-title = | module3 = }} '''Irakli Mtsituri''' (born 13 August 1995) is a Georgian [[Freestyle wrestling|freestyle wrestler]]. In 2019, he won one of the bronze medals in the [[2019 World Wrestling Championships – Men's freestyle 92 kg|men's 92 kg]] event at the [[2019 World Wrestling Championships]] held in Nur-Sultan, Kazakhstan.<ref name="uww_world_wrestling_championships_2019">{{Cite web|url=https://unitedworldwrestling.org/sites/default/files/2019-09/nur-sultan_kz_final-book_1.pdf|title=2019 World Wrestling Championships Results|website=United World Wrestling|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200412151211/https://unitedworldwrestling.org/sites/default/files/2019-09/nur-sultan_kz_final-book_1.pdf|archive-date=12 April 2020|access-date=12 April 2020}}</ref><ref name="two_more_golds_2019">{{Cite news|url=https://www.insidethegames.biz/articles/1085009/two-golds-russia-freestyle-wrestling|title=Two more golds put Russia top of freestyle at World Wrestling Championships|last=Rowbottom|first=Mike|date=21 September 2019|work=InsideTheGames.biz|access-date=18 January 2020}}</ref> Earlier that year, he also won a bronze medal in the [[2019 European Wrestling Championships – Men's freestyle 92 kg|92 kg]] event at the [[2019 European Wrestling Championships]] held in Bucharest, Romania.<ref name="uww_european_wrestling_championships_2019">{{Cite web|url=https://unitedworldwrestling.org/sites/default/files/2019-04/opt-final-book_european_bucharest_2019.pdf|title=2019 European Wrestling Championships Results|website=United World Wrestling|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200412162932/https://unitedworldwrestling.org/sites/default/files/2019-04/opt-final-book_european_bucharest_2019.pdf|archive-date=12 April 2020|access-date=12 April 2020}}</ref> == Major results == {| class="wikitable" style="font-size:95%;" !Year !Tournament !Location !Result !Event |- |rowspan=2 | 2019 |[[2019 European Wrestling Championships|European Championships]] |{{flagicon|ROM}} Bucharest, Romania |align="center" bgcolor="cc9966" | 3rd |[[2019 European Wrestling Championships – Men's freestyle 92 kg|Freestyle 92 kg]] |- |[[2019 World Wrestling Championships|World Championships]] |{{flagicon|KAZ}} Nur-Sultan, Kazakhstan |align="center" bgcolor="cc9966" | 3rd |[[2019 World Wrestling Championships – Men's freestyle 92 kg|Freestyle 92 kg]] |} == References == {{reflist}} == External links == * {{sports links}} {{authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Mtsituri, Irakli}} [[Category:Living people]] [[Category:1995 births]] [[Category:Place of birth missing (living people)]] [[Category:Male sport wrestlers from Georgia (country)]] [[Category:World Wrestling Championships medalists]] [[Category:European Wrestling Championships medalists]] [[Category:21st-century sportsmen from Georgia (country)]] {{Georgia-wrestling-bio-stub}}
1,265,457,498
[{"title": "Personal information", "data": {"Born": "13 August 1995", "Height": "171 cm (5.61 ft; 67 in)"}}, {"title": "Sport", "data": {"Country": "Georgia", "Sport": "Amateur wrestling", "Event": "Freestyle"}}, {"title": "World Championships", "data": {"Bronze medal \u2013 third place": "2019 Nur-Sultan \u00b7 92 kg"}}, {"title": "European Championships", "data": {"Bronze medal \u2013 third place": "2019 Bucharest \u00b7 92 kg"}}, {"title": "World U23 Championships", "data": {"Bronze medal \u2013 third place": "2017 Bydgoszcz \u00b7 86 kg"}}, {"title": "European U23 Championship", "data": {"Silver medal \u2013 second place": "2018 Istanbul \u00b7 92 kg"}}]
false
# Insurrection Rising Insurrection Rising is Savage Messiah's first full studio album and was released on Candlelight Records on 19 October 2009. It was recorded at The Ecology Room studios in Deal, England. The band worked with Grammy Nominated producer Chris Tsangarides, famous for his production on such seminal albums as "Painkiller" by Judas Priest, "Tattooed Millionaire" by Bruce Dickinson as well as notching up production credits for bands such as Thin Lizzy, Black Sabbath, Y&T, Yngwie Malmsteen and more recently Biomechanical as well as many others. Recording for the album was finished in March and Scott Atkins (Cradle of Filth, Gama Bomb) was hired to mix the album. ## Track listing | No. | Title | Length | | --- | -------------------------------- | ------ | | 1. | "Insurrection Rising" | 3:52 | | 2. | "Corruption X" | 4:13 | | 3. | "In Absence of Liberty" | 6:15 | | 4. | "The Serpent Tongue of Divinity" | 4:16 | | 5. | "Vigil of the Navigator" | 5:09 | | 6. | "Enemy Image (Dehumanization)" | 4:26 | | 7. | "Silent Empire" | 5:39 | | 8. | "The Nihilist Machine" | 3:59 | | 9. | "He Who Laughs Last" | 5:34 |
enwiki/25485900
enwiki
25,485,900
Insurrection Rising
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insurrection_Rising
2022-04-18T06:26:00Z
en
Q6042445
41,364
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}} {{More citations needed|date=December 2009}} {{Infobox album | name = Insurrection Rising | type = studio | artist = [[Savage Messiah (band)|Savage Messiah]] | cover = Savage_Messia,_Insurrection_Rising_Album_Cover.jpg | alt = | released = 19 October 2009 | recorded = The Ecology Room studios, Deal, England<ref>{{cite web|author=Un |url=http://www.myspace.com/savagemessiahmetal |title=Savage Messiah &#124; Gratis muziek, tourneedata, foto's, video's |publisher=Myspace.com |date= |accessdate=2012-02-25}}</ref> | venue = | studio = | genre = [[Thrash metal]] | length = 42:40<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.amazon.com/Insurrection-Rising-Savage-Messiah/dp/B002KAJ068 |title=Insurrection Rising: Savage Messiah: Music |publisher=Amazon.com |date= |accessdate=2012-02-25}}</ref> | label = [[Candlelight Records]] | producer = [[Chris Tsangarides]] | prev_title = [[Spitting Venom]] | prev_year = 2007 | next_title = [[Plague of Conscience]] | next_year = 2012 }} '''''Insurrection Rising''''' is [[Savage Messiah (band)|Savage Messiah]]'s first full studio album and was released on [[Candlelight Records]] on 19 October 2009. It was recorded at The Ecology Room studios in Deal, England. The band worked with Grammy Nominated producer [[Chris Tsangarides]], famous for his production on such seminal albums as "[[Painkiller (Judas Priest album)|Painkiller]]" by [[Judas Priest]], "[[Tattooed Millionaire]]" by [[Bruce Dickinson]] as well as notching up production credits for bands such as [[Thin Lizzy]], [[Black Sabbath]], [[Y&T]], [[Yngwie Malmsteen]] and more recently [[Biomechanical (band)|Biomechanical]] as well as many others. Recording for the album was finished in March and Scott Atkins ([[Cradle of Filth]], [[Gama Bomb]]) was hired to mix the album.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.candlelightrecords.co.uk/artists.htm |title=Candlelight Records UK |publisher=Candlelightrecords.co.uk |accessdate=2012-02-25 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120215040407/http://www.candlelightrecords.co.uk/artists.htm |archivedate=2012-02-15 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.blabbermouth.net/cdreviews/insurrection-rising/ |title=CD Reviews - Insurrection Rising Savage Messiah - Blabbermouth.net |publisher=Blabbermouth.net | date= |accessdate=2014-04-04}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://kkdowning.net/reviews/albums/savagemessiah_ir.html |title=Insurrection Rising - K.K. DOWNING STEEL MILL :: Keep Feeding the Flames! |publisher=KKDowning.net |date= |accessdate=2014-04-04 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130517062929/http://www.kkdowning.net/reviews/albums/savagemessiah_ir.html |archive-date=2013-05-17 |url-status=dead }}</ref> ==Track listing== {{tracklist | title1 =Insurrection Rising | length1 =3:52 | title2 =Corruption X | length2 =4:13 | title3 =In Absence of Liberty | length3 =6:15 | title4 =The Serpent Tongue of Divinity | length4 =4:16 | title5 =Vigil of the Navigator | length5 =5:09 | title6 =Enemy Image (Dehumanization) | length6 =4:26 | title7 =Silent Empire | length7 =5:39 | title8 =The Nihilist Machine | length8 =3:59 | title9 =He Who Laughs Last | length9 =5:34 }} ==References== {{Reflist}} {{Authority control}} [[Category:Savage Messiah (band) albums]]
1,083,316,992
[{"title": "Studio album by Savage Messiah", "data": {"Released": "19 October 2009", "Recorded": "The Ecology Room studios, Deal, England", "Genre": "Thrash metal", "Length": "42:40", "Label": "Candlelight Records", "Producer": "Chris Tsangarides"}}, {"title": "Savage Messiah chronology", "data": {"Spitting Venom \u00b7 (2007)": "Insurrection Rising \u00b7 (2009) \u00b7 Plague of Conscience \u00b7 (2012)"}}]
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# London Tower (Alaska) London Tower is a 7,550 ft (2,300 m) mountain summit located in the Alaska Range, in Denali National Park and Preserve, in Alaska, United States. It is situated on the east side of the Ruth Gorge, 15.23 mi (25 km) southeast of Denali and 3.38 mi (5 km) south of The Moose's Tooth. Mount Bradley rises 2.55 miles (4.10 km) directly across The Great Gorge to the west. Despite its relatively low elevation, it is notable for its west face with over 3,000 feet of vertical granite. ## Climate Based on the Köppen climate classification, London Tower is located in a Tundra climate zone with long, cold, snowy winters, and cool summers. Weather systems are forced upwards by the Alaska Range (orographic lift), causing heavy precipitation in the form of snowfall. Winter temperatures can drop below −20 °F with wind chill factors below −30 °F. The months May through June offer the most favorable weather for viewing and climbing. ## Gallery - London Tower (center) and Peak 7979 (upper right) - London Tower
enwiki/60808956
enwiki
60,808,956
London Tower (Alaska)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/London_Tower_(Alaska)
2025-01-05T19:19:20Z
en
Q65071818
45,170
{{Short description|Mountain summit in the Alaska Range, USA}} {{Use mdy dates|date=January 2025}} {{Infobox mountain | name = London Tower | photo = London Tower in Alaska.jpg | photo_caption = Aerial view of London Tower | elevation_ft = 7550 | elevation_ref = <ref>[https://listsofjohn.com/peak/147779 7550, listsofjohn.com]</ref> | prominence_ft = 1132 | prominence_ref = <ref name=peakbagger>{{cite peakbagger|pid=66024|name=London Tower|accessdate=2019-05-19}}</ref> | parent_peak = | range = [[Alaska Range]] | listing = | map = USA Alaska | map_caption = Location in Alaska | label_position = right | mapframe = yes | mapframe-zoom = 8 | mapframe-caption = Interactive map of London Tower | country = United States | state = [[Alaska]] | region = [[Matanuska-Susitna Borough, Alaska|Matanuska-Susitna]] | region_type = Borough | part_type = Protected&nbsp;area | part = [[Denali National Park and Preserve|Denali National Park]] | coordinates = {{coord|62|55|21|N|150|38|45|W|type:mountain_region:US-AK_scale:100000|format=dms|display=inline,title}} | coordinates_ref = <ref name=peakbagger/> | topo = [[United States Geological Survey|USGS]] Talkeetna D-2 | first_ascent = | easiest_route = | rock = [[Granite]] }} '''London Tower''' is a {{convert|7550|ft|-1|abbr=on|}} mountain summit located in the [[Alaska Range]], in [[Denali National Park and Preserve]], in [[Alaska|Alaska, United States]]. It is situated on the east side of the [[Ruth Glacier|Ruth Gorge]], {{convert|15.23|mi|km|0|abbr=on}} southeast of [[Denali]] and {{convert|3.38|mi|km|0|abbr=on}} south of [[The Moose's Tooth]]. [[Mount Bradley (Alaska)|Mount Bradley]] rises {{convert|2.55|mi|km}} directly across The Great Gorge to the west. Despite its relatively low elevation, it is notable for its west face with over 3,000 feet of vertical granite. ==Climate== Based on the [[Köppen climate classification]], London Tower is located in a [[Tundra climate]] zone with long, cold, snowy winters, and cool summers.<ref name=Peel>{{cite journal | author = Peel, M. C. |author2=Finlayson, B. L. |author3=McMahon, T. A. | year = 2007 | title = Updated world map of the Köppen−Geiger climate classification | journal = Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci. | volume = 11 |issue=5 |page=1633 |doi=10.5194/hess-11-1633-2007 |bibcode=2007HESS...11.1633P | issn = 1027-5606 | doi-access = free | bibcode-access = free}}</ref> Weather systems are forced upwards by the Alaska Range ([[orographic lift]]), causing heavy precipitation in the form of snowfall. Winter temperatures can drop below −20&nbsp;°F with wind chill factors below −30&nbsp;°F. The months May through June offer the most favorable weather for viewing and climbing.<ref>[https://www.alpineinstitute.com/articles/faqs/denali-faq/#:~:text=1.-,What%20do%20you%20recommend%20as%20the%20best%20month%20to%20climb,combination%20of%20weather%20and%20conditions. ''Denali FAQ'', American Alpine Institute], alpineinstitute.com, Retrieved 2024-01-08.</ref> ==Gallery== <div style="max-width: 500px;"> <gallery mode=slideshow> File:London Tower and Peak 7979.jpg|London Tower (center) and Peak 7979 (upper right) File:London Tower Alaska Range.jpg|London Tower File:London Tower, AK.jpg </gallery> </div> ==See also== *[[Mountain peaks of Alaska]] * [[Geography of Alaska]] ==References== {{reflist}} ==External links== * NOAA weather: [https://forecast.weather.gov/MapClick.php?lat=62.8948&lon=-150.7077#.XN3SRNhlBLM Talkeetna] * Localized weather: [https://www.mountain-forecast.com/peaks/Mooses-Tooth/forecasts/3150 Mountain Forecast] * Flight through 747 Pass: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wE2e9TVvk9g YouTube] (London Tower on right at 1:46 mark) {{Portal bar|Mountains|Geography|Alaska}} [[Category:Alaska Range]] [[Category:Mountains of Matanuska-Susitna Borough, Alaska]] [[Category:Mountains of Denali National Park and Preserve]] [[Category:Two-thousanders of the United States]]
1,267,577,522
[{"title": "Highest point", "data": {"Elevation": "7,550 ft (2,300 m)", "Prominence": "1,132 ft (345 m)", "Coordinates": "62\u00b055\u203221\u2033N 150\u00b038\u203245\u2033W\ufeff / \ufeff62.92250\u00b0N 150.64583\u00b0W"}}, {"title": "Geography", "data": {"Geography": ["London TowerLocation in Alaska", "Interactive map of London Tower"], "Country": "United States", "State": "Alaska", "Borough": "Matanuska-Susitna", "Protected area": "Denali National Park", "Parent range": "Alaska Range", "Topo map": "USGS Talkeetna D-2"}}, {"title": "Geology", "data": {"Rock type": "Granite"}}]
false
# People's Commissariat for Nationalities The People's Commissariat of Nationalities of the RSFSR (Russian: Народный комиссариат по делам национальностей РСФСР, Narodny komissariat po delam natsional'nostey RSFSR), abbreviated NKNats (Russian: НКНац) or Narkomnats (Russian: Наркомнац), an organization functioning from 1917 to 1924 in the early Soviet period of Russian and Soviet history, tasked with dealing with non-Russian nationalities. Its head, Joseph Stalin, as the chairman of the People's Commissariat of Nationalities (1917–23), served as a member of the Council of People's Commissars. ## Origins It was established even before the October Revolution on 11 June 1917 by the Petrograd Soviet as part of three measures to create state forms that would guarantee federal and autonomous solutions to national questions in the Russian Revolution: - complete civil equality for all citizens - the right to use the mother tongue in official business, on par with Russian - the formation of a Soviet of nationality affairs – Narkomnats. This decision was made in response to the crisis triggered by the Central Council of Ukraine's demands for autonomy for national territories and a seat at any peace conference. These demands were rejected by Alexander Kerensky. Narkomnats was set up as an organ of the Soviets to prepare for the Constituent Assembly, particularly in regards to how Ukrainian autonomy could be handled. It provided for the organisation of a congress of representatives from all of Ukraine, which in turn would set up a Ukrainian Constituent Assembly. At this time the Bolsheviks opposed any national autonomy; however, on 13 August, Joseph Stalin published a tract that floated the idea of the Party might set up an agency for nationality affairs. This came at a time when Kerensky and Mensheviks like Nikolay Chkheidze were arguing for a unified state. Kerensky told Latvian representatives that they could only hope for the status of Zemstvo. In 1918, Joseph Stalin as the chairman presided over five or six of the first seven meetings of the Narkomnats Collegium, but failed to attend the next twenty one. ## Specific commissariats related to Narkomnats - Belnatskom was the Belarusian commissariat established 31 January 1918[6] - Evkom was the Jewish commissariat[7] - Muskom was the Muslim commissariat, chaired by Mullanur Waxitov - Volga Commissariat for German Affairs, charter approved by Narkomnat on May 29, 1918[8]
enwiki/11041604
enwiki
11,041,604
People's Commissariat for Nationalities
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/People%27s_Commissariat_for_Nationalities
2024-12-26T14:03:00Z
en
Q1695906
27,334
{{short description|Soviet government organisation (1917–1924)}} The '''People's Commissariat of Nationalities of the RSFSR''' ({{Langx|ru|Народный комиссариат по делам национальностей РСФСР}}, ''Narodny komissariat po delam natsional'nostey RSFSR''), abbreviated '''NKNats''' ({{Langx|ru|НКНац}}) or '''Narkomnats''' ({{Langx|ru|Наркомнац}}), an organization functioning from 1917 to 1924<ref>{{cite book|last=Hirsch|first=Francine|author-link=Francine Hirsch|chapter=State and Evolution: Ethnographic Knowledge, Economic Expediency, and the Making of the USSR, 1917–1924|editor1-last=Burbank|editor1-first=Jane|editor2-last=von Hagen|editor2-first=Mark|editor2-link=Mark von Hagen|editor3-last=Remnev|editor3-first=Anatolyi|title=Russian Empire: Space, People, Power, 1700–1930|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NmzT3q0k5XMC|series=Indiana-Michigan series in Russian and East European studies|date=8 August 2007|publisher=Indiana University Press|publication-date=2007|page=161|isbn=9780253219114|accessdate=2015-07-23|quote=The new Soviet constitution of 1924 dissolved Narkomnats [...].}}</ref> in the early Soviet period of [[Russian Civil War|Russia]]n and [[History of the Soviet Union|Soviet history]], tasked with dealing with non-[[Russian people|Russian]] nationalities. Its head, [[Joseph Stalin]], as the chairman of the People's Commissariat of Nationalities (1917–23), served as a member of the [[Council of People's Commissars]]. ==Origins== It was established even before the [[October Revolution]] on 11 June 1917<ref>''Petrogradskii Sovet Rabochikh i Soldatskikh Deputatov: Protokoly Zasedanii'' (Moscow: Gosudarstvennoe Izdatel'stvo, 1935).</ref> by the [[Petrograd Soviet]] as part of three measures to create state forms that would guarantee [[Federalism|federal]] and [[autonomous]] solutions to national questions in the [[Russian Revolution (1917)|Russian Revolution]]: * complete civil equality for all citizens * the right to use the [[First language|mother tongue]] in official business, on par with [[Russian language|Russian]] * the formation of a Soviet of nationality affairs – Narkomnats. This decision was made in response to the crisis triggered by the [[Central Council of Ukraine]]'s demands for autonomy for national territories and a seat at any peace conference. These demands were rejected by [[Alexander Kerensky]]. Narkomnats was set up as an organ of the Soviets to prepare for the [[Russian Constituent Assembly|Constituent Assembly]], particularly in regards to how Ukrainian autonomy could be handled. It provided for the organisation of a congress of representatives from all of Ukraine, which in turn would set up a Ukrainian Constituent Assembly. At this time the [[Bolshevik]]s opposed any national autonomy; however, on 13 August, [[Joseph Stalin]] published a tract that floated the idea of the [[Communist Party of the Soviet Union|Party]] might set up an agency for nationality affairs.<ref>''Revoliutsionnoe Dvizhenie v Rossii v Avgust' 1917 Goda: Protokoly'' (Moscow: Izdatel'stvo Akademii Nauk SSR, 1959) This text was omitted from the collected Works of Stalin)</ref> This came at a time when Kerensky and [[Mensheviks]] like [[Nikolay Chkheidze]] were arguing for a unified state. Kerensky told [[Latvia]]n representatives that they could only hope for the status of [[Zemstvo]].<ref>''Revoliutsionnoe Dvizhenie v Rossii v Mae-Iun' 1917 g.'', III (Moscow: Izdatel'stvo Akademii Nauk SSR, 1959).</ref> In 1918, [[Joseph Stalin]] as the chairman presided over five or six of the first seven meetings of the Narkomnats Collegium, but failed to attend the next twenty one.<ref>'Stalin as Commissar of Nationalities' by Jeremy Smith in [https://books.google.com/books?id=LXo-0FUpZccC&q=Narkomnats&pg=PA55&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&q&f=false ''Stalin: A New History''] by Sarah Davies (Editor), James Harris (Editor), 2005, p. 55, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511614897.006</ref> ==Specific commissariats related to Narkomnats== * Belnatskom was the [[Belarus]]ian commissariat established 31 January 1918<ref>''The Sorcerer as Apprentice: Stalin as Commissar of Nationalities 1917–1924'' by Stephen Blank, Greenwood Press 1995, p. 20.</ref> * Evkom was the Jewish commissariat<ref>Zvi Y. Gitelman, ''Jewish Nationality and Soviet Politics: The Jewish Sections of the CPSU, 1917-1930'' (1972).</ref> * [[Muskom]] was the [[Muslims|Muslim]] commissariat, chaired by [[Mullanur Waxitov]] * [[Volga Commissariat for German Affairs]], charter approved by Narkomnat on May 29, 1918<ref name="Volga Commissariat">{{cite web |title=Право.ru: законодательство, судебная система, новости и аналитика. Все о юридическом рынке. |url=https://pravo.ru/news/view/123033/ |website=ПРАВО.Ru |publisher=ПРАВО.Ru |access-date=9 June 2023 |language=ru}}</ref> ==References== {{reflist|2}} ==Further reading== * James R. Millar, ''Encyclopedia of Russian History'' (2004) 3: 1000–1027, 1158–59. {{authority control}} {{bots|deny=Citation bot}} [[Category:People's commissariats and ministries of the Soviet Union|Nationalities]] [[Category:Soviet ethnic policy]] [[Category:1917 establishments in Russia]] [[Category:Joseph Stalin]] [[Category:1924 disestablishments in the Soviet Union]] [[Category:Ministries disestablished in 1924]] [[Category:Ministries established in 1917]]
1,265,354,962
[]
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# Lahey's Canungra Tramway Tunnel Lahey's Canungra Tramway Tunnel is a heritage-listed tunnel on Laheys Tramway at Canungra, Queensland, Australia. It was built from 1901 to 1903 by Mr Clark. It was added to the Queensland Heritage Register on 11 April 2005. ## History The Laheys Canungra Tramway Tunnel represents part of a large scale, privately constructed and operated tramway used between 1903 and 1930. The tramway tunnel was cut through solid sandstone, thereby negating any requirements for lining or support structures. European settlement of the area surrounding the Coomera River commenced in 1843 with the establishment of the Tambourine holding. Early timber harvesting began in the 1860s by Hugh Mahony, who cut and hauled cedar logs to mills in Ipswich. The Lahey family emigrated from their native Ireland to Australia in 1862. Francis Lahey, his wife and eleven children arrived in Sydney, but immediately travelled north to Brisbane. The family began farming in the Pimpama region in 1870. In 1875 Francis Lahey purchased a sugar mill and sawbench at Tygum, Waterford for his sons. After being informed of the "good timber" in the region, David Lahey commenced work on the construction of the first sawmill in Canungra on 2 October 1884. During the same year David, John, Isaiah, Thomas and Evangeline Lahey all applied for and were granted selections of land around Canungra totaling over 3,000 acres (1,200 ha). The mill at Canungra flourished during the first sixteen years of operation with timber readily obtained from the immediate area. The Lahey family expanded their business during this time, establishing an office in Brisbane in 1887, saw and planing mills at Beaudesert in 1888, the construction of a new mill at Canungra in 1897 after the original mill was destroyed by fire, and the construction of another mill at Widgee near Hill View in 1898. By the turn of the 20th century, transportation of timber to the Canungra mill was becoming a problem. By this time the Laheys had acquired timber leases amounting to over 16,000 acres (6,500 ha) in the Canungra and Pine Creek Valleys, thereby requiring the slow and expensive bullock teams to haul logs over ever-increasing distances. The Laheys saw mechanisation as the solution to their transportation problems. After a failed experiment with a steam traction engine, it was decided to build a tramway into the Pine Creek Valley to help keep transportation costs down. Steep grades and rugged terrain were an early problem in the design of the tramway. Various means of propulsion to cope with the steep grades and potentially heavy haulage weights were considered. A geared Climax locomotive, claimed to be capable of operating on grades as steep as 1 in 10, depending on haulage weight, was selected. A narrow gauge of 3 feet 6 inches (1.07 m) was also chosen to match that of the growing Queensland Government Railways, as it was hoped that the government line would eventually extend to Canungra (this finally occurred in 1914). Tom Lahey and a Mr Clark were responsible for the selection of the tramway route. George Phillips, a celebrated civil engineer, was then engaged to make a detailed survey of the route, which was completed in February 1900. A contract was then let to Mr Clark for the initial construction. An immediate problem he faced was a ridge of the Darlington Range that separated the mill in Canungra from the timber leases in the Coomera Valley. After considering an expensive long circuitous route around the ridge formation, a tunnel cutting through the ridge was chosen with an approach grade of 1 in 12½ with short radius curves. The tunnel was pierced on 1 January 1901. First use of the tunnel was in September 1903. The grade against loaded trains heading to the mill was kept to 1 in 16½. The downhill grade from the tunnel to the mill was steeper and considered dangerously steep. To overcome this, a safety switch was laid. During actual operations, no serious accidents occurred, though there are reports of "some exciting moments", being "due to greasy rails". The tramway was extended over time. By 1910, the main line was 13.5 kilometres (8.4 mi) long, with a branch 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) up Flying Fox Creek and a sub-branch 500 metres (1,600 ft) up Little Flying Fox Creek to service a new aerial ropeway on Beech Mountain. Eventually, the total length of track laid amounted to 26.5 kilometres (16.5 mi). Usage of the tramway continued to increase so that during 1915 alone, 15,000 short tons (14,000 t) of logs were hauled to the mill. With the construction of the tramway came the preservation of belts of native vegetation alongside the tracks. The line "curved among waterfalls, ferns and thick scrub", and it was used by the locals for everyday transportation needs, with reports of locals sitting atop the logs, children using the tramway for rides to school and for picnickers hitching a ride to their destinations. By 1920 much of the timber had been removed from the Canungra area. In 1920, the War Service Homes Commission purchased the whole milling operation and before long, closed the mill. David Lahey's company Brisbane Timbers Ltd, however, took over the remaining timber harvesting operations and the tramway was used sporadically for a few more years. Trips along the tramway by sightseers are recorded up till 1930. By June 1933, the line was being dismantled. In 1935, the rails and bogies were sold for scrap. During its period of use, the tramway collectively hauled approximately 130 million super feet of timber. During the Second World War, the tunnel was used for the storage of ammunition for the nearby Kokoda Barracks at Canungra. Following the war the tunnel fell out of use, but has since been cleared out through work conducted under a Centenary of Federation grant project. The tunnel was officially re-opened for pedestrian and visitor use on 21 January 2001, but subsequently fenced off due to safety concerns. ## Description The tunnel was originally meant to be 88 yards (80 m) in length. However, its actual overall length is 91 metres (299 ft) plus an approach cutting at each end. The tunnel is straight, unlined and rectangular in section and cut through solid sandstone. On the walls of the tunnel is etched graffiti. The majority of graffiti is concentrated near the well-lit southeastern and northwestern entrances. Each entrance has an open approach cutting that extends from the tunnel. The northwestern entrance features two interpretive signs, one outlining the history of the tramway and tunnel, the other identifying the use of the tunnel during the Second World War. Both entrances also feature waist high steel entrance barriers added to the site as part of the Centenary of Federation project. Neither of the modern interpretive signs or modern entrance barriers are of cultural heritage significance. ## Heritage listing Lahey's Canungra Tramway Tunnel was listed on the Queensland Heritage Register on 11 April 2005 having satisfied the following criteria. The place is important in demonstrating the evolution or pattern of Queensland's history. The Laheys Canungra Tramway Tunnel is important in demonstrating the pattern of Queensland's history as an example of a privately built, owned and operated tramway. It is also important as a product of the development of the early timber getting and milling industries in Queensland. The place demonstrates rare, uncommon or endangered aspects of Queensland's cultural heritage. The place demonstrates uncommon aspects of Queensland's cultural heritage as an early example of one of the few tramway tunnels built in Queensland not requiring lining or support. The place is important in demonstrating a high degree of creative or technical achievement at a particular period. The tunnel is important in demonstrating the high degree of creative and technical achievement required to solve complex engineering problems associated with the construction of Queensland's early railways in challenging environments and through the use of new and untried technologies. The place has a strong or special association with a particular community or cultural group for social, cultural or spiritual reasons. The tunnel holds strong social significance for the community for its landmark values and for the contribution that the early timber industry and subsequent tramway operations had for the economic and cultural development of the Canungra region. The tunnel is also of social significance to the community as demonstrated by the installation of interpretive signing and the opening of the tunnel as a local tourist attraction. The place has a special association with the life or work of a particular person, group or organisation of importance in Queensland's history. The place has a special association with the life and work of several generations of the Lahey family, who have been influential in the development of the timber industry in southeastern Queensland, and in the general development of the Canungra area. ### Attribution This Wikipedia article was originally based on "The Queensland heritage register" published by the State of Queensland under CC-BY 3.0 AU licence (accessed on 7 July 2014, archived on 8 October 2014). The geo-coordinates were originally computed from the "Queensland heritage register boundaries" published by the State of Queensland under CC-BY 3.0 AU licence (accessed on 5 September 2014, archived on 15 October 2014).
enwiki/44396692
enwiki
44,396,692
Lahey's Canungra Tramway Tunnel
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lahey%27s_Canungra_Tramway_Tunnel
2025-01-24T14:24:56Z
en
Q18619781
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{{Short description|Heritage-listed tunnel in Canungra, Queensland, Australia}} <!-- Article title: '''Lahey's Canungra Tramway Tunnel''' siteId: 19652 placeRef:602529 --> {{Use Australian English|date=November 2014}} {{Use dmy dates|date=November 2014}} {{Infobox historic site | name = Lahey's Canungra Tramway Tunnel | image = StateLibQld 2 239688 View of the locomotive approaching the tunnel on the Canungra Sawmill tramway.jpg | caption = Locomotive approaching the tunnel on the Canungra Sawmill tramway, 1912 | locmapin = Queensland#Australia | map_caption = | coordinates = {{coord|-28.0231|153.1718|region:AU-QLD_type:landmark|display=inline,title}} | location = [[Canungra, Queensland|Canungra]], [[Queensland]], Australia | beginning_label = Design period | beginning_date = 1900 - 1914 (early 20th century) | built = 1901 - 1903 | built_for = | demolished = | architect = | architecture = | owner = | designation1 = Queensland Heritage Register | designation1_offname = Lahey's Canungra Tramway Tunnel | designation1_type = state heritage (built) | designation1_date = 11 April 2005 | delisted1_date = | designation1_partof = | designation1_number = 602529 | designation1_free1name = Significant period | designation1_free1value = 1900s (fabric)<br/>1903-{{circa|1933}} (historical period of use)<br/>1940s (wartime storage use) | designation1_free2name = Significant components | designation1_free2value = graffiti, cutting - tramway, tunnel - tramway | designation1_free3name = Builders | designation1_free3value = Mr Clark }} '''Lahey's Canungra Tramway Tunnel''' is a heritage-listed [[tunnel]] on [[Laheys Tramway]] at [[Canungra, Queensland|Canungra]], [[Queensland]], Australia. It was built from 1901 to 1903 by Mr Clark. It was added to the [[Queensland Heritage Register]] on 11 April 2005.<ref name=qhr>{{cite QHR|19652|Lahey's Canungra Tramway Tunnel|602529|accessdate=1 August 2014}}</ref> == History == The Laheys Canungra Tramway Tunnel represents part of a large scale, privately constructed and operated tramway used between 1903 and 1930. The tramway tunnel was cut through solid [[sandstone]], thereby negating any requirements for lining or support structures.<ref name=qhr/> European settlement of the area surrounding the [[Coomera River]] commenced in 1843 with the establishment of the Tambourine holding. Early timber harvesting began in the 1860s by Hugh Mahony, who cut and hauled cedar logs to mills in [[Ipswich, Queensland|Ipswich]].<ref name=qhr/> The Lahey family emigrated from their native Ireland to Australia in 1862. Francis Lahey, his wife and eleven children arrived in Sydney, but immediately travelled north to [[Brisbane]]. The family began farming in the [[Pimpama, Queensland|Pimpama]] region in 1870. In 1875 Francis Lahey purchased a sugar mill and sawbench at Tygum, [[Waterford, Queensland|Waterford]] for his sons.<ref name=qhr/> After being informed of the "good timber" in the region, [[David Lahey]] commenced work on the construction of the [[Lahey's Canungra Sawmill|first sawmill in Canungra]] on 2 October 1884. During the same year David, John, Isaiah, Thomas and Evangeline Lahey all applied for and were granted selections of land around Canungra totaling over {{convert|3,000|acre}}.<ref name=qhr/> The mill at Canungra flourished during the first sixteen years of operation with timber readily obtained from the immediate area. The Lahey family expanded their business during this time, establishing an office in Brisbane in 1887, saw and planing mills at [[Beaudesert, Queensland|Beaudesert]] in 1888, the construction of a new mill at Canungra in 1897 after the original mill was destroyed by fire, and the construction of another mill at [[Widgee]] near Hill View in 1898.<ref name=qhr/> By the turn of the 20th century, transportation of timber to the Canungra mill was becoming a problem. By this time the Laheys had acquired timber leases amounting to over {{convert|16,000|acre}} in the Canungra and Pine Creek Valleys, thereby requiring the slow and expensive bullock teams to haul logs over ever-increasing distances.<ref name=qhr/> The Laheys saw mechanisation as the solution to their transportation problems. After a failed experiment with a steam [[traction engine]], it was decided to build a tramway into the Pine Creek Valley to help keep transportation costs down. Steep grades and rugged terrain were an early problem in the design of the tramway. Various means of propulsion to cope with the steep grades and potentially heavy haulage weights were considered. A geared [[Climax locomotive]], claimed to be capable of operating on grades as steep as 1 in 10, depending on haulage weight, was selected. A narrow gauge of {{convert|3|ft|6|in}} was also chosen to match that of the growing [[Queensland Government Railways]], as it was hoped that the government line would eventually extend to Canungra (this finally occurred in 1914).<ref name=qhr/><ref name=":0">{{Cite web|url=https://qldrailheritage.com/seq/laheys.htm|title=QldRailHeritage.com: Lahey's Canungra Tramway Tunnel|website=qldrailheritage.com|access-date=2018-04-14}}</ref> Tom Lahey and a Mr Clark were responsible for the selection of the tramway route. George Phillips, a celebrated civil engineer, was then engaged to make a detailed survey of the route, which was completed in February 1900. A contract was then let to Mr Clark for the initial construction. An immediate problem he faced was a ridge of the [[Darlington Range]] that separated the mill in Canungra from the timber leases in the [[Coomera River|Coomera Valley]]. After considering an expensive long circuitous route around the ridge formation, a tunnel cutting through the ridge was chosen with an approach grade of 1 in 12½ with short radius curves. The tunnel was pierced on 1 January 1901. First use of the tunnel was in September 1903.<ref name=qhr/> The grade against loaded trains heading to the mill was kept to 1 in 16½. The downhill grade from the tunnel to the mill was steeper and considered dangerously steep. To overcome this, a safety switch was laid. During actual operations, no serious accidents occurred, though there are reports of "some exciting moments", being "due to greasy rails".<ref name=qhr/> The tramway was extended over time. By 1910, the main line was {{convert|13.5|km}} long, with a branch {{convert|2|km}} up Flying Fox Creek and a sub-branch {{convert|500|m}} up Little Flying Fox Creek to service a new aerial ropeway on Beech Mountain. Eventually, the total length of track laid amounted to {{convert|26.5|km}}.<ref name=qhr/> Usage of the tramway continued to increase so that during 1915 alone, {{convert|15000|ST|t}} of logs were hauled to the mill.<ref name=qhr/> With the construction of the tramway came the preservation of belts of native vegetation alongside the tracks. The line "curved among waterfalls, ferns and thick scrub", and it was used by the locals for everyday transportation needs, with reports of locals sitting atop the logs, children using the tramway for rides to school and for picnickers hitching a ride to their destinations.<ref name=qhr/> By 1920 much of the timber had been removed from the Canungra area. In 1920, the [[War Service Homes Commission]] purchased the whole milling operation and before long, closed the mill. David Lahey's company Brisbane Timbers Ltd, however, took over the remaining timber harvesting operations and the tramway was used sporadically for a few more years. Trips along the tramway by sightseers are recorded up till 1930. By June 1933, the line was being dismantled. In 1935, the rails and bogies were sold for scrap.<ref name=":0" /> During its period of use, the tramway collectively hauled approximately 130 million [[board foot|super feet]] of timber.<ref name=qhr/> During the [[Second World War]], the tunnel was used for the storage of ammunition for the nearby [[Kokoda Barracks]] at Canungra. Following the war the tunnel fell out of use, but has since been cleared out through work conducted under a Centenary of Federation grant project. The tunnel was officially re-opened for pedestrian and visitor use on 21 January 2001,<ref name=qhr/> but subsequently fenced off due to safety concerns.<ref name="Tunnel">[https://environment.ehp.qld.gov.au/heritage-register/explorer/detail/?id=602529 Lahey's Canungra Tramway Tunnel. Darlington Range Road, Canungra.] 2009 (CC BY 4.0). Retrieved on 9 August 2018.</ref> == Description == [[File:Laheys Canungra Tramway Tunnel, 2007.jpg|thumb|Laheys Canungra Tramway Tunnel, 2007]] The tunnel was originally meant to be {{convert|88|yd|m}} in length. However, its actual overall length is {{convert|91|m}} plus an approach cutting at each end. The tunnel is straight, unlined and rectangular in section and cut through solid sandstone. On the walls of the tunnel is etched [[graffiti]]. The majority of graffiti is concentrated near the well-lit southeastern and northwestern entrances.<ref name=qhr/> Each entrance has an open approach cutting that extends from the tunnel. The northwestern entrance features two interpretive signs, one outlining the history of the tramway and tunnel, the other identifying the use of the tunnel during the Second World War.<ref name=qhr/> Both entrances also feature waist high steel entrance barriers added to the site as part of the Centenary of Federation project.<ref name=qhr/> Neither of the modern interpretive signs or modern entrance barriers are of cultural heritage significance.<ref name=qhr/> == Heritage listing == Lahey's Canungra Tramway Tunnel was listed on the [[Queensland Heritage Register]] on 11 April 2005 having satisfied the following criteria.<ref name=qhr/> '''The place is important in demonstrating the evolution or pattern of Queensland's history.''' The Laheys Canungra Tramway Tunnel is important in demonstrating the pattern of Queensland's history as an example of a privately built, owned and operated tramway. It is also important as a product of the development of the early timber getting and milling industries in Queensland.<ref name=qhr/> '''The place demonstrates rare, uncommon or endangered aspects of Queensland's cultural heritage.''' The place demonstrates uncommon aspects of Queensland's cultural heritage as an early example of one of the few tramway tunnels built in Queensland not requiring lining or support.<ref name=qhr/> '''The place is important in demonstrating a high degree of creative or technical achievement at a particular period.''' The tunnel is important in demonstrating the high degree of creative and technical achievement required to solve complex engineering problems associated with the construction of Queensland's early railways in challenging environments and through the use of new and untried technologies.<ref name=qhr/> '''The place has a strong or special association with a particular community or cultural group for social, cultural or spiritual reasons.''' The tunnel holds strong social significance for the community for its landmark values and for the contribution that the early timber industry and subsequent tramway operations had for the economic and cultural development of the Canungra region. The tunnel is also of social significance to the community as demonstrated by the installation of interpretive signing and the opening of the tunnel as a local tourist attraction.<ref name=qhr/> '''The place has a special association with the life or work of a particular person, group or organisation of importance in Queensland's history.''' The place has a special association with the life and work of several generations of the Lahey family, who have been influential in the development of the timber industry in southeastern Queensland, and in the general development of the Canungra area.<ref name=qhr/> ==See also== {{Portal|Queensland}} * [[Lahey's Canungra Sawmill]] == References == {{reflist}} === Attribution === {{QHR-CC-2014}} == Further reading == * {{Cite book| last1=Morgan|first1=Robert K | last2=Stamford|first2=Frank | title=Laheys' Canungra tramway |year=2000 | publication-date=2000 | publisher=Light Railway Research Society of Australia | isbn=978-0-909340-40-7 }} * {{Cite book| last=Kerr|first=John | title=Forest industry heritage places study : sawmills and tramways, South Eastern Queensland | chapter= Lahey's Tramway, Canungra|chapter-url=http://www.agriculture.gov.au/SiteCollectionDocuments/rfa/regions/qld-south-east/cultural-heriatage/forest-industry-places/pdf/qld_se_saw12.pdf|publication-date=1998 | publisher=Dept. of Environment] | url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/32692329 | access-date=14 April 2018 }} == External links == {{Commons category-inline|Lahey's Canungra Tramway Tunnel}} [[Category:Queensland Heritage Register]] [[Category:Canungra, Queensland]] [[Category:Railway tunnels in Queensland]] [[Category:Articles incorporating text from the Queensland Heritage Register]] [[Category:Tunnels completed in 1903]] [[Category:1903 establishments in Australia]] [[Category:Disused tunnels in Australia]]
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[{"title": "Lahey's Canungra Tramway Tunnel", "data": {"Location": "Canungra, Queensland, Australia", "Coordinates": "28\u00b001\u203223\u2033S 153\u00b010\u203218\u2033E\ufeff / \ufeff28.0231\u00b0S 153.1718\u00b0E", "Design period": "1900 - 1914 (early 20th century)", "Built": "1901 - 1903"}}, {"title": "Queensland Heritage Register", "data": {"Official name": "Lahey's Canungra Tramway Tunnel", "Type": "state heritage (built)", "Designated": "11 April 2005", "Reference no.": "602529", "Significant period": "1900s (fabric) \u00b7 1903-c. 1933 (historical period of use) \u00b7 1940s (wartime storage use)", "Significant components": "graffiti, cutting - tramway, tunnel - tramway", "Builders": "Mr Clark"}}]
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# Los Molinos, Madrid Los Molinos is a municipality of the Community of Madrid, Spain.
enwiki/23550455
enwiki
23,550,455
Los Molinos, Madrid
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Los_Molinos,_Madrid
2024-08-14T22:44:56Z
en
Q963615
67,765
{{Expand Spanish|topic=geo|date=July 2009|Los Molinos (Madrid)}} {{Infobox settlement <!-- See Template:Infobox settlement for additional fields and descriptions --> <!-- Basic info ----------------> |name = Los Molinos |other_name = |native_name = <!-- for cities whose native name is not in English --> |nickname = |settlement_type = [[Municipalities of Spain|Municipality]] |motto = <!-- images and maps -----------> |image_skyline = |imagesize = |image_caption = |image_flag = Bandera_de_Los_Molinos.png |flag_size = |image_seal = |seal_size = |image_shield = EscudoMolinosVector.png |shield_size = |image_map =Los Molinos (Madrid) mapa.svg |mapsize =300px |map_caption =Municipal location within the Community of Madrid. |pushpin_map =<!-- the name of a location map as per http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Location_map --> |pushpin_label_position =above |pushpin_mapsize =300 |pushpin_map_caption =Location in Spain <!-- Location ------------------> |subdivision_type = Country |subdivision_name = {{flag|Spain}} |subdivision_type1 = [[Autonomous communities of Spain|Autonomous community]] |subdivision_name1 =[[Community of Madrid]] |subdivision_type2 = |subdivision_name2 = |subdivision_type3 = |subdivision_name3 = |<!-- Politics -----------------> |government_footnotes = |government_type = |leader_title = |leader_name = |leader_title1 = <!-- for places with, say, both a mayor and a city manager --> |leader_name1 = |established_title = <!-- Settled --> |established_date = <!-- Area ---------------------> |area_magnitude = |unit_pref =Imperial <!--Enter: Imperial, if Imperial (metric) is desired--> |area_footnotes = |area_total_km2 = <!-- ALL fields dealing with a measurements are subject to automatic unit conversion--> |area_land_km2 = <!--See table @ Template:Infobox Settlement for details on automatic unit conversion--> <!-- Population -----------------------> |population_note = |population_as_of = {{Spain metadata Wikidata|population_as_of}} |population_footnotes = {{Spain metadata Wikidata|population_footnotes}} |population_total = {{Spain metadata Wikidata|population_total}} |population_density_km2 = |population_density_sq_mi = |population_metro = |population_density_metro_km2 = |population_density_metro_sq_mi = |population_blank1_title =Ethnicities |population_blank1 = |population_density_blank1_km2 = |population_density_blank1_sq_mi = <!-- General information ---------------> |timezone = [[Central European Time|CET]] |utc_offset = +1 |timezone_DST = [[Central European Summer Time|CEST]] |utc_offset_DST = +2 |coordinates = |elevation_footnotes = <!--for references: use <ref> </ref> tags--> |elevation_m = |elevation_ft = <!-- Area/postal codes & others --------> |postal_code_type = <!-- enter ZIP code, Postcode, Post code, Postal code... --> |postal_code = |area_code = |blank_name = |blank_info = |blank1_name = |blank1_info = |website = |footnotes = }} ''' Los Molinos''' is a [[Municipalities of Spain|municipality]] of the [[Community of Madrid]], Spain. == References == {{reflist}} {{coord|40|42|40|N|4|04|28|W|source:kolossus-plwiki|display=title}} {{Municipalities in the Community of Madrid}} {{authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Molinos, Los, Spain}} [[Category:Municipalities in the Community of Madrid]] {{Madrid-geo-stub}}
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[{"title": "Los Molinos", "data": {"Country": "Spain", "Autonomous community": "Community of Madrid"}}, {"title": "Population (2018)", "data": {"\u2022 Total": "4,328", "Time zone": "UTC+1 (CET)", "\u2022 Summer (DST)": "UTC+2 (CEST)"}}]
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# Law and Gospel (Cranach) Law and Gospel (or Law and Grace) is one of a number of thematically linked, allegorical panel paintings by Lucas Cranach the Elder from about 1529. The paintings, intended to illustrate Lutheran ideas of salvation, are exemplars of Lutheran Merkbilder, which were simple, didactic illustrations of Christian doctrine. Cranach probably drew on input from his lifelong friend Martin Luther when designing these panels, which illustrate the Protestant concept of Law and Gospel. The earliest forms of the picture are the panels in Gotha, Germany and the National Gallery in Prague; the Gotha panel is thought to be later. The paintings were the basis for many similar works by Cranach and his workshop, Lucas Cranach the Younger, and other artists in diverse forms such as printmaking, relief sculpture and household furnishings. ## Theological context The left and right "wings" of the paintings illustrate the Protestant concept of Law and Gospel, which emphasizes salvation through the forgiveness of sins in light of the person and work of Jesus Christ. "Law", or the Old Covenant, is symbolized on the left, and "Gospel" or "Grace" on the right. The panels illustrate the Lutheran idea that Law is not sufficient for salvation, but Gospel is. As Luther wrote in 1522: The Law is the Word in which God teaches and tells us what we are to do and not to do, as in the Ten Commandments. Now wherever human nature is alone, without the grace of God, the Law cannot be kept, because since Adam's fall in Paradise man is corrupt and has nothing but a wicked desire to sin... The other Word of God is not Law or commandment, nor does it require anything of us; but after the first Word, that of the Law, has done this work and distressful misery and poverty have been produced in the heart, God comes and offers His lovely, living Word, and promises, pledges, and obligates Himself to give grace and help, that we may get out of this misery and that all sins not only be forgiven but also blotted out... See, this divine promise of His grace and of the forgiveness of sin is properly called Gospel." The two halves of the panel can be seen as illustrating opposing theologies. Donald Ehresmann wrote in 1967, "The way to salvation set forth on the right side ... is strikingly contrasted to the way of damnation on the left side." A more nuanced approach asks the viewer to find a dynamic relationship between Law and Gospel. Art historian Bonnie Noble suggests that in Lutheranism, "law is also the means by which the necessity of grace becomes apparent.... The painting draws a boundary between the dynamics of law and gospel (Lutheran theology) on the one hand, and law on its own (Catholicism or Judaism) on the other". ## Description On the left, "Law" side of the Gotha painting, a naked man is tormented by a demon and a skeleton (Death) as they force him toward Hell. Other motifs on the left include Christ in Judgment, the Fall of Man, the Brazen Serpent, and Moses with his tablets. On the right, "Gospel" side, a man interacts with John the Baptist, who is pointing to Jesus as if to say, "He died for you." He stands before both Christ on the Cross and the Risen Christ, whose blood streams onto the man, through the Dove (Holy Spirit), making Christ's blood into "the saving waters of baptism". The Lamb of God stands atop the trampled demons from the left half. A tree divides the two halves of the panel, shown dying on the left side but living on the "Gospel" side. The bottom of the Gotha painting has six columns of New Testament scripture in German, likely chosen by Philip Melanchthon. The Prague version unifies the two halves by portraying one man sitting in front of the tree, flanked by a prophet on the left and John the Baptist on the right, both of whom point towards Christ. The two panels can be read somewhat differently: it is easier for the viewer to identify with the man when he is the centered subject. Temporally, the Gotha panel shows two men simultaneously facing the consequences of past actions, while the man in the Prague panel clearly has a choice before him. While his "baser" lower body points to the "Law" side, his head and torso turn affirmatively toward John and the "Gospel" half. The painting includes many of the same symbols as the Gotha panel, such as the Brazen Serpent, Moses (at top left), the Fall, and the Crucified and Risen Christ. The Virgin now stands on a hill at right. This panel originally contained text that labelled the motifs, but they were lost during cleaning. The Prague composition was the preferred one for many derivative works by Hans Holbein the Younger, Erhard Altdorfer, the engraver Geoffroy Tory and others. Cranach moved the Brazen Serpent motif from the left side in the original two panels to the right in later versions, such as the woodcut. It is an Old Testament story in which God punishes Israelites fleeing Egypt by inflicting them with serpents; they need only look upon the serpent placed on a cross by Moses to be saved. Luther considered the story an example of faith and illustrative of Gospel. The mixture of Old and New Testament concerns in both halves of the panels illustrates that Gospel is not only found in the New Testament. ## Meaning For Luther and Cranach, artworks such as Law and Gospel were intended to instill understanding of scripture and Lutheran thought, and the images were deemed acceptable so long as they were subordinate to the written word. The role of these Reformation Merkbilder contrasted with religious art in other parts of Europe, such as Early Netherlandish and Italian Renaissance painting. According to Bonnie Noble: Earlier art originated from nonscriptural sources and performed nebulous functions, such as to inspire pious meditations or even private visions. Pre-Reformation images could bestow merit upon the beholder and frequently became the objects of veneration themselves. The varied origins and functions of art before the Reformation offered a considerable amount of interpretive freedom to the beholder, a freedom that Lutheran views on images vehemently endeavored to curtail. Thus the didactic format of the painting seeks to define and limit the viewer's response, making it ripe for art-historical criticism less enamored of such moral or instructive values. In one summary, Cranach's work is described as a "shallow fantasy" that fails to raise the "religious thought world of the Reformers ... to an artistic height"; it is "Protestant allegory overburdened with thoughts" and "overweighted with dry, didactic propagandistic content". The painting has also been analyzed in terms of typology, in which correspondences between the Old and New Testaments are sought. In this case, the "Law" half is seen to illustrate the Old Testament, and the "Gospel" half the New Testament. For example, the "type" of Moses placing a serpent on a cross is answered by the "antitype" of the Crucifixion. The analysis is complicated by the appearance of Christ in Judgment, from the New Testament, on the "Law" side, and by the Old Testament's Brazen Serpent motif on the "Gospel" side in later versions of the panel.
enwiki/57113444
enwiki
57,113,444
Law and Gospel (Cranach)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_and_Gospel_(Cranach)
2024-11-16T19:14:45Z
en
Q133444154
56,753
{{Short description|Paintings by Lucas Cranach the Elder}} {{italic title}} [[File:GOTHA-cranach-veljo.jpg|thumb|400px|[[Lucas Cranach the Elder]], ''Law and Gospel'', Herzogliches Museum, Gotha, Germany. {{convert|82.2|x|118|cm|in|abbr=on}}]] '''''Law and Gospel''''' (or '''''Law and Grace''''') is one of a number of thematically linked, allegorical panel paintings by [[Lucas Cranach the Elder]] from about 1529. The paintings, intended to illustrate [[Lutheran]] ideas of salvation, are exemplars of Lutheran ''Merkbilder'',<ref>Ehrstine, Glenn (2002). ''Theater, Culture, and Community in Reformation Bern: 1523–1555''. Studies in Medieval and Reformation Thought Vol. 85. Brill. {{ISBN|9789004123533}}</ref> which were simple, [[Didacticism|didactic]] illustrations of Christian doctrine. Cranach probably drew on input from his lifelong friend [[Martin Luther]] when designing these panels, which illustrate the [[Protestant]] concept of [[Law and Gospel]]. The earliest forms of the picture are the panels in [[Law and Grace (Gotha)|Gotha]], Germany and the [[Law and Grace (Prague)|National Gallery in Prague]]; the Gotha panel is thought to be later. The paintings were the basis for many similar works by Cranach and his workshop, Lucas Cranach the Younger, and other artists in diverse forms such as printmaking, relief sculpture and household furnishings. ==Theological context== [[File:Lucas Cranach - Verdammnis und Erlösung.jpg|thumb|300px|A later (1536) version by Cranach and his son. Oil, gold and paper on panel, transferred on panel]] The left and right "wings" of the paintings illustrate the Protestant concept of [[Law and Gospel]], which emphasizes salvation through the forgiveness of sins in light of the person and work of Jesus Christ. "Law", or the [[Christian views on the Old Covenant|Old Covenant]], is symbolized on the left, and "Gospel" or "Grace" on the right. The panels illustrate the Lutheran idea that Law is not sufficient for salvation, but Gospel is.<ref>Noble, 37</ref> As Luther wrote in 1522: {{blockquote|The Law is the Word in which God teaches and tells us what we are to do and not to do, as in the Ten Commandments. Now wherever human nature is alone, without the grace of God, the Law cannot be kept, because since Adam's fall in Paradise man is corrupt and has nothing but a wicked desire to sin... The other Word of God is not Law or commandment, nor does it require anything of us; but after the first Word, that of the Law, has done this work and distressful misery and poverty have been produced in the heart, God comes and offers His lovely, living Word, and promises, pledges, and obligates Himself to give grace and help, that we may get out of this misery and that all sins not only be forgiven but also blotted out... See, this divine promise of His grace and of the forgiveness of sin is properly called Gospel."<ref>Luther in translation by Christensen, C. C. (1979), ''Art and the Reformation in Germany''. Quoted in Kusukawa, Sachiko (1995). ''The Transformation of Natural Philosophy: The Case of Philip Melanchthon'', p. 29</ref>}} The two halves of the panel can be seen as illustrating opposing theologies. Donald Ehresmann wrote in 1967, "The way to salvation set forth on the right side ... is strikingly contrasted to the way of damnation on the left side."<ref>Quoted in Noble, 41</ref> A more nuanced approach asks the viewer to find a dynamic relationship between Law and Gospel. Art historian Bonnie Noble suggests that in Lutheranism, "law is also the means by which the necessity of grace becomes apparent.... The painting draws a boundary between the dynamics of law and gospel (Lutheran theology) on the one hand, and law on its own (Catholicism or Judaism) on the other".<ref>Noble, 49</ref> ==Description== [[File:Cranach law and grace woodcut.jpg|thumb|left|300px|''Law and Grace'', woodcut. Cranach, c. 1530]] On the left, "Law" side of the Gotha painting, a naked man is tormented by a demon and a skeleton (Death) as they force him toward Hell. Other motifs on the left include [[Christ in Judgment]], the [[Fall of Man]], the [[Brazen Serpent]], and [[Moses]] with his tablets. On the right, "Gospel" side, a man interacts with [[John the Baptist]], who is pointing to Jesus as if to say, "He died for you."<ref>Kusukawa, 199</ref> He stands before both [[Crucifixion of Christ|Christ on the Cross]] and the [[Risen Christ]], whose blood streams onto the man, through the [[Christian symbolism#Dove|Dove]] ([[Holy Spirit]]), making Christ's blood into "the saving waters of baptism".<ref>Koerner, 373</ref> The [[Lamb of God]] stands atop the trampled demons from the left half. A tree divides the two halves of the panel, shown dying on the left side but living on the "Gospel" side. The bottom of the Gotha painting has six columns of New Testament scripture in German, likely chosen by [[Philip Melanchthon]].<ref>Noble, 15, 27–32, 40</ref> The Prague version unifies the two halves by portraying one man sitting in front of the tree, flanked by a prophet on the left and John the Baptist on the right, both of whom point towards Christ. The two panels can be read somewhat differently: it is easier for the viewer to identify with the man when he is the centered subject. Temporally, the Gotha panel shows two men simultaneously facing the consequences of past actions, while the man in the Prague panel clearly has a choice before him. While his "baser" lower body points to the "Law" side, his head and torso turn affirmatively toward John and the "Gospel" half. The painting includes many of the same symbols as the Gotha panel, such as the Brazen Serpent, Moses (at top left), the Fall, and the Crucified and Risen Christ. The [[Virgin Mary|Virgin]] now stands on a hill at right. This panel originally contained text that labelled the motifs, but they were lost during cleaning. The Prague composition was the preferred one for many derivative works by [[Hans Holbein the Younger]], [[Erhard Altdorfer]], the engraver [[Geoffroy Tory]] and others.<ref>Koerner, 398</ref> Cranach moved the Brazen Serpent motif from the left side in the original two panels to the right in later versions, such as the woodcut. It is an Old Testament story in which God punishes Israelites fleeing Egypt by inflicting them with serpents; they need only look upon the serpent placed on a cross by Moses to be saved. Luther considered the story an example of faith and illustrative of Gospel. The mixture of Old and New Testament concerns in both halves of the panels illustrates that Gospel is not only found in the New Testament.<ref>Nadel, 38</ref> ==Meaning== [[File:Lucas Cranach (I) - The Law and the Gospel.jpg|300px|thumb|''Law and Gospel'', [[National Gallery in Prague]]. Tempera panel. {{convert|72|x|88.5|cm|in|abbr=on}}]] For Luther and Cranach, artworks such as ''Law and Gospel'' were intended to instill understanding of scripture and Lutheran thought, and the images were deemed acceptable so long as they were subordinate to the written word. The role of these Reformation ''Merkbilder'' contrasted with religious art in other parts of Europe, such as [[Early Netherlandish painting|Early Netherlandish]] and [[Italian Renaissance painting]]. According to Bonnie Noble: {{blockquote|Earlier art originated from nonscriptural sources and performed nebulous functions, such as to inspire pious meditations or even private visions. Pre-Reformation images could bestow merit upon the beholder and frequently became the objects of veneration themselves. The varied origins and functions of art before the Reformation offered a considerable amount of interpretive freedom to the beholder, a freedom that Lutheran views on images vehemently endeavored to curtail.<ref>Noble, 34</ref>}} Thus the didactic format of the painting seeks to define and limit the viewer's response, making it ripe for art-historical criticism less enamored of such moral or instructive values. In one summary, Cranach's work is described as a "shallow fantasy" that fails to raise the "religious thought world of the Reformers ... to an artistic height"; it is "Protestant allegory overburdened with thoughts" and "overweighted with dry, didactic propagandistic content".<ref>Various critics collected by Weimer, 304–305</ref> The painting has also been analyzed in terms of [[typology (theology)|typology]], in which correspondences between the Old and New Testaments are sought. In this case, the "Law" half is seen to illustrate the Old Testament, and the "Gospel" half the New Testament. For example, the "type" of Moses placing a serpent on a cross is answered by the "antitype" of the Crucifixion. The analysis is complicated by the appearance of Christ in Judgment, from the New Testament, on the "Law" side, and by the Old Testament's Brazen Serpent motif on the "Gospel" side in later versions of the panel. == See also == *[[Lutheran art]] * [[Art in the Protestant Reformation and Counter-Reformation]] ==Notes== {{reflist|2}} ==Works cited== {{Refbegin|26em}} * {{cite book|last=Koerner |first=Joseph Leo |date=1993 |title=The Moment of Self-Portraiture in German Renaissance Art |publisher=University of Chicago Press |isbn=9780226449999}} * {{cite book|last=Noble|first=Bonnie|title=Lucas Cranach the Elder: Art and Devotion of the German Reformation |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zza73rddamcC&pg=PR7 |year=2009 |publisher=University Press of America |isbn=978-0-7618-4337-5}} * {{cite book |last=Weimer |first=Christoph |editor-last=Wengert |editor-first=Timothy J. |title=The Pastoral Luther: Essays on Martin Luther's Practical Theology |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=r6PS3JKdoi4C&pg=PA117 |date= 2009 |publisher=Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing |isbn=978-0-8028-6351-5 |chapter = Luther and Cranach on Justification in Word and Image|pages=292–309 }} {{refend}} {{Lucas Cranach the Elder}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Law and Gospel}} [[Category:Paintings by Lucas Cranach the Elder]] [[Category:1529 paintings]] [[Category:16th-century allegorical paintings]] [[Category:Christian paintings]] [[Category:Paintings of John the Baptist]] [[Category:Paintings of the Crucifixion of Jesus]] [[Category:Lutheran art]] [[Category:Skulls in art]] [[Category:Sheep in art]]
1,257,809,121
[]
false
# Mandani, Iran Mandani (Persian: ماندني, also Romanized as Māndanī) is a village in Tashan-e Sharqi Rural District, Tashan District, Behbahan County, Khuzestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 106, in 23 families.
enwiki/37082053
enwiki
37,082,053
Mandani, Iran
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mandani,_Iran
2024-11-01T16:28:01Z
en
Q5789292
56,731
{{For|the village in Gotvand County|Mandani, Gotvand}} {{Infobox settlement |official_name =Mandani |native_name =ماندني |settlement_type = village |subdivision_type = [[List of countries|Country]] |subdivision_name = {{flag|Iran}} |subdivision_type1 =[[Provinces of Iran|Province]] |subdivision_name1 =[[Khuzestan Province|Khuzestan]] |subdivision_type2 =[[Counties of Iran|County]] |subdivision_name2 = [[Behbahan County|Behbahan]] |subdivision_type3 =[[Bakhsh]] |subdivision_name3 =[[Tashan District|Tashan]] |subdivision_type4 =[[Rural Districts of Iran|Rural District]] |subdivision_name4 =[[Tashan-e Sharqi Rural District|Tashan-e Sharqi]] |leader_title = |leader_name = |established_title = |established_date = |area_total_km2 = |area_footnotes = |population_as_of = 2006 |population_total =106 |population_density_km2 =auto |timezone = [[Iran Standard Time|IRST]] |utc_offset = +3:30 |timezone_DST = [[Iran Daylight Time|IRDT]] |utc_offset_DST = +4:30 |coordinates = |elevation_m = |area_code = |website = |footnotes = }} '''Mandani''' ({{langx|fa|ماندني}}, also [[Romanize]]d as '''Māndanī''') is a village in [[Tashan-e Sharqi Rural District]], [[Tashan District]], [[Behbahan County]], [[Khuzestan Province]], [[Iran]]. At the 2006 census, its population was 106, in 23 families.<ref>{{IranCensus2006|06}}</ref> == References == {{Portal|Iran}} {{Reflist}} {{Behbahan County}} {{Coord missing|Khuzestan Province}} [[Category:Populated places in Behbahan County]] {{Behbahan-geo-stub}}
1,254,772,043
[{"title": "Mandani \u0645\u0627\u0646\u062f\u0646\u064a", "data": {"Country": "Iran", "Province": "Khuzestan", "County": "Behbahan", "Bakhsh": "Tashan", "Rural District": "Tashan-e Sharqi"}}, {"title": "Population (2006)", "data": {"\u2022 Total": "106", "Time zone": "UTC+3:30 (IRST)", "\u2022 Summer (DST)": "UTC+4:30 (IRDT)"}}]
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# Love Is Hot, Truth Is Molten | Review scores | Review scores | | Source | Rating | | ------------- | ------------- | | Allmusic | [ 1 ] | Love Is Hot, Truth Is Molten is a compilation album from Scottish singer-songwriter Donovan. It was released in Australia on 7 April 1998 (Raven Records 68). ## History In 1998, Raven Records issued a comprehensive overview of Donovan's 1960s material as Love Is Hot, Truth Is Molten. The album featured many of the songs in true stereo, unique to any Donovan compact disc release up until that time. ## Track listing All tracks by Donovan Leitch, except where noted. 1. "Catch the Wind" – 2:54 2. "Colours" – 2:43 3. "Universal Soldier" (Buffy Sainte-Marie) – 2:12 4. "Hey Gyp (Dig the Slowness)" – 3:11 5. "Josie" – 3:24 6. "Season of the Witch" – 5:00 7. "Celeste" – 4:09 8. "Sunshine Superman" – 4:33 9. "The Trip" – 4:34 10. "Mellow Yellow" – 3:41 11. "Superlungs" – 3:15 12. "Epistle to Dippy" – 3:09 13. "There Is a Mountain" – 2:34 14. "Wear Your Love Like Heaven" – 2:24 15. "Jennifer Juniper" – 2:42 16. "Poor Cow" – 2:56 17. "Hurdy Gurdy Man" – 3:15 18. "Laléna" – 2:59 19. "Atlantis" – 5:01 20. "Goo Goo Barabajagal (Love Is Hot)" – 3:18 21. "To Susan on the West Coast Waiting" – 3:11 22. "Celia of the Seals" – 3:00 23. "Cosmic Wheels" – 4:02
enwiki/4029531
enwiki
4,029,531
Love Is Hot, Truth Is Molten
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Love_Is_Hot,_Truth_Is_Molten
2024-12-05T14:43:01Z
en
Q6690730
44,478
{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2020}} {{Use British English|date=April 2011}} {{Infobox album | name = Love Is Hot, Truth Is Molten | type = [[Compilation album]] | artist = [[Donovan]] | cover = Donovan-Love_Is_Hot_Truth_Is_Molten.jpg | alt = | released = 7 April 1998 | recorded = 1965–1973 | venue = | studio = | genre = [[folk music|folk]], rock | length = 77:34 | label = [[Raven Records|Raven]] | producer = Terry Kennedy, Peter Eden, Geoff Stephens, [[Mickie Most]] | prev_title = [[Mellow (Donovan album)|Mellow]] | prev_year = 1997 | next_title = [[The Very Best of Donovan (1998 album)|The Very Best of Donovan]] | next_year = 1998 }} {{Album ratings | rev1 = [[Allmusic]] | rev1Score = {{Rating|4.5|5}}<ref>{{AllMusic|class=album|id=r347971|first=Lindsay|last=Planer}}</ref> | noprose = yes }} '''''Love Is Hot, Truth Is Molten''''' is a compilation album from Scottish singer-songwriter [[Donovan]]. It was released in Australia on 7 April 1998 (Raven Records 68). ==History== In 1998, Raven Records issued a comprehensive overview of Donovan's 1960s material as ''Love Is Hot, Truth Is Molten''. The album featured many of the songs in true stereo, unique to any Donovan compact disc release up until that time. ==Track listing== All tracks by Donovan Leitch, except where noted. #"[[Catch the Wind (song)|Catch the Wind]]" – 2:54 #"[[Colours (Donovan song)|Colours]]" – 2:43 #"[[Universal Soldier (song)|Universal Soldier]]" ([[Buffy Sainte-Marie]]) – 2:12 #"Hey Gyp (Dig the Slowness)" – 3:11 #"[[Josie (Donovan song)|Josie]]" – 3:24 #"Season of the Witch" – 5:00 #"Celeste" – 4:09 #"[[Sunshine Superman (song)|Sunshine Superman]]" – 4:33 #"The Trip" – 4:34 #"[[Mellow Yellow]]" – 3:41 #"Superlungs" – 3:15 #"[[Epistle to Dippy]]" – 3:09 #"[[There Is a Mountain]]" – 2:34 #"[[Wear Your Love Like Heaven]]" – 2:24 #"[[Jennifer Juniper]]" – 2:42 #"Poor Cow" – 2:56 #"[[Hurdy Gurdy Man]]" – 3:15 #"[[Laléna]]" – 2:59 #"[[Atlantis (Donovan song)|Atlantis]]" – 5:01 #"[[Barabajagal (song)|Goo Goo Barabajagal (Love Is Hot)]]" – 3:18 #"To Susan on the West Coast Waiting" – 3:11 #"Celia of the Seals" – 3:00 #"Cosmic Wheels" – 4:02 ==References== {{Reflist}} ==External links== * [http://donovan-unofficial.com/music/compilations/other/love_is_hot_truth_is_molten.html Love Is Hot, Truth Is Molten – Donovan Unofficial Site] {{Donovan}} {{Authority control}} [[Category:Albums produced by Mickie Most]] [[Category:1998 compilation albums]] [[Category:Donovan compilation albums]]
1,261,327,264
[{"title": "Compilation album by Donovan", "data": {"Released": "7 April 1998", "Recorded": "1965\u20131973", "Genre": "folk, rock", "Length": "77:34", "Label": "Raven", "Producer": "Terry Kennedy, Peter Eden, Geoff Stephens, Mickie Most"}}, {"title": "Donovan chronology", "data": {"Mellow \u00b7 (1997)": "Love Is Hot, Truth Is Molten \u00b7 (1998) \u00b7 The Very Best of Donovan \u00b7 (1998)"}}, {"title": "Donovan", "data": {"Studio albums": "What's Bin Did and What's Bin Hid ( Catch the Wind ) Fairytale Sunshine Superman Mellow Yellow A Gift from a Flower to a Garden The Hurdy Gurdy Man Barabajagal Open Road HMS Donovan Cosmic Wheels Essence to Essence 7-Tease Slow Down World Donovan Neutronica Love Is Only Feeling Lady of the Stars Sutras Pied Piper Sixty Four Brother Sun, Sister Moon Beat Cafe Shadows of Blue", "Live albums": "Donovan in Concert Live in Japan: Spring Tour 1973 Rising Rising Again Greatest Hits Live: Vancouver 1986", "Songs": "\" Catch the Wind \" \" Colours \" \" Universal Soldier \" \" Turquoise \" / \" Hey Gyp (Dig the Slowness) \" \" You're Gonna Need Somebody On Your Bond \" \" To Try for the Sun \" \" Josie \" \" Remember the Alamo \" \" Sunshine Superman \" \" Mellow Yellow \" \" Epistle to Dippy \" \" There Is a Mountain \" \" Wear Your Love Like Heaven \" \" Jennifer Juniper \" \" Hurdy Gurdy Man \" \" Atlantis \" \" Lal\u00e9na \" \" Barabajagal \" \" Rock 'n' Roll with Me \" \" Season of the Witch \" \" Billion Dollar Babies \" \" I Am the Shaman \"", "Compilation \u00b7 albums": "The Best of Donovan (1969) Catch the Wind (1971) Catch the Wind (1986) Atlantis Calling Donovan's Greatest Hits Donovan's Greatest Hits and More The Collection Colours (1972) Colours (1991) Definitive Collection Donovan File Universal Soldier Wonderful Music of Donovan Early Treasures The Early Years This Is Donovan A Touch of Music a Touch of Donovan Sunshine Superman: The Very Best of Donovan Sunshine Superman: 18 Songs of Love and Freedom The Real Donovan Peace and Love Songs Minstrel Boy Mellow Love Is Hot, Truth Is Molten Like It Is, Was, and Evermore Shall Be Storyteller Summer Day Reflection Songs Eco-Song The Essential Donovan", "Box sets": "Troubadour: The Definitive Collection 1964\u20131976 Try for the Sun: The Journey of Donovan", "Family": "Linda Lawrence (wife) Donovan Leitch (son) Ione Skye (daughter) Kirsty Hume (daughter-in-law) Ben Lee (son-in-law) Ad-Rock (son-in-law)", "Related": "There Is an Ocean The Sports Play Dylan (and Donovan) Island of Circles Open Road One Night in Time The Sensual Donovan"}}]
false
# Lambley Viaduct Lambley Viaduct is a stone bridge across the River South Tyne at Lambley in Northumberland. Formerly a railway bridge, it remains open to pedestrians but one end of the viaduct has been fenced off. ## History Lambley viaduct crosses the River South Tyne as a series of elegant stone arches. More than 260 m (850 ft) long, it was one of nine viaducts on the former Haltwhistle to Alston railway. This was opened in 1852 to haul coal and lead from the Alston mines, closed in 1976, and the viaduct was allowed to decay. In 1991 the British Rail Property Board agreed to repair the viaduct and hand it over to the North Pennine Heritage Trust which would maintain it in the future; however the Trust went into administration in 2011. The viaduct was probably designed by George Barclay Bruce, a Victorian engineer who was involved in the Alston line before leaving for India to pioneer railway construction there. It is a particularly elegant example of Victorian engineering: the river is crossed by nine 17-metre (56 ft) wide arches which support a deck at least 33 m (108 ft) above the river but, as it carried a single rail track, only 3.5 m (11 ft) wide. The piers to the arches are built of massive rough-faced stones each weighing up to 500 kilograms (1,100 lb), with similar-sized stones in ashlar to the main arch voussoirs. The spandrels and piers to the 6-metre (20 ft) wide approach arches are built of coursed rubble masonry. One end of the viaduct has been fenced off, after the path was diverted in 2004 to pass further away from Lambley railway station, which is now a private house. It is a Grade II* listed structure.
enwiki/52597211
enwiki
52,597,211
Lambley Viaduct
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lambley_Viaduct
2025-02-22T10:21:42Z
en
Q28961911
55,909
{{Use British English|date=September 2018}} {{Use dmy dates|date=September 2018}} {{Infobox bridge | name = Lambley Viaduct | image = South Tyne Lambley Viaduct 6173.JPG | alt = | caption = Lambley Viaduct in October 2011 | coordinates = {{coord|54.9190|-2.5085|type:landmark_region:GB-NBL}} | os_grid_reference = NY675584 | official_name = | other_name = | carries = {{ubl|{{UK NCN route|route=68}}|Pedestrians|{{small|(Formerly, [[Alston line]])}}}} | crosses = [[River Tyne|River South Tyne]] | locale = [[Northumberland]] | owner = | maint = | id = | architect = | designer = Probably [[George Barclay Bruce|Sir George Barclay Bruce]]<ref name=nhle /> | engineering = | design = | material = Stone | length = {{cvt|260|m}} | width = {{cvt|3.5|m}} | height = At least {{cvt|33|m}} | mainspan = | spans = 9 | pierswater = 3 | load = | clearance = | below = | life = | builder = | fabricator = | begin = | complete = 1852 | cost = | open = {{start date|1852|11|17|df=y}}<ref>{{cite book |last=Tomlinson |first=William Weaver |date=1914 |title=The North Eastern Railway: Its Rise and Development |url=https://archive.org/details/northeasternrail00tomluoft/page/511/mode/1up |location=Newcastle upon Tyne |publisher=Andrew Reid & Company |page=511 |via=[[Internet Archive]]}}</ref> | inaugurated = | preceded = Eals Footbridge | followed = [[Lambley Footbridge]] | collapsed = | closed = {{end date|1976|05|03|df=yes}}, as a railway | replaces = | extra = {{Infobox designation list | embed = yes | designation1 = NHLE | designation1_type = Grade II listed building | designation1_date = 23 August 1985<ref name=nhle /> | designation1_number = 1042918}} }} '''Lambley Viaduct''' is a stone bridge across the [[River Tyne|River South Tyne]] at [[Lambley, Northumberland|Lambley]] in [[Northumberland]]. Formerly a railway bridge, it remains open to pedestrians but one end of the viaduct has been fenced off. ==History== [[File:Lambley viaduct and Metro Cammell dmu.jpg|thumb|left|A train crossing the viaduct in September 1973]] [[File:Lambley Viaduct.jpeg | thumb | right | alt=A view of the viaduct from below | Lambley Viaduct 2024]] Lambley viaduct crosses the [[River Tyne|River South Tyne]] as a series of elegant stone [[arch]]es. More than {{cvt|260|m}} long, it was one of nine viaducts on the former [[Alston Line|Haltwhistle to Alston]] railway.<ref name="Fenton-1974">{{cite magazine |last=Fenton |first=Mike |date=December 1974 |title=South Tynedale Railway |magazine=[[The Railway Magazine|Railway Magazine]] |volume=120 |issue=884 |location=London |pages=588–591}}</ref><ref name="Fenton-1986">{{cite magazine |last=Fenton |first=Mike |date=Autumn 1986 |title=The Alston Branch |magazine=British Railway Journal |issue=13 |location=Didcot |pages=135–154 |issn=0265-4105}}</ref> This was opened in 1852 to haul coal and lead from the [[Alston, Cumbria|Alston]] mines, closed in 1976, and the viaduct was allowed to decay.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.bridgesonthetyne.co.uk/lambrw.html |title=River South Tyne - Lambley Viaduct |publisher=Bridges on the Tyne |access-date=2016-01-21 |df=dmy-all}}</ref> In 1991 the [[British Rail|British Rail Property Board]] agreed to repair the viaduct and hand it over to the North Pennine Heritage Trust which would maintain it in the future; however the Trust went into administration in 2011.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.thejournal.co.uk/news/north-east-news/north-pennines-heritage-trust-collapses-4423229 |title=North Pennines Heritage Trust collapses|date=2011-09-10|newspaper=[[The Journal (Newcastle upon Tyne newspaper)|The Journal]] |location=[[Newcastle upon Tyne]] |publisher=[[Trinity Mirror]] |access-date=2016-01-21 |quote=The trust, with 400 members and a team of volunteers, also owns Alston Arches and the Lambley Viaduct at Haltwhistle.}}</ref><ref name="Forsythe">{{cite book |last1=Forsythe |first1=Robert |last2=Blackett-Ord |first2=Charles |name-list-style=amp |date=1998 |title=Lambley Viaduct: The History, Decline and Restoration of a Great Monument |location=Nenthead |publisher=North Pennines Heritage Trust |isbn=0951353551}}</ref> The viaduct was probably designed by [[George Barclay Bruce]],<ref name=nhle /> a Victorian engineer who was involved in the Alston line before leaving for India to pioneer railway construction there. It is a particularly elegant example of Victorian engineering: the river is crossed by nine {{convert|17|m|adj=on}} wide arches which support a deck at least {{cvt|33|m}} above the river<ref name=nhle /> but, as it carried a single rail track, only {{cvt|3.5|m}} wide. The [[Pier (architecture)|piers]] to the arches are built of massive rough-faced stones each weighing up to {{convert|500|kg}}, with similar-sized stones in [[ashlar]] to the main arch [[voussoir]]s. The [[spandrel]]s and piers to the {{convert|6|m|adj=on}} wide approach arches are built of coursed rubble masonry.<ref name=ElaineRigby>{{cite web |title=Lambley Viaduct |url=http://freespace.virgin.net/elaine.rigby/lambley.htm |website=Blacket-Ord Consulting Engineers |access-date=2008-12-04 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20021107003743/http://freespace.virgin.net/elaine.rigby/lambley.htm |archive-date=2002-11-07}}</ref> One end of the viaduct has been fenced off, after the path was diverted in 2004 to pass further away from [[Lambley railway station]], which is now a private house.<ref name=ElaineRigby/> It is a [[Grade II* listed]] structure.<ref name=nhle>{{NHLE|grade=II*|num=1042918|desc=Railway Viaduct Across River South Tyne|access-date=5 September 2018|mode=cs2}}</ref> ==References== {{reflist}} {{River item box |River = [[River Tyne|River South Tyne]] |upstream = [[Eals Footbridge]] |upsub = [[Footbridge]] |downstream = [[Lambley Footbridge]] |downsub = [[Footbridge]] |type = bridge |location = NY675584}} {{Commons category}} [[Category:Bridges in Northumberland]] [[Category:Crossings of the River Tyne]] [[Category:Former railway bridges in the United Kingdom]] [[Category:Grade II* listed railway bridges and viaducts]] [[Category:National Transport Trust Red Wheel sites]]
1,277,051,425
[{"title": "Lambley Viaduct", "data": {"Coordinates": "54\u00b055\u203208\u2033N 2\u00b030\u203231\u2033W\ufeff / \ufeff54.9190\u00b0N 2.5085\u00b0W", "OS grid reference": "NY675584", "Carries": "- 68 - Pedestrians - (Formerly, Alston line)", "Crosses": "River South Tyne", "Locale": "Northumberland", "Preceded by": "Eals Footbridge", "Followed by": "Lambley Footbridge"}}, {"title": "Characteristics", "data": {"Material": "Stone", "Total length": "260 m (850 ft)", "Width": "3.5 m (11 ft)", "Height": "At least 33 m (108 ft)", "No. of spans": "9", "Piers in water": "3"}}, {"title": "History", "data": {"Designer": "Probably Sir George Barclay Bruce", "Construction end": "1852", "Opened": "17 November 1852", "Closed": "3 May 1976, as a railway"}}, {"title": "National Heritage List for England", "data": {"Type": "Grade II listed building", "Designated": "23 August 1985", "Reference no.": "1042918"}}]
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# List of sculptures by Jacob Epstein This is a list of public sculptures by Jacob Epstein. This list only includes works held in public collections, such as museums and art galleries, in public spaces or in buildings and venues open to the public. It does not include works held only in private collections. Throughout his career Epstein was a prolific sculptor of portrait heads and busts both of friends, family members, professional and amateur models but also of many of the most prominent public figures of his time, including Winston Churchill, Albert Einstein, George Bernard Shaw and Joseph Conrad. Popular as his portrait work was, almost all of Epstein's early large-scale public commissions, such as the Ages of Man statues in London and the tomb of Oscar Wilde in Paris, along with his exhibition pieces, were met with outrage and controversy. As a consequence, he received few architectural commissions from the 1930s until the 1950s. Then, the rebuilding of Britain following the Second World War created a demand for the monumental figurative sculptures that Epstein excelled in and the last decade of his life became a period of intense activity with substantial commissions from cathedrals and public buildings. Several of his large exhibition works which had also provoked controversy, notably Jacob and the Angel and Adam, were initially acquired by the owners of amusement parks and freak-shows where they were displayed behind curtains and warning signs. The majority of those works did not enter any public collections or galleries until after Epstein's death in 1959. ## 1900 to 1909 | Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates | Date | Type | Material | Dimensions | Designation | Wikidata | Notes | | ----------- | -------------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | ------- | -------------------- | -------------- | -------------------- | ----------- | --------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | More images | Baby Awake | The New Art Gallery Walsall | 1902-04 | Head | Bronze | 12.7cm | | | Six bronze casts in two versions. Plaster version in Mishkan Museum of Art, Israel | | | Baby Asleep | - National Galleries Scotland - The New Art Gallery Walsall - Leeds Art Gallery - Bristol Museum and Art Gallery | 1902-04 | Head | Bronze | 13.2 x 9.8 x 14.8cm | | Q76630325 | 23 casts. Plaster version in Israel Museum, Jerusalem | | | Head of an Infant | National Gallery of Victoria | 1902-03 | Head | Bronze | 28.1 x 10.6 x 14.5cm | | | [ 6 ] | | | Head of a Baby | Manchester Art Gallery | 1902-04 | Head | Bronze | 13.5 x 10cm | | | [ 7 ] | | More images | Romilly John | - Ben Uri Gallery & Museum, - Fitzwilliam Museum, - Fogg Museum, - National Gallery of Canada, - Museum Boijmans van Beuningen - The New Art Gallery Walsall | 1907 | Head | Gilded bronze | 30 x 16 x 21.5cm | | | Nine casts. Plaster version in Israel Museum | | | Italian Peasant Women | Ingram Collection of Modern British Art | 1907 | Head | Bronze | 33cm | | | Two casts. Plaster version in Syracuse University | | More images | The Ages of Man | Former British Medical Association headquarters, now Zimbabwe House, London | 1907-08 | 18 statues in niches | Portland stone | Each 210-215cm tall | | | Partally destroyed in 1937, some fragments in the National Gallery of Canada collection | | | The Severed Head | Metropolitan Museum of Art | 1907-08 | Head | Stone | 43.2 x 26 x 21.6cm | | | [ 17 ] | | | First Portrait of Euphemia Lamb | Tate Britain, Birmingham Museums and Art Gallery, Mishkan Museum of Art | 1908 | Bust | Bronze | 375 x 400 x 203mm | | Q76627327 | Eight casts. Plaster version, Israel Museum | | | Nan | - Tate Britain, - Queensland Art Gallery | 1909 | Bust | Bronze | 445 x 381 x 229mm | | | Modelled by Nan Condron. Two versions plus plaster version in Mishkan Museum of Art | | More images | Mary McEvoy | - Victoria and Albert Museum on loan from Tate Britain, - National Gallery of Victoria, - Leeds Art Gallery | 1909 | Bust | Bronze | 419 x 394 x 229mm | | | Three casts. Plaster version in Mishkan Museum of Art | | | Mary McEvoy / Mrs Ambrose McEvoy | Johannesburg Art Gallery | 1909 | Bust | Marble | 48cm | | | [ 1 ] [ 21 ] | | | Fountain figure (Euphemia Lamb) | MAMCO, Geneva | 1908-10 | Statue | Marble | 134.5cm tall | | | Commissioned by Lady Ottoline Morrell for her garden | ## 1910 to 1914 | Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates | Date | Type | Material | Dimensions | Designation | Wikidata | Notes | | ----------- | ---------------------------------------------- | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | ------- | ----------------------------- | ----------------- | ---------------------------- | ----------- | --------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | More images | Sun Goddess, Crouching | Victoria and Albert Museum on loan from Nottingham Castle Museum | 1909-10 | Statue | Limestone | 37.5cm | | | [ 1 ] | | More images | Sun worshipper | The Café, Holland Park, London | 1910 | Relief panel | Limestone | 190 x 54cm | | | [ 1 ] | | | Sun God | Tate Britain | 1910 | Relief | Hopton Wood stone | 2134 x 1980 x 355mm | | | On long-term loan from the Metropolitan Museum of Art | | | Rom | National Museum Cardiff | 1910 | Sculpture | Limestone | 85 x 31 x 31cm | | | Portrait of Romilly John;- Inscription by Eric Gill | | | Mrs Emily Chadbourne | Tate Britain | 1910 | Bust | Alabaster | 455 x 260 x 290mm | | | [ 27 ] | | | Maternity | Leeds Art Gallery | 1910 | Statue | Hoptonwood stone | 206cm tall | | | [ 1 ] | | | Lady Gregory | - Hugh Lane Gallery, - Leeds Art Gallery | 1910 | Bust | Bronze | 38cm | | | Commissioned by Hugh Lane | | | Mrs Marjorie Clifton | Mishkan Museum of Art | 1911 | Bust | Plaster | | | | Bronze cast in a private collection | | | Second portrait of Euphemia Lamb | Museum of the City of New York | 1911 | Half-length figure | Plaster | | | | Four bronze casts | | | Gertrude (The Bather) | - Ben Uri Gallery & Museum, - Carrick Hill, South Australia | 1911 | Half-figure | Bronze | 96cm high | | | Also known as Gertrude in a Bathing Cap, edition of two | | | Nan Seated | Museum of Modern Art, New York City | 1911 | Sculpture | Bronze | 47 x 33 x 14.9cm | | | Seven casts | | More images | Nan The Dreamer | - Fitzwilliam Museum, - The New Art Gallery Walsall, - Bradford Art Gallery, - Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery, Cleveland Museum of Art | 1911 | Sculpture of reclining figure | Bronze | 31 x 28.5 x 36.3cm | | | Modelled by Nan Condron; Edition of six casts plus a plaster version in the Mishkan Museum of Art | | | Nan (the Dreamer) | - Bradford Art Gallery, - Detroit Institute of Art, - Fitzwilliam Museum | 1911 | Bust | Bronze | 14 x 15 x 9cm | | | Modelled by Nan Condron, five casts, plaster model in the Ashmolean Museum | | More images | Head of a Women with Closed Eyes / The Sleeper | Fitzwilliam Museum | 1911 | Miniature bust on pedestal | Bronze & marble | 9.4(6.4) x 16.2 x 6.3(3.8)cm | | | Modelled by Nan Condron; Edition of three casts | | | Mother and Child | Carrick Hill, South Australia | 1911 | Statue | Bronze | 167.6cm tall | | | Three casts. Plaster version in Mishkan Museum of Art | | More images | Oscar Wilde's tomb | Père Lachaise Cemetery, Paris | 1911–12 | Sculpture | Stone | | | Q12432989 | [ 1 ] | | | Sunflower | National Gallery of Victoria | 1912-13 | Sculpture | Stone | 58.7 x 27.5 x 20.4cm | | | [ 36 ] | | More images | Self-portrait / Self-portrait with Storm Cap | National Portrait Gallery, London | 1912 | Bust | Bronze, cast 1917 | 502 x 270mm | | | 1912 plaster in Israel Museum | | | Female Figure in Flenite | Tate Britain | 1913 | Sculpture | Serpentine stone | 457 x 95 x 121mm plus base | | | [ 38 ] | | | Birth | Art Gallery of Ontario | 1913 | Carved panel | Stone | 30.6 x 26.6 x 10.2cm | | | [ 1 ] [ 39 ] | | | Figure in Flenite | Minneapolis Institute of Art | 1913 | Sculpture | Serpentine stone | 60.9cm | | | [ 40 ] | | More images | Rock Drill | 1973 reconstruction in Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery | 1913–14 | Sculpture | Plaster & metal | 205 x 141.5cm | | Q13274870 | Original version dismantled by Epstein in 1916 | | | Mother and Child | Museum of Modern Art, New York City | 1913 | Two heads | Marble | 43.8 x 43.1 x 10.2cm | | | [ 42 ] | | | Venus - First version | Baltimore Museum of Art | 1913 | Statue | Marble | 123.2 x 40.6 x 29.8cm | | | [ 43 ] | | | Doves (First Version) | Hirshhorn Museum | 1914 | Sculpture | Parian marble | 34.7 x 50.3 x 18.5cm | | | [ 44 ] | | More images | Doves (Second Version) | Tate Britain | 1914-15 | Sculpture | Parian marble | 648 x 787 x 343mm | | | [ 45 ] | ## 1915 to 1919 | Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates | Date | Type | Material | Dimensions | Designation | Wikidata | Notes | | ----------- | --------------------------------------------------- | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | ------- | ----------- | ------------------------ | --------------------- | ----------- | --------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | | Hilda Hamblay | Mishkan Museum of Art | 1915 | Bust | Plaster | | | | Two bronze casts | | | Elizabeth Scott-Ellis | Museum of the City of New York | 1915 | Bust | Plaster | | | | Bronze cast, possibly lost or in a private collection | | | First Portrait of Lilian Shelley | Montreal Museum of Fine Arts | 1915 | Head | Bronze | 32.5cm | | | Three casts | | | Admiral of the Fleet, Lord Fisher of Kilverstone | - Imperial War Museum, - National Gallery of Canada | 1915 | Bust | Bronze | 290 x 469 x 338mm | | Q76627716 | Five casts in two versions plus plaster casts in Israel Museum and National Maritime Museum | | | Mask of Billie Gordon | National Gallery of Canada | 1915 | Mask | Bronze | 26.8 x 18.6 x 20.4cm | | | [ 48 ] | | | The Duchess of Hamilton | Hirshhorn Museum | 1915 | Half-figure | Bronze | 63.7 x 53.5 x 27.3cm | | | [ 49 ] | | More images | Torso in Metal from 'The Rock Drill' | - Tate Britain, - Museum of Modern Art, - Auckland Art Gallery, - National Gallery of Canada | 1915 | Sculpture | Bronze or gunmetal | 705 x 584 x 445mm | | Q21743265 | Plaster cast in Israel Museum | | | Portrait of Iris Beerbohn Tree | Tate Britain | 1915 | Head | Patinated bronze | 348 x 290 x 228mm | | | At least six casts created | | | Second Portrait / Mask of Mrs Epstein | - Auckland Art Gallery, - Buffalo AKG Art Museum, - Manchester Art Gallery | 1916 | Mask | Bronze | 241mm | | | Two versions, with or without earrings, in nine casts plus plaster version at Mishkan Museum of Art | | More images | W. H. Davies | - National Portrait Gallery, London, - Newport Museum and Art Gallery | 1916 | Head | Bronze | 311mm high | | | Three casts | | More images | Augustus John | - National Portrait Gallery, London, - National Museum Cardiff | 1916 | Bust | Bronze | 350 x 270mm | | | Eleven casts plus plaster in Israel Museum | | More images | Bust of Meum Stewart | - Arts Council Collection, - The New Art Gallery Walsall, - Manchester Art Gallery | 1916-18 | Bust | Bronze | 42.5 x 39.4 x 26.7cm | | | [ 3 ] [ 63 ] [ 64 ] [ 65 ] | | | Second Portrait of Meum (Head) | - Fogg Gallery, - Art Gallery of New South Wales | 1916 | Head | Bronze | 32.5cm | | | Six bronze casts;- plaster version at Mishkan Museum of Art | | | Meum Lindsell-Stewart | National Gallery of Art, Washington | 1916-18 | Bust | Painted plaster | 43.5 x 40 x 31cm | | | [ 68 ] | | | Fourth Portrait of Meum / Meum with a Fan | Burrell Collection | 1916-18 | Half-figure | Bronze | 871mm | | | [ 69 ] | | | The Tin Hat | Imperial War Museum | 1916 | Bust | Bronze | 290 x 335 x 280mm | | | Four casts, plaster version at Mishkan Museum of Art | | | First Portrait of Bernard van Dieren | Detroit Institute of Art | 1916 | Bust | Plaster | 33.6 x 19.7 x 23cm | | | Plaster version;-University of Hull, three bronze casts | | | James Muirhead Bone | The McManus | 1916 | Head | Bronze | 26.5cm | | | Four casts, plaster version in Israel Museum | | | Venus - Second Version | Yale University Art Gallery | 1917 | Statue | Marble | 235.6 x 43.2 x 82.6cm | | | [ 73 ] | | | An American Soldier | - Imperial War Museum, - National Gallery of Art, Washington, - Metropolitan Museum of Art | 1917 | Bust | Bronze | 39.9 x 26.8 x 24.3cm | | | [ 74 ] [ 75 ] [ 76 ] | | | Gladys Deacon | Israel Museum | 1917 | Head | Plaster | 50cm | | Q76628051 | One bronze cast. Subject later became the 9th Duchess of Marlborough | | | Second portrait of Bernard van Dieren | Mishkan Museum of Art | 1917 | Head | Plaster | | | | One bronze cast | | More images | Bronze Head | Watford Museum | c. 1917 | Head | Bronze | | | | Also known as Strand Head | | | Fifth Portrait of Mrs Jacob Epstein (in a mantilla) | - Laing Art Gallery, - Yeshiva University Museum | 1918 | Bust | Bronze | 38cm | | Q76629695 | Seven casts in different versions, plaster in Israel Museum | | | Marchesa Casati | - Allen Memorial Art Museum, - Philadelphia Museum of Art, - Beecroft Art Gallery | 1918 | Head | Bronze | 29.3cm | | | Eight casts, plaster version at Mishkan Museum of Art | | | Gabrielle Soene | Israel Museum | 1918-19 | Bust | Plaster | | | | [ 1 ] | | | Sergeant David Ferguson Hunter | Imperial War Museum | 1919 | Bust | Bronze | 325 x 587 x 470mm | | | [ 80 ] | | More images | Portrait of Hélène | Fitzwilliam Museum | 1919 | Bust | Bronze | 53.4cm | | | Modelled by Hélène Yelin, a singer. Four casts | | | Noneen (Head of a Girl) | Ashmolean Museum | 1919 | Bust | Bronze with brown petina | 33.7cm | | | [ 82 ] | | | The Risen Christ | National Galleries Scotland | 1917-19 | Sculpture | Bronze | 218.5 x 54.5 x 56cm | | | [ 83 ] | | | Hands of the Risen Christ | The New Art Gallery Walsall | 1919 | Sculpture | Bronze | | | | [ 3 ] [ 84 ] | | | Clare Sheridan | Rye Art Gallery | 1919 | Bust | Bronze | 57 x 40 x 20cm | | | Two casts | | | Betty May | Manchester Art Gallery | 1919 | Head | Bronze | 35.5 x 21cm | | | Plaster;- Museum of the City of New York | ## 1920 to 1924 | Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates | Date | Type | Material | Dimensions | Designation | Wikidata | Notes | | ----------- | ------------------------------------------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | ------------------------------- | ---------------------------- | -------- | -------------------- | ----------- | --------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | | More images | Fourth Portrait of Peggy Jean (asleep) | - Carrick Hill, - The Hepworth Wakefield, - Bolton Museum, - Doncaster Museum and Art Gallery, - The New Art Gallery Walsall | 1920 | Half-figure | Bronze | 26cm | | | Thirteen casts, plaster at Israel Museum | | | Self-portrait with a Beard | - Nottingham Castle Museum, - Hull University, - Los Angeles County Museum of Art | 1920 | Head | Bronze | 38.1cm | | | Seven casts, plaster version at Mishkan Museum of Art | | More images | Second Portrait of Lilian Shelley | Burrell Collection | 1920 | Half-figure | Bronze | 705 x 580 x 380mm | | | [ 90 ] | | More images | Study of a Cat | The New Art Gallery Walsall | 1920 | Sculpture | Bronze | 17 x 30cm | | | Two casts | | | Seventh Portrait of Peggy Jean (pouting) | Bradford Art Gallery | 1920-21 | Half-figure | Bronze | | | | Two casts | | | Ninth Portrait of Peggy-Jean (laughing, at 2 years, 9 months) | - Ashmolean Museum, - Leeds Art Gallery, - Memphis Brooks Museum of Art | 1921 | Head | Bronze | 22.5 x 22 x 23.5cm | | | Thirteen casts, plaster at Israel Museum | | More images | First Portrait of Miriam Plichte | - Glasgow Museum Resource Centre, - The New Art Gallery Walsall | 1921 | Bust | Bronze | 39cm | | | Two casts | | | Second Portrait of Miriam Plichte | Montreal Museum of Fine Arts | 1921 | Half-figure | Bronze | 61.5cm | | | Eight casts | | More images | First Portrait of Kathleen | - Tate Britain, - Yale University Art Gallery, - New Art Gallery Walsall, - Fogg Gallery, - Manchester Art Gallery | 1921 | Bust | Bronze | 470 x 470 x 305mm | | | Twelve casts, plaster in the Phoenix Art Museum | | | Second portrait of Kathleen | Mishkan Museum of Art | 1922 | Bust | Plaster | | | | Five bronze casts | | | Jacob Kramer | - Tate Britain, - Ben Uri Gallery & Museum,Skirball Cultural Center | 1921 | Bust | Bronze | 65.5 x 53 x 30cm | | | Five casts, plaster at Mishkan Museum of Art | | | The Girl from Senegal | - The Whitworth, - Buffalo AKG Art Museum, - Fogg Gallery, - Artarmon Galleries | 1921-23 | Half-figure | Bronze | 559 x 460 x 337mm | | | Modelled by Madeleine Bechet, eight casts | | | Old Smith, the Matchseller | Hirshhorn Museum | c. 1922 | Head | Bronze | 37.1 x 20.6 x 27.3cm | | | Three casts | | | The Weeping Women | - Leicester Museum and Art Gallery , - Cleveland Museum of Art | 1922 | Half-figure with raised arms | Bronze | | | | Three casts | | | Maquette for the Hudson Memorial | Mishkan Museum of Art | 1922-23 | Sculpture, rejected design | Plaster | 32.5 x 44cm | | | Two bronze casts | | | Hans Kindler | Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum | 1922–30 | Head | Plaster | | | | [ 107 ] | | | R.B. Cunninghame Graham | - National Portrait Gallery, London, - Aberdeen Art Gallery, - Glasgow Museums Resource Centre, - National Galleries Scotland - Manchester Art Gallery | 1923 | Head | Bronze | 468 x 265mm | | | Ten casts | | | Old Pinager | - Aberdeen Art Gallery, - Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum | 1923 | Bust | Bronze | 42 x 35 x 48cm | | | Plaster version in the Mishkan Museum of Art | | | Old Pinager's Hands | The New Art Gallery Walsall | 1923 | Sculpture | Bronze | | | | [ 115 ] | | | Delores | - Fitzwilliam Museum, - Manchester Art Gallery | 1923 | Bust | Bronze | 38.3 x 38.9 x 27.4cm | | | Six casts in two versions | | More images | Angel Torso | Glynn Vivian Art Gallery, Swansea | Plaster 1923, bronze after 1959 | Sculpture | Bronze | | | | A plaster figure from 1923 that remained in Epstein's studio and was cast in bronze after his death, when the head, modelled in 1923 by Ferosa Rastoumji was also added. | | | Charles Spencer-Churchill, 9th Duke of Marlborough | Blenheim Palace | 1923-25 | Half-figure | Bronze | 104.2cm | | | Portrait study in plaster in the Israel Museum, plaster model of hands in the Mishkan Museum of Art | | | Dr. Adolph S. Oko | Mishkan Museum of Art | 1923 | Bust | Plaster | | | | Two bronze casts | | | The Seraph (Marie Collins) | Bowdoin College, Maine | 1924 | Bust | Plaster | | | | Six bronzes | | More images | Joseph Conrad | - Hirshhorn Museum, - National Portrait Gallery, London, - Philadelphia Museum of Art | 1924 | Head | Bronze | 41.0 x 30.8 x 28.5cm | | | Nine casts | | | Joseph Conrad | - Manchester Art Gallery, - Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery, - Jewish Museum (Manhattan) | 1924 | Bust | Bronze | 48.2cm | | | Six casts plus plaster at Mishkan Museum of Art | | | Professor Samuel Alexander | - University of Manchester, - Ben Uri Gallery & Museum | 1924 | Bust | Bronze | 51 x 57 x 37cm | | | Two casts | | | Jacob Epstein of Baltimore | Baltimore Museum of Art | 1924 | Bust | Bronze | 52.7 x 57.2 x 30.5cm | | | [ 122 ] | | | David Erskine of Linlathen | The McManus | 1924 | Bust | Bronze | 58.5cm | | | [ 1 ] | | More images | Rima, W. H. Hudson Memorial | Hyde Park, London | 1924–25 | Relief | Stone | 116 x 183cm | Grade II | Q26525156 | Inscriptions cut by Eric Gill | ## 1925 to 1929 | Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates | Date | Type | Material | Dimensions | Designation | Wikidata | Notes | | ----------- | ------------------------------------------------------- | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | ------- | ---------------------- | ---------------- | -------------------- | ----------- | --------- | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | More images | Sybil Thorndike | - National Portrait Gallery, London, - Garrick Club, - Doncaster Museum and Art Gallery | 1925 | Bust | Bronze | 500 x 620mm | | | Three casts | | | First Portrait of Sunita | Private collection | 1925 | Bust | Bronze | 48.9cm | | | One bronze cast sold at Christies in 1973 | | More images | Second Portrait of Sunita | Manchester Art Gallery | 1925 | Bust | Bronze | 55.9 x 56cm | | | [ 1 ] [ 125 ] | | | Pearl Oko | Israel Museum | 1926 | Head | Bronze | 36 x 18 x 25cm | | Q76629133 | Plaster at Mishkan Museum of Art | | More images | The Visitation | - Tate Britain, - Hirshhorn Museum, - Queensland Art Gallery - Museo de Bellas Artes (Caracas) | 1926 | Statue | Bronze | 171 x 47 x 47cm | | Q56696120 | Eight casts, plaster model at Israel Museum | | | Ramsay MacDonald | - Palace of Westminster, - National Galleries Scotland - Glasgow Museums Resource Centre | 1926 | Bust | Bronze | 49 x 25 x 28cm | | | Four casts plus a plaster version in Aberdeen Art Gallery | | | Second Portrait of Oriel Ross | The Whitworth | 1926 | Bust | Bronze | 408 x 282 x 242mm | | | Four casts | | More images | C.P Scott | - Manchester Art Gallery, - Guardian News and Media Archive, London | 1926 | Bust | Bronze | 58cm | | | [ 1 ] [ 136 ] | | More images | Rabindranath Tagore | - The New Art Gallery Walsall, - Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery, - Salford Museum and Art Gallery, - Herbert Art Gallery, - British High Commission, New Delhi from Government Art Collection, - Rabindra Bhavana Museum, - National Gallery of Victoria | 1926 | Bust | Bronze | 51cm high | | | Sixteen casts, plaster at Mishkan Museum of Art | | | Moshe Oyved (Edward Good) | Israel Museum | 1926 | Bust | Bronze | 41 x 25 x 28cm | | | [ 141 ] | | More images | Sunita and Enver / Heads for New York Madonna and Child | - The New Art Gallery Walsall, - Detroit Institute of Arts | 1926-27 | Two heads | Bronze | 48.2cm and 29.2cm | | | Seven casts | | | Anita (Miriam Patel) | Albright-Knox Art Gallery | 1926 | Bust | Plaster | 53.3cm high | | | Two bronze casts | | | Third portrait of Sunita | Israel Museum | 1926 | Bust with necklace | Plaster | 58.3cm | | Q76626548 | One bronze cast, Museum of African Art, Washington | | | Professor Franz Boas | Cornell University | 1927 | Bust | Plaster | | | | Two bronze casts in private collections | | More images | Madonna and Child | Riverside Church, New York City | 1927 | Seated sculpture group | Bronze | Life-size | | | Donated to the Riverside Church in 1960 by Sally Ryan, plaster in the Israel Museum | | | John Dewey | - National Gallery of Art, - Columbia University | 1927 | Bust | Bronze | 55.9cm | | | [ 1 ] | | | Zeda (Pasha) | - Bolton Museum, - Art Gallery of Ontario | 1927 | Bust | Bronze | 68.5cm | | | [ 1 ] [ 145 ] | | More images | Paul Robeson | - Museum of Modern Art, New York City, - Touchstones Rochdale, - York Art Gallery, - Smith College Museum of Art | 1928 | Head | Bronze | 34.5 x 21.5 x 29.5cm | | Q76628064 | 19 casts, plaster at Israel Museum | | | Maquette for Night | Mishkan Museum of Art | 1928 | Sculpture | Plaster | 35.5cm high | | | Four bronze casts in private collections | | More images | Day | 55 Broadway, St. James', London | 1928-29 | Carved sculpture | Portland stone | 275 x 275 x 100cm | | | | | More images | Night | 55 Broadway, St. James', London | 1928-29 | Carved sculpture | Portland stone | 275 x 275 x 100cm | | | | | | The Sick Child (Tweltfth portrait of Peggy Jean) | The Whitworth | 1928 | Sculpture | Bronze | 362 x 507 x 572mm | | | Five casts plus plaster in the Israel Museum | | | Mrs Godfrey Phillips | Tate Britain | 1928 | Bust | Bronze | 457 x 432 x 248mm | | | Six casts plus plaster model at Des Moines Art Center | | | First portrait of Mrs Betty Joel (with necklace) | Dunedin Public Art Gallery | 1928 | Bust | Bronze | | | | Two casts | | | Sir William Cotts | Dumfries Museum | 1929 | Bust | Bronze | 58cm | | | [ 1 ] | | More images | Genesis | The Whitworth | 1929-31 | Sculpture | Seravezza marble | 1625 x 838 x 787mm | | | [ 153 ] | | | First portrait of Lydia | Mishkan Museum of Art | 1929-30 | Bust | Plaster | 52cm | | | Seven bronze casts in private collections | ## 1930 to 1934 | Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates | Date | Type | Material | Dimensions | Designation | Wikidata | Notes | | ----------- | -------------------------------------- | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | ------- | --------------- | ------------------------- | --------------------- | ---------------- | --------- | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | | Mary Blandford | Leicester Museum and Art Gallery | 1930-31 | Head | Bronze | 37.5cm | | | Five casts | | More images | Rebecca | Museum of Reading | 1930 | Bust | Bronze | 56 x 37 x 26cm | | | [ 154 ] [ 155 ] | | | Head of Joan Greenwood as a Child | Fitzwilliam Museum | 1930 | Head | Bronze | 43.5cm high | | | Edition of ten casts, plaster version in Art Gallery of Ontario | | | The beautiful jewess (La belle juive) | Art Gallery of South Australia | 1930 | Head | Bronze | 55 x 46 x 27cm | | | [ 152 ] [ 157 ] | | | Israfel (Sunita) | Walker Art Gallery | 1930 | Bust | Bronze | 53.3cm | | | [ 158 ] [ 159 ] | | More images | Esther | Tate Britain | 1930 | Bust | Bronze | 533 x 635 x 254mm | | | [ 160 ] | | | Oriel | Aberdeen Art Gallery | 1931 | Bust | Bronze | 56 x 42 x 29cm | | | [ 161 ] | | | Third Portrait of Oriel Ross | Fitzwilliam Museum | 1931 | Bust | Bronze with golden patina | 66cm high | | | Plaster at Mishkan Museum of Art | | | Mrs Sonia Heath | - Walker Art Gallery, - Keele University | 1931 | Bust | Bronze | 57cm | | | [ 1 ] [ 158 ] | | | Paul Robeson, Junior | Sheffield City Art Gallery | 1931 | Bust | Bronze | 42cm | | | [ 1 ] | | | Professor Lucy Martin Donnelly | Bryn Mawr College | 1931 | Bust with arms | Bronze | 55.9cm | | | [ 1 ] | | | Lydia (Second Portrait of Lydia) | Ben Uri Gallery & Museum | 1931 | Bust | Bronze | 48 x 40 x 20cm | | | [ 163 ] | | | Primeval Gods | Tate Britain | 1931-33 | Relief | Hoptonwood stone | 2134 x 1980 x 355mm | | | Carved on reverse of Sun God | | | Malcolm Bendon | Israel Museum | 1931 | Bust | Plaster | | | | One bronze cast | | | Emlyn Williams | Israel Museum | 1932 | Bust | Plaster | | | Q76630323 | One bronze cast | | | Women Possessed (Elemental Figure) | National Gallery of Australia | 1932 | Prone sculpture | Hoptonwood stone | 102.2 x 33.3 x 45.1cm | | | [ 164 ] | | | Rose | Leeds Art Gallery | 1932 | Bust | Bronze | 37.5cm | | | Two casts known | | | Fourth Portrait of Kathleen (laughing) | Maidstone Museum | 1932 | Bust | Bronze | 38.5cm | | | Four casts in two versions | | | Ahmed | Ulster Museum | 1932 | Bust | Bronze | 49.5cm | | | [ 1 ] [ 165 ] | | | First Portrait of Isobel | - Iziko South African National Gallery, - Des Moines Art Center | 1932-33 | Bust | Bronze | 53.2cm | | | Seven casts, plaster in National Gallery of Victoria | | | Second Portrait of Isobel | Ferens Art Gallery | 1932-33 | Half-figure | Bronze | 70.6cm | | | Five casts known | | More images | Second Portrait of Isabel Nicholas | The New Art Gallery Walsall | 1933 | Half-figure | Plaster | 70.6cm | | | Previously in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art, New York | | More images | First Portrait of Roma of Barbados | Fitzwilliam Museum | 1932 | Head | Bronze | 35.5cm high | | | Modelled by Roma Olive Martin, Three casts | | | First Portrait of Louise | Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam | 1932 | Head | Bronze with gold patina | 50.8cm | | | Three casts, plaster at Museo de Bellas Artes (Caracas) | | | Mrs Sarah Oyved | Israel Museum, Jerusalem | 1932 | Bust | Bronze | 43cm | | Q76627800 | [ 169 ] | | More images | Albert Einstein | - Hirshhorn Museum, - National Galleries Scotland, - Ben Uri Gallery & Museum, - Fitzwilliam Museum, - Carrick Hill, - Des Moines Art Center, - National Gallery of Victoria, - Science Museum, London, Victoria and Albert Museum | 1933 | Bust | Bronze | 52.5 x 29.7 x 26.5cm | | Q76628262 | 35 casts known, plaster model at Israel Museum | | | Michael Balcon | National Portrait Gallery, London | 1933 | Bust | Bronze | 410 x 330mm | | | [ 178 ] | | | Tiger King (Man of Arran) | - Walker Art Gallery, - Hugh Lane Gallery | 1933 | Head | Bronze | 44.5cm | | | Eight casts, plaster at Hull University | | | Third Portrait of Lydia (Laughing) | - University of Aberdeen, - Leeds Art Gallery, - Bolton Museum | 1933 | Head | Bronze | 410 x 240 x 270mm | | | Six casts | | More images | Robert Flaherty | The New Art Gallery Walsall | 1933 | Head | Plaster | 31.7cm | | | Previously in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art, New York; a bronze cast also exists. | | | Lord Beaverbrook | Beaverbrook Art Gallery | 1933 | Head | Bronze | 26cm | | | Two casts, plaster at Mishkan Museum of Art | | | Hugh Walpole | Keswick Museum | 1934 | Bust | Bronze | 40 x 17 x 23cm | | | Plaster at University of Sussex | | | Herbert Chapman | Highbury Square, London | 1934 | Bust | Bronze | | Grade II listing | | Two casts, made in 2006, at the Emirates Stadium and at the Kirklees Stadium. | | | Second Portrait of Ramsay MacDonald | - National Portrait Gallery, London, - National Galleries Scotland | 1934 | Bust | Bronze | 61cm high | | | [ 184 ] | | | First Portrait of George Bernard Shaw | - Carrick Hill, - National Gallery of Art, Washington, - Harry Ransom Centre | 1934 | Bust | Bronze | 64.2cm | | | Five casts, plaster at Israel Museum | | More images | Second Portrait of George Bernard Shaw | - National Portrait Gallery, London, - Queensland Art Gallery, - Aberdeen Art Gallery, - Glasgow Museums, - National Gallery of Canada, - Fogg Museum, - Metropolitan Museum of Art | 1934 | Head | Bronze | 42.5 x 26.5 x 27cm | | | 25 casts | | More images | Chaim Azriel Weizmann | - National Portrait Gallery, London, - Tel Aviv Museum, - Mount Holyoke College Art Museum, - Manchester University | 1934 | Bust | Bronze | 455 x 590mm | | | Nineteen casts, plaster at Israel Museum | | More images | Olive | Watford Museum | 1934 | Head | Bronze | 34.8cm | | | Nine casts | | | Hiram Halle | Israel Museum | 1934 | Bust | Plaster | 45.8cm | | | One bronze cast | | | Third Portrait of Bernard van Dieren | Towneley Hall Art Gallery and Museum | 1934-35 | Bust | Bronze | 46.5cm | | | [ 1 ] | ## 1935 to 1939 | Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates | Date | Type | Material | Dimensions | Designation | Wikidata | Notes | | ----------- | -------------------------------------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------- | --------------------------- | --------------------------- | ------------------------ | ------------------------------ | ----------- | -------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | | More images | Fifth Portrait of Kathleen | Bristol Museum and Art Gallery, The Lightbox | 1935 | Half-figure | Bronze | 76.2cm | | | Four casts, plaster in Israel Museum | | | Nianda (Neander) | Hayward Bequest at Carrick Hill | 1935 | Half-figure | Bronze | 39.3cm | | | Three casts | | | Sir Alec Martin | Hugh Lane Gallery, Dublin | 1935 | Half-figure | Bronze | 63 x 61 x 37cm | | | [ 198 ] | | | First portrait of Jackie | Museum of the City of New York | 1935 | Bust with arms | Plaster | 30.5cm | | | Four bronze casts | | More images | Jackie - A Babe | The New Art Gallery Walsall | 1935 | Half-figure | Bronze | | | | [ 199 ] | | | Sir Frank Fletcher | Charterhouse School | 1935 | Bust | Bronze | 61cm | | | Two casts | | | Fifteenth Portrait of Peggy Jean | Gallery Oldham | 1935 | Bust | Bronze | | | | Two casts | | | William Henry Collins | - Middlesex Hospital, - Royal College of Surgeons | 1935 | Bust | Bronze | 58cm | | | [ 1 ] | | More images | Ecce Homo | Coventry Cathedral | Carved 1935, installed 1969 | Carved monolith on pedestal | Subiaco marble | c. 3m tall | | | [ 200 ] | | | Shulamite Womem (Arab Girl) | Ben Uri Gallery & Museum | 1935 | Bust | Bronze | 52cm | | | Two casts plus a head only version exist | | | Mona Stewart | Mishkan Museum of Art | 1935 | Bust | Plaster | 63.5cm | | | Seven bronze casts | | More images | Emperior Haile Selassie | The New Art Gallery Walsall | 1936 | Half-figure | Plaster | 121.8cm | | | Two bronze casts made; Plaster cast previously in the Museum of Modern Art, New York | | | J. B. Priestley | Harry Ransom Center, Texas | 1936 | Bust | Bronze | 76.2cm | | | [ 1 ] | | | Elsa (Graves) | Leeds City Art Gallery | 1936 | Bust | Bronze | 36cm | | | Three casts, plaster at Albright-Knox Art Gallery | | | Canon Charles Bernard Mortlock | St Vedast Foster Lane, London | 1936 | Portrait relief | Stone | | | | [ 202 ] | | | Tanya | National Gallery of Victoria | 1936 | Bust | Plaster | 57.1cm | | | Four bronze casts in private collections | | | Consummatum Est | National Galleries Scotland | 1936-37 | Prone sculpture | Alabaster | 61 x 223.5 x 81cm | | | [ 203 ] | | More images | Sally Ryan | The New Art Gallery Walsall | 1937 | Bust | Bronze | 39cm | | | Two casts | | | Pola Nerenska | Memphis Brooks Museum of Art | 1937 | Head | Bronze | 38cm | | | Five casts, plaster National Gallery of Victoria | | More images | Second Portrait of Jackie with Curls | The New Art Gallery Walsall | 1937 | Head | Bronze | 24.9cm | | | [ 1 ] [ 205 ] | | | Second Portrait of Louise (Berenice) | Sheffield Galleries and Museums Trust | 1937 | Bust | Bronze | 55cm tall | | | Two casts, plaster at Museo de Bellas Artes (Caracas) | | | First Portrait of Norman Hornstein (The Young Communist) | Bolton Museum | 1937 | Bust | Bronze | 45.7cm | | | Five casts | | | The Burial of Abel | Watford Museum | 1938 | Sculpture group | Bronze with green patina | | | | Three casts | | | Adam and Eve | Watford Museum | 1938 | Two figure sculpture group | Bronze | 11.5cm | | | Four casts | | | Marie Tracey | National Galleries Scotland | 1938 | Bust | Bronze | 40.8 x 20.5 x 34.3cm | | | Four casts, plaster at Goddard College, Vermont | | | Betty Cecil | National Galleries Scotland | 1938 | Half-figure | Bronze | 52.7 x 42 x 34.5cm | | | Three casts | | | Ellen Ballon | McGill University | 1938 | Half-figure | Bronze | 60 x 56 x 67cm | | | [ 208 ] | | | Third Portrait of Leda (with outstretched arms) | - Glasgow Museums, - Nottingham Castle Museum | 1939 | Bust | Bronze | 21.5cm | | | Two casts | | | Adam | Harewood House | 1939 | Sculpture | Alabaster | 218.5cm high, base 66 x 81.3cm | | | [ 1 ] | | | Lisa Sainsbury | Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts | 1939 | Bust | Bronze | 455 x 220 x 220mm | | | [ 209 ] | ## 1940 to 1944 | Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates | Date | Type | Material | Dimensions | Designation | Wikidata | Notes | | ----------- | --------------------------------------------------------------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | ------- | --------------------------------- | ------------------------- | -------------------------- | ----------- | --------- | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | | Leda | Glasgow Museums Resource Centre | c. 1940 | Half-figure | Bronze | 270 x 385 x 320mm | | | A portrait of Epstein's grandchild at six months of age | | | Fourth Portrait of Leda (with coxcomb) | - Portsmouth City Museum, - Bolton Museum | 1940 | Head | Bronze | 20.4cm | | | Ten casts | | More images | Fourth Portrait of Leda (with coxcomb) | The New Art Gallery Walsall | 1940 | Head | Plaster | 20.4cm | | | Previously held by the Museum of Modern Art, New York | | | Jacob and the Angel | Tate Britain | 1940-41 | Sculpture | Alabaster | 2140 x 1100 x 920mm | | | [ 211 ] | | | I. M. Maisky | Imperial War Museum | 1941 | Head | Bronze | 205 x 255 x 195mm | | Q76626850 | Six casts, plaster in Israel Museum | | | First Portrait of Deirdre (with arms) | - Bolton Museum, - Carrick Hill, South Australia | 1941 | Half-figure | Bronze | 62.3cm | | | Six casts, plaster in Israel Museum | | | Second Portrait of Deirdre (In a Slip) | - Ingram Collection of Modern British Art, - Knightshayes Court, - The Box, Plymouth, - Beaverbrook Art Gallery | 1941-42 | Half-figure | Bronze with brown petina | 54.6cm | | | Seven casts, plaster cast in National Gallery of Victoria | | | Chia Pi | National Museum Cardiff | 1941 | Bust | Bronze | 61cm | | | Five casts | | | Third Portrait of Deirdre (Leaning forward) | - Lady Lever Art Gallery, - Winnipeg Art Gallery, - Crawford Art Gallery | 1942 | Bust | Bronze with green patina | 41cm | | | Eight casts | | | Ian (Ossian) | - Auckland Art Gallery, - Jewish Museum (Manhattan) | 1942 | Half-figure;- baby with arms | Bronze | 406mm | | | Five casts, plaster in Museo de Bellas Artes (Caracas) | | | Girl with Gardenias (Kathleen) | Aberdeen Art Gallery | 1942 | Statue | Bronze | 190cm tall | | | [ 218 ] | | More images | Saint Francis | The New Art Gallery Walsall | 1942 | Head | Bronze | 31cm | | | [ 1 ] [ 3 ] [ 219 ] | | | Dr W.G. Whittaker | Music Department, Newcastle University | 1942 | Head | Bronze | 31.1cm tall | | | [ 1 ] | | | Study for Slave Hold | Bolton Museum | 1941 | Two half-figures with raised arms | Bronze | 114.3cm | | | [ 1 ] | | | Robert Sainsbury | Sainsbury Centre, University of East Anglia | 1942 | Head | Bronze | 30.5cm | | | [ 1 ] | | | Alexander Margulies | Ben Uri Gallery & Museum | 1942 | Bust | Bronze | 41.9 x 31 x 25cm | | | [ 220 ] | | | Hewlett Johnson | Beaney House of Art and Knowledge | 1942 | Bust | Bronze | | | | | | | Air Chief Marshal Sir Charles Portal | Imperial War Museum | 1942-43 | Head | Bronze | 240 x 450 x 188mm | | | Commissioned by the War Artists' Advisory Committee | | | Major-General Sir Alan Cunningham | Imperial War Museum | 1942 | Head | Bronze | 275 x 596 x 610mm | | | Commissioned by the War Artists' Advisory Committee | | | The Rt. Hon. Ernest Bevin | Tate Britain | 1943 | Head | Bronze | 260 x 216 x 248mm | | | Commissioned by the War Artists' Advisory Committee; two casts plus plaster in Israel Museum | | | Philip Sayers | W. Irving Gallery, New York City | 1943 | Bust | Bronze | 60cm | | | [ 1 ] | | | Nude Study A (Betty Peters) | Museum of Modern Art, New York | 1943-45 | Prone statue | Bronze | 72.4cm length | | | Six casts plus plaster at Mishkan Museum of Art | | | Nude Study B (Betty Peters) | Museum of Modern Art, New York | 1943-45 | Prone statue | Bronze | 58.4cm length | | | Four casts | | | Two Hands and an Arm | The New Art Gallery Walsall | 1943-45 | Sculpture | Bronze | | | | Modelled by Betty Peters | | | Yehudi Menuhin | Te Papa, Wellington | 1943 | Head | Bronze | 260 x 470 x 202mm | | | Twelve casts, plaster at The New Art Gallery Walsall, formerly at the Jewish Museum (Manhattan) | | | Lucifer | Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery | 1944–45 | Statue | Bronze | 3.15m tall, 1.93m wingspan | | | [ 1 ] | | | Princess Nadejada de Braganza | Centre Pompidou, Paris | 1944 | Bust | Bronze, green patina | 61cm high | | | Plaster, National Gallery of Victoria | | More images | First Portrait of Esther (with long hair) | The New Art Gallery Walsall | 1944 | Bust | Bronze, gark green patina | 47cm | | Q76629549 | Three casts, plaster at Mishkan Museum of Art | | More images | First Portrait of Kitty (with curls) / Head of Kitty with Curls | - Huddersfield Art Gallery, - The New Art Gallery Walsall | 1944 | Head | Bronze | 38cm | | | Eleven casts plus plaster in Israel Museum | | | Fifth Portrait of Leda (pouting) / Head of Leda | Auckland Art Gallery, Manchester Art Gallery | 1944 | Head | Bronze | 260 x 220 x 280mm | | | Nine casts, plaster at Mishkan Museum of Art | | | Girl from Baku | Nottingham Castle Museum | 1944 | Half-figure | Bronze | 56.5cm | | | Ten casts | ## 1945 to 1949 | Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates | Date | Type | Material | Dimensions | Designation | Wikidata | Notes | | ----------- | --------------------------------------------- | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | ------- | ---------------------- | ------------------- | ---------------------------- | ----------- | --------- | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | | Field Marshal Archibald Wavell | Imperial War Museum | 1945 | Bust | Bronze | 300 x 470 x 440mm | | | [ 1 ] [ 231 ] | | More images | John Anderson, 1st Viscount Waverley | - Imperial War Museum, - All Saints Church, Westdean - Port of London Authority | 1945 | Bust | Bronze | 245 x 380 x 190mm | | | Three casts | | | Mexican Girl | Hayward Bequest at Carrick Hill | 1945-46 | Half-figure | Bronze | | | | [ 1 ] | | | Dame Myra Hess | Royal Academy of Music | 1946 | Half-figure | Bronze | 630 x 520mm | | | [ 234 ] | | | Winston Churchill | - Imperial War Museum, - Hirshhorn Museum, - Iziko South African National Gallery, - Churchill College, Cambridge, Carrick Hill, - Pompidou Centre, - The White House from the Government Art Collection, - Gallery Oldham | 1946 | Bust | Bronze | 40.2 x 19.7 x 24cm with base | | Q28843749 | 27 casts, plus plaster at Israel Museum | | More images | First portrait of Pandit Nehru | The New Art Gallery Walsall | 1946 | Bust | Plaster | 29.5cm | | | Plaster version previously held by Museum of Modern Art, New York; bronze cast in Derby Museum and Art Gallery | | | Neptune | National Museum Cardiff | 1946 | Group sculpture | Bronze | 34cm | | | Four casts | | | Ronald Duncan | Ronald Duncan Literary Foundation | 1946 | Head | Bronze | 25.4cm | | | Six casts | | | Ymiel Oyved | Israel Museum, Jerusalem | 1946 | Half-figure | Bronze | 38cm | | Q76626778 | Five casts | | | Frederick H. Silberman | Johannesburg Art Gallery | 1946 | Head | Bronze | 26cm | | | [ 1 ] | | | Anthony in a Balaclava Helmet | Mishkan Museum of Art | 1947 | Bust | Plaster | 33cm | | | One bronze cast | | | Lord Lindsay of Birker | Balliol College, Oxford | 1947 | Head | Bronze | 54cm | | | Plaster at Keele University | | More images | Second Portrait of Kitty | - Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery, - The New Art Gallery Walsall | 1947-49 | Head | Bronze | 31.8cm | | | Seven casts, plaster at Phoenix Art Museum | | | Lazarus | Chapel of New College, Oxford | 1947–48 | Statue | Hopton Wood stone | 2.5m | | | [ 1 ] | | | Helen Esterman | Winnipeg Art Gallery | c. 1948 | Bust | Bronze | 39.7 x 33.1 x 25.7cm | | | [ 241 ] | | More images | Second portrait of Pandit Nehru | National Portrait Gallery, London, Art Gallery of South Australia | 1948-49 | Bust | Bronze | 40 x 45 x 20cm | | | Three casts | | | Franklin Dyall | Garrick Club, London | 1948 | Half-figure | Bronze | 53cm | | | [ 1 ] | | | Isaac L. Myers | Memphis Brooks Museum of Art | 1948 | Head | Bronze | 33 x 17 x 21cm | | | [ 244 ] | | | Peter Laughing | Mishkan Museum of Art | 1948 | Bust | Plaster | 30.5cm | | | Four bronzes cast | | | Second portrait of Joan Greenwood | Hull University | 1948 | Bust | Plaster | 38cm | | | Four bronze casts in private collections | | | Second portrait of Esther | Jewish Museum, New York | 1948 | Bust | Plaster | 47cm | | | Two bronze casts | | | Seventh portrait of Kathleen (with shawl) | Israel Museum | 1948 | Half-length figure | Plaster | | | | Three bronze casts | | | Ernest Bloch | Israel Museum | 1948-49 | Bust | Plaster | | | Q76629590 | One bronze cast | | | Princess Menen | National Gallery of Art, Washington | 1948-49 | Bust | Bronze | 54.3 x 53.3 x 32.7cm | | | [ 245 ] | | | Princess Desta | Tel Aviv Museum | 1948-49 | Bust | Bronze | 53.3cm | | | [ 1 ] | | | Lucian Freud | National Portrait Gallery, London | 1949 | Bust | Bronze | 510 x 210mm | | | Eight bronze casts, also a 1947 plaster model, with arms, at Allen Memorial Art Museum | | | Ann Freud | Tate Britain, Yeshiva University Museum | 1949-50 | Head | Bronze | 280 x 190 x 203mm | | Q76626938 | Five casts | | More images | Third portrait of Esther / Esther with Flower | - Queensland Art Gallery, - The New Art Gallery Walsall | 1949 | Half-figure | Bronze | 60.5 x 45 x 28cm | | | Six casts, plaster in Israel Museum | | | Judith Marguiles | Israel Museum | 1949 | Half-figure of a child | Plaster | 20.3cm | | Q76630135 | Two bronze casts | | | Siobham | Museo de Bellas Artes (Caracas) | 1949 | Bust of a child | Plaster | 33cm | | | [ 1 ] | | | Master Stewart, (Babe with arms) | Israel Museum | 1949 | Figure | Plaster | 25.4cm | | | Two bronzes in different versions | | More images | Roland Joffé | The New Art Gallery Walsall | 1949-50 | Head | Bronze, gold patina | 21cm | | | Plaster at Mishkan Museum of Art | | | Victor | - Leeds City Art Gallery, - Kelvingrove Museum | 1949 | Head on base | Bronze & stone | 250 x 170 x 200mm | | Q76625885 | Edition of 15 casts, plaster at Israel Museum | | | Youth Advances | Manchester Art Gallery | 1949-50 | Statue | Bronze | 208cm tall | | | Commissioned for the 1951 Festival of Britain | ## 1950 to 1954 | Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates | Date | Type | Material | Dimensions | Designation | Wikidata | Notes | | ----------- | --------------------------------------------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | ---------------------------------- | ----------------------- | ------------------------ | -------------------- | ----------- | ---------- | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | More images | Woman Removing Her Dress | Roper's Gardens, Chelsea Embankment, London | Carved c. 1950, unveiled June 1973 | Relief | Portland stone | 144 x 108 x 20cm | | | [ 1 ] | | | Gwen, Lady Melchett of Landford | Mishkan Museum of Art | 1950 | Head | Plaster | 30cm | | | Two bronze casts | | | Lord Samuel | Reform Club, London | 1950 | Bust | Bronze | | | | [ 1 ] | | More images | Patrick Blackett | Sussex University | 1950 | Bust | Plaster | | | Q124360608 | 1950 bronze cast, location unknown; 1997 bronze cast, Imperial College, London | | | Ralph Vaughan Williams | - National Portrait Gallery, London, - Arts Council England collection, - Manchester Art Gallery - York University | 1950 | Bust | Bronze with green patina | 39.5 x 25 x 29cm | | Q107863579 | 17 known casts, plaster at Israel Museum | | | Louis Colville Gray Clarke | Fitzwilliam Museum | 1951 | Bust | Bronze with green patina | 53.2cm high | | | [ 1 ] [ 259 ] | | | Robert Rhodes | National Gallery of Victoria | 1951 | Head of a child | Plaster | 39.4cm | | | Five bronze casts | | | Somerset Maugham | Hirshhorn Museum | 1951 | Bust | Bronze | 39cm high | | | Seven bronze casts; plaster at the Phoenix Art Museum | | More images | Maquette for Madonna and Child | - Hirshhorn Museum, - Auckland Art Gallery, - The New Art Gallery Walsall, - Arts Council Collection, Vatican Museums | 1951 | Sculpture | Lead with brass wire | 34.2 x 14.9 x 6.7cm | | | Six known casts, | | | Christ Figure | Hirshhorn Museum | c. 1951 | Sculpture | Lead | 65.2 x 22 x 9.4cm | | | [ 264 ] | | | Alic Halford Smith | New College, Oxford | 1951-52 | Bust | Bronze | 61cm high | | | [ 1 ] | | | Maquette for Social Consciousness | Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery | 1951-53 | Sculpture group | Bronze | 35.5cm | | | [ 1 ] | | More images | Social Consciousness | University of Pennsylvania | 1951-53 | Sculpture group | Bronze | | | | Previously located outside The Art Museum of Philadelphia. | | | Set of four door handles | - Convent of the Holy Child Jesus, Cavendish Square, - Coventry Cathedral | 1952 | Door handles | Bronze | | | | Five sets known to exist | | | Portland Mason | Bury Art Museum | 1952 | Head | Bronze | 34cm | | | [ 1 ] | | | Dame Hilda Lloyd | Medical School, Birmingham University | 1952 | Bust | Bronze | 56cm | | | [ 1 ] | | | Mark Joffe | Watford Museum | 1952 | Head | Bronze | 30cm | | | [ 1 ] [ 77 ] | | More images | Madonna and Child | Dean's Mews, Cavendish Square, London | 1952 | Architectural sculpture | Lead | 3.9 x 1.4m | | | Architect Louis Osman | | | First Portrait of Annabel Freud (with bonnet) | - Hirshhorn Museum, - The New Art Gallery Walsall | 1952 | Head | Bronze | 18cm high | | | Four casts including one without a bonnet and plaster version at the Israel Museum | | More images | Anne and Annabel Freud (The Sisters) | The New Art Gallery Walsall | 1952 | Two heads | Bronze | 19cm high | | | [ 1 ] [ 3 ] [ 267 ] | | More images | T. S. Eliot | - Hirshhorn Museum, - The New Art Gallery Walsall | 1952-53 | Bust | Bronze | 46.0 x 45.3 x 35.4cm | | | Six casts, original plaster model in the National Portrait Gallery, London | | | Sholem Asch | - Ben Uri Gallery & Museum, - Cleveland Museum of Art | 1953 | Head | Bronze | 50 x 22.5 x 32cm | | | Six casts plus plaster at Mishkan Museum of Art | | | Sir Stafford Cripps | St Paul's Cathedral, London | 1953 | Half-figure on pedestal | Bronze | | | | Inscription carved by David McFall | | | Professor James Walter MacLeod | School of Medicine, Leeds University | 1953 | Head | Bronze | 33cm high | | | [ 1 ] | | | Mai Zetterling | Los Angeles County Museum of Art | 1953 | Bust | Bronze | 53.3cm tall | | | [ 1 ] | | | Lord Bertrand Russell | - Hirshhorn Museum, - British High Commission, Dar es Salaam from Government Art Collection | 1953 | Head | Bronze with green patina | 42cm | | | Four casts;- plaster at Israel Museum | | More images | Frisky, the Sculptor's Dog | The New Art Gallery Walsall | 1953 | Sculpture | Bronze | | | | [ 3 ] [ 275 ] | | | Dr Elias Avery Lowe | - Morgan Library & Museum, - Metropolitan Museum of Art | 1953-54 | Bust | Bronze | 61.9 x 20.3 x 17.8cm | | | Three casts | | | Dr J.J. Mallon | Toynbee Hall, London | 1954 | Bust | Bronze | 42cm high | | | Two casts | | More images | Christ in Majesty | Llandaff Cathedral, Cardiff | 1954-55 | Sculpture | Aluminium | 5.5m high | | | [ 1 ] [ 278 ] | ## 1955 to 1959 | Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates | Date | Type | Material | Dimensions | Designation | Wikidata | Notes | | ----------- | -------------------------------------------------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------ | -------------------- | ---------------------------- | ------------------------ | ------------------------------ | ---------------- | --------- | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | | Franklin Medal | | 1955, presented 1956 | Medal | Bronze | | | | Medal with images of Benjamin Franklin and Prometheus | | | Ludwig Loewy | National Galleries Scotland | 1955 | Bust | Bronze | 67.5 x 76.5 x 34.5cm | | | Six casts made for Loewy family members | | | Marquette for a Trade Union Congress war memorial | - Bolton Museum, - Ashmolean Museum | 1955 | Sculpture | Bronze | 54.5 x 29.5cm | | | [ 1 ] [ 280 ] | | More images | Rosalyn Tureck | The New Art Gallery Walsall | 1956 | Head | Plaster | 28cm tall | | | Plaster previously held by the Museum of Modern Art, New York; bronze cast in Philadelphia Museum of Art | | | The Hon. Robert Hesketh | The New Art Gallery Walsall | 1956 | Bust of a child | Bronze | 45cm | | | Two bronze casts; plaster cast in Israel Museum | | More images | Liverpool Resurgent | Former Lewis's department store, Ranelagh Street, Liverpool | 1956 | Statue | Bronze | 5.4m tall | Grade II | Q42852357 | [ 1 ] [ 282 ] [ 283 ] | | More images | Children Fighting, Baby in a Pram & Children Playing | Former Lewis's department store, Ranelagh Street, Liverpool | 1956 | Three relief panels | Ciment fondu | 101 x 183cm each | Grade II | | [ 1 ] [ 283 ] | | | Sir James Gray | Department of Zoology, Cambridge University | 1956 | Bust | Bronze | 63.5cm tall | | | [ 1 ] | | More images | Statue of Jan Smuts | Parliament Square, London | 1956 | Statue on pedestal | Bronze & granite | | Grade II listing | Q20785576 | [ 284 ] | | | Marquette for Saint Michael and the Devil | Wesley House, Cambridge | 1956 | Sculpture group | Terracotta / bronze | | | | Plaster at Mishkan Museum of Art | | | Third Portrait of Kitty (with short hair) | Queensland Art Gallery | 1957 | Bust | Bronze | 57.5 x 43 x 35cm with pedestal | | | Plaster at Mishkan Museum of Art | | | Virginia, Marchioness of Bath | Longleat House | 1957 | Bust | Bronze | 57cm high | | | [ 1 ] | | | Sir Wilfrid Le Gros Clark FRS | School of Human Anatomy, Oxford University | 1957 | Bust | Bronze with green patina | 40cm high | | | Plaster at Cornell University | | | Maria Donska | Atkinson Art Gallery and Library | 1957 | Head | Bronze | 42cm high | | | [ 1 ] | | | Otto Klemperer | Government Art Collection | 1957 | Head | Bronze | 37.5 x 22 x 29cm | | | Four casts;- Plaster version at the Israel Museum | | More images | William Blake | Westminster Abbey, London | 1957 | Bust | Bronze | 54cm high | | | Plaster version at Israel Museum | | | Dean John Lowe | Christ Church, Oxford | 1957 | Bust | Bronze | 61cm high | | | Plaster version held by National Gallery of Canada | | More images | Bishop Edward Sydney Woods | Lichfield Cathedral | 1958 | Half-figure | Bronze | 91.4 x 99cm | | | Plaster version in the National Gallery of Victoria | | | Professor Charles Mclnnes | Bristol Museum & Art Gallery | 1958 | Head | Bronze | 38.0cm | | | [ 1 ] | | | William Haley | Broadcasting House, London | 1958 | Bust | Bronze | 63.0cm | | | [ 1 ] | | More images | St Michael's Victory over the Devil | Coventry Cathedral | 1958 | Wall mounted sculpture group | Bronze | | | Q27436668 | [ 200 ] | | More images | Trade Union Victims of Two World Wars - The Spirit of Trade Unionism | Congress House, London | 1958 | Sculpture | Stone | 300 x 150 x 120cm | Grade II* | | [ 1 ] [ 291 ] [ 292 ] | | More images | Basil Spence | RIBA Architectural Study Room, Victoria and Albert Museum | c. 1958 | Bust | Bronze | | | | Plaster cast, University of Sussex | | | David Lloyd George | National Museum Cardiff | 1958-59 | Bust | Plaster | 65 x 87.5 x 51.4cm | | | [ 293 ] | | | Sir Russell Brain | - Royal College of Physicians, London, - New College, Oxford | 1959 | Bust | Bronze | 73.7cm | | | [ 1 ] [ 294 ] | | | Archbishop Geoffrey Francis Fisher | Lambeth Palace, London | 1959 | Bust | Bronze | 63.5cm | | | [ 1 ] | | | David Lloyd George | - Beaverbrook Art Gallery, - The New Art Gallery Walsall | 1959 | Head | Bronze | 63.5cm | | | [ 1 ] [ 295 ] | | | Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon | Keele University | 1959 | Half-statue | Bronze | 92cm | | | [ 1 ] | | | The Artist's Hand | Winnipeg Art Gallery | 1959 | Sculpture | Bronze | 15 x 18.7 x 14.5cm | | | Edition of six casts | | | Christ in Majesty | Riverside Church, New York City | Erected after 1959 | Sculpture | Gilded plaster | | | | This is the plaster model from which the Llandaff Cathedral figure was cast | | More images | The Rush of Green | Edinburgh Gate, Hyde Park, London | 1959, unveiled 1961 | Sculpture group | Bronze | | Grade II | Q21714480 | Also known as Pan or The Bowater House Group |
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List of sculptures by Jacob Epstein
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_sculptures_by_Jacob_Epstein
2025-03-28T11:32:20Z
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Q122363875
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{{Short description|none}} [[File:Jacob Epstein photo by George Charles Beresford 1921.jpg|thumb|Epstein, 1921, photo by George Charles Beresford]] This is a list of public sculptures by [[Jacob Epstein]]. This list only includes works held in public collections, such as museums and art galleries, in public spaces or in buildings and venues open to the public. It does not include works held only in private collections. Throughout his career Epstein was a prolific sculptor of portrait heads and busts both of friends, family members, professional and amateur models but also of many of the most prominent public figures of his time, including Winston Churchill, Albert Einstein, George Bernard Shaw and Joseph Conrad. Popular as his portrait work was, almost all of Epstein's early large-scale public commissions, such as the ''Ages of Man'' statues in London and the tomb of Oscar Wilde in Paris, along with his exhibition pieces, were met with outrage and controversy. As a consequence, he received few architectural commissions from the 1930s until the 1950s. Then, the rebuilding of Britain following the Second World War created a demand for the monumental figurative sculptures that Epstein excelled in and the last decade of his life became a period of intense activity with substantial commissions from cathedrals and public buildings. Several of his large exhibition works which had also provoked controversy, notably ''Jacob and the Angel'' and ''Adam'', were initially acquired by the owners of amusement parks and freak-shows where they were displayed behind curtains and warning signs. The majority of those works did not enter any public collections or galleries until after Epstein's death in 1959. == 1900 to 1909 == {{Public art header|show_architect=no|show_material=yes|show_dimensions=yes|show_artist=no|show_owner=no|show_wikidata=yes}} {{Public art row | image = Baby Awake by Jacob Epstein 02.jpg | commonscat = Baby Awake by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''Baby Awake'' | location = [[The New Art Gallery Walsall]] | date = 1902-04 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 12.7cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Six bronze casts in two versions. Plaster version in [[Mishkan Museum of Art]], Israel<ref name="ESilber">{{cite book|author=Evelyn Silber|author-link=Evelyn Silber|title=The Sculpture of Epstein with a Complete Catalogue|publisher=Phaidon|year=1986|isbn=0714822620}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://collections.thenewartgallerywalsall.org.uk/objects/4272/baby-awake?ctx=d87921dc-7f2c-4b71-bf17-94239e44907e&idx=2|title=Baby Awake|website=The New Art Gallery Walsall|access-date=16 May 2023}}</ref><ref name="SharedV">{{cite book|author=Sheila McGregor|title=A Shared Vision The Garman Ryan Collection at The New Art Gallery Walsall|publisher=Merrell Holberton|year= 1999|isbn=1858940869}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Baby Asleep'' | location = {{ubl|[[National Galleries Scotland]]|The New Art Gallery Walsall|[[Leeds Art Gallery]]|[[Bristol Museum and Art Gallery]]}} | date = 1902-04 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 13.2 x 9.8 x 14.8cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = Q76630325 | notes = 23 casts. Plaster version in [[Israel Museum]], Jerusalem<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nationalgalleries.org/art-and-artists/273 |title=Baby Asleep|website=National Galleries Scotland|access-date=16 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://collections.thenewartgallerywalsall.org.uk/objects/5086/baby-asleep?ctx=50393ec9-d42f-49da-b0aa-37e6997ddfb4&idx=0|title= Baby asleep|website=The New Art Gallery Walsall|access-date=20 June 2024}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Head of an Infant'' | location = [[National Gallery of Victoria]] | date = 1902-03 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 28.1 x 10.6 x 14.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.ngv.vic.gov.au/explore/collection/work/3393/ |title=Head of an Infant|website=National Gallery of Victoria |access-date=12 June 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Head of a Baby by Jacob Epstein 02.jpg | commonscat = | subject = ''Head of a Baby'' | location = [[Manchester Art Gallery]] | date = 1902-04 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 13.5 x 10cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://manchesterartgallery.org/explore/title/?mag-object-3372 |title=Head of A Baby|website=Manchester Art Gallery|access-date=25 July 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Romilly John by Jacob Epstein 01.jpg | commonscat = Romilly John by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''Romilly John'' | location = {{ubl|[[Ben Uri Gallery & Museum]],|[[Fitzwilliam Museum]],|[[Harvard Art Museums|Fogg Museum]],|[[National Gallery of Canada]],|[[Museum Boijmans van Beuningen]]|[[The New Art Gallery Walsall]]}} | date = 1907 | type = Head | material = Gilded bronze | dimensions = 30 x 16 x 21.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Nine casts. Plaster version in [[Israel Museum]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.benuricollection.org.uk/search_result.php?item_id=3551 |title=Romilly John|website=Ben Uri Gallery|access-date=2 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/id/object/12397|title=Romilly: Head of an Infant: M.157-1941|website=The Fitzwilliam Museum|access-date=10 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.gallery.ca/collection/artwork/romilly|title=Romilly|website=National Gallery Canada|access-date=28 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.boijmans.nl/en/collection/artworks/40440/romilly-john|title=Romilly John|website=museum boijmans van beuninggen|access-date=29 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://harvardartmuseums.org/collections/object/226230?position=0&context=person&id=19493|title=Romilly John|website=Harvard Art Museums|access-date=12 June 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://collections.thenewartgallerywalsall.org.uk/objects/5767/romilly-john|title=Romilly John|website=The New Art Gallery Walsall|access-date=25 July 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Italian Peasant Women'' | location = [[Ingram Collection of Modern British Art]] | date = 1907 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 33cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Two casts. Plaster version in [[Syracuse University]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://ingramcollection.com/works/italian-peasant-woman-1907/|title=Italian Peasant Women, 1907|website=Ingram Collection|access-date=15 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Zimbabwe House three statues.jpg | commonscat = The Ages of Man, Strand sculptures by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''The Ages of Man'' | location = Former [[British Medical Association]] headquarters, now [[Embassy of Zimbabwe, London|Zimbabwe House]], London | date = 1907-08 | type = 18 statues in niches | material = Portland stone | dimensions = Each 210-215cm tall | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Partally destroyed in 1937, some fragments in the [[National Gallery of Canada]] collection<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url= https://www.gallery.ca/collection/artwork/infant-supported-by-two-hands-fragment|title=Infant Supported by Two Hands (fragment)|website=National Gallery of Canada|access-date=12 June 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url= https://www.gallery.ca/collection/artwork/head-of-a-man-fragment|title=Head of a Man (fragment)|website=National Gallery of Canada|access-date=12 June 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''The Severed Head'' | location = [[Metropolitan Museum of Art]] | date = 1907-08 | type = Head | material = Stone | dimensions = 43.2 x 26 x 21.6cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/484889|title=The Severed Head|website=Metropolitan Museum of Art|access-date=12 June 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Euphemia Lamb, Jacob Epstein.jpg | commonscat = | subject =''First Portrait of [[Euphemia Lamb]]'' | location = [[Tate Britain]], [[Birmingham Museums and Art Gallery]], [[Mishkan Museum of Art]] | date = 1908 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 375 x 400 x 203mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = Q76627327 | notes = Eight casts. Plaster version, [[Israel Museum]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/epstein-euphemia-lamb-n03187|title=Display caption: Euphemia Lamb|website=Tate |access-date=2 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject =''Nan'' | location = {{ubl|[[Tate Britain]],|[[Queensland Art Gallery]]}} | date = 1909 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 445 x 381 x 229mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Modelled by Nan Condron. Two versions plus plaster version in [[Mishkan Museum of Art]]<ref>{{cite web|url= https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/epstein-nan-n03646|title=Display caption: Nan|website=Tate |access-date=2 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://collection.qagoma.qld.gov.au/objects/7514|title=Nan 1909|website=Queensland Art/Gallery of Modern Art|access-date=3 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Mary McEvoy by Jacob Epstein 02.jpg | commonscat = Mary McEvoy by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''[[Mary McEvoy (artist)|Mary McEvoy]]'' | location = {{ubl|[[Victoria and Albert Museum]] on loan from [[Tate Britain]],|[[National Gallery of Victoria]],|[[Leeds Art Gallery]]}} | date = 1909 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 419 x 394 x 229mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Three casts. Plaster version in [[Mishkan Museum of Art]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref name="MMcEvoy">{{cite web|url=https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/epstein-mrs-mary-mcevoy-n06139|title=Mrs Mary McEvoy|website=Tate|access-date=2 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.ngv.vic.gov.au/explore/collection/work/3398/|title=Mrs McEvoy (1909) |website=National Gallery of Victoria|access-date=29 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Mary McEvoy (artist)|Mary McEvoy / Mrs Ambrose McEvoy]]'' | location = [[Johannesburg Art Gallery]] | date = 1909 | type = Bust | material = Marble | dimensions = 48cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/><ref name="MMcEvoy"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Fountain figure (Euphemia Lamb)'' | location = [[MAMCO]], Geneva | date = 1908-10 | type = Statue | material = Marble | dimensions = 134.5cm tall | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Commissioned by Lady [[Ottoline Morrell]] for her garden<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art footer}} == 1910 to 1914 == {{Public art header|show_architect=no|show_material=yes|show_dimensions=yes|show_artist=no|show_owner=no|show_wikidata=yes}} {{Public art row | image = Sun Goddess, Crouching by Jacob Epstein 03.jpg | commonscat = Sun Goddess, Crouching by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''Sun Goddess, Crouching'' | location = [[Victoria and Albert Museum]] on loan from [[Nottingham Castle Museum]] | date = 1909-10 | type = Statue | material = Limestone | dimensions = 37.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= yes | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = Sun Worshipper, Holland Park.jpg | commonscat = Sun Worshipper by Epstein, Holland Park | subject = ''Sun worshipper'' | location = The Café, [[Holland Park]], London | date = 1910 | type = Relief panel | material = Limestone | dimensions = 190 x 54cm | designation = | show_wikidata= yes | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = Jacob epstein, dei primaverili (verso, dio solare), 1910, 02.jpg | commonscat = | subject =''Sun God'' | location = [[Tate Britain]] | date = 1910 | type = Relief | material = [[Hopton Wood stone]] | dimensions = 2134 x 1980 x 355mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = On long-term loan from the [[Metropolitan Museum of Art]]<ref name="SGods">{{cite web|url=https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/epstein-sun-god-verso-primeval-gods-l03237 |title=Summary: Sun God (verso: Primeval Gods)|website=Tate |access-date=2 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/480810|title=Relief: Obverse:Sun God (1910); Reverse; Primeval Gods (1933)|website=Metropolitan Museum of Art|access-date=12 June 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Rom (Epstein), National Museum Wales, January 2018.jpg | commonscat = | subject = ''Rom'' | location = [[National Museum Cardiff]] | date = 1910 | type = Sculpture | material = Limestone | dimensions = 85 x 31 x 31cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Portrait of Romilly John;- Inscription by [[Eric Gill]]<ref>{{cite book|author=Oliver Fairclough|year=2011|title=A Companion Guide to the Welsh National Museum of Art|publisher=National Museum Wales Books|isbn=978-0-72-000613-1}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://museum.wales/collections/online/object/9efb551b-da03-3121-9136-846818f1087e/Rom/?index=6|title=Rom|website=National Museum Cardiff|access-date=10 February 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Mrs Emily Chadbourne'' | location = Tate Britain | date = 1910 | type = Bust | material = Alabaster | dimensions = 455 x 260 x 290mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/epstein-mrs-emily-chadbourne-t13983|title=Mrs Emily Chadbourne|website=Tate|access-date=4 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Maternity'' | location = [[Leeds Art Gallery]] | date = 1910 | type = Statue | material = [[Hopton Wood stone|Hoptonwood stone]] | dimensions = 206cm tall | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = Jacob epstein, lady gregory, 1910.jpg | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Lady Gregory]]'' | location = {{ubl|[[Hugh Lane Gallery]],|[[Leeds Art Gallery]]}} | date = 1910 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 38cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Commissioned by [[Hugh Lane]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://hughlane.emuseum.com/objects/500/lady-gregory|title=Lady Gregory|website=Hugh Lane Gallery|access-date=29 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Mrs Marjorie Clifton'' | location = [[Mishkan Museum of Art]] | date = 1911 | type = Bust | material = Plaster | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Bronze cast in a private collection<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = Second portrait of Euphemia Lamb | location = [[Museum of the City of New York]] | date = 1911 | type = Half-length figure | material = Plaster | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Four bronze casts<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Gertrude (The Bather)'' | location = {{ubl|[[Ben Uri Gallery & Museum]],|[[Carrick Hill]], South Australia}} | date = 1911 | type = Half-figure | material = Bronze | dimensions = 96cm high | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Also known as ''Gertrude in a Bathing Cap'', edition of two<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.benuricollection.org.uk/search_result.php?item_id=3552 |title=Gertrude (The Bather)|website=Ben Uri Gallery|access-date=2 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Nan Seated'' | location = [[Museum of Modern Art]], New York City | date = 1911 | type = Sculpture | material = Bronze | dimensions = 47 x 33 x 14.9cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Seven casts<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url= https://www.moma.org/collection/works/80761?artist_id=1741&page=1&sov_referrer=artist |title=Nan Seated|website=Museum of Modern Art|access-date=9 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Nan, the Dreamer by Jacob Epstein 03.jpg | commonscat = Nan the Dreamer by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''Nan The Dreamer'' | location = {{ubl|[[Fitzwilliam Museum]],|[[The New Art Gallery Walsall]],|[[Bradford Art Gallery]],| [[Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery]], [[Cleveland Museum of Art]]}} | date = 1911 | type = Sculpture of reclining figure | material = Bronze | dimensions = 31 x 28.5 x 36.3cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Modelled by Nan Condron; Edition of six casts plus a plaster version in the [[Mishkan Museum of Art]]<ref name="SharedV"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/id/object/12319|title=The Dreamer: M.1-1937|website=The Fitzwilliam Museum|access-date=10 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://collections.thenewartgallerywalsall.org.uk/objects/4276/nan-the-dreamer?ctx=27ab680c-bc11-421c-8a0f-e5919a44b0c6&idx=1|title=Nan (the Dreamer)|website=The New Art Gallery Walsall|access-date=16 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url= https://www.clevelandart.org/art/1975.84|title=Nan (The Dreamer)|website=Cleveland Museum of Art|access-date=8 June 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Nan (the Dreamer)'' | location = {{ubl|Bradford Art Gallery,|[[Detroit Institute of Art]],|[[Fitzwilliam Museum]]}} | date = 1911 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 14 x 15 x 9cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Modelled by Nan Condron, five casts, plaster model in the [[Ashmolean Museum]]<ref>{{cite web|url=https://collections.ashmolean.org/collection/search/per_page/25/offset/0/sort_by/relevance/object/125317|title=Nan (the Dreamer)|website=Ashmolean Museum|access-date=15 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Head of a Woman with Closed Eyes by Epstein 04.jpg | commonscat = Head of a Woman with Closed Eyes by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''Head of a Women with Closed Eyes / The Sleeper'' | location = [[Fitzwilliam Museum]] | date = 1911 | type = Miniature bust on pedestal | material = Bronze & marble | dimensions = 9.4(6.4) x 16.2 x 6.3(3.8)cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Modelled by Nan Condron; Edition of three casts<ref>{{cite web|url=https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/id/object/13410|title=Head of a Women with Closed Eyes: M.34-1982|website=The Fitzwilliam Museum |access-date=1 July 2024}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Mother and Child'' | location = [[Carrick Hill]], South Australia | date = 1911 | type = Statue | material = Bronze | dimensions = 167.6cm tall | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Three casts. Plaster version in [[Mishkan Museum of Art]]<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = Monument of Oscar Wilde LCCN2014690681.jpg | commonscat = Grave of Oscar Wilde and Robert Baldwin Ross | subject = [[Oscar Wilde's tomb]] | location = [[Père Lachaise Cemetery]], Paris | date = 1911–12 | type = Sculpture | material = Stone | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = Q12432989 | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Sunflower'' | location = [[National Gallery of Victoria]] | date = 1912-13 | type = Sculpture | material = Stone | dimensions = 58.7 x 27.5 x 20.4cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url= https://www.ngv.vic.gov.au/explore/collection/work/3406/ |title=Sunflower (c. 1912-13) |website=National Gallery of Victoria|access-date=29 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Self portrait by Jacob Epstein 01.jpg | commonscat = Self-portrait by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''Self-portrait / Self-portrait with Storm Cap'' | location = [[National Portrait Gallery, London]] | date = 1912 | type = Bust | material = Bronze, cast 1917 | dimensions = 502 x 270mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = 1912 plaster in [[Israel Museum]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url= https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw02119/Jacob-Epstein?LinkID=mp01484&role=art&rNo=0|title=Jacob Epstein|website=National Portrait Gallery|access-date=1 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Female Figure in Flenite'' | location = [[Tate Britain]] | date = 1913 | type = Sculpture | material = Serpentine stone | dimensions = 457 x 95 x 121mm plus base | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/epstein-female-figure-in-flenite-t01691|title=Female Figure in Flenite|website=Tate|access-date=2 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Birth'' | location = [[Art Gallery of Ontario]] | date = 1913 | type = Carved panel | material = Stone | dimensions = 30.6 x 26.6 x 10.2cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://ago.ca/exhibitions/transformative-power-art|title=The Transformative Power of Art|year=2005|website=Art Gallery of Ontario|access-date=7 June 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Figure in Flenite'' | location = [[Minneapolis Institute of Art]] | date = 1913 | type = Sculpture | material = Serpentine stone | dimensions = 60.9cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://collections.artsmia.org/art/1633/female-figure-sir-jacob-epstein|title=Female Figure|website=Minneapolis Institute of Art |access-date=29 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Rock Drill by Jacob Epstein.jpg | commonscat = Rock Drill (Jacob Epstein) | subject = ''[[Rock Drill (Jacob Epstein)|Rock Drill]]'' | location = 1973 reconstruction in [[Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery]] | date = 1913–14 | type = Sculpture | material = Plaster & metal | dimensions = 205 x 141.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = Q13274870 | notes = Original version dismantled by Epstein in 1916<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.tate.org.uk/context-comment/blogs/story-jacob-epsteins-rock-drill |title=The story of Jacob Epstein's "Rock Drill"; Tate |access-date= 2 May 2023|archive-date=23 January 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180123062650/http://www.tate.org.uk/context-comment/blogs/story-jacob-epsteins-rock-drill}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Mother and Child'' | location = [[Museum of Modern Art]], New York City | date = 1913 | type = Two heads | material = Marble | dimensions = 43.8 x 43.1 x 10.2cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.moma.org/collection/works/80769?artist_id=1741&page=1&sov_referrer=artist |title=Mother and Child|website=Museum of Modern Art|access-date=9 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Venus - First version'' | location = [[Baltimore Museum of Art]] | date = 1913 | type = Statue | material = Marble | dimensions = 123.2 x 40.6 x 29.8cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://collection.artbma.org/objects/38222/first-venus?ctx=2ad00467cadcdc435645513c024bebe2011347b4&idx=3|title= First Venus|website=Baltimore Museum of Art|access-date=31 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Doves (First Version)'' | location = [[Hirshhorn Museum]] | date = 1914 | type = Sculpture | material = [[Parian marble]] | dimensions = 34.7 x 50.3 x 18.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://hirshhorn.si.edu/collection/artwork/?edanUrl=edanmdm%3Ahmsg_66.1791|title=Doves (First Version)|website=Hirshhorn Museum|access-date=30 April 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Doves Second Version by Jacob Epstein 01.jpg | commonscat = Doves (Second Version) by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''Doves (Second Version)'' | location = [[Tate Britain]] | date = 1914-15 | type = Sculpture | material = Parian marble | dimensions = 648 x 787 x 343mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/epstein-doves-t01820|title=Doves|website=Tate|access-date=2 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art footer}} == 1915 to 1919 == {{Public art header|show_architect=no|show_material=yes|show_dimensions=yes|show_artist=no|show_owner=no|show_wikidata=yes}} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Hilda Hamblay'' | location = [[Mishkan Museum of Art]] | date = 1915 | type = Bust | material = Plaster | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Two bronze casts<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Elizabeth Scott-Ellis'' | location = [[Museum of the City of New York]] | date = 1915 | type = Bust | material = Plaster | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Bronze cast, possibly lost or in a private collection<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''First Portrait of [[Lilian Shelley]]'' | location = [[Montreal Museum of Fine Arts]] | date = 1915 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 32.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Three casts<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Admiral of the Fleet, [[John Fisher, 1st Baron Fisher|Lord Fisher of Kilverstone]]'' | location = {{ubl|[[Imperial War Museum]],|[[National Gallery of Canada]]}} | date = 1915 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 290 x 469 x 338mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = Q76627716 | notes = Five casts in two versions plus plaster casts in [[Israel Museum]] and [[National Maritime Museum]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/8627|title=Admiral of the Fleet, Lord Fisher of Kilverstone, GCB, OM, GCVO |website=Imperial War Museum|access-date=12 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.gallery.ca/collection/artwork/admiral-lord-fisher|title=Admiral Lord Fisher|website=National Gallery of Canada|access-date=28 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Mask of Billie Gordon'' | location = [[National Gallery of Canada]] | date = 1915 | type = Mask | material = Bronze | dimensions = 26.8 x 18.6 x 20.4cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.gallery.ca/collection/artwork/mask-of-billie-gordon |title=Mask of Billie Gordon|website=National Gallery of Canada|access-date=5 June 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''The Duchess of Hamilton'' | location = [[Hirshhorn Museum]] | date = 1915 | type = Half-figure | material = Bronze | dimensions = 63.7 x 53.5 x 27.3cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://hirshhorn.si.edu/collection/artwork/?edanUrl=edanmdm%3Ahmsg_72.109|title=The Duchess of Hamilton|website=Hirshhorn Museum|access-date=30 April 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Torso in Metal from 'The Rock Drill' by Jacob Epstein, Tate Britain.JPG | commonscat = Torso in Metal from The Rock Drill by Jacob Epstein | subject = Torso in Metal from 'The Rock Drill' | location = {{ubl|[[Tate Britain]],|[[Museum of Modern Art]],|[[Auckland Art Gallery]],|[[National Gallery of Canada]]}} | date = 1915 | type = Sculpture | material = Bronze or gunmetal | dimensions = 705 x 584 x 445mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = Q21743265 | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/epstein-torso-in-metal-from-the-rock-drill-t00340 |title=Torso in Metal from 'The Rock Drill'|website=Tate|access-date=2 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|title=The Museum of Modern Art New York The History and the Collection|year=1984|publisher=Thames and Hudson|isbn=0500234035}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url= https://www.aucklandartgallery.com/explore-art-and-ideas/artwork/3055/torso-in-metal-from-the-rock-drill|title=Torso in Metal from 'The Rock Drill'|website=Auckland Art Gallery|access-date=13 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.gallery.ca/collection/artwork/rock-drill|title=Rock Drill|website=National Gallery of Canada|access-date=6 June 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.moma.org/collection/works/81041|title=The Rock Drill|website=Museum of Modern Art|access-date=6 June 2023}}</ref> Plaster cast in [[Israel Museum]]<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Portrait of [[Iris Tree|Iris Beerbohn Tree]]'' | location = [[Tate Britain]] | date = 1915 | type = Head | material = Patinated bronze | dimensions = 348 x 290 x 228mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = At least six casts created <ref>{{cite web| url=https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/epstein-portrait-of-iris-beerbohm-tree-t07051|title=Portrait of Iris Beerbohn Tree|website=Tate|access-date=2 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url= https://artuk.org/discover/stories/heads-up-how-helmets-inspired-british-modernists |title=Heads up: how helmets inspired British modernists |author=Deborah Nash |date= 17 February 2025 |website=Art UK |access-date=20 February 2025}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Second Portrait / Mask of Mrs Epstein'' | location = {{ubl|[[Auckland Art Gallery]],|[[Buffalo AKG Art Museum]],|[[Manchester Art Gallery]]}} | date = 1916 | type = Mask | material = Bronze | dimensions = 241mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Two versions, with or without earrings, in nine casts plus plaster version at [[Mishkan Museum of Art]]<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.aucklandartgallery.com/explore-art-and-ideas/artwork/3012/mask-of-mrs-epstein|title=Mask of Mrs Epstein|website=Auckland Art Gallery|access-date=13 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://buffaloakg.org/artworks/1953722-mrs-jacob-epstein|title=Mrs. Jacob Epstein|website=Buffalo AKG Art Museum|access-date=7 June 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://manchesterartgallery.org/explore/title/?mag-object-3367 |title=Mask of Mrs Epstein (With Earrings)|website=Manchester Art Gallery|access-date=25 July 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = W.H. Davies by Jacob Epstein 02.jpg | commonscat = W.H. Davies by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''[[W. H. Davies]]'' | location = {{ubl|[[National Portrait Gallery, London]],|[[Newport Museum and Art Gallery]]}} | date = 1916 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 311mm high | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Three casts<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw01739 |title=William Henry Davies|website=National Portrait Gallery|access-date=1 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Augustus John by Jacob Epstein 01.jpg | commonscat = Augustus John by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''[[Augustus John]]'' | location = {{ubl|[[National Portrait Gallery, London]],|[[National Museum Cardiff]]}} | date = 1916 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 350 x 270mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Eleven casts plus plaster in [[Israel Museum]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw03478 |title=Augustus John|website=National Portrait Gallery|access-date=1 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://museum.wales/art/online/?action=show_item&item=540 |title=Augustus John (1878-1961)|website=National Museum Cardiff|access-date=18 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Bust of Meum Stewart by Jacob Epstein 04.jpg | commonscat = Bust of Meum Stewart by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''Bust of Meum Stewart'' | location = {{ubl|[[Arts Council Collection]],|[[The New Art Gallery Walsall]],|[[Manchester Art Gallery]]}} | date = 1916-18 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 42.5 x 39.4 x 26.7cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="SharedV"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://artscouncilcollection.org.uk/artwork/bust-meum |title=Bust of Meum|website=Arts Council Collection|access-date=17 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url= https://collections.thenewartgallerywalsall.org.uk/objects/4268/bust-of-meum-stewart |title=Bust of Meum Stewart|website=The New Art Gallery Walsall |access-date=18 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://manchesterartgallery.org/explore/title/?mag-object-2316 |title=Mrs Meum Lindsell Stewart|website=Manchester Art Gallery|access-date=25 July 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Second Portrait of Meum (Head)'' | location = {{ubl|[[Harvard Art Museums|Fogg Gallery]],|[[Art Gallery of New South Wales]]}} | date = 1916 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 32.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Six bronze casts;- plaster version at [[Mishkan Museum of Art]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://harvardartmuseums.org/collections/object/228083?position=4&context=person&id=19493|title=Second Portrait of Meum (Lindsell-Stewart)|website=Harvard Art Museums|access-date=8 June 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.artgallery.nsw.gov.au/collection/works/931/|title=Meum|website=Art Gallery NSW|access-date=8 June 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Meum Lindsell-Stewart'' | location = [[National Gallery of Art, Washington]] | date = 1916-18 | type = Bust | material = Painted plaster | dimensions = 43.5 x 40 x 31cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nga.gov/collection/art-object-page.55372.html|title=Meum Lindsell-Stewart, 1916/1918|website=National Gallery of Art|access-date=10 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Fourth Portrait of Meum / Meum with a Fan'' | location = [[Burrell Collection]] | date = 1916-18 | type = Half-figure | material = Bronze | dimensions = 871mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=http://collections.glasgowmuseums.com/mwebcgi/mweb?request=record;id=33310;type=101|title=Meum with a Fan|website=Glasgow Museums|access-date=15 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''The Tin Hat'' | location = [[Imperial War Museum]] | date = 1916 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 290 x 335 x 280mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Four casts, plaster version at [[Mishkan Museum of Art]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/8630|title=The Tin Hat|website=Imperial War Museum|access-date=28 April 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author=Claire Brenard|publisher=Imperial War Museum|year=2023|title=Visions of War Art of the Imperial War Museums |isbn=978-1-912423-64-4}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Bust of Bernard van Dieren.jpg | commonscat = | subject = ''First Portrait of [[Bernard van Dieren]]'' | location = [[Detroit Institute of Art]] | date = 1916 | type = Bust | material = Plaster | dimensions = 33.6 x 19.7 x 23cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Plaster version;-[[University of Hull]], three bronze casts<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://artuk.org/discover/artworks/first-portrait-of-bernard-van-dieren-18871936-278239|title=First Portrait of Bernard van Dieren (1887-1936)|website=Art UK|access-date=14 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''James Muirhead Bone'' | location = [[The McManus]] | date = 1916 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 26.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Four casts, plaster version in [[Israel Museum]]<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Venus - Second Version'' | location = [[Yale University Art Gallery]] | date = 1917 | type = Statue | material = Marble | dimensions = 235.6 x 43.2 x 82.6cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://artgallery.yale.edu/collections/objects/52201|title=Venus 1917|website=Yale University Art Gallery|access-date=31 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''An American Soldier'' | location = {{ubl|[[Imperial War Museum]],|[[National Gallery of Art, Washington]],|[[Metropolitan Museum of Art]]}} | date = 1917 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 39.9 x 26.8 x 24.3cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/8629|title=An American Soldier|website=Imperial War Museum|access-date=28 April 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nga.gov/collection/art-object-page.46006.html|title=An American Soldier, 1917|website=National Gallery of Art|access-date=10 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/195072?ft=Jacob+Epstein&amp;offset=0&amp;rpp=40&amp;pos=6|title=The American Soldier|website=The Met|access-date=6 June 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Gladys Spencer-Churchill, Duchess of Marlborough|Gladys Deacon]]'' | location = [[Israel Museum]] | date = 1917 | type = Head | material = Plaster | dimensions = 50cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = Q76628051 | notes = One bronze cast. Subject later became the 9th Duchess of Marlborough<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = Second portrait of Bernard van Dieren | location = [[Mishkan Museum of Art]] | date = 1917 | type = Head | material = Plaster | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = One bronze cast<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = Bronze Head by Jacob Epstein 03.jpg | commonscat = Bronze Head by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''Bronze Head'' | location = [[Watford Museum]] | date = c. 1917 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Also known as ''Strand Head''<ref name="Watford">{{cite web|url=https://www.watfordmuseum.org.uk/sculpture|title=Sculpture|website=Watford Museum|access-date=15 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Portrait of Mrs. Epstein (Sculpture) (3717256061).jpg | commonscat = | subject = ''Fifth Portrait of Mrs Jacob Epstein (in a mantilla)'' | location = {{ubl|[[Laing Art Gallery]],|[[Yeshiva University Museum]]}} | date = 1918 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 38cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = Q76629695 | notes = Seven casts in different versions, plaster in [[Israel Museum]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://museums.cjh.org/web/pages/cjh/Display.php?irn=6607&QueryPage=%2F|title=Portrait of Mrs. Epstein (Margaret Dunlop)|website=Center for Jewish History - Museum Collections|access-date=21 July 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Luisa Casati|Marchesa Casati]]'' | location = {{ubl|[[Allen Memorial Art Museum]],|[[Philadelphia Museum of Art]],|[[Beecroft Art Gallery]]}} | date = 1918 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 29.3cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Eight casts, plaster version at [[Mishkan Museum of Art]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://allenartcollection.oberlin.edu/objects/12231/marchesa-casati?ctx=00ac72e95cc20ad100ff21cbc2869b24d11bfad0&idx=3|title=Marchesa Casati|website=Allen Memorial Art Museum|access-date=6 June 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Gabrielle Soene'' | location = [[Israel Museum]] | date = 1918-19 | type = Bust | material = Plaster | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = Sergeant David Ferguson Hunter.jpg | commonscat = | subject = ''Sergeant [[David Ferguson Hunter]]'' | location = [[Imperial War Museum]] | date = 1919 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 325 x 587 x 470mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/8628|title=Sergeant DF Hunter, VC. 1/5 Highland Light Infantry|website=Imperial War Museum|access-date=28 April 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Portrait of Hélène by Epstein 02.jpg | commonscat = Portrait of Hélène by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''Portrait of Hélène'' | location = [[Fitzwilliam Museum]] | date = 1919 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 53.4cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Modelled by Hélène Yelin, a singer. Four casts<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/id/object/12312|title=Helene: M.11-1931|website=The Fitzwilliam Museum|access-date=10 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Noneen (Head of a Girl)'' | location = [[Ashmolean Museum]] | date = 1919 | type = Bust | material = Bronze with brown petina | dimensions = 33.7cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://collections.ashmolean.org/collection/search/sort_by/relevance/sort_order/asc/per_page/25/offset/0/object/128772 |title=Noneen (Head of a Girl)|website=Ashmolean Museum|access-date=15 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''The Risen Christ'' | location = [[National Galleries Scotland]] | date = 1917-19 | type = Sculpture | material = Bronze | dimensions = 218.5 x 54.5 x 56cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nationalgalleries.org/art-and-artists/276 |title=The Risen Christ, 1917-19|website=National Galleries Scotland|access-date=16 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Hands of the Risen Christ by Jacob Epstein.jpg | commonscat = | subject = ''Hands of the Risen Christ'' | location = [[The New Art Gallery Walsall]] | date = 1919 | type = Sculpture | material = Bronze | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="SharedV"/><ref>{{cite web|url= https://collections.thenewartgallerywalsall.org.uk/objects/4279/hands-of-the-risen-christ |title=Hands of the Risen Christ|website=The New Art Gallery Walsall |access-date=16 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Clare Sheridan]]'' | location = [[Rye Art Gallery]] | date = 1919 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 57 x 40 x 20cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Two casts<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ryeartgallery.co.uk/collection-artists/153/1547/sir-jacob-epstein/clare-sheridan-1919 |title= Clare Sheridan|website= Rye Art Gallery |access-date=18 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Betty May]]'' | location = [[Manchester Art Gallery]] | date = 1919 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 35.5 x 21cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Plaster;- [[Museum of the City of New York]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://manchesterartgallery.org/explore/title/?mag-object-3369 |title=Betty May|website=Manchester Art Gallery|access-date=25 July 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art footer}} == 1920 to 1924 == {{Public art header|show_architect=no|show_material=yes|show_dimensions=yes|show_artist=no|show_owner=no|show_wikidata=yes}} {{Public art row | image = Peggy Jean Asleep by Jacob Epstein 03.jpg | commonscat = Peggy Jean Asleep by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''Fourth Portrait of Peggy Jean (asleep)'' | location = {{ubl|[[Carrick Hill]],|[[The Hepworth Wakefield]],|[[Bolton Museum]],|[[Doncaster Museum and Art Gallery]],|[[The New Art Gallery Walsall]]}} | date = 1920 | type = Half-figure | material = Bronze | dimensions = 26cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Thirteen casts, plaster at [[Israel Museum]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref name="CHill">{{cite web|url=https://www.carrickhill.sa.gov.au/collection/modi-sapiente-provident-soluta|title=Sculpture|website=Carrick Hill|access-date=24 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://collections.thenewartgallerywalsall.org.uk/objects/8232/peggy-jean-asleep|title=Peggy Jean Asleep|website=New Art Gallery, Walsall |access-date=21 July 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://hepworthwakefield.org/our-art-artists/collections/highlights/collection-highlights-jacob-epstein/ |title=Jacob Epstein 1880-1959|website=The Hepworth Wakefield|access-date=27 July 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Self-portrait with a Beard'' | location = {{ubl|[[Nottingham Castle Museum]],|[[Hull University]],|[[Los Angeles County Museum of Art]]}} | date = 1920 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 38.1cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Seven casts, plaster version at [[Mishkan Museum of Art]]<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = Lilian Shelley, bronze, 1920 CE, by Sir Jacob Epstein. The Burrell Collection, Glasgow, Scotland, UK.jpg | commonscat = Lilian Shelley by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''Second Portrait of [[Lilian Shelley]]'' | location = [[Burrell Collection]] | date = 1920 | type = Half-figure | material = Bronze | dimensions = 705 x 580 x 380mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=http://collections.glasgowmuseums.com/mwebcgi/mweb?request=record&id=33128&type=101|title=Lilian Shelley|website=Glasgow Museums|access-date=14 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Study of a Cat by Jacob Epstein 03.jpg | commonscat = Study of a Cat by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''Study of a Cat'' | location = [[The New Art Gallery Walsall]] | date = 1920 | type = Sculpture | material = Bronze | dimensions = 17 x 30cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Two casts<ref name="ESilber"/><ref name="SharedV"/><ref>{{cite web|url= https://collections.thenewartgallerywalsall.org.uk/objects/4273/study-of-a-cat?ctx=cd3f57b8-e08c-4de2-b142-dfea0e33a7c4&idx=0 |title=Study of a Cat |website=The New Art Gallery Walsall |access-date=16 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Seventh Portrait of Peggy Jean (pouting)'' | location = [[Bradford Art Gallery]] | date = 1920-21 | type = Half-figure | material = Bronze | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Two casts<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Ninth Portrait of Peggy-Jean (laughing, at 2 years, 9 months)'' | location = {{ubl|[[Ashmolean Museum]],|[[Leeds Art Gallery]],|[[Memphis Brooks Museum of Art]]}} | date = 1921 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 22.5 x 22 x 23.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Thirteen casts, plaster at [[Israel Museum]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://collections.ashmolean.org/collection/search/sort_by/relevance/sort_order/asc/per_page/25/offset/0/object/121606|title=Ninth Portrait of Peggy-Jean|website=Ashmolean Museum|access-date=15 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Miriam Plichte by Jacobe Epstein 02.jpg | commonscat = First Portrait of Miriam Plichte by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''First Portrait of Miriam Plichte'' | location = {{ubl|[[Glasgow Museums|Glasgow Museum Resource Centre]],|[[The New Art Gallery Walsall]]}} | date = 1921 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 39cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Two casts<ref name="ESilber"/><ref name="mp">{{cite web|url=http://collections.glasgowmuseums.com/mwebcgi/mweb?request=record;id=718673;type=101 |title=First Portrait of Miriam Plichte|website=Glasgow Museums|access-date=15 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://collections.thenewartgallerywalsall.org.uk/objects/5413/miriam-plichte|title=Miriam Plichte|website=The New Art Gallery Walsall|access-date=18 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Second Portrait of Miriam Plichte'' | location = [[Montreal Museum of Fine Arts]] | date = 1921 | type = Half-figure | material = Bronze | dimensions = 61.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Eight casts<ref name="ESilber"/><ref name="mp"/> }} {{Public art row | image = First Portrait of Kathleen by Jacob Epstein 04.jpg | commonscat = First Portrait of Kathleen by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''First Portrait of [[Kathleen Garman|Kathleen]]'' | location = {{ubl|[[Tate Britain]],|[[Yale University Art Gallery]],|[[New Art Gallery Walsall]],|[[Harvard Art Museums|Fogg Gallery]],|[[Manchester Art Gallery]]}} | date = 1921 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 470 x 470 x 305mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Twelve casts, plaster in the [[Phoenix Art Museum]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref name="SharedV"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/epstein-kathleen-n06089|title=Kathleen|website=Tate|access-date=2 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://collections.thenewartgallerywalsall.org.uk/objects/4278/kathleen-first-portrait|title=Kathleen (First Portrait)|website=The New Art Gallery Walsall|access-date=16 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://artgallery.yale.edu/collections/objects/9598|title=Kathleen|website=Yale University Art Gallery|access-date=31 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url= https://harvardartmuseums.org/collections/object/312034?position=3|title=Portrait of Kathleen|website=Harvard Art Museums|access-date=9 June 2023}}</ref> <ref>{{cite web|url=https://manchesterartgallery.org/explore/title/?mag-object-3370 |title=Kathleen|website=Manchester Art Gallery|access-date=25 July 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Second portrait of [[Kathleen Garman|Kathleen]]'' | location = [[Mishkan Museum of Art]] | date = 1922 | type = Bust | material = Plaster | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Five bronze casts<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Jacob Kramer]]'' | location = {{ubl|[[Tate Britain]],|[[Ben Uri Gallery & Museum]],[[Skirball Cultural Center]]}} | date = 1921 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 65.5 x 53 x 30cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Five casts, plaster at [[Mishkan Museum of Art]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web| url= https://www.benuricollection.org.uk/search_result.php?item_id=1053|title=Bust of Jacob Kramer|website=Ben Uri Collection|access-date=2 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url= https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/epstein-jacob-kramer-n03849|title=Jacob Kramer|website=Tate|access-date=2 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''The Girl from Senegal'' | location = {{ubl|[[The Whitworth]],|[[Buffalo AKG Art Museum]],|[[Harvard Art Museums|Fogg Gallery]],|Artarmon Galleries}} | date = 1921-23 | type = Half-figure | material = Bronze | dimensions = 559 x 460 x 337mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Modelled by Madeleine Bechet, eight casts<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=http://gallerysearch.ds.man.ac.uk/Detail/17928|title=The Girl from Senegal|website=The Whitworth|access-date=4 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://buffaloakg.org/artworks/192733-senegalese-woman|title=Senegalise Woman, 1921|website=Buffalo AKG Art Museum|access-date=6 June 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://harvardartmuseums.org/collections/object/228611?position=1|title=Girl from Senegal|website=Harvard Art Museums|access-date=6 June 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Old Smith, the Matchseller'' | location = [[Hirshhorn Museum]] | date = c. 1922 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 37.1 x 20.6 x 27.3cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Three casts<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://hirshhorn.si.edu/collection/artwork/?edanUrl=edanmdm%3Ahmsg_66.1790|title=Old Smith, the Matchseller|website=Hirshhorn Museum|access-date=30 April 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''The Weeping Women'' | location = {{ubl|[[Leicester Museum and Art Gallery ]],|[[Cleveland Museum of Art]]}} | date = 1922 | type = Half-figure with raised arms | material = Bronze | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Three casts<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.clevelandart.org/art/1966.140|title=The Weeping Woman|website=Cleveland Museum of Art|access-date=8 June 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = Maquette for the Hudson Memorial | location = [[Mishkan Museum of Art]] | date = 1922-23 | type = Sculpture, rejected design | material = Plaster | dimensions = 32.5 x 44cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Two bronze casts<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Hans Kindler]]'' | location = [[Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum]] | date = 1922–30 | type = Head | material = Plaster | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.kemperartmuseum.wustl.edu/collection/explore/artwork/536|title=Portrait of Hans Kindler|website=Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum|access-date=9 June 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Robert Bontine Cunninghame Graham|R.B. Cunninghame Graham]]'' | location = {{ubl|[[National Portrait Gallery, London]],|[[Aberdeen Art Gallery]],|[[Glasgow Museums|Glasgow Museums Resource Centre]],|[[National Galleries Scotland]]|[[Manchester Art Gallery]]}} | date = 1923 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 468 x 265mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Ten casts<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portraitExtended/mw02664/Robert-Bontine-Cunninghame-Graham? |title=Robert Bontine Cunninghame Graham|website=National Portrait Gallery|access-date=1 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://emuseum.aberdeencity.gov.uk/objects/3987/rb-cunninghame-graham|title=R.B. Cunninghame Graham|website=Aberdeen Archives, Gallery & Museums|access-date=8 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://collections.glasgowmuseums.com/mwebcgi/mweb?request=record;id=165514;type=101|title=R B Cunningham Graham|website=Glasgow Museums |access-date=15 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nationalgalleries.org/art-and-artists/2590 |title=Robert Bontine Cunninghame Graham, 1852-1936. Writer & traveller|website=National Galleries Scotland|access-date=16 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://manchesterartgallery.org/explore/title/?mag-object-3380 |title=RB Cunningham Graham|website=Manchester Art Gallery|access-date=25 July 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Old Pinager'' | location = {{ubl|[[Aberdeen Art Gallery]],|[[Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum]]}} | date = 1923 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 42 x 35 x 48cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Plaster version in the [[Mishkan Museum of Art]]<ref>{{cite web|url=https://emuseum.aberdeencity.gov.uk/objects/3989/old-pinager |title=Old Pinager|website=Aberdeen Archives, Gallery & Museums|access-date=8 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.kemperartmuseum.wustl.edu/collection/explore/artwork/539|title=Old Pinager|website=Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum|access-date=9 June 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Old Pinager's Hands.jpg | commonscat = | subject = ''Old Pinager's Hands'' | location = [[The New Art Gallery Walsall]] | date = 1923 | type = Sculpture | material = Bronze | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://collections.thenewartgallerywalsall.org.uk/objects/5408/old-pinagers-hands?ctx=5ffbbeff-a249-41c6-aae7-bc49e2403051&idx=0 |title=Old Pinager's Hands|website=New Art Gallery, Walsall|access-date=16 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Fitzwilliam Museum - First Portrait of Dolores (17102160682).jpg | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Dolores (artists' model)|Delores]]'' | location = {{ubl|[[Fitzwilliam Museum]],|[[Manchester Art Gallery]]}} | date = 1923 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 38.3 x 38.9 x 27.4cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Six casts in two versions<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/id/object/12403|title=Delores: M.2-1945|website=The Fitzwilliam Museum|access-date=10 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://manchesterartgallery.org/explore/title/?mag-object-3366 |title=Delores|website=Manchester Art Gallery|access-date=25 July 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Angel Torso sculpture by Jacob Epstein 05.jpg | commonscat = Angel Torso by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''Angel Torso'' | location = [[Glynn Vivian Art Gallery]], Swansea | date = Plaster 1923, bronze after 1959 | type = Sculpture | material = Bronze | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = A plaster figure from 1923 that remained in Epstein's studio and was cast in bronze after his death, when the head, modelled in 1923 by Ferosa Rastoumji was also added. }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Charles Spencer-Churchill, 9th Duke of Marlborough]]'' | location = [[Blenheim Palace]] | date = 1923-25 | type = Half-figure | material = Bronze | dimensions = 104.2cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Portrait study in plaster in the Israel Museum, plaster model of hands in the Mishkan Museum of Art<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = Dr. Adolph S. Oko | location = [[Mishkan Museum of Art]] | date = 1923 | type = Bust | material = Plaster | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Two bronze casts<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''The Seraph'' (Marie Collins) | location = [[Bowdoin College]], Maine | date = 1924 | type = Bust | material = Plaster | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Six bronzes<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = Joseph Conrad, by Jacob Epstein.jpg | commonscat = Joseph Conrad by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''[[Joseph Conrad]]'' | location = {{ubl|[[Hirshhorn Museum]],|[[National Portrait Gallery, London]],|[[Philadelphia Museum of Art]]}} | date = 1924 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 41.0 x 30.8 x 28.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Nine casts<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://hirshhorn.si.edu/collection/artwork/?edanUrl=edanmdm%3Ahmsg_66.1789|title=Joseph Conrad|website=Hirshhorn Museum|access-date=30 April 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw01448/Joseph-Conrad?LinkID=mp01005&role=sit&rNo=9|title=Joseph Conrad|website=National Portrait Gallery|access-date=30 April 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = PM Conrad2.JPG | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Joseph Conrad]]'' | location = {{ubl|[[Manchester Art Gallery]],|[[Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery]],|[[Jewish Museum (Manhattan)]]}} | date = 1924 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 48.2cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Six casts plus plaster at [[Mishkan Museum of Art]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://manchesterartgallery.org/explore/title/?mag-object-3405 |title=Joseph Conrad|website=Manchester Art Gallery|access-date=25 July 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Professor [[Samuel Alexander]]'' | location = {{ubl|[[University of Manchester]],|[[Ben Uri Gallery & Museum]]}} | date = 1924 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 51 x 57 x 37cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Two casts<ref>{{cite web| url= https://www.benuricollection.org.uk/search_result.php?item_id=611 |title= Professor Samuel Alexander O.M. |website=Ben Uri Collection |access-date=2 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Jacob Epstein (art collector)|Jacob Epstein of Baltimore]]'' | location = [[Baltimore Museum of Art]] | date = 1924 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 52.7 x 57.2 x 30.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://collection.artbma.org/objects/37679/jacob-epstein-of-baltimore?ctx=be5c684d7e3c440ad1db237a5ebf2289e6062607&idx=1|title= Jacob Epstein of Baltimore|website=Baltimore Museum of Art|access-date=31 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''David Erskine of Linlathen'' | location = [[The McManus]] | date = 1924 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 58.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = WH Hudson memorial, Hyde Park, London 03.jpg | commonscat = Hudson memorial, Hyde Park, London | subject = ''Rima'', W. H. Hudson Memorial | location = [[Hyde Park, London]] | date = 1924–25 | type = Relief | material = Stone | dimensions = 116 x 183cm | designation = Grade II | show_wikidata= | wikidata = Q26525156 | notes = Inscriptions cut by [[Eric Gill]]<ref>{{NHLE |num=1231572 |desc=WH Hudson memorial (on the southwest edge of the Bird Sanctuary east of the West Carriage Drive)|access-date=25 January 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art footer}} == 1925 to 1929 == {{Public art header|show_architect=no|show_material=yes|show_dimensions=yes|show_artist=no|show_owner=no|show_wikidata=yes}} {{Public art row | image = Sybil Thorndike by Jacob Epstein 03.jpg | commonscat = Sybil Thorndike by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''[[Sybil Thorndike]]'' | location = {{ubl|[[National Portrait Gallery, London]],|[[Garrick Club]],|[[Doncaster Museum and Art Gallery]]}} | date = 1925 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions =500 x 620mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Three casts<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw07959 |title=Sybil Thorndike|website=National Portrait Gallery|access-date=1 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''First Portrait of [[Sunita Devi|Sunita]]'' | location = Private collection | date = 1925 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 48.9cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = One bronze cast sold at Christies in 1973<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = Second Portrait of Sunita by Jacob Epstein 01.jpg | commonscat = Second Portrait of Sunita by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''Second Portrait of [[Sunita Devi|Sunita]]'' | location = [[Manchester Art Gallery]] | date = 1925 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 55.9 x 56cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://manchesterartgallery.org/explore/title/?mag-object-3528 |title=Sunita|website=Manchester Art Gallery|access-date=25 July 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Pearl Oko'' | location = [[Israel Museum]] | date = 1926 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 36 x 18 x 25cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = Q76629133 | notes = Plaster at [[Mishkan Museum of Art]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.imj.org.il/en/collections/193785-0|title=Pearl Oko |website= The Israel Museum, Jerusalem |access-date=10 June 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = 'The Visitation' by Jacob Epstein, Tate Britain.JPG | commonscat = The Visitation by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''The Visitation'' | location = {{ubl|[[Tate Britain]],|[[Hirshhorn Museum]],|[[Queensland Art Gallery]]|[[Museo de Bellas Artes (Caracas)]]}} | date = 1926 | type = Statue | material = Bronze | dimensions = 171 x 47 x 47cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = Q56696120 | notes = Eight casts, plaster model at [[Israel Museum]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://hirshhorn.si.edu/collection/artwork/?edanUrl=edanmdm%3Ahmsg_66.1786|title= The Visitation|website=Hirshhorn Museum|access-date=30 April 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artists/sir-jacob-epstein-1061|title=Display caption: The Visitation|website=Tate|access-date=2 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://collection.qagoma.qld.gov.au/objects/5381|title=The Visitation 1926, cast 1958|website=Queensland Art Gallery/Gallery of Modern Art|access-date=3 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.imj.org.il/en/collections/193780-0|title=The Visitation|website=The Israel Museum|access-date=4 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Ramsay MacDonald]]'' | location = {{ubl|[[Palace of Westminster]],|[[National Galleries Scotland]]|[[Glasgow Museums|Glasgow Museums Resource Centre]]}} | date = 1926 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 49 x 25 x 28cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Four casts plus a plaster version in [[Aberdeen Art Gallery]]<ref>{{cite book|title=Art in Parliament - The Permanent Collection of the House of Commons|author=Malcolm Hay & Jacqueline Riding|year=1996|publisher=Jarrod Publishing & The Palace of Westminster|isbn=0-7117-0898-3}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://emuseum.aberdeencity.gov.uk/objects/3992/james-ramsay-macdonald|title=James Ramsay MacDonald|website=Aberdeen Archives, Gallery & Museums|access-date=8 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url= http://collections.glasgowmuseums.com/mwebcgi/mweb?request=record;id=165634;type=101|title=Ramsay MacDonald|website=Glasgow Museums|access-date=15 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nationalgalleries.org/art-and-artists/3236 |title=James Ramsay Macdonald, 1866-1937 |website=National Galleries Scotland |access-date=16 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Second Portrait of [[Oriel Ross]]'' | location = [[The Whitworth]] | date = 1926 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 408 x 282 x 242mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Four casts<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=http://gallerysearch.ds.man.ac.uk/Detail/17927|title=Second Portrait of Oriel Ross |website=The Whitworth|access-date=4 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = C.P. Scott by Jacob Epstein, Manchester Art Gallery 01.jpg | commonscat = C.P. Scott by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''[[Charles Prestwich Scott|C.P Scott]]'' | location = {{ubl|[[Manchester Art Gallery]],|Guardian News and Media Archive, London}} | date = 1926 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 58cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://manchesterartgallery.org/explore/title/?mag-object-3438 |title=Charles Prestwich Scott|website=Manchester Art Gallery|access-date=25 July 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Rabindranath Tagore by Jacob Epstein 01.jpg | commonscat = Bust of Rabindranath Tagore by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''[[Rabindranath Tagore]]'' | location = {{ubl|[[The New Art Gallery Walsall]],|[[Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery]],|[[Salford Museum and Art Gallery]],|[[Herbert Art Gallery]],|British High Commission, New Delhi from [[Government Art Collection]],|Rabindra Bhavana Museum,|[[National Gallery of Victoria]]}} | date = 1926 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 51cm high | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Sixteen casts, plaster at [[Mishkan Museum of Art]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref name="SharedV"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://collections.thenewartgallerywalsall.org.uk/objects/4271/mask-of-rabindranath-tagore |title=Mask of Rabindranath Tagore|website=The New Art Gallery Walsall|access-date=18 May 2023}}</ref><ref name="RHill">{{cite web|url=https://galleryoldham.org.uk/sculpting-stories-me-you-and-us/|title=Sculpting Stories - Me, You and Us|author=Rebecca Hill|website=Gallery Oldham|access-date=23 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.ngv.vic.gov.au/explore/collection/work/3403/|title=Rabindranath Tagore|website=National Gallery of Victoria|access-date=12 June 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://artcollection.culture.gov.uk/artwork/16130/|title=Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941) poet and philosopher |website=Government Art Collection|access-date=29 June 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Moshe Oyved (Edward Good)'' | location = [[Israel Museum]] | date = 1926 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 41 x 25 x 28cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.imj.org.il/en/collections/193781-0|title=Moshe Oyved (Edward Good)|website= The Israel Museum, Jerusalem|access-date=11 June 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Heads of New York Madonna and Child by Jacob Epstein 02.jpg | commonscat = Heads of New York Madonna and Child by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''Sunita and Enver / Heads for New York Madonna and Child'' | location = {{ubl|[[The New Art Gallery Walsall]],|[[Detroit Institute of Arts]]}} | date = 1926-27 | type = Two heads | material = Bronze | dimensions = 48.2cm and 29.2cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Seven casts<ref name="ESilber"/><ref name="SharedV"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://collections.thenewartgallerywalsall.org.uk/objects/4283/heads-of-new-york-madonna-and-child |title=Heads for New York Madonna and Child|website=The New Art Gallery Walsall|access-date=16 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://dia.org/collection/study-madonna-and-child-44488|title=Study for Madonna and Child, 20th Century|website=Detroit Institute of Arts|access-date=10 June 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Anita'' (Miriam Patel) | location = [[Albright-Knox Art Gallery]] | date = 1926 | type = Bust | material = Plaster | dimensions = 53.3cm high | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Two bronze casts<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Third portrait of Sunita'' | location = [[Israel Museum]] | date = 1926 | type = Bust with necklace | material = Plaster | dimensions = 58.3cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = Q76626548 | notes = One bronze cast, Museum of African Art, Washington<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Professor [[Franz Boas]]'' | location = [[Cornell University]] | date = 1927 | type = Bust | material = Plaster | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Two bronze casts in private collections<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = The Riverside Church, (15110860484) (cropped).jpg | commonscat = Riverside Church Madonna and Child by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''Madonna and Child'' | location = [[Riverside Church]], New York City | date = 1927 | type = Seated sculpture group | material = Bronze | dimensions = Life-size | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Donated to the Riverside Church in 1960 by [[Sally Ryan]], plaster in the [[Israel Museum]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref name="Riverside">{{cite web|url=https://www.trcnyc.org/arts/|title=Selected art at Riverside|website=The Riverside Church in the City of New York|access-date=30 April 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[John Dewey]]'' | location = {{ubl|[[National Gallery of Art]],|[[Columbia University]]}} | date = 1927 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 55.9cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Zeda (Pasha)'' | location = {{ubl|[[Bolton Museum]],|[[Art Gallery of Ontario]]}} | date = 1927 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 68.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://ago.ca/collection/object/52/19|title=Head from a half-length figure of Zeda (Pasha)|website=Art Gallery of Ontario|access-date=10 June 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Bust of Paul Robeson.jpg | commonscat = Paul Robeson by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''[[Paul Robeson]]'' | location = {{ubl|[[Museum of Modern Art]], New York City,|[[Touchstones Rochdale]],|[[York Art Gallery]],|[[Smith College Museum of Art]]}} | date = 1928 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 34.5 x 21.5 x 29.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = Q76628064 | notes = 19 casts, plaster at [[Israel Museum]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref name="RHill"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.moma.org/collection/works/81296?artist_id=1741&page=1&sov_referrer=artist |title=Paul Robeson|website=Museum of Modern Art|access-date=9 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.yorkmuseumstrust.org.uk/collections/search/item/?id=20001486|title=Portrait Bust of Paul Robeson|website=York Museums Trust|access-date=24 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://museums.fivecolleges.edu/detail.php?museum=all&t=objects&type=all&f=&s=Jacob+Epstein&record=4|title=Jacob Epstein - Paul Robeson |website=Five College and Historic Deerfield Museum Consortium|access-date=24 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = Maquette for ''Night'' | location = [[Mishkan Museum of Art]] | date = 1928 | type = Sculpture | material = Plaster | dimensions = 35.5cm high | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Four bronze casts in private collections<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = Day - geograph.org.uk - 2715781.jpg | commonscat = Day & Night sculptures, 55 Broadway, London | subject = ''Day'' | location = [[55 Broadway]], St. James', London | date = 1928-29 | type = Carved sculpture | material = Portland stone | dimensions = 275 x 275 x 100cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = }} {{Public art row | image = Night - geograph.org.uk - 2715814.jpg | commonscat = Day & Night sculptures, 55 Broadway, London | subject = ''Night'' | location = 55 Broadway, St. James', London | date = 1928-29 | type = Carved sculpture | material = Portland stone | dimensions = 275 x 275 x 100cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''The Sick Child (Tweltfth portrait of Peggy Jean)'' | location = [[The Whitworth]] | date = 1928 | type = Sculpture | material = Bronze | dimensions = 362 x 507 x 572mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Five casts plus plaster in the [[Israel Museum]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=http://gallerysearch.ds.man.ac.uk/Detail/17926|title=The Sick Child (12th portrait of Peggy Jean) |website=The Whitworth |access-date=4 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Mrs Godfrey Phillips'' | location = [[Tate Britain]] | date = 1928 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 457 x 432 x 248mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Six casts plus plaster model at [[Des Moines Art Center]]<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/epstein-mrs-godfrey-phillips-n04418|title=Mrs Godfrey Phillips|website=Tate|access-date=2 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://emuseum.desmoinesartcenter.org/objects/41996/a-portrait-of-mrs-godfrey-phillips|title=Mrs Godfrey Phillips|website=Des Moines Art Center|access-date=12 June 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''First portrait of Mrs Betty Joel (with necklace)'' | location = [[Dunedin Public Art Gallery]] | date = 1928 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Two casts<ref name="ESilber"/><ref name="BettyJ">{{cite web|url=https://collection.dunedin.art.museum/objects/831/betty-joel|title=Betty Joel|website=Dunedin Public Art Gallery|access-date=25 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Sir [[William Cotts]]'' | location = [[Dumfries Museum]] | date = 1929 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 58cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = Genesis by Epstein 2.jpg | commonscat = Genesis by Epstein | subject = ''Genesis'' | location = [[The Whitworth]] | date = 1929-31 | type = Sculpture | material = Seravezza marble | dimensions = 1625 x 838 x 787mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=http://gallerysearch.ds.man.ac.uk/Detail/17965|title=Genesis|website=The Whitworth|access-date=4 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''First portrait of Lydia'' | location = [[Mishkan Museum of Art]] | date = 1929-30 | type = Bust | material = Plaster | dimensions = 52cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Seven bronze casts in private collections<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art footer}} == 1930 to 1934 == {{Public art header|show_architect=no|show_material=yes|show_dimensions=yes|show_artist=no|show_owner=no|show_wikidata=yes}} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Mary Blandford'' | location = [[Leicester Museum and Art Gallery]] | date = 1930-31 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 37.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Five casts<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = Rebecca by Jacob Epstein, Museum of Reading 01.jpg | commonscat = Rebecca by Jacob Epstein, Museum of Reading | subject = ''Rebecca'' | location = [[Museum of Reading]] | date = 1930 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 56 x 37 x 26cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.readingmuseum.org.uk/your-visit/permanent-galleries/window-gallery|title=Window Gallery|website=Reading Museum|access-date=17 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://artuk.org/discover/artworks/rebecca-281594/search/actor:epstein-jacob-18801959/page/2|title=Rebecca|website=Art UK|access-date=17 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Head of Joan Greenwood as a Child'' | location = [[Fitzwilliam Museum]] | date = 1930 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 43.5cm high | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Edition of ten casts, plaster version in [[Art Gallery of Ontario]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/id/object/13419|title=Head of Joan Greenwood as a Child: M.35-1982|website=The Fitzwilliam Museum|access-date=10 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''The beautiful jewess (La belle juive)'' | location = [[Art Gallery of South Australia]] | date = 1930 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 55 x 46 x 27cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="BettyJ"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.agsa.sa.gov.au/collection-publications/collection/works/the-beautiful-jewess-la-belle-juive/25405/ |title=The beautiful jewess (La belle juive)|website=The Art Gallery of South Australia |access-date=10 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Israfel]] (Sunita)'' | location = [[Walker Art Gallery]] | date = 1930 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 53.3cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes =<ref name="NML">{{cite web|url=https://www.liverpoolmuseums.org.uk/whatson/walker-art-gallery/exhibition/epstein-busts-display|title=Epstein busts display|website=National Museums Liverpool|access-date=25 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.liverpoolmuseums.org.uk/artifact/israfel|title=Israfel|website=Walker Art Gallery|access-date=25 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Esther by Jacob Epstein, Tate Britain 01.jpg | commonscat = Esther by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''Esther'' | location = [[Tate Britain]] | date = 1930 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 533 x 635 x 254mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/epstein-esther-n05579|title=Esther|website=Tate|access-date=2 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Oriel Ross|Oriel]]'' | location = [[Aberdeen Art Gallery]] | date = 1931 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 56 x 42 x 29cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://emuseum.aberdeencity.gov.uk/objects/3988/oriel|title=Oriel|website=Aberdeen Archives, Gallery & Museums|access-date=8 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Third Portrait of [[Oriel Ross]]'' | location = [[Fitzwilliam Museum]] | date = 1931 | type = Bust | material = Bronze with golden patina | dimensions = 66cm high | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Plaster at [[Mishkan Museum of Art]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/id/object/12414|title=Third Portrait of Oriel Ross:M.6-1948|website=The Fitzwilliam Museum|access-date=10 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Mrs Sonia Heath'' | location = {{ubl|[[Walker Art Gallery]],|[[Keele University]]}} | date = 1931 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 57cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/><ref name="NML"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Paul Robeson, Junior'' | location = Sheffield City Art Gallery | date = 1931 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 42cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Professor [[Lucy Martin Donnelly]]'' | location = [[Bryn Mawr College]] | date = 1931 | type = Bust with arms | material = Bronze | dimensions = 55.9cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Lydia (Second Portrait of Lydia)'' | location = [[Ben Uri Gallery & Museum]] | date = 1931 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 48 x 40 x 20cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.benuricollection.org.uk/search_result.php?item_id=610|title=Lydia (Second Portrait of Lydia) |website=Ben Uri Collection|access-date=2 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Jacob epstein, dei primaverili (verso, dio solare), 1910, 01.jpg | commonscat = | subject =''Primeval Gods'' | location = [[Tate Britain]] | date = 1931-33 | type = Relief | material = Hoptonwood stone | dimensions = 2134 x 1980 x 355mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Carved on reverse of ''Sun God''<ref name="SGods"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Malcolm Bendon'' | location = [[Israel Museum]] | date = 1931 | type = Bust | material = Plaster | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = One bronze cast<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Emlyn Williams'' | location = [[Israel Museum]] | date = 1932 | type = Bust | material = Plaster | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = Q76630323 | notes = One bronze cast<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Women Possessed (Elemental Figure)'' | location = [[National Gallery of Australia]] | date = 1932 | type = Prone sculpture | material = Hoptonwood stone | dimensions = 102.2 x 33.3 x 45.1cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://searchthecollection.nga.gov.au/object/113990|title=Jacob Epstein Women Possessed|website=National Gallery of Australia|access-date=24 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Rose'' | location = [[Leeds Art Gallery]] | date = 1932 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 37.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Two casts known<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Fourth Portrait of Kathleen (laughing)'' | location = [[Maidstone Museum]] | date = 1932 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 38.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Four casts in two versions<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Ahmed'' | location = [[Ulster Museum]] | date = 1932 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 49.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://collections.nationalmuseumsni.org/object-belum-u966|title=Ahmed (1932) (Doris Ahmed)|website=National Museums NI|access-date=11 June 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''First Portrait of [[Isabel Nicholas|Isobel]]'' | location = {{ubl|[[Iziko South African National Gallery]],|[[Des Moines Art Center]]}} | date = 1932-33 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 53.2cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Seven casts, plaster in [[National Gallery of Victoria]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://emuseum.desmoinesartcenter.org/objects/40470/first-portrait-of-isobel|title=First Portrait of Isobel|website=Des Moines Art Center|access-date=11 June 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Second Portrait of [[Isabel Nicholas|Isobel]]'' | location = [[Ferens Art Gallery]] | date = 1932-33 | type = Half-figure | material = Bronze | dimensions = 70.6cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Five casts known<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=http://museumcollections.hullcc.gov.uk/collections/search-results/display.php?irn=1027&keywordsorig=&titleorig=&personorig=&placeorig=&dateorig=&materialorig=&accessionnumberorig=&collectionorig=&museumorig=&keywords=Jacob+Epstein&SearchSubmit_x=30&SearchSubmit_y=13&title=&person=&place=&date=&material=&accessionnumber=&collectionall=all&museumall=all&location=any&Sender=List&Page=|title=Isabel|website=Hull Museums Collection|access-date=6 June 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Second Portrait of Isobel by Jacob Epstein 03.jpg | commonscat = Second Portrait of Isobel by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''Second Portrait of [[Isabel Nicholas]]'' | location = [[The New Art Gallery Walsall]] | date = 1933 | type = Half-figure | material = Plaster | dimensions = 70.6cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Previously in the collection of the [[Museum of Modern Art]], New York<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = First portrait of Roma of Barbados 02.jpg | commonscat = First portrait of Roma of Barbados by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''First Portrait of Roma of Barbados'' | location = [[Fitzwilliam Museum]] | date = 1932 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 35.5cm high | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Modelled by Roma Olive Martin, Three casts<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/id/object/12400|title=First Portrait of Roma of Barbados: M.1-1945|website=The Fitzwilliam Museum|access-date=10 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''First Portrait of Louise'' | location = [[Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam]] | date = 1932 | type = Head | material = Bronze with gold patina | dimensions = 50.8cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Three casts, plaster at [[Museo de Bellas Artes (Caracas)]]<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Mrs Sarah Oyved'' | location = [[Israel Museum]], Jerusalem | date = 1932 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 43cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = Q76627800 | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.imj.org.il/en/collections/193783-0|title=Mrs Sarah Oyved|website= The Israel Museum, Jerusalem|access-date=11 June 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Head of Albert Einstein, Ben Uri Gallery 04.jpg | commonscat = Bust of Albert Einstein (Epstein) | subject = ''[[Albert Einstein]]'' | location = {{ubl|[[Hirshhorn Museum]],|[[National Galleries Scotland]],|[[Ben Uri Gallery & Museum]],|[[Fitzwilliam Museum]],| [[Carrick Hill]],| [[Des Moines Art Center]],|[[National Gallery of Victoria]], |[[Science Museum, London]], [[Victoria and Albert Museum]]}} | date = 1933 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 52.5 x 29.7 x 26.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = Q76628262 | notes = 35 casts known, plaster model at [[Israel Museum]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://hirshhorn.si.edu/collection/artwork/?edanUrl=edanmdm%3Ahmsg_66.1785|title=Albert Einstein, Portrait of|website=Hirshhorn Museum|access-date=30 April 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.benuricollection.org.uk/search_result.php?item_id=3553|title=Albert Einstein|website=Ben Uri Collection|access-date=2 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/objects-and-artworks/highlights/M7-1933|title= A Bust of Albert Einstein|website=The Fitzwilliam Museum|access-date=3 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nationalgalleries.org/art-and-artists/274 |title=Albert Einstein |website=National Galleries Scotland|access-date=16 May 2023}}</ref><ref name="CHill"/><ref name="NML"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://emuseum.desmoinesartcenter.org/objects/37213/portrait-of-albert-einstein |title=First Portrait of Albert Einstein|website=Des Moines Art Center|access-date=11 June 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.ngv.vic.gov.au/explore/collection/work/3402/|title=Professor Albert Einstein|website=National Gallery of Victoria|access-date=12 June 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://collection.sciencemuseumgroup.org.uk/objects/co66082/bust-of-albert-einstein-1879-1955-portrait-bust|title= Bust of Albert Einstein (1879-1955)|website=Science Museum Group|access-date=6 December 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/epstein-albert-einstein-n04754|title=Albert Einstein, 1933, Jacob Epstein|website=Tate|access-date=3 June 2024}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Michael Balcon]]'' | location = [[National Portrait Gallery, London]] | date = 1933 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions =410 x 330mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw07069 |title=Michael Balcon|website=National Portrait Gallery|access-date=1 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Tiger King (Man of Arran)'' | location = {{ubl|[[Walker Art Gallery]],|[[Hugh Lane Gallery]]}} | date = 1933 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 44.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Eight casts, plaster at [[Hull University]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref name="NML"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://hughlane.emuseum.com/objects/499/man-of-aran-tiger-king|title=Man of Arran (Tiger King)|website=Hugh Lane Gallery|access-date=9 June 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Third Portrait of Lydia (Laughing)'' | location = {{ubl|[[University of Aberdeen]],|[[Leeds Art Gallery]],|[[Bolton Museum]]}} | date = 1933 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 410 x 240 x 270mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Six casts<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://exhibitions.abdn.ac.uk/university-collections/document/1569|title=Sculpture bust (Lydia Lopokova)|website=University of Aberdeen collections|access-date=15 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Robert Flaherty by Jacob Epstein 01.jpg | commonscat = Robert Flaherty by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''[[Robert Flaherty]]'' | location = [[The New Art Gallery Walsall]] | date = 1933 | type = Head | material = Plaster | dimensions = 31.7cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Previously in the collection of the [[Museum of Modern Art]], New York; a bronze cast also exists.<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Lord Beaverbrook]]'' | location = [[Beaverbrook Art Gallery]] | date = 1933 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 26cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Two casts, plaster at [[Mishkan Museum of Art]]<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Hugh Walpole]]'' | location = [[Keswick Museum]] | date = 1934 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 40 x 17 x 23cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Plaster at [[University of Sussex]]<ref>{{cite web|url=https://artuk.org/discover/artworks/hugh-walpole-18841941-292913|title=Hugh Walpole|website=Art UK|access-date=17 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Herbert Chapman bust 20050922.jpg | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Herbert Chapman]]'' | location = [[Highbury Square]], London | date = 1934 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = | designation =[[Listed building|Grade II listing]] | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Two casts, made in 2006, at the [[Emirates Stadium]] and at the [[Kirklees Stadium]].<ref>{{cite web|url= https://www.arsenal.com/news/news-archive/the-bust-of-herbert-chapman |title=The Bust of Herbert Chapman|date=1 June 2017|publisher= Arsenal F.C. |access-date=18 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{NHLE |num=1119692 |desc=East stand at Highbury Stadium|access-date=30 September 2022}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Second Portrait of [[Ramsay MacDonald]]'' | location = {{ubl|[[National Portrait Gallery, London]],|[[National Galleries Scotland]]}} | date = 1934 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 61cm high | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw04121 |title=Ramsay MacDonald|website=National Portrait Gallery|access-date=1 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = George Bernard Shaw by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''First Portrait of [[George Bernard Shaw]]'' | location = {{ubl|[[Carrick Hill]],|[[National Gallery of Art, Washington]],|[[Harry Ransom Centre]]}} | date = 1934 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 64.2cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Five casts, plaster at [[Israel Museum]]<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = George Bernard Shaw by Jacob Epstein, NPG cast 01.jpg | commonscat = George Bernard Shaw by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''Second Portrait of [[George Bernard Shaw]]'' | location = {{ubl|[[National Portrait Gallery, London]],|[[Queensland Art Gallery]],|[[Aberdeen Art Gallery]],|[[Glasgow Museums]],|[[National Gallery of Canada]],|[[Harvard Art Museums|Fogg Museum]],|[[Metropolitan Museum of Art]]}} | date = 1934 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 42.5 x 26.5 x 27cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = 25 casts<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw05744/George-Bernard-Shaw?LinkID=mp01484&role=art&rNo=8|title=George Bernard Shaw|website=National Portrait Gallery |access-date=1 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://collection.qagoma.qld.gov.au/objects/1469 |title=Bernard Shaw|website=Queensland Art Gallery/Museum of Modern Art|access-date=3 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://emuseum.aberdeencity.gov.uk/objects/3991/george-bernard-shaw|title=George Bernard Shaw|website=Aberdeen Archives, Gallery & Museums|access-date=8 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nga.gov/collection/art-object-page.61255.html|title=George Bernard Shaw, 1934 |website=National Gallery of Art|access-date=10 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://collections.glasgowmuseums.com/mwebcgi/mweb?request=record;id=165430;type=101|title=George Bernard Shaw|website=Glasgow Museums|access-date=15 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.gallery.ca/collection/artwork/george-bernard-shaw|title=George Bernard Shaw|website=National Gallery of Canada|access-date=12 June 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://harvardartmuseums.org/collections/object/227533|title=Bust of George Bernard Shaw|website=Harvard Art Museums|access-date=12 June 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/199857|title=George Bernard Shaw|website=Metropolitan Museum of Art|access-date=12 June 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url= https://artuk.org/discover/stories/who-was-george-bernard-shaw?utm| title=Who was George Bernard Shaw ? |author=Lydia Figes|date=11 September 2019|website=Art UK|access-date=24 January 2024}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Chaim Azriel Weizmann by Jacob Epstein 04.jpg | commonscat = Chaim Azriel Weizmann by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''[[Chaim Azriel Weizmann]]'' | location = {{ubl|[[National Portrait Gallery, London]],|[[Tel Aviv Museum]],|[[Mount Holyoke College Art Museum]],|[[Manchester University]]}} | date = 1934 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 455 x 590mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Nineteen casts, plaster at [[Israel Museum]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw304133 |title=Chaim Azriel Weizmann|website=National Portrait Gallery|access-date=1 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://museums.fivecolleges.edu/detail.php?museum=all&t=objects&type=all&f=&s=Jacob+Epstein&record=2|title=Chaim Weizmann |website=Five College and Historic Deerfield Museum Consortium|access-date=24 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Olive by Jacob Epstein 02.jpg | commonscat = Olive by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''Olive'' | location = [[Watford Museum]] | date = 1934 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 34.8cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Nine casts<ref name="ESilber"/><ref name="Watford"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Hiram Halle'' | location = [[Israel Museum]] | date = 1934 | type = Bust | material = Plaster | dimensions = 45.8cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = One bronze cast<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Third Portrait of [[Bernard van Dieren]]'' | location = [[Towneley Hall Art Gallery and Museum]] | date = 1934-35 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 46.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art footer}} == 1935 to 1939 == {{Public art header|show_architect=no|show_material=yes|show_dimensions=yes|show_artist=no|show_owner=no|show_wikidata=yes}} {{Public art row | image = Kathlene by Jacob Epstein.jpg | commonscat = Kathleen Garman by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''Fifth Portrait of [[Kathleen Garman|Kathleen]]'' | location = [[Bristol Museum and Art Gallery]], [[The Lightbox]] | date = 1935 | type = Half-figure | material = Bronze | dimensions = 76.2cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Four casts, plaster in [[Israel Museum]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.thelightbox.org.uk/the-joan-hurst-collection|title=The Joan Hurst Collection|website=The Lightbox|access-date= 29 June 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Nianda (Neander)'' | location = Hayward Bequest at [[Carrick Hill]] | date = 1935 | type = Half-figure | material = Bronze | dimensions = 39.3cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Three casts<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url= https://www.adelaidenow.com.au/entertainment/arts/carrick-hills-bronze-portraits-by-artist-jacob-epstein-under-discussion-in-adelaide/news-story/258e8bbe830e09fd41da62f6ad7ac382|title=Carrick Hill's bronze portraits by Jacob Epstein under discussion in Adelaide|author=Louise Nunn|website=The Advertiser|date=27 August 2014|access-date=13 August 2024}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Jacob epstein, sir alec martin, 1930-39 ca.jpg | commonscat = | subject = ''Sir Alec Martin'' | location = [[Hugh Lane Gallery]], Dublin | date = 1935 | type = Half-figure | material = Bronze | dimensions = 63 x 61 x 37cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://hughlane.emuseum.com/objects/501/sir-alec-martin |title=Sir Alec Martin |website=Hugh Lane Gallery|access-date=9 June 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''First portrait of Jackie'' | location = [[Museum of the City of New York]] | date = 1935 | type = Bust with arms | material = Plaster | dimensions = 30.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Four bronze casts<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = Jackie - A Babe by Jacob Epstein 01.jpg | commonscat = Jackie - A Babe by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''Jackie - A Babe'' | location = [[The New Art Gallery Walsall]] | date = 1935 | type = Half-figure | material = Bronze | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://collections.thenewartgallerywalsall.org.uk/objects/5587/jackie--a-babe|title=Jackie - A Babe|website=The New Art Gallery Walsall|access-date=16 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Sir Frank Fletcher'' | location = [[Charterhouse School]] | date = 1935 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 61cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Two casts<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Fifteenth Portrait of Peggy Jean'' | location = [[Gallery Oldham]] | date = 1935 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Two casts<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''William Henry Collins'' | location = {{ubl|[[Middlesex Hospital]],|[[Royal College of Surgeons]]}} | date = 1935 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 58cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = Ecce Homo - geograph.org.uk - 3576606.jpg | commonscat = Ecce Homo (Sir Jacob Epstein) | subject = ''[[Ecce Homo]]'' | location = [[Coventry Cathedral]] | date = Carved 1935, installed 1969 | type = Carved monolith on pedestal | material = Subiaco marble | dimensions = c. 3m tall | designation = | show_wikidata= yes | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="Journey">{{cite book|author=|title=Journey into the Light: The Art Treasures of Coventry Cathedral |publisher=Coventry Cathedral|year=2014}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Shulamite Womem (Arab Girl)'' | location = [[Ben Uri Gallery & Museum]] | date = 1935 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 52cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Two casts plus a head only version exist<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.benuricollection.org.uk/search_result.php?item_id=612 |title=Shulamite Womem (Arab Girl) |website=Ben Uri Gallery|access-date=2 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Mona Stewart'' | location = [[Mishkan Museum of Art]] | date = 1935 | type = Bust | material = Plaster | dimensions = 63.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Seven bronze casts<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = Haile Selassie by Jacob Epstein 01.jpg | commonscat = Haile Selassie by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''Emperior [[Haile Selassie]]'' | location = [[The New Art Gallery Walsall]] | date = 1936 | type = Half-figure | material = Plaster | dimensions = 121.8cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Two bronze casts made; Plaster cast previously in the [[Museum of Modern Art]], New York<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[J. B. Priestley]]'' | location = [[Harry Ransom Center]], Texas | date = 1936 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 76.2cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Elsa (Graves)'' | location = [[Leeds City Art Gallery]] | date = 1936 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 36cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Three casts, plaster at [[Albright-Knox Art Gallery]]<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = Saint Vedast-alias-Foster, Head by Jacob Epstein.jpg | commonscat = | subject = Canon Charles Bernard Mortlock | location = [[St Vedast Foster Lane]], London | date = 1936 | type = Portrait relief | material = Stone | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite book|author=Raquel Gilboa|title=....Unto Heaven will I ascend, Jacob Epstein's inspired years 1930-59|publisher=Paul Holberton Publishing|year=2013|isbn=9781907372490}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Tanya'' | location = [[National Gallery of Victoria]] | date = 1936 | type = Bust | material = Plaster | dimensions = 57.1cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Four bronze casts in private collections<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Consummatum Est'' | location = [[National Galleries Scotland]] | date = 1936-37 | type = Prone sculpture | material = Alabaster | dimensions = 61 x 223.5 x 81cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nationalgalleries.org/art-and-artists/277 |title=Consummatum Est |website=National Galleries Scotland|access-date=16 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Sally Ryan by Jacob Epstein 04.jpg | commonscat = Sally Ryan by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''[[Sally Ryan]]'' | location = [[The New Art Gallery Walsall]] | date = 1937 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 39cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Two casts<ref name="ESilber"/><ref name="SharedV"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://collections.thenewartgallerywalsall.org.uk/objects/4282/sally-ryan|title=Sally Ryan|website=The New Art Gallery Walsall|access-date=18 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Pola Nerenska'' | location = [[Memphis Brooks Museum of Art]] | date = 1937 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 38cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Five casts, plaster [[National Gallery of Victoria]]<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = Second portrait of Jackie with curls 01.jpg | commonscat = Second portrait of Jackie with curls by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''Second Portrait of Jackie with Curls'' | location = [[The New Art Gallery Walsall]] | date = 1937 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 24.9cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://collections.thenewartgallerywalsall.org.uk/objects/7575/2nd-portrait-of-jackie-with-curls|title=Second Portrait of Jackie with curls|website=New Art Gallery, Walsall|access-date=21 July 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Second Portrait of Louise (Berenice)'' | location = [[Sheffield Galleries and Museums Trust]] | date = 1937 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 55cm tall | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Two casts, plaster at [[Museo de Bellas Artes (Caracas)]]<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''First Portrait of Norman Hornstein (The Young Communist)'' | location = [[Bolton Museum]] | date = 1937 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 45.7cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Five casts<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''The Burial of Abel'' | location = [[Watford Museum]] | date = 1938 | type = Sculpture group | material = Bronze with green patina | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Three casts<ref name="ESilber"/><ref name="Watford"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Adam and Eve'' | location = [[Watford Museum]] | date = 1938 | type = Two figure sculpture group | material = Bronze | dimensions = 11.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Four casts<ref name="ESilber"/><ref name="Watford"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Marie Tracey'' | location = [[National Galleries Scotland]] | date = 1938 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 40.8 x 20.5 x 34.3cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Four casts, plaster at [[Goddard College]], Vermont<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nationalgalleries.org/art-and-artists/278 |title=Head of Marie Tracey, 1938|website=National Galleries Scotland|access-date=16 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Betty Cecil'' | location = [[National Galleries Scotland]] | date = 1938 | type = Half-figure | material = Bronze | dimensions = 52.7 x 42 x 34.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Three casts<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nationalgalleries.org/art-and-artists/275 |title=Betty Cecil|website=National Galleries Scotland|access-date=16 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Ellen Ballon]]'' | location = [[McGill University]] | date = 1938 | type = Half-figure | material = Bronze | dimensions = 60 x 56 x 67cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://news.library.mcgill.ca/wonderfully-eccentric-sir-jacob-epsteins-portrait-of-ellen-ballon/|title=Wonderfully Eccentric: Sir Jacob Epstein's Portrait of Ellen Ballon|author=Elsa Hetletvedt|website=McGill University Library News|access-date=30 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Third Portrait of Leda (with outstretched arms)'' | location = {{ubl|[[Glasgow Museums]],| [[Nottingham Castle Museum]]}} | date = 1939 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 21.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Two casts<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Adam'' | location = [[Harewood House]] | date = 1939 | type = Sculpture | material = Alabaster | dimensions = 218.5cm high, base 66 x 81.3cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Lisa Sainsbury'' | location = [[Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts]] | date = 1939 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 455 x 220 x 220mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.sainsburycentre.ac.uk/art-and-objects/rls-7-portrait-bust-of-lisa-sainsbury/|title=Portrait bust of Lisa Sainsbury|website=Sainsbury Centre|access-date=31 July 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art footer}} == 1940 to 1944 == {{Public art header|show_architect=no|show_material=yes|show_dimensions=yes|show_artist=no|show_owner=no|show_wikidata=yes}} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Leda'' | location = [[Glasgow Museums|Glasgow Museums Resource Centre]] | date = c. 1940 | type = Half-figure | material = Bronze | dimensions = 270 x 385 x 320mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = A portrait of Epstein's grandchild at six months of age<ref>{{cite web|url= http://collections.glasgowmuseums.com/mwebcgi/mweb?request=record;id=165433;type=101 |title=Leda|website=Glasgow Museums|access-date=15 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Fourth Portrait of Leda (with coxcomb)'' | location = {{ubl|[[Portsmouth City Museum]],|[[Bolton Museum]]}} | date = 1940 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 20.4cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Ten casts<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = Leda with coxcomb by Jacob Epstein 03.jpg | commonscat = Leda with coxcomb by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''Fourth Portrait of Leda (with coxcomb)'' | location = [[The New Art Gallery Walsall]] | date = 1940 | type = Head | material = Plaster | dimensions = 20.4cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Previously held by the [[Museum of Modern Art]], New York }} {{Public art row | image = Jacob epstein, giacobbe e l'angelo, 1940-41, alabastro, 01.jpg | commonscat = | subject = ''Jacob and the Angel'' | location = [[Tate Britain]] | date = 1940-41 | type = Sculpture | material = Alabaster | dimensions = 2140 x 1100 x 920mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/epstein-jacob-and-the-angel-t07139|title=Jacob and the Angel|website=Tate|access-date=2 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Ivan Maisky|I. M. Maisky]]'' | location = [[Imperial War Museum]] | date = 1941 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 205 x 255 x 195mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = Q76626850 | notes = Six casts, plaster in [[Israel Museum]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/8631|title=I M Maisky: Russian Ambassador to London|website=Imperial War Museum|access-date=12 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''First Portrait of Deirdre (with arms)'' | location = {{ubl|[[Bolton Museum]],|[[Carrick Hill]], South Australia}} | date = 1941 | type = Half-figure | material = Bronze | dimensions = 62.3cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Six casts, plaster in [[Israel Museum]]<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Second Portrait of Deirdre (In a Slip)'' | location = {{ubl|[[Ingram Collection of Modern British Art]],|[[Knightshayes Court]],|[[The Box, Plymouth]],|[[Beaverbrook Art Gallery]]}} | date = 1941-42 | type = Half-figure | material = Bronze with brown petina | dimensions = 54.6cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Seven casts, plaster cast in [[National Gallery of Victoria]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://ingramcollection.com/works/second-portrait-of-deirdre-in-a-slip-1941-42/ |title=Second Portrait of Deirdre (In a Slip), 1941-42 |website=Ingram Collection|access-date=15 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nationaltrustcollections.org.uk/object/541259|title=Deirdre|website=The National Trust |access-date=17 August 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Chia Pi'' | location = [[National Museum Cardiff]] | date = 1941 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 61cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Five casts<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://museum.wales/collections/online/object/9279afc7-390d-37f2-902a-c2c7c0da7e33/Chia-Pia/?index=3|title=Chia Pi|website=National Museum Cardiff|access-date=22 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Third Portrait of Deirdre (Leaning forward)'' | location = {{ubl|[[Lady Lever Art Gallery]],|[[Winnipeg Art Gallery]],|[[Crawford Art Gallery]]}} | date = 1942 | type = Bust | material = Bronze with green patina | dimensions = 41cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Eight casts<ref name="ESilber"/><ref name="NML"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://crawfordartgallery.ie/work-of-the-week-3-march-2020/|title= Work of the Week 3 March 2020|website=Crawford Art Gallery|access-date=23 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Ian (Ossian)'' | location = {{ubl|[[Auckland Art Gallery]],|[[Jewish Museum (Manhattan)]]}} | date = 1942 | type = Half-figure;- baby with arms | material = Bronze | dimensions = 406mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Five casts, plaster in [[Museo de Bellas Artes (Caracas)]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.aucklandartgallery.com/explore-art-and-ideas/artwork/9686/ian-ossian |title=Ian (Ossian)|website=Auckland Art Gallery|access-date=13 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Girl with Gardenias (Kathleen)'' | location = [[Aberdeen Art Gallery]] | date = 1942 | type = Statue | material = Bronze | dimensions = 190cm tall | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://emuseum.aberdeencity.gov.uk/objects/3990/the-girl-with-gardenias|title=The Girl with Gardenias|website=Aberdeen Archives, Gallery & Museums|access-date=8 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Saint Francis by Jacob Epstein 01.jpg | commonscat = Saint Francis by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''Saint Francis'' | location = [[The New Art Gallery Walsall]] | date = 1942 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 31cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/><ref name="SharedV"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://collections.thenewartgallerywalsall.org.uk/objects/4270/st-francis|title=St Francis|website= The New Art Gallery Walsall|access-date=18 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Dr W.G. Whittaker'' | location = Music Department, [[Newcastle University]] | date = 1942 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 31.1cm tall | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = Study for ''Slave Hold'' | location = [[Bolton Museum]] | date = 1941 | type = Two half-figures with raised arms | material = Bronze | dimensions = 114.3cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Robert Sainsbury]]'' | location = [[Sainsbury Centre]], University of East Anglia | date = 1942 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 30.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Alexander Margulies'' | location = [[Ben Uri Gallery & Museum]] | date = 1942 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 41.9 x 31 x 25cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.benuricollection.org.uk/search_result.php?item_id=609|title= Alexander Margulies |website=Ben Uri Collection|access-date=2 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Hewlett Johnson by Jacob Epstein 02.JPG | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Hewlett Johnson]]'' | location = [[Beaney House of Art and Knowledge]] | date = 1942 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Air Chief Marshal Sir [[Charles Portal, 1st Viscount Portal of Hungerford|Charles Portal]]'' | location = [[Imperial War Museum]] | date = 1942-43 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 240 x 450 x 188mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Commissioned by the [[War Artists' Advisory Committee]]<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/8632|title=Air Chief Marshal Sir Charles Portal, KCB, DSO, MC|website=Imperial War Museum|access-date=12 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Major-General Sir [[Alan Cunningham]]'' | location = [[Imperial War Museum]] | date = 1942 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 275 x 596 x 610mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Commissioned by the War Artists' Advisory Committee<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/8633|title= Major-General Sir Alan Cunningham, KCB, DSO, MC|website=Imperial War Museum|access-date=12 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''The Rt. Hon. [[Ernest Bevin]]'' | location = [[Tate Britain]] | date = 1943 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 260 x 216 x 248mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Commissioned by the War Artists' Advisory Committee; two casts plus plaster in [[Israel Museum]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/epstein-the-rt-hon-ernest-bevin-n05689|title=The Rt. Hon. Ernest Bevin|website=Tate|access-date=2 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Philip Sayers'' | location = W. Irving Gallery, New York City | date = 1943 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 60cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Nude Study A (Betty Peters)'' | location = [[Museum of Modern Art]], New York | date = 1943-45 | type = Prone statue | material = Bronze | dimensions = 72.4cm length | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Six casts plus plaster at [[Mishkan Museum of Art]]<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Nude Study B (Betty Peters)'' | location = [[Museum of Modern Art]], New York | date = 1943-45 | type = Prone statue | material = Bronze | dimensions = 58.4cm length | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Four casts<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Two Hands and an Arm'' | location = [[The New Art Gallery Walsall]] | date = 1943-45 | type = Sculpture | material = Bronze | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Modelled by Betty Peters<ref>{{cite web|url=https://collections.thenewartgallerywalsall.org.uk/objects/5460/two-hands-and-an-arm|title=Two Hands and an Arm|website=The New Art Gallery Walsall|access-date=20 June 2024}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Yehudi Menuhin]]'' | location = [[Te Papa]], Wellington | date = 1943 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 260 x 470 x 202mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Twelve casts, plaster at [[The New Art Gallery Walsall]], formerly at the [[Jewish Museum (Manhattan)]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://collections.tepapa.govt.nz/object/38503|title=Yehudi Menuhin|website=Museum of New Zealand|access-date=8 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url= https://collections.thenewartgallerywalsall.org.uk/objects/7308/head-of-yehudi-menuhin|title=Head of Yehudi Menuhin|website=The New Art Gallery Walsall|access-date=20 June 2024}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = PM epstein lucifer.JPG | commonscat = | subject = ''Lucifer'' | location = [[Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery]] | date = 1944–45 | type = Statue | material = Bronze | dimensions = 3.15m tall, 1.93m wingspan | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Princess Nadejada de Braganza'' | location = [[Centre Pompidou]], Paris | date = 1944 | type = Bust | material = Bronze, green patina | dimensions = 61cm high | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Plaster, [[National Gallery of Victoria]]<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = First Portrait of Esther (with long hair) by Jacob Epstein 01.jpg | commonscat = First Portrait of Esther (with long hair) by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''First Portrait of Esther (with long hair)'' | location = [[The New Art Gallery Walsall]] | date = 1944 | type =Bust | material = Bronze, gark green patina | dimensions = 47cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = Q76629549 | notes = Three casts, plaster at [[Mishkan Museum of Art]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref name="SharedV"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://collections.thenewartgallerywalsall.org.uk/objects/5418/first-portrait-of-esther-with-long-hair|title=First Portrait of Esther (with long hair)|website= The New Art Gallery Walsall|access-date=16 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Head of Kitty with Curls by Jacob Epstein 02.jpg | commonscat = Head of Kitty with Curls by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''First Portrait of Kitty (with curls) / Head of [[Kitty Garman|Kitty]] with Curls'' | location = {{ubl|[[Huddersfield Art Gallery]],| [[The New Art Gallery Walsall]]}} | date = 1944 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 38cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Eleven casts plus plaster in [[Israel Museum]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref name="SharedV"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://collections.thenewartgallerywalsall.org.uk/objects/4267/head-of-kitty-with-curls?ctx=a139b101-2d1d-498b-b46c-f02e1351b32f&idx=26|title=Head of Kitty with Curls|website=The New Art Gallery Walsall |access-date=16 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Fifth Portrait of Leda (pouting) / Head of Leda'' | location = [[Auckland Art Gallery]], [[Manchester Art Gallery]] | date = 1944 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 260 x 220 x 280mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Nine casts, plaster at [[Mishkan Museum of Art]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.aucklandartgallery.com/explore-art-and-ideas/artwork/9685/leda|title=Leda|website=Auckland Art Gallery|access-date=13 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://manchesterartgallery.org/explore/title/?mag-object-5652 |title=Head of Leda|website=Manchester Art Gallery|access-date=25 July 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Girl from Baku'' | location = [[Nottingham Castle Museum]] | date = 1944 | type = Half-figure | material = Bronze | dimensions = 56.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Ten casts<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art footer}} == 1945 to 1949 == {{Public art header|show_architect=no|show_material=yes|show_dimensions=yes|show_artist=no|show_owner=no|show_wikidata=yes}} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Field Marshal [[Archibald Wavell, 1st Earl Wavell|Archibald Wavell]]'' | location = [[Imperial War Museum]] | date = 1945 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 300 x 470 x 440mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/8634|title=Field Marshal Sir Archibald Wavel, KCB, CMG, MC|website=Imperial War Museum|access-date=12 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = All Saints Church, Westdean, East Sussex (NHLE Code 1184445) (June 2021) (Viscount Waverley Bust) (cropped).JPG | commonscat = John Anderson, 1st Viscount Waverley memorial by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''[[John Anderson, 1st Viscount Waverley]]'' | location = {{ubl|[[Imperial War Museum]],|All Saints Church, Westdean|[[Port of London Authority]]}} | date = 1945 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 245 x 380 x 190mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Three casts<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/8635|title=The Rt Hon Sir John Anderson|website=Imperial War Museum|access-date=28 April 2023}}</ref><ref>{{NHLE |num=1184445 |desc=The Parish Church of All Saints|access-date=28 April 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Mexican Girl'' | location = Hayward Bequest at [[Carrick Hill]] | date = 1945-46 | type = Half-figure | material = Bronze | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Dame [[Myra Hess]]'' | location = [[Royal Academy of Music]] | date = 1946 | type = Half-figure | material = Bronze | dimensions = 630 x 520mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url= https://collections.ram.ac.uk/IMU/#/details/ecatalogue/11219|title=Sculpture:Portrait bust in bronze of Dame Myra Hess by Jacob Epstein, 1946|website=Royal Academy of Music|access-date=14 June 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Winston Churchill]]'' | location = {{ubl|[[Imperial War Museum]],|[[Hirshhorn Museum]],|[[Iziko South African National Gallery]],|[[Churchill College, Cambridge]], [[Carrick Hill]],|[[Pompidou Centre]],|[[The White House]] from the [[Government Art Collection]],|[[Gallery Oldham]]}} | date = 1946 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 40.2 x 19.7 x 24cm with base | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = Q28843749 | notes = 27 casts, plus plaster at [[Israel Museum]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/8636|title=The Rt Hon Winston Churchill|website=Imperial War Museum|access-date=28 April 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://hirshhorn.si.edu/collection/artwork/?edanUrl=edanmdm%3Ahmsg_86.1764|title=Winston Churchill|website=Hirshhorn Museum|access-date=30 April 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://artcollection.culture.gov.uk/artwork/16203/|title=Sir Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill (1874-1965) Prime Minister |website=Government Art Collection|access-date=29 June 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://galleryoldham.org.uk/ve-day-winston-churchill-and-oldham/|title=Object in Focus for VE Day anniversary|website=gallery oldham |access-date=17 August 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = First portrait of Pandit Nehru by Jacob Epstein 03.jpg | commonscat = First portrait of Pandit Nehru by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''First portrait of [[Pandit Nehru]]'' | location = [[The New Art Gallery Walsall]] | date = 1946 | type = Bust | material = Plaster | dimensions = 29.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Plaster version previously held by [[Museum of Modern Art]], New York; bronze cast in [[Derby Museum and Art Gallery]]<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Neptune'' | location = [[National Museum Cardiff]] | date = 1946 | type = Group sculpture | material = Bronze | dimensions = 34cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Four casts<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Ronald Duncan]]'' | location = Ronald Duncan Literary Foundation | date = 1946 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 25.4cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Six casts<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Ymiel Oyved'' | location = [[Israel Museum]], Jerusalem | date = 1946 | type = Half-figure | material = Bronze | dimensions = 38cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = Q76626778 | notes = Five casts<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.imj.org.il/en/collections/193782-0|website=The Israel Museum, Jerusalem|title=Jacob Epstein - Ymiel Oyved|access-date=11 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Frederick H. Silberman'' | location = [[Johannesburg Art Gallery]] | date = 1946 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 26cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Anthony in a Balaclava Helmet'' | location = [[Mishkan Museum of Art]] | date = 1947 | type = Bust | material = Plaster | dimensions = 33cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = One bronze cast<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Sandie Lindsay, 1st Baron Lindsay of Birker|Lord Lindsay of Birker]]'' | location = [[Balliol College]], Oxford | date = 1947 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 54cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Plaster at [[Keele University]]<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = Second Portrait of Kitty by Jacob Epstein 04.jpg | commonscat = Second Portrait of Kitty by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''Second Portrait of [[Kitty Garman|Kitty]]'' | location = {{ubl|[[Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery]],|[[The New Art Gallery Walsall]]}} | date = 1947-49 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 31.8cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Seven casts, plaster at [[Phoenix Art Museum]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://collections.thenewartgallerywalsall.org.uk/objects/5407/kitty-ii|title=Kitty II |website=The New Art Gallery Walsall|access-date=16 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Lazarus'' | location = Chapel of [[New College, Oxford]] | date = 1947–48 | type = Statue | material = [[Hopton Wood stone]] | dimensions = 2.5m | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Helen Esterman'' | location = [[Winnipeg Art Gallery]] | date = c. 1948 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 39.7 x 33.1 x 25.7cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url= https://www.wag.ca/art/collection/item/23725/?from=art-search|title=Helen Esterman|website=Winnipeg Art Gallery|access-date=23 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Jawaharial Nehru by Jacob Epstein 01.jpg | commonscat = Jawaharial Nehru by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''Second portrait of [[Pandit Nehru]]'' | location = [[National Portrait Gallery, London]], [[Art Gallery of South Australia]] | date = 1948-49 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 40 x 45 x 20cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Three casts<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.agsa.sa.gov.au/collection-publications/collection/works/second-portrait-of-pandit-nehru-bust/25406/ |title=Second portrait of Pandit Nehru|website=The Art Gallery of South Australia |access-date=10 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw202563 |title=Jawaharial Nehru|website=National Portrait Gallery|access-date=1 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Franklin Dyall]]'' | location = [[Garrick Club]], London | date = 1948 | type = Half-figure | material = Bronze | dimensions = 53cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Isaac L. Myers'' | location = [[Memphis Brooks Museum of Art]] | date = 1948 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 33 x 17 x 21cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=http://emuseum.brooksmuseum.org/objects/1204/head-of-isaac-l-myers?|title=Head of Isaac L. Mayers|website= Memphis Brooks Museum of Art|access-date=10 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Peter Laughing'' | location = [[Mishkan Museum of Art]] | date = 1948 | type = Bust | material = Plaster | dimensions = 30.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Four bronzes cast<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Second portrait of Joan Greenwood'' | location = [[Hull University]] | date = 1948 | type = Bust | material = Plaster | dimensions = 38cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Four bronze casts in private collections<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Second portrait of Esther'' | location = Jewish Museum, New York | date = 1948 | type = Bust | material = Plaster | dimensions = 47cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Two bronze casts<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Seventh portrait of Kathleen (with shawl)'' | location = [[Israel Museum]] | date = 1948 | type = Half-length figure | material = Plaster | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Three bronze casts<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Ernest Bloch]]'' | location = [[Israel Museum]] | date = 1948-49 | type = Bust | material = Plaster | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = Q76629590 | notes = One bronze cast<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Princess Menen'' | location = [[National Gallery of Art, Washington]] | date = 1948-49 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 54.3 x 53.3 x 32.7cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nga.gov/collection/art-object-page.53582.html|title=Princess Menen, 1949|website=National Gallery of Art|access-date=10 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Princess Desta'' | location = [[Tel Aviv Museum]] | date = 1948-49 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 53.3cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = Lucian Freud by Jacob Epstein.jpg | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Lucian Freud]]'' | location = [[National Portrait Gallery, London]] | date = 1949 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 510 x 210mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Eight bronze casts, also a 1947 plaster model, with arms, at [[Allen Memorial Art Museum]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw02344 |title=Lucian Freud|website=National Portrait Gallery|access-date=1 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://allenartcollection.oberlin.edu/objects/5663/lucian-freud|title=Lucian Freud|website=Allen Memorial Art Museum|access-date=12 June 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Ann Freud'' | location = [[Tate Britain]], [[Yeshiva University Museum]] | date = 1949-50 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 280 x 190 x 203mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = Q76626938 | notes = Five casts<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/epstein-ann-freud-t04940|title=Ann Freud|website=Tate|access-date=2 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://museums.cjh.org/web/pages/cjh/Display.php?irn=24179&QueryPage=%2F |title=Bust of Anne Freud|website=Center for Jewish History Museum Collections|access-date=21 July 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Esther with Flower by Jacob Epstein 01.jpg | commonscat = Esther with Flower by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''Third portrait of Esther'' / ''Esther with Flower'' | location = {{ubl|[[Queensland Art Gallery]],|[[The New Art Gallery Walsall]]}} | date = 1949 | type = Half-figure | material = Bronze | dimensions = 60.5 x 45 x 28cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Six casts, plaster in [[Israel Museum]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref name="SharedV"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://collection.qagoma.qld.gov.au/objects/7997|title=Esther 1949|website=Queensland Art Gallery/Gallery of Modern Art|access-date=3 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://collections.thenewartgallerywalsall.org.uk/objects/4266/esther-with-flower |title= Esther with Flower |website= The New Art Gallery Walsall|access-date=18 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Judith Marguiles'' | location = Israel Museum | date = 1949 | type = Half-figure of a child | material = Plaster | dimensions = 20.3cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = Q76630135 | notes = Two bronze casts<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Siobham'' | location = [[Museo de Bellas Artes (Caracas)]] | date = 1949 | type = Bust of a child | material = Plaster | dimensions = 33cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Master Stewart, (Babe with arms)'' | location = Israel Museum | date = 1949 | type = Figure | material = Plaster | dimensions = 25.4cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Two bronzes in different versions<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = Roland Joffé by Jacob Epstein 01.jpg | commonscat = Roland Joffé by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''[[Roland Joffé]]'' | location = [[The New Art Gallery Walsall]] | date = 1949-50 | type = Head | material = Bronze, gold patina | dimensions = 21cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Plaster at [[Mishkan Museum of Art]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref name="SharedV"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://collections.thenewartgallerywalsall.org.uk/objects/4274/roland-joffe |title= Roland Joffe |website= The New Art Gallery Walsall|access-date=5 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Victor'' | location = {{ubl|[[Leeds City Art Gallery]],|[[Kelvingrove Museum]]}} | date = 1949 | type = Head on base | material = Bronze & stone | dimensions = 250 x 170 x 200mm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = Q76625885 | notes = Edition of 15 casts, plaster at [[Israel Museum]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=http://collections.glasgowmuseums.com/mwebcgi/mweb?request=record;id=718674;type=101|title=Victor|website=Glasgow Museums|access-date=15 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Youth Advances'' | location = [[Manchester Art Gallery]] | date = 1949-50 | type = Statue | material = Bronze | dimensions = 208cm tall | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Commissioned for the 1951 [[Festival of Britain]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://manchesterartgallery.org/explore/title/?mag-object-5804 |title=Youth Advances|website=Manchester Art Gallery|access-date=25 July 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art footer}} == 1950 to 1954 == {{Public art header|show_architect=no|show_material=yes|show_dimensions=yes|show_artist=no|show_owner=no|show_wikidata=yes}} {{Public art row | image = Epstein 7 sculpture in Roper's Garden - sony 192 (cropped).jpg | commonscat = Woman Removing Her Dress, Jacob Epstein | subject = ''Woman Removing Her Dress'' | location = Roper's Gardens, [[Chelsea Embankment]], London | date = Carved c. 1950, unveiled June 1973 | type = Relief | material = Portland stone | dimensions = 144 x 108 x 20cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Gwen, Lady Melchett of Landford'' | location = [[Mishkan Museum of Art]] | date = 1950 | type = Head | material = Plaster | dimensions = 30cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Two bronze casts<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Lord Samuel'' | location = [[Reform Club]], London | date = 1950 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = Patrick Blackett by Jacob Epstein 03.jpg | commonscat = Patrick Blackett by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''[[Patrick Blackett]]'' | location = [[Sussex University]] | date = 1950 | type = Bust | material = Plaster | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = Q124360608 | notes = 1950 bronze cast, location unknown;<ref name="ESilber"/> 1997 bronze cast, [[Imperial College, London]] }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Ralph Vaughan Williams]]'' | location = {{ubl|[[National Portrait Gallery, London]],|[[Arts Council England]] collection,|[[Manchester Art Gallery]]|[[York University]]}} | date = 1950 | type = Bust | material = Bronze with green patina | dimensions = 39.5 x 25 x 29cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = Q107863579 | notes = 17 known casts, plaster at [[Israel Museum]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw06486 |title=Ralph Vaughan Williams|website=National Portrait Gallery|access-date=1 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url= https://artscouncilcollection.org.uk/artwork/bust-dr-vaughan-williams-om|title=Bust of Dr. Vaughan Williams O.M|website=Arts Council Collection|access-date=17 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://manchesterartgallery.org/explore/title/?mag-object-5694 |title=Ralph Vaughan Williams|website=Manchester Art Gallery|access-date=25 July 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.futurelearn.com/info/courses/introducing-art-history-discovering-public-sculpture/0/steps/97390|title=Case Study:Bust of Ralph Vaughan Williams and Singing Stone|author=Maddie Boden|website=Future Learn|access-date=17 August 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Louis Clarke (antiquarian)|Louis Colville Gray Clarke]]'' | location = [[Fitzwilliam Museum]] | date = 1951 | type = Bust | material = Bronze with green patina | dimensions = 53.2cm high | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/id/object/12446|title=Louis Colville Gray Clarke, Litt. D. (1881-1960):M.14-1951|website=The Fitzwilliam Museum|access-date=9 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Robert Rhodes'' | location = [[National Gallery of Victoria]] | date = 1951 | type = Head of a child | material = Plaster | dimensions = 39.4cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Five bronze casts<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = Somerset Maugham by Jacob Epstein, 1951, bronze - Harry Ransom Center - University of Texas at Austin - DSC08560.jpg | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Somerset Maugham]]'' | location = [[Hirshhorn Museum]] | date = 1951 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 39cm high | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Seven bronze casts; plaster at the [[Phoenix Art Museum]]<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = Jacob epstein, madonna con bambino, bozzetto per il monumento a cavendish square, londra, 1950.jpg | commonscat = Maquette for Cavendish Square Madonna and Child | subject = Maquette for ''Madonna and Child'' | location = {{ubl|[[Hirshhorn Museum]],|[[Auckland Art Gallery]],|[[The New Art Gallery Walsall]],|Arts Council Collection, [[Vatican Museums]]}} | date = 1951 | type = Sculpture | material = Lead with brass wire | dimensions = 34.2 x 14.9 x 6.7cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Six known casts, <ref name="ESilber"/><ref name="SharedV"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://hirshhorn.si.edu/collection/artwork/?edanUrl=edanmdm%3Ahmsg_66.1787|title=Maquette for "Madonna and Child"|website=Hirshhorn Museum|access-date=30 April 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.aucklandartgallery.com/explore-art-and-ideas/artwork/2784/madonna-and-child|title=Madonna and Child|website=Auckland Art Gallery|access-date=13 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://collections.thenewartgallerywalsall.org.uk/objects/4281/maquette-for-cavendish-square-madonna-and-child?ctx=d99d0c04-3ebc-4814-80f2-fa8744be1055&idx=1|title=Maquette for Cavendish Square Madonna and Child|website=The New Art Gallery Walsall|access-date=16 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://artscouncilcollection.org.uk/artwork/maquette-madonna-and-child-convent-holy-child-jesus |title=Maquette of the Madonna and Child for the Convent of the Holy Child Jesus|website=Arts Council Collection|access-date=17 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Christ Figure'' | location = [[Hirshhorn Museum]] | date = c. 1951 | type = Sculpture | material = Lead | dimensions = 65.2 x 22 x 9.4cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://hirshhorn.si.edu/collection/artwork/?edanUrl=edanmdm%3Ahmsg_66.1788|title=Christ Figure|website=Hirshhorn Museum|access-date=30 April 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Alic Halford Smith]]'' | location = [[New College, Oxford]] | date = 1951-52 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 61cm high | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = Maquette for ''Social Consciousness'' | location = [[Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery]] | date = 1951-53 | type = Sculpture group | material = Bronze | dimensions = 35.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = The Art Museum of Philadelphia.jpg | commonscat = Social Consciousness by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''Social Consciousness'' | location = [[University of Pennsylvania]] | date = 1951-53 | type = Sculpture group | material = Bronze | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Previously located outside The Art Museum of Philadelphia.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://penntoday.upenn.edu/news/two-monumental-sculptures-arrive-campus|title=Two monumental sculptures arrive on campus|website=Penn Today|access-date=11 October 2019}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = Set of four door handles | location = {{ubl|Convent of the Holy Child Jesus, Cavendish Square,|[[Coventry Cathedral]]}} | date = 1952 | type = Door handles | material = Bronze | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Five sets known to exist<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Portland Mason'' | location = [[Bury Art Museum]] | date = 1952 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 34cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Dame [[Hilda Lloyd]]'' | location = Medical School, [[Birmingham University]] | date = 1952 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 56cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Mark Joffe]]'' | location = [[Watford Museum]] | date = 1952 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 30cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/><ref name="Watford"/> }} {{Public art row | image = Epstein, Madonna and Child, Dean's Mews.jpg | commonscat = Madonna and Child sculpture, Cavendish Square, London | subject = ''Madonna and Child'' | location = Dean's Mews, [[Cavendish Square]], London | date = 1952 | type = Architectural sculpture | material = Lead | dimensions = 3.9 x 1.4m | designation = | show_wikidata= yes | wikidata = | notes = Architect [[Louis Osman]]<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''First Portrait of Annabel Freud (with bonnet)'' | location = {{ubl|[[Hirshhorn Museum]],|[[The New Art Gallery Walsall]]}} | date = 1952 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 18cm high | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Four casts including one without a bonnet and plaster version at the [[Israel Museum]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://collections.thenewartgallerywalsall.org.uk/objects/5663/first-portrait-of-annabel-freud–with–bonnet-1952|title=First Portrait of Annabel Freud with bonnet |website=The New Art Gallery Walsall|access-date=18 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = The Sisters, Anne & Annabel, by Jacob Epstein 01.jpg | commonscat = The Sisters Anne & Annabel Freud by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''Anne and Annabel Freud (The Sisters)'' | location = [[The New Art Gallery Walsall]] | date = 1952 | type = Two heads | material = Bronze | dimensions = 19cm high | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/><ref name="SharedV"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://collections.thenewartgallerywalsall.org.uk/objects/4269/the-sisters-anne-and-annabel-freud|title=The Sisters (Anne and Annabel Freud |website=The New Art Gallery Walsall|access-date=18 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = T.S. Eliot by Jacob Epstein 01.jpg | commonscat = T.S. Eliot by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''[[T. S. Eliot]]'' | location = {{ubl|[[Hirshhorn Museum]],|[[The New Art Gallery Walsall]]}} | date = 1952-53 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 46.0 x 45.3 x 35.4cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Six casts, original plaster model in the National Portrait Gallery, London<ref name="ESilber"/><ref name="SharedV"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://hirshhorn.si.edu/collection/artwork/?edanUrl=edanmdm%3Ahmsg_66.1782|title=T.S. Eliot, Portrait of|website=Hirshhorn Museum|access-date=30 April 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw02067 |title= T.S. Eliot|website=National Portrait Gallery|access-date=1 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://collections.thenewartgallerywalsall.org.uk/objects/4277/t-s-eliot?ctx=e353a9c5-080b-4870-8d50-7067825b4dfc&idx=3|title=T.S Eliot|website=The New Art Gallery Walsall|access-date=16 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Sholem Asch]]'' | location ={{ubl|[[Ben Uri Gallery & Museum]],|[[Cleveland Museum of Art]]}} | date = 1953 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 50 x 22.5 x 32cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Six casts plus plaster at [[Mishkan Museum of Art]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web| url=https://www.benuricollection.org.uk/search_result.php?item_id=683|title=Sholem Asch|website=Ben Uri Collection|access-date=2 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.clevelandart.org/art/1983.108|title=Head of Sholem Asch|website=Cleveland Museum of Art|access-date=8 June 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Stafford Cripps memorial, St Paul's Cathedral.jpg | commonscat = | subject = ''Sir [[Stafford Cripps]]'' | location = [[St Paul's Cathedral]], London | date = 1953 | type = Half-figure on pedestal | material = Bronze | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Inscription carved by [[David McFall]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=http://davidmcfall.co.uk/page78.html|title=1954/4 Sir Stafford Cripps inscription|website=David McFall RA (1919-1988)|access-date=29 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Professor James Walter MacLeod'' | location = School of Medicine, [[Leeds University]] | date = 1953 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 33cm high | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Mai Zetterling]]'' | location = [[Los Angeles County Museum of Art]] | date = 1953 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 53.3cm tall | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Lord [[Bertrand Russell]]'' | location = {{ubl|[[Hirshhorn Museum]],|British High Commission, Dar es Salaam from [[Government Art Collection]]}} | date = 1953 | type = Head | material = Bronze with green patina | dimensions = 42cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Four casts;- plaster at [[Israel Museum]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://artcollection.culture.gov.uk/artwork/16546/|title=Bertrand Arthur William Russell, 3rd Earl Russell (1872-1970) philosopher, journalist, and political campaigner |website=Government Art Collection|access-date=29 June 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Frisky, the Sculptor's Dog by Jacob Epstein 02.jpg | commonscat = Frisky, the Sculptor's Dog by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''Frisky, the Sculptor's Dog'' | location = [[The New Art Gallery Walsall]] | date = 1953 | type = Sculpture | material = Bronze | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="SharedV"/><ref>{{cite web|url= https://collections.thenewartgallerywalsall.org.uk/objects/4275/frisky-the-sculptors-dog |title=Frisky, the Sculptor's Dog |website=The New Art Gallery Walsall |access-date=18 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Dr [[Elias Avery Lowe]]'' | location = {{ubl|[[Morgan Library & Museum]],|[[Metropolitan Museum of Art]]}} | date = 1953-54 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 61.9 x 20.3 x 17.8cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Three casts<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/201925|title=Dr Elias A Lowe|website=Metropolitan Museum of Art|access-date=12 June 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.themorgan.org/objects/item/214068|title=Bust of Professor Elias Avery Lowe (1879-1969)|website=Morgan Library & Museum|access-date=14 June 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[James Joseph Mallon|Dr J.J. Mallon]]'' | location = [[Toynbee Hall]], London | date = 1954 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 42cm high | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Two casts<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = Epstein's Christ in Majesty - Llandaff Cathedral (2995951423).jpg | commonscat = Christ in Majesty (Jacob Epstein) | subject = ''Christ in Majesty'' | location = [[Llandaff Cathedral]], Cardiff | date = 1954-55 | type = Sculpture | material = Aluminium | dimensions = 5.5m high | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.llandaffcathedral.org.uk/history/the-majestas/|title=The Majestas|website=Llandaff Cathedral|access-date=17 January 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art footer}} == 1955 to 1959 == {{Public art header|show_architect=no|show_material=yes|show_dimensions=yes|show_artist=no|show_owner=no|show_wikidata=yes}} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = [[Franklin Medal]] | location = | date = 1955, presented 1956 | type = Medal | material = Bronze | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Medal with images of [[Benjamin Franklin]] and [[Prometheus]]<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Ludwig Loewy'' | location = [[National Galleries Scotland]] | date = 1955 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 67.5 x 76.5 x 34.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Six casts made for Loewy family members<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nationalgalleries.org/art-and-artists/50571 |title=Ludwig Loewy |website=National Galleries Scotland|access-date=16 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = Marquette for a Trade Union Congress war memorial | location = {{ubl|[[Bolton Museum]],|[[Ashmolean Museum]]}} | date = 1955 | type = Sculpture | material = Bronze | dimensions = 54.5 x 29.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://collections.ashmolean.org/collection/search/sort_by/relevance/sort_order/asc/per_page/25/offset/0/object/125488|title=Marquette for the Trade Union Congress memorial |website=Ashmolean Museum|access-date=15 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Rosalyn Tureck by Jacob Epstein 03.jpg | commonscat = Rosalyn Tureck by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''[[Rosalyn Tureck]]'' | location = [[The New Art Gallery Walsall]] | date = 1956 | type = Head | material = Plaster | dimensions = 28cm tall | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Plaster previously held by the [[Museum of Modern Art]], New York; bronze cast in [[Philadelphia Museum of Art]]<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''The Hon. Robert Hesketh'' | location = [[The New Art Gallery Walsall]] | date = 1956 | type = Bust of a child | material = Bronze | dimensions = 45cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Two bronze casts; plaster cast in [[Israel Museum]]<ref>{{cite web|url= https://collections.thenewartgallerywalsall.org.uk/objects/5417/the-hon-robert-hesketh |title=The Hon. Robert Hesketh |website=The New Art Gallery Walsall |access-date=18 May 2023}}</ref><ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = Liverpool Resurgent Epstein.jpg | commonscat = Liverpool Resurgent | subject = ''[[Liverpool Resurgent]]'' | location = Former Lewis's department store, Ranelagh Street, Liverpool | date = 1956 | type = Statue | material = Bronze | dimensions = 5.4m tall | designation = Grade II | show_wikidata= yes | wikidata = Q42852357 | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/><ref name="JoDarke">{{cite book|author=Jo Darke|publisher=Macdonald Illustrated|year=1991|title= The Monument Guide to England and Wales |isbn=0-356-17609-6}}</ref><ref name="Lewis">{{NHLE |num=1391992 |desc=Lewis's Department Store|access-date= 21 April 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Epstein reliefs on Lewis's department store, Liverpool 3.jpg | commonscat = Epstein reliefs on Lewis's department store, Liverpool | subject = ''Children Fighting'', ''Baby in a Pram'' & ''Children Playing'' | location = Former Lewis's department store, Ranelagh Street, Liverpool | date = 1956 | type = Three relief panels | material = Ciment fondu | dimensions = 101 x 183cm each | designation = Grade II | show_wikidata= yes | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/><ref name="Lewis"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Sir [[James Gray (zoologist)|James Gray]]'' | location = Department of Zoology, [[Cambridge University]] | date = 1956 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 63.5cm tall | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = Jan Christian Smuts (9177337292).jpg | subject = [[Statue of Jan Smuts, Parliament Square|Statue]] of ''[[Jan Smuts]]'' | commonscat = Statue of Jan Smuts, Parliament Square, London | location = [[Parliament Square]], London | date = 1956 | type = Statue on pedestal | material = Bronze & granite | dimensions = | designation = [[Listed building|Grade II listing]] | show_wikidata= yes | wikidata = Q20785576 | notes = <ref>{{NHLE |num=1226373 |desc=Statue of Field Marshall Jan Smuts|access-date=21 April 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = Marquette for ''Saint Michael and the Devil'' | location = [[Wesley House]], Cambridge | date = 1956 | type = Sculpture group | material = Terracotta / bronze | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Plaster at [[Mishkan Museum of Art]]<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.wesley.cam.ac.uk/visit/artwork/saint-michael-and-the-devil/|title=Saint Michael and the Devil, Marquette, 1956|website=Wesley House|access-date=16 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Third Portrait of Kitty (with short hair)'' | location = [[Queensland Art Gallery]] | date = 1957 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 57.5 x 43 x 35cm with pedestal | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Plaster at [[Mishkan Museum of Art]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://collection.qagoma.qld.gov.au/objects/14603|title=Kitty 1957|website=Queensland Art Gallery/Gallery of Modern Art|access-date=3 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Virginia, Marchioness of Bath'' | location = [[Longleat House]] | date = 1957 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 57cm high | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Sir [[Wilfrid Le Gros Clark]] FRS'' | location = School of Human Anatomy, [[Oxford University]] | date = 1957 | type = Bust | material = Bronze with green patina | dimensions = 40cm high | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Plaster at [[Cornell University]]<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Maria Donska'' | location = [[Atkinson Art Gallery and Library]] | date = 1957 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 42cm high | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Otto Klemperer]]'' | location = [[Government Art Collection]] | date = 1957 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 37.5 x 22 x 29cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Four casts;- Plaster version at the [[Israel Museum]]<ref>{{cite web|url=https://artcollection.culture.gov.uk/artwork/16870/|title=Otto Klemperer, (1885-1973), conductor and composer|website=Government Art Collection|access-date=29 June 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Bust of William Blake in Westminster Abbey, London.jpg | commonscat = Bust of William Blake, Westminster Abbey | subject = ''[[William Blake]]'' | location = [[Westminster Abbey]], London | date = 1957 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 54cm high | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Plaster version at [[Israel Museum]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.westminster-abbey.org/abbey-commemorations/commemorations/william-blake |title=William Blake|website=Westminster Abbey|access-date=21 April 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Dean [[John Lowe (Dean of Christ Church)|John Lowe]]'' | location = [[Christ Church, Oxford]] | date = 1957 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 61cm high | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes =Plaster version held by [[National Gallery of Canada]]<ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.gallery.ca/collection/artwork/dean-lowe|title=Dean Lowe|website=National Gallery of Canada|access-date=28 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Edward Sydney Woods by Epstein.jpg | commonscat = Bust of Bishop Woods, Lichfield Cathedral | subject = ''Bishop [[Edward Sydney Woods]]'' | location = [[Lichfield Cathedral]] | date = 1958 | type = Half-figure | material = Bronze | dimensions = 91.4 x 99cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Plaster version in the [[National Gallery of Victoria]]<ref>{{cite web|url=https://ehive.com/collections/201690/objects/1337726/epstein-bishop-woods|title=Epstein, Bishop Woods;Jacob Epstein; Feb-June 1958; LCA 0413|website=Lichfield Cathedral|access-date=14 June 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Professor Charles Mclnnes'' | location = [[Bristol Museum & Art Gallery]] | date = 1958 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 38.0cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[William Haley]]'' | location = [[Broadcasting House]], London | date = 1958 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 63.0cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = Cathedral St Michaels Victory.jpg | commonscat = St Michaels Victory over the Devil (Sir Jacob Epstein) | subject = ''St Michael's Victory over the Devil'' | location = [[Coventry Cathedral]] | date = 1958 | type = Wall mounted sculpture group | material = Bronze | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= yes | wikidata = Q27436668 | notes = <ref name="Journey"/> }} {{Public art row | image = Sculpture by Jacob Epstein at Congress House, Great Russell Street, London (3934104663) (cropped).jpg | commonscat = TUC War Memorial, Congress House | subject = ''Trade Union Victims of Two World Wars - The Spirit of Trade Unionism'' | location = [[Congress House]], London | date = 1958 | type = Sculpture | material = Stone | dimensions = 300 x 150 x 120cm | designation = Grade II* | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.iwm.org.uk/memorials/item/memorial/58332 |title=War Memorials Register: Trade Union Victims of Two World Wars - The Spirit of Trade Unionism|access-date= 21 April 2023|website= [[Imperial War Museum]]}}</ref><ref>{{NHLE |num=1113223 |desc=Congress House including forecourt and courtyard sculptures|access-date= 21 April 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = Basil Spence by Jacob Epstein 01.jpg | commonscat = Basil Spence by Jacob Epstein | subject = ''[[Basil Spence]]'' | location = [[Royal Institute of British Architects|RIBA]] Architectural Study Room, Victoria and Albert Museum | date = c. 1958 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Plaster cast, [[University of Sussex]]<ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = [[David Lloyd George]] | location = [[National Museum Cardiff]] | date = 1958-59 | type = Bust | material = Plaster | dimensions = 65 x 87.5 x 51.4cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://museum.wales/collections/online/object/501502c7-270a-337e-a778-975e1653c851/David-1st-Earl-Lloyd-George-1863-1945/ |title=David, 1st Earl Lloyd George (1863-1946)|website=National Museum Cardiff|access-date=18 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Sir [[Russell Brain]]'' | location = {{ubl|[[Royal College of Physicians]], London,|[[New College, Oxford]]}} | date = 1959 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 73.7cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://artuk.org/discover/artworks/walter-russell-brain-18951966-1st-baron-brain-293860/search/actor:epstein-jacob-18801959/page/2|title=Walter Russell Brain (1895-1966), 1st Baron Brain|website=Art UK|access-date=17 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''Archbishop [[Geoffrey Francis Fisher]]'' | location = [[Lambeth Palace]], London | date = 1959 | type = Bust | material = Bronze | dimensions = 63.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[David Lloyd George]]'' | location = {{ubl|[[Beaverbrook Art Gallery]],|[[The New Art Gallery Walsall]]}} | date = 1959 | type = Head | material = Bronze | dimensions = 63.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://collections.thenewartgallerywalsall.org.uk/objects/5409/lloyd-george|title=Lloyd George |website=The New Art Gallery Walsall|access-date=18 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''[[Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon]]'' | location = [[Keele University]] | date = 1959 | type = Half-statue | material = Bronze | dimensions = 92cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = <ref name="ESilber"/> }} {{Public art row | image = | commonscat = | subject = ''The Artist's Hand'' | location = [[Winnipeg Art Gallery]] | date = 1959 | type = Sculpture | material = Bronze | dimensions = 15 x 18.7 x 14.5cm | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = Edition of six casts<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.wag.ca/art/collection/item/23749/?from=art-search|title=The Artist's Hand|website=Winnipeg Art Gallery|access-date=23 May 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art row | image = The Riverside Church, (15545357498).jpg | commonscat = | subject = ''Christ in Majesty'' | location = [[Riverside Church]], New York City | date = Erected after 1959 | type = Sculpture | material = Gilded plaster | dimensions = | designation = | show_wikidata= | wikidata = | notes = This is the plaster model from which the Llandaff Cathedral figure was cast<ref name="Riverside"/> }} {{Public art row | image = Edinburgh Gate, Hyde Park, London 02.jpg | commonscat = Rush of Green | subject = ''[[The Rush of Green]]'' | location = Edinburgh Gate, [[Hyde Park, London]] | date = 1959, unveiled 1961 | type = Sculpture group | material = Bronze | dimensions = | designation = Grade II | show_wikidata= | wikidata = Q21714480 | notes = Also known as ''Pan'' or ''The Bowater House Group''<ref>{{NHLE|num=1431163|desc=The Pan Statue|access-date=21 April 2023}}</ref> }} {{Public art footer}} ==References== {{Reflist}} {{Jacob Epstein}} {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Epstein, Jacob}} [[Category:Sculptures by Jacob Epstein]] [[Category:Lists of sculptures]]
1,282,752,259
[]
false
# Panos Michalopoulos Panos Michalopoulos (Greek: Παναγιώτης (Πάνος) Μιχαλόπουλος; born 15 January 1949) is a Greek actor, who has appeared during the last three decades in movies and television series. ## Selected filmography ### Films - Iphigenia (1977) - Enas kontos tha mas sosei (1981) - Garsoniera gia deka (1981) - Ta Tsakalia (1981) - Vasika kalispera sas (1982) - I Strofi (1982) - Peraste, filiste, teliosate! (1986) - Roz gatos (1986) - Pano kato ke plagios (1993) ### Television - Vaincre à Olympie (1977) - Fovos kai pathos (1990) - Tmima ithon (1992) - Pirasmos (1995) - Palirroia (1996) - Dada gia oles tis douleies (1998) - Gia mia gynaika kai ena aftokinito (2001) - Ta Filarakia (2002) - I Ora i kali (2004) - Ta koritsia tou baba (2007) - S'agapao...parkare (2009)
enwiki/8570828
enwiki
8,570,828
Panos Michalopoulos
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panos_Michalopoulos
2024-10-27T02:27:30Z
en
Q7131554
26,933
{{short description|Greek actor}} {{BLP sources|date=May 2019}} {{Infobox person | name = Panos Michalopoulos | image = | imagesize = | caption = | birth_name = Panayiotis Michalopoulos | birth_date = {{birth date and age|df=yes|1949|1|15}} | birth_place = [[Kalamata]], [[Kingdom of Greece|Greece]] | othername = | spouse = [[Roula Koromila]] (1988–1990) | children = | yearsactive = 1977–present | website = | awards = }} '''Panos Michalopoulos''' ({{langx|el|Παναγιώτης (Πάνος) Μιχαλόπουλος}}; born 15 January 1949) is a [[Greeks|Greek]] actor, who has appeared during the last three decades in movies and television series. ==Selected filmography== ===Films=== *''[[Iphigenia (film)|Iphigenia]]'' (1977) *''[[Enas kontos tha mas sosei]]'' (1981) *''[[Garsoniera gia deka]]'' (1981) *''[[Ta Tsakalia]]'' (1981) *''[[Vasika kalispera sas]]'' (1982) *''[[I Strofi]]'' (1982) *''[[Peraste, filiste, teliosate!]]'' (1986) *''[[Roz gatos]]'' (1986) *''[[Pano kato ke plagios]]'' (1993) ===Television=== * ''[[Vaincre à Olympie]]'' (1977) *''[[Fovos kai pathos]]'' (1990) *''[[Tmima ithon]]'' (1992) *''[[Pirasmos]]'' (1995) *''Palirroia'' (1996) *''[[Dada gia oles tis douleies]]'' (1998) *''[[Gia mia gynaika kai ena aftokinito]]'' (2001) *''[[Ta Filarakia]]'' (2002) *''[[I Ora i kali]]'' (2004) *''[[Ta koritsia tou baba]]'' (2007) *''[[S'agapao...parkare]]'' (2009) ==External links== *{{IMDb name| id=0586204 |name=Panos Mihalopoulos}} {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Michalopoulos, Panos}} [[Category:1949 births]] [[Category:Living people]] [[Category:Greek male film actors]] [[Category:Greek male stage actors]] [[Category:Greek male television actors]] [[Category:People from Kalamata]] [[Category:20th-century Greek male actors]] [[Category:21st-century Greek male actors]]
1,253,640,080
[{"title": "Panos Michalopoulos", "data": {"Born": "Panayiotis Michalopoulos \u00b7 15 January 1949 \u00b7 Kalamata, Greece", "Years active": "1977\u2013present", "Spouse": "Roula Koromila (1988\u20131990)"}}]
false
# Laheycourt Laheycourt (French pronunciation: [la.ekuʁ]) is a commune in the Meuse department in Grand Est in north-eastern France. ## Geography The Chée flows westward through the southern part of the commune and crosses the village.
enwiki/15887744
enwiki
15,887,744
Laheycourt
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laheycourt
2024-08-25T10:18:32Z
en
Q753260
104,703
{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2023}} {{Infobox French commune |name = Laheycourt |commune status = [[Communes of France|Commune]] |image = Laheycourt la mairie.JPG |caption = The town hall in Laheycourt |image coat of arms = Blason ville fr Laheycourt 55.svg |arrondissement = Bar-le-Duc |canton = Revigny-sur-Ornain |INSEE = 55271 |postal code = 55800 |mayor = Jean-Jacques Westrich<ref>{{cite web|title=Répertoire national des élus: les maires|url=https://www.data.gouv.fr/fr/datasets/r/2876a346-d50c-4911-934e-19ee07b0e503|publisher=data.gouv.fr, Plateforme ouverte des données publiques françaises|date=13 September 2022|language=fr}}</ref> |term = 2020&ndash;2026 |intercommunality = CC du Pays de Revigny-sur-Ornain |coordinates = {{coord|48.8917|5.0236|format=dms|display=inline,title}} |elevation m = 170 |elevation min m = 156 |elevation max m = 204 |area km2 = 18 |population = {{France metadata Wikidata|population_total}} |population date = {{France metadata Wikidata|population_as_of}} |population footnotes = {{France metadata Wikidata|population_footnotes}} }} '''Laheycourt''' ({{IPA|fr|la.ekuʁ}}) is a [[Communes of France|commune]] in the [[Meuse (department)|Meuse]] [[Departments of France|department]] in [[Grand Est]] in north-eastern [[France]]. ==Geography== The [[Chée]] flows westward through the southern part of the commune and crosses the village. ==See also== *[[Communes of the Meuse department]] ==References== {{reflist}} {{commons category}} {{Meuse communes}} {{authority control}} [[Category:Communes of Meuse (department)]] {{Meuse-geo-stub}}
1,242,164,932
[{"title": "Laheycourt", "data": {"Country": "France", "Region": "Grand Est", "Department": "Meuse", "Arrondissement": "Bar-le-Duc", "Canton": "Revigny-sur-Ornain", "Intercommunality": "CC du Pays de Revigny-sur-Ornain"}}, {"title": "Government", "data": {"\u2022 Mayor (2020\u20132026)": "Jean-Jacques Westrich", "Area1": "18 km2 (7 sq mi)", "Population (2022)": "354", "\u2022 Density": "20/km2 (51/sq mi)", "Time zone": "UTC+01:00 (CET)", "\u2022 Summer (DST)": "UTC+02:00 (CEST)", "INSEE/Postal code": "55271 /55800", "Elevation": "156\u2013204 m (512\u2013669 ft) \u00b7 (avg. 170 m or 560 ft)"}}]
false
# Ivan Ninčević Ivan Ninčević (born 27 November 1981) is a former Croatian handball player. He competed for the Croatian national team at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, winning the bronze medal. ## Honours Zagreb - Croatian First League (5): 2000-01, 2001–02, 2002–03, 2003–04, 2004–05 - Croatian Cup (5): 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005 - EHF Cup Winners' Cup Runner-up (1): 2005
enwiki/36669583
enwiki
36,669,583
Ivan Ninčević
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ivan_Nin%C4%8Devi%C4%87
2024-12-27T10:36:04Z
en
Q595752
72,895
{{short description|Croatian handball player (born 1981)}} {{Infobox handball biography | name = Ivan Ninčević | image = Ivan Nincevic 01.jpg | nationality = Croatian | birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1981|11|27|df=y}} | birth_place = [[Zadar]], [[Croatia]] | height = {{height|m=1.84|precision=0}} | position = Left wing | currentclub = | clubnumber = | years1 = 1998-2000 | clubs1 = Zadar | years2 = 2000-2005 | clubs2 = [[RK Zagreb|Zagreb]] | years3 = 2005-2006 | clubs3 = HSG Niesetal-Staufenberg | years4 = 2006-2009 | clubs4 = Stralsunder HV | years5 = 2009-2010 | clubs5 = Zadar | years6 = 2010-2013 | clubs6 = [[Füchse Berlin Reinickendorf HBC|Füchse Berlin]] | years7 = 2013-2014 | clubs7 = [[HC Dinamo Minsk (handball)|Dinamo Minsk]] | years8 = 2014-2017 | clubs8 = [[Beşiktaş JK (handball)|Beşiktaş JK]] | nationalyears1 = 2009– | nationalteam1 = [[Croatia men's national handball team|Croatia]] | nationalcaps1 = 65<ref>{{cite web|url=http://ihf.info/files/CompetitionData/153/pdf/CRO.pdf |title=2015 World Championship Roster |publisher=[[International Handball Federation|IHF]] |access-date=15 January 2015 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141218194554/http://www.ihf.info/files/CompetitionData/153/pdf/CRO.pdf |archive-date=18 December 2014 }}</ref> | nationalgoals1 = 96 | medaltemplates = {{MedalOlympic}} {{MedalBronze|[[2012 Summer Olympics|2012 London]]|[[Handball at the 2012 Summer Olympics – Men's tournament|Team]]}} {{MedalCompetition|[[IHF World Men's Handball Championship|World Championships]]}} {{MedalBronze|[[2013 World Men's Handball Championship|2013 Spain]]|Team}} {{MedalCompetition|[[European Men's Handball Championship|European Championships]]}} {{MedalBronze|[[2012 European Men's Handball Championship|2012 Serbia]]|Team}} }} '''Ivan Ninčević''' (born 27 November 1981) is a former Croatian [[handball]] player. He competed for the [[Croatia men's national handball team|Croatian national team]] at the [[2012 Summer Olympics]] in London, winning the bronze medal.<ref>{{cite web|title=Ivan Ninčević |url=https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/ni/ivan-nincevic-1.html |publisher=Sports Reference LLC |access-date=8 August 2012 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121214151934/http://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/ni/ivan-nincevic-1.html |archive-date=14 December 2012 }}</ref> ==Honours== ;Zagreb *[[Croatian Premier Handball League|Croatian First League]] (5): 2000-01, 2001–02, 2002–03, 2003–04, 2004–05 *[[Croatian Handball Cup|Croatian Cup]] (5): 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005 *[[EHF Cup Winners' Cup]] '''Runner-up''' (1): 2005 ==References== {{reflist}} ==External links== * {{Sports links}} {{Navboxes colour |title= Croatia squads |bg = white |fg = red |bordercolor = red |list1= {{Croatia squad 2012 European Men's Handball Championship}} {{Croatia handball squad 2012 Summer Olympics}} {{Croatia squad 2014 European Men's Handball Championship}} {{Croatia squad 2015 World Men's Handball Championship}} }} {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Nincevic, Ivan}} [[Category:1981 births]] [[Category:Living people]] [[Category:Sportspeople from Zadar]] [[Category:Croatian male handball players]] [[Category:21st-century Croatian sportsmen]] [[Category:Olympic handball players for Croatia]] [[Category:Handball players at the 2012 Summer Olympics]] [[Category:Olympic bronze medalists for Croatia in handball]] [[Category:Olympic medalists in handball]] [[Category:Medalists at the 2012 Summer Olympics]] [[Category:RK Zagreb players]] [[Category:Beşiktaş J.K. Handball Team players]] [[Category:Expatriate handball players in Turkey]] [[Category:Füchse Berlin Reinickendorf HBC players]] [[Category:Croatian expatriate handball players in Germany]] [[Category:Croatian expatriate sportspeople in Turkey]] [[Category:Croatian expatriate sportspeople in Belarus]] {{Croatia-Olympic-medalist-stub}} {{Croatia-handball-bio-stub}}
1,265,529,437
[{"title": "Personal information", "data": {"Born": "27 November 1981 \u00b7 Zadar, Croatia", "Nationality": "Croatian", "Height": "1.84 m (6 ft 0 in)", "Playing position": "Left wing"}}, {"title": "Senior clubs", "data": {"Years": "Team", "1998-2000": "Zadar", "2000-2005": "Zagreb", "2005-2006": "HSG Niesetal-Staufenberg", "2006-2009": "Stralsunder HV", "2009-2010": "Zadar", "2010-2013": "F\u00fcchse Berlin", "2013-2014": "Dinamo Minsk", "2014-2017": "Be\u015fikta\u015f JK"}}, {"title": "National team", "data": {"Years": "Team \u00b7 Apps \u00b7 (Gls)", "2009\u2013": "Croatia \u00b7 65 \u00b7 (96)"}}, {"title": "Olympic Games", "data": {"Bronze medal \u2013 third place": "2012 London \u00b7 Team"}}, {"title": "World Championships", "data": {"Bronze medal \u2013 third place": "2013 Spain \u00b7 Team"}}, {"title": "European Championships", "data": {"Bronze medal \u2013 third place": "2012 Serbia \u00b7 Team"}}, {"title": "Croatia squad \u2013 2012 European Men's Handball Championship \u2013 Bronze medal", "data": {"4 Bali\u0107 5 Duvnjak 6 Lackovi\u0107 8 Kopljar 9 Vori 10 Gojun 12 Losert 13 Horvat 14 Vukovi\u0107 20 Bi\u010dani\u0107 21 Bunti\u0107 25 Alilovi\u0107 26 \u0160trlek 27 \u010cupi\u0107 28 Musa 29 Nin\u010devi\u0107 Coach: Golu\u017ea": "Croatia"}}, {"title": "Croatia squad \u2013 2012 Summer Olympics \u2013 Bronze medal", "data": {"1 Losert 4 Bali\u0107 5 Duvnjak 6 Lackovi\u0107 8 Kopljar 9 Vori 10 Gojun 13 Horvat 14 Vukovi\u0107 20 Bi\u010dani\u0107 21 Bunti\u0107 25 Alilovi\u0107 26 \u0160trlek 27 \u010cupi\u0107 29 Nin\u010devi\u0107 Coach: Golu\u017ea": "Croatia"}}, {"title": "Croatia squad \u2013 2014 European Men's Handball Championship \u2013 4th place", "data": {"1 Losert 5 Duvnjak 8 Kopljar 9 Vori 10 Gojun 13 Horvat 14 Vukovi\u0107 20 Bi\u010dani\u0107 21 Bunti\u0107 22 Val\u010di\u0107 23 Mandalini\u0107 25 Alilovi\u0107 26 \u0160trlek 27 \u010cupi\u0107 28 Musa 29 Nin\u010devi\u0107 32 Sli\u0161kovi\u0107 Coach: Golu\u017ea": "Croatia"}}, {"title": "Croatia squad \u2013 Men's handball \u2013 2015 World Championship \u2013 6th place", "data": {"5 Duvnjak 7 Stepan\u010di\u0107 8 Kopljar 9 Vori 10 Gojun 13 Horvat 16 Ivi\u0107 18 Kara\u010di\u0107 20 Bi\u010dani\u0107 25 Alilovi\u0107 26 \u0160trlek 27 \u010cupi\u0107 28 Musa 29 Nin\u010devi\u0107 32 Sli\u0161kovi\u0107 34 Brozovi\u0107 Coach: Golu\u017ea": "Croatia"}}]
false
# Pterotocera Pterotocera is a genus of moths in the family Geometridae. The genus was described by Staudinger in 1882. ## Species - Pterotocera ussurica Djakonov, 1949 - Pterotocera insignilinearia Beljaev, 1994 - Pterotocera declinata Staudinger, 1882 - Pterotocera suidunaria (Alphéraky, 1883) - Pterotocera armeniacae Djakonov, 1949
enwiki/23645098
enwiki
23,645,098
Pterotocera
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pterotocera
2021-01-04T22:36:52Z
en
Q7256950
29,013
{{Short description|Genus of moths}} {{Automatic_taxobox | image = | taxon = Pterotocera | authority = Staudinger, 1882 }} '''''Pterotocera''''' is a genus of [[moth]]s in the family [[Geometridae]]. The genus was described by Staudinger in 1882.<ref>{{cite web |last=Savela |first=Markku |url=http://www.nic.funet.fi/pub/sci/bio/life/insecta/lepidoptera/ditrysia/geometroidea/geometridae/ennominae/pterotocera/ |title=''Pterotocera'' Staudinger, 1882 |website=Lepidoptera and Some Other Life Forms |accessdate=February 4, 2019}}</ref> ==Species== *''[[Pterotocera ussurica]]'' <small>Djakonov, 1949</small> *''[[Pterotocera insignilinearia]]'' <small>Beljaev, 1994</small> *''[[Pterotocera declinata]]'' <small>Staudinger, 1882</small> *''[[Pterotocera suidunaria]]'' <small>(Alphéraky, 1883)</small> *''[[Pterotocera armeniacae]]'' <small>Djakonov, 1949</small> ==References== {{Reflist}} *{{cite web |last1=Pitkin |first1=Brian |last2=Jenkins |first2=Paul |name-list-style=amp |url=http://www.nhm.ac.uk/our-science/data/butmoth/search/GenusList3.dsml?&FAMILY=Geometridae&sort=GENUS |title=Search results Family: Geometridae |website=Butterflies and Moths of the World |publisher=Natural History Museum, London}} {{Taxonbar|from=Q7256950}} [[Category:Bistonini]] {{Bistonini-stub}}
998,333,643
[{"title": "Scientific classification", "data": {"Domain": "Eukaryota", "Kingdom": "Animalia", "Phylum": "Arthropoda", "Class": "Insecta", "Order": "Lepidoptera", "Family": "Geometridae", "Tribe": "Bistonini", "Genus": "Pterotocera \u00b7 Staudinger, 1882"}}]
false
# Mohammad Nawaz Alam Mohammad Nawaz Alam (born 1967) is an Indian politician belonging to Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD). He was elected as a member of Bihar Legislative Assembly from Arrah in 2015.
enwiki/61931067
enwiki
61,931,067
Mohammad Nawaz Alam
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mohammad_Nawaz_Alam
2022-11-21T04:22:58Z
en
Q69386634
18,914
{{short description|Indian politician based in Bihar}} {{Use dmy dates|date=July 2022}} {{Infobox officeholder | name = Mohammad Nawaz Alam | image = | caption = | birth_date = 1967 | birth_place = | residence = | death_date = | death_place = | office = [[Member of the Legislative Assembly (India)|Member]] (MLA) of [[Bihar Legislative Assembly]] | term_start = 2015 | term_end = 2020 | predecessor = [[Amrendra Pratap Singh]] | successor = [[Amrendra Pratap Singh]] | constituency = [[Arrah Assembly constituency|Arrah]] | party = [[Rashtriya Janata Dal]] | alma_mater = HD Jain College, Arrah <br> [[Veer Kunwar Singh University]] | spouse = | children = | website = }} '''Mohammad Nawaz Alam''' (born 1967) is an Indian politician belonging to [[Rashtriya Janata Dal]] (RJD). He was elected as a member of [[Bihar Legislative Assembly]] from [[Arrah Assembly constituency|Arrah]] in 2015.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.elections.in/bihar/assembly-constituencies/2015-election-results.html|title=Bihar Assembly Election Results 2015|accessdate=30 September 2019|website=www.elections.in }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://myneta.info/bihar2015/index.php?action=show_winners&sort=default|title=List of Winners in Bihar 2015|accessdate=30 September 2019|website=www.myneta.info }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.india.com/news/india/bihar-assembly-election-results-2015-list-of-winning-candidates-693977/ |title=Bihar Assembly Election Results 2015: List of winning candidates|date=8 November 2015|accessdate=30 September 2019|website=www.india.com }}</ref> ==References== {{reflist}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Alam, Mohammad Nawaz}} [[Category:Living people]] [[Category:Rashtriya Janata Dal politicians]] [[Category:Bihar MLAs 2015–2020]] [[Category:1967 births]]
1,122,998,362
[{"title": "Member (MLA) of Bihar Legislative Assembly", "data": {"Member (MLA) of Bihar Legislative Assembly": "In office \u00b7 2015\u20132020", "Preceded by": "Amrendra Pratap Singh", "Succeeded by": "Amrendra Pratap Singh", "Constituency": "Arrah"}}, {"title": "Personal details", "data": {"Born": "1967", "Political party": "Rashtriya Janata Dal", "Alma mater": "HD Jain College, Arrah \u00b7 Veer Kunwar Singh University"}}]
false
# Pornography in Austria In Austria, the "Federal Act Against Obscene Publications and for the Protection of Youth Morally Endangered" was passed in 1990 to regulate pornography in Austria. In 1994, a prohibition on child pornography was added to the law. Under these regulations, the minimum age for buying hardcore pornography is 16. Publication of pornography or material depicting bestiality is illegal. Child pornography is punishable by up to 10 years in prison. In 2013, there have been an increasing number of reports of people accessing child pornography through the internet, according to Stopline—an internet authority set up by Internet Service Providers Austria (ISPA) to reduce illegal activity online. According to the Austrian Press Agency, there were over 6,000 reports of illegal cases, more than double than that of 2012 report. At a press conference in Vienna, director Barbara Schlossbauer said that 98% of cases were related to child pornography, but only a third actually occurred in Austria. Within three days, 80% of the content was removed from the internet within three days by the Internet Service Providers Austria (ISPA).
enwiki/63802946
enwiki
63,802,946
Pornography in Austria
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pornography_in_Austria
2024-11-19T10:32:54Z
en
Q96399777
77,725
{{Short description|none}} {{Use dmy dates|date=April 2020}} In [[Austria]], the "Federal Act Against Obscene Publications and for the Protection of Youth Morally Endangered" was passed in 1990 to regulate pornography in Austria. In 1994, a prohibition on child pornography was added to the law. Under these regulations, the minimum age for buying [[hardcore pornography]] is 16. Publication of pornography or material depicting bestiality is illegal.<ref>{{cite book|title=The Continuum Complete International Encyclopedia of Sexuality|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dciuj1-F3fYC|first1=Robert T.|last1=Francoeur|first2=Raymond J.|last2=Noonan|publisher=A&C Black|year=2004|isbn=9780826414885|pages=52–53}}</ref> [[Child pornography]] is punishable by up to 10 years in prison.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-austria-pornography/austria-smashes-major-global-child-porn-ring-idUKL0792040620070207|title=Austria smashes global child porn operation|website=Reuters|date=2007-02-07|accessdate=2020-04-29}}{{dead link|date=September 2024|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}</ref> In 2013, there have been an increasing number of reports of people accessing child pornography through the internet, according to Stopline—an internet authority set up by Internet Service Providers Austria (ISPA) to reduce illegal activity online.<ref name=thelocal>{{cite web|url=https://www.thelocal.at/20140522/more-austrian-looking-for-child-porn-online|website=thelocal.at|title='Dramatic rise' in illegal online porn visits|date=2014-05-22|accessdate=2020-04-29}}</ref> According to the Austrian Press Agency, there were over 6,000 reports of illegal cases, more than double than that of 2012 report. At a press conference in [[Vienna]], director Barbara Schlossbauer said that 98% of cases were related to child pornography, but only a third actually occurred in Austria. Within three days, 80% of the content was removed from the internet within three days by the Internet Service Providers Austria (ISPA).<ref name=thelocal/> ==See also== {{Portal|Erotica and pornography}} * [[Pornography laws by region]] * [[Legality of child pornography]] ==References== {{reflist}} {{Austria topics}} {{Europe topic|prefix=Pornography in|countries_only=yes}} {{Pornography}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Pornography In Austria}} [[Category:Pornography in Austria]]
1,258,376,582
[]
false
# Louis S. Diggs Louis S. Diggs (April 13, 1932 – October 24, 2022) was an African-American writer and historian specializing in the African-American history of Baltimore County, Maryland. As a chronicler of the county's African-American legacy, his work illuminates the historic past of its Black communities. In addition to social history, Diggs has published on Baltimore African-American military records from the American Civil War and the Maryland Army National Guard. Diggs died on October 24, 2022, at the age of 90. ## Military career In 1950, Diggs dropped out of Douglas High School for two years of service in Korea as a member of the all Black Maryland National Guard (726th Transportation Truck Company of the 231st Transportation Truck Battalion). After tours in Korea, Germany, and Japan, he retired from the military in 1970. ## Education Diggs earned his high school diploma in 1975 and an AA degree from Catonsville Community College (1976). Subsequently, the University of Baltimore awarded him a BA degree cum laude (1979) and Masters of Public Administration (1982). ## Later career Diggs followed up his military career with nineteen years in the DC public school system from which he retired in 1989. However, it was his subsequent work as a substitute teacher at Catonsville High School that inspired his third career as an historian and chronicler of Baltimore County's African-American communities when he discovered that his students had little knowledge of the historic background of their own community. He then researched and wrote his first book: It All Started on Winter's Lane. Nine more books followed. ## Honors and tributes - Diggs was honored by the State of Maryland in 1997 for his contributions in preserving the history of Maryland's Black communities.[4] - The Diggs/Johnson (Louis S. Diggs - Lenwood Johnson ) Mini-Museum on African American History[5] was opened on November 14, 2015. Named in honor of Louis Diggs and Lenwood Johnson, the museum is located in the former Cherry Hill African Union Methodist Protestant Church in Granite, Maryland. The church building, whose origins date to the 1880s and which was abandoned after the last congregation left during the 1970s, was restored through state funding and community support under Digg's leadership.[6] - In 2016, Baltimore County established the Louis S. Diggs Award in honor of his work preserving African American History in Baltimore County. The award is given annually during Black History Month.[7] ## Publications - It all started on Winters Lane: A History of the Black Community in Catonsville, Maryland, Linda D. Stone, editor. Uptown Press, Baltimore, MD, 1995. ISBN 978-097957050-6 - Holding on to Their Heritage, Francis Martin Cockey, editor. Uptown Press, Baltimore, MD, 1996. ISBN 0-9663419-8-8 - In Our Voices: A Folk History in Legacy, Ann V. Augustine, editor. Uptown Press, Baltimore, MD, 1998. ISBN 978-097957051-3 - Since the Beginning: African-American communities in Towson, Uptown Press, Baltimore, MD, 2000. ISBN 0-9663419-5-3. - Surviving in America: Histories of 7 Black communities in Baltimore County, Maryland: Oakland Park Road, Relay, Oella, Halethorpe, Granite, Church Lane, Winands Road, With Evangeline A. Wheeler. Uptown Press, Baltimore, MD, 2002. ISBN 0-9663419-6-1. - From the Meadows to the Point: The Histories of the African-American community of Turner Station, Evangeline A. Wheeler editor. Uptown Press, Baltimore, MD, 2003. ISBN 0-9663419-1-0. - North County: The History of African-American Settlements in Northern Baltimore County's Scenic Horse Country, Shirley Washington Diggs, editor, Uptown Press, Baltimore, MD, 2005. - Our Struggles: Historic African-American Communities in Southeast Baltimore County, Maryland: Overlea, Back River Neck Road, Goodwood/Hyde Park, Hopewell Avenue, Norris Lane, Edgemere Uptown Press, Baltimore, MD, 2007. ISBN 978-097957053-7. - Forgotten Road Warriors: The History of an all African-American Maryland National Guard Unit from Baltimore, Maryland, Uptown Press, Baltimore, MD, 2005. ISBN 0-9663419-4-5. - African-Americans from Baltimore County who served in the Civil War, Maryland's Six Regiments of Slaves, Shirley C. Diggs, editor, Baltimore, MD, 2014. ISBN 978-1935911166
enwiki/48473062
enwiki
48,473,062
Louis S. Diggs
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_S._Diggs
2024-03-12T20:38:12Z
en
Q21598132
43,916
{{Short description|American writer and historian (1932–2022)}} '''Louis S. Diggs''' (April 13, 1932 – October 24, 2022) was an [[African-American]] writer and historian specializing in the African-American history of [[Baltimore County, Maryland]]. As a chronicler of the county's African-American legacy, his work illuminates the historic past of its Black communities. In addition to social history, Diggs has published on Baltimore African-American military records from the [[American Civil War]] and the [[Maryland Army National Guard]].<ref name=diggs>{{cite web |url=http://www.louisdiggs.com/ |title=Home |website=louisdiggs.com}}</ref> Diggs died on October 24, 2022, at the age of 90.<ref>{{cite web |title=Louis S. Diggs 1932–2022 |url=https://hsobc.org/louis-s-diggs-1932-2022/ |website=Historical Society of Baltimore County |access-date=28 January 2024}}</ref> ==Military career== [[File:The Monumental City Guards celebrate 135 years 140222-A-XH589-070.jpg|right|thumb|150px|alt=Louis Diggs addressing The Monumental City Guards|Diggs at the 2014 ceremony celebrating the 231st Transportation Truck Battalion's 135th anniversary of its establishment as an all-Black independent militia company]] In 1950, Diggs dropped out of Douglas High School for two years of service in Korea as a member of the all Black Maryland National Guard (726th Transportation Truck Company of the 231st Transportation Truck Battalion). After tours in Korea, Germany, and Japan, he retired from the military in 1970.<ref name=diggs/> ==Education== Diggs earned his high school diploma in 1975 and an AA degree from [[Catonsville Community College]] (1976). Subsequently, the [[University of Baltimore]] awarded him a BA degree cum laude (1979) and Masters of Public Administration (1982).<ref name=diggs/> ==Later career== Diggs followed up his military career with nineteen years in the DC public school system from which he retired in 1989. However, it was his subsequent work as a substitute teacher at [[Catonsville High School]] that inspired his third career as an historian and chronicler of Baltimore County's African-American communities when he discovered that his students had little knowledge of the historic background of their own community. He then researched and wrote his first book: ''It All Started on Winter's Lane''.<ref>{{cite news|last1=Apperson|first1=Jay|title=History from Obscurity|newspaper=The Baltimore Sun|date=February 14, 1999}}</ref> Nine more books followed. ==Honors and tributes== *Diggs was honored by the State of Maryland in 1997 for his contributions in preserving the history of Maryland's Black communities.<ref>{{cite news|last1=Price|first1=Larry|title=Black Historian to Receive State Honor|newspaper=The Baltimore Sun|date=February 25, 1997}}</ref> *The Diggs/Johnson (Louis S. Diggs - Lenwood Johnson ) Mini-Museum on African American History<ref>{{cite web|title=DiggsJohnson Museum|url=http://diggsjohnsonmuseum.com/|accessdate=21 November 2015}}</ref> was opened on November 14, 2015. Named in honor of Louis Diggs and Lenwood Johnson, the museum is located in the former Cherry Hill [[A.U.M.P. Church|African Union Methodist Protestant Church]] in [[Granite, Maryland]]. The church building, whose origins date to the 1880s and which was abandoned after the last congregation left during the 1970s, was restored through state funding and community support under Digg's leadership.<ref>{{cite news|last1=Wood|first1=Pamela|title=Rescued From Ruin, Tiny African-American Church Becomes a Museum|url=http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/bs-md-co-granite-church-20150612-story.html|newspaper=The Baltimore Sun|date=June 12, 2015}}</ref> *In 2016, Baltimore County established the Louis S. Diggs Award in honor of his work preserving African American History in Baltimore County. The award is given annually during [[Black History Month]].<ref>{{cite web|title=Kamenetz Announces the Louis S. Diggs Award|url=https://www.baltimorecountymd.gov/news/baltimorecountynow/keyword/african-american|website=Baltimore County News|publisher=Baltimore County Government|accessdate=19 April 2016}}</ref> ==Publications== *''It all started on Winters Lane: A History of the Black Community in Catonsville, Maryland'', Linda D. Stone, editor. Uptown Press, Baltimore, MD, 1995. {{ISBN|978-097957050-6}} *''Holding on to Their Heritage'', Francis Martin Cockey, editor. Uptown Press, Baltimore, MD, 1996. {{ISBN|0-9663419-8-8}} *''In Our Voices: A Folk History in Legacy'', Ann V. Augustine, editor. Uptown Press, Baltimore, MD, 1998. {{ISBN|978-097957051-3}} *''Since the Beginning: African-American communities in Towson'', Uptown Press, Baltimore, MD, 2000. {{ISBN|0-9663419-5-3}}. *''Surviving in America: Histories of 7 Black communities in Baltimore County, Maryland: Oakland Park Road, Relay, Oella, Halethorpe, Granite, Church Lane, Winands Road'', With Evangeline A. Wheeler. Uptown Press, Baltimore, MD, 2002. {{ISBN|0-9663419-6-1}}. *''From the Meadows to the Point: The Histories of the African-American community of Turner Station'', Evangeline A. Wheeler editor. Uptown Press, Baltimore, MD, 2003. {{ISBN|0-9663419-1-0}}. *''North County: The History of African-American Settlements in Northern Baltimore County's Scenic Horse Country'', Shirley Washington Diggs, editor, Uptown Press, Baltimore, MD, 2005. *''Our Struggles: Historic African-American Communities in Southeast Baltimore County, Maryland: Overlea, Back River Neck Road, Goodwood/Hyde Park, Hopewell Avenue, Norris Lane, Edgemere'' Uptown Press, Baltimore, MD, 2007. {{ISBN|978-097957053-7}}. *''Forgotten Road Warriors: The History of an all African-American Maryland National Guard Unit from Baltimore, Maryland'', Uptown Press, Baltimore, MD, 2005. {{ISBN|0-9663419-4-5}}. *''African-Americans from Baltimore County who served in the Civil War, Maryland's Six Regiments of Slaves'', Shirley C. Diggs, editor, Baltimore, MD, 2014. {{ISBN|978-1935911166}} ==References== {{reflist}} ==External links== * [http://www.koreanwar.org/html/units/726trans.htm 726th Transportation Truck Company] {{authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Diggs, Louis S.}} [[Category:1932 births]] [[Category:2022 deaths]] [[Category:African-American historians]] [[Category:21st-century American historians]] [[Category:American male non-fiction writers]] [[Category:African Americans in the Korean War]] [[Category:Historians of the American Civil War]] [[Category:University of Baltimore alumni]] [[Category:People from Catonsville, Maryland]] [[Category:Historians from Maryland]] [[Category:21st-century American male writers]] [[Category:21st-century African-American writers]] [[Category:African-American male writers]] [[Category:21st-century African-American academics]] [[Category:21st-century American academics]]
1,213,399,830
[]
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# London Square London Square (Hebrew: כיכר לונדון, Kikar London) is a public plaza in the center of Tel Aviv, Israel located at the western end of Bograshov Street, between Herbert Samuel Promenade ("The Promenade") and Hayarkon Street. The square was named in honor of the citizens of London, England who withstood the bombing of the United Kingdom by Nazi Germany during World War II—The Blitz. ## History The square is named after London, the capital of England and the United Kingdom, and was inaugurated on May 24, 1942. The square was named as a tribute and honor to the resilience of the British people and the residents of London during the heavy bombings by Germany during World War II (The Blitz). In April 2000, a project began to develop the garden into an urban square, with an underground parking lot containing 500 parking spaces. Additionally, a gas station was built at the entrance to the parking lot and a café on the upper level. The project was completed in July 2003. ## Design The area of the square is about 10 dunams, redesigned by landscape architect Bruce Levin. The square is built on different levels (due to slight elevation differences between Herbert Samuel Promenade along the promenade and Hayarkon Street, which is a few meters higher). At the center of the square stands a monument in the shape of an immigrant ship, commemorating the struggle of the Aliyah Bet against British rule. The monument includes explanations and impressions alongside pictures about the history of the Aliyah Bet, the hardships faced by the immigrants, and their ships. Additionally, six plaques are placed in the square with the names of all the immigrant ships. In the building with the rounded balcony that borders the square to the south, the Pilz Café was located (as of 2012, it is a McDonald's branch). ## Gallery - London Square during its establishment, 1941 - London Square in 1942 - London Square in 1942 - The six plaques with the names of the immigrant ships - London Square - The square from Hayarkon Street
enwiki/11805971
enwiki
11,805,971
London Square
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/London_Square
2025-03-07T09:02:23Z
en
Q2909214
49,031
{{Short description|Square in Tel Aviv, Israel}} [[File:London Sqaure color.jpg|thumb|right|A monument in London Square]] {{for|squares in London|Squares in London}} '''London Square''' ({{langx|he|כיכר לונדון}}, ''Kikar London'') is a public plaza in the center of [[Tel Aviv]], [[Israel]] located at the western end of Bograshov Street, between [[Tel Aviv Promenade|Herbert Samuel Promenade]] ("The Promenade") and [[Hayarkon Street]]. The square was named in honor of the citizens of London, England who withstood the bombing of the [[United Kingdom]] by [[Nazi Germany]] during [[World War II]]—[[The Blitz]]. [[File:London Square BW.jpg|thumb|upright|An older photo of London Square]] == History == The square is named after [[London]], the capital of [[England]] and the [[United Kingdom]], and was inaugurated on May 24, 1942. The square was named as a tribute and honor to the resilience of the British people and the residents of London during the heavy bombings by Germany during [[World War II]] (The Blitz). In April 2000, a project began to develop the garden into an urban square, with an underground parking lot containing 500 parking spaces. Additionally, a gas station was built at the entrance to the parking lot and a café on the upper level. The project was completed in July 2003.<ref>{{cite news |title=Stage A of the renovation of London Garden on Tel Aviv's promenade: parking lot and gas station |author=Elazar Levin |work=Globes |date=April 9, 2000 |url=https://www.globes.co.il/news/article.aspx?did=438115}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=HGI won the tender to build the London Garden complex in Tel Aviv for 25 million shekels |work=Globes |date=October 14, 2001 |url=https://www.globes.co.il/news/article.aspx?did=527043}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=Tel Aviv: "London Garden" parking lot opens for 50 million shekels |author=Sharon Kadmi |work=Globes |date=July 13, 2003 |url=https://www.globes.co.il/news/article.aspx?did=705127}}</ref> == Design == The area of the square is about 10 dunams, redesigned by landscape architect Bruce Levin. The square is built on different levels (due to slight elevation differences between Herbert Samuel Promenade along the promenade and Hayarkon Street, which is a few meters higher). At the center of the square stands a monument in the shape of an immigrant ship, commemorating the struggle of the [[Aliyah Bet]] against British rule. The monument includes explanations and impressions alongside pictures about the history of the Aliyah Bet, the hardships faced by the immigrants, and their ships. Additionally, six plaques are placed in the square with the names of all the immigrant ships. In the building with the rounded balcony that borders the square to the south, the Pilz Café was located (as of 2012, it is a McDonald's branch). == Gallery == <gallery> File:London Square BW.jpg|London Square during its establishment, 1941 File:Buffs, Company 16 באפס, פלוגה 16-ZKlugerPhotos-00132it-0907170685126bce.jpg|London Square in 1942 File:אוסף צילומים של הצלם זולטן קלוגר טווח מספרי התשלילים 17387 - 18742-ZKlugerPhotos-00132it.jpeg|London Square in 1942 File:Londino024.jpg|The six plaques with the names of the immigrant ships File:London Sqaure color.jpg|London Square File:Londino030.jpg|The square from Hayarkon Street </gallery> == References == {{reflist}} == External links == * {{Commonscat inline|London Square}} * [https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/culture/1.920603 The Blitz on London Garden] by Esther Zandberg, ''Haaretz'', October 29, 2003 {{coord|32|04|42|N|34|46|2|E|type:landmark|display=title}} {{Squares in Tel Aviv}} [[Category:Squares in Tel Aviv]] {{Israel-geo-stub}} {{TelAviv-stub}} ---- ''This article was translated from [[:he:%D7%9B%D7%99%D7%9B%D7%A8 %D7%9C%D7%95%D7%A0%D7%93%D7%95%D7%9F|the Hebrew Wikipedia]].''
1,279,236,421
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# Paolo Tosato Paolo Tosato (born 8 September 1972) is an Italian politician. He has been Senator in the Italian Senate since 2014. In 2016 Tosato presented a resolution against sanctions imposed on Russia. He was listed as a recipient of thousands of euros for passing the resolution in leaked emails of Russia's International Agency for Current Policy. He strongly refuted the accusation. Similar resolutions, have previously been presented in other circumstances by other politicians as in the Regional Council of Veneto.
enwiki/70455462
enwiki
70,455,462
Paolo Tosato
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paolo_Tosato
2024-11-23T01:40:42Z
en
Q17308415
35,738
{{short description|Italian politician}} {{Multiple issues| {{BLP sources|date=April 2022}} {{Expand Italian|topic=bio|date=April 2022}} }} {{Use dmy dates|date=May 2022}} [[File:Paolo Tosato datisenato 2018.jpg|thumb|Paolo Tosato in 2018.]] '''Paolo Tosato''' (born 8 September 1972) is an Italian politician. He has been Senator in the [[Italian Senate]] since 2014.<ref>{{Cite web |title=senato.it - Scheda di attività di Paolo TOSATO - XVII Legislatura |url=https://www.senato.it/leg/17/BGT/Schede/Attsen/00030915.htm |access-date=2022-04-03 |website=www.senato.it}}</ref> In 2016 Tosato presented a resolution against sanctions imposed on Russia. He was listed as a recipient of thousands of euros for passing the resolution in leaked emails of Russia's International Agency for Current Policy.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Tkachenko |first=Martin Laine (Eesti Ekspress), Cecilia Anesi (IrpiMedia), Lorenzo Bagnoli (IrpiMedia), and Tatiana |title=Kremlin-Linked Group Arranged Payments to European Politicians to Support Russia's Annexation of Crimea |url=https://www.occrp.org/en/investigations/kremlin-linked-group-arranged-payments-to-european-politicians-to-support-russias-annexation-of-crimea |access-date=2023-02-04 |website=OCCRP |language=en}}</ref> He strongly refuted the accusation.<ref>{{Cite web |title=unacceptable calumny |url=https://www.larena.it/territori/citta/l-espresso-interrogazione-sulla-russia-di-tosato-pagata-20mila-euro-e-la-lega-querela-chiederemo-1-milione-1.9304782 |access-date=2023-02-07 |website=larena.it - Inaccettabili falsità: e il senatore veronese Paolo Tosato e la Lega querelano L'Espresso.}}</ref> Similar resolutions, have previously been presented in other circumstances by other politicians as in the Regional Council of Veneto. == References == {{reflist}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Tosato, Paolo}} [[Category:Living people]] [[Category:1972 births]] [[Category:20th-century Italian politicians]] [[Category:Senators of Legislature XVII of Italy]] [[Category:Senators of Legislature XVIII of Italy]] [[Category:Lega Nord politicians]] [[Category:Members of the Regional Council of Veneto]] {{Veneto-politician-stub}}
1,259,042,550
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# Richard Hawkins (artist) Richard Hawkins (born 1961 in Mexia, Texas) is an American artist. He lives and works in Los Angeles. His works are held by museums including the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Museum of Modern Art, and the Art Institute of Chicago. He received a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the University of Texas, Austin in 1984 and a Master of Fine Arts from the California Institute of the Arts (Cal Arts) in 1988. After graduating from Cal Arts, Hawkins worked for a time as a short story writer. Hawkins' art largely consists of sculpture and collage. His works combine "ubiquitous pop-culture images and objects with arcane references and quotes"; frequent themes include "current celebrities, literary lions of yesteryear, haunted houses, Asian sex tourism, Greek and Roman statuary and the American Indian experience". He is gay, and his sexuality also informs his artwork. According to art historian Richard Meyer, Hawkins' "mash-up [of] avant-garde, kitsch and kink", including the use of traditionally feminine consumer items, "challenge[s] us to rethink our hierarchies of value and visual pleasure." Hawkins was instrumental in reviving the work of the late artist Tony Greene, including co-curating (with Catherine Opie) an exhibition of Greene's work that was included in the 2014 Whitney Biennial exhibition in New York. ## Exhibitions - "focus: Richard Hawkins: Third Mind", Art Institute of Chicago (2010)[10] - "Third Mind", Hammer Museum, Los Angeles (2011)[10] - "Hijikata Twist", Tate Liverpool (2014)[11]
enwiki/42158188
enwiki
42,158,188
Richard Hawkins (artist)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Hawkins_(artist)
2024-09-24T18:39:12Z
en
Q4500460
51,728
{{Short description|American artist}} '''Richard Hawkins''' (born 1961 in [[Mexia]], [[Texas]]) is an American artist.<ref name=whitney /> He lives and works in [[Los Angeles]].<ref name=whitney>{{cite web|title=Richard Hawkins|url=http://whitney.org/Exhibitions/2012Biennial/RichardHawkins|publisher=[[Whitney Museum of Art]]|accessdate=9 March 2014}}</ref> His works are held by museums including the [[Whitney Museum of American Art]],<ref name=whitney2>{{cite web|title=All Artists in the Collection: H|url=http://whitney.org/Collection/AllArtists?name=H|publisher=[[Whitney Museum of American Art]]|accessdate=9 March 2014|url-status=dead|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20131205153932/http://whitney.org/Collection/AllArtists?name=H|archivedate=5 December 2013}}</ref><ref name=whitney /> the [[Museum of Modern Art]],<ref name=moma>{{cite web|title=Richard Hawkins (American, born 1961)|url=http://www.moma.org/collection/artist.php?artist_id=28652|publisher=[[Museum of Modern Art]]|accessdate=9 March 2014}}</ref> and the [[Art Institute of Chicago]].<ref>{{cite news|title=Hawkins, Richard|url=http://www.artic.edu/aic/collections/artwork/artist/Hawkins,+Richard|newspaper=[[Art Institute of Chicago]]|accessdate=9 March 2014}}</ref> He received a [[Bachelor of Fine Arts]] from the [[University of Texas, Austin]] in 1984 and a [[Master of Fine Arts]] from the [[California Institute of the Arts]] (Cal Arts) in 1988.<ref>{{cite book |title=Gay & Lesbian Almanac |date=1998 |publisher=St. James Press |location=Detroit |isbn=9781558623583 |page=[https://archive.org/details/stjamespressgayl00schl/page/516 516] |editor=Neil Schlager |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/stjamespressgayl00schl/page/516 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book|title=Red eye: L.A. artists from the Rubell Family Collection, December 6, 2006-May 31, 2007.|date=2007|publisher=[[Rubell Museum]]|location=Miami, Fla.|isbn=9780978988876|editor=Mark Coetzee}}</ref> After graduating from Cal Arts, Hawkins worked for a time as a short story writer.<ref name=latimes/> Hawkins' art largely consists of sculpture and collage.<ref name=int>{{cite news|title=In Conversation with Richard Hawkins|url=http://www.gayletter.com/in-conversation-with-richard-hawkins/|accessdate=9 March 2014|newspaper=[[Gayletter]]}}</ref> His works combine "ubiquitous pop-culture images and objects with arcane references and quotes"; frequent themes include "current celebrities, literary lions of yesteryear, haunted houses, Asian sex tourism, Greek and Roman statuary and the American Indian experience".<ref name=latimes/> He is gay, and his sexuality also informs his artwork.<ref name=latimes>{{cite news|last=Young|first=Paul|title=Richard Hawkins: The Beautiful and the Damned|url=http://www.latimesmagazine.com/2011/02/the-beautiful-and-the-damned.html|newspaper=[[LA Times Magazine]]|date=February 2011}}</ref><ref name=int/> According to art historian [[Richard Meyer (academic)|Richard Meyer]], Hawkins' "mash-up [of] avant-garde, kitsch and kink", including the use of traditionally feminine consumer items, "challenge[s] us to rethink our hierarchies of value and visual pleasure."<ref name=latimes/> Hawkins was instrumental in reviving the work of the late artist [[Tony Greene (artist)|Tony Greene]], including co-curating (with [[Catherine Opie]]) an exhibition of Greene's work that was included in the 2014 [[Whitney Biennial]] exhibition in New York.<ref>Whitney Museum of American Art, "Tony Greene curated by Richard Hawkins and Catherine Opie" [http://whitney.org/Exhibitions/2014Biennial/TonyGreeneCuratedByRichardHawkinsAndCatherineOpie]</ref> == Exhibitions == *"focus: Richard Hawkins: Third Mind", [[Art Institute of Chicago]] (2010)<ref name=corvi/> *"Third Mind", [[Hammer Museum]], Los Angeles (2011)<ref name=corvi>{{cite web|url=http://www.corvi-mora.com/biography/richardhawkins/|title=Corvi Mora - Richard Hawkins|publisher=}}</ref> *"Hijikata Twist", [[Tate Liverpool]] (2014)<ref>{{cite web|title=Richard Hawkins: Hijikata Twist|url=http://www.tate.org.uk/about/press-office/press-releases/richard-hawkins-hijikata-twist|publisher=[[Tate Liverpool]]|accessdate=March 9, 2014|date=February 20, 2014}}</ref> ==References== {{reflist}} ==Further reading== *{{cite book|last=Dorin|first=Lisa|title=Richard Hawkins : third mind|date=2010|publisher=Art Institute of Chicago|location=Chicago|isbn=9780300166255|author2=George Baker |author3=Ali Subotnick }} *{{cite book|last=Müller|first=Christopher|title=Richard Hawkins. Of two minds, simultaneously.|date=2008|publisher=Verlag der Buchhandlung|location=Cologne|isbn=9783865604255}} {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Hawkins, Richard}} [[Category:1961 births]] [[Category:Living people]] [[Category:American LGBTQ artists]] [[Category:People from Mexia, Texas]] [[Category:Artists from Los Angeles]] [[Category:University of Texas at Austin alumni]] [[Category:California Institute of the Arts alumni]] [[Category:Artists from Texas]] [[Category:LGBTQ people from Texas]] [[Category:LGBTQ people from California]] [[Category:20th-century American male artists]] [[Category:21st-century American male artists]]
1,247,533,937
[]
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# Marcelino Vespeira Marcelino Macedo Vespeira (Samouco, Alcochete, 9 September 1925- Lisbon, 22 February 2002) was a Portuguese painter and graphic artist. A leading figure in the surrealist movement in Portugal, Vespeira built a long and diversified work. It emerged in the mid-1940s in the context of Portuguese neo-realism, it reached a high point in the surrealist and intensely personal works made between 1948 and 1952; after that he went through abstractionism to return, in more recent decades, to the themes and forms from his surrealist period. ## Life and career He took the course at the Escola de Artes Decorativas António Arroio, in Lisbon, and attended the 1st year of Architecture at the School of Fine Arts in Lisbon. After that he started working in graphic arts; he was invited by painter Bernardo Marques to collaborate in the magazine Colóquio/Artes, of which he became graphic director in 1962. An oppositionist to the far-right New State regime, in the early period of his work he was linked to neo-realism, creating works such as Apertado pela Fome (Tightened by Hunger) (1945), with which he participated in the 1st General Exhibition of Plastic Arts of the SNBA, in 1946. Although neo-realistic in the theme, in works like this "Vespeira already shows a formal language that indicates surrealizing atmospheres". In the following year he was one of the founders of the Surrealist Group of Lisbon, together with António Pedro, Cândido Costa Pinto, Fernando de Azevedo, Mário Cesariny and José-Augusto França, among others. His work then quickly evolved into a coherent and personal language. In 1949 he participated in the group's first and only exhibition, where two collaborative works (Cadavre Exquis) were presented: in one, he worked with Fernando de Azevedo; in the other, with large dimensions, with fellow painters António Pedro, Moniz Pereira, António Domingues and Fernando de Azevedo. Marked by an accentuated erotic character, endowed with great formal and chromatic sensuality, Vespeira's painting uses a lexicon of contrasting, round, pointed shapes, which allow him to cross metamorphoses of the female body or explicit sexual allusions with evocations of the animal world and vegetable. According to Emília Ferreira: "In a game of themes evoking ritualizing situations, we will see the emergence of the bodies of women with large round breasts, vulvas, erect phalluses, birds, flowers, horns ...", like in his famous paintings Parque dos Insultos (Park of the Insults) (1949) or Simumis (1949). From the mid-1950s, his work changed once again. Vespeira strives for abstraction, first in a geometric style that he quickly left, then into a lyrical option closer to gestural informalism. He also started to name the tables with a simple sequential numbering. Often dominated by reds, its palette thickens; later, in the 1960s, the composition became more fluid, formally and chromatically. At the invitation of the painter Lino António, his former teacher, Vespeira taught at the António Arroio School but had to leave due to pressure from the Ministry of Education. In the following decade Vespeira re-approaches the original surrealist universe (in the 1980s he also uses collage), in works where he relapses on ancient themes and recovers "the sensual view of the world, in its familiar hybridism", crossing the contours of the landscape and the music with the lines of the female body. For a period he was the designer of the arts and letters magazine Colóquio, Revista de Artes e Letras, published by the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation. His long history of work in graphic arts and resistance to the Estado Novo continued after the overthrow of the dictatorship on April 25, 1974, leading him to actively collaborate with the Armed Forces Movement. Vespeira was the author of the well-known symbol of the MFA.
enwiki/8549893
enwiki
8,549,893
Marcelino Vespeira
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marcelino_Vespeira
2024-11-08T23:51:39Z
en
Q6756327
23,873
{{Short description|Portuguese painter and graphic artist}} '''Marcelino Macedo Vespeira''' (Samouco, [[Alcochete]], 9 September 1925- [[Lisbon]], 22 February 2002) was a Portuguese painter and graphic artist. A leading figure in the surrealist movement in [[Portugal]], Vespeira built a long and diversified work. It emerged in the mid-1940s in the context of Portuguese neo-realism, it reached a high point in the surrealist and intensely personal works made between 1948 and 1952; after that he went through abstractionism to return, in more recent decades, to the themes and forms from his surrealist period. ==Life and career== He took the course at the Escola de Artes Decorativas António Arroio, in [[Lisbon]], and attended the 1st year of Architecture at the School of Fine Arts in Lisbon. After that he started working in graphic arts; he was invited by painter [[Bernardo Marques]] to collaborate in the magazine Colóquio/Artes, of which he became graphic director in 1962.<ref>Ferreira, Emília - "Marcelino Vespeira". In: A.A.V.V. – ''Centro de Arte Moderna José de Azeredo Perdigão: Roteiro da coleção''. Lisbon, Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, 2004, p. 90 (Portuguese)</ref> An oppositionist to the far-right [[Estado Novo (Portugal)|New State]] regime, in the early period of his work he was linked to [[socialist realism|neo-realism]], creating works such as ''Apertado pela Fome'' (''Tightened by Hunger'') (1945), with which he participated in the 1st General Exhibition of Plastic Arts of the SNBA, in 1946. Although neo-realistic in the theme, in works like this "Vespeira already shows a formal language that indicates surrealizing atmospheres".<ref>A.A.V.V. – ''Os anos 40 na arte portuguesa'', tomo 1. Lisboa, Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, 1982, p. 90 (Portuguese)</ref> In the following year he was one of the founders of the Surrealist Group of Lisbon, together with [[António Pedro]], Cândido Costa Pinto, Fernando de Azevedo, [[Mário Cesariny]] and José-Augusto França, among others. His work then quickly evolved into a coherent and personal language.<ref>França, José-Augusto, ''A Arte em Portugal no Século XX''. Lisbon, Livraria Bertrand, 1991, p. 390 (Portuguese)</ref> In 1949 he participated in the group's first and only exhibition, where two collaborative works (''Cadavre Exquis'') were presented: in one, he worked with Fernando de Azevedo; in the other, with large dimensions, with fellow painters António Pedro, Moniz Pereira, António Domingues and Fernando de Azevedo. Marked by an accentuated erotic character, endowed with great formal and chromatic sensuality, Vespeira's painting uses a lexicon of contrasting, round, pointed shapes, which allow him to cross metamorphoses of the female body or explicit sexual allusions with evocations of the animal world and vegetable. According to Emília Ferreira: "In a game of themes evoking ritualizing situations, we will see the emergence of the bodies of women with large round breasts, vulvas, erect phalluses, birds, flowers, horns ...", like in his famous paintings ''Parque dos Insultos'' (''Park of the Insults'') (1949) or ''Simumis'' (1949).<ref>A.A.V.V. – ''Os anos 40 na arte portuguesa'', tomo 1. Lisboa, Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, 1982, p. 90 (Portuguese)</ref> From the mid-1950s, his work changed once again. Vespeira strives for abstraction, first in a geometric style that he quickly left, then into a lyrical option closer to gestural informalism. He also started to name the tables with a simple sequential numbering.<ref>Silva, Raquel Henriques da, "Marcelino Vespeira". In: A.A.V.V. – 50 Anos de Arte Portuguesa. Lisbon, Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, 2007 (Portuguese)</ref> Often dominated by reds, its palette thickens; later, in the 1960s, the composition became more fluid, formally and chromatically. At the invitation of the painter Lino António, his former teacher, Vespeira taught at the António Arroio School but had to leave due to pressure from the Ministry of Education. In the following decade Vespeira re-approaches the original surrealist universe (in the 1980s he also uses collage), in works where he relapses on ancient themes and recovers "the sensual view of the world, in its familiar hybridism", crossing the contours of the landscape and the music with the lines of the female body. For a period he was the designer of the arts and letters magazine ''[[Colóquio]], Revista de Artes e Letras'', published by the [[Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation]].<ref>Ferreira, Emília - "Marcelino Vespeira". In: A.A.V.V. – ''Centro de Arte Moderna José de Azeredo Perdigão: Roteiro da coleção''. Lisbon, Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, 2004, p. 90(Portuguese)</ref> His long history of work in graphic arts and resistance to the Estado Novo continued after the overthrow of the dictatorship on April 25, 1974, leading him to actively collaborate with the [[Armed Forces Movement]]. Vespeira was the author of the well-known symbol of the MFA. ==References== {{reflist}} {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Vespeira, Marcelino}} [[Category:1925 births]] [[Category:2002 deaths]] [[Category:Portuguese surrealist artists]] [[Category:20th-century Portuguese painters]] [[Category:20th-century Portuguese male artists]] [[Category:Portuguese male painters]] [[Category:People from Alcochete]]
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# Koubewel Koundia Koubewel Koundia is a rural commune in the Cercle of Douentza in the Mopti Region of Mali. The commune contains 14 villages and had a population of 13,529 in the 2009 census. The main village (chef-lieu) is Koubewel.
enwiki/21670626
enwiki
21,670,626
Koubewel Koundia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Koubewel_Koundia
2022-06-28T20:14:13Z
en
Q1763942
63,192
{{Infobox settlement <!-- Basic info ----------------> |name = Koubewel Koundia |other_name = |native_name = <!-- for cities whose native name is not in English --> |nickname = |settlement_type =[[Communes of Mali|Commune]] and village |motto = <!-- images and maps -----------> |image_skyline = |imagesize = |image_caption = |image_flag = |flag_size = |image_seal = |seal_size = |image_shield = |shield_size = |image_map = |mapsize = |map_caption = |pushpin_map =Mali<!-- the name of a location map as per http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Location_map --> |pushpin_label_position =bottom |pushpin_mapsize =300 |pushpin_map_caption =Location in Mali <!-- Location ------------------> |subdivision_type = Country |subdivision_name = {{flag|Mali}} |subdivision_type1 = [[Regions of Mali|Region]] |subdivision_name1 = [[Mopti Region]] |subdivision_type2 =[[Cercles of Mali|Cercle]] |subdivision_name2 = [[Douentza Cercle]] |subdivision_type3 = |subdivision_name3 = |<!-- Politics -----------------> |government_footnotes = |government_type = |leader_title = |leader_name = |leader_title1 = <!-- for places with, say, both a mayor and a city manager --> |leader_name1 = |established_title = <!-- Settled --> |established_date = <!-- Area ---------------------> |area_magnitude = |unit_pref =<!--Enter: Imperial, if Imperial (metric) is desired--> |area_footnotes = |area_total_km2 = <!-- ALL fields dealing with a measurements are subject to automatic unit conversion--> |area_land_km2 = <!--See table @ Template:Infobox Settlement for details on automatic unit conversion--> <!-- Population -----------------------> |population_as_of =2009 census |population_footnotes =<ref name=pop2009>{{citation |url=http://instat.gov.ml/documentation/mopti.pdf |publisher=République de Mali: Institut National de la Statistique |title=Resultats Provisoires RGPH 2009 (Région de Mopti) |language=French |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120727120129/http://instat.gov.ml/documentation/mopti.pdf |archivedate=July 27, 2012 }}.</ref> |population_note = |population_total =13529 |population_density_km2 = |population_density_sq_mi = |population_metro = |population_density_metro_km2 = |population_density_metro_sq_mi = |population_blank1_title =Ethnicities |population_blank1 = |population_density_blank1_km2 = |population_density_blank1_sq_mi = <!-- General information ---------------> |timezone =[[GMT]] |utc_offset = +0 |timezone_DST = |utc_offset_DST = |coordinates = {{coord|14|59|10|N|3|2|2|W|region:ML_type:city|display=inline,title}} |elevation_footnotes = <!--for references: use <ref> </ref> tags--> |elevation_m = |elevation_ft = <!-- Area/postal codes & others --------> |postal_code_type = <!-- enter ZIP code, Postcode, Post code, Postal code... --> |postal_code = |area_code = |blank_name = |blank_info = |blank1_name = |blank1_info = |website = |footnotes = }} ''' Koubewel Koundia ''' is a [[Communes of Mali|rural commune]] in the [[Douentza Cercle|Cercle of Douentza]] in the [[Mopti Region]] of [[Mali]]. The commune contains 14 villages and had a population of 13,529 in the 2009 census. The main village (''[[chef-lieu]]'') is Koubewel. ==References== {{reflist}} ==External links== *{{citation | title=Plan de Sécurité Alimentaire Commune Rurale de Koubewel Koundia 2006-2010 | publisher=Commissariat à la Sécurité Alimentaire, République du Mali, USAID-Mali | year=2006 | url= http://www.aec.msu.edu/fs2/mali_fd_strtgy/plans/mopti/douentza/psa_koubewel_koundia.pdf | language=French }}. *{{citation | title= Situation des points d'eau modernes au Mali en 2003: Koubewel Koundia | url=http://www.bndr-mali.org/bnn-mali/index.php?option=com_docman&task=doc_download&gid=635&Itemid=53 | publisher= Ministère des Mines, de l'Energie et de l'Eau, République du Mali | year=2003 | language=French}}. {{Communes of the Mopti Region}} [[Category:Communes of Mopti Region]] {{Mopti-geo-stub}}
1,095,515,967
[{"title": "Koubewel Koundia", "data": {"Country": "Mali", "Region": "Mopti Region", "Cercle": "Douentza Cercle"}}, {"title": "Population (2009 census)", "data": {"\u2022 Total": "13,529", "Time zone": "UTC+0 (GMT)"}}]
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# Mohammad Naveed Mohammad Naveed (born 3 June 1987) is a cricketer who played for the United Arab Emirates national cricket team. He made his One Day International (ODI) debut against Afghanistan on 2 May 2014 and his Twenty20 International (T20I) debut against Scotland in the 2015 ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier tournament on 9 July 2015. In January 2019, he captained the UAE for the first time in an ODI, in their home series against Nepal. In March 2021, Naveed was found guilty of corruption and banned from all cricket for eight years. ## Career In January 2018, Naveed was named in the UAE squad for the 2018 ICC World Cricket League Division Two tournament. On 4 March 2018, in the UAE's match against Papua New Guinea in the 2018 Cricket World Cup Qualifier, Naveed took his first five-wicket haul in an ODI. The UAE won the match by 56 runs, and Naveed was named the man of the match. On 22 March 2018, in the UAE's final match of the Cricket World Cup Qualifier, against Zimbabwe, Naveed took three wickets for 40 runs, and was again named the man of the match. On 3 June 2018, he was selected to play for the Toronto Nationals in the players' draft for the inaugural edition of the Global T20 Canada tournament. He was part of the United Arab Emirates squad for the 2018 Asia Cup Qualifier tournament. In September 2018, he was named in Kandahar's squad in the first edition of the Afghanistan Premier League tournament. In December 2018, he was named in the United Arab Emirates' team for the 2018 ACC Emerging Teams Asia Cup. In January 2019, he was named as the captain of the United Arab Emirates' ODI squad for their series against Nepal. This was after the UAE's regular captain, Rohan Mustafa, was suspended by the Emirates Cricket Board (ECB) for breaching the ECB's Player's Code of Conduct. In June 2019, he was selected to play for the Montreal Tigers franchise team in the 2019 Global T20 Canada tournament. ### Ban from cricket In September 2019, he was named as the captain of the United Arab Emirates' squad for the 2019 ICC T20 World Cup Qualifier tournament in the UAE. However, the following month Naveed was withdrawn from the UAE's squad, with Ahmed Raza named as captain in his place. Two days before the start of the tournament, the ICC confirmed that Naveed had been suspended, after breaching cricket's anti-corruption rules. In February 2020, Naveed said that he wanted to clear his name, but could face a ban of up to ten years if the corruption charges are proven. In January 2021, the ICC found him guilty of corruption in relation to attempted match-fixing. In March 2021, Naveed was given an eight-year ban from playing ICC cricket, backdated to 16 October 2019, after being found guilty on charges of corruption. In response to the ban, Naveed issued a statement saying that he was not involved in match-fixing and his only mistake was not reporting a corrupt approach.
enwiki/44534542
enwiki
44,534,542
Mohammad Naveed
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mohammad_Naveed
2025-02-01T06:10:02Z
en
Q18637708
104,191
{{short description|Emirati cricketer (born 1987)}} {{Use dmy dates|date=June 2019}} {{Infobox cricketer | name = Mohammad Naveed | image = | country = United Arab Emirates | fullname = Mohammad Naveed | birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1987|6|3|df=yes}} | birth_place = [[Dubai]], United Arab Emirates | death_date = | death_place = | heightft = | heightinch = | heightm = | batting = Right-handed | bowling = Right-arm [[Fast bowling|medium]] | role = [[Bowling (cricket)|Bowler]] | international = true | internationalspan = 2014–2019 | odidebutdate = 2 May | odidebutyear = 2014 | odidebutagainst = Afghanistan | odicap = 51 | lastodidate = 16 April | lastodiyear = 2019 | lastodiagainst = Zimbabwe | T20Idebutdate = 9 July | T20Idebutyear = 2015 | T20Idebutagainst = Scotland | T20Icap = 15 | lastT20Idate = 6 August | lastT20Iyear = 2019 | lastT20Iagainst = Netherlands | columns = 4 | column1 = [[One Day International|ODI]] | matches1 = 39 | runs1 = 397 | bat avg1 = 16.54 | 100s/50s1 = 0/0 | top score1 = 45 | deliveries1 = 1,938 | wickets1 = 53 | bowl avg1 = 33.15 | fivefor1 = 1 | tenfor1 = 0 | best bowling1 = 5/28 | catches/stumpings1 = 6/– | column2 = [[Twenty20 International|T20I]] | matches2 = 31 | runs2 = 176 | bat avg2 = 12.57 | 100s/50s2 = 0/0 | top score2 = 27[[Not out|*]] | deliveries2 = 688 | wickets2 = 37 | bowl avg2 = 19.70 | fivefor2 = 0 | tenfor2 = 0 | best bowling2 = 3/14 | catches/stumpings2 = 4/– | column3 = [[First-class cricket|FC]] | matches3 = 7 | runs3 = 29 | bat avg3 = 4.14 | 100s/50s3 = 0/0 | top score3 = 17 | deliveries3 = 1,012 | wickets3 = 16 | bowl avg3 = 35.25 | fivefor3 = 0 | tenfor3 = 0 | best bowling3 = 4/78 | catches/stumpings3 = 2/– | column4 = [[List A cricket|LA]] | matches4 = 80 | runs4 = 654 | bat avg4 = 14.53 | 100s/50s4 = 0/1 | top score4 = 56 | deliveries4 = 3,878 | wickets4 = 114 | bowl avg4 = 28.06 | fivefor4 = 1 | tenfor4 = 0 | best bowling4 = 5/28 | catches/stumpings4 = 11/– | date = 1 October 2021 | source = http://www.espncricinfo.com/ci/content/player/533862.html Cricinfo }} '''Mohammad Naveed''' (born 3 June 1987) is a [[cricket]]er who played for the [[United Arab Emirates national cricket team]].<ref name="bio">{{cite web |url=http://www.espncricinfo.com/ci/content/player/533862.html |title=Mohammad Naveed |access-date=28 November 2014 |work=ESPN Cricinfo}}</ref> He made his [[One Day International]] (ODI) debut against [[Afghanistan national cricket team|Afghanistan]] on 2 May 2014<ref name="ODI">{{cite web |url=http://www.espncricinfo.com/ci/engine/match/736503.html |title=4th Match, Asian Cricket Council Premier League at Kuala Lumpur, May 2 2014 |access-date=4 March 2018|work=ESPN Cricinfo}}</ref> and his [[Twenty20 International]] (T20I) debut against [[Scotland national cricket team|Scotland]] in the [[2015 ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier]] tournament on 9 July 2015.<ref name="T20I">{{cite web |url=http://www.espncricinfo.com/ci/engine/match/875457.html |title=ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier, 1st Match, Group B: Scotland v United Arab Emirates at Edinburgh, Jul 9, 2015 |access-date=9 July 2015|work=ESPN Cricinfo}}</ref> In January 2019, he captained the UAE for the first time in an ODI, in their home series [[Nepalese cricket team in the United Arab Emirates in 2018–19|against Nepal]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.thenational.ae/sport/cricket/uae-captain-mohammed-naveed-leads-by-example-in-three-wicket-win-over-nepal-1.817985 |title=UAE captain Mohammed Naveed leads by example in three-wicket win over Nepal |work=The National |access-date=25 January 2019}}</ref> In March 2021, Naveed was found guilty of corruption and banned from all cricket for eight years.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.icc-cricket.com/media-releases/2069768 |title=Naveed and Shaiman banned for eight years each under ICC Anti-Corruption Code |work=International Cricket Council |access-date=16 March 2021}}</ref> ==Career== In January 2018, Naveed was named in the UAE squad for the [[2018 ICC World Cricket League Division Two]] tournament.<ref name="UAEWCL2">{{Cite web|url=https://www.icc-cricket.com/media-releases/604943 |title=Six teams vying for the final two spots in ICC Cricket World Cup Qualifier 2018 |access-date=29 January 2018 |work=International Cricket Council}}</ref> On 4 March 2018, in the UAE's match against [[Papua New Guinea national cricket team|Papua New Guinea]] in the [[2018 Cricket World Cup Qualifier]], Naveed took his first five-wicket haul in an ODI.<ref name="Naveed5wkt">{{Cite web |url=https://www.thenational.ae/sport/cricket/naveed-battles-through-the-pain-to-help-uae-defeat-papua-new-guinea-in-world-cup-qualifier-opener-1.710057 |title=Naveed battles through the pain to help UAE defeat Papua New Guinea in World Cup Qualifier opener |access-date=4 March 2018 |work=The National}}</ref> The UAE won the match by 56 runs, and Naveed was named the man of the match.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.espncricinfo.com/series/8038/game/1134540/papua-new-guinea-vs-united-arab-emirates-group-a-world-cup-qualifier-2017-18|title=Group A, ICC World Cup Qualifiers at Harare, Mar 4 2018|publisher=ESPN Cricinfo|access-date=4 March 2018}}</ref> On 22 March 2018, in the UAE's final match of the Cricket World Cup Qualifier, against [[Zimbabwe national cricket team|Zimbabwe]], Naveed took three wickets for 40 runs, and was again named the man of the match.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.espncricinfo.com/series/8038/game/1133029/zimbabwe-vs-united-arab-emirates-32nd-match,-super-sixes-world-cup-qualifier-2017-18/|title=32nd Match, Super Sixes, ICC Cricket World Cup Qualifier at Harare, Mar 22 2018|publisher=ESPN Cricinfo|access-date=22 March 2018}}</ref> On 3 June 2018, he was selected to play for the [[Toronto Nationals (cricket)|Toronto Nationals]] in the players' draft for the [[2018 Global T20 Canada|inaugural edition]] of the [[Global T20 Canada]] tournament.<ref name="Squads1">{{cite web|url=https://www.sportskeeda.com/cricket/global-t20-canada-complete-squads |title=Global T20 Canada: Complete Squads |work=SportsKeeda |access-date=4 June 2018}}</ref><ref name="Squads2">{{cite web|url=https://www.crictracker.com/global-t20-canada-league-full-squads-announced/ |title=Global T20 Canada League – Full Squads announced |work=CricTracker |access-date=4 June 2018}}</ref> He was part of the United Arab Emirates squad for the [[2018 Asia Cup Qualifier]] tournament.<ref name="UAEACQ">{{cite web|url=http://www.emiratescricket.com/whatsnew/Emirates%20Cricket%20Board%20has%20officially%20announced%20the%20team%20that%20will%20represent%20the%20UAE%20in%20the%20Asia%20Cup%202018%20Qualifier. |title=Emirates Cricket Board officially announces team to represent the UAE in the Asia Cup Qualifiers 2018 |work=Emirates Cricket Board |access-date=18 August 2018}}</ref> In September 2018, he was named in Kandahar's squad in the [[2018–19 Afghanistan Premier League|first edition]] of the [[Afghanistan Premier League]] tournament.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.crictracker.com/afghanistan-premier-league-2018-all-you-need-to-know-from-the-player-draft/ |title=Afghanistan Premier League 2018 – All you need to know from the player draft |work=CricTracker |access-date=10 September 2018}}</ref> In December 2018, he was named in the United Arab Emirates' team for the [[2018 ACC Emerging Teams Asia Cup]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.emiratescricket.com/whatsnew/Emirates%20Cricket%20Board%20announce%20team%20that%20will%20represent%20the%20UAE%20in%20Asia%20Cricket's%20Emerging%20Teams%20Asia%20Cup%202018 |title=Emirates Cricket Board announce team that will represent the UAE in Asia Cricket's Emerging Teams Asia Cup 2018 |work=Emirates Cricket Board |access-date=3 December 2018}}</ref> In January 2019, he was named as the captain of the United Arab Emirates' ODI squad for their series [[Nepalese cricket team in the United Arab Emirates in 2018–19|against Nepal]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://emiratescricket.com/news/Emirates%20Cricket%20Board%20announces%20team%20to%20represent%20the%20UAE%20in%20upcoming%20ODI%20tri-match-series%20against%20Nepal |title=Emirates Cricket Board announces team to represent the UAE in upcoming ODI tri-match-series against Nepal |work=Emirates Cricket Board |access-date=10 January 2019}}</ref> This was after the UAE's regular captain, [[Rohan Mustafa]], was suspended by the [[Emirates Cricket Board]] (ECB) for breaching the ECB's Player's Code of Conduct.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.espncricinfo.com/story/_/id/25572741/rohan-mustafa,-ahmed-raza,-rameez-shahzad-suspended-eight-weeks-international-cricket |title=Three UAE players suspended for eight weeks from international cricket |work=ESPN Cricinfo |access-date=19 December 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://cricketingnepal.com/articles/463983/familiar-naveed-to-lead-uae-against-nepal-in-odi-twenty20-series |title=Familiar Naveed to lead UAE against Nepal in ODI, Twenty20 Series |work=Cricketing Nepal |access-date=10 January 2019}}</ref> In June 2019, he was selected to play for the Montreal Tigers franchise team in the [[2019 Global T20 Canada]] tournament.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.canadacricket.com/?p=12755 |title=Global T20 draft streamed live |work=Canada Cricket Online |access-date=20 June 2019}}</ref> ===Ban from cricket=== In September 2019, he was named as the captain of the United Arab Emirates' squad for the [[2019 ICC T20 World Cup Qualifier]] tournament in the UAE.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.emiratescricket.com/whatsnew/Emirates%20Cricket%20Board%20announces%20side%20to%20compete%20in%20the%20ICC%20Men%C3%A2%E2%82%AC%E2%84%A2s%20T20%20World%20Cup%20Qualifiers%202019 |title=Emirates Cricket Board announces side to compete in the ICC Men's T20 World Cup Qualifiers 2019 |work=Emirates Cricket Board |access-date=17 September 2019}}</ref> However, the following month Naveed was withdrawn from the UAE's squad, with [[Ahmed Raza (Emirati cricketer)|Ahmed Raza]] named as captain in his place.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.thenational.ae/sport/cricket/mohammed-naveed-replaced-as-uae-captain-withdrawn-from-t20-world-cup-qualifier-1.922602 |title=Mohammed Naveed replaced as UAE captain, withdrawn from T20 World Cup Qualifier |work=The National |access-date=13 October 2019}}</ref> Two days before the start of the tournament, the ICC confirmed that Naveed had been suspended, after breaching cricket's anti-corruption rules.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.icc-cricket.com/media-releases/1453760 |title=Three UAE players charged under anti-corruption code |work=International Cricket Council |access-date=16 October 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.espncricinfo.com/story/_/id/27858921/uae-mohammad-naveed,-shaiman-anwar,-qadeer-ahmed-suspended-corruption |title=UAE's Mohammad Naveed, Shaiman Anwar, Qadeer Ahmed suspended for corruption |work=ESPN Cricinfo |access-date=16 October 2019}}</ref> In February 2020, Naveed said that he wanted to clear his name, but could face a ban of up to ten years if the corruption charges are proven.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.thenational.ae/sport/cricket/mohammed-naveed-wants-to-clear-his-name-of-corruption-charges-accepts-uae-career-is-over-1.982172 |title=Mohammed Naveed wants to clear his name of corruption charges, accepts UAE career is over |work=The National |access-date=20 February 2020}}</ref> In January 2021, the ICC found him guilty of corruption in relation to attempted match-fixing.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.espncricinfo.com/story/uae-players-mohammad-naveed-and-shaiman-anwar-found-guilty-of-corruption-1249303 |title=Mohammad Naveed and Shaiman Anwar found guilty of corruption |work=ESPN Cricinfo |access-date=26 January 2021}}</ref> In March 2021, Naveed was given an eight-year ban from playing ICC cricket, backdated to 16 October 2019, after being found guilty on charges of corruption.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.espncricinfo.com/story/mohammad-naveed-and-shaiman-anwar-handed-eight-year-bans-for-corruption-by-the-icc-1254996 |title=Mohammad Naveed and Shaiman Anwar handed eight-year bans for corruption |work=ESPN Cricinfo |access-date=16 March 2021}}</ref> In response to the ban, Naveed issued a statement saying that he was not involved in match-fixing and his only mistake was not reporting a corrupt approach.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.espncricinfo.com/story/mohammad-naveed-former-uae-captain-vows-to-fight-to-clear-his-name-1255035 |title=Former UAE captain Mohammad Naveed vows to fight to clear his name |work=ESPN Cricinfo |access-date=16 March 2021}}</ref> ==References== {{reflist}} ==External links== * {{cricinfo|id=533862}} {{United Arab Emirates ODI Cricket Captains}} {{United Arab Emirates Squad 2015 Cricket World Cup}} {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Naveed, Mohammad}} [[Category:1987 births]] [[Category:Living people]] [[Category:Emirati cricketers]] [[Category:United Arab Emirates One Day International cricketers]] [[Category:United Arab Emirates Twenty20 International cricketers]] [[Category:Cricketers at the 2015 Cricket World Cup]] [[Category:Kandahar Knights cricketers]] [[Category:Cricketers from Dubai]] [[Category:Cricketers banned for corruption]] [[Category:Emirati expatriate sportspeople]] [[Category:Expatriate cricketers in Afghanistan]]
1,273,193,683
[{"title": "Mohammad Naveed", "data": {"Full name": "Mohammad Naveed", "Born": "3 June 1987 \u00b7 Dubai, United Arab Emirates", "Batting": "Right-handed", "Bowling": "Right-arm medium", "Role": "Bowler"}}, {"title": "International information", "data": {"National side": "- United Arab Emirates (2014\u20132019)", "ODI debut (cap 51)": "2 May 2014 v Afghanistan", "Last ODI": "16 April 2019 v Zimbabwe", "T20I debut (cap 15)": "9 July 2015 v Scotland", "Last T20I": "6 August 2019 v Netherlands"}}, {"title": "Career statistics", "data": {"Competition": "ODI \u00b7 T20I \u00b7 FC \u00b7 LA", "Matches": "39 \u00b7 31 \u00b7 7 \u00b7 80", "Runs scored": "397 \u00b7 176 \u00b7 29 \u00b7 654", "Batting average": "16.54 \u00b7 12.57 \u00b7 4.14 \u00b7 14.53", "100s/50s": "0/0 \u00b7 0/0 \u00b7 0/0 \u00b7 0/1", "Top score": "45 \u00b7 27* \u00b7 17 \u00b7 56", "Balls bowled": "1,938 \u00b7 688 \u00b7 1,012 \u00b7 3,878", "Wickets": "53 \u00b7 37 \u00b7 16 \u00b7 114", "Bowling average": "33.15 \u00b7 19.70 \u00b7 35.25 \u00b7 28.06", "5 wickets in innings": "1 \u00b7 0 \u00b7 0 \u00b7 1", "10 wickets in match": "0 \u00b7 0 \u00b7 0 \u00b7 0", "Best bowling": "5/28 \u00b7 3/14 \u00b7 4/78 \u00b7 5/28", "Catches/stumpings": "6/\u2013 \u00b7 4/\u2013 \u00b7 2/\u2013 \u00b7 11/\u2013"}}, {"title": "United Arab Emirates squad \u2013 2015 Cricket World Cup", "data": {"2 Tauqir ( c ) 7 Patil ( wk ) 8 Nasir 11 Khurram 15 Guruge 27 Javed 36 Chandran 47 Saqlain ( wk ) 50 Shaiman 91 Berenger 77 Amjad ( wk ) 80 Mustafa 87 Naveed 55 Fahad 6 Shazad Coach: Aaqib Javed": "United Arab Emirates"}}]
false
# Porichthyinae Porichthyinae is a subfamily of toadfish in the family Batrachoididae. They are found in the eastern Pacific Ocean and western Atlantic from Canada to Argentina. The species of this subfamily have no venom glands or subopercular spines, they have canine like teeth and two solid spines in the dorsal fin. ## Genera There are two genera in the Porichthyinae: - Aphos Hubbs & Schultz, 1939 - Porichthys Girard, 1854
enwiki/43822612
enwiki
43,822,612
Porichthyinae
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Porichthyinae
2022-12-17T14:04:29Z
en
Q18343670
32,950
{{Short description|Subfamily of fishes}} {{Automatic taxobox | image = Plainfin Midshipman.JPG | image_caption = Plainfin midshipman (''[[Porichthys notatus]]'') | taxon = Porichthyinae | authority = [[Alípio de Miranda-Ribeiro|Miranda Ribeiro]], 1915<ref name = Zootaxa>{{cite journal | author1 = Richard van der Laan | author2 = William N. Eschmeyer | author3 = Ronald Fricke | name-list-style = amp |year=2014 | title = Family-group names of Recent fishes | url = https://biotaxa.org/Zootaxa/article/view/zootaxa.3882.1.1/10480 | journal = Zootaxa | volume = 3882 | issue =2 | pages = 001–230| doi = 10.11646/zootaxa.3882.1.1 | pmid = 25543675 | doi-access = free }}</ref> }} '''Porichthyinae''' is a subfamily of [[toadfish]] in the family [[Batrachoididae]]. They are found in the eastern Pacific Ocean and western Atlantic from Canada to Argentina. The species of this subfamily have no venom glands or subopercular spines, they have canine like teeth and two solid spines in the [[dorsal fin]].<ref name = Greenfield>{{cite journal | author1 = David W. Greenfield | author2 = Richard Winterbottom | author3 = Bruce Baden Collette | name-list-style = amp | year = 2008 | title = Review of the toadfish genera (Teleostei: Batrachoididae) | url = https://www.researchgate.net/publication/294688674 | journal = Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences | series = 4 | volume = 59| issue = 15 | pages = 665–710}}</ref> ==Genera== There are two genera in the Porichthyinae:<ref name = WoRMS>{{cite WoRMS |id=714643 |title=Porichthyinae Miranda Ribeiro, 1915 |year=2015 |accessdate=18 July 2018 |db=FishBase}}</ref> * ''[[Aphos]]'' <small>[[Carl Leavitt Hubbs|Hubbs]] & [[Leonard Peter Schultz|Schultz]], 1939</small> * ''[[Porichthys]]'' <small>[[Charles Frédéric Girard|Girard, 1854]]</small> ==References== {{Reflist}} {{Taxonbar|from=Q18343670}} [[Category:Batrachoididae]] {{Batrachoidiformes-stub}}
1,127,938,538
[{"title": "Scientific classification", "data": {"Domain": "Eukaryota", "Kingdom": "Animalia", "Phylum": "Chordata", "Class": "Actinopterygii", "Order": "Batrachoidiformes", "Family": "Batrachoididae", "Subfamily": "Porichthyinae \u00b7 Miranda Ribeiro, 1915"}}]
false
# Naga morsarang The naga morsarang, also known as sahan, is a container which is used to store medicine in the culture of Toba Batak people of North Sumatra, Indonesia. The naga morsarang is created out of the horn of the water buffalo. ## Description Naga morsarang is one of several types of container in which the datu (Batak people's ritual specialist) kept a supernaturally powerful potion. The naga morsarang is made of horn of a water buffalo. A large naga morsarang vessel measures 20.5 inches (52 cm) long and 10.25 inches (26.0 cm) wide. As a container of a powerful potion, the naga morsarang is extensively decorated with complex patterns. The outer surface is incised thoroughly with complex designs. The pointed end of the horn is carved into the shape of a seated figure of a man, or sometimes more. The opening of the horn is plugged with a wooden stopper. This wooden stopper is always shaped into a figure of the singa, a Naga-like underground figures. Many additional figures are sometimes carved as mounting the singa e.g. the lizard Boraspati ni Tano, a human figure, or several human figures. These human figures may represent the datu, owner of the naga morsarang, and the former datus, former owners of the naga morsarang. Others think that these figures represent characters from Batak mythology. A figure of a lizard, which represents the earth deity Boraspati ni Tano, is sometimes carved inside the hollow of the horn. ## Potions Toba people believed that the spirits of the dead were able to influence the fate of the living. To gain favor from the spirits, the Toba performed elaborate rituals or sacrifices with the help of the datu, a male ritual specialist who acted as intermediaries between the human and supernatural world. The datu created magic books known as the pustaha which was used by him and by his disciples as a reference for his magic rituals. Among the contents of the pustaha are methods to create different kind of potions used for both white magic and black magic in a kind of complex magic ritual. Naga morsarang are used as container for these potions. One example of a white magic potion is the pagar, a potion used as a kind of amulet to protect from evil. The creation of pagar is very difficult, and can only be done on certain auspicious days. Most of the ingredients of a pagar are derived from plants, although sometimes chicken head, its entrails, and its feathers are included in the mixture. The ingredients for a pagar can only be gathered on certain sacred sites known as the sombaon. Creation of a pagar took days or weeks. All the ingredients are then cooked and finely crushed into a kind of paste which is then stored in the naga morsarang. ## Similar vessel The Karo version of the vessel known as perminaken/parminaken or guri-guri. Instead of strictly a bull's horn, the perminaken may use other types of material for the vessel e.g. a bamboo, a gourd, or even a Ming period jar imported from China. The perminaken similarly use a wooden stopper with carvings of a figure of the singa, a person, or a person riding the singa. ## Cited works - Bonatz, Dominik; Miksic, John; Neidel, J. David (2009). From Distant Tales: Archaeology and Ethnohistory in the Highlands of Sumatra. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. ISBN 9781443807845. - Kozok, Uli (2009). Surat Batak: sejarah perkembangan tulisan Batak : berikut pedoman menulis aksara Batak dan cap Si Singamangaraja XII (PDF) (in Indonesian). École française d'Extrême-Orient. ISBN 9789799101532.[permanent dead link‍] - Sitepu, Andrianus G. (1980). Mengenal seni kerajinan tradisional Karo [Understanding the Traditional Arts and Crafts of the Karo] (in Indonesian). Eʼ Karya. - NAGA MORSARANG 440mm CONTAINER, Borneoartifact
enwiki/55819939
enwiki
55,819,939
Naga morsarang
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naga_morsarang
2024-08-20T12:16:14Z
en
Q48728989
33,209
[[File:COLLECTIE TROPENMUSEUM Toverhoorn met vijf voorouder figuren op een singa TMnr A-3932.jpg|thumb|right|The naga morsarang container with the head of the [[Singa (mythology)|Singa]] on the wooden stopper and the lizard-like [[Boraspati ni Tano]] on the center.]] The '''naga morsarang''', also known as '''sahan''', is a container which is used to store medicine in the culture of [[Toba Batak people]] of [[North Sumatra]], [[Indonesia]]. The naga morsarang is created out of the horn of the [[water buffalo]]. ==Description== Naga morsarang is one of several types of container in which the ''datu'' (Batak people's ritual specialist) kept a supernaturally powerful potion. The naga morsarang is made of horn of a [[water buffalo]]. A large naga morsarang vessel measures {{convert|20.5|inch|cm}} long and {{convert|10.25|inch|cm}} wide. As a container of a powerful potion, the naga morsarang is extensively decorated with complex patterns. The outer surface is incised thoroughly with complex designs. The pointed end of the horn is carved into the shape of a seated figure of a man, or sometimes more. The opening of the horn is plugged with a wooden stopper. This wooden stopper is always shaped into a figure of the [[Singa (mythology)|singa]], a [[Nāga|Naga]]-like underground figures. Many additional figures are sometimes carved as mounting the singa e.g. the lizard [[Boraspati ni Tano]], a human figure, or several human figures. These human figures may represent the ''datu'', owner of the naga morsarang, and the former ''datu''s, former owners of the naga morsarang. Others think that these figures represent characters from Batak mythology.<ref name="met">{{cite web |url=https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/315889 |title=Container for Magical Substances (Naga Morsarang) |author=<!--Not stated--> |date=2018 |website=Met Museum |publisher=The Metropolitan Museum of Art. All rights reserved. |access-date=July 1, 2018 }}</ref> A figure of a lizard, which represents the earth deity [[Boraspati ni Tano]], is sometimes carved inside the hollow of the horn.<ref name="met"/> ==Potions== [[File:COLLECTIE TROPENMUSEUM Toverhoorn voor de opslag van pupuk TMnr 137-599.jpg|thumb|left|A naga morsarang]] [[Toba people]] believed that the spirits of the dead were able to influence the fate of the living. To gain favor from the spirits, the Toba performed elaborate rituals or sacrifices with the help of the datu, a male ritual specialist who acted as intermediaries between the human and supernatural world. The datu created magic books known as the [[pustaha]] which was used by him and by his disciples as a reference for his magic rituals. Among the contents of the pustaha are methods to create different kind of potions used for both [[white magic]] and [[black magic]] in a kind of complex magic ritual. Naga morsarang are used as container for these potions.{{sfn|Kozok|2009|pp=44-5}} One example of a white magic potion is the ''pagar'', a potion used as a kind of amulet to protect from evil. The creation of ''pagar'' is very difficult, and can only be done on certain auspicious days. Most of the ingredients of a ''pagar'' are derived from plants, although sometimes chicken head, its entrails, and its feathers are included in the mixture. The ingredients for a ''pagar'' can only be gathered on certain sacred sites known as the ''sombaon''. Creation of a pagar took days or weeks. All the ingredients are then cooked and finely crushed into a kind of paste which is then stored in the naga morsarang.{{sfn|Kozok|2009|pp=44-5}} ==Similar vessel== The [[Karo people (Indonesia)|Karo]] version of the vessel known as ''perminaken/parminaken'' or ''guri-guri''. Instead of strictly a bull's horn, the ''perminaken'' may use other types of material for the vessel e.g. a bamboo, a gourd, or even a Ming period jar imported from China.{{sfn|Bonatz|Miksic|Neidel|2009|p=139}} The ''perminaken'' similarly use a wooden stopper with carvings of a figure of the [[singa (mythology)|singa]], a person, or a person riding the singa.{{sfn|Sitepu|1980|p=45}} ==See also== {{commonscat|Naga morsarang}} *[[Tunggal panaluan]] ==References== {{reflist|30em}} ==Cited works== {{refbegin}} *{{cite book |last1=Bonatz |first1=Dominik|author2-link=John N. Miksic |last2=Miksic |first2=John |last3=Neidel |first3=J. David |date=2009 |title=From Distant Tales: Archaeology and Ethnohistory in the Highlands of Sumatra |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=MusYBwAAQBAJ |publisher=Cambridge Scholars Publishing |isbn=9781443807845}} *{{cite book |last=Kozok |first=Uli |date=2009 |title=Surat Batak: sejarah perkembangan tulisan Batak : berikut pedoman menulis aksara Batak dan cap Si Singamangaraja XII |url=http://ipll.manoa.hawaii.edu/shared/surat_batak.pdf |publisher=École française d'Extrême-Orient |language=id |isbn=9789799101532 }}{{Dead link|date=April 2020 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} *{{cite book |last=Sitepu |first=Andrianus G. |year=1980 |title=Mengenal seni kerajinan tradisional Karo |trans-title=Understanding the Traditional Arts and Crafts of the Karo |language=id|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZUobAAAAIAAJ |publisher=Eʼ Karya }} {{refend}} * [https://www.borneoartifact.com/product/box-jewelry/ NAGA MORSARANG 440mm CONTAINER], Borneoartifact [[Category:Culture of Sumatra]] [[Category:Religion in Indonesia]] [[Category:Batak]] [[Category:Medicine storage containers]]
1,241,293,980
[]
false
# Louis S. Goebel Louis S. Goebel (July 9, 1839 in New York City – November 2, 1915 in Manhattan, NYC) was an American lawyer and politician from New York. ## Life He graduated from City College of New York in 1864. Then he taught school, studied law at Columbia Law School, was admitted to the bar in 1868, and practiced in New York City. He was a member of the New York State Senate (6th D.) in 1878 and 1879. He died at his home at 338 West 87th Street in Manhattan, and was buried at the Kensico Cemetery. ## Sources - Civil List and Constitutional History of the Colony and State of New York compiled by Edgar Albert Werner (1884; pg. 290) - The State Government for 1879 by Charles G. Shanks (Weed, Parsons & Co, Albany NY, 1879; pg. 51) - Lewis (sic) S. Goebel in NYT on November 4, 1915
enwiki/37507808
enwiki
37,507,808
Louis S. Goebel
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_S._Goebel
2024-12-06T03:33:11Z
en
Q6688109
6,972
{{short description|American politician}} '''Louis S. Goebel''' (July 9, 1839 in New York City &ndash; November 2, 1915 in [[Manhattan]], NYC) was an American lawyer and politician from New York. ==Life== He graduated from [[City College of New York]] in 1864. Then he taught school, studied law at [[Columbia Law School]], was admitted to the bar in 1868, and practiced in New York City. He was a member of the [[New York State Senate]] (6th D.) in [[101st New York State Legislature|1878]] and [[102nd New York State Legislature|1879]]. He died at his home at 338 West 87th Street in Manhattan, and was buried at the [[Kensico Cemetery]]. ==Sources== * [https://archive.org/stream/civillistandcon00unkngoog#page/n335/mode/1up ''Civil List and Constitutional History of the Colony and State of New York''] compiled by Edgar Albert Werner (1884; pg. 290) * [http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=njp.32101061337661;seq=73;view=1up;num=51 ''The State Government for 1879''] by Charles G. Shanks (Weed, Parsons & Co, Albany NY, 1879; pg. 51) * [https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1915/11/04/104656131.pdf ''Lewis (sic) S. Goebel''] in NYT on November 4, 1915 {{s-start}} {{s-par|us-ny-sen}} {{succession box | before = [[Caspar A. Baaden]] | title = [[New York State Senate]] <br>6th District | years = 1878–1879 | after = [[Jacob Seebacher]]}} {{s-end}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Goebel, Louis S}} [[Category:1839 births]] [[Category:1915 deaths]] [[Category:Republican Party New York (state) state senators]] [[Category:Politicians from New York City]] [[Category:City College of New York alumni]] [[Category:Columbia Law School alumni]] [[Category:Burials at Kensico Cemetery]] [[Category:Lawyers from New York City]] [[Category:19th-century American lawyers]] [[Category:19th-century members of the New York State Legislature]]
1,261,442,224
[]
false
# London Steede-Jackson London Steede-Jackson (born 30 December 1994) is a Bermudian footballer who plays for BAA Wanderers as a midfielder. ## Career Steede-Jackson played college soccer for Thomas College. He began his club career with BAA Wanderers in 2018. He made his international debut for Bermuda in 2019.
enwiki/67341551
enwiki
67,341,551
London Steede-Jackson
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/London_Steede-Jackson
2024-11-21T03:22:04Z
en
Q106424901
31,258
{{Short description|Bermudian footballer}} {{Use dmy dates|date=April 2021}} {{Infobox football biography |name = London Steede-Jackson |image = |image_size = |caption = |fullname = |birth_date = {{birth date and age|1994|12|30|df=y}} |birth_place = | height = 1.82 m <ref name="Footballcritic">{{cite web|url=https://www.footballcritic.com/london-steede-jackson/profile/274205|title=Profile of L. Steede-Jackson|website=footballcritic.com|accessdate=16 June 2019}}</ref> |position = [[Midfielder]] |currentclub = [[BAA Wanderers F.C.|BAA Wanderers]] |clubnumber = |youthyears1 = |youthclubs1 = |collegeyears1 = 2013–2016 |college1 = [[Thomas College]] |collegecaps1 = 60 |collegegoals1 = 10 |years1 = 2018– |clubs1 = [[BAA Wanderers F.C.|BAA Wanderers]] |caps1 = |goals1 = |nationalyears1 = 2019– |nationalteam1 = [[Bermuda national football team|Bermuda]] |nationalcaps1 = 3 |nationalgoals1 = 0 |club-update = 17:48, 8 April 2021 (UTC) |ntupdate = 17:48, 8 April 2021 (UTC) }} '''London Steede-Jackson''' (born 30 December 1994) is a Bermudian [[association football|footballer]] who plays for [[BAA Wanderers F.C.|BAA Wanderers]] as a [[midfielder]]. ==Career== Steede-Jackson played college soccer for [[Thomas College]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://athletics.thomas.edu/sports/mens-soccer/roster/london-steede-jackson/2689|title=London Steede-Jackson - 2016 - Men's Soccer|website=Thomas College}}</ref> He began his club career with [[BAA Wanderers F.C.|BAA Wanderers]] in 2018.<ref name = "NFT">{{NFT player|pid=73696|accessdate=8 April 2021}}</ref> He made his international debut for [[Bermuda national football team|Bermuda]] in 2019.<ref name = "NFT"/> ==References== {{reflist}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Steede-Jackson, London}} [[Category:1994 births]] [[Category:Living people]] [[Category:Bermudian men's footballers]] [[Category:Bermuda men's international footballers]] [[Category:BAA Wanderers F.C. players]] [[Category:Men's association football midfielders]] [[Category:Bermudian expatriate men's footballers]] [[Category:Bermudian expatriates in the United States]] [[Category:Expatriate men's soccer players in the United States]] [[Category:21st-century British sportsmen]] {{Bermuda-footy-bio-stub}}
1,258,701,978
[{"title": "London Steede-Jackson", "data": {"Date of birth": "30 December 1994", "Height": "1.82 m (6 ft 0 in)", "Position(s)": "Midfielder"}}, {"title": "Team information", "data": {"Current team": "BAA Wanderers"}}, {"title": "College career", "data": {"Years": "Team \u00b7 Apps \u00b7 (Gls)", "2013\u20132016": "Thomas College \u00b7 60 \u00b7 (10)"}}, {"title": "Senior career*", "data": {"Years": "Team \u00b7 Apps \u00b7 (Gls)", "2018\u2013": "BAA Wanderers"}}, {"title": "International career\u2021", "data": {"2019\u2013": "Bermuda \u00b7 3 \u00b7 (0)"}}]
false
# Paolo Tiralongo Paolo Tiralongo (born 8 July 1977) is an Italian former professional road bicycle racer, who rode professionally between 2000 and 2017 for the Fassa Bortolo, Ceramica Panaria–Navigare, Lampre–NGC and Astana teams. ## Career In 2009, while riding for Lampre–NGC, Tiralongo registered his best final result on a Grand Tour, finishing the Vuelta a España in eighth position after riding consistently in the mountain stages. He conceded a little over 9 minutes to the victor, Spaniard Alejandro Valverde of Caisse d'Epargne. He joined Astana for the 2010 season, on a 2-year contract. In 2011, Tiralongo took a notable victory on stage 19 of the Giro d'Italia, a summit finish to Macugnaga. He attacked in the final kilometers and went clear of the lead group, but was joined by Alberto Contador (Saxo Bank–SunGard) in the final few meters. He came first on the line, taking his first victory in more than ten years. In 2012, he won another stage in the Giro d'Italia, stage 7, which was a hilltop finish atop Rocca di Cambio. With 500 meters to go, Tiralongo followed an attack initiated by Michele Scarponi of Lampre–ISD and he passed Scarponi inside of the final 100 meters. He lay on the ground afterward, out of breath. On 24 April 2015, Tiralongo collected his first victory of the season in the final stage of the Giro del Trentino. He passed the last climb (Passo Predaia) with a small leading group and won the sprint after the descent. On 17 May, he won Stage 9 of the 2015 Giro d'Italia. ## Major results 1998 1st Gran Premio di Poggiana 3rd Overall Giro Ciclistico d'Italia 1999 1st Overall Triptyque Ardennais 3rd Road race, National Under-23 Road Championships 2001 2nd Trofeo dello Scalatore III 3rd Overall Tour of Austria 6th Gran Premio della Costa Etruschi 8th Giro della Provincia di Siracusa 9th GP Industria & Artigianato di Larciano 10th Trofeo dello Scalatore I 2002 2nd Overall Tour Méditerranéen 6th Overall Brixia Tour 8th Coppa Ugo Agostoni 10th Trofeo Pantalica 2003 8th Overall Settimana Internazionale di Coppi e Bartali 10th Overall Giro del Trentino 10th Giro dell'Appennino 2004 1st Mountains classification Tour Down Under 2nd Overall Brixia Tour 2nd Trofeo Melinda 2nd GP Citta di Rio Saliceto e Correggio 5th Giro del Medio Brenta 7th Tre Valli Varesine 7th Giro della Romagna 8th Giro del Veneto 2005 3rd Milano–Torino 3rd Trofeo Laigueglia 6th Overall Settimana Internazionale di Coppi e Bartali 6th Gran Premio Fred Mengoni 8th Giro d'Oro 2008 6th Klasika Primavera 2009 8th Overall Vuelta a España 10th Giro dell'Emilia 2011 1st Stage 19 Giro d'Italia 2012 1st Stage 7 Giro d'Italia 2013 1st Stage 1 (TTT) Vuelta a España 2014 9th Overall Vuelta a Burgos 2015 1st Stage 4 Giro del Trentino 1st Stage 9 Giro d'Italia ### Grand Tour general classification results timeline | Grand Tour | 2000 | 2001 | 2002 | 2003 | 2004 | 2005 | 2006 | 2007 | 2008 | 2009 | 2010 | 2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | | --------------- | ---- | ---- | ---- | ---- | ---- | ---- | ---- | ---- | ---- | ---- | ---- | ---- | ---- | ---- | ---- | ---- | ---- | ---- | | Giro d'Italia | — | — | — | DNF | — | 32 | 15 | 26 | — | 37 | DNF | 18 | 23 | 99 | 45 | 19 | — | 83 | | Tour de France | — | — | — | — | — | — | 69 | — | 46 | — | 53 | DNF | — | — | — | — | 74 | — | | Vuelta a España | 96 | — | 43 | — | — | — | — | DNF | 27 | 8 | — | — | 38 | 51 | 33 | DNF | — | — | | — | Did not compete | | DNF | Did not finish |
enwiki/11715530
enwiki
11,715,530
Paolo Tiralongo
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paolo_Tiralongo
2024-01-26T18:51:12Z
en
Q386459
55,822
{{short description|Italian road bicycle racer}} {{Use dmy dates|date=May 2017}} {{Infobox cyclist | name = Paolo Tiralongo | image = Tour de Romandie 2011 - Prologue - Paolo Tiralongo.jpg | caption = Tiralongo at the [[2011 Tour de Romandie]] | fullname = Paolo Tiralongo | nickname = L'Ape di Avola (The Bee from Avola) | birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1977|7|8|df=y}} | birth_place = [[Avola]], [[Italy]] | height = {{convert|1.68|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} | weight = {{convert|56|kg|lb|abbr=on}} | currentteam = Retired | discipline = Road | role = Rider | ridertype = Climbing specialist | proyears1 = 2000–2002 | proteam1 = {{UCI team code|FAS|2000}} | proyears2 = 2003–2005 | proteam2 = {{UCI team code|CSF|2003}} | proyears3 = 2006–2009 | proteam3 = {{UCI team code|LAM|2006}} | proyears4 = 2010–2017 | proteam4 = {{UCI team code|AST|2010}} | majorwins = '''[[Grand Tour (cycling)|Grand Tours]]''' :'''[[Giro d'Italia]]''' ::3 individual stages ([[2011 Giro d'Italia|2011]], [[2012 Giro d'Italia|2012]], [[2015 Giro d'Italia|2015]]) :'''[[Vuelta a España]]''' ::1 TTT stage ([[2013 Vuelta a España|2013]]) }} '''Paolo Tiralongo''' (born 8 July 1977) is an Italian former professional [[road bicycle racer]],<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.cyclingnews.com/news/giro-ditalia-tiralongo-to-retire-at-season-end-news-shorts/|title=Giro d'Italia: Tiralongo to retire at season end - News shorts|work=[[Cyclingnews.com]]|publisher=[[Immediate Media Company]]|date=6 May 2017|access-date=1 January 2018}}</ref> who rode professionally between 2000 and 2017 for the {{UCI team code|FAS|2002}}, {{UCI team code|CSF|2005}}, {{UCI team code|LAM|2009}} and {{UCI team code|AST|2017}} teams. ==Career== In 2009, while riding for {{UCI team code|LAM|2009}}, Tiralongo registered his best final result on a [[Grand Tour (cycling)|Grand Tour]], finishing the [[2009 Vuelta a España|Vuelta a España]] in eighth position after riding consistently in the mountain stages. He conceded a little over 9 minutes to the victor, Spaniard [[Alejandro Valverde]] of {{UCI team code|MOV|2009}}.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.bikeworldnews.com/2009/09/20/2009-vuelta-espana-stage-21final-results/|title=2009 Vuelta a Espana Stage 21/Final results|work=Bike World News|publisher=Disqus|date=20 September 2009|access-date=11 December 2012}}</ref> He joined Astana for the 2010 season, on a 2-year contract.<ref>{{cite news |title=2009 Tiralongo signs for Astana - Cyclingnews.com |url=http://www.cyclingnews.com/news/astana-sign-tiralongo-on-two-year-contract |access-date=20 October 2009}}</ref> In 2011, Tiralongo took a notable victory on [[2011 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21#Stage 19|stage 19]] of the [[2011 Giro d'Italia|Giro d'Italia]], a summit finish to [[Macugnaga]]. He attacked in the final kilometers and went clear of the lead group, but was joined by [[Alberto Contador]] ({{UCI team code|SAX|2011}}) in the final few meters. He came first on the line, taking his first victory in more than ten years.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://road.cc/content/news/36350-giro-ditalia-stage-19-astanas-tiralongo-takes-maiden-stage-win-home-tour|title=Giro d'Italia Stage 19: Astana's Tiralongo takes maiden win after 12 years as a pro|work=RoadCC|publisher=Farrelly Atkinson Ltd|date=27 May 2011|access-date=11 December 2012|author=Simon MacMichael}}</ref> In 2012, he won another stage in the [[2012 Giro d'Italia|Giro d'Italia]], [[2012 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11#Stage 7|stage 7]], which was a hilltop finish atop [[Rocca di Cambio]]. With 500 meters to go, Tiralongo followed an attack initiated by [[Michele Scarponi]] of {{UCI team code|LAM|2012}} and he passed Scarponi inside of the final 100 meters. He lay on the ground afterward, out of breath.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.cyclingnews.com/giro-ditalia/stage-7/results|title=Giro d'Italia: Tiralongo wins into Rocca di Cambio|work=Cycling News|publisher=Future Publishing Limited|date=12 May 2012|access-date=12 May 2012|first=Susan|last=Westemeyer}}</ref> On 24 April 2015, Tiralongo collected his first victory of the season in the final stage of the [[2015 Giro del Trentino|Giro del Trentino]]. He passed the last climb (Passo Predaia) with a small leading group and won the sprint after the descent.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.cyclingnews.com/races/giro-del-trentino-2015/stage-4/results|title=Richie Porte seals Giro del Trentino overall win|work=[[Cyclingnews.com]]|publisher=[[Future plc]]|date=24 April 2015|access-date=25 April 2015|author=Kirsten Frattini}}</ref> On 17 May, he won Stage 9 of the [[2015 Giro d'Italia]]. ==Major results== {{div col}} ;1998 : 1st [[Gran Premio di Poggiana]] : 3rd Overall [[Giro Ciclistico d'Italia]] ;1999 : 1st Overall [[Triptyque Ardennais]] : 3rd [[Italian National Road Race Championships|Road race]], National Under-23 Road Championships ;2001 : 2nd [[Trofeo dello Scalatore]] III : 3rd Overall [[Tour of Austria]] : 6th [[Gran Premio della Costa Etruschi]] : 8th [[Giro della Provincia di Siracusa]] : 9th [[GP Industria & Artigianato di Larciano]] : 10th [[Trofeo dello Scalatore]] I ;2002 : 2nd Overall [[La Méditerranéenne|Tour Méditerranéen]] : 6th Overall [[Brixia Tour]] : 8th [[Coppa Ugo Agostoni]] : 10th [[Trofeo Pantalica]] ;2003 : 8th Overall [[Settimana Internazionale di Coppi e Bartali]] : 10th Overall [[2003 Giro del Trentino|Giro del Trentino]] : 10th [[Giro dell'Appennino]] ;2004 : 1st [[File:Jersey blue.svg|20px]] Mountains classification [[2004 Tour Down Under|Tour Down Under]] : 2nd Overall [[Brixia Tour]] : 2nd [[Trofeo Melinda]] : 2nd GP Citta di Rio Saliceto e Correggio : 5th [[Giro del Medio Brenta]] : 7th [[Tre Valli Varesine]] : 7th [[Giro della Romagna]] : 8th [[Giro del Veneto]] ;2005 : 3rd [[Milano–Torino]] : 3rd [[Trofeo Laigueglia]] : 6th Overall [[Settimana Internazionale di Coppi e Bartali]] : 6th [[Gran Premio Fred Mengoni]] : 8th [[Giro d'Oro]] ;2008 : 6th [[Klasika Primavera]] ;2009 : 8th Overall [[2009 Vuelta a España|Vuelta a España]] : 10th [[2009 Giro dell'Emilia|Giro dell'Emilia]] ;2011 : 1st Stage 19 [[2011 Giro d'Italia|Giro d'Italia]] ;2012 : 1st Stage 7 [[2012 Giro d'Italia|Giro d'Italia]] ;2013 : 1st Stage 1 ([[Team time trial|TTT]]) [[2013 Vuelta a España|Vuelta a España]] ;2014 : 9th Overall [[2014 Vuelta a Burgos|Vuelta a Burgos]] ;2015 : 1st Stage 4 [[2015 Giro del Trentino|Giro del Trentino]] : 1st Stage 9 [[2015 Giro d'Italia|Giro d'Italia]] {{div col end}} ===Grand Tour general classification results timeline=== {| class="wikitable plainrowheaders" |- ! scope="col" | [[Grand Tour (cycling)|Grand Tour]] ! scope="col" | 2000 ! scope="col" | 2001 ! scope="col" | 2002 ! scope="col" | 2003 ! scope="col" | 2004 ! scope="col" | 2005 ! scope="col" | 2006 ! scope="col" | 2007 ! scope="col" | 2008 ! scope="col" | 2009 ! scope="col" | 2010 ! scope="col" | 2011 ! scope="col" | 2012 ! scope="col" | 2013 ! scope="col" | 2014 ! scope="col" | 2015 ! scope="col" | 2016 ! scope="col" | 2017 |- style="text-align:center;" ! scope="row" | [[File:Jersey pink.svg|20px|link=|alt=A pink jersey]] [[General classification in the Giro d'Italia|Giro d'Italia]] |— |— |— |[[2003 Giro d'Italia|DNF]] |— |[[2005 Giro d'Italia|32]] |[[2006 Giro d'Italia|15]] |[[2007 Giro d'Italia|26]] |— |[[2009 Giro d'Italia|37]] |[[2010 Giro d'Italia|DNF]] |[[2011 Giro d'Italia|18]] |[[2012 Giro d'Italia|23]] |[[2013 Giro d'Italia|99]] |[[2014 Giro d'Italia|45]] |[[2015 Giro d'Italia|19]] |— |[[2017 Giro d'Italia|83]] |- style="text-align:center;" ! scope="row" | [[File:Jersey yellow.svg|20px|link=|alt=A yellow jersey]] [[General classification in the Tour de France|Tour de France]] |— |— |— |— |— |— |[[2006 Tour de France|69]] |— |[[2008 Tour de France|46]] |— |[[2010 Tour de France|53]] |[[2011 Tour de France|DNF]] |— |— |— |— |[[2016 Tour de France|74]] |— |- style="text-align:center;" ! scope="row" | [[File:Jersey red.svg|20px|link=|alt=A red jersey]] [[General classification in the Vuelta a España|Vuelta a España]] |[[2000 Vuelta a España|96]] |— |[[2002 Vuelta a España|43]] |— |— |— |— |[[2007 Vuelta a España|DNF]] |[[2008 Vuelta a España|27]] |align="center" style="background:#ddddff;"|[[2009 Vuelta a España|8]] |— |— |[[2012 Vuelta a España|38]] |[[2013 Vuelta a España|51]] |[[2014 Vuelta a España|33]] |[[2015 Vuelta a España|DNF]] |— |— |} {| class="wikitable" |+ Legend |- ! scope="row" | — | Did not compete |- ! scope="row" | [[Did not finish|DNF]] | Did not finish |} == References == {{reflist}} == External links == {{Commons category|Paolo Tiralongo}} *{{cycling archives|7205}} *[http://www.cyclingbase.com/Paolo-Tiralongo.html Paolo Tiralongo's profile on Cycling Base] {{DEFAULTSORT:Tiralongo, Paolo}} [[Category:1977 births]] [[Category:Living people]] [[Category:People from Avola]] [[Category:Italian male cyclists]] [[Category:Italian Giro d'Italia stage winners]] [[Category:Sportspeople from the Province of Syracuse]] [[Category:Cyclists from Sicily]]
1,199,305,374
[{"title": "Personal information", "data": {"Full name": "Paolo Tiralongo", "Nickname": "L'Ape di Avola (The Bee from Avola)", "Born": "8 July 1977 \u00b7 Avola, Italy", "Height": "1.68 m (5 ft 6 in)", "Weight": "56 kg (123 lb)"}}, {"title": "Team information", "data": {"Current team": "Retired", "Discipline": "Road", "Role": "Rider", "Rider type": "Climbing specialist"}}, {"title": "Professional teams", "data": {"2000\u20132002": "Fassa Bortolo", "2003\u20132005": "Ceramiche Panaria\u2013Fiordo", "2006\u20132009": "Lampre\u2013Fondital", "2010\u20132017": "Astana"}}, {"title": "Major wins", "data": {"Major wins": "Grand Tours Giro d'Italia 3 individual stages (2011, 2012, 2015) Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a 1 TTT stage (2013)"}}]
false
# List of peers 1170–1179 This page lists all peers who held extant titles between 1170 and 1179. ## Peerage of England | Title | Holder | Date gained | Date lost | Notes | | -------------------------- | ---------------------------------------------- | ----------- | --------- | ----- | | Earl of Northampton (1080) | Simon Saint-Lis, 3rd Earl of Northampton | 1153 | 1184 | | | Earl of Surrey (1088) | Isabel de Warenne, 4th Countess of Surrey | 1148 | 1199 | | | Earl of Warwick (1088) | William de Beaumont, 3rd Earl of Warwick | 1153 | 1184 | | | Earl of Devon (1141) | Baldwin de Redvers, 3rd Earl of Devon | 1162 | 1188 | | | Earl of Leicester (1107) | Robert de Beaumont, 3rd Earl of Leicester | 1168 | 1190 | | | Earl of Chester (1121) | Hugh de Kevelioc, 3rd Earl of Chester | 1153 | 1181 | | | Earl of Gloucester (1121) | William Fitzrobert, 2nd Earl of Gloucester | 1147 | 1183 | | | Earl of Hertford (1135) | Roger de Clare, 3rd Earl of Hertford | 1151 | 1173 | Died | | Earl of Hertford (1135) | Richard de Clare, 4th Earl of Hertford | 1173 | 1217 | | | Earl of Richmond (1136) | Conan IV, Duke of Brittany | 1146 | 1171 | Died | | Earl of Richmond (1136) | Constance of Brittany | 1171 | 1201 | | | Earl of Arundel (1138) | William d'Aubigny, 1st Earl of Arundel | 1138 | 1176 | Died | | Earl of Arundel (1138) | William d'Aubigny, 2nd Earl of Arundel | 1176 | 1193 | | | Earl of Derby (1138) | William de Ferrers, 3rd Earl of Derby | 1162 | 1190 | | | Earl of Pembroke (1138) | Richard de Clare, 2nd Earl of Pembroke | 1147 | 1176 | Died | | Earl of Pembroke (1138) | Gilbert de Strigul, 3rd Earl of Pembroke | 1176 | 1185 | | | Earl of Essex (1139) | William de Mandeville, 3rd Earl of Essex | 1160 | 1189 | | | Earl of Norfolk (1140) | Hugh Bigod, 1st Earl of Norfolk | 1140 | 1177 | Died | | Earl of Norfolk (1140) | Roger Bigod, 2nd Earl of Norfolk | 1177 | 1221 | | | Earl of Cornwall (1141) | Reginald de Dunstanville, 1st Earl of Cornwall | 1141 | 1175 | Died | | Earl of Oxford (1142) | Aubrey de Vere, 1st Earl of Oxford | 1142 | 1194 | | | Earl of Salisbury (1145) | William of Salisbury, 2nd Earl of Salisbury | 1168 | 1196 | | | Earl of Buckingham (1164) | Richard de Clare, 2nd Earl of Pembroke | 1164 | 1176 | Died | ## Peerage of Scotland | Title | Holder | Date gained | Date lost | Notes | | ------------------------- | -------------------------------- | ----------- | --------- | ----- | | Earl of Mar (1114) | Morggán, Earl of Mar | Abt. 1140 | Abt. 1178 | Died | | Earl of Mar (1114) | Gille Críst, Earl of Mar | Abt. 1178 | Abt. 1220 | | | Earl of Dunbar (1115) | Waltheof, Earl of Dunbar | 1166 | 1182 | | | Earl of Angus (1115) | Gille Brigte, Earl of Angus | 1135 | 1187 | | | Earl of Atholl (1115) | Máel Coluim, Earl of Atholl | Abt 1150 | Abt 1190 | | | Earl of Buchan (1115) | Colbán, Earl of Buchan | Abt. 1135 | Abt. 1180 | | | Earl of Strathearn (1115) | Ferchar, Earl of Strathearn | Abt. 1140 | 1171 | Died | | Earl of Strathearn (1115) | Gille Brigte, Earl of Strathearn | 1171 | 1223 | | | Earl of Fife (1129) | Donnchad II, Earl of Fife | 1154 | 1203 | | | Earl of Menteith (1160) | Gille Críst, Earl of Menteith | Abt. 1160 | Abt. 1190 | | ## Peerage of Ireland | Title | Holder | Date gained | Date lost | Notes | | -------------------- | -------------------- | ----------- | --------- | ------------ | | Baron Athenry (1172) | Robert de Bermingham | 1172 | 1218 | New creation |
enwiki/1330808
enwiki
1,330,808
List of peers 1170–1179
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_peers_1170%E2%80%931179
2024-04-22T11:37:56Z
en
Q6632112
48,423
{{short description|None}} {{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}} {{No footnotes|date=April 2009}} {{PeerYearBox | year1=1170 | year2=1179}} == Peerage of England == {{PeerYearTable}} |[[Earl of Northampton|Earl of Northampton (1080)]]||[[Simon Saint-Lis, 3rd Earl of Northampton]]||1153||1184||&nbsp; |- |[[Earl of Surrey|Earl of Surrey (1088)]]||[[Isabel de Warenne, 4th Countess of Surrey]]||1148||1199||&nbsp; |- |[[Earl of Warwick|Earl of Warwick (1088)]]||[[William de Beaumont, 3rd Earl of Warwick]]||1153||1184||&nbsp; |- |[[Earl of Devon|Earl of Devon (1141)]]||[[Baldwin de Redvers, 3rd Earl of Devon]]||1162||1188||&nbsp; |- |[[Earl of Leicester|Earl of Leicester (1107)]]||[[Robert de Beaumont, 3rd Earl of Leicester]]||1168||1190||&nbsp; |- |[[Earl of Chester|Earl of Chester (1121)]]||[[Hugh de Kevelioc, 3rd Earl of Chester]]||1153||1181||&nbsp; |- |[[Earl of Gloucester|Earl of Gloucester (1121)]]||[[William Fitzrobert, 2nd Earl of Gloucester]]||1147||1183||&nbsp; |- |rowspan=2|[[Earl of Hertford|Earl of Hertford (1135)]]||[[Roger de Clare, 3rd Earl of Hertford]]||1151||1173||Died |- |[[Richard de Clare, 4th Earl of Hertford]]||1173||1217||&nbsp; |- |rowspan=2|[[Earl of Richmond|Earl of Richmond (1136)]]||[[Conan IV, Duke of Brittany]]||1146||1171||Died |- |[[Constance of Brittany]]||1171||1201||&nbsp; |- |rowspan=2|[[Earl of Arundel|Earl of Arundel (1138)]]||[[William d'Aubigny, 1st Earl of Arundel]]||1138||1176||Died |- |[[William d'Aubigny, 2nd Earl of Arundel]]||1176||1193||&nbsp; |- |[[Earl of Derby|Earl of Derby (1138)]]||[[William de Ferrers, 3rd Earl of Derby]]||1162||1190||&nbsp; |- |rowspan=2|[[Earl of Pembroke|Earl of Pembroke (1138)]]||[[Richard de Clare, 2nd Earl of Pembroke]]||1147||1176||Died |- |[[Gilbert de Strigul, 3rd Earl of Pembroke]]||1176||1185||&nbsp; |- |[[Earl of Essex|Earl of Essex (1139)]]||[[William de Mandeville, 3rd Earl of Essex]]||1160||1189||&nbsp; |- |rowspan=2|[[Earl of Norfolk|Earl of Norfolk (1140)]]||[[Hugh Bigod, 1st Earl of Norfolk]]||1140||1177||Died |- |[[Roger Bigod, 2nd Earl of Norfolk]]||1177||1221||&nbsp; |- |[[Earl of Cornwall|Earl of Cornwall (1141)]]||[[Reginald de Dunstanville, 1st Earl of Cornwall]]||1141||1175||Died |- |[[Earl of Oxford|Earl of Oxford (1142)]]||[[Aubrey de Vere, 1st Earl of Oxford]]||1142||1194||&nbsp; |- |[[Earl of Salisbury|Earl of Salisbury (1145)]]||[[William of Salisbury, 2nd Earl of Salisbury]]||1168||1196||&nbsp; |- |[[Earl of Buckingham|Earl of Buckingham (1164)]]||[[Richard de Clare, 2nd Earl of Pembroke]]||1164||1176||Died {{end}} ==Peerage of Scotland== {{PeerYearTable}} |rowspan=2|[[Earl of Mar|Earl of Mar (1114)]]||[[Morggán, Earl of Mar]]||Abt. 1140||Abt. 1178||Died |- |[[Gille Críst, Earl of Mar]]||Abt. 1178||Abt. 1220|| |- |[[Earl of Dunbar|Earl of Dunbar (1115)]]||[[Waltheof, Earl of Dunbar]]||1166||1182|| |- |[[Earl of Angus|Earl of Angus (1115)]]||[[Gille Brigte, Earl of Angus]]||1135||1187|| |- |[[Earl of Atholl|Earl of Atholl (1115)]]||[[Máel Coluim, Earl of Atholl]]||Abt 1150||Abt 1190|| |- |[[Earl of Buchan|Earl of Buchan (1115)]]||[[Colbán, Earl of Buchan]]||Abt. 1135||Abt. 1180|| |- |rowspan=2|[[Earl of Strathearn|Earl of Strathearn (1115)]]||[[Ferchar, Earl of Strathearn]]||Abt. 1140||1171||Died |- |[[Gille Brigte, Earl of Strathearn]]||1171||1223|| |- |[[Earl of Fife|Earl of Fife (1129)]]||[[Donnchad II, Earl of Fife]]||1154||1203|| |- |[[Earl of Menteith|Earl of Menteith (1160)]]||[[Gille Críst, Earl of Menteith]]||Abt. 1160||Abt. 1190|| |- |} ==Peerage of Ireland== {{PeerYearTable}} |[[Baron Athenry|Baron Athenry (1172)]]||[[Robert de Bermingham]]||1172||1218||New creation |- |} ==References== {{Reflist}} * {{cite book | editor-last=Cokayne | editor-first=George Edward | year=1887 | title=Complete peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, extant, extinct or dormant | volume=1-8 | edition=1st | location=London | publisher=George Bell & Sons }} {{s-start}} {{succession box | before=[[List of peers 1160–1169]] | title=[[:Category:Lists of peers by decade|Lists of peers by decade]] | years=1170&ndash;1179 | after=[[List of peers 1180–1189]]}} {{s-end}} {{Peerage of England and Ireland by date}} {{DEFAULTSORT:1170-1179, List Of Peers}} [[Category:Lists of peers by decade]] [[Category:1170s in England]] [[Category:12th century in Ireland]] [[Category:12th century in Scotland]] [[Category:12th-century English nobility]] [[Category:12th-century mormaers]] [[Category:Lists of 12th-century people|Peers]]
1,220,199,104
[]
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# Richard Harbert Smith Richard Harbert Smith (15 January 1894, Dillsboro, Indiana – 6 July 1957, Alexandria, Virginia) was a professor and researcher of aeronautical engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), from 1929 to 1945. His academic education was developed at the Moores Hill College (BS, 1915), Indiana (today, University of Evansville); the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (SB, 1918), Cambridge (Greater Boston), Massachusetts; and the Johns Hopkins University (MA, 1928; PhD, 1929), Baltimore, Maryland. After World War I, Prof. Smith worked as an assistant at the United States Naval Research Laboratory. In 1929, he was an associate physicist at the Navy's laboratory when he was hired by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology as an associate professor of aeronautical engineering, being promoted to full professor in 1931. For many years, he was Dr. Jerome Clarke Hunsaker's assistant administrator for aeronautical engineering at MIT. During the World War II period, Prof. Smith coordinated the MIT Civilian Pilot Training Program and was also instructor for several classes of female engineering trainees for the Curtiss company. In 1945, he left MIT to go to Brazil, hired by the Brazilian government, in a venture led by Casimiro Montenegro Filho, then lieutenant-colonel of the Brazilian Air Force, to establish an institute of aeronautics, the Instituto Tecnológico de Aeronáutica (Aeronautical Technology Institute), of which he became the first rector. This was an outstanding contribution to the scientific and technological education in Brazil.
enwiki/27005985
enwiki
27,005,985
Richard Harbert Smith
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Harbert_Smith
2024-05-31T22:59:22Z
en
Q7326260
41,368
{{Infobox scientist | name = Richard Harbert Smith | image = Prof. Richard Harbert Smith (MIT).jpg | image_size = 160px | caption = Prof. Richard Harbert Smith (MIT). (1946) | birth_date = {{birth date|1894|01|15}} | birth_place = [[Dillsboro, Indiana]], United States | death_date = {{death date and age|1957|07|06|1894|01|15}} | death_place = [[Alexandria, Virginia]] | field = [[Aeronautics]] | work_institutions = {{Plainlist | * [[United States Naval Research Laboratory]] * [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]] * [[Instituto Tecnológico de Aeronáutica]] }} | alma_mater = {{Plainlist | * [[University of Evansville|Moores Hill College (today, University of Evansville)]] * [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]] * [[Johns Hopkins University]] }} | thesis_title = Aerodynamic theory and test of strut forms. | thesis_url = https://ntrs.nasa.gov/api/citations/19930091405/downloads/19930091405.pdf | thesis_year = 1929 | doctoral_advisor = [[Albert Francis Zahm]]<ref name="phdthesis" /><ref>Acknowledged in Foreword of PhD thesis.</ref> | doctoral_students = Manfred Rauscher | known_for = pioneering research in aeronautics | prizes = | module = }} '''Richard Harbert Smith''' (15 January 1894, [[Dillsboro, Indiana|Dillsboro]], [[Indiana]] &ndash; 6 July 1957, [[Alexandria, Virginia|Alexandria]], [[Virginia]]) was a professor and researcher of [[aeronautical engineering]] at the [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology|Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)]], from 1929 to 1945.<ref>[http://www.aeitaonline.com.br/wiki/index.php?title=Richard_Harbert_Smith Douglas, D.G. Mini-Biography on Prof. '''Richard Harbert Smith''' obtained from MIT Archives, sent by e-mail on Dec 23, 2008. Published under MIT Museum authorization on the wiki of the ITA Alumni on Jan 13, 2009.]</ref> His academic education was developed at the [[Moores Hill, Indiana|Moores Hill]] College ([[Bachelor's degree|BS]], 1915), [[Indiana]] (today, [[University of Evansville]]);<ref>[http://www.evansville.edu/ University of Evansville.]</ref> the [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]] ([[Bachelor's degree|SB]], 1918), [[Cambridge, Massachusetts|Cambridge]] ([[Greater Boston]]), [[Massachusetts]]; and the [[Johns Hopkins University]] ([[Master of Arts|MA]],<ref name="ma_thesis">[https://ntrs.nasa.gov/citations/19930091381 Smith R. H. Aerodynamic theory and test of strut forms. Part I ("''This part was submitted in May, 1928, to the Johns Hopkins University in conformity with the requirements for the M.A. degree. The second part will be completed and the whole submitted in 1929 in conformity with the requirements for the Ph.D. degree''"). Aerodynamical Laboratory Bureau of Construction and Repair, U.S. Navy, 1930. NACA-TR-311. (Available in pdf on NASA Technical Reports Server, on August 16, 2023).]</ref> 1928; [[Doctor of Philosophy|PhD]],<ref name="phdthesis">[https://ntrs.nasa.gov/citations/19930091405 Smith R. H. Aerodynamic theory and test of strut forms. Part II ("''This part was submitted in May, 1929, to the Johns Hopkins University as a doctor’s dissertation''"). Aerodynamical Laboratory Bureau of Construction and Repair, U.S. Navy, 1930. NACA-TR-335. (Available in pdf on NASA Technical Reports Server, on August 16, 2023).]</ref> 1929), [[Baltimore]], [[Maryland]]. After [[World War I]], Prof. Smith worked as an assistant at the [[United States Naval Research Laboratory]].<ref>[https://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?R=377413&id=6&as=false&or=false&qs=Ntt%3DSmith%252c%2BR%2BH%26Ntk%3Dall%26Ntx%3Dmode%2Bmatchall%26Ns%3DHarvestDate%257c0%26N%3D4294756313 Zahm, A F; Smith, R H; Hill, G C. The drag of C class airship hull with varying length of cylindric midships. Bureau of Construction and Repair, Navy Department, 1923. NACA-TR-138. (available in pdf on NASA Technical Reports Server, on May 26, 2010).]</ref> In 1929, he was an associate physicist at the Navy's laboratory when he was hired by the [[MIT|Massachusetts Institute of Technology]] as an associate professor of aeronautical engineering, being promoted to full professor in 1931. For many years, he was Dr. [[Jerome Clarke Hunsaker]]'s assistant administrator for aeronautical engineering at [[MIT]].<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?ei=JJX8S5vqEoGgywSnvfyhCg&cd=10&hl=en&id=rCIXAQAAIAAJ&dq=Richard+Harbert+Smith&q=%22Richard+Harbert+Smith%22 The Blue book of American aviation: who's who in the industry. Aviation Statistics Institute of America. 1942. (Google Books search result)]</ref> During the [[World War II]] period, Prof. Smith coordinated the [[MIT]] [[Civilian Pilot Training Program]]<ref>[http://tech.mit.edu/V61/PDF/N50.pdf "''Flight training suspended here. War order is first to effect institute; ban is temporary''". The Tech, Vol LXI, No. 50, pg 01/04, Dec 9, 1941. MIT, Cambridge, Massachusetts.]</ref><ref>[http://tech.mit.edu/V61/PDF/N59.pdf "''Flight training nears completion. Trainees next term must pledge service, pass rigid physical''". The Tech, Vol LXI, No. 59, pg 04/04, Jan 20, 1942. MIT, Cambridge, Massachusetts.]</ref> and was also instructor for several classes of female engineering trainees for the [[Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Company|Curtiss]] company. In 1945, he left [[MIT]] to go to [[Brazil]], hired by the Brazilian government, in a venture led by [[Casimiro Montenegro Filho]], then [[lieutenant-colonel]] of the [[Brazilian Air Force]], to establish an institute of aeronautics,<ref>[http://www.fcmf.org.br/sitenovo/73.php '''Smith''' Plan (ITA/CTA). Site of ''FCMF - Fundação Casimiro Montenegro Filho'' (Casimiro Montenegro Filho Foundation).]</ref> the ''[[Instituto Tecnológico de Aeronáutica]]'' (Aeronautical Technology Institute), of which he became the first [[Rector (academia)|rector]].<ref>[http://www.ita.br/agenda_reitor/galeria_fotos/galeria.html ITA Rectors Gallery (portuguese). Site of the ''Instituto Tecnológico de Aeronáutica (ITA)''.]</ref><ref>[http://www.pro-grad.ita.br/reitor.php Rectors and vice-rectors of ITA (portuguese). Site of the ''Instituto Tecnológico de Aeronáutica (ITA)''.]</ref> This was an outstanding contribution to the scientific and technological education in [[Brazil]]. ==References== <references/> ==External links== # [http://www.evansville.edu/ University of Evansville] (earlier [[Moores Hill, Indiana|Moores Hill]] College), [[Indiana]]. # [http://libraries.mit.edu/archives/ MIT Archives]. # [http://web.mit.edu/ Massachusetts Institute of Technology]. # [http://www.jhu.edu/ Johns Hopkins University]. # [https://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?Ns=HarvestDate|0&N=4294756313&Ntk=all&Ntx=mode%20matchall&Ntt=Smith,%20R%20H Smith, R H - List of Technical Reports. NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)]. # [http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/276924/Jerome-C-Hunsaker Dr. Jerome Clarke Hunsaker. Article from the Encyclopædia Britannica]. # [https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0007FJHVQ Shatswell Ober, "The Story of Aeronautics at M.I.T., 1895 to 1960". Amazon.com site]. # [https://web.archive.org/web/20101231031333/http://www.ita.br/ingles/ingles.htm Site of the ''Instituto Tecnológico de Aeronáutica'' (Aeronautical Technology Institute)]. # [http://web.mit.edu/museum/ MIT Museum]. # [http://web.mit.edu/aeroastro/ MIT Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics] # [http://www.aeitaonline.com.br/wiki/index.php?title=Richard_Harbert_Smith '''Richard Harbert Smith''']. Wiki of [[Instituto Tecnológico de Aeronáutica|ITA]] Alumni. # [http://www.cta.br/richard.php '''Smith, R. H.''' Conference "''Brazil, future aviation power''"] (excerpts in [[Portuguese language|Portuguese]]). Conference held on September 26, 1945, at the Brazilian Education Ministry auditorium, in Rio de Janeiro, invited by the ''Instituto Brasileiro de Aeronáutica'' (Brazilian Institute of Aeronautics). Site of the ''[[:pt:Departamento de ciência e tecnologia aeroespacial|Departamento de Ciência e Tecnologia Aeroespacial - DCTA]]'' (Brazilian Department of Aerospace Science and Technology). {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Smith, Richard Harbert}} [[Category:1894 births]] [[Category:1957 deaths]] [[Category:American aerospace engineers]] [[Category:Massachusetts Institute of Technology alumni]] [[Category:Johns Hopkins University alumni]] [[Category:People from Dillsboro, Indiana]] [[Category:20th-century American educators]] [[Category:Brazilian educators]] [[Category:20th-century American engineers]]
1,226,637,706
[{"title": "Richard Harbert Smith", "data": {"Born": "January 15, 1894 \u00b7 Dillsboro, Indiana, United States", "Died": "July 6, 1957 (aged 63) \u00b7 Alexandria, Virginia", "Alma mater": "- Moores Hill College (today, University of Evansville) - Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Johns Hopkins University", "Known for": "pioneering research in aeronautics", "Fields": "Aeronautics", "Institutions": "- United States Naval Research Laboratory - Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Instituto Tecnol\u00f3gico de Aeron\u00e1utica", "Thesis": "Aerodynamic theory and test of strut forms. (1929)", "Doctoral advisor": "Albert Francis Zahm", "Doctoral students": "Manfred Rauscher"}}]
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# Margherita Grandi Margherita Grandi (10 October 1892 – 29 January 1972) was an Australian-born Italian dramatic soprano. ## Life and career Margherita Grandi was born Margaret Gard in Harwood Island, Clarence River, near Maclean, in the Northern Rivers area of New South Wales, Australia. When she was ten, her family moved to Tasmania and she went to school in Hobart. She left Australia in 1911 to study at the Royal Conservatory of Music in London. She also studied with Mathilde Marchesi and Jean de Reszke; and later in Paris with Emma Calvé. She made her professional debut in Paris, as a mezzo-soprano under the stage name of Djéma Vécla (Vecla being an anagram of Calvé) singing Charlotte in Massenet's Werther. In 1922, she created Massenet's Amadis in Monte Carlo. She went to Italy, where she married stage designer Giovanni Grandi, with whom she had a daughter, Patricia. After further studies in Milan, with Giannina Russ, and an absence from the stage of almost ten years, she made a new debut as a soprano using her married name Grandi in 1932, at the Teatro Carcano in Milan, in the title role of Verdi's Aida. She made her debut at La Scala in 1934, as Helen in Boito's Mefistofele. She made her British debut in 1939 at Glyndebourne, as Verdi's Lady Macbeth, considered her greatest role. She sang the role of Maria in the Italian premiere of Richard Strauss's Friedenstag in 1940. Later, she was sent to an internment camp at Avellino, near Naples; her husband retrieved her and she retreated to the Italian Alps for the duration. She reportedly actively supported the partisans, helping to smuggle Allied airmen to safety in Switzerland. Returning to Britain following the Second World War, she sang at the Royal Opera House from 1947 to 1950, as Donna Anna in Mozart's Don Giovanni, Leonora in Il trovatore and the title role in Puccini's Tosca, and there she created the role of Diana in Arthur Bliss's The Olympians. She sang Lady Macbeth at the 1947 Edinburgh Festival, since issued on CD. In 1948, she recorded the Sleepwalking Scene from Macbeth conducted by Sir Thomas Beecham, but the scene's final floated high D-flat was "ghost-sung" by the English coloratura soprano Dorothy Bond. When news of this emerged shortly afterwards, Grandi announced that this note was not yet beyond her, and she would be singing it herself in a forthcoming concert at the Albert Hall, which she did. Margherita Grandi's singing voice is heard in the 1948 film The Red Shoes. She retired from the stage in 1951, and died in Milan in 1972, survived by her daughter. She can be heard on disc and in the film as Giulietta in Offenbach's The Tales of Hoffmann conducted by Beecham, and in excerpts from Verdi's Macbeth, La forza del destino and Don Carlos, and Puccini's Tosca. She left few commercial recordings as she was in her fifties by the time she entered the studio. She never performed in, or even returned to, her native Australia after leaving in 1911, and consequently is little known there.
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Margherita Grandi
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margherita_Grandi
2024-04-01T08:46:10Z
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{{short description|Italian opera singer}} {{Use dmy dates|date=October 2016}} {{Use Australian English|date=October 2016}} '''Margherita Grandi''' (10 October 1892<ref group=n>Some sources give her birthdate as 4 October 1894.</ref>{{spaced ndash}}29 January 1972) was an Australian-born Italian [[dramatic soprano]]. ==Life and career== Margherita Grandi was born '''Margaret Gard''' in [[Harwood Island (New South Wales)|Harwood Island]], [[Clarence River (New South Wales)|Clarence River]], near [[Maclean, New South Wales|Maclean]], in the [[Northern Rivers]] area of [[New South Wales]], Australia.<ref name=adb>{{Cite Australian Dictionary of Biography|title=Grandi, Margherita (Maggie) (1892–1972)|id2=grandi-margherita-maggie-10341|first=Jill|last=Waters|volume=14|year=1996|accessdate=16 November 2017}}</ref> When she was ten, her family moved to [[Tasmania]] and she went to school in [[Hobart]]. She left Australia in 1911 to study at the [[Royal Academy of Music|Royal Conservatory of Music]] in [[London]]. She also studied with [[Mathilde Marchesi]] and [[Jean de Reszke]]; and later in [[Paris]] with [[Emma Calvé]].<ref name=adb /> She made her professional debut in Paris, as a [[mezzo-soprano]] under the stage name of '''Djéma Vécla''' (Vecla being an anagram of Calvé)<ref group=n>Not to be confused with the French singer [[Emma Vecla]] who adopted that stage name for the same reason (student of Calvé) and whose biography has many parallels.</ref> singing Charlotte in [[Jules Massenet|Massenet]]'s ''[[Werther]]''.<ref name=adb /> In 1922, she created Massenet's ''[[Amadis (Massenet)|Amadis]]'' in [[Monte Carlo]].<ref name=adb /><ref name="kutschriem">[[Karl-Josef Kutsch|Kutsch, Karl-Josef]]; [[Leo Riemens|Riemens, Leo]]. ''[[Großes Sängerlexikon|Unvergängliche Stimmen: Sängerlexikon.]]'' Francke Verlag, Bern and München, 1982.</ref> She went to Italy, where she married stage designer Giovanni Grandi,<ref name=adb/><ref name="kutschriem"/> with whom she had a daughter, Patricia. After further studies in Milan, with [[Giannina Russ]], and an absence from the stage of almost ten years, she made a new debut as a soprano using her married name '''Grandi''' in 1932, at the Teatro Carcano in Milan, in the title role of [[Giuseppe Verdi|Verdi]]'s ''[[Aida]]''.<ref name=adb /> She made her debut at [[La Scala]] in 1934, as Helen in [[Arrigo Boito|Boito]]'s ''[[Mefistofele]]''. She made her British debut in 1939 at [[Glyndebourne]], as Verdi's [[Macbeth (Verdi)|Lady Macbeth]], considered her greatest role.<ref name=adb /> She sang the role of Maria in the Italian premiere of [[Richard Strauss]]'s ''[[Friedenstag]]'' in 1940.<ref name=adb /><ref name="kutschriem"/> Later, she was sent to an internment camp at Avellino, near Naples; her husband retrieved her and she retreated to the Italian Alps for the duration. She reportedly actively supported the partisans, helping to smuggle Allied airmen to safety in Switzerland.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.smh.com.au/news/music/a-forgotten-diva-who-never-looked-back/2006/09/20/1158431782418.html?page=fullpage|title=A forgotten diva who never looked back|work=[[The Sydney Morning Herald]]|accessdate=16 November 2017}}</ref> Returning to Britain following the Second World War, she sang at the [[Royal Opera House]] from 1947 to 1950, as Donna Anna in [[Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart|Mozart]]'s ''[[Don Giovanni]]'', Leonora in ''[[Il trovatore]]'' and the title role in [[Giacomo Puccini|Puccini]]'s ''[[Tosca]]'', and there she created the role of Diana in [[Arthur Bliss]]'s ''[[The Olympians]]''.<ref name=adb/> She sang Lady Macbeth at the 1947 [[Edinburgh Festival]],<ref name="kutschriem" /> since issued [[Macbeth discography|on CD]]. In 1948, she recorded the Sleepwalking Scene from ''Macbeth'' conducted by Sir [[Thomas Beecham]], but the scene's final floated high D-flat was "ghost-sung" by the English coloratura soprano [[Dorothy Bond]].<ref>[http://www.gramophone.co.uk/review/smetanaverdi-the-beecham-collection Smetana/Verdi - The Beecham Collection] by [[Alan Blyth]], ''[[Gramophone (magazine)|Gramophone]]'', March 2001</ref> When news of this emerged shortly afterwards, Grandi announced that this note was not yet beyond her, and she would be singing it herself in a forthcoming concert at the [[Albert Hall]], which she did.<ref>[http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article26512291 "Famous Soprano Honours Promise"], ''[[The Mercury (Hobart)|The Mercury]]'' (Hobart), 12 January 1949; via [[Trove]]. Retrieved 27 July 2014</ref> Margherita Grandi's singing voice is heard in the 1948 film ''[[The Red Shoes (1948 film)|The Red Shoes]]''. She retired from the stage in 1951, and died in [[Milan]] in 1972, survived by her daughter. She can be heard on disc and in the film as Giulietta in [[Jacques Offenbach|Offenbach]]'s ''[[The Tales of Hoffmann]]'' conducted by Beecham, and in excerpts from Verdi's ''Macbeth'', ''[[La forza del destino]]'' and ''[[Don Carlos]]'', and Puccini's ''Tosca''. She left few commercial recordings as she was in her fifties by the time she entered the studio. She never performed in, or even returned to, her native Australia after leaving in 1911, and consequently is little known there.<ref name=adb /> ==Notes and sources== '''Notes''' {{Reflist|group=n}} '''References''' {{Reflist}} '''Sources''' * ''[[Grove Music Online]]'', [[Harold Rosenthal]], Oxford University Press, 2008. ==External links== {{External media|image1=[http://www.abc.net.au/cm/rimage/9273828-16x9-large.jpg The young Grandi]|image2=[http://www.abc.net.au/news/image/9279316-3x2-940x627.jpg Grandi, c. 1940]}} *[http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-12-24/rising-opera-talent-discovers-connection-forgotten-diva/9273772 "Rising opera talent discovers connection to celebrated Italian singer from small NSW town"] by Catherine Marciniak, [[ABC News (Australia)|ABC News]], 24 December 2017 *{{IMDb name|0334865|Margherita Grandi}} {{Portal bar|Biography|Opera}} {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Grandi, Margherita}} [[Category:1890s births]] [[Category:1972 deaths]] [[Category:Italian operatic sopranos]] [[Category:Australian operatic sopranos]] [[Category:20th-century Italian women opera singers]] [[Category:20th-century Australian women opera singers]] [[Category:Australian emigrants to Italy]] [[Category:Year of birth uncertain]]
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# Publius Cornelius Rufinus (consul 290 BC) Publius Cornelius Rufinus was a Roman politician and general of the third century BC. He is often thought to be a son of Publius Cornelius Rufinus, dictator in 334 BC, but this is impossible because the Fasti Capitolini say that his father was a certain Gnaeus Cornelius Rufinus and his grandfather was Publius Cornelius Rufinus, probably the dictator (note the 44-year gap in between Publius the Elder's dictatorship and Publius the Younger's first consulship). Rufinus was consul twice and dictator once, the latter in an unknown year. He brought the Samnite War to an end in his first consulship, in 290 BC, with his colleague Manius Curius Denatus. In the elections of 277 BC, Gaius Fabricius Luscinus, consul the previous year, was an opponent of Rufinus but voted for him anyway, seeing that Rufinus was the only candidate with military genius. When Rufinus thanked him for the support, or when the people inquired why he voted for his opponent, Fabricius replied, "I would rather be robbed by a fellow countryman than sold by the enemy [as a slave]." Rufinus took up arms again because of the vulnerability of the enemy, in his second consulship in 277 BC, in which he captured the towns of Croton and Locri, but his reputation suffered severely because of his avarice and cruelty. Two years later, Rufinus was expelled from the senate by Fabricius, who was censor at the time, when he was found to have possessed over ten librae (or pounds) of silver plate. He was also the great-great-great grandfather of the dictator Lucius Cornelius Sulla, and a father of Publius Cornelius Sulla, Flamen Dialis c. 250 BC.
enwiki/50074874
enwiki
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Publius Cornelius Rufinus (consul 290 BC)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Publius_Cornelius_Rufinus_(consul_290_BC)
2023-10-11T03:31:05Z
en
Q723447
19,384
{{short description|Roman senator and general}} '''Publius Cornelius Rufinus''' was a Roman politician and general of the third century BC. He is often thought to be a son of [[Publius Cornelius Rufinus (dictator 334 BC)|Publius Cornelius Rufinus]], dictator in 334 BC, but this is impossible because the [[Fasti Capitolini]] say that his father was a certain Gnaeus Cornelius Rufinus and his grandfather was Publius Cornelius Rufinus, probably the dictator (note the 44-year gap in between Publius the Elder's dictatorship and Publius the Younger's first consulship). Rufinus was [[consul]] twice and [[Roman dictator|dictator]] once, the latter in an unknown year. He brought the [[Samnite Wars|Samnite War]] to an end in his first consulship, in 290 BC, with his colleague [[Manius Curius Dentatus|Manius Curius Denatus]]. In the elections of 277 BC, [[Gaius Fabricius Luscinus]], consul the previous year, was an opponent of Rufinus but voted for him anyway, seeing that Rufinus was the only candidate with military genius. When Rufinus thanked him for the support, or when the people inquired why he voted for his opponent, Fabricius replied, "I would rather be robbed by a fellow countryman than sold by the enemy [as a slave]."<ref name=AtticNights>{{cite book |last1=Aulus Gellius |title=Attic Nights Vii, 4.8 |url=http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A2007.01.0072%3Abook%3D4%3Achapter%3D8 |access-date=August 16, 2023}}</ref> Rufinus took up arms again because of the vulnerability of the enemy, in his second consulship in 277 BC, in which he captured the towns of [[Crotone|Croton]] and [[Locri]], but his reputation suffered severely because of his avarice and cruelty. Two years later, Rufinus was expelled from the senate by Fabricius, who was [[Roman censor|censor]] at the time, when he was found to have possessed over ten ''librae'' (or pounds) of silver plate.<ref name=AtticNights /> He was also the great-great-great grandfather of the dictator [[Sulla|Lucius Cornelius Sulla]], and a father of Publius Cornelius Sulla, [[Flamen Dialis]] c. 250 BC.<ref>[[Secondary source|Secondary sources]]: Reams (1985) ''The First Fifty Years of Sulla: A Re-assessment'', pp. 14 - 17; Keaveney (2005) ''Sulla: The Last Republican'', p. 5; Cagniart (1986) ''The Life and Career of Lucius Cornelius Sulla through his Consulship in 88 BC: A Study in Politics'', p. 21; Badian (1970) ''Lucius Sulla: The Deadly Reformer'', pp. 4 - 5; Carcopino (1931) ''Sylla; ou, la monarchie manquée'', p. 20 n. 4; Broughton ''MRR'' 1.183, 187 and 194; ed. Smith (1872) ''A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, Volume 3'', p. 665 (Rufinus no. 2); Crawford (1993) ''The Roman Republic'', pp. 29 - 30; Keulen (2009) ''Gellius the Satirist: Roman Cultural Authority in Attic Nights'', p. 186. [[Primary source|Primary sources]]: Dion. Hal. 20.13.1; Val. Max. 2.9.4; Vell. Pat. 1.14.6; Plin. NH. 7.166; Eutrop. 2.9.3; Cic. ''Orat''. 2.268; Aul. Gell. 4.8.1,17.21.39; Front. ''Strat''. 3.6.4; Zonar. 8.6; L. Amp. 18.9; Plut. ''Sul.'' 1.1; Flor. 1.18.2;Tert. ''Apol''. 6; Aug. ''Civ. Dei'' 5.18; Plin. ''NH''. 18.8; Juv. ''Sat''. 9.142.</ref> ==See also== * [[Cornelia gens]] ==References== {{Reflist}} {{s-start}} {{s-off}} {{s-bef|before=[[Lucius Postumius Megellus (consul 305 BC)|Lucius Postumius Megellus]]|before2=[[Gaius Junius Bubulcus Brutus (consul 291 BC)|Gaius Junius Bubulcus Brutus]]}} {{s-ttl|title=[[List of Roman Republican consuls|Roman consul]]|years=290 BC|with=[[Manius Curius Dentatus]]}} {{s-aft|after=[[Marcus Valerius Maximus Corvinus]]|after2=[[Quintus Caedicius Noctua]]}} {{s-bef|before=[[Gaius Fabricius Luscinus]] II|before2=[[Quintus Aemilius Papus]] II}} {{s-ttl|title=[[List of Roman Republican consuls|Roman consul]] II|years=277 BC|with=[[Gaius Junius Bubulcus Brutus (consul 291 BC)|Gaius Junius Bubulcus Brutus]] II}} {{s-aft|after=[[Quintus Fabius Maximus Gurges (consul 292 BC)|Q. Fabius Maximus Gurges]] II|after2=[[Gaius Genucius Clepsina]]}} {{s-end}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Cornelius Rufinus, Publius}} [[Category:3rd-century BC Roman consuls]] [[Category:Cornelii|Rufinus, Publius]] [[Category:Ancient Roman dictators]] [[Category:Ancient Roman patricians]]
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# Mlynky Mlynky (Hungarian: Hollópatak) is a village and municipality of the Spišská Nová Ves District in the Košice Region of central-eastern Slovakia. It is one of the most important touristic localities around Slovak Karst mountains, and the village's inhabitants mainly make their living from tourism. ## History The village has existed since around 1850. ## Geography The village lies at an altitude of 739 metres and covers an area of 25.051 km². In 2011 had a population of 581 inhabitants.
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Mlynky
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mlynky
2025-01-11T06:23:39Z
en
Q1037862
57,795
{{for|the Ukrainian village|Klishkivtsi}} {{Infobox settlement | name = Mlynky | other_name = Hollópatak | settlement_type = [[List of municipalities and towns in Slovakia|Municipality]] <!-- images, nickname, motto --> | image_skyline = Mlynky SR2.jpg | image_caption = | image_flag = Mlynky-spisska nova ves-flag.svg | image_shield = <!-- location --> | subdivision_type = [[List of sovereign states|Country]] | subdivision_name = {{SVK}} | subdivision_type1 = [[Regions of Slovakia|Region]] | subdivision_name1 = {{flag|Košice Region}} | subdivision_type2 = [[Districts of Slovakia|District]] | subdivision_name2 = [[Spišská Nová Ves District]] <!-- maps and coordinates --> | pushpin_map = Slovakia Košice Region#Slovakia | pushpin_relief = 1 | pushpin_map_caption = Location of Mlynky in the [[Košice Region]]##Location of Mlynky in [[Slovakia]] | coordinates = {{coord|48.85|N|20.43|E|region:SK|display=inline,title}} <!-- government --> | leader_title = | leader_name = | leader_party = <!-- established --> | established_title = First mentioned | established_date = 1850 <!-- area --> | area_footnotes = <ref name="area">{{Cite web |url=http://datacube.statistics.sk/#!/view/sk/VBD_DEM/om7014rr/v_om7014rr_00_00_00_sk |title=Hustota obyvateľstva - obce [om7014rr_ukaz: Rozloha (Štvorcový meter)] |language=sk |date=2022-03-31 |website=www.statistics.sk |publisher= Statistical Office of the Slovak Republic|access-date=2022-03-31}}</ref> | area_total_km2 = 25.14 <!-- elevation --> | elevation_footnotes = <ref name="base_info">{{Cite web |url=http://datacube.statistics.sk/#!/view/sk/VBD_SK_WIN/om5001rr/v_om5001rr_00_00_00_sk |title=Základná charakteristika |language=sk |date=2015-04-17 |website=www.statistics.sk |publisher= Statistical Office of the Slovak Republic|access-date=2022-03-31}}</ref> | elevation_m = 761 <!-- population --> | population_as_of = {{abbr|2021|Population: 2021-12-31. Population density & Total area: 2021-06-30/-07-01. Elevation, Postal code & Area code (last updated): 2015-04-17.}} | population_footnotes = <ref>{{Cite web |url=http://datacube.statistics.sk/#!/view/sk/VBD_DEM/om7101rr/v_om7101rr_00_00_00_sk |title=Počet obyvateľov podľa pohlavia - obce (ročne) |language=sk |date=2022-03-31 |website=www.statistics.sk |publisher= Statistical Office of the Slovak Republic|access-date=2022-03-31}}</ref> | population_total = 494 <!-- time zone(s) --> | timezone1 = [[Central European Time|CET]] | utc_offset1 = +1 | timezone1_DST = [[Central European Summer Time|CEST]] | utc_offset1_DST = +2 <!-- postal codes, area code --> | postal_code_type = Postal code | postal_code = 537 6<ref name="base_info"/> | area_code = +421 53<ref name="base_info"/> | blank_name = [[Slovak car registration plates|Car plate]] | blank_info = SN <!-- website, footnotes --> | website = {{URL|https://mlynky.sk/}} }} '''Mlynky''' ({{langx|hu|Hollópatak}}) is a [[village]] and [[municipality]] of the [[Spišská Nová Ves District]] in the [[Košice Region]] of central-eastern [[Slovakia]]. It is one of the most important touristic localities around [[Slovak Karst]] mountains, and the village's inhabitants mainly make their living from tourism. ==History== The village has existed since around 1850. ==Geography== The village lies at an altitude of 739 metres and covers an area of 25.051 km². In 2011 had a population of 581 inhabitants. ==References== {{Reflist}} {{Spisska Nova Ves District}} {{authority control}} [[Category:Villages and municipalities in Spišská Nová Ves District]] {{Košice-geo-stub}}
1,268,725,728
[{"title": "Mlynky Holl\u00f3patak", "data": {"Country": "Slovakia", "Region": "Ko\u0161ice Region", "District": "Spi\u0161sk\u00e1 Nov\u00e1 Ves District", "First mentioned": "1850"}}, {"title": "Area", "data": {"\u2022 Total": "25.14 km2 (9.71 sq mi)", "Elevation": "761 m (2,497 ft)"}}, {"title": "Population (2021)", "data": {"\u2022 Total": "494", "Time zone": "UTC+1 (CET)", "\u2022 Summer (DST)": "UTC+2 (CEST)", "Postal code": "537 6", "Area code": "+421 53", "Car plate": "SN", "Website": "mlynky.sk"}}]
false
# Porto Valtravaglia Porto Valtravaglia is a comune (municipality) of c. 2,400 inhabitants in the Province of Varese in the Italian region Lombardy, located about 70 kilometres (43 mi) northwest of Milan and about 20 kilometres (12 mi) northwest of Varese. Porto Valtravaglia borders the following municipalities: Brezzo di Bedero, Brissago-Valtravaglia, Casalzuigno, Castelveccana, Duno, Ghiffa and Oggebbio. Dario Fo, Nobel Prize in literature of 1997, spent his childhood and adolescence here, and the little village played a central role in the development of his artistic specificity and production. In fact, it was the mix of people from different countries, working at the local, renowned blown glass factory and speaking an array of languages, that inspired the creation by Fo of the Grammelot, an original new idiom mixing a number of regional dialects. Listening to the stories told by the inhabitants of the village, typically fishermen, peasants, glass blowers and smugglers, then, introduced and trained him to the art of storytelling, of which he was a great representative. Eventually, it was again the local population, often busy with nightly jobs, who inspired one of his novels, "Il paese dei Mezarat" (the village of the bats).
enwiki/6700907
enwiki
6,700,907
Porto Valtravaglia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Porto_Valtravaglia
2024-08-05T15:31:49Z
en
Q39860
82,095
{{Infobox Italian comune | name = Porto Valtravaglia | official_name = Comune di Porto Valtravaglia | native_name = | image_skyline = Porto Valtravaglia Panorama.jpg | image_caption = Porto Valtravaglia | image_shield = Porto Valtravaglia-Stemma.svg | shield_alt = | image_map = Map of comune of Porto Valtravaglia (province of Varese, region Lombardy, Italy).svg | map_alt = | map_caption = | pushpin_label_position = | pushpin_map_alt = | coordinates = {{coord|45|58|N|8|42|E|type:city(2,464)_region:IT|display=inline,title}} | coordinates_footnotes = | region = [[Lombardy]] | province = [[Province of Varese|Varese]] (VA) | frazioni = Ligurno, Muceno, Musadino, San Michele, C.na Profarè, C.na Bassa, Monte Pian Nave, Monte della Colonna, Monte Ganna, Domo, Torre, Casa Piano Croce | mayor_party = | mayor = Bruno Virgilio Barassi | area_footnotes = | area_total_km2 = 16.0 | population_footnotes = <ref name="istat">All demographics and other statistics: Italian statistical institute [[National Institute of Statistics (Italy)|Istat]].</ref> | population_total = 2464 | population_as_of = Dec. 2004 | pop_density_footnotes = | population_demonym = Portovaltravagliesi | elevation_footnotes = | elevation_m = 199 | twin1 = | twin1_country = | saint = Madonna Assunta | day = August 15 | postal_code = 21010 | area_code = 0332 | website = {{official website|http://www.comune-portovaltravaglia.it}} | footnotes = }} '''Porto Valtravaglia''' is a ''[[comune]]'' (municipality) of c. 2,400 inhabitants in the [[Province of Varese]] in the [[Italy|Italian]] region [[Lombardy]], located about {{convert|70|km|mi}} northwest of [[Milan]] and about {{convert|20|km|mi}} northwest of [[Varese]]. Porto Valtravaglia borders the following municipalities: [[Brezzo di Bedero]], [[Brissago-Valtravaglia]], [[Casalzuigno]], [[Castelveccana]], [[Duno, Lombardy|Duno]], [[Ghiffa]] and [[Oggebbio]]. [[Dario Fo]], [[Nobel Prize in Literature|Nobel Prize in literature]] of 1997, spent his childhood and adolescence here, and the little village played a central role in the development of his artistic specificity and production. In fact, it was the mix of people from different countries, working at the local, renowned blown glass factory and speaking an array of languages, that inspired the creation by Fo of the [[Grammelot]], an original new idiom mixing a number of regional dialects. Listening to the stories told by the inhabitants of the village, typically fishermen, peasants, glass blowers and smugglers, then, introduced and trained him to the art of storytelling, of which he was a great representative. Eventually, it was again the local population, often busy with nightly jobs, who inspired one of his novels, "Il paese dei Mezarat" (the village of the bats). == Demographic evolution == <timeline> Colors= id:lightgrey value:gray(0.9) id:darkgrey value:gray(0.8) id:sfondo value:rgb(1,1,1) id:barra value:rgb(0.6,0.7,0.8) ImageSize = width:455 height:303 PlotArea = left:50 bottom:50 top:30 right:30 DateFormat = x.y Period = from:0 till:3000 TimeAxis = orientation:vertical AlignBars = justify ScaleMajor = gridcolor:darkgrey increment:1000 start:0 ScaleMinor = gridcolor:lightgrey increment:200 start:0 BackgroundColors = canvas:sfondo BarData= bar:1861 text:1861 bar:1871 text:1871 bar:1881 text:1881 bar:1901 text:1901 bar:1911 text:1911 bar:1921 text:1921 bar:1931 text:1931 bar:1936 text:1936 bar:1951 text:1951 bar:1961 text:1961 bar:1971 text:1971 bar:1981 text:1981 bar:1991 text:1991 bar:2001 text:2001 PlotData= color:barra width:20 align:left bar:1861 from: 0 till:1534 bar:1871 from: 0 till:1762 bar:1881 from: 0 till:1789 bar:1901 from: 0 till:1838 bar:1911 from: 0 till:1986 bar:1921 from: 0 till:1994 bar:1931 from: 0 till:1980 bar:1936 from: 0 till:1743 bar:1951 from: 0 till:2041 bar:1961 from: 0 till:2313 bar:1971 from: 0 till:2449 bar:1981 from: 0 till:2479 bar:1991 from: 0 till:2409 bar:2001 from: 0 till:2387 PlotData= bar:1861 at:1534 fontsize:XS text: 1534 shift:(-8,5) bar:1871 at:1762 fontsize:XS text: 1762 shift:(-8,5) bar:1881 at:1789 fontsize:XS text: 1789 shift:(-8,5) bar:1901 at:1838 fontsize:XS text: 1838 shift:(-8,5) bar:1911 at:1986 fontsize:XS text: 1986 shift:(-8,5) bar:1921 at:1994 fontsize:XS text: 1994 shift:(-8,5) bar:1931 at:1980 fontsize:XS text: 1980 shift:(-8,5) bar:1936 at:1743 fontsize:XS text: 1743 shift:(-8,5) bar:1951 at:2041 fontsize:XS text: 2041 shift:(-8,5) bar:1961 at:2313 fontsize:XS text: 2313 shift:(-8,5) bar:1971 at:2449 fontsize:XS text: 2449 shift:(-8,5) bar:1981 at:2479 fontsize:XS text: 2479 shift:(-8,5) bar:1991 at:2409 fontsize:XS text: 2409 shift:(-8,5) bar:2001 at:2387 fontsize:XS text: 2387 shift:(-8,5) TextData= fontsize:S pos:(20,20) text:Data from ISTAT </timeline> ==References== {{reflist}} ==External links== * [http://www.comune-portovaltravaglia.it Official website] {{in lang|it}} <br> {{Province of Varese}} {{Lago Maggiore}} {{authority control}} [[Category:Cities and towns in Lombardy]]
1,238,765,299
[{"title": "Porto Valtravaglia", "data": {"Country": "Italy", "Region": "Lombardy", "Province": "Varese (VA)", "Frazioni": "Ligurno, Muceno, Musadino, San Michele, C.na Profar\u00e8, C.na Bassa, Monte Pian Nave, Monte della Colonna, Monte Ganna, Domo, Torre, Casa Piano Croce"}}, {"title": "Government", "data": {"\u2022 Mayor": "Bruno Virgilio Barassi"}}, {"title": "Area", "data": {"\u2022 Total": "16.0 km2 (6.2 sq mi)", "Elevation": "199 m (653 ft)"}}, {"title": "Population (Dec. 2004)", "data": {"\u2022 Total": "2,464", "\u2022 Density": "150/km2 (400/sq mi)", "Demonym": "Portovaltravagliesi", "Time zone": "UTC+1 (CET)", "\u2022 Summer (DST)": "UTC+2 (CEST)", "Postal code": "21010", "Dialing code": "0332", "Patron saint": "Madonna Assunta", "Saint day": "August 15", "Website": "Official website"}}]
false
# Manettia nubigena Manettia nubigena is a species of plant in the family Rubiaceae. It is endemic to Ecuador.
enwiki/12895523
enwiki
12,895,523
Manettia nubigena
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manettia_nubigena
2023-03-18T16:49:18Z
en
Q3595777
29,061
{{Short description|Species of plant}} {{Speciesbox |status = DD |status_system = IUCN3.1 |taxon = Manettia nubigena |authority = [[Friedrich Ludwig Emil Diels|Diels]] |status_ref = <ref name = "iucn status 17 November 2021">{{cite iucn |author = Jaramillo, T. |author2 = Cornejo, X. |author3 = Pitman, N. |date = 2004 |title = ''Manettia nubigena'' |volume = 2004 |page = e.T46067A11032471 |doi = 10.2305/IUCN.UK.2004.RLTS.T46067A11032471.en |access-date = 17 November 2021}}</ref> }} '''''Manettia nubigena''''' is a species of [[plant]] in the family [[Rubiaceae]]. It is [[Endemism|endemic]] to [[Ecuador]]. ==References== {{reflist}} {{Taxonbar|from=Q3595777}} [[Category:Manettia|nub]] [[Category:Endemic flora of Ecuador]] [[Category:Data deficient plants]] [[Category:Taxonomy articles created by Polbot]] {{Rubioideae-stub}}
1,145,341,235
[{"title": "Conservation status", "data": {"Conservation status": "\u00b7 Data Deficient (IUCN 3.1)"}}, {"title": "Scientific classification", "data": {"Kingdom": "Plantae", "Clade": ["Tracheophytes", "Angiosperms", "Eudicots", "Asterids"], "Order": "Gentianales", "Family": "Rubiaceae", "Genus": "Manettia", "Species": "M. nubigena"}}, {"title": "Binomial name", "data": {"Binomial name": "Manettia nubigena \u00b7 Diels"}}]
false
# Louis S. Warren Louis S. Warren (born December 8, 1962) is an American historian and a W. Turrentine Jackson Professor of Western U.S. History at the University of California, Davis, where he teaches environmental history, the history of the American West, and U.S. history. ## Early life and education Warren was born in Pocatello, Idaho he is the third child of Claude and Elizabeth Warren. Warren attended a two-room schoolhouse in the ghost town of Goodsprings, Nevada, and attended Basic High School in Henderson, Nevada. He was a British American Education Foundation Scholar at Cranleigh School, Surrey, UK, in 1980 – 81, and did his undergraduate work in history at Columbia University in New York, where he graduated in 1985. He became a teacher at Peterhouse School in Zimbabwe from 1985 until 1987. In 1988, he began graduate study at Yale University, where he received his Ph.D. in history in 1993. ## Professional career In addition to teaching at UC Davis, Warren has written or edited several books on US Western and Environmental History. He is the co-editor of Boom: A Journal of California. ## Awards He has received numerous awards for his writing, including: - 1997 the National Cowboy Hall of Fame Wrangler Award for Best Non-Fiction Book.[6] - 2005 the Great Plains Distinguished Book Prize.[7] - 2006 Albert Beveridge Prize[8] of the American Historical Association - 2006 Caughey-Western History Association Prize of the Western History Association.[9] - 2006 Western Writers of America Spur Award for Historical Nonfiction.[10] - 2011 Guggenheim Fellowship for US History.[11] - 2018 Bancroft Prize.[12] ## Publications - The Hunter's Game: Poachers and Conservationists in Twentieth-Century America. Yale University Press. 1997. ISBN 978-0-300-06206-9. Louis S. Warren. - Louis S. Warren, ed. (2003). American environmental history. Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 978-0-631-22863-9. - Buffalo Bill's America: William Cody and the Wild West Show. Alfred A. Knopf. 2005. ISBN 978-0-375-41216-5. - God's Red Son: The Ghost Dance Religion and the Making of Modern America. Basic Books. 2017. ISBN 978-0465015023. ## Reviews - Geoffrey C. Ward (December 11, 2005). "Showman of the Wild Frontier". The New York Times.
enwiki/32511010
enwiki
32,511,010
Louis S. Warren
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_S._Warren
2025-02-03T14:46:36Z
en
Q6688111
65,605
{{Short description|American historian (born 1962)}} {{Infobox person | name = Louis S. Warren | image = Louis S. Warren, 2018.png | caption = Warren in 2018 | birth_date = {{birth date and age|1962|12|8|mf=y}} | birth_place = [[Pocatello, Idaho]] | nationality = American | known_for = US Western and Environmental History | alma_mater = [[Columbia University]] ([[Bachelor of Arts|BA]])<br>[[Yale University]] ([[Doctor of Philosophy|PhD]]) | employer = [[University of California, Davis]] | occupation = [[Historian]] | website = [http://louiswarren.com louiswarren.com] }} '''Louis S. Warren''' (born December 8, 1962) is an American [[historian]] and a [[W. Turrentine Jackson]] Professor of Western U.S. History at the [[University of California, Davis]],<ref name='ucdavis'> {{cite web |url=http://dhi.ucdavis.edu/?page_id=1646 |title=Seminar Participants: "California Convergences: People, Places, Products" (Winter 2010) |publisher=UC Davis Humanities Institute |year=2010 |accessdate=23 July 2011 }}</ref> where he teaches environmental history, the history of the American West, and U.S. history.<ref name='ucdavis2'>{{cite web |url=http://history.ucdavis.edu/professor/louis_warren |title=Louis Warren |publisher=Department of History, UC Davis |accessdate=24 July 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120220071150/http://history.ucdavis.edu/professor/louis_warren |archive-date=20 February 2012 |url-status=dead }}</ref> ==Early life and education== Warren was born in [[Pocatello, Idaho]] he is the third child of [[Claude Nelson Warren|Claude]] and [[Elizabeth von Till Warren|Elizabeth Warren]].<ref name="schneider"> {{cite book | last1=Winslow |first1=Diane Lynne | last2=Wedding | first2=Jeffrey R. | last3=Schneider | first3=Joan S. | chapter=Claude Nelson Warren: An introduction to his life and times | pages=1–7 | editor1-last = Schneider | editor1-first = Joan S. | editor2-first = Robert M | editor2-last = Yohe II | editor3-first = Jill K | editor3-last = Gardner | title = Archaeological Passages: a volume in honor of Claude Nelson Warren | location = Hemet, California | publisher = Western Center for Archaeology and Paleontology, Publications in Archaeology | year= 2000 | series= Number 1 | isbn = 0-9713558-0-0 }} </ref> Warren attended a [[Goodsprings Schoolhouse|two-room schoolhouse]] in the ghost town of [[Goodsprings, Nevada]], and attended [[Basic High School]] in [[Henderson, Nevada]].<ref name='louiswarren'> {{cite web |title=Bio |publisher=Louis S. Warren |url=http://louiswarren.com/ |accessdate=24 July 2011 }}</ref> He was a British American Education Foundation Scholar at [[Cranleigh School]], [[Surrey]], UK, in 1980 – 81, and did his undergraduate work in history at [[Columbia University]] in New York, where he graduated in 1985.<ref name='louiswarren'/> He became a teacher at [[Peterhouse Group of Boarding Schools|Peterhouse School]] in [[Zimbabwe]] from 1985 until 1987. In 1988, he began graduate study at [[Yale University]], where he received his Ph.D. in history in 1993.<ref name='louiswarren'/> == Professional career == In addition to teaching at UC Davis, Warren has written or edited several books on US Western and Environmental History. He is the co-editor of ''[[Boom: A Journal of California]]''.<ref name='boom'>{{cite web |url=http://www.boomcalifornia.com/editorial-board/ |title=Editorial Board |publisher=Boom: A Journal of California |access-date=2011-07-23 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110605025847/http://www.boomcalifornia.com/editorial-board/ |archive-date=2011-06-05 |url-status=dead }}</ref> == Awards == He has received numerous awards for his writing, including: *1997 the [[National Cowboy Hall of Fame]] Wrangler Award for Best Non-Fiction Book.<ref> {{cite web |url=http://h-net.msu.edu/cgi-bin/logbrowse.pl?trx=vx&list=h-museum&month=0305&week=a&msg=5fpflsm2h6Ub5OhTq6TZvg&user=&pw= |title=Larom Summer Institute Institute of Western American Studies |publisher=H-Net Discussion Networks |accessdate=24 July 2011 }}</ref> *2005 the [[Great Plains Distinguished Book Prize]].<ref name='greatplains'> {{cite web |title=Past Book Prize Winners |publisher=Center For Great Plains Studies, University of Nebraska-Lincoln |url=http://www.unl.edu/plains/bookprize/pastwinners.shtml |accessdate=23 July 2011 }}</ref> *2006 [[Albert J. Beveridge Award|Albert Beveridge Prize]]<ref name='Beveridge'> {{cite web |title=Albert J. Beveridge Award |publisher=American Historical Association |url=http://www.historians.org/prizes/AWARDED/BeveridgeWinner.htm |accessdate=23 July 2011 }} </ref> of the [[American Historical Association]] *2006 [[Caughey Western History Association Prize|Caughey-Western History Association Prize]] of the [[Western History Association]].<ref name='caughey'> {{cite web |url=http://www.mnstate.edu/schwartz/westhistassoccaughey.htm |title=The Caughey-Western History Association Prize |author=Larry Schwartz |publisher=Livingston Lord Library, Minnesota State University |location=Moorhead, Minnesota |accessdate=24 July 2011 }} </ref> *2006 [[Western Writers of America]] [[Spur Award]] for Historical Nonfiction.<ref name='wwa'> {{cite web |title = Spur Award History |publisher = Western Writers of America, Inc. |url = http://www.westernwriters.org/spur_award_history.htm#2006 |accessdate = 23 July 2011 |url-status = dead |archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20100124155545/http://www.westernwriters.org/spur_award_history.htm#2006 |archivedate = 24 January 2010 }} </ref> *2011 [[Guggenheim Fellowships|Guggenheim Fellowship]] for US History.<ref name='guggenheim'> {{cite web |title=2011 Fellows - United States and Canada |publisher=John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation |url=http://www.gf.org/news-events/2011-Fellows-United-States-and-Canada/ |accessdate=23 July 2011 }} </ref> *2018 [[Bancroft Prize]].<ref name='bancroft'> {{cite web |title=The Bancroft Prizes - Columbia University Libraries |publisher=Columbia University Libraries |url=https://library.columbia.edu/about/awards/bancroft.html |accessdate=13 March 2018 }} </ref> == Publications == *{{cite book| url=https://archive.org/details/huntersgamepoach00warr| url-access=registration| quote=Louis S. Warren.| title=The Hunter's Game: Poachers and Conservationists in Twentieth-Century America| publisher= Yale University Press| year= 1997| isbn= 978-0-300-06206-9}} *{{cite book| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Bt_-dC6PAaYC&q=Louis+S.+Warren| title= American environmental history| editor=Louis S. Warren| publisher=Wiley-Blackwell| year= 2003| isbn=978-0-631-22863-9}} *{{cite book| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2lgq-ebTZfcC&q=Louis+S.+Warren| title=Buffalo Bill's America: William Cody and the Wild West Show| publisher= Alfred A. Knopf| year= 2005| isbn=978-0-375-41216-5 }} *{{cite book| title=God's Red Son: The Ghost Dance Religion and the Making of Modern America| publisher= Basic Books | year= 2017| isbn= 978-0465015023 }} == Reviews == *{{cite news| url=https://www.nytimes.com/2005/12/11/books/review/11ward.html| title=Showman of the Wild Frontier| author=Geoffrey C. Ward| work=The New York Times| date= December 11, 2005}} == References == {{reflist}} ==External links== *{{C-SPAN|1016953}} {{authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Warren, Louis S}} [[Category:21st-century American historians]] [[Category:21st-century American male writers]] [[Category:Living people]] [[Category:1962 births]] [[Category:People educated at Cranleigh School]] [[Category:Bancroft Prize winners]] [[Category:American male non-fiction writers]] [[Category:Columbia College (New York) alumni]] [[Category:Yale Graduate School of Arts and Sciences alumni]] [[Category:University of California, Davis faculty]]
1,273,687,558
[{"title": "Louis S. Warren", "data": {"Born": "December 8, 1962 \u00b7 Pocatello, Idaho", "Nationality": "American", "Alma mater": "Columbia University (BA) \u00b7 Yale University (PhD)", "Occupation": "Historian", "Employer": "University of California, Davis", "Known for": "US Western and Environmental History", "Website": "louiswarren.com"}}]
false
# Long Creek Presbyterian Church Long Creek Presbyterian Church is a member of the Presbyterian Church (USA) and sits on a hill in Gaston County, North Carolina, in a rural area between Bessemer City and Kings Mountain. Long Creek was organized by the Orange Presbytery of the Synod of New York and Philadelphia in 1780. One of the oldest surviving churches in Gaston County, the Long Creek Presbyterian Church building was built in 1876, almost a century after the congregation was formed. This Greek Revival church is a single-story, frame building which rests on granite piers and has been underpinned with masonry brick. In December 1993, the historic sanctuary was saved from a fire which destroyed a brick choir room addition attached to the wood frame sanctuary building. The fire, determined to have been set by an arsonist, heavily damaged both the sanctuary and the Sunday School building. In the year following the fire, the church, under the leadership of former pastor James S. Welch Jr., rebuilt the choir room addition and renovated the sanctuary in keeping with historical registry requirements. The church is listed on the Gaston County historic properties registry. One of the most interesting features of the Long Creek Presbyterian Church property is the two hundred year old cemetery enclosed by a rock wall. The earliest marked grave in the cemetery here is that of Joseph Blackwood, dated October 22, 1780. Tradition says that he was wounded in the Battle of Kings Mountain on October 7, and died a few days later. The church cemetery is the final resting place for a number of revolutionary war soldiers including Captain Samuel Espy, an officer who had served under Colonel William Graham. In 2012, a large second cemetery directly below the rock walled cemetery was discovered containing the remains of at least 90 former slaves. The discovery was made following cemetery work begun with a grant from the David Belk Cannon Foundation. The grant was awarded to professionally restore and preserve the church's traditional cemetery within the rock wall. Photos of the markers along with information on them will go onto a website available to researchers. The church is now working with local African American congregations to also preserve the additional gravesites.
enwiki/52891699
enwiki
52,891,699
Long Creek Presbyterian Church
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long_Creek_Presbyterian_Church
2024-12-19T14:58:42Z
en
Q28419383
31,633
{{Short description|Presbyterian Church in North Carolina}} {{Orphan|date=November 2023}} '''Long Creek Presbyterian Church''' is a member of the [[Presbyterian Church (USA)]] and sits on a hill in [[Gaston County, North Carolina|Gaston County]], North Carolina, in a rural area between [[Bessemer City, North Carolina|Bessemer City]] and [[Kings Mountain, North Carolina|Kings Mountain]]. Long Creek was organized by the Orange Presbytery of the Synod of New York and Philadelphia in 1780.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.ncgenweb.us/white/media/LongCreekHistory.pdf |title=Archived copy |access-date=2017-01-16 |archive-date=2014-10-23 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141023101556/http://www.ncgenweb.us/white/media/LongCreekHistory.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref> One of the oldest surviving churches in Gaston County, the Long Creek Presbyterian Church building was built in 1876, almost a century after the congregation was formed. This Greek Revival church is a single-story, frame building which rests on granite piers and has been underpinned with masonry brick.<ref>{{cite web |title=Slave Cemetery a Thrilling Find for Gaston Church |url=https://www.wsoctv.com/news/local/slave-cemetery-thrilling-find-gaston-church/329892120/ |website=WSOC-TV |date=25 August 2016 |access-date=19 December 2024}}</ref> In December 1993, the historic sanctuary was saved from a fire which destroyed a brick choir room addition attached to the wood frame sanctuary building. The fire, determined to have been set by an arsonist, heavily damaged both the sanctuary and the Sunday School building. In the year following the fire, the church, under the leadership of former pastor [[James S. Welch Jr.]], rebuilt the choir room addition and renovated the sanctuary in keeping with historical registry requirements.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://kmherald.com/yearold-church-looks-to-resurrect-cemetery-p952-126.htm |title=231-year-old church looks to resurrect cemetery |access-date=2017-01-17 |archive-date=2017-01-31 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170131184010/http://kmherald.com/yearold-church-looks-to-resurrect-cemetery-p952-126.htm |url-status=live }}</ref> The church is listed on the Gaston County historic properties registry.{{wbr}} <ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.gastongov.com/boards-commitees/historic-preservation-commission/local-designation |title=Designated Gaston County Historic Properties |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160716083110/http://www.gastongov.com/boards-commitees/historic-preservation-commission/local-designation |archive-date=16 July 2016 |access-date=20 January 2017 }}</ref> : One of the most interesting features of the Long Creek Presbyterian Church property is the two hundred year old cemetery enclosed by a rock wall. The earliest marked grave in the cemetery here is that of Joseph Blackwood, dated October 22, 1780. Tradition says that he was wounded in the [[Battle of Kings Mountain]] on October 7, and died a few days later. The church cemetery is the final resting place for a number of revolutionary war soldiers including Captain Samuel Espy, an officer who had served under [[William Graham (colonel)|Colonel William Graham]].<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://elehistory.com/gen/plonk/PlonkLongCreekPC.pdf |title=Archived copy |access-date=2017-01-16 |archive-date=2016-04-27 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160427021450/http://elehistory.com/gen/plonk/PlonkLongCreekPC.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref> In 2012, a large second cemetery directly below the rock walled cemetery was discovered containing the remains of at least 90 former slaves. The discovery was made following cemetery work begun with a grant from the David Belk Cannon Foundation.<ref>{{cite web |title=Slave Cemetery a Thrilling Find for Gaston Church |url=https://www.wsoctv.com/news/local/slave-cemetery-thrilling-find-gaston-church/329892120/ |website=WSOC-TV |date=25 August 2016 |access-date=19 December 2024}}</ref> The grant was awarded to professionally restore and preserve the church's traditional cemetery within the rock wall. Photos of the markers along with information on them will go onto a website available to researchers. The church is now working with local African American congregations to also preserve the additional gravesites.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.wsoctv.com/news/local/slave-cemetery-thrilling-find-gaston-church/329892120|title=Slave cemetery thrilling find for Gaston church|last=EndPlay|date=17 April 2012|publisher=|access-date=17 January 2017|archive-date=31 January 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170131194719/http://www.wsoctv.com/news/local/slave-cemetery-thrilling-find-gaston-church/329892120|url-status=live}}</ref> == References == {{reflist}} [[Category:Presbyterian Church (USA) churches]] [[Category:1780 establishments in North Carolina]]
1,263,947,883
[]
false
# List of peers 1130–1139 This page lists all peers who held extant titles between 1130 and 1139. ## Peerage of England | Title | Holder | Date gained | Date lost | Notes | | -------------------------- | -------------------------------------------------- | ----------- | --------- | ------------------ | | Earl of Northampton (1080) | Simon II de Senlis, Earl of Huntingdon-Northampton | 1109 | 1153 | | | Earl of Surrey (1088) | William de Warenne, 2nd Earl of Surrey | 1099 | 1138 | Died | | Earl of Surrey (1088) | William de Warenne, 3rd Earl of Surrey | 1138 | 1148 | | | Earl of Warwick (1088) | Roger de Beaumont, 2nd Earl of Warwick | 1119 | 1153 | | | Earl of Buckingham (1097) | Walter Giffard, 2nd Earl of Buckingham | 1102 | 1164 | | | Earl of Leicester (1107) | Robert de Beaumont, 2nd Earl of Leicester | 1118 | 1168 | | | Earl of Chester (1121) | Ranulf de Gernon, 4th Earl of Chester | 1129 | 1153 | | | Earl of Gloucester (1121) | Robert, 1st Earl of Gloucester | 1121 | 1147 | | | Earl of Hertford (1135) | Richard Fitz Gilbert de Clare | 1135 | 1136 | New creation; Died | | Earl of Hertford (1135) | Gilbert de Clare, 1st Earl of Hertford | 1136 | 1151 | | | Earl of Richmond (1136) | Alan de Bretagne, 1st Earl of Richmond | 1136 | 1146 | New creation | | Earl of Arundel (1138) | William d'Aubigny, 1st Earl of Arundel | 1138 | 1176 | New creation | | Earl of Bedford (1138) | Hugh de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Bedford | 1138 | 1142 | New creation | | Earl of Derby (1138) | Robert de Ferrers, 1st Earl of Derby | 1138 | 1139 | New creation; Died | | Earl of Derby (1138) | Robert de Ferrers, 2nd Earl of Derby | 1139 | 1162 | | | Earl of Pembroke (1138) | Gilbert de Clare, 1st Earl of Pembroke | 1138 | 1147 | New creation | | Earl of Worcester (1138) | Waleran de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Worcester | 1138 | 1145 | New creation | | Earl of Essex (1139) | Geoffrey de Mandeville, 1st Earl of Essex | 1139 | 1144 | New creation | ## Peerage of Scotland | Title | Holder | Date gained | Date lost | Notes | | ------------------------- | ------------------------------ | ----------- | --------- | ----- | | Earl of Mar (1114) | Ruadrí, Earl of Mar | 1115 | Abt. 1140 | | | Earl of Dunbar (1115) | Gospatric II, Earl of Dunbar | 1115 | 1138 | Died | | Earl of Dunbar (1115) | Gospatric III, Earl of Dunbar | 1138 | 1166 | | | Earl of Angus (1115) | Dufugan, Earl of Angus | 1115 | 1135 | Died | | Earl of Angus (1115) | Gille Brigte, Earl of Angus | 1135 | 1187 | | | Earl of Atholl (1115) | Máel Muire, Earl of Atholl | 1115 | Abt 1150 | | | Earl of Buchan (1115) | Gartnait, Earl of Buchan | 1115 | Abt. 1135 | Died | | Earl of Buchan (1115) | Colbán, Earl of Buchan | Abt. 1135 | Abt. 1180 | | | Earl of Strathearn (1115) | Máel Ísu I, Earl of Strathearn | 1115 | Abt. 1140 | | | Earl of Fife (1129) | Gille Míchéil, Earl of Fife | 1129 | 1139 | Died | | Earl of Fife (1129) | Donnchad I, Earl of Fife | 1139 | 1154 | |
enwiki/1265180
enwiki
1,265,180
List of peers 1130–1139
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_peers_1130%E2%80%931139
2023-06-13T22:58:55Z
en
Q6632108
43,694
{{short description|None}} {{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}} {{No footnotes|date=April 2009}} {{PeerYearBox | year1=1130 | year2=1139}} ==Peerage of England== {{PeerYearTable}} |[[Earl of Northampton|Earl of Northampton (1080)]]||[[Simon II de Senlis, Earl of Huntingdon-Northampton]]||1109||1153||&nbsp; |- |rowspan=2|[[Earl of Surrey|Earl of Surrey (1088)]]||[[William de Warenne, 2nd Earl of Surrey]]||1099||1138||Died |- |[[William de Warenne, 3rd Earl of Surrey]]||1138||1148||&nbsp; |- |[[Earl of Warwick|Earl of Warwick (1088)]]||[[Roger de Beaumont, 2nd Earl of Warwick]]||1119||1153||&nbsp; |- |[[Earl of Buckingham|Earl of Buckingham (1097)]]||[[Walter Giffard, 2nd Earl of Buckingham]]||1102||1164||&nbsp; |- |[[Earl of Leicester|Earl of Leicester (1107)]]||[[Robert de Beaumont, 2nd Earl of Leicester]]||1118||1168||&nbsp; |- |[[Earl of Chester|Earl of Chester (1121)]]||[[Ranulf de Gernon, 4th Earl of Chester]]||1129||1153||&nbsp; |- |[[Earl of Gloucester|Earl of Gloucester (1121)]]||[[Robert, 1st Earl of Gloucester]]||1121||1147||&nbsp; |- |rowspan=2|[[Earl of Hertford|Earl of Hertford (1135)]]||[[Richard Fitz Gilbert de Clare]]||1135||1136||New creation; Died |- |[[Gilbert de Clare, 1st Earl of Hertford]]||1136||1151||&nbsp; |- |[[Earl of Richmond|Earl of Richmond (1136)]]||[[Alan de Bretagne, 1st Earl of Richmond]]||1136||1146||New creation |- |[[Earl of Arundel|Earl of Arundel (1138)]]||[[William d'Aubigny, 1st Earl of Arundel]]||1138||1176||New creation |- |[[Earl of Bedford|Earl of Bedford (1138)]]||[[Hugh de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Bedford]]||1138||1142||New creation |- |rowspan=2|[[Earl of Derby|Earl of Derby (1138)]]||[[Robert de Ferrers, 1st Earl of Derby]]||1138||1139||New creation; Died |- |[[Robert de Ferrers, 2nd Earl of Derby]]||1139||1162||&nbsp; |- |[[Earl of Pembroke|Earl of Pembroke (1138)]]||[[Gilbert de Clare, 1st Earl of Pembroke]]||1138||1147||New creation |- |[[Earl of Worcester|Earl of Worcester (1138)]]||[[Waleran de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Worcester]]||1138||1145||New creation |- |[[Earl of Essex|Earl of Essex (1139)]]||[[Geoffrey de Mandeville, 1st Earl of Essex]]||1139||1144||New creation {{end}} ==Peerage of Scotland== {{PeerYearTable}} |[[Earl of Mar|Earl of Mar (1114)]]||[[Ruadrí, Earl of Mar]]||1115||Abt. 1140|| |- |rowspan=2|[[Earl of Dunbar|Earl of Dunbar (1115)]]||[[Gospatric II, Earl of Lothian|Gospatric II, Earl of Dunbar]]||1115||1138||Died |- |[[Gospatric III, Earl of Lothian|Gospatric III, Earl of Dunbar]]||1138||1166|| |- |rowspan=2|[[Earl of Angus|Earl of Angus (1115)]]||[[Dufugan, Earl of Angus]]||1115||1135||Died |- |[[Gille Brigte, Earl of Angus]]||1135||1187|| |- |[[Earl of Atholl|Earl of Atholl (1115)]]||[[Máel Muire, Earl of Atholl]]||1115||Abt 1150|| |- |rowspan=2|[[Earl of Buchan|Earl of Buchan (1115)]]||[[Gartnait, Earl of Buchan]]||1115||Abt. 1135||Died |- |[[Colbán, Earl of Buchan]]||Abt. 1135||Abt. 1180|| |- |[[Earl of Strathearn|Earl of Strathearn (1115)]]||[[Máel Ísu I, Earl of Strathearn]]||1115||Abt. 1140|| |- |rowspan=2|[[Earl of Fife|Earl of Fife (1129)]]||[[Gille Míchéil, Earl of Fife]]||1129||1139||Died |- |[[Donnchad I, Earl of Fife]]||1139||1154|| |- |} ==References== {{Reflist}} * {{cite book | editor-last=Cokayne | editor-first=George Edward | year=1887 | title=Complete peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, extant, extinct or dormant | volume=1-8 | edition=1st | location=London | publisher=George Bell & Sons }} {{Peerage of England and Ireland by date}} {{DEFAULTSORT:1130-1139, List Of Peers}} [[Category:Lists of peers by decade]] [[Category:1130s in England]] [[Category:12th century in Scotland]] [[Category:12th-century English nobility]] [[Category:12th-century mormaers]] [[Category:Lists of 12th-century people|Peers]]
1,160,015,156
[]
false
# Richard Stone (sculptor) Richard Stone is a British sculptor and painter and a fellow and trustee of the Royal British Society of Sculptors. He was born in 1974 in England and graduated from Central Saint Martins in 2000. In 2014 Stone was awarded the Brian Mercer Residency for Bronze Casting and in 2013 was awarded Arts Council England funding. Stone works between London and Pietrasanta, Italy. ## Notable exhibitions Works by Stone were included in Sweep~Landskip (2018), an exhibition of international artists whose work use landscape as a concept. In 2018, Stone exhibited marble works and a series of abstract paintings at Art Brussels. He was included in the exhibition Nature Morte, which toured museums in Norway, Sweden and Poland before returning to London's Guildhall in 2017. Recent solo exhibitions include everywhen (2017) and gleam (2014). ## Critical responses Stone has been referred to as "one of the most talented emerging artists working in the UK today" and his practice seen as seen as "intrinsic to consider our place and purpose within an ever-changing world". Stone was also included in Michael Petry's Nature Morte which explored the timeless tradition of still life, bought up to date by international contemporary artists including Matt Collishaw, Elmgreen & Dragset, Gabriel Orozco and Gerhard Richter. ## Media recognition Stone has been featured in many media articles including Artdependence, Elephant and Wall Street International Magazine. In 2018, a documentary entitled Hard Beauty screened on Sky Arts in the United Kingdom. The documentary featured Stone discussing his mentor Helaine Blumenfeld's sculptural practice. In 2017, Stone appeared on London Live, where he spoke about the exhibition Nature Morte.
enwiki/57390910
enwiki
57,390,910
Richard Stone (sculptor)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Stone_(sculptor)
2024-11-08T20:54:23Z
en
Q55631677
44,513
{{Short description|British sculptor}} {{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}} {{Infobox artist | name = Richard Stone | image = | caption = | birth_name = | birth_date = {{birth year and age|1974}} | birth_place = Devon, United Kingdom | nationality = British | education = | alma_mater = [[Central Saint Martins]] | movement = | spouse = | elected = [[Royal British Society of Sculptors]] | patrons = | memorials = | website = {{URL|richardstoneprojects.com}} | module = }} '''Richard Stone''' is a British sculptor and painter and a fellow and trustee of the [[Royal British Society of Sculptors]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://rbs.org.uk/about-us/council/|title=RBS Council » Royal British Society of Sculptors|website=rbs.org.uk}}</ref> He was born in 1974 in England and graduated from [[Central Saint Martins]] in 2000. In 2014 Stone was awarded the [[Royal Society of Sculptors#Brian_Mercer_Residencies|Brian Mercer Residency]] for Bronze Casting<ref>{{cite web|url=https://rbs.org.uk/awards/brian-mercer-residencies/|title=Brian Mercer Residencies » Royal British Society of Sculptors|website=rbs.org.uk}}</ref> and in 2013 was awarded [[Arts Council England]] funding.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://rbs.org.uk/awards/brian-mercer-residencies/residents/richard-stone|title=Richard Stone » Brian Mercer Residencies » Royal British Society of Sculptors|website=rbs.org.uk}}</ref> Stone works between [[London]] and [[Pietrasanta]], [[Italy]]. ==Notable exhibitions== Works by Stone were included in ''Sweep~Landskip (2018)'', an exhibition of international artists whose work use landscape as a concept.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://kinokino.no/program/1806|title=kinokino|website=kinokino.no}}</ref> In 2018, Stone exhibited marble works and a series of abstract paintings at Art Brussels.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.richardstoneprojects.com/art-brussels|title=art brussels 2018|website=richard stone}}</ref> He was included in the exhibition ''Nature Morte'', which toured museums in Norway, Sweden and Poland before returning to London's Guildhall in 2017.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.mocalondon.co.uk/nature-morte.html|title=Nature Morte|website=MOCA}}</ref> Recent solo exhibitions include ''everywhen (2017)''<ref>{{cite web|url=http://fadmagazine.com/2017/09/03/new-richard-stone-everywhen/|title=NEW: Richard Stone "everywhen"|date=2017-09-03}}</ref> and ''gleam (2014)''.<ref>{{Cite web | url=https://londonist.com/2014/09/heroic-sculpture-by-richard-stone | title=Heroic Sculpture by Richard Stone| date=2014-09-16}}</ref> ==Critical responses== Stone has been referred to as "one of the most talented emerging artists working in the UK today"<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.artlyst.com/previews/richard-stone-collision-cultural-reference-points-kristin-hjellegjerde-gallery/|title=Richard Stone: A Collision Of Cultural Reference Points Kristin Hjellegjerde Gallery - Artlyst|publisher=}}</ref> and his practice seen as seen as "intrinsic to consider our place and purpose within an ever-changing world".<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.trebuchet-magazine.com/richard-stone/ | title=Everywhen Dreaming: Richard Stone| date=2017-09-26}}</ref> Stone was also included in Michael Petry's ''Nature Morte'' which explored the timeless tradition of still life, bought up to date by international contemporary artists including Matt Collishaw, [[Elmgreen & Dragset]], [[Gabriel Orozco]] and [[Gerhard Richter]].<ref>{{cite book |author=Michael Petry|title=Nature Morte|location=London |publisher=Thames and Hudson|isbn=978-0500239063|year=2013}}</ref> ==Media recognition== Stone has been featured in many media articles including Artdependence,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.artdependence.com/articles/statelessness-collapse-and-transformation-in-richard-stone-s-work-an-interview-with-the-artist/|title=ArtDependence - Statelessness, Collapse and Transformation in Richard Stone's Work – An Interview with the Artist|last=Artdependence|website=Artdependence}}</ref> Elephant and Wall Street International Magazine.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://wsimag.com/art/10755-richard-stone-gleam|title=Richard Stone. Gleam|date=20 August 2014|publisher=}}</ref> In 2018, a documentary entitled ''Hard Beauty'' screened on Sky Arts in the United Kingdom. The documentary featured Stone discussing his mentor [[Helaine Blumenfeld]]'s sculptural practice.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.facebook.com/richardstoneartist/videos/920165674854297/|title=Richard Stone|website=www.facebook.com}}</ref> In 2017, Stone appeared on [[London Live (TV channel)|London Live]], where he spoke about the exhibition ''Nature Morte''.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.facebook.com/richardstoneartist/videos/813749675495898/|title=Richard Stone|website=www.facebook.com}}</ref> ==References== {{reflist}} {{authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Stone, Richard}} [[Category:1974 births]] [[Category:Living people]] [[Category:Fellows of the Royal British Society of Sculptors]] [[Category:Alumni of Central Saint Martins]] [[Category:21st-century British sculptors]] [[Category:20th-century British sculptors]] [[Category:21st-century British painters]] [[Category:British male sculptors]] [[Category:People from Torbay (district)]] [[Category:20th-century British male artists]] [[Category:21st-century British male artists]]
1,256,216,523
[{"title": "Richard Stone", "data": {"Born": "1974 (age 50\u201351) \u00b7 Devon, United Kingdom", "Nationality": "British", "Alma mater": "Central Saint Martins", "Elected": "Royal British Society of Sculptors", "Website": "richardstoneprojects.com"}}]
false
# Margherita Gonzaga, Marquise of Ferrara Margherita Gonzaga, Marquise of Ferrara (1418–1439) was a noblewoman of the House of Gonzaga, from Mantua in modern-day Italy. She was the daughter of Gianfrancesco I Gonzaga, Marquess of Mantua and Paola Malatesta. In 1435, she became the first wife of Leonello d'Este, Marquess of Ferrara, making her the Marquise of Ferrara and creating an alliance between the House of Gonzaga of Mantua and the House of Este of Ferrara. The artist Pisanello gave them a painting of Julius Caesar as a wedding gift. The couple had a son, Niccolò, who is also known as Niccolò di Leonello to avoid confusion with his grandfather, Niccolò III d'Este.
enwiki/74760139
enwiki
74,760,139
Margherita Gonzaga, Marquise of Ferrara
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margherita_Gonzaga,_Marquise_of_Ferrara
2024-12-02T23:43:07Z
en
Q3846942
39,643
{{Other uses|Margherita Gonzaga (disambiguation){{!}}Margherita Gonzaga}} {{Use dmy dates|date=September 2023}} {{Infobox noble | name = Margherita Gonzaga | image = Margherita Gonzaga.jpg | caption = Margherita in the ''[[Genealogia dei principi d'Este]]'' (1470s) | noble family = [[House of Gonzaga|Gonzaga]] | title = Marquise of Ferrara | birth_date = 1418 | birth_place = [[Mantua]] | death_date = 7 July 1439 | death_place = [[Governolo]] | nationality = | other_names = | occupation = | resting_place = [[Mantua]] | spouse = [[Leonello d'Este, Marquis of Ferrara]] | issue = Niccolò d'Este ([[Niccolò di Leonello]]) | father = [[Gianfrancesco I Gonzaga, Marquess of Mantua]] | mother = [[Paola Malatesta]] }} '''Margherita Gonzaga, Marquise of Ferrara''' (1418–1439) was a noblewoman of the [[House of Gonzaga]], from [[Mantua]] in modern-day Italy. She was the daughter of [[Gianfrancesco I Gonzaga, Marquess of Mantua]]<ref name=Fenlon>{{cite book|page=135|title=The Renaissance: From the 1470s to the end of the 16th century|editor=Iain Fenlon|publisher=MacMillan|location=London|year=1989}}</ref> and [[Paola Malatesta]].<ref name=Commire>{{cite book|page=365|title=Women in World History|author1=Anne Commire|author2=Deborah Klezmer|publisher=Yorkin Publications|year=1999}}</ref> In 1435, she became the first wife of [[Leonello d'Este, Marquis of Ferrara|Leonello d'Este, Marquess of Ferrara]],<ref name=Lewis>{{cite book|title=The Intellectual Life of the Early Renaissance Artist|author=Francis Ames-Lewis|publisher=Yale University Press|location=New London|year=2000|page=78}}</ref><ref name=British-Museum>{{cite web|url=https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/term/BIOG111183|title=Leonello d'Este, Marquis of Ferrara and Modena|publisher=The British Museum}}</ref> making her the Marquise of Ferrara and creating an alliance between the House of Gonzaga of Mantua and the [[House of Este]] of Ferrara.<ref name="Art">{{cite book |title=Art and Architecture in Naples, 1266 - 1713: New Approaches |publisher=Wiley-Blackwell |year=2010 |editor1=Cordelia Warr |location=Chichester |page=8 |editor2=Janis Elliott}}</ref> The artist [[Pisanello]] gave them a painting of Julius Caesar as a wedding gift.<ref name=Lewis /> The couple had a son, Niccolò, who is also known as [[Niccolò di Leonello]] to avoid confusion with his grandfather, [[Niccolò III d'Este]].<ref name=Barstow>{{cite book|page=27|title=The Gualenghi-d'Este Hours|author=Kurt Barstow|publisher=J. Paul Getty Museum|location=Los Angeles|year=2000}}</ref> ==References== {{Reflist}} {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Gonzaga, Margherita}} [[Category:1418 births]] [[Category:1439 deaths]] [[Category:15th-century Italian women]] [[Category:House of Gonzaga|Margherita]] [[Category:Nobility from Ferrara]] {{Italy-noble-stub}}
1,260,856,873
[{"title": "Margherita Gonzaga", "data": {"Born": "1418 \u00b7 Mantua", "Died": "7 July 1439 \u00b7 Governolo", "Buried": "Mantua", "Noble family": "Gonzaga", "Spouse(s)": "Leonello d'Este, Marquis of Ferrara", "Issue": "Niccol\u00f2 d'Este (Niccol\u00f2 di Leonello)", "Father": "Gianfrancesco I Gonzaga, Marquess of Mantua", "Mother": "Paola Malatesta"}}]
false
# Ptychochromis grandidieri Ptychochromis grandidieri is a species of fish in the family Cichlidae endemic to river basins along a large part of the eastern coast of Madagascar, although it has been recorded as far as 100 km (62 mi) inland. Uniquely in the genus Ptychochromis, this species also occurs in brackish water. It reaches 35cm in standard length. It shares a large part of its range with a cichlid from another genus, Paretroplus polyactis. The specific name honours Alfred Grandidier (1836-1921), the French naturalist and explorer who, with Henri Joseph Léon Humblot (1852-1914), collected the type.
enwiki/12621671
enwiki
12,621,671
Ptychochromis grandidieri
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ptychochromis_grandidieri
2021-11-16T20:10:16Z
en
Q1840891
40,375
{{Short description|Species of fish}} {{Speciesbox | image = Ptychochromis grandidieri.jpg | status = LC | status_system = IUCN3.1 | status_ref = <ref name="iucn status 16 November 2021">{{cite iucn |author=Sparks, J.S. |date=2016 |title=''Ptychochromis grandidieri'' |volume=2016 |page=e.T44502A58308434 |doi=10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-3.RLTS.T44502A58308434.en |access-date=16 November 2021}}</ref> | taxon = Ptychochromis grandidieri | authority = [[Henri Émile Sauvage|Sauvage]], 1882 | synonyms = * ''Tilapia grandidieri'' <small>(Sauvage, 1882)</small> * ''Ptychochromis madagascariensis'' <small>Liénard, 1891</small> * ''Tilapia madagascariensis'' <small>(Liénard, 1891)</small> }} '''''Ptychochromis grandidieri''''' is a species of [[fish]] in the family [[Cichlidae]] [[Endemism|endemic]] to [[river basin]]s along a large part of the eastern coast of [[Madagascar]], although it has been recorded as far as {{convert|100|km|mi|abbr=on}} inland.<ref name=StiassnySparks>Stiassny, M., and Sparks, J. S. (2006). ''Phylogeny and Taxonomic Revision of the Endemic Malagasy Genus Ptychochromis (Teleostei: Cichlidae), with the Description of Five New Species and a Diagnosis for Katria, New Genus.'' [[American Museum Novitates]] 3535.</ref> Uniquely in the genus ''[[Ptychochromis]]'', this species also occurs in brackish water.<ref name=StiassnySparks/> It reaches 35cm in [[fish measurement|standard length]].<ref name=fisbase>{{FishBase | genus = Ptychochromis | species = grandidieri | month = April| year = 2013 }}</ref> It shares a large part of its range with a cichlid from another genus, ''[[Paretroplus polyactis]]''.<ref name=Sparks>Sparks, J. S. (2008). ''Phylogeny of the Cichlid Subfamily Etroplinae and Taxonomic Revision of the Malagasy Cichlid Genus Paretroplus (Teleostei: Cichlidae).'' Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History Number 314 :1-151</ref> The [[Specific name (zoology)|specific name]] honours [[Alfred Grandidier]] (1836-1921), the [[France|French]] naturalist and explorer who, with [[Léon Humblot|Henri Joseph Léon Humblot]] (1852-1914), collected the [[Type (biology)|type]].<ref name = ETYFish>{{cite web | url = http://www.etyfish.org/cichlidae1/ | title = Order CICHLIFORMES: Family CICHLIDAE: Subfamilies ETROPLINAE and PTYCHOCHROMINAE | access-date= 20 November 2018 | author1 = Christopher Scharpf | author2 = Kenneth J. Lazara | name-list-style = amp | work = The ETYFish Project Fish Name Etymology Database | publisher = Christopher Scharpf and Kenneth J. Lazara | date = 22 July 2018}}</ref> ==References== {{Reflist}} {{Taxonbar|from=Q1840891}} [[Category:Ptychochromis|grandidieri]] [[Category:Freshwater fish of Madagascar]] [[Category:Fish described in 1882]] [[Category:Taxa named by Henri Émile Sauvage]] [[Category:Taxonomy articles created by Polbot]] {{Cichlidae-stub}}
1,055,603,042
[{"title": "Conservation status", "data": {"Conservation status": "\u00b7 Least Concern (IUCN 3.1)"}}, {"title": "Scientific classification", "data": {"Domain": "Eukaryota", "Kingdom": "Animalia", "Phylum": "Chordata", "Class": "Actinopterygii", "Order": "Cichliformes", "Family": "Cichlidae", "Genus": "Ptychochromis", "Species": "P. grandidieri"}}, {"title": "Binomial name", "data": {"Binomial name": "Ptychochromis grandidieri \u00b7 Sauvage, 1882"}}, {"title": "Synonyms", "data": {"Synonyms": "- Tilapia grandidieri (Sauvage, 1882) - Ptychochromis madagascariensis Li\u00e9nard, 1891 - Tilapia madagascariensis (Li\u00e9nard, 1891)"}}]
false
# Mohammad-Reza Modarresi Yazdi Ayatollah Mohammad Reza Modarresi-Yazdi (born 1955 in Yazd) is one of the 12 members of the Guardian Council of the Islamic Republic of Iran and also a member of the Assembly of Experts.
enwiki/8898679
enwiki
8,898,679
Mohammad-Reza Modarresi Yazdi
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mohammad-Reza_Modarresi_Yazdi
2025-01-08T17:02:12Z
en
Q6891642
25,862
{{Short description|Iranian Ayatollah}} {{distinguish|Mohammad Yazdi}} {{Infobox officeholder | name = Mohammad Reza Modarresi-Yazdi | image = Ayatollah Seyed Mohammad Reza Yazdi.jpg | caption = Ayatollah Seyed Mohammad Reza Yazdi during a press conference in 2016. | office1 = [[Assembly of Experts|Member of the Assembly of Experts]] | term_start1 = 8 March 2022 | term_end1 = | majority1 = 1,053,385 | constituency1 = [[Razavi Khorasan Province]] | title = [[Ayatollah]] | native_name = <big>'''محمد رضا مدرسی یزدی'''</big> | alias = | ordination = | post = | birth_date = {{birth year and age|1955}} | birth_place = [[Yazd]], [[Iran]] | death_date = | death_place = | website = }} [[Ayatollah]] '''Mohammad Reza Modarresi-Yazdi''' (born 1955 in [[Yazd]])<ref>[http://www.shora-gc.ir/Portal/Home/ShowPage.aspx?Object=NEWS&ID=8e1f89f4-509d-440d-9852-d70e604749ba&WebPartID=2a98965b-80ea-4a68-95fe-826868e4eca2&CategoryID=f6adb1ab-ec3e-4c6a-8da4-13743357ca04 Ayatollah Sayyid Mohammad Reza Modarresi-Yazdi] shora-gc.ir</ref> is one of the 12 members of the [[Guardian Council]] of the [[Islamic Republic of Iran]] and also a member of the [[Assembly of Experts]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=NewsLibrary&p_multi=BBAB&d_place=BBAB&p_theme=newslibrary2&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&p_topdoc=1&p_text_direct-0=103E41B9DB0EB7F7&p_field_direct-0=document_id&p_perpage=10&p_sort=YMD_date:D&s_trackval=GooglePM|title=Iran's Khamene'i appoints three Guardian Council members|date=16 July 2004|publisher=[[Iranian Labour News Agency|ILNA]]|accessdate=13 August 2010}}</ref> ==See also== * [[List of ayatollahs]] == References == {{Reflist}} {{authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Modarresi-Yazdi, Mohammad Reza}} [[Category:Iranian ayatollahs]] [[Category:Iranian individuals subject to U.S. Department of the Treasury sanctions]] [[Category:Iranian Islamists]] [[Category:Shia Islamists]] [[Category:Living people]] [[Category:Members of the Guardian Council]] [[Category:Society of Seminary Teachers of Qom members]] [[Category:1955 births]] [[Category:People from Yazd]] {{Iran-politician-stub}}
1,268,208,364
[{"title": "Member of the Assembly of Experts", "data": {"Member of the Assembly of Experts": ["Incumbent", "Assumed office \u00b7 8 March 2022"], "Constituency": "Razavi Khorasan Province", "Majority": "1,053,385"}}, {"title": "Personal details", "data": {"Born": "1955 (age 69\u201370) \u00b7 Yazd, Iran"}}]
false
# Porto Venere Porto Venere (Italian pronunciation: [ˈpɔrto ˈvɛːnere]; until 1991 Portovenere; Ligurian: Pòrtivene) is a town and comune (municipality) located on the Ligurian coast of Italy in the province of La Spezia. It comprises the three villages of Fezzano, Le Grazie and Porto Venere, and the three islands of Palmaria, Tino and Tinetto. In 1997 Porto Venere and the villages of Cinque Terre were designated by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site. ## History The ancient Portus Veneris is believed to date back to at least the middle of the 1st century BC. It has been said that the name refers to a temple to the goddess Venus which was sited on the promontory where the church of Peter the Apostle now stands. The name has also been linked to that of the hermit Saint Venerius. In Roman times the city was essentially a fishing community. After the fall of the Western Roman Empire, Porto Venere became the base of the Byzantine fleet in the northern Tyrrhenian Sea, but was destroyed by the Lombards in 643 AD. Later, it was a frequent target of Saracen raids. First indications of the existence of a castle date from 1113, and in 1161 the walls were erected. Porto Venere became a fiefdom of a family from Vezzano before passing to Republic of Genoa in the early 12th century. In 1494, it suffered a devastating bombardment from the Aragonese fleet during their war with Genoa: subsequently the old part of the town declined in importance, giving way to the development of the Borgo Nuovo ("New District"), which had existed from 1139 and is centred on the church of St. Peter. On 2 December 1797, after the French established their domination in Italy, the town became part of the Department of the Gulf of Venus, with the capital in La Spezia, in the Ligurian Republic annexed to the First French Empire. From 28 April 1798 with the new French law, the territory of Portovenere fell in the seventh canton, as the capital, the Jurisdiction of the Gulf of Venus since 1803 and the main center of the third State of the Gulf of Venus in the jurisdiction of the Gulf of Venus. From 13 June 1805 to 1814 it was included in the Department of the Apennines. It was at this point which, in 1812, it became part of the coastal route called "Route Napoleon" in honor of the French general and now known as localized road 530, which still connects the marine center with La Spezia via Fezzano, Le Grazie and Terizzo. In 1815 it was incorporated in the Kingdom of Sardinia, according to the decisions of the Congress of Wien of 1814, and subsequently in the Kingdom of Italy from 1861. From 1859 to 1927 the territory was included in the First district of La Spezia, part of the Eastern District of the Province of Genoa before and, with its establishment in 1923, the Province of La Spezia. In 1998 it obtained for its architectural heritage and natural entry in the list of protected World Heritage Site, with the Rolli in Genoa's historic center, one of only two Ligurian sites, and in 2001 established the eponymous Regional Natural Park. ## Coat of arms The municipal Coat of arms was approved by the special decree of the Head of the Government dated 19 April 1933. In addition to the emblem and banner of the city is the cross of St. George to be also a symbol of civic and historical community of Porto Venere, including banner bearing its coat of arms (the color of Genoa are the flags of the three towers) and wants to emphasize the secular alliance of the village with the ancient Republic of Genoa. This "objective" is also mentioned in the municipal charter. ## Territory The village lies at the southern end of a peninsula, which, breaking away from the jagged coastline of the Riviera di Levante, forming the western tip of the Gulf of La Spezia. At the end of this peninsula are three small islands: Palmaria, Tino and Tinetto; only Palmaria Island, which lies directly opposite the village of Porto Venere beyond a narrow strait, is partially inhabited. It is bordered to the north by the municipality of La Spezia, and to the south, west and east by the Mediterranean Sea. It is about 3.2 kilometres (2 mi) south of La Spezia and 72 kilometres (45 mi) southeast of Genoa. There is a conveyor system with the sewer grates and pumps that push the waste into a subsea pipeline that comes out to about 200 metres (660 ft) beyond the toe of St. Peter. The strong current and high depth of discharge, about 35 metres (115 ft), contribute to the rapid dispersion of the fluid. The beaches of the area are a tourist attraction. ## Climate The climate is typically Mediterranean, with almost no excess heat in summer and no freezing in winter. However, rainfall can be abundant, especially in autumn and spring, due to the orography of the Riviera di Levante. In the municipal area, the weather station is located on Island of Palmaria, where data can be considered similar to those occurring in Porto Venere and the surrounding areas. The area of Portovenere-Palmaria Island is the only point behind in the Ligurian Sea between the Isle of Elba and the islands of Hyères, France. Hence the strategic role in the history of seafaring. ## Economy In the municipality of Porto Venere, in Panigaglia, into the Gulf of Spezia, there is a regasification plant, thanks to which it can import by sea, in the liquid state, natural hydrocarbon gas, such as liquified natural gas. Portovenere's economy focuses on tourism. Hotels, bed and breakfasts, guest houses, and residences have become more important in recent years. The popular shopping promenade in the Doria quay and the picturesque Alley and panoramic views to the church of St. Peter and the Doria Castle. The harbor of Portovenere, although the smallest of Liguria, is always sold out in the summer season and also hosts many celebrities. ## Main sights - The Church of St. Peter consecrated in 1198. It was built over a pre-existing 5th-century Palaeo-Christian church, which had rectangular plan and semicircular apse. The new part, from the 13th century, is marked externally by white and black stripes. - The Romanesque church of Saint Lorence, also called the Sanctuary of the White Virgin (in Italian: Santuario della Madonna Bianca) was erected in 1098 by the Genoese. It is probably occupies the site of ancient temple dedicated to Jupiter and is the work of the Antelami Magisters, originary of the Valle d'Intelvi, in the Province of Como.[5] The church was damaged by a fire in 1340 and by the Aragonese attack in 1494, and was further restored in 1582. - The Doria Castle, an example of Genoese military architecture. The castle has changed over the centuries in response to developments in military technology. The castle consists of two parts, a 15th Century upper section and a later (post-cannon) lower section. The lower section contains the Sala Ipostila, a hall built on the site of ancient Greek temples. The upper section contains the Casa del Catellano, the home of the commander of the castle and sits above the Sala Ipostila. During the Napoleonic period after 1807, the Castle saw service as a political prison. - The Grotta dell'Arpaia (now collapsed), known as Byron's Grotto, from which the English poet Byron swam across the gulf of La Spezia to San Terenzo to visit Shelley in Lerici, in 1822. - The medieval nucleus of Le Grazie is set around the 14th-century Church of Our Lady of the Graces; nearby is a medieval convent which once belonged to the Olivetans and the remains of the 1st century BCE Roman villa of Varignano. Finds from recent excavations at the villa are held in the Antiquarium della Villa Romana del Varignano in Porto Venere. - In Fezzano the medieval alleyways are noteworthy, along with the church of St. John the Baptist (1740) and the recently restored Villa Cattaneo. ## Natural areas Natural places in Porto Venere include the famous sea caves Byron (Cala dell'Arpaia), Azzurra or Blue Cave (semi-submerged) and Tinetto; the cavity of the Doves and the wall of Tino, the shoal of Dante and Small and Big creeks. Byron's cave, named after the English poet George Gordon Byron, who found inspiration and meditation for his literary works here. It is located at the spur of rock below the church of St. Peter and the old defensive position, the marine cave has a minimum depth of five meters and a maximum of twenty along the side. ### Regional Natural Park The Regional Natural Park in Portovenere offers a unique landscape with its high coasts, caves and vegetation that permeates the atmosphere in any season with the changing shades of color. An element that blends and harmonizes every detail is the sea, sometimes calm and clear, so as to reflect like a mirror enchanted multicolored rocks and seagulls, sometimes rough and almost angry. To crown the Park archipelago with three islands of Palmaria, Tino and Tinetto, defying the blue sea in a swirl of aromas and looks towards the infinite. But the park is not only Nature, History dwells here since prehistoric times with the Cave of the Doves, until the recent past in which Guglielmo Marconi experimented in front of the village his innovative studies. ## Popular culture The 2021 Pixar animated film Luca was primarily based on the Cinque Terre towns, however the animation team visited Porto Venere as well for inspiration. ## People - Simonetta Vespucci (ca. 1453 – 26 April 1476), the Renaissance muse of Botticelli - Lord Byron (1788–1824), poet and diplomat - Gino Montefinale (1881–1974), admiral, writer and artist ## Events - Porto Venere is one of the maritime villages that participate each year in Palio of Gulf. - Traditional procession of the White Madonna along the streets of the village set up in celebration and evocative Roman torches lighting the headland of Punta di San Pietro, the icon of the Virgin Mary (17 August 1399) is carried in procession through the streets of village. The procession of the "White Madonna" brings hundred of tourists every August.[7] - Feast of St. Venerius (patron of the Gulf of Spezia and lighthouse keepers of Italy) on 13 September on the island of Tino. - Feast of the Basil of Caesarea, is celebrated every year[8] on 9 April. - The market is held every Monday morning in the center of the town.
enwiki/1724149
enwiki
1,724,149
Porto Venere
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Porto_Venere
2024-12-22T02:05:03Z
en
Q188315
114,768
{{Infobox Italian comune | name = Porto Venere | official_name = Comune di Porto Venere | native_name = {{native name|lij|Pòrtivene}} | image_skyline = Porto Venere from Lerici.jpg | imagesize = | image_alt = | image_caption = Panoramic view from [[Lerici]] | image_shield = Porto Venere-Stemma.svg | shield_alt = | image_map = | map_alt = | map_caption = | pushpin_label_position = | pushpin_map_alt = | coordinates = {{coord|44|3|N|9|50|E|display=inline}} | coordinates_footnotes = | region = [[Liguria]] | province = [[Province of La Spezia|La Spezia]] (SP) | frazioni = Le Grazie, Fezzano, Terrizzo | mayor_party = | mayor = Matteo Cozzani | area_footnotes = | area_total_km2 = 7 | population_footnotes = | population_total = 3763 | population_as_of = 1 January 2014 | pop_density_footnotes = | population_demonym = Portoveneresi | elevation_footnotes = | elevation_m = 8 | twin1 = | twin1_country = |istat=| saint = The White Madonna | day = August 17 | postal_code = 19025 | area_code = 0187 | website = {{official website|http://www.comune.portovenere.sp.it/}} | footnotes = {{Infobox UNESCO World Heritage Site | child = yes | part_of = [[Cinque Terre]] and Portovenere part of Portovenere, Cinque Terre, and the Islands ([[Palmaria (island)|Palmaria]], [[Tino (island)|Tino]] and [[Tinetto]]) | criteria = {{UNESCO WHS type|(ii)(iv)(v)}}(ii)(iv)(v) | ID = 826-001 | year = 1997 }} }} [[File:Liguria 5Terre1 tango7174.jpg|thumb|View from the sea]] '''Porto Venere''' ({{IPA|it|ˈpɔrto ˈvɛːnere}}; until 1991 ''Portovenere'';<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dizionario.rai.it/poplemma.aspx?lid=29639&r=343399|title = Dizionario d'ortografia e di pronunzia}}</ref> {{langx|lij|Pòrtivene}}) is a town and ''[[comune]]'' (municipality) located on the [[Liguria]]n coast of Italy in the [[province of La Spezia]]. It comprises the three villages of Fezzano, Le Grazie and Porto Venere, and the three islands of [[Palmaria (island)|Palmaria]], [[Tino (island)|Tino]] and [[Tinetto]]. In 1997 Porto Venere and the villages of [[Cinque Terre]] were designated by UNESCO as a [[Unesco World Heritage|World Heritage Site]]. ==History== [[File:Porto Venere War Memorial.jpg|thumb|The War Memorial]] [[File:Garibaldi XXX.JPG|thumb|Plaque dedicated to [[Giuseppe Garibaldi]]]] The ancient ''Portus Veneris'' is believed to date back to at least the middle of the 1st century&nbsp;BC. It has been said that the name refers to a temple to the goddess [[Venus (mythology)|Venus]] which was sited on the promontory where the church of Peter the Apostle now stands. The name has also been linked to that of the hermit [[Venerius the Hermit|Saint Venerius]]. In Roman times the city was essentially a fishing community. After the fall of the [[Western Roman Empire]], Porto Venere became the base of the [[Byzantine fleet]] in the northern [[Tyrrhenian Sea]], but was destroyed by the [[Lombards]] in 643&nbsp;AD. Later, it was a frequent target of [[Saracen]] raids. First indications of the existence of a castle date from 1113, and in 1161 the walls were erected. Porto Venere became a [[fiefdom]] of a family from [[Vezzano Ligure|Vezzano]] before passing to [[Republic of Genoa]] in the early 12th century. In 1494, it suffered a devastating bombardment from the [[Crown of Aragon|Aragon]]ese fleet during [[Italian War of 1494–1498|their war with Genoa]]: subsequently the old part of the town declined in importance, giving way to the development of the ''Borgo Nuovo'' ("New District"), which had existed from 1139 and is centred on the [[San Pietro, Porto Venere|church of St. Peter]]. On 2 December 1797, after the [[French Revolutionary Wars|French established their domination in Italy]], the town became part of the ''Department of the Gulf of Venus'', with the capital in La Spezia, in the [[Ligurian Republic]] annexed to the [[First French Empire]]. From 28 April 1798 with the new French law, the territory of Portovenere fell in the seventh canton, as the capital, the Jurisdiction of the Gulf of Venus since 1803 and the main center of the third State of the Gulf of Venus in the jurisdiction of the Gulf of Venus. From 13 June 1805 to 1814 it was included in the Department of the Apennines. It was at this point which, in 1812, it became part of the coastal route called "Route Napoleon" in honor of the French general and now known as localized road 530, which still connects the marine center with La Spezia via Fezzano, Le Grazie and Terizzo. In 1815 it was incorporated in the [[Kingdom of Sardinia]], according to the decisions of the [[Congress of Wien]] of 1814, and subsequently in the [[Kingdom of Italy]] from 1861. From 1859 to 1927 the territory was included in the First district of La Spezia, part of the Eastern District of the Province of Genoa before and, with its establishment in 1923, the Province of La Spezia. In 1998 it obtained for its architectural heritage and natural entry in the list of protected World Heritage Site, with the ''Rolli'' in Genoa's historic center, one of only two Ligurian sites, and in 2001 established the eponymous ''Regional Natural Park''.<ref>[http://www.parks.it/parco.porto.venere/ National Park]</ref> ==Coat of arms== The municipal Coat of arms was approved by the special decree of the Head of the Government dated 19 April 1933. In addition to the emblem and banner of the city is the cross of ''St. George'' to be also a symbol of civic and historical community of Porto Venere, including banner bearing its coat of arms (the color of [[Genoa]] are the flags of the three towers) and wants to emphasize the secular alliance of the village with the ancient [[Republic of Genoa]]. This "objective" is also mentioned in the municipal charter. ==Territory== The village lies at the southern end of a peninsula, which, breaking away from the jagged coastline of the Riviera di Levante, forming the western tip of the [[Gulf of La Spezia]]. At the end of this peninsula are three small islands: [[Palmaria (island)|Palmaria]], [[Tino (island)|Tino]] and [[Tinetto]]; only Palmaria Island, which lies directly opposite the village of Porto Venere beyond a narrow strait, is partially inhabited. It is bordered to the north by the municipality of [[La Spezia]], and to the south, west and east by the [[Mediterranean Sea]]. It is about {{convert|3.2|km|mi|0}} south of La Spezia and {{convert|72|km|mi}} southeast of [[Genoa]]. There is a conveyor system with the sewer grates and pumps that push the waste into a subsea pipeline that comes out to about {{convert|200|m|ft}} beyond the toe of St. Peter. The strong current and high depth of discharge, about {{convert|35|m|ft}}, contribute to the rapid dispersion of the fluid. The beaches of the area are a tourist attraction. ==Climate== [[File:La Grotta di Byron.jpg|thumb|right|Byron's Grotto, so named because the poet [[Lord Byron]] used to meditate there]] [[File:Porto Venere Yacht and Sails.jpg|thumb|right|The Marina]] The climate is typically Mediterranean, with almost no excess heat in summer and no freezing in winter. However, rainfall can be abundant, especially in autumn and spring, due to the orography of the [[Riviera di Levante]]. In the municipal area, the weather station is located on Island of [[Palmaria (island)|Palmaria]], where data can be considered similar to those occurring in Porto Venere and the surrounding areas. The area of ''Portovenere-Palmaria Island'' is the only point behind in the [[Ligurian Sea]] between the Isle of [[Elba]] and the islands of [[Hyères]], [[France]]. Hence the strategic role in the history of seafaring. ==Economy== In the municipality of Porto Venere, in ''Panigaglia'', into the [[Gulf of Spezia]], there is a regasification plant, thanks to which it can import by sea, in the liquid state, natural hydrocarbon gas, such as liquified [[natural gas]]. Portovenere's economy focuses on tourism. Hotels, bed and breakfasts, guest houses, and residences have become more important in recent years. The popular shopping promenade in the Doria quay and the picturesque Alley and panoramic views to the church of St. Peter and the Doria Castle. The harbor of Portovenere, although the smallest of Liguria, is always sold out in the summer season and also hosts many celebrities. ==Main sights== [[File:Porto Venere San Pietro 0154.jpg|thumb|right|[[Church of St. Peter (Portovenere)|Church of St. Peter]]]] [[File:Portovenere, castello Doria.jpg|thumb|Doria Castle]] *The [[Church of St. Peter (Portovenere)|Church of St. Peter]] consecrated in 1198. It was built over a pre-existing 5th-century Palaeo-Christian church, which had rectangular plan and semicircular apse. The new part, from the 13th century, is marked externally by white and black stripes. *The [[Romanesque architecture|Romanesque]] church of Saint Lorence, also called the ''Sanctuary of the White Virgin'' (in Italian: ''Santuario della Madonna Bianca'') was erected in 1098 by the Genoese. It is probably occupies the site of ancient temple dedicated to [[Jupiter (mythology)|Jupiter]] and is the work of the Antelami Magisters, originary of the Valle d'Intelvi, in the [[Province of Como]].<ref>{{cite journal | language = Italian | format = pdf | url = https://maes.unibo.it/article/view/8096 | title = La fondazione antelamica di una chiesa genovese: San Lorenzo a Portovenere | author = Francesca Ghiggini | doi = 10.6092/issn.2533-2325/8096 | issn = 1593-8999 | journal = I Quaderni del MAES | year = 1999 | issue = 2 | volume = 1 | pages = 65–83 | publisher = University of Bologna | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20180425145225/https://maes.unibo.it/article/view/8096/7817 | archive-date = April 25, 2018 | url-status = live}}</ref> The church was damaged by a fire in 1340 and by the Aragonese attack in 1494, and was further restored in 1582. *The [[Doria (family)|Doria]] Castle, an example of Genoese military architecture. The castle has changed over the centuries in response to developments in military technology. The castle consists of two parts, a 15th Century upper section and a later (post-cannon) lower section. The lower section contains the ''Sala Ipostila'', a hall built on the site of ancient Greek temples. The upper section contains the ''Casa del Catellano'', the home of the commander of the castle and sits above the ''Sala Ipostila''. During the Napoleonic period after 1807, the Castle saw service as a political prison. *The ''Grotta dell'Arpaia'' (now collapsed), known as [[Byron]]'s Grotto, from which the English poet Byron swam across the gulf of La Spezia to [[San Terenzo]] to visit [[Percy Bysshe Shelley|Shelley]] in [[Lerici]], in 1822. * The medieval nucleus of Le Grazie is set around the 14th-century Church of Our Lady of the Graces; nearby is a medieval convent which once belonged to the [[Olivetans]] and the remains of the 1st century BCE [[Roman villa]] of [[Varignano Villa|Varignano]]. Finds from recent excavations at the villa are held in the ''Antiquarium della Villa Romana del Varignano'' in Porto Venere. * In Fezzano the medieval alleyways are noteworthy, along with the church of St.&nbsp;John the Baptist (1740) and the recently restored ''Villa Cattaneo''. ==Natural areas== Natural places in Porto Venere include the famous [[sea caves]] Byron (Cala dell'Arpaia), Azzurra or Blue Cave (semi-submerged) and Tinetto; the cavity of the Doves and the wall of Tino, the shoal of Dante and Small and Big creeks. Byron's cave, named after the English poet [[George Gordon Byron]], who found inspiration and meditation for his literary works here. It is located at the spur of rock below the church of St. Peter and the old defensive position, the marine cave has a minimum depth of five meters and a maximum of twenty along the side. ===Regional Natural Park=== The Regional Natural Park in Portovenere offers a unique landscape with its high coasts, caves and vegetation that permeates the atmosphere in any season with the changing shades of color. An element that blends and harmonizes every detail is the sea, sometimes calm and clear, so as to reflect like a mirror enchanted multicolored rocks and seagulls, sometimes rough and almost angry. To crown the Park archipelago with three islands of Palmaria, Tino and Tinetto, defying the blue sea in a swirl of aromas and looks towards the infinite. But the park is not only Nature, History dwells here since prehistoric times with the Cave of the Doves, until the recent past in which [[Guglielmo Marconi]] experimented in front of the village his innovative studies. == Popular culture == The 2021 [[Pixar]] animated film ''[[Luca (2021 film)|Luca]]'' was primarily based on the [[Cinque Terre]] towns, however the animation team visited Porto Venere as well for inspiration.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Carey|first=Meredith|title=How Disney and Pixar's 'Luca' Built a Fictional Town Using the Best Parts of Cinque Terre|url=https://www.cntraveler.com/story/on-location-disney-pixars-luca|access-date=2021-06-20|website=Condé Nast Traveler|date=28 April 2021|language=en-US}}</ref> ==People== * [[Simonetta Vespucci]] (ca. 1453 – 26 April 1476), the Renaissance muse of [[Botticelli]] * [[Lord Byron]] (1788–1824), poet and diplomat * [[Gino Montefinale]] (1881–1974), admiral, writer and artist == Events == * Porto Venere is one of the maritime villages that participate each year in ''Palio of Gulf''. * Traditional procession of the ''White Madonna'' along the streets of the village set up in celebration and evocative Roman torches lighting the headland of ''Punta di San Pietro'', the icon of the Virgin Mary (17 August 1399) is carried in procession through the streets of village. The procession of the "White Madonna" brings hundred of tourists every August.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://do-in-italy.com/madonna-bianca-in-portovenere/|title=Madonna Bianca: a miracle in Portovenere}}</ref> * Feast of ''St. Venerius'' (patron of the [[Gulf of Spezia]] and lighthouse keepers of Italy) on 13 September on the island of Tino. * Feast of the [[Basil of Caesarea]], is celebrated every year<ref>[http://discoverportovenere.com/portovenere-the-basics/ "Portovenere 101: the basics"]. Discover Portovenere. January 31, 2015.</ref> on 9 April. * The [[Market (place)|market]] is held every Monday morning in the center of the town. ==References== {{Reflist}} ==External links== {{EB1911 Poster|Portovenere}} * [http://www.prolocoportovenere.it/ Official Website Tourist Association PRO LOCO PORTO VENERE] * [http://www.apathtolunch.com/2013/01/getting-to-portovenere.html Portovenere Transport Guide] * [http://www.comune.portovenere.sp.it/ Municipal website] * [https://whc.unesco.org/pg.cfm?cid=31&id_site=826 Unesco World Heritage entry] * [https://alltravels.co.za/things-to-do-in-portovenere/ Top 7 Things To Do In Portovenere, Italy] {{commons category|Porto Venere}} {{Province of La Spezia}} {{World Heritage Sites in Italy}} {{authority control}} [[Category:Coastal towns in Liguria]] [[Category:Italian Riviera]] [[Category:World Heritage Sites in Italy]]
1,264,456,562
[{"title": "Porto Venere P\u00f2rtivene (Ligurian)", "data": {"Country": "Italy", "Region": "Liguria", "Province": "La Spezia (SP)", "Frazioni": "Le Grazie, Fezzano, Terrizzo"}}, {"title": "Government", "data": {"\u2022 Mayor": "Matteo Cozzani"}}, {"title": "Area", "data": {"\u2022 Total": "7 km2 (3 sq mi)", "Elevation": "8 m (26 ft)"}}, {"title": "Population (1 January 2014)", "data": {"\u2022 Total": "3,763", "\u2022 Density": "540/km2 (1,400/sq mi)", "Demonym": "Portoveneresi", "Time zone": "UTC+1 (CET)", "\u2022 Summer (DST)": "UTC+2 (CEST)", "Postal code": "19025", "Dialing code": "0187", "Patron saint": "The White Madonna", "Saint day": "August 17", "Website": "Official website"}}, {"title": "UNESCO World Heritage Site", "data": {"Part of": "Cinque Terre and Portovenere part of Portovenere, Cinque Terre, and the Islands (Palmaria, Tino and Tinetto)", "Criteria": "Cultural: (ii)(iv)(v)", "Reference": "826-001", "Inscription": "1997 (21st Session)"}}]
false
# John Evelyn the Younger John Evelyn the younger (1655–1699) was an English translator. ## Life Evelyn was the third but eldest surviving son of John Evelyn, born 19 January 1655. On 13 December 1660, his father presented him to the queen mother, who made much of him. Until 1662, he was 'brought up amongst Mr. Howard's children at Arundel House.’ In 1665, Edmund Bohun became his tutor. In early 1667, he was sent to Trinity College, Oxford, under Ralph Bathurst. He left Oxford in March 1669, and was admitted to the Middle Temple on 2 May 1672. On 29 March 1673, his father took him to see Peter Gunning, Bishop of Chichester, who gave him instructions and advice 'before he received the Holy Sacrament.' On 25 May of the same year, he became a younger brother of Trinity House, and on 10 November 1675, he went to France in the suite of the ambassador Lord Berkeley, returning in May of the next year. In December 1687, Evelyn was employed in Devon by the treasury, as a commissioner respecting 'concealment of land.' Just a year later he was presented to William, Prince of Orange at Abingdon by Colonel Sidney and Colonel Berkeley. As a volunteer in John Lovelace, 3rd Baron Lovelace's troop he helped to secure Oxford for William. In 1690, he purchased the chief clerkship of the treasury, but was removed within a year. He acted as a commissioner of revenue in Ireland from 1692 to 1696. He returned home seriously ill, and died in Berkeley Street, London, 24 March 1699, in his father's lifetime. ## Works Evelyn translated the following works: - 'Of Gardens. Four books. First written in Latin verse by Renatus Rapinus, and now made English,’ London, 1673, dedicated to Henry Bennet, 1st Earl of Arlington. - 'The History of the Grand Visiers,’ London, 1677, from the French of François de Chassepol. - Plutarch's 'Life of Alexander the Great,’ for the 'Plutarch's Lives by Several Hands' (1683–6). To the third edition of his father's Sylva (1678) Evelyn contributed some prefatory Greek hexameters, written at the age of fifteen; and in the last chapter the second book of his version of René Rapin's Hortorum Liber was reprinted. Several poems by him are printed in John Dryden's 'Miscellanies' and in John Nichols's 'Collection of Poems.' ## Family Evelyn married, in 1679, Martha, daughter and co-heiress of Richard Spenser, a Turkey merchant. She died on 13 September 1726. They had two sons and three daughters, but only a son, John, and a daughter, Elizabeth (wife of Simon Harcourt, son of Simon Harcourt, 1st Viscount Harcourt), survived infancy. Their son John, born on 1 March 1682, married Anne, daughter of Edward Boscawen of Cornwall, on 18 September 1750. He was made a baronet 30 July 1713, built a library at the family seat of Wotton House, became a fellow of the Royal Society, and served as a commissioner of customs. He died on 18 July 1763. His grandson Sir Frederick Evelyn, a soldier, died without issue in 1812. His estates passed to his widow, Mary, daughter of William Turton of Staffordshire, who bequeathed them on her death in 1817 to John Evelyn, a direct descendant of George Evelyn (1530–1603), and grandfather of William John Evelyn. John, a first cousin of Frederick, became the fourth baronet. With the death of this Sir John's brother, Hugh, in 1848, the baronetcy became extinct.
enwiki/31045461
enwiki
31,045,461
John Evelyn the Younger
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Evelyn_the_Younger
2025-03-28T12:13:17Z
en
Q68164067
33,038
{{Short description|English translator}} {{Use dmy dates|date=September 2020}} '''John Evelyn the younger''' (1655–1699) was an English translator. ==Life== Evelyn was the third but eldest surviving son of [[John Evelyn]], born 19 January 1655. On 13 December 1660, his father presented him to the [[Henrietta Maria|queen mother]], who made much of him. Until 1662, he was 'brought up amongst Mr. Howard's children at [[Arundel House]].’ In 1665, [[Edmund Bohun]] became his tutor. In early 1667, he was sent to [[Trinity College, Oxford]], under [[Ralph Bathurst]].{{sfn|Lee|1889|p=83}} He left Oxford in March 1669, and was admitted to the [[Middle Temple]] on 2 May 1672. On 29 March 1673, his father took him to see [[Peter Gunning]], Bishop of Chichester, who gave him instructions and advice 'before he received the Holy Sacrament.' On 25 May of the same year, he became a younger brother of [[Trinity House]], and on 10 November 1675, he went to France in the suite of the ambassador [[George Berkeley, 1st Earl of Berkeley|Lord Berkeley]], returning in May of the next year.{{sfn|Lee|1889|p=83}} In December 1687, Evelyn was employed in [[Devon]] by the treasury, as a commissioner respecting 'concealment of land.' Just a year later he was presented to [[William III of England|William, Prince of Orange]] at [[Abingdon-on-Thames|Abingdon]] by Colonel Sidney and Colonel Berkeley. As a volunteer in [[John Lovelace, 3rd Baron Lovelace]]'s troop he helped to secure Oxford for William.{{sfn|Lee|1889|p=83}} In 1690, he purchased the chief clerkship of the treasury, but was removed within a year. He acted as a commissioner of revenue in Ireland from 1692 to 1696. He returned home seriously ill, and died in [[Berkeley Street, London]], 24 March 1699, in his father's lifetime.{{sfn|Lee|1889|p=83}} ==Works== Evelyn translated the following works:{{sfn|Lee|1889|p=83}} * 'Of Gardens. Four books. First written in Latin verse by Renatus Rapinus, and now made English,’ London, 1673, dedicated to [[Henry Bennet, 1st Earl of Arlington]]. * 'The History of the Grand Visiers,’ London, 1677, from the French of [[François de Chassepol]]. * [[Plutarch]]'s 'Life of Alexander the Great,’ for the 'Plutarch's Lives by Several Hands' (1683–6). To the third edition of his father's ''[[Sylva, or A Discourse of Forest-Trees and the Propagation of Timber|Sylva]]'' (1678) Evelyn contributed some prefatory Greek hexameters, written at the age of fifteen; and in the last chapter the second book of his version of [[René Rapin]]'s ''Hortorum Liber'' was reprinted. Several poems by him are printed in [[John Dryden]]'s 'Miscellanies' and in [[John Nichols (printer)|John Nichols]]'s 'Collection of Poems.'{{sfn|Lee|1889|p=83}} ==Family== Evelyn married, in 1679, Martha, daughter and co-heiress of Richard Spenser, a Turkey merchant. She died on 13 September 1726.<ref>Hist. Reg. for 1726, p. 36</ref> They had two sons and three daughters, but only a son, John, and a daughter, Elizabeth (wife of Simon Harcourt, son of [[Simon Harcourt, 1st Viscount Harcourt]]), survived infancy.{{sfn|Lee|1889|p=83}} Their son [[Sir John Evelyn, 1st Baronet of Wotton|John]], born on 1 March 1682, married Anne, daughter of Edward Boscawen of Cornwall, on 18 September 1750. He was made a baronet 30 July 1713, built a library at the family seat of [[Wotton House, Surrey|Wotton House]], became a fellow of the [[Royal Society]], and served as a commissioner of customs. He died on 18 July 1763. His grandson Sir Frederick Evelyn, a soldier, died without issue in 1812. His estates passed to his widow, Mary, daughter of William Turton of Staffordshire, who bequeathed them on her death in 1817 to John Evelyn, a direct descendant of George Evelyn (1530–1603), and grandfather of William John Evelyn. John, a first cousin of Frederick, became the fourth baronet. With the death of this Sir John's brother, Hugh, in 1848, the baronetcy became extinct.{{sfn|Lee|1889|p=83}} ==Notes== {{reflist}} ==References== *{{DNB|first=Sidney |last=Lee |wstitle=Evelyn, John (1655-1699) |volume=18 |page=83}} This source cites: **Evelyn's Diary, ed. Bray and Wheatley, i. lxxxvii, and ii. passim; **Dews's ''Hist. of Deptford''; **Wood's ''Athenæ Oxon''. ed. Bliss, iv. 689. {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Evelyn, John}} [[Category:1655 births]] [[Category:1699 deaths]] [[Category:17th-century English writers]] [[Category:17th-century English male writers]] [[Category:17th-century English translators]] [[Category:Fellows of the Royal Society]] [[Category:Alumni of Trinity College, Oxford]] [[Category:English male non-fiction writers]] [[Category:Members of Trinity House]]
1,282,756,294
[]
false
# Lovoni 17°42′S 178°48′E / 17.700°S 178.800°E The Tikina of Lovoni is made up of the Fijian villages of Lovoni, Nasaumatua, Vuni-ivi-savu, Visoto, Nukutocia and Nacobo. The latter three villages are located on the coast of Ovalau. The paramount Chief of the Tikina of Lovoni which includes six villages is the Tui Wailevu the Vunivalu. The Lovoni Village Road is used by the inhabitants to access the nearby town of Levuka. Pacific boas can be found near the villages and are considered as delicacies. ## History Various myths and legends attribute the Lovoni people to different origins. It is believed that they were the first settlers of the island having migrated from mainland Vitilevu to settle Ovalau. Popular beliefs link them to the High Chiefdom of Verata and inevitably to the Nakauvadra epic. The founding ancestor of the Lovoni is popularly referred to as Rakavono, nephew to the mythical founder of the Bureta people, Bui Savulu, daughter of Lutunasobasoba. At the time of European contact, written sources refer to this group of people as the predominant rulers of Ovalau. They were responsible for torching the settlement of Levuka, at least twice, causing a dispersal of its early European settlers to Savusavu. They were an independent Fijian Kingdom with kinship ties to the Roko Tui Bau, the people of Verata, Wainibuka and Naitasiri. Their allies within the Lomaiviti group lay with the Tora ni Bau of Batiki. They also had strong ties with the people of Bua and Cakaudrove. To the east, they had extensive ties and allies with the Yasayasa Moala and Ono-i-Lau. Their ties to the west of Fiji were direct kinship ties with the noblehouse of the Tui Nadi. The Lovoni people, being an independent kingdom with several strategic tributaries, ensured their role as mercenaries of war in the central Fijian province of Lomaiviti, which at the time of European contact, was undergoing a major power struggle between the Noble Houses of Verata and their ally and kin the House of the Roko Tui Bau and the rising power of the Vunivalu of Bau. This period also saw the growing power of the Tongans influx to the east of Fiji, the rise of Rewa and its tributaries and the presence of the Europeans and their efficient firearms. The Lovoni people found themselves in the center of this major conflict and power struggle and often played the determining role of supporting whichever side suited them best, based on kinship ties. Their unfailing support of the ailing and declining house of the Roko Tui Bau and his descendants would mark the fate of this fiercely independent and proud people.
enwiki/16481215
enwiki
16,481,215
Lovoni
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lovoni
2024-02-21T00:11:06Z
en
Q6692664
26,189
{{More citations needed|date=February 2024}} [[File:Lovoni village.jpg|thumb|Lovoni Village, Ovalau, Fiji]] {{coord|17|42|S|178|48|E|display=title|region:FJ_type:city_source:GNS-enwiki}} The '''Tikina of Lovoni''' is made up of the [[Fiji]]an villages of Lovoni, Nasaumatua, Vuni-ivi-savu, [[Visoto]], Nukutocia and Nacobo. The latter three [[village]]s are located on the coast of [[Ovalau (Fiji)|Ovalau]]. The paramount Chief of the Tikina of Lovoni which includes six villages is the Tui Wailevu the Vunivalu. The Lovoni Village Road is used by the inhabitants to access the nearby town of [[Levuka]].<ref>{{cite news |last1=Kumar |first1=Kreetika |title=Multiple roads inaccessible due to land slips |url=https://www.fbcnews.com.fj/news/roads/multiple-roads-inaccessible-due-to-land-slips/ |access-date=21 February 2024 |work=Fiji Broadcasting Corporation |date=2 February 2021}}</ref> [[Pacific boa]]s can be found near the villages and are considered as delicacies.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Vakasukawaqa |first1=Arieta |title=Pacific Boas found in Lovoni |url=https://www.fijitimes.com.fj/pacific-boas-found-in-lovoni/ |access-date=21 February 2024 |work=The Fiji Times |date=25 January 2019}}</ref> == History == Various [[myth]]s and legends attribute the Lovoni people to different origins. It is believed that they were the first [[settler]]s of the [[island]] having [[human migration|migrated]] from mainland Vitilevu to settle [[Ovalau (Fiji)|Ovalau]]. Popular beliefs link them to the High Chiefdom of Verata and inevitably to the Nakauvadra epic. The founding ancestor of the Lovoni is popularly referred to as Rakavono, nephew to the mythical founder of the Bureta people, Bui Savulu, daughter of Lutunasobasoba. At the time of [[Europe]]an contact, written sources refer to this group of people as the predominant rulers of Ovalau. They were responsible for torching the settlement of [[Levuka]], at least twice, causing a dispersal of its early European settlers to [[Savusavu]]. They were an independent [[Fiji]]an Kingdom with kinship ties to the Roko Tui Bau, the people of Verata, Wainibuka and [[Naitasiri Province|Naitasiri]]. Their allies within the [[Lomaiviti (archipelago)|Lomaiviti]] group lay with the Tora ni Bau of [[Batiki]]. They also had strong ties with the people of [[Bua Province|Bua]] and [[Cakaudrove Province|Cakaudrove]]. To the east, they had extensive ties and allies with the Yasayasa Moala and [[Ono-i-Lau]]. Their ties to the west of Fiji were direct kinship ties with the noblehouse of the [[Tui Nadi]]. The Lovoni people, being an [[sovereignty|independent kingdom]] with several strategic tributaries, ensured their role as [[mercenary|mercenaries of war]] in the central Fijian province of [[Lomaiviti Province|Lomaiviti]], which at the time of European contact, was undergoing a major power struggle between the Noble Houses of Verata and their ally and kin the House of the Roko Tui Bau and the rising power of the [[Vunivalu of Bau]]. This period also saw the growing power of the [[Tonga]]ns influx to the east of Fiji, the rise of [[Rewa (princely state)|Rewa]] and its tributaries and the presence of the Europeans and their efficient [[firearm]]s. The Lovoni people found themselves in the center of this major conflict and power struggle and often played the determining role of supporting whichever side suited them best, based on kinship ties. Their unfailing support of the ailing and declining house of the Roko Tui Bau and his descendants would mark the fate of this fiercely independent and proud people. ==References== {{reflist}} [[Category:Populated places in Fiji]]
1,209,246,052
[]
false
# Paolo Ferrando Paolo Ferrando (born 31 August 1941) is an Italian water polo player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1968 Summer Olympics.
enwiki/62474591
enwiki
62,474,591
Paolo Ferrando
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paolo_Ferrando
2024-11-27T22:59:48Z
en
Q13408059
29,633
{{short description|Italian water polo player}} {{Use dmy dates|date=December 2019}} {{Infobox sportsperson | name = Paolo Ferrando | full_name = | image = | caption = | nationality = Italian | sport = [[Water polo]] | birth_date = {{birth date and age|1941|8|31|df=yes}} | birth_place = [[Genoa]], Italy | death_date = | death_place = }} '''Paolo Ferrando''' (born 31 August 1941) is an Italian [[water polo]] player.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.olympedia.org/athletes/54307 |title=Paolo Ferrando |work=Olympedia |access-date=30 June 2022}}</ref> He competed in the [[Water polo at the 1968 Summer Olympics|men's tournament]] at the [[1968 Summer Olympics]].<ref name="SportsRef">{{cite Sports-Reference |url=https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/fe/paolo-ferrando-1.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200418012850/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/fe/paolo-ferrando-1.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=18 April 2020 |title=Paolo Ferrando Olympic Results |accessdate=1 December 2019}}</ref> ==References== {{reflist}} ==External links== * {{sports links}} {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Ferrando, Paolo}} [[Category:1941 births]] [[Category:Living people]] [[Category:Italian male water polo players]] [[Category:Olympic water polo players for Italy]] [[Category:Water polo players at the 1968 Summer Olympics]] [[Category:Water polo players from Genoa]] [[Category:20th-century Italian sportsmen]] {{Italy-waterpolo-bio-stub}}
1,259,943,530
[{"title": "Paolo Ferrando", "data": {"Nationality": "Italian", "Born": "31 August 1941 \u00b7 Genoa, Italy"}}, {"title": "Sport", "data": {"Sport": "Water polo"}}]
false
# Kann Thirandhu Paaramma Kann Thirandhu Paaramma (transl. Goddess, please open your eyes and see) is a 2000 Indian Tamil-language devotional film directed by L. C. Selva. The film stars Sangita and Ranjith, while Indhu and Vasu Vikram also appear in supporting roles. The film was released on 4 August 2000. ## Cast - Sangita as Gayatri and Amman - Ranjith as Prabhu - Indhu - Y. Vijaya - Babu Mohan - Mahanadhi Shankar - Vasu Vikram - Chaplin Balu - Mahendran - Ra. Sankaran ## Production United & Co, who worked as distributors for over 505 films, opted to make their first production through the film and opted to spend heavily on visual effects. The director, Selva, had previously apprenticed under K. Vijayan. ## Soundtrack Soundtrack was composed by newcomer S. P. Eeswar. | No. | Title | Singer(s) | Length | | --- | -------------------------------- | ------------- | ------ | | 1. | "Amman Solai" | | | | 2. | "Unnai Thaane Amman Endru" | Sujatha Mohan | | | 3. | "Unnai Thaane Amman Endru" (sad) | K. S. Chithra | | ## Reception Dinakaran wrote, "Newface director Selva L.C. as well as the technical team of the film seem to have handled the problem of audience's reception to the film 'in a taken-for-granted fashion'." Indiainfo wrote, "Lot of graphics to show powers of Amman and Sangeetha’s good acting make the film watch able, but various loose ends mar the film. Easwar’s music consists of typical amman songs that you may have heard before and Sivamanohar’s camera work is average".
enwiki/53213267
enwiki
53,213,267
Kann Thirandhu Paaramma
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kann_Thirandhu_Paaramma
2025-03-16T22:01:43Z
en
Q29025724
36,685
{{No plot|date=July 2024}} {{Use dmy dates|date=March 2018}} {{Use Indian English|date=March 2018}} {{Infobox film | image = Kann Thirandhu Paaramma.jpg | caption = DVD cover | director = L. C. Selva | producer = Leo Raja | writer = L. C. Selva | starring = {{ubl|[[Sangita Madhavan Nair|Sangita]]|[[Ranjith (actor)|Ranjith]]}} | music = S. P. Eashwar | cinematography = N. Sivamanohar | editing = V. Chakrapani | distributor = Guru Shree Art Pictures | released = {{Film date|2000|08|04|df=yes}} | runtime = | studio = United And Company | country = India | language = Tamil | budget = | gross = }} '''''Kann Thirandhu Paaramma''''' ({{translation|Goddess, please open your eyes and see}}) is a 2000 Indian [[Tamil language|Tamil]]-language [[devotional film]] directed by L. C. Selva. The film stars [[Sangita Madhavan Nair|Sangita]] and [[Ranjith (actor)|Ranjith]], while Indhu and [[Vasu Vikram]] also appear in supporting roles. The film was released on 4 August 2000. == Cast == {{cast listing| *[[Sangita Madhavan Nair|Sangita]] as Gayatri and Amman *[[Ranjith (actor)|Ranjith]] as Prabhu *Indhu *[[Y. Vijaya]] *[[Babu Mohan]] *[[Mahanadhi Shankar]] *[[Vasu Vikram]] *[[Chaplin Balu]] *[[Mahendran (actor)|Mahendran]] *[[Ra. Sankaran]] }} == Production == United & Co, who worked as distributors for over 505 films, opted to make their first production through the film and opted to spend heavily on visual effects. The director, Selva, had previously apprenticed under K. Vijayan.<ref>{{Cite web |date=11 February 2000 |title=Kannu Thorathu Paar Amma {{!}} Ranjith, Sangeetha teamed |url=http://www.screenindia.com/old/feb11/south.htm |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080410082848/http://www.screenindia.com/old/feb11/south.htm |archive-date=10 April 2008 |website=[[Screen (magazine)|Screen]] |access-date=2 July 2024 }}</ref> == Soundtrack == Soundtrack was composed by newcomer S. P. Eeswar.<ref>{{Cite web |date=4 August 2000 |title=Kan Thiranthu Paaramma |url=https://www.jiosaavn.com/album/kan-thiranthu-paaramma/RJHposrPcro_ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230117211424/https://www.jiosaavn.com/album/kan-thiranthu-paaramma/RJHposrPcro_ |archive-date=17 January 2023 |access-date=17 January 2023 |website=[[JioSaavn]]}}</ref> {{Track listing | headline = Track listing | extra_column = Singer(s) | title1 = Amman Solai | length1 = | lyrics1 = | extra1 = | title2 = Unnai Thaane Amman Endru | length2 = | lyrics2 = | extra2 = [[Sujatha Mohan]] | title3 = Unnai Thaane Amman Endru | note3 = sad | lyrics3 = | extra3 = [[K. S. Chithra]] | title4 = | length4 = }} == Reception == ''[[Dinakaran]]'' wrote, "Newface director Selva L.C. as well as the technical team of the film seem to have handled the problem of audience's reception to the film 'in a taken-for-granted fashion'."<ref>{{Cite web |date=1 September 2000 |title=Review: "Kann Thiranthu Paarammaa" |url=http://www.dinakaran.com/cinema/english/reviews/01-09-00/kannthi.htm |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050309024757/http://www.dinakaran.com/cinema/english/reviews/01-09-00/kannthi.htm |archive-date=9 March 2005 |access-date=2024-07-02 |website=[[Dinakaran]]}}</ref> ''Indiainfo'' wrote, "Lot of graphics to show powers of Amman and Sangeetha’s good acting make the film watch able, but various loose ends mar the film. Easwar’s music consists of typical amman songs that you may have heard before and Sivamanohar’s camera work is average".<ref>{{Cite web |title={{sic|nolink=y|Kaanu}} Thiranthu Paaramma : Treat for Amman devotees |url=http://movies.indiainfo.com/tamil/reviews/kaanu.html |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20010210011532/http://movies.indiainfo.com/tamil/reviews/kaanu.html |archive-date=10 February 2001 |access-date=2024-07-03 |website=Indiainfo}}</ref> == References == {{Reflist}} == External links == *{{IMDB title}} [[Category:2000 films]] [[Category:2000s Indian films]] [[Category:2000s Tamil-language films]] [[Category:Hindu devotional films]] [[Category:Tamil-language Indian films]]
1,280,863,002
[{"title": "Kann Thirandhu Paaramma", "data": {"Directed by": "L. C. Selva", "Written by": "L. C. Selva", "Produced by": "Leo Raja", "Starring": "- Sangita - Ranjith", "Cinematography": "N. Sivamanohar", "Edited by": "V. Chakrapani", "Music by": "S. P. Eashwar", "Production \u00b7 company": "United And Company", "Distributed by": "Guru Shree Art Pictures", "Release date": "- 4 August 2000", "Country": "India", "Language": "Tamil"}}]
false
# Lake Elphinstone Lake Elphinstone is a natural lake in Queensland, Australia. It is located about 92 kilometres (57 mi) west of Mackay in Isaac Region (formerly Nebo Shire). The lake used to support the town of Elphinstone, however the town no longer exists, and the lake is a recreation area popular for bird-watching, fishing and camping.
enwiki/3009383
enwiki
3,009,383
Lake Elphinstone
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lake_Elphinstone
2024-02-24T19:15:59Z
en
Q6475732
34,040
{{Short description|Lake in Queensland, Australia}} {{Use Australian English|date=June 2020}} {{Use dmy dates|date=July 2019}} {{Infobox body of water |name = Lake Elphinstone |image =Let's Go Fishing, Lake Elphinstone, Queensland, Australia, 29 June 2016.jpg |caption =Lake Elphinstone, 2016 |image_bathymetry = |pushpin_map=Queensland |caption_bathymetry = |location = [[Queensland]] |coords = {{Coord|21|31|S|148|14|E|region:AU_type:waterbody|display=inline,title}} |type = |inflow = |outflow = |catchment = |basin_countries = Australia |length = |width = |area = |depth = |max-depth = |volume = |residence_time = |shore = |elevation = |islands = |cities = }} '''Lake Elphinstone''' is a natural [[lake]] in [[Queensland]], Australia. It is located about {{convert|92|km}} west of [[Mackay, Queensland|Mackay]] in [[Isaac Region]] (formerly [[Nebo Shire]]). The lake used to support the town of [[Elphinstone, Queensland (Isaac Region)|Elphinstone]], however the town no longer exists, and the lake is a recreation area popular for bird-watching, fishing and camping.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.mackayregion.com/accommodation/lake-elphinstone/76305|title=Lake Elphinstone|website=Mackay Region Visitor Information Centre|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170724093046/http://www.mackayregion.com/accommodation/lake-elphinstone/76305|archive-date=24 July 2017|url-status=live|access-date=24 July 2017}}</ref> ==See also== {{Portal|Queensland}} *[[List of lakes of Australia]] == References == {{Reflist}} ==External links== {{commons category-inline|Lake Elphinstone}} [[Category:Lakes of Queensland|Elphinstone, Lake]] [[Category:North Queensland]] {{NorthQueensland-geo-stub}}
1,210,047,432
[{"title": "Lake Elphinstone", "data": {"Location": "Queensland", "Coordinates": "21\u00b031\u2032S 148\u00b014\u2032E\ufeff / \ufeff21.517\u00b0S 148.233\u00b0E", "Basin countries": "Australia"}}]
false
# Margaret Seymour Carpenter Margaret Seymour Carpenter (April 3, 1893 - March 30, 1987) was the writer of the novel Experiment Perilous (Boston: Little Brown & Co., 1943), a New York Times Bestseller in 1943. The novel was produced by RKO Radio Pictures as a film of the same name, Experiment Perilous, starring Hedy Lamarr, George Brent, and Paul Lukas. She was the daughter of George Rice Carpenter and his wife, Mary Seymour. ## Personal life and death She married on May 2, 1916, in New York City to Henry Barber Richardson of Boston, Massachusetts. Carpenter died March 30, 1987, four days before her 94th birthday, in Boston, Massachusetts.
enwiki/30514276
enwiki
30,514,276
Margaret Seymour Carpenter
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margaret_Seymour_Carpenter
2024-04-06T02:29:38Z
en
Q6759886
22,462
{{short description|American novelist}} '''Margaret Seymour Carpenter''' (April 3, 1893 - March 30, 1987) was the writer of the novel ''Experiment Perilous'' (Boston: Little Brown & Co., 1943), a [[New York Times Bestseller]] in 1943. The novel was produced by [[RKO Radio Pictures]] as a film of the same name, ''[[Experiment Perilous]]'', starring [[Hedy Lamarr]], [[George Brent]], and [[Paul Lukas]]. She was the daughter of [[George Rice Carpenter]] and his wife, Mary Seymour.<ref>John W. Leonard, ed.: ''Who's Who in New York City and State'', Third Edition, New York: L. R. Hamersley & Co., 1907, p. 247.</ref> ==Personal life and death== She married on May 2, 1916, in New York City to Henry Barber Richardson of Boston, Massachusetts.<ref>''The New York Times'', May 4, 1916.</ref> Carpenter died March 30, 1987, four days before her 94th birthday, in Boston, Massachusetts.{{cn|date=April 2024}} ==References== {{reflist}} {{authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Carpenter, Margaret Seymour}} [[Category:1893 births]] [[Category:1987 deaths]] [[Category:Novelists from Boston]] [[Category:Novelists from New York City]] [[Category:American women novelists]] [[Category:20th-century American novelists]] [[Category:20th-century American women writers]] [[Category:Rehoboth Carpenter family]] {{US-novelist-1890s-stub}}
1,217,483,752
[]
false
# Krasnomayskaya, Bryansk Oblast Krasnomayskaya (Russian: Красномайская) is a rural locality (a village) in Pochepsky District, Bryansk Oblast, Russia. The population was 13 as of 2010. There is 1 street. ## Geography Krasnomayskaya is located 25 km east of Pochep (the district's administrative centre) by road. Moskali is the nearest rural locality.
enwiki/61819003
enwiki
61,819,003
Krasnomayskaya, Bryansk Oblast
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Krasnomayskaya,_Bryansk_Oblast
2024-11-05T06:48:23Z
en
Q21336993
39,481
{{Infobox settlement |official_name = Krasnomayskaya |other_name = |native_name = Красномайская |native_name_lang = ru |nickname = |settlement_type = Village |image_skyline = |image_caption = |pushpin_map = Russia Bryansk Oblast#Russia |pushpin_label_position = |pushpin_mapsize = |pushpin_map_caption = |subdivision_type = Country |subdivision_name = [[Russia]] |subdivision_type1 = [[List of regions of Russia|Region]] |subdivision_name1 = [[Bryansk Oblast]] |subdivision_type2 = [[Counties of Russia|County]] |subdivision_name2 = |subdivision_type3 = [[Districts of Russia|District]] |subdivision_name3 = [[Pochepsky District]] |subdivision_type4 = [[List of municipalities of Russia|Municipality]] |subdivision_name4 = | population_as_of = | population_footnotes = | population_total = |timezone1 = |utc_offset1 = +3:00 |timezone1_DST = |utc_offset1_DST = |postal_code_type = |postal_code = |elevation_m = |elevation_footnotes = |coordinates = {{coord|52|56|N|33|47|E|display=inline}}<ref>[https://mapdata.ru/bryanskaya-oblast/pochepskiy-rayon/ Карта Почепского района Брянской области]</ref> }} '''Krasnomayskaya''' ({{langx|ru|Красномайская}}) is a [[types of inhabited localities in Russia|rural locality]] (a [[Village#Russia|village]]) in [[Pochepsky District]], [[Bryansk Oblast]], Russia. The population was 13 as of 2010.<ref>[http://bryansk.gks.ru/wps/wcm/connect/rosstat_ts/bryansk/resources/0f50b5804e367fe2afe7afba5f1db840/01-10.xls Всероссийская перепись населения 2010 года. 10. Численность населения Брянской области, городских округов, муниципальных районов, городских и сельских поселений, городских населённых пунктов, сельских населённых пунктов] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140518101114/http://bryansk.gks.ru/wps/wcm/connect/rosstat_ts/bryansk/resources/0f50b5804e367fe2afe7afba5f1db840/01-10.xls |date=2014-05-18 }} {{Retrieved|access-date=2014-01-28}}</ref> There is 1 street. == Geography == Krasnomayskaya is located 25 km east of [[Pochep,_Bryansk_Oblast|Pochep]] (the district's administrative centre) by road. Moskali is the nearest rural locality.<ref>[http://allroutes.ru/rasstoyanie_krasnomajskaja-32_pochep Расстояние от Красномайской до Почепа]</ref> == References == {{reflist}} {{Rural localities in Pochepsky District}} {{Authority control}} [[Category:Rural localities in Pochepsky District]] {{BryanskOblast-geo-stub}}
1,255,497,924
[{"title": "Krasnomayskaya \u041a\u0440\u0430\u0441\u043d\u043e\u043c\u0430\u0439\u0441\u043a\u0430\u044f", "data": {"Country": "Russia", "Region": "Bryansk Oblast", "District": "Pochepsky District", "Time zone": "UTC+3:00"}}]
false
# Mo Yecong Mo Yecong (born 26 June 2000) is a Chinese tennis player. Mo has a career high ATP singles ranking of 545 achieved on 10 June 2024. He also has a career high ATP doubles ranking of 914 achieved on 25 September 2023. Mo made his ATP main draw debut at the 2023 Zhuhai Championships after receiving wildcards into the singles and doubles main draws. He also made an appearance at the 2024 Chengdu Open with a wildcard into the doubles main draw, where he recorded his first ATP-level win.
enwiki/77919679
enwiki
77,919,679
Mo Yecong
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mo_Yecong
2025-03-18T01:29:57Z
en
Q123421534
36,847
{{Short description|Chinese tennis player}} {{Infobox tennis biography |name = Mo Yecong |image = |caption = |fullname = |country = {{flagu|China}} |residence = |birth_date = {{birth date and age|df=yes|2000|6|26}} |birth_place = [[Shaodong]], China |height = {{convert|abbr=on|1.83|m}} |weight = |turnedpro = |plays = Right-handed (two-handed backhand) |careerprizemoney = $52,186 |singlesrecord = 0–1 <small> (at [[ATP Tour]] level, [[Grand Slam (tennis)|Grand Slam]] level, and in [[Davis Cup]])</small> |singlestitles = 1 ITF |highestsinglesranking = No. 545 (10 June 2024) |currentsinglesranking = No. 582 (16 September 2024) |doublesrecord = 1–1 <small> (at [[ATP Tour]] level, [[Grand Slam (tennis)|Grand Slam]] level, and in [[Davis Cup]])</small> |doublestitles = 0 |highestdoublesranking = No. 914 (25 September 2023) |currentdoublesranking = No. 1194 (16 September 2024) |updated = 20 September 2024 }} '''Mo Yecong''' (born 26 June 2000) is a Chinese tennis player. Mo has a career high [[Association of Tennis Professionals|ATP]] singles ranking of 545 achieved on 10 June 2024. He also has a career high ATP doubles ranking of 914 achieved on 25 September 2023.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.atptour.com/en/players/ye-cong-mo/m0bw/overview|title=Ye Cong Mo &#124; Overview &#124; ATP Tour &#124; Tennis|website=ATP Tour}}</ref> Mo made his ATP main draw debut at the [[2023 Zhuhai Championships]] after receiving wildcards into the singles and doubles main draws. He also made an appearance at the [[2024 Chengdu Open]] with a wildcard into the doubles main draw, where he recorded his first ATP-level win. ==References== {{reflist}} ==External links== *{{ATP|M0BW}} *{{ITF|yecong-mo/800472836/chn}} {{Top male singles tennis players by country|CHN}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Mo, Yecong}} [[Category:2000 births]] [[Category:Living people]] [[Category:Chinese male tennis players]] [[Category:People from Shaodong]] {{China-tennis-bio-stub}}
1,281,060,836
[{"title": "Mo Yecong", "data": {"Country (sports)": "China", "Born": "26 June 2000 \u00b7 Shaodong, China", "Height": "1.83 m (6 ft 0 in)", "Plays": "Right-handed (two-handed backhand)", "Prize money": "$52,186"}}, {"title": "Singles", "data": {"Career record": "0\u20131 (at ATP Tour level, Grand Slam level, and in Davis Cup)", "Career titles": "1 ITF", "Highest ranking": "No. 545 (10 June 2024)", "Current ranking": "No. 582 (16 September 2024)"}}, {"title": "Doubles", "data": {"Career record": "1\u20131 (at ATP Tour level, Grand Slam level, and in Davis Cup)", "Career titles": "0", "Highest ranking": "No. 914 (25 September 2023)", "Current ranking": "No. 1194 (16 September 2024)"}}]
false
# Lower Rose Lower Rose is a hamlet in the parish of Perranzabuloe (where the population at the 2011 census was included.), Cornwall, England, UK. Lower Rose is approximately 6 miles (9.7 km) north of Truro.
enwiki/33139658
enwiki
33,139,658
Lower Rose
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lower_Rose
2020-04-10T18:00:46Z
en
Q6693761
53,970
{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2016}} {{Use British English|date=January 2016}} {{Infobox UK place |static_image= |static_image_caption= |country= England |region= South West England |map_type=Cornwall |official_name= Lower Rose |cornish_name= |civil_parish= [[Perranzabuloe]] |unitary_england= [[Cornwall Council|Cornwall]] |lieutenancy_england =[[Cornwall]] |os_grid_reference= SW780549 |coordinates = {{coord|50.352|-5.122|display=inline,title}} |population = |population_ref = |post_town= [[Truro]] |postcode_area= TR |postcode_district= TR4 |dial_code= | |hide_services=yes }} '''Lower Rose''' is a [[Hamlet (place)|hamlet]] in the parish of [[Perranzabuloe]] (where the population at the 2011 census was included.), [[Cornwall]], England, UK.<ref name=OS200>{{cite map|title=Ordnance Survey: Landranger map sheet 200 ''Newquay & Bodmin (Camelford & St Austell)''|ISBN=978-0-319-22938-5|publisher=Ordnance Survey|date=}}</ref><ref>[http://www.explorebritain.info/locality-cornwall-lower-rose-sw7854 Lower Rose]; Explore Britain</ref> Lower Rose is approximately {{convert|6|mi|km}} north of [[Truro]].<ref name=HowFar>{{cite web|url=http://www.genuki.org.uk/cgi-bin/howfar?FROMGR=SX038593|title=GENUKI: How far is it from SX038593?|website=www.genuki.org.uk|publisher=GENUKI|accessdate=30 January 2016}}</ref> ==References== {{Portal|Cornwall}} {{Reflist}} {{Cornwall|state=collapsed}} [[Category:Hamlets in Cornwall]] {{Cornwall-geo-stub}}
950,188,778
[{"title": "Lower Rose", "data": {"OS grid reference": "SW780549", "Civil parish": "- Perranzabuloe", "Unitary authority": "- Cornwall", "Ceremonial county": "- Cornwall", "Region": "- South West", "Country": "England", "Sovereign state": "United Kingdom", "Post town": "Truro", "Postcode district": "TR4"}}, {"title": "Ceremonial county of Cornwall", "data": {"Unitary authorities": "Cornwall Council Council of the Isles of Scilly", "Major settlements \u00b7 (cities in italics)": "Bodmin Bude Callington Camborne Camelford Falmouth Fowey Hayle Helston Hugh Town Launceston Liskeard Looe Lostwithiel Marazion Newlyn Newquay Padstow Penryn Penzance Porthleven Redruth St Austell St Blazey St Columb Major St Ives St Just in Penwith Saltash Stratton Torpoint Truro Wadebridge See also: List of civil parishes in Cornwall", "Rivers": "Allen Camel Carnon Cober De Lank Fal Fowey Gannel Hayle Helford Inny Kensey Lerryn Looe Lynher Menalhyl Ottery Par Pont Pill Port Navas Red St Austell Seaton Tamar Tiddy Truro Valency full list...", "Topics": "History ( Civil War ) Status debate Flag Culture Language Economy Fishing Flora and fauna Places List of farms Population of major settlements Demography Notable people The Duchy Diocese Politics Schools Hundreds/shires Places of interest South West Coast Path Outline of Cornwall Index of Cornwall-related articles"}}]
false
# Nadia Essayan Nadia Essayan (born 6 June 1957) is a French politician representing the Democratic Movement. She was elected to the French National Assembly on 18 June 2017, representing Cher's 2nd constituency. She lost her seat in the first round of the 2022 French legislative election.
enwiki/54351023
enwiki
54,351,023
Nadia Essayan
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nadia_Essayan
2024-06-08T10:50:38Z
en
Q30349130
36,184
{{Short description|French politician (born 1957)}} {{Expand French|topic=bio|date=March 2020}}{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2020}} {{infobox officeholder | name = Nadia Essayan | image = Nadia Essayan.jpg | caption = Nadia Essayan in 2017 | office = Member of the [[National Assembly (France)|National Assembly]]<br/>for [[Cher's 2nd constituency]] | term_start = 21 June 2017 | predecessor = [[Nicolas Sansu]] | birth_date = {{birth date and age|1957|06|06|df=yes}} | birth_place = [[Dimbokro]], Ivory Coast | nationality = [[French nationality law|French]] | party = [[Democratic Movement (France)|MoDem]] | termend = June 2022 }} '''Nadia Essayan''' (born 6 June 1957) is a French politician representing the [[Democratic Movement (France)|Democratic Movement]]. She was elected to the [[National Assembly (France)|French National Assembly]] on 18 June 2017, representing [[Cher's 2nd constituency]].<ref name="Bio">{{Cite web|url=http://elections.interieur.gouv.fr/legislatives-2017/018/01802.html |title=Elections législatives 2017 |accessdate=19 June 2017 |work=Ministry of the Interior |language=French}}</ref> She [[List of MPs who lost their seat in the 2022 French legislative election|lost her seat]] in the first round of the [[2022 French legislative election]].<ref>{{Cite web |last=France |first=Centre |date=2022-06-12 |title=Politique - Nadia Essayan éliminée, le RN s'invite au second tour, les premières réactions : le premier tour des élections législatives dans le Cher |url=https://www.leberry.fr/bourges-18000/actualites/nadia-essayan-eliminee-le-rn-s-invite-au-second-tour-les-premieres-reactions-le-premier-tour-des-elections-legislatives-dans-le-cher_14142134/ |access-date=2022-06-13 |website=www.leberry.fr}}</ref> ==See also== * [[2017 French legislative election]] ==References== {{Reflist}} {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Essayan, Nadia}} [[Category:1957 births]] [[Category:Living people]] [[Category:Deputies of the 15th National Assembly of the French Fifth Republic]] [[Category:Democratic Movement (France) politicians]] [[Category:People from Dimbokro]] [[Category:Women members of the National Assembly (France)]] [[Category:21st-century French women politicians]] [[Category:People from Cher (department)]] [[Category:Naturalized citizens of France]] {{France-politician-MoDem-stub}}
1,227,893,441
[{"title": "Member of the National Assembly \u00b7 for Cher's 2nd constituency", "data": {"Member of the National Assembly \u00b7 for Cher's 2nd constituency": "In office \u00b7 21 June 2017 \u2013 June 2022", "Preceded by": "Nicolas Sansu"}}, {"title": "Personal details", "data": {"Born": "6 June 1957 \u00b7 Dimbokro, Ivory Coast", "Nationality": "French", "Political party": "MoDem"}}]
false
# Loving Prince Gongzi Docing (Cantonese 公子多情 Loving Prince) is the third studio album of cantopop singer Prudence Liew, released in October 1988. ## Album information This album contains less covers than her previous album, Why; however two of the three covers made it as singles. The title track and lead single "公子多情 Loving Prince" is actually a Chinese song from 1965 albeit with updated lyrics written by Liew herself. The second single is "一見鍾情 Love at First Sight", a cover of the Tiffany song "I Saw Him Standing There", which in itself was a cover of the 1963 Beatles tune, "I Saw Her Standing There". The track "討厭 Annoying" is a cover version of Fairground Attraction's song "Perfect". The third single to release from the album is "廣播道神話 The Legend of Broadcast Drive". It is a song about Broadcast Drive in Kowloon, which at the time was home to four of Hong Kong's media outlets: Radio Television Hong Kong (RTHK), Television Broadcasts Limited (TVB), Asia Television (ATV), and Commercial Radio Hong Kong (CRHK). ## Track listing | No. | Title | Lyrics | Music | Length | | ------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------ | ------------------------- | ------------------------ | ------ | | 1. | "廣播道神話 (The Legend of Broadcast Drive)" | Yuen Leung Poon | Joseph Chow | 4:47 | | 2. | "也許是愛 (Maybe It's Love)" | Albert Leung | John Laudon | 4:59 | | 3. | "討厭 (Annoying)" | Richard Lam | Mark E. Nevin | 3:42 | | 4. | "燃點真愛 (Igniting Real Love)" (with Danny Chan & Priscilla Chan) | Kwok Kong Cheng | Danny Chan, Dominic Chow | 4:29 | | 5. | "風情 (Wind Love)" | Anonymous | Joseph Chan | 4:48 | | 6. | "公子多情 (Loving Prince)" | Bo Sung Lo, Prudence Liew | Anonymous | 3:22 | | 7. | "一見鍾情 (Love at First Sight)" | Cheuk Fai Lau | Lennon–McCartney | 3:48 | | 8. | "明天止步 (Stopping Tomorrow)" | Siu May | Michael Lai | 4:12 | | 9. | "痴心誤會 (Loving Misunderstanding)" | Siu May | Richard Yung | 4:20 | | 10. | "浪漫時光 (Romantic Time)" | Andrew Lam | Tommy Chui | 3:30 | | 11. | "甜甜小公主 (The Sweet Princess)" | Kwok Kong Cheng | Joseph Chan | 3:34 | | Total length: | Total length: | Total length: | Total length: | 45:31 |
enwiki/25060462
enwiki
25,060,462
Loving Prince
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loving_Prince
2024-05-20T07:23:14Z
en
Q6692620
39,189
{{Infobox album | name = Loving Prince<br>公子多情 | type = Studio album | artist = [[Prudence Liew]] | cover = Loving Prince Cover.jpg | alt = | released = October 1988 | recorded = 1987–1988 | venue = | studio = | genre = [[Cantopop]] | length = 45:31 | label = Current | producer = Joseph Chan | prev_title = [[Hit Mix (Prudence Liew album)|Hit Mix]] | prev_year = 1988 | next_title = [[Fate (Prudence Liew EP)|Fate 緣]] | next_year = 1989 | misc = {{Extra album cover | header = Alternate cover | type = Studio album | cover = Prudence_Liew_Loving_Prince_Alt_Cover.jpg | border = | alt = | caption = LP Record version cover. }} {{Singles | name = Prudence Liew | type = Studio album | single1 = 公子多情 Loving Prince | single1date = | single2 = 一見鍾情 Love at First Sight | single2date = | single3 = 廣播道神話 The Legend of Broadcast Drive | single3date = }} }} '''''Gongzi Docing''''' (Cantonese 公子多情 Loving Prince) is the third [[studio album]] of [[cantopop]] singer [[Prudence Liew]], released in October 1988. ==Album information== This album contains less [[Cover versions|covers]] than her previous album, ''[[Why (Prudence Liew album)|Why]]''; however two of the three covers made it as singles. The title track and lead single "公子多情 Loving Prince" is actually a Chinese song from 1965 albeit with updated lyrics written by Liew herself. The second single is "一見鍾情 Love at First Sight", a cover of the [[Tiffany Darwish|Tiffany]] song "[[I Saw Him Standing There]]", which in itself was a cover of the 1963 [[The Beatles|Beatles]] tune, "[[I Saw Her Standing There]]". The track "討厭 Annoying" is a cover version of [[Fairground Attraction]]'s song "[[Perfect (Fairground Attraction song)|Perfect]]". The third single to release from the album is "廣播道神話 The Legend of Broadcast Drive". It is a song about [[Broadcast Drive]] in [[Kowloon]], which at the time was home to four of Hong Kong's media outlets: [[Radio Television Hong Kong]] (RTHK), [[Television Broadcasts Limited]] (TVB), [[Asia Television]] (ATV), and [[Commercial Radio Hong Kong]] (CRHK).<ref>[http://blog.roodo.com/muzikland/archives/5864943.html Muzikland review of Loving Prince] Retrieved on November 12, 2009.</ref> ==Track listing== {{Track listing | total_length = 45:31 | title1 = 廣播道神話 (The Legend of Broadcast Drive) | lyrics1 = Yuen Leung Poon | music1 = Joseph Chow | length1 = 4:47 | title2 = 也許是愛 (Maybe It's Love) | lyrics2 = [[Albert Leung]] | music2 = John Laudon | length2 = 4:59 | title3 = 討厭 (Annoying) | lyrics3 = [[Richard Lam]] | music3 = [[Mark E. Nevin]] | length3 = 3:42 | title4 = 燃點真愛 (Igniting Real Love) | note4 = with [[Danny Chan]] & [[Priscilla Chan (singer)|Priscilla Chan]] | lyrics4 = Kwok Kong Cheng | music4 = [[Danny Chan]], Dominic Chow | length4 = 4:29 | title5 = 風情 (Wind Love) | lyrics5 = Anonymous | music5 = Joseph Chan | length5 = 4:48 | title6 = 公子多情 (Loving Prince) | lyrics6 = Bo Sung Lo, [[Prudence Liew]] | music6 = Anonymous | length6 = 3:22 | title7 = 一見鍾情 (Love at First Sight) | lyrics7 = Cheuk Fai Lau | music7 = [[Lennon–McCartney]] | length7 = 3:48 | title8 = 明天止步 (Stopping Tomorrow) | lyrics8 = Siu May | music8 = Michael Lai | length8 = 4:12 | title9 = 痴心誤會 (Loving Misunderstanding) | lyrics9 = Siu May | music9 = Richard Yung | length9 = 4:20 | title10 = 浪漫時光 (Romantic Time) | lyrics10 = Andrew Lam | music10 = Tommy Chui | length10 = 3:30 | title11 = 甜甜小公主 (The Sweet Princess) | lyrics11 = Kwok Kong Cheng | music11 = Joseph Chan | length11 = 3:34 }} ==References== {{reflist}} {{Prudence Liew}} {{Authority control}} [[Category:1988 albums]] [[Category:Prudence Liew albums]]
1,224,752,666
[{"title": "Studio album by Prudence Liew", "data": {"Released": "October 1988", "Recorded": "1987\u20131988", "Genre": "Cantopop", "Length": "45:31", "Label": "Current", "Producer": "Joseph Chan"}}, {"title": "Prudence Liew chronology", "data": {"Hit Mix \u00b7 (1988)": "Loving Prince \u00b7 \u516c\u5b50\u591a\u60c5 \u00b7 (1988) \u00b7 Fate \u7de3 \u00b7 (1989)"}}, {"title": "Alternate cover", "data": {"Alternate cover": "LP Record version cover."}}, {"title": "Singles from Prudence Liew", "data": {"Singles from Prudence Liew": "1. \"\u516c\u5b50\u591a\u60c5 Loving Prince\" 2. \"\u4e00\u898b\u937e\u60c5 Love at First Sight\" 3. \"\u5ee3\u64ad\u9053\u795e\u8a71 The Legend of Broadcast Drive\""}}, {"title": "Prudence Liew", "data": {"Studio albums": "Prudence Liew (1986) Why (1987) Loving Prince (1988) Jokingly Saying (1989) The Naked Feeling (1990) Linger (1990) Listen to Me (1991) Not a Little Girl Anymore (1992) Autumn Heart (1992) Spoiled by You (1993) Thoughts in the Night, Dreams During the Day (1994) Love Yourself (2000) The Queen of Hardships (2009) Love Addict (2011) Stolen Moments (2012)", "EPs": "Fate (1988)", "Compilations": "Hit Mix (1988) Remixes (1989) Love & Passion (1990-1991) Hong Kong Love (1991) Opening the Sexual Boundaries (2008)", "Live albums": "Opening the Sexual Boundaries Concert CD (2008)", "Singles": "\" The Last Night \" (1987) \" Two Cups of Tea \" (2015)"}}]
false
# Loltun Cave Loltun Cave is a cave in the Yucatán, approximately 7 km (4.3 mi) south of Oxkutzcab. The cave contains paintings attributed to the Maya civilization from the Late Preclassic Era or even older. The name is Mayan for "Flower Stone" ("Lol-Tun"). ## History This cave is about two kilometers in length. Inside Loltún there is evidence that confirms human occupation such as recovered bones of mammoth, bison, cats, and deer remains from the pleistocene. On the walls you can observe natural formations and paintings, hand painted with representations of the technique of negative human faces painted on the walls, sculptural representations, representations of animals and some geometric shapes. Tools were also recovered. The prehispanic Maya also used the cave as shelter and used to extract the clay to make their tools. The tour offers visits to the galleries and natural formations known locally as the room of musical columns, a vault known as the cathedral, jaltunes, Grand Canyon, corn cob, the infant, black hand paintings, the room of stalactites and trenches. The Huechil cavity was excavated where they found remains of extinct fauna such as mammoth bones and vegetation different from today. The occupation in Loltún goes back more than 10,000 years and served as a hiding place during the caste war. ## Location It is located 110 kilometers southwest of Mérida. It is 7 km south of the town of Oxkutzcab.
enwiki/10999582
enwiki
10,999,582
Loltun Cave
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loltun_Cave
2025-02-14T18:45:17Z
en
Q2061976
34,315
'''Loltun Cave''' is a [[cave]] in the [[Yucatán Peninsula|Yucatán]], approximately {{convert|7|km|mi|abbr=on}} south of [[Oxkutzcab]]. The cave contains [[Cave painting|paintings]] attributed to the [[Maya civilization]] from the Late Preclassic Era or even older. The name is [[Maya language|Mayan]] for "Flower Stone" ("Lol-Tun").<ref>{{cite web | title = MayanRoutes.com | url = http://www.mayanroutes.com/loltun.html | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/19991002053111/http://mayanroutes.com/loltun.html | url-status = usurped | archive-date = October 2, 1999 | access-date = 2007-05-01 }}</ref> == History == This cave is about two kilometers in length. Inside Loltún there is evidence that confirms human occupation such as recovered bones of [[mammoth]], bison, cats, and deer remains from the pleistocene. On the walls you can observe natural formations and [[Cave painting|paintings]], hand painted with representations of the technique of negative human faces painted on the walls, sculptural representations, representations of animals and some geometric shapes. Tools were also recovered. [[Image:Cavepaintings-loltun.jpg|thumb|cave paintings from Lol-Tun, Yucatán]] The prehispanic Maya also used the cave as shelter and used to extract the clay to make their tools. The tour offers visits to the galleries and natural formations known locally as the room of musical columns, a vault known as the cathedral, jaltunes, Grand Canyon, corn cob, the infant, black hand paintings, the room of stalactites and trenches. The Huechil cavity was excavated where they found remains of extinct fauna such as [[mammoth]] bones and vegetation different from today. The occupation in Loltún goes back more than 10,000 years and served as a hiding place during the [[Caste War of Yucatán|caste war]]. [[Image:Grutas de Loltun 2.JPG|thumb|Lol-Tun, Yucatán]] == Location == It is located 110 kilometers southwest of [[Mérida, Yucatán|Mérida]]. It is 7&nbsp;km south of the town of [[Oxkutzcab]]. ==See also== *[[Maya cave sites]] ==References== {{Reflist}} ==External links== {{Commons category|Grutas de Loltun}} * [https://web.archive.org/web/20070509032622/http://studentweb.tulane.edu/~dhixson/loltun/loltun.html Loltun Cave Photo Archive] * [https://web.archive.org/web/20091117000543/http://dti.inah.gob.mx/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=3889&Itemid=329 INAH official site] * [http://yucatantoday.com/en/topics/caves-yucatan Caves of the Yucatan] * [http://yucatan.for91days.com/the-grutas-de-loltun/ Photo Essay of the Loltun Cave] {{Authority control}} {{Coord|20|15|10|N|89|27|23|W|region:MX_source:kolossus-nowiki|display=title}} [[Category:Caves of Mexico]] [[Category:Cave sites in Mesoamerican archaeology]] [[Category:Maya sites in Yucatán]] [[Category:Landforms of Yucatán]] {{Yucatán-geo-stub}}
1,275,728,473
[]
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# Leon Dubus Leon Dubus (18 February 1894 – 19 October 1981) was a French philatelist who was added to the Roll of Distinguished Philatelists in 1957.
enwiki/44004887
enwiki
44,004,887
Leon Dubus
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leon_Dubus
2022-06-15T12:34:29Z
en
Q18204729
18,315
{{Short description|French philatelist}} '''Leon Dubus''' (18 February 1894 – 19 October 1981)<ref>''[http://www.abps.org.uk/Awards/Roll_of_Distinguished_Philatelists/RDP_Background_20111231_LR.pdf Background notes on The Roll of Distinguished Philatelists September 2011]'', Roll of Distinguished Philatelists Trust, London, 2011. [https://web.archive.org/web/20130819000841/http://abps.org.uk/Awards/Roll_of_Distinguished_Philatelists/RDP_Background_20111231_LR.pdf Archived here.]</ref> was a French [[philatelist]] who was added to the [[Roll of Distinguished Philatelists]] in 1957. ==References== {{Reflist}} {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Dubus, Leon}} [[Category:Signatories to the Roll of Distinguished Philatelists]] [[Category:1894 births]] [[Category:1981 deaths]] [[Category:French philatelists]] {{Philatelist-stub}}
1,093,251,050
[]
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# Integrated pulmonary index Integrated pulmonary index (IPI) is a patient pulmonary index which uses information from capnography and pulse oximetry to provide a single value that describes the patient's respiratory status. IPI is used by clinicians to quickly assess the patient's respiratory status to determine the need for additional clinical assessment or intervention. The IPI is a patient index which provides a simple indication in real time of the patient's overall ventilatory status as an integer ranging from numbers 1 to 10. IPI integrates four major physiological parameters provided by a patient monitor, using this information along with an algorithm to produce the IPI score. The IPI score is not intended to replace current patient respiratory parameters, but to provide an additional integrated score or index of the patient ventilation status to the caregiver. ## Mechanism The IPI incorporates four patient parameters (end-tidal CO2 and respiratory rate measured by capnography, as well as pulse rate and blood oxygenation SpO2 as measured by pulse oximetry) into a single index value. The IPI value on the patient monitor indicates the patient ventilatory status, where a score of 10 is normal, indicating optimal pulmonary status, and a score of 1 or 2 requires immediate intervention. The IPI algorithm was developed based on the data from a group of medical experts (anesthesiologists, nurses, respiratory therapists, and physiologists) who evaluated cases with varying parameter values and whom assigned an IPI value to a predefined patient status. A mathematical model was built using patient normal ranges for these parameters and the ratings given to various combinations of the parameters by these professionals. Fuzzy logic, a mathematical method which mimics human logical thinking, was used to develop the IPI model. Clinical validation studies indicate that the IPI value produced by the IPI algorithm accurately reflects the patient's ventilatory status. In studies on both adult and pediatric patients, in which experts’ ratings of ventilatory status were collected along with IPI data, the IPI scores were found to be highly correlated with the experts’ annotated ratings. Studies conducted to validate the index also concluded that the single numeric value of IPI along with IPI trend may be valuable for promoting early awareness to changes in patient ventilatory status and in simplifying the monitoring of patients in busy clinical environments. ## How does IPI help clinicians? IPI is a real-time patient value, updated every second, always available to the caregiver. An IPI trend graph also shows IPI scores over the previous hour (or other set time period), indicating if the IPI is remaining steady or trending up or down, thus reflecting changes in pulmonary status over time. In the example seen here, the changing IPI score indicates changes in the ventilatory status of the patient; IPI improves after a stimulus is applied. IPI can promote early awareness to changes in a patient's ventilatory status. The caregiver can view the IPI trend, which indicates changes in IPI over time. A quick view of the IPI trend can show that if the IPI has changed over the previous minutes or hours, to help the clinician ascertain if the patient's overall ventilatory status is worsening, remaining steady, or improving. This information can help determine the next steps in patient care. Thus, IPI can simplify the monitoring of patients in clinical environments. The caregiver can quickly and easily assess a patient's ventilatory status by following one number, the IPI, before checking the four parameters that make up this number. The four parameters continue to be displayed on the monitor screen. A significant change in the IPI is a “red flag” indicator, indicating that the clinician should review other monitored data and assess the patient. In the clinical environment, a quick check of the IPI value and IPI trend is a first indicator of pulmonary status of the patient and may be used to determine if further patient assessment is warranted. IPI can increase patient safety, by indicating the presence of slow-developing patient respiratory issues not easily identified with individual instantaneous data to the caregiver in real time. This enables timely decisions and interventions to reduce patient risk, improve outcomes and increase patient safety. Since normal values for the physiological parameters are different for different age categories, the IPI algorithm differs for different age groups (three pediatric age groups and adult). IPI is not available for neonatal and infant patients (up to the age of 1 year). ## Footnotes 1. ↑ Taft, et al., 2008, Introduction 2. ↑ Taft, et al., 2008, Methods 3. ↑ Y. Gozal, et al., 2009, Results 4. ↑ D. Gozal, et al., 2009, Results 5. ↑ D. Gozal, et al., 2009, Conclusion 6. ↑ Y. Gozal, et al., 2009, Conclusion - - {{}}==References== - A Novel Integrated Pulmonary Index (IPI) Quantifies Heart Rate, Etco2, Respiratory Rate and SpO2% , Arthur Taft, Ph.D., Michal Ronen, Ph.D., Chad Epps, M.D., Jonathan Waugh, Ph.D., Richard Wales, B.S., presented at the Annual meeting of the American Society of Anesthesiologists, 2008 - Reliability of the Integrated Pulmonary Index Postoperatively , D. Gozal, MD, Y. Gozal, MD, presented at Society for Technology in Anesthesia (STA) in 2009 - The Integrated Pulmonary Index: Validity and Application in the Pediatric Population , D. Gozal, MD, Y. Gozal, MD, presented at Society for Technology in Anesthesia (STA) in 2009
enwiki/24760321
enwiki
24,760,321
Integrated pulmonary index
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Integrated_pulmonary_index
2025-01-15T12:20:52Z
en
Q6042946
16,310
'''Integrated pulmonary index (IPI)''' is a patient pulmonary index which uses information from [[capnography]] and [[pulse oximetry]] to provide a single value that describes the patient's respiratory status. IPI is used by clinicians to quickly assess the patient's respiratory status to determine the need for additional clinical assessment or intervention. The IPI is a patient index which provides a simple indication in real time of the patient's overall ventilatory status as an integer ranging from numbers 1 to 10. IPI integrates four major physiological parameters provided by a patient monitor, using this information along with an algorithm to produce the IPI score. The IPI score is not intended to replace current patient respiratory parameters, but to provide an additional integrated score or index of the patient ventilation status to the caregiver. == Mechanism == [[Image:IPIChart.jpg|thumb|right|alt=IPI Chart|IPI chart]] The IPI incorporates four patient parameters (end-tidal CO<sub>2</sub> and [[respiratory rate]] measured by [[capnography]], as well as pulse rate and blood oxygenation SpO<sub>2</sub> as measured by [[pulse oximetry]]) into a single index value.<ref>Taft, et al., 2008, Introduction</ref> The IPI value on the patient monitor indicates the patient ventilatory status, where a score of 10 is normal, indicating optimal pulmonary status, and a score of 1 or 2 requires immediate intervention. The IPI algorithm was developed based on the data from a group of medical experts (anesthesiologists, nurses, respiratory therapists, and physiologists) who evaluated cases with varying parameter values and whom assigned an IPI value to a predefined patient status.<ref>Taft, et al., 2008, Methods</ref> A mathematical model was built using patient normal ranges for these parameters and the ratings given to various combinations of the parameters by these professionals. [[Fuzzy logic]], a mathematical method which mimics human logical thinking, was used to develop the IPI model. Clinical validation studies indicate that the IPI value produced by the IPI algorithm accurately reflects the patient's ventilatory status. In studies on both adult and pediatric patients, in which experts’ ratings of ventilatory status were collected along with IPI data, the IPI scores were found to be highly correlated with the experts’ annotated ratings.<ref>Y. Gozal, et al., 2009, Results</ref><ref>D. Gozal, et al., 2009, Results</ref> Studies conducted to validate the index also concluded that the single numeric value of IPI along with IPI trend may be valuable for promoting early awareness to changes in patient ventilatory status <ref>D. Gozal, et al., 2009, Conclusion</ref> and in simplifying the monitoring of patients in busy clinical environments.<ref>Y. Gozal, et al., 2009, Conclusion</ref> ==How does IPI help clinicians? == IPI is a real-time patient value, updated every second, always available to the caregiver. An IPI trend graph also shows IPI scores over the previous hour (or other set time period), indicating if the IPI is remaining steady or trending up or down, thus reflecting changes in pulmonary status over time. In the example seen here, the changing IPI score indicates changes in the ventilatory status of the patient; IPI improves after a stimulus is applied. IPI can promote early awareness to changes in a patient's ventilatory status. The caregiver can view the IPI trend, which indicates changes in IPI over time. A quick view of the IPI trend can show that if the IPI has changed over the previous minutes or hours, to help the clinician ascertain if the patient's overall ventilatory status is worsening, remaining steady, or improving. This information can help determine the next steps in patient care. Thus, IPI can simplify the monitoring of patients in clinical environments. The caregiver can quickly and easily assess a patient's ventilatory status by following one number, the IPI, before checking the four parameters that make up this number. The four parameters continue to be displayed on the monitor screen. A significant change in the IPI is a “red flag” indicator, indicating that the clinician should review other monitored data and assess the patient. In the clinical environment, a quick check of the IPI value and IPI trend is a first indicator of pulmonary status of the patient and may be used to determine if further patient assessment is warranted. IPI can increase patient safety, by indicating the presence of slow-developing patient respiratory issues not easily identified with individual instantaneous data to the caregiver in real time. This enables timely decisions and interventions to reduce patient risk, improve outcomes and increase patient safety. Since normal values for the physiological parameters are different for different age categories, the IPI algorithm differs for different age groups (three pediatric age groups and adult). IPI is not available for neonatal and infant patients (up to the age of 1 year). == See also== * [[Anesthesia]] * [[Medical tests]] == Footnotes == {{reflist|30em}} ** {{<!--'''منdownloading the code for the new iOS '''-->}}==References== * A Novel Integrated Pulmonary Index (IPI) Quantifies [[Heart rate|Heart Rate]], Etco2, Respiratory Rate and Sp<sub>O<sub>2</sub></sub>% [http://www.asaabstracts.com/strands/asaabstracts/abstract.htm;jsessionid=6485E4FDEAF8997C15C65A3E2D41053D?year=2008&index=8&absnum=1597], Arthur Taft, Ph.D., Michal Ronen, Ph.D., Chad Epps, M.D., Jonathan Waugh, Ph.D., Richard Wales, B.S., presented at the Annual meeting of the [[American Society of Anesthesiologists]], 2008 * Reliability of the Integrated Pulmonary Index Postoperatively [http://www.anestech.org/media/Publications/Annual_2009/2009_STA_Abstracts.pdf], D. Gozal, MD, Y. Gozal, MD, presented at Society for Technology in Anesthesia (STA) in 2009 * The Integrated Pulmonary Index: Validity and Application in the Pediatric Population [http://www.anestech.org/media/Publications/Annual_2009/2009_STA_Abstracts.pdf], D. Gozal, MD, Y. Gozal, MD, presented at Society for Technology in Anesthesia (STA) in 2009 [[Category:Medical technology]]
1,269,593,809
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