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In what country is Tina?
[ "United States of America", "the United States of America", "America", "U.S.A.", "USA", "U.S.", "US", "the US", "the USA", "US of A", "the United States", "U. S. A.", "U. S.", "the States", "the U.S.", "'Merica", "U.S", "United States", "'Murica" ]
country
Tina, West Virginia
5,998,755
50
[ { "id": "31538807", "title": "This Is Not Art", "text": " This Is Not Art (TiNA) is a national festival of new media and arts organized in Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia each year over the October long weekend since 1998. TiNA is dedicated to the work and ideas of artistic communities not generally included in other major Australian arts festivals or institutions. The program includes the festivals Electrofringe, the National Young Writers' Festival, Critical Animals, and Crack Theatre Festival.", "score": "1.6068127" }, { "id": "6720848", "title": "Tina!", "text": " Source:", "score": "1.5937723" }, { "id": "303182", "title": "Samanta Tīna", "text": " Samanta Poļakova (born 31 March 1989), better known as Samanta Tīna, is a Latvian singer, songwriter and composer. After having attempted to represent her country in the Eurovision Song Contest six times earlier (in 2012, 2013, 2014, 2016 and 2019), she won the national selection Supernova in 2020 and was to represent Latvia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2020 that was to be held in Rotterdam, the Netherlands with the song \"Still Breathing\". Due to the contest being canceled, she represented her country in 2021 instead with a new song, \"The Moon Is Rising\". She had also competed in the Lithuanian preselection twice (in 2013 and 2017), and in the Lithuanian version of The Voice.", "score": "1.5836337" }, { "id": "8075836", "title": "Tina (singer)", "text": " Tina (born Martina Csillagová; 11 March 1984) is a Slovak singer. She won the Best Female Singer prize at the Slávik Awards in 2011 and 2012. Tina co-hosted the 2011 edition of Czech/Slovak television series SuperStar alongside Leoš Mareš. She returned to host alongside Mareš in the first two series of The Voice Česko Slovensko.", "score": "1.5645039" }, { "id": "13607326", "title": "Tina Bara", "text": " Tina Bara (born 18 March 1962, in Kleinmachnow) is a German photographer who began her career in the German Democratic Republic Her work was featured in several exhibitions at key galleries and museums, including the Galerie Eigen + Art, Leipzig and the Kunsthalle Erfurt. In MutualArt’s artist press archive, Tina Bara is featured in Interference, a piece from the Revista Arta in 2020. Before reunification, she was in touch with peace movement in the German Democratic Republic.", "score": "1.5366457" }, { "id": "10199894", "title": "Tina Karol", "text": " Tetiana Hryhorivna Liberman (born 25 January 1985), better known by her stage name Tina Karol, is a Ukrainian singer, actress, and television presenter. She represented Ukraine in the Eurovision Song Contest 2006 with the song \"Show Me Your Love\", placing seventh. Karol has since become a mentor on The Voice of Ukraine and in 2020 she has also been a judge at Vidbir, Ukraine's National Selection for the Eurovision Song Contest.", "score": "1.5193005" }, { "id": "1399208", "title": "Tina Dico", "text": " Tina Dico (born Tina Dickow Danielsen on 14 October 1977) is a Danish singer-songwriter. She founded her own record label and releases her music independently, enjoying large success with her albums in her home country as well as critical acclaim across Europe. She is inspired by artists such as Tracy Chapman, Bob Dylan and Leonard Cohen. In Denmark she performs both under her real name, Tina Dickow, and under the adopted name Tina Dico as well.", "score": "1.5169853" }, { "id": "11533333", "title": "Tina Lund", "text": " country as Denmark). The show was called \"Tina Lund – Tæt på\" (translated to English: Tina Lund – Close up). Tina Lund (born 1981 in Dallas, Texas) is a Danish professional equestrian (show jumper) living in Skævinge, Nordsjælland in Danmark Tina Lund is 19 times Danish Champion, three times Nordic Champion, and one time European Champion for \"young riders\" (riders under the age of 21). She was also the most winning Danish rider in 2006, and today the only rider to win the Nordic championship, Danish Championship and the European Championship in the same year. She is daughter of the former soccer player Flemming Lund. Lund lives at Stutteri Lyngsholm in Nordsjælland training the family's competition horses. She is ", "score": "1.5165149" }, { "id": "6720846", "title": "Tina!", "text": " Tina! is a greatest hits album by American singer Tina Turner, released in North America on September 30, 2008, by Capitol Records and in Germany on October 17, 2008 (the album was released as an \"import\" in other regions). The album was later expanded to a three-disc set titled The Platinum Collection, released in Europe on February 23, 2009, by Parlophone to coincide with the European leg of Turner's tour.", "score": "1.505388" }, { "id": "2939915", "title": "Tina Arena", "text": " in Australia and one of the biggest-selling albums by an Australian female singer to date. It has sold over two million copies worldwide and was certified 10 times platinum by ARIA in 2011 for shipment of over 700,000 copies in that country alone. The success of the record made her a \"priority artist\" for Sony, who marketed her in the US. Her European success was realised: Don't Ask charted in Germany, Sweden and Switzerland. The lead single, \"Chains\", was issued ahead of the album in August 1994, in Australia, and peaked at No. 4 on the ARIA Singles Chart. It also reached No. 6 in the UK, No. ", "score": "1.5031885" }, { "id": "32996813", "title": "Tina (2021 film)", "text": " Tina is an 2021 American-British documentary film, directed by Dan Lindsay and T. J. Martin. It follows the life and career of musician Tina Turner. The film had its world premiere at the Berlin International Film Festival on March 2, 2021. It was released in the United States on March 27, 2021, by HBO, and in the United Kingdom on March 28, 2021, by Altitude Film Distribution.", "score": "1.5031585" }, { "id": "4717184", "title": "1222 Tina", "text": " In the SMASS taxonomy, Tina is an X-type asteroid, while it is classified as a metal-rich M-type asteroid by the WISE-survey.", "score": "1.5018034" }, { "id": "5231786", "title": "January 1985", "text": "Born: Tina Karol, Ukrainian singer, in Orotukan, USSR ", "score": "1.5017284" }, { "id": "3063773", "title": "Tina Ferreira", "text": " Tina Ferreira is an Afro-Uruguayan, dancer, journalist and vedette of both theater and carnival, known for performing in carnivals all around Uruguay. She works as the lead vedette in the carnival group Serpentina in which she has worked since 2004 with José de Lima, the group's director. She has won many awards for her performances with the group. She also works as a journalist for Caras y Caretas. In 2010 she was called to work in Nito Artaza's and Miguel Ángel Cherutti's theatre, Teatro Nogaró.", "score": "1.5016491" }, { "id": "13176672", "title": "Murder of Tina Isa", "text": " Jersey, Arecibo, Puerto Rico, back to Rondonópolis, then to Cáceres, Mato Grosso; Tina was born in Mato Grosso. The family moved back to Puerto Rico, living in Arecibo until moving to Isabela one year later. During this time, the father, without the mother, lived with his children in the West Bank for periods of time. In 1980, Zein became a naturalized citizen of the United States. The entire family moved to Beitin in the West Bank when Tina was five. The family came to St. Louis around 1986 and owned a grocery store there. Tina began learning English after arriving in St. Louis, where her friends gave her the nickname \"Tina\". In 1991, Tim Bryant of the ", "score": "1.4977312" }, { "id": "4717181", "title": "1222 Tina", "text": " Tina is the namesake of the Tina family a group of 17–89 asteroids that form a small, well-defined asteroid family, which share similar spectral properties and orbital elements; hence they may have arisen from the same collisional event of two larger parent bodies. All members have a relatively high orbital inclination. The Tina family is unique because of its resonant nature: all its members are in anti-aligned librating states of the ν6 secular resonance, i.e., the longitudes of pericenter of the asteroids follow the longitudes of pericenter of Saturn by 180 degrees. This orbital configuration protects the asteroids from achieving high eccentricities and ", "score": "1.4955683" }, { "id": "1399213", "title": "Tina Dico", "text": " In the beginning of 2002, Tina Dico moved to England in an attempt to escape the cosy atmosphere in Denmark. In 2002 Tina played her first duo-concerts with Steffen Brandt on Bornholm. Thanks to her contract with Jonathan Morley, she had the opportunity to step into the English music community, which led to a collaboration with Australian singer Holly Valance on the song \"Send My Best\" in 2005. Tina wrote the album Notes during her stay in England, capturing the loneliness and fear of being alone in London. Notes was written while Tina lived in Richmond and later on Tenter Ground near ", "score": "1.4884809" }, { "id": "11114247", "title": "Tina Escaja", "text": " Tina Escaja (born 1965 in Zamora, Spain), also known as Alm@ Pérez, is a Spanish-American writer, activist, feminist scholar and digital artist based in Burlington, Vermont. She is Distinguished Professor of Romance Languages and Gender & Women's Studies, and Director of the Gender, Sexuality and Women’s Studies Program at the University of Vermont. She is the winner of the International Poetry Prize Dulce María Loynaz, and the National Latino Poetry Award for Young Adults, Isabel Campoy-Alma Flor Ada. She is considered a pioneer in the field of Electronic literature in Spanish.", "score": "1.4880329" }, { "id": "13348686", "title": "Tina (given name)", "text": " ; Tina Cousins (born 1971), English singer-songwriter ; Tina Cullen (born 1970), English field hockey forward ; Tina Dutta (born 1991), Indian actress ; Tina Fey (born 1970), American writer and actress ; Tina Fontaine (1999–2014), Canadian murder victim ; Tina Guo (born 1985), Chinese-American cellist and erhuist ; Tina Harris (born 1975), American R'n'B singer ; Tina Huang, American actress ; Tina Ivanović (born 1973), Serbian pop-folk singer ; Tina Karol (born 1985), Ukrainian singer ; Tiina Kankaanpää (born 1976), Finnish discus thrower ; Tina Kover (born 1975), American translator ; Tina Krajišnik (born 1991), Serbian basketball player ; Tina ", "score": "1.4876323" }, { "id": "32810717", "title": "Tiñana", "text": " Tiñana is a parish in Siero, a municipality within the province and autonomous community of Asturias, in northern Spain. It has a surface area of 6.89 km2 and a population of 1,001 people (INE 2007). Santa Maria Tiñana is an eighteenth-century church dedicated to Our Lady of the Visitation.", "score": "1.4840465" } ]
[ "This Is Not Art\n This Is Not Art (TiNA) is a national festival of new media and arts organized in Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia each year over the October long weekend since 1998. TiNA is dedicated to the work and ideas of artistic communities not generally included in other major Australian arts festivals or institutions. The program includes the festivals Electrofringe, the National Young Writers' Festival, Critical Animals, and Crack Theatre Festival.", "Tina!\n Source:", "Samanta Tīna\n Samanta Poļakova (born 31 March 1989), better known as Samanta Tīna, is a Latvian singer, songwriter and composer. After having attempted to represent her country in the Eurovision Song Contest six times earlier (in 2012, 2013, 2014, 2016 and 2019), she won the national selection Supernova in 2020 and was to represent Latvia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2020 that was to be held in Rotterdam, the Netherlands with the song \"Still Breathing\". Due to the contest being canceled, she represented her country in 2021 instead with a new song, \"The Moon Is Rising\". She had also competed in the Lithuanian preselection twice (in 2013 and 2017), and in the Lithuanian version of The Voice.", "Tina (singer)\n Tina (born Martina Csillagová; 11 March 1984) is a Slovak singer. She won the Best Female Singer prize at the Slávik Awards in 2011 and 2012. Tina co-hosted the 2011 edition of Czech/Slovak television series SuperStar alongside Leoš Mareš. She returned to host alongside Mareš in the first two series of The Voice Česko Slovensko.", "Tina Bara\n Tina Bara (born 18 March 1962, in Kleinmachnow) is a German photographer who began her career in the German Democratic Republic Her work was featured in several exhibitions at key galleries and museums, including the Galerie Eigen + Art, Leipzig and the Kunsthalle Erfurt. In MutualArt’s artist press archive, Tina Bara is featured in Interference, a piece from the Revista Arta in 2020. Before reunification, she was in touch with peace movement in the German Democratic Republic.", "Tina Karol\n Tetiana Hryhorivna Liberman (born 25 January 1985), better known by her stage name Tina Karol, is a Ukrainian singer, actress, and television presenter. She represented Ukraine in the Eurovision Song Contest 2006 with the song \"Show Me Your Love\", placing seventh. Karol has since become a mentor on The Voice of Ukraine and in 2020 she has also been a judge at Vidbir, Ukraine's National Selection for the Eurovision Song Contest.", "Tina Dico\n Tina Dico (born Tina Dickow Danielsen on 14 October 1977) is a Danish singer-songwriter. She founded her own record label and releases her music independently, enjoying large success with her albums in her home country as well as critical acclaim across Europe. She is inspired by artists such as Tracy Chapman, Bob Dylan and Leonard Cohen. In Denmark she performs both under her real name, Tina Dickow, and under the adopted name Tina Dico as well.", "Tina Lund\n country as Denmark). The show was called \"Tina Lund – Tæt på\" (translated to English: Tina Lund – Close up). Tina Lund (born 1981 in Dallas, Texas) is a Danish professional equestrian (show jumper) living in Skævinge, Nordsjælland in Danmark Tina Lund is 19 times Danish Champion, three times Nordic Champion, and one time European Champion for \"young riders\" (riders under the age of 21). She was also the most winning Danish rider in 2006, and today the only rider to win the Nordic championship, Danish Championship and the European Championship in the same year. She is daughter of the former soccer player Flemming Lund. Lund lives at Stutteri Lyngsholm in Nordsjælland training the family's competition horses. She is ", "Tina!\n Tina! is a greatest hits album by American singer Tina Turner, released in North America on September 30, 2008, by Capitol Records and in Germany on October 17, 2008 (the album was released as an \"import\" in other regions). The album was later expanded to a three-disc set titled The Platinum Collection, released in Europe on February 23, 2009, by Parlophone to coincide with the European leg of Turner's tour.", "Tina Arena\n in Australia and one of the biggest-selling albums by an Australian female singer to date. It has sold over two million copies worldwide and was certified 10 times platinum by ARIA in 2011 for shipment of over 700,000 copies in that country alone. The success of the record made her a \"priority artist\" for Sony, who marketed her in the US. Her European success was realised: Don't Ask charted in Germany, Sweden and Switzerland. The lead single, \"Chains\", was issued ahead of the album in August 1994, in Australia, and peaked at No. 4 on the ARIA Singles Chart. It also reached No. 6 in the UK, No. ", "Tina (2021 film)\n Tina is an 2021 American-British documentary film, directed by Dan Lindsay and T. J. Martin. It follows the life and career of musician Tina Turner. The film had its world premiere at the Berlin International Film Festival on March 2, 2021. It was released in the United States on March 27, 2021, by HBO, and in the United Kingdom on March 28, 2021, by Altitude Film Distribution.", "1222 Tina\n In the SMASS taxonomy, Tina is an X-type asteroid, while it is classified as a metal-rich M-type asteroid by the WISE-survey.", "January 1985\nBorn: Tina Karol, Ukrainian singer, in Orotukan, USSR ", "Tina Ferreira\n Tina Ferreira is an Afro-Uruguayan, dancer, journalist and vedette of both theater and carnival, known for performing in carnivals all around Uruguay. She works as the lead vedette in the carnival group Serpentina in which she has worked since 2004 with José de Lima, the group's director. She has won many awards for her performances with the group. She also works as a journalist for Caras y Caretas. In 2010 she was called to work in Nito Artaza's and Miguel Ángel Cherutti's theatre, Teatro Nogaró.", "Murder of Tina Isa\n Jersey, Arecibo, Puerto Rico, back to Rondonópolis, then to Cáceres, Mato Grosso; Tina was born in Mato Grosso. The family moved back to Puerto Rico, living in Arecibo until moving to Isabela one year later. During this time, the father, without the mother, lived with his children in the West Bank for periods of time. In 1980, Zein became a naturalized citizen of the United States. The entire family moved to Beitin in the West Bank when Tina was five. The family came to St. Louis around 1986 and owned a grocery store there. Tina began learning English after arriving in St. Louis, where her friends gave her the nickname \"Tina\". In 1991, Tim Bryant of the ", "1222 Tina\n Tina is the namesake of the Tina family a group of 17–89 asteroids that form a small, well-defined asteroid family, which share similar spectral properties and orbital elements; hence they may have arisen from the same collisional event of two larger parent bodies. All members have a relatively high orbital inclination. The Tina family is unique because of its resonant nature: all its members are in anti-aligned librating states of the ν6 secular resonance, i.e., the longitudes of pericenter of the asteroids follow the longitudes of pericenter of Saturn by 180 degrees. This orbital configuration protects the asteroids from achieving high eccentricities and ", "Tina Dico\n In the beginning of 2002, Tina Dico moved to England in an attempt to escape the cosy atmosphere in Denmark. In 2002 Tina played her first duo-concerts with Steffen Brandt on Bornholm. Thanks to her contract with Jonathan Morley, she had the opportunity to step into the English music community, which led to a collaboration with Australian singer Holly Valance on the song \"Send My Best\" in 2005. Tina wrote the album Notes during her stay in England, capturing the loneliness and fear of being alone in London. Notes was written while Tina lived in Richmond and later on Tenter Ground near ", "Tina Escaja\n Tina Escaja (born 1965 in Zamora, Spain), also known as Alm@ Pérez, is a Spanish-American writer, activist, feminist scholar and digital artist based in Burlington, Vermont. She is Distinguished Professor of Romance Languages and Gender & Women's Studies, and Director of the Gender, Sexuality and Women’s Studies Program at the University of Vermont. She is the winner of the International Poetry Prize Dulce María Loynaz, and the National Latino Poetry Award for Young Adults, Isabel Campoy-Alma Flor Ada. She is considered a pioneer in the field of Electronic literature in Spanish.", "Tina (given name)\n ; Tina Cousins (born 1971), English singer-songwriter ; Tina Cullen (born 1970), English field hockey forward ; Tina Dutta (born 1991), Indian actress ; Tina Fey (born 1970), American writer and actress ; Tina Fontaine (1999–2014), Canadian murder victim ; Tina Guo (born 1985), Chinese-American cellist and erhuist ; Tina Harris (born 1975), American R'n'B singer ; Tina Huang, American actress ; Tina Ivanović (born 1973), Serbian pop-folk singer ; Tina Karol (born 1985), Ukrainian singer ; Tiina Kankaanpää (born 1976), Finnish discus thrower ; Tina Kover (born 1975), American translator ; Tina Krajišnik (born 1991), Serbian basketball player ; Tina ", "Tiñana\n Tiñana is a parish in Siero, a municipality within the province and autonomous community of Asturias, in northern Spain. It has a surface area of 6.89 km2 and a population of 1,001 people (INE 2007). Santa Maria Tiñana is an eighteenth-century church dedicated to Our Lady of the Visitation." ]
What sport does Robert Braet play?
[ "association football", "football", "soccer" ]
sport
Robert Braet
977,673
89
[ { "id": "15978706", "title": "Robert Braet", "text": " Robert Braet (11 February 1912, in Bruges – 23 February 1987, in Bruges) was a tall Belgian goalkeeper. He never played for any other football team besides Cercle Brugge. Braet is seen as one of the biggest monuments in the team's history. He was also part of the Belgian national team that took part in the 1938 FIFA World Cup.", "score": "1.9172597" }, { "id": "12471694", "title": "Robert Braber", "text": " Robert Braber (born 9 November 1982) is a Dutch football manager and former player who played as a midfielder. He is the head coach of Tweede Klasse club RBC.", "score": "1.6254742" }, { "id": "32289231", "title": "Robert Havekotte", "text": " Robert Jan Havekotte (born January 25, 1967 in De Bilt) is a retired water polo player from the Netherlands, who finished in ninth position with the Dutch team at the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona. As of 2008 he is a board member at UNIBA Partners, an independent network of insurance brokers.", "score": "1.6031884" }, { "id": "13933404", "title": "Robert", "text": " driver ; Robert Lewandowski, Polish football player who plays as a striker for Bayern Munich and is the captain of the Poland national team ; Roberto López Ufarte, Basque former footballer ; Roberto Mancini, Italian football manager and former player who is the manager of the Italy national team ; Robert \"Bob\" McNamara, American baseball player ; Robert Alexander Michel Melki (born 1992), Swedish-Lebanese footballer ; Robert Mühren, Dutch professional footballer ; Robert Person (born 1969), American baseball player ; Robert \"Bobby\" Orr, Canadian former professional ice hockey player, widely acknowledged as one of the greatest of all time ; Robert Remus, American professional wrestler known as Sgt. Slaughter ; Robert \"Rob\" Terry, Welsh professional wrestler and bodybuilder ; Robert Whittaker, New Zealand-born Australian professional mixed martial artist ; Robert Wickens, Canadian racing driver ", "score": "1.6023705" }, { "id": "32308790", "title": "Rob Braknis", "text": " Robert Braknis (born January 8, 1973) is a Canadian former competition swimmer, who competed for his native country at the 1996 Summer Olympics. There he finished in 16th position in the 100-metre backstroke, and in twelfth place with the men's relay team in the 4x100-medley. Braknis set the Canadian and Commonwealth record in the 50-metre backstroke in 1994. Braknis is a graduate of Florida State University where he was a 7-time All-American and the Atlantic Coast Conference Swimmer of the Year in 1995. He was also a torch-bearer for the 2010 Winter Olympics torch relay. He is currently employed as a police officer for the Peel Regional Police in Brampton, Ontario.", "score": "1.585939" }, { "id": "29751618", "title": "Robert Lucas (field hockey)", "text": " Robert Charles Louis Lucas (5 October 1922 – 13 December 2019) was a French field hockey player who competed in the 1948 Summer Olympics and in the 1952 Summer Olympics. Lucas was born in Cambrai in October 1922 and died in Soorts-Hossegor in December 2019 at the age of 97.", "score": "1.5747697" }, { "id": "2347023", "title": "Stephen Murphy (ice hockey)", "text": " to a shoulder injury which kept him off the ice for the remainder of the season. He moved into European hockey for the 2004/05 season. He found regular games with Swedish Division 1 team Bräcke IK. Murphy proved to be an excellent signing for Bräcke and became known for his speed and agility. After 3 months, Murphy was poached by the higher level Allsvenskan team IF Björklöven to play out the remainder of the season for them. Murphy adapted to the change in standard well, and completed the season as a Björklöven player. They failed to make the post-season however and so Murphy returned to Scotland ", "score": "1.5728774" }, { "id": "32963072", "title": "Robert Boeser", "text": " Robert Raymond Boeser (June 30, 1927 – October 29, 1995) is an American ice hockey player who competed in ice hockey at the 1948 Winter Olympics. Boeser was a member of the American ice hockey team which played eight games, but was disqualified, at the 1948 Winter Olympics hosted by St. Moritz, Switzerland.", "score": "1.5707245" }, { "id": "4751824", "title": "Bob Brooke", "text": " Robert Wesley Brooke (born December 18, 1960) is an American former professional ice hockey forward who played 447 games in the National Hockey League (NHL) between 1984 and 1990. Brooke was the first of the \"AB Pros,\" the handful of NHL players that grew up through the Acton-Boxborough youth hockey program of the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s (Tom Barrasso, Ted Crowley, Bob Sweeney, Ian Moran, and Jeff Norton). He graduated from Acton-Boxborough Regional High School in 1979. After graduation, Brooke played for the Yale University men's ice hockey team graduating in 1983. He played international hockey as a member of the United States national team at the 1984 Winter Olympics in Sarajevo. He also played baseball for Yale alongside future New York Mets' pitcher Ron Darling. In the NHL, he played for the New York Rangers, Minnesota North Stars and New Jersey Devils. After joining the NHL, he also played for US team in the 1984 Canada Cup, 1985 and 1987 Ice Hockey World Championships as well as the 1987 Canada Cup.", "score": "1.5700233" }, { "id": "30607959", "title": "Will Brazier", "text": " Brazier played for the USA Tomahawks representing the United States against Australia in rugby league football at the 2004 Liberty Bell Cup. In that game, the USA led 24-6 before losing 36-24 to the world’s best rugby league team. Brazier currently plays for the USA Falcons in rugby union.", "score": "1.564964" }, { "id": "1220616", "title": "Robert Nowotny", "text": " Robert Nowotny (born January 27, 1974, in Vienna) is an Austrian beach volleyball player. Nowotny began his career at the FIVB World Tour in 1996. From the 2000 season went on to compete with your long-time partner, Peter Gartmayer, where they remained until 2005. In 2004 Gartmayer/Nowotny obtained the qualification for the 2004 Summer Olympics, in Athens, but they lost all their games in the group stage and did not advance to the medal round.", "score": "1.5630261" }, { "id": "16082454", "title": "Hans Brase", "text": " Brase plays internationally for Germany. In 2013, he attended the under-20 European Championships in Estonia. During the summer of 2014, he played in friendly tournaments across Europe ultimately culminating in a six team tournament in China. He won silver at the 2015 World University Games in South Korea after losing to the Kansas Jayhawks, who were representing the United States, in the gold medal game. Brase led the team in scoring and rebounding as their only defeat in the tournament was to Kansas in double overtime.", "score": "1.5615752" }, { "id": "16082451", "title": "Hans Brase", "text": " Hans-George Brase (Hans) (born September 15, 1993) is an American-German basketball player for Hamburg Towers of the Basketball Bundesliga. He stands 6’9’’ (205 cm) tall and plays the forward position.", "score": "1.5583885" }, { "id": "12471695", "title": "Robert Braber", "text": " His former clubs are NAC Breda and Helmond Sport. Braber moved from Excelsior to Swansea City in the Coca Cola Championship on 22 June 2009 on trial, and signed then a one-year contract with FC Ingolstadt 04 on 3 July 2009. In the summer of 2016, Braber returned to former club Helmond Sport.", "score": "1.5563126" }, { "id": "31176912", "title": "Braian Toledo", "text": " Braian Ezequiel Toledo (8 September 1993 – 26 February 2020) was an Argentine javelin thrower who improved the World Youth Best in boys' javelin throw by more than six metres. He won the inaugural javelin title at the 2010 Youth Olympics in Singapore and also won gold at the 2010 South American Youth Championships and 2009 Pan American Junior Championships. In 2011 Braian protagonized a publicity spot for the campaign of Cristina Fernández de Kirchner in the presidential elections. In 2012 he participated, along with other Olympic athletes, in a campaign of Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo to recover the grandchildren who were robbed during the National Reorganization Process. Since November 2016 he had Kari Ihalainen as coach and in April 2017 he moved to Kuortane, Finland, with the aim of improving his performance in view of the 2020 Olympic Games. On 26 February 2020, Toledo died in a motorcycle accident. Among those to pay tribute to the athlete were Diego Maradona and president of the Argentine Olympic Committee, Gerardo Werthein.", "score": "1.5513775" }, { "id": "1358215", "title": "Robert Bălăeț", "text": " Robert Bălăeț (born 18 November 1974) is a Romanian retired footballer who played as a goalkeeper. After retirement, he worked for Pandurii Târgu Jiu as a sporting director.", "score": "1.5499575" }, { "id": "56825", "title": "Robert Thompson (water polo)", "text": " Robert Thompson (born June 11, 1947) is a retired Canadian water polo player and coach. He competed at the 1972 Olympics in Munich where his team finished in 16th place. He was one of the unsuspecting athletes who helped the Munich massacre terrorists to climb over the fence into the Olympic Village. Thompson was born in a swimming family – his father James and elder sister Patty were Olympic swimmers and coaches – and started training in swimming at four years of age. He later changed to water polo, and already by 1961 competed at the national level. He was a member of the national teams that competed at the 1967 and 1971 Pan American Games and 1972 Olympics. In 1969 he started coaching water polo and later prepared the Canadian team for the 1980 and 1984 Olympics and 1983 Pan American Games. For his coaching achievements he was inducted into the McMaster University Hall of Fame in 1989 and into the Ontario Aquatic Hall of Fame in 1995.", "score": "1.5492669" }, { "id": "30731524", "title": "Patrice Brasey", "text": " Patrice Brasey (born January 28, 1964 in Fribourg, Switzerland) is a former Swiss ice hockey player. He played in the National League A for HC Fribourg-Gottéron, HC Lugano, ZSC Lions and Genève-Servette HC. He also played for the Switzerland men's national ice hockey team at the 1988 and 1992 Olympics, as well as the 1987 World Ice Hockey Championships.", "score": "1.545517" }, { "id": "29164400", "title": "Robert Gregg (field hockey)", "text": " Robert Gregg (born June 9, 1954) is an American field hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1984 Summer Olympics.", "score": "1.5454667" }, { "id": "29440296", "title": "Robert Horstink", "text": " Robert Horstink (born 26 December 1981 in Twello, Gelderland) is a volleyball player from the Netherlands, who represented his native country at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece. There he ended up in ninth place with the Dutch Men's National Team. He mainly plays as an outside hitter and is known for his vertical jump, his cocky attitude, and his powerful backrow attacks.", "score": "1.5444034" } ]
[ "Robert Braet\n Robert Braet (11 February 1912, in Bruges – 23 February 1987, in Bruges) was a tall Belgian goalkeeper. He never played for any other football team besides Cercle Brugge. Braet is seen as one of the biggest monuments in the team's history. He was also part of the Belgian national team that took part in the 1938 FIFA World Cup.", "Robert Braber\n Robert Braber (born 9 November 1982) is a Dutch football manager and former player who played as a midfielder. He is the head coach of Tweede Klasse club RBC.", "Robert Havekotte\n Robert Jan Havekotte (born January 25, 1967 in De Bilt) is a retired water polo player from the Netherlands, who finished in ninth position with the Dutch team at the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona. As of 2008 he is a board member at UNIBA Partners, an independent network of insurance brokers.", "Robert\n driver ; Robert Lewandowski, Polish football player who plays as a striker for Bayern Munich and is the captain of the Poland national team ; Roberto López Ufarte, Basque former footballer ; Roberto Mancini, Italian football manager and former player who is the manager of the Italy national team ; Robert \"Bob\" McNamara, American baseball player ; Robert Alexander Michel Melki (born 1992), Swedish-Lebanese footballer ; Robert Mühren, Dutch professional footballer ; Robert Person (born 1969), American baseball player ; Robert \"Bobby\" Orr, Canadian former professional ice hockey player, widely acknowledged as one of the greatest of all time ; Robert Remus, American professional wrestler known as Sgt. Slaughter ; Robert \"Rob\" Terry, Welsh professional wrestler and bodybuilder ; Robert Whittaker, New Zealand-born Australian professional mixed martial artist ; Robert Wickens, Canadian racing driver ", "Rob Braknis\n Robert Braknis (born January 8, 1973) is a Canadian former competition swimmer, who competed for his native country at the 1996 Summer Olympics. There he finished in 16th position in the 100-metre backstroke, and in twelfth place with the men's relay team in the 4x100-medley. Braknis set the Canadian and Commonwealth record in the 50-metre backstroke in 1994. Braknis is a graduate of Florida State University where he was a 7-time All-American and the Atlantic Coast Conference Swimmer of the Year in 1995. He was also a torch-bearer for the 2010 Winter Olympics torch relay. He is currently employed as a police officer for the Peel Regional Police in Brampton, Ontario.", "Robert Lucas (field hockey)\n Robert Charles Louis Lucas (5 October 1922 – 13 December 2019) was a French field hockey player who competed in the 1948 Summer Olympics and in the 1952 Summer Olympics. Lucas was born in Cambrai in October 1922 and died in Soorts-Hossegor in December 2019 at the age of 97.", "Stephen Murphy (ice hockey)\n to a shoulder injury which kept him off the ice for the remainder of the season. He moved into European hockey for the 2004/05 season. He found regular games with Swedish Division 1 team Bräcke IK. Murphy proved to be an excellent signing for Bräcke and became known for his speed and agility. After 3 months, Murphy was poached by the higher level Allsvenskan team IF Björklöven to play out the remainder of the season for them. Murphy adapted to the change in standard well, and completed the season as a Björklöven player. They failed to make the post-season however and so Murphy returned to Scotland ", "Robert Boeser\n Robert Raymond Boeser (June 30, 1927 – October 29, 1995) is an American ice hockey player who competed in ice hockey at the 1948 Winter Olympics. Boeser was a member of the American ice hockey team which played eight games, but was disqualified, at the 1948 Winter Olympics hosted by St. Moritz, Switzerland.", "Bob Brooke\n Robert Wesley Brooke (born December 18, 1960) is an American former professional ice hockey forward who played 447 games in the National Hockey League (NHL) between 1984 and 1990. Brooke was the first of the \"AB Pros,\" the handful of NHL players that grew up through the Acton-Boxborough youth hockey program of the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s (Tom Barrasso, Ted Crowley, Bob Sweeney, Ian Moran, and Jeff Norton). He graduated from Acton-Boxborough Regional High School in 1979. After graduation, Brooke played for the Yale University men's ice hockey team graduating in 1983. He played international hockey as a member of the United States national team at the 1984 Winter Olympics in Sarajevo. He also played baseball for Yale alongside future New York Mets' pitcher Ron Darling. In the NHL, he played for the New York Rangers, Minnesota North Stars and New Jersey Devils. After joining the NHL, he also played for US team in the 1984 Canada Cup, 1985 and 1987 Ice Hockey World Championships as well as the 1987 Canada Cup.", "Will Brazier\n Brazier played for the USA Tomahawks representing the United States against Australia in rugby league football at the 2004 Liberty Bell Cup. In that game, the USA led 24-6 before losing 36-24 to the world’s best rugby league team. Brazier currently plays for the USA Falcons in rugby union.", "Robert Nowotny\n Robert Nowotny (born January 27, 1974, in Vienna) is an Austrian beach volleyball player. Nowotny began his career at the FIVB World Tour in 1996. From the 2000 season went on to compete with your long-time partner, Peter Gartmayer, where they remained until 2005. In 2004 Gartmayer/Nowotny obtained the qualification for the 2004 Summer Olympics, in Athens, but they lost all their games in the group stage and did not advance to the medal round.", "Hans Brase\n Brase plays internationally for Germany. In 2013, he attended the under-20 European Championships in Estonia. During the summer of 2014, he played in friendly tournaments across Europe ultimately culminating in a six team tournament in China. He won silver at the 2015 World University Games in South Korea after losing to the Kansas Jayhawks, who were representing the United States, in the gold medal game. Brase led the team in scoring and rebounding as their only defeat in the tournament was to Kansas in double overtime.", "Hans Brase\n Hans-George Brase (Hans) (born September 15, 1993) is an American-German basketball player for Hamburg Towers of the Basketball Bundesliga. He stands 6’9’’ (205 cm) tall and plays the forward position.", "Robert Braber\n His former clubs are NAC Breda and Helmond Sport. Braber moved from Excelsior to Swansea City in the Coca Cola Championship on 22 June 2009 on trial, and signed then a one-year contract with FC Ingolstadt 04 on 3 July 2009. In the summer of 2016, Braber returned to former club Helmond Sport.", "Braian Toledo\n Braian Ezequiel Toledo (8 September 1993 – 26 February 2020) was an Argentine javelin thrower who improved the World Youth Best in boys' javelin throw by more than six metres. He won the inaugural javelin title at the 2010 Youth Olympics in Singapore and also won gold at the 2010 South American Youth Championships and 2009 Pan American Junior Championships. In 2011 Braian protagonized a publicity spot for the campaign of Cristina Fernández de Kirchner in the presidential elections. In 2012 he participated, along with other Olympic athletes, in a campaign of Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo to recover the grandchildren who were robbed during the National Reorganization Process. Since November 2016 he had Kari Ihalainen as coach and in April 2017 he moved to Kuortane, Finland, with the aim of improving his performance in view of the 2020 Olympic Games. On 26 February 2020, Toledo died in a motorcycle accident. Among those to pay tribute to the athlete were Diego Maradona and president of the Argentine Olympic Committee, Gerardo Werthein.", "Robert Bălăeț\n Robert Bălăeț (born 18 November 1974) is a Romanian retired footballer who played as a goalkeeper. After retirement, he worked for Pandurii Târgu Jiu as a sporting director.", "Robert Thompson (water polo)\n Robert Thompson (born June 11, 1947) is a retired Canadian water polo player and coach. He competed at the 1972 Olympics in Munich where his team finished in 16th place. He was one of the unsuspecting athletes who helped the Munich massacre terrorists to climb over the fence into the Olympic Village. Thompson was born in a swimming family – his father James and elder sister Patty were Olympic swimmers and coaches – and started training in swimming at four years of age. He later changed to water polo, and already by 1961 competed at the national level. He was a member of the national teams that competed at the 1967 and 1971 Pan American Games and 1972 Olympics. In 1969 he started coaching water polo and later prepared the Canadian team for the 1980 and 1984 Olympics and 1983 Pan American Games. For his coaching achievements he was inducted into the McMaster University Hall of Fame in 1989 and into the Ontario Aquatic Hall of Fame in 1995.", "Patrice Brasey\n Patrice Brasey (born January 28, 1964 in Fribourg, Switzerland) is a former Swiss ice hockey player. He played in the National League A for HC Fribourg-Gottéron, HC Lugano, ZSC Lions and Genève-Servette HC. He also played for the Switzerland men's national ice hockey team at the 1988 and 1992 Olympics, as well as the 1987 World Ice Hockey Championships.", "Robert Gregg (field hockey)\n Robert Gregg (born June 9, 1954) is an American field hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1984 Summer Olympics.", "Robert Horstink\n Robert Horstink (born 26 December 1981 in Twello, Gelderland) is a volleyball player from the Netherlands, who represented his native country at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece. There he ended up in ninth place with the Dutch Men's National Team. He mainly plays as an outside hitter and is known for his vertical jump, his cocky attitude, and his powerful backrow attacks." ]
Who was the director of The Day?
[ "Alfred Rolfe" ]
director
The Day (1914 film)
5,920,612
48
[ { "id": "28738330", "title": "Robert Day (director)", "text": " Robert Frederick Day (11 September 1922 – 17 March 2017) was an English film director. He directed more than 40 films between 1956 and 1991.", "score": "1.5339239" }, { "id": "28738331", "title": "Robert Day (director)", "text": " Day was born in Sheen, England. He worked his way up from clapper boy to camera operator then cinematographer while in his native country, and began directing in the mid-1950s. His first film as director, the black comedy The Green Man (1956) for the writer-producer team of Frank Launder and Sidney Gilliat, gained good reviews. Using this as a starting point, Day went on to become one of the industry's busiest directors including directing several Tarzan films. He relocated to Hollywood in the 1960s and directed many TV episodes and made-for-TV movies. He occasionally had small parts in his own productions, including The Haunted Strangler (1958), Two-Way Stretch (1960), and the TV mini-series Peter and Paul (1981). In the 1970s and 1980s, Day would direct episodes of numerous American television shows, including Barnaby Jones, The F.B.I., Dallas, Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color, and Matlock.", "score": "1.5140513" }, { "id": "26836073", "title": "James Day (journalist)", "text": " James Day (December 22, 1918 – April 24, 2008) was an American public television station and network executive and on-air interviewer, and professor of television broadcasting at Brooklyn College. Day was a co-founder, and the founding president and general manager, of pioneer San Francisco public television station KQED, and in 1969 became the final president of National Educational Television (NET) before it wound down operations by 1970, making way for its successor, the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS). Day then became general manager of NET's now-former flagship, New York PBS member station WNET. Day was an original PBS board member, and was also a founding board member of the Children's Television Workshop, creators and producers of Sesame Street, which quickly became a \"flagship\" children's program for public television. Day was born in Alameda, California and died in New York City. One of Day's innovations ", "score": "1.508014" }, { "id": "28738332", "title": "Robert Day (director)", "text": " Day was married to Eileen Day and then, following their divorce, to actress Dorothy Provine until her death in 2010. He was the brother of cinematographer Ernest Day. Day died at the age of 94 on Bainbridge Island near Seattle on 17 March 2017.", "score": "1.4969795" }, { "id": "8244991", "title": "L. B. Day", "text": " In 1970, Day was appointed as a regional director for the U.S. Department of the Interior under Interior Secretary Walter Hickel. When President Richard Nixon fired Hickel, Day returned to Oregon and was appointed soon after to serve as Governor Tom McCall's first director of the newly formed Oregon Department of Environmental Quality. During 1973 negotiations over Oregon's landmark comprehensive land-use planning legislation, Senate Bill 100, Day played a vital role in developing the compromises necessary to move SB 100 through the Senate. He then served as the first chairman of the new state Land Conservation and Development Commission in 1974.", "score": "1.4899297" }, { "id": "27839686", "title": "Day of the Fight", "text": " high-school friend of Stanley Kubrick (both attended William Howard Taft High School in the Bronx), served as assistant director and as a cameraman on this production. Singer also worked on Kubrick's Killer's Kiss (1955) and The Killing (1956), and went on to have a long career as a director of films and television dramas. ; Douglas Edwards, the narrator on Day of the Fight, was a veteran CBS radio and television newscaster. At the time, he was the anchor on the first televised daily news program, which would later be titled Douglas Edwards with the News and then The CBS Evening News. ", "score": "1.4725494" }, { "id": "7339487", "title": "Phil Day (town planner)", "text": " with the Department of Local Government, he moved to the Department of Decentralisation and Development in 1968, eventually becoming director. He was next director of town planning for Brisbane City Council, and then moved to the University of Queensland, where he was head of school from 1977 to 1980, when he moved to the Australian Institute of Urban Studies as director. He retired from the Institute and wrote his last report in 1989 as a member of the Chalk Committee of Inquiry into Valuation and Rating. From 1987 he was editor of Queensland Planner, and wrote frequently for The Courier-Mail. In his eighties he published Hijacked Inheritance, based on his doctorate thesis which he had completed at the age of 77. Day died in 2011.", "score": "1.4704428" }, { "id": "6299379", "title": "Linda Day", "text": " Day started as a script supervisor on the Television film Victory at Entebbe, and on the soap opera parody Soap. She became an associate director for WKRP in Cincinnati in 1978, and began directing episodes of the show in 1980. Linda Day went on to direct a number of successful sitcoms in the 1980s and '90s, including the pilot of Married With Children and 32 more episodes of the show. Day also directed four episodes of the soap opera Dallas during what would become the show's \"dream season\" in 1985–86, when the events of the entire season were explained away as being a character's dream. In addition to a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing for a Comedy Series nomination, she received a Humanitas Prize and was honored by the Directors Guild of America for paving the way for women in television; she directed more than 350 episodes and 50 series.", "score": "1.4690467" }, { "id": "6299378", "title": "Linda Day", "text": " Linda Day (August 12, 1938 – October 23, 2009) was an American television director, working primarily in situation comedies. Day was born as Linda Brickner in Los Angeles, the daughter of Roy Brickner, a film editor. At the age of 67, she married her childhood sweetheart, L. Steve Varnum, in Texas.", "score": "1.4677607" }, { "id": "6546784", "title": "Bill Day (filmmaker)", "text": " Day directed the documentary Saviors of the Forest which was shown at the Sundance Film Festival. He also directed Rubber Jungle, a behind the scenes look at the life of Brazilian labor leader Chico Mendes and the movie about his life. In 2002, Day co-produced the musical documentary Under The Covers, followed by Alternative Rock and Roll Years in 2003 for Discovery Channel. Day served as a field producer for Hopkins 24/7, a television documentary series. With Carlo Gennarelli, he co-produced Ordinary Joe, a documentary film about Joe Sciacca, a Vietnam veteran from New York City. Day made a film about XXXchurch.com called Missionary Positions. He also produced and directed The Pussycat Preacher, a film about Heather Veitch and her organization, JC's Girls. He holds the YouTube channel 'billschannel', which posts videos of wildlife trips around the world and a series named 'Real or Fake?' This series shows him and his research group 'The Chewy Piranhas' uncover photographs and videos on the internet and using various methods to show whether they are portraying real-life events, fake hoaxes or unknown mysteries.", "score": "1.4549351" }, { "id": "9170684", "title": "New York University Press", "text": "Arthur Huntington Nason, 1916–1932 ; no director, 1932–1946 ; Jean B. Barr (interim director), 1946–1952 ; Filmore Hyde, 1952–1957 ; Wilbur McKee, acting director, 1957–1958 ; William B. Harvey, 1958–1966 ; Christopher Kentera, 1966–1974 ; Malcolm C. Johnson, 1974–1981 ; Colin Jones, 1981–1996 ; Niko Pfund, 1996–2000 ; Steve Maikowski, 2001–2014 ; Ellen Chodosh, 2014–present ", "score": "1.4459186" }, { "id": "15566901", "title": "DaDaFest", "text": "Mandy Colleran – Former director ; Ruth Gould - Gould was appointed as the Creative Director of the NWDAF in 2001, she is now the Chief Executive Officer of DaDaFest. Whilst working for the NWDAF in 2001, she was asked to create something for International Disabled People's Day but she claimed that \"one day was not enough\" and set about producing a festival with the help of a steering group. The result of this was the first DaDaFest in December 2001 and the subsequent change of 'DaDaFest' as a one off festival into its own brand. ; Jane Cordell - Cordell ", "score": "1.4415345" }, { "id": "10760847", "title": "Nick Day (film director)", "text": " Day trained and worked as an editor in London while studying cinema as part of the British Film Institute/University of London diploma program. After relocating to the US, he worked for several years in television production on a wide range of programming, including commercials, news, current affairs, and arts and entertainment for broadcast in Italy, Brazil, Germany, as well as the US. He later produced and directed the documentary Short Cut to Nirvana: Kumbh Mela with Maurizio Benazzo, which won several awards. Day also won an award for best screenplay for The Fallen, a World War I drama directed by Ari Taub. Day currently produces ", "score": "1.4328623" }, { "id": "16187317", "title": "David Maloney", "text": " David John Lee Maloney (14 December 1933 – 18 July 2006) was a British television director and producer best known for his work on the BBC science-fiction series Doctor Who, Blake's 7 and The Day of the Triffids. The Guardian described him on his death as \"one of that old school who could turn out 30-minute dramas in two days shooting time\".", "score": "1.422816" }, { "id": "9214394", "title": "Geoff Posner", "text": " Wood's All Day Breakfast, director, 1992 ; It's A Mad World, World, World, World, director, 1994 ; Paul Calf's Video Diary, director / producer, 1994 ; Victoria Wood: Live In Your Own Home, director/ producer, 1994 ; A Christmas Night With the Stars, director, 1994 ; Pauline Calf's Wedding Video, director/ producer, 1994 ; Coogan's Run, director/ producer, 1995 ; The Tony Ferrino Phenomenon, director/ producer, 1997 ; Harry Enfield and Chums, director/ producer, 1997 ; Victoria Wood: Live, director/ producer, 1997 ; Eurovision Song Contest 1998, director, 1998 ; Stephen Fry's Live From The Lighthouse, director/ producer, 1998 ; Steve Coogan: The Man Who Thinks He's It, director/ producer, 1998 ; dinnerladies, director/ producer, 1998-2000 ; tlc, director/ ", "score": "1.4224641" }, { "id": "14210029", "title": "Robin Day", "text": " Day spent almost his entire working life in journalism. He rose to prominence on the new Independent Television News (ITN) from 1955. According to Dick Taverne, Day first came to notice by interviewing Sir Kenneth Clark, then chairman of the regulator Independent Television Authority. The ITA had proposed to cut ITN's broadcasting hours and finances. His direct, non-deferential approach was then entirely new. Day was the first British journalist to interview Egypt's President Nasser after the Suez Crisis. In 1958, he interviewed Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, in what the Daily Express called: \"the most vigorous cross-examination a prime minister has been subjected to in public\". The interview turned Day into ", "score": "1.4140456" }, { "id": "6038090", "title": "Thomas B. Day", "text": " Communication. He advocated for affirmative action programs and selected Mary Alice Hill in 1983 to be the first female athletic director at a university with a Division I-A football program. Facing budget shortfalls in 1992, Day proposed sharp cuts that would have eliminated whole departments and laid off faculty. In August 1992, faculty passed a vote of no confidence in Day and asked the California State University Board of Trustees to replace him. An improvement in the budget situation led to the cuts being rescinded, but Day remained unpopular on campus, and was ultimately asked to resign, ostensibly for health reasons. Day was a member of the National Science Board from 1984 to 1996 and a vice-chairman from 1990 to 1994. He was also a Senior Fellow of the California Council on Science and Technology and a former board member.", "score": "1.413914" }, { "id": "6075163", "title": "Walter Percy Day", "text": " A meeting with Alexander Korda opened up new perspectives for the Day studio. Day worked with Korda on The Private Life of Henry VIII (1933) a film starring Charles Laughton. Day accordingly established a studio in Iver (Buckinghamshire) and from 1936, directed the matte department at Denham Studios. The artist painted mattes and created trick shots for numerous films by Korda and his stable of directors, who included his brother Zoltan Korda, Anthony Asquith, William Cameron Menzies (Things to Come, 1936), Michael Powell, and Lothar Mendes. In 1946 Day joined the Korda group as Director of Special Effects at Korda's new ", "score": "1.4119899" }, { "id": "4681269", "title": "Question Time (TV programme)", "text": " Veteran broadcaster Sir Robin Day was the programme's first chair, presenting it for nearly 10 years until June 1989. Question Time soon gained popularity under Day's lead, with his quick wit and interrogation skills. His famous catchphrase when he had introduced the panel was: \"There they are, and here we go.\" The programme was mainly filmed at the Greenwood Theatre in London on the south side of London Bridge. Day's last appearance as presenter was broadcast from Paris on 12 July 1989. He was allowed to choose his own guests.", "score": "1.4064087" }, { "id": "9401955", "title": "The Day (1960 film)", "text": " Although Finch was best known as an actor, he had worked as a writer and director before, notably on stage. He also helped make the documentary Primitive Peoples (1949).", "score": "1.4043875" } ]
[ "Robert Day (director)\n Robert Frederick Day (11 September 1922 – 17 March 2017) was an English film director. He directed more than 40 films between 1956 and 1991.", "Robert Day (director)\n Day was born in Sheen, England. He worked his way up from clapper boy to camera operator then cinematographer while in his native country, and began directing in the mid-1950s. His first film as director, the black comedy The Green Man (1956) for the writer-producer team of Frank Launder and Sidney Gilliat, gained good reviews. Using this as a starting point, Day went on to become one of the industry's busiest directors including directing several Tarzan films. He relocated to Hollywood in the 1960s and directed many TV episodes and made-for-TV movies. He occasionally had small parts in his own productions, including The Haunted Strangler (1958), Two-Way Stretch (1960), and the TV mini-series Peter and Paul (1981). In the 1970s and 1980s, Day would direct episodes of numerous American television shows, including Barnaby Jones, The F.B.I., Dallas, Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color, and Matlock.", "James Day (journalist)\n James Day (December 22, 1918 – April 24, 2008) was an American public television station and network executive and on-air interviewer, and professor of television broadcasting at Brooklyn College. Day was a co-founder, and the founding president and general manager, of pioneer San Francisco public television station KQED, and in 1969 became the final president of National Educational Television (NET) before it wound down operations by 1970, making way for its successor, the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS). Day then became general manager of NET's now-former flagship, New York PBS member station WNET. Day was an original PBS board member, and was also a founding board member of the Children's Television Workshop, creators and producers of Sesame Street, which quickly became a \"flagship\" children's program for public television. Day was born in Alameda, California and died in New York City. One of Day's innovations ", "Robert Day (director)\n Day was married to Eileen Day and then, following their divorce, to actress Dorothy Provine until her death in 2010. He was the brother of cinematographer Ernest Day. Day died at the age of 94 on Bainbridge Island near Seattle on 17 March 2017.", "L. B. Day\n In 1970, Day was appointed as a regional director for the U.S. Department of the Interior under Interior Secretary Walter Hickel. When President Richard Nixon fired Hickel, Day returned to Oregon and was appointed soon after to serve as Governor Tom McCall's first director of the newly formed Oregon Department of Environmental Quality. During 1973 negotiations over Oregon's landmark comprehensive land-use planning legislation, Senate Bill 100, Day played a vital role in developing the compromises necessary to move SB 100 through the Senate. He then served as the first chairman of the new state Land Conservation and Development Commission in 1974.", "Day of the Fight\n high-school friend of Stanley Kubrick (both attended William Howard Taft High School in the Bronx), served as assistant director and as a cameraman on this production. Singer also worked on Kubrick's Killer's Kiss (1955) and The Killing (1956), and went on to have a long career as a director of films and television dramas. ; Douglas Edwards, the narrator on Day of the Fight, was a veteran CBS radio and television newscaster. At the time, he was the anchor on the first televised daily news program, which would later be titled Douglas Edwards with the News and then The CBS Evening News. ", "Phil Day (town planner)\n with the Department of Local Government, he moved to the Department of Decentralisation and Development in 1968, eventually becoming director. He was next director of town planning for Brisbane City Council, and then moved to the University of Queensland, where he was head of school from 1977 to 1980, when he moved to the Australian Institute of Urban Studies as director. He retired from the Institute and wrote his last report in 1989 as a member of the Chalk Committee of Inquiry into Valuation and Rating. From 1987 he was editor of Queensland Planner, and wrote frequently for The Courier-Mail. In his eighties he published Hijacked Inheritance, based on his doctorate thesis which he had completed at the age of 77. Day died in 2011.", "Linda Day\n Day started as a script supervisor on the Television film Victory at Entebbe, and on the soap opera parody Soap. She became an associate director for WKRP in Cincinnati in 1978, and began directing episodes of the show in 1980. Linda Day went on to direct a number of successful sitcoms in the 1980s and '90s, including the pilot of Married With Children and 32 more episodes of the show. Day also directed four episodes of the soap opera Dallas during what would become the show's \"dream season\" in 1985–86, when the events of the entire season were explained away as being a character's dream. In addition to a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing for a Comedy Series nomination, she received a Humanitas Prize and was honored by the Directors Guild of America for paving the way for women in television; she directed more than 350 episodes and 50 series.", "Linda Day\n Linda Day (August 12, 1938 – October 23, 2009) was an American television director, working primarily in situation comedies. Day was born as Linda Brickner in Los Angeles, the daughter of Roy Brickner, a film editor. At the age of 67, she married her childhood sweetheart, L. Steve Varnum, in Texas.", "Bill Day (filmmaker)\n Day directed the documentary Saviors of the Forest which was shown at the Sundance Film Festival. He also directed Rubber Jungle, a behind the scenes look at the life of Brazilian labor leader Chico Mendes and the movie about his life. In 2002, Day co-produced the musical documentary Under The Covers, followed by Alternative Rock and Roll Years in 2003 for Discovery Channel. Day served as a field producer for Hopkins 24/7, a television documentary series. With Carlo Gennarelli, he co-produced Ordinary Joe, a documentary film about Joe Sciacca, a Vietnam veteran from New York City. Day made a film about XXXchurch.com called Missionary Positions. He also produced and directed The Pussycat Preacher, a film about Heather Veitch and her organization, JC's Girls. He holds the YouTube channel 'billschannel', which posts videos of wildlife trips around the world and a series named 'Real or Fake?' This series shows him and his research group 'The Chewy Piranhas' uncover photographs and videos on the internet and using various methods to show whether they are portraying real-life events, fake hoaxes or unknown mysteries.", "New York University Press\nArthur Huntington Nason, 1916–1932 ; no director, 1932–1946 ; Jean B. Barr (interim director), 1946–1952 ; Filmore Hyde, 1952–1957 ; Wilbur McKee, acting director, 1957–1958 ; William B. Harvey, 1958–1966 ; Christopher Kentera, 1966–1974 ; Malcolm C. Johnson, 1974–1981 ; Colin Jones, 1981–1996 ; Niko Pfund, 1996–2000 ; Steve Maikowski, 2001–2014 ; Ellen Chodosh, 2014–present ", "DaDaFest\nMandy Colleran – Former director ; Ruth Gould - Gould was appointed as the Creative Director of the NWDAF in 2001, she is now the Chief Executive Officer of DaDaFest. Whilst working for the NWDAF in 2001, she was asked to create something for International Disabled People's Day but she claimed that \"one day was not enough\" and set about producing a festival with the help of a steering group. The result of this was the first DaDaFest in December 2001 and the subsequent change of 'DaDaFest' as a one off festival into its own brand. ; Jane Cordell - Cordell ", "Nick Day (film director)\n Day trained and worked as an editor in London while studying cinema as part of the British Film Institute/University of London diploma program. After relocating to the US, he worked for several years in television production on a wide range of programming, including commercials, news, current affairs, and arts and entertainment for broadcast in Italy, Brazil, Germany, as well as the US. He later produced and directed the documentary Short Cut to Nirvana: Kumbh Mela with Maurizio Benazzo, which won several awards. Day also won an award for best screenplay for The Fallen, a World War I drama directed by Ari Taub. Day currently produces ", "David Maloney\n David John Lee Maloney (14 December 1933 – 18 July 2006) was a British television director and producer best known for his work on the BBC science-fiction series Doctor Who, Blake's 7 and The Day of the Triffids. The Guardian described him on his death as \"one of that old school who could turn out 30-minute dramas in two days shooting time\".", "Geoff Posner\n Wood's All Day Breakfast, director, 1992 ; It's A Mad World, World, World, World, director, 1994 ; Paul Calf's Video Diary, director / producer, 1994 ; Victoria Wood: Live In Your Own Home, director/ producer, 1994 ; A Christmas Night With the Stars, director, 1994 ; Pauline Calf's Wedding Video, director/ producer, 1994 ; Coogan's Run, director/ producer, 1995 ; The Tony Ferrino Phenomenon, director/ producer, 1997 ; Harry Enfield and Chums, director/ producer, 1997 ; Victoria Wood: Live, director/ producer, 1997 ; Eurovision Song Contest 1998, director, 1998 ; Stephen Fry's Live From The Lighthouse, director/ producer, 1998 ; Steve Coogan: The Man Who Thinks He's It, director/ producer, 1998 ; dinnerladies, director/ producer, 1998-2000 ; tlc, director/ ", "Robin Day\n Day spent almost his entire working life in journalism. He rose to prominence on the new Independent Television News (ITN) from 1955. According to Dick Taverne, Day first came to notice by interviewing Sir Kenneth Clark, then chairman of the regulator Independent Television Authority. The ITA had proposed to cut ITN's broadcasting hours and finances. His direct, non-deferential approach was then entirely new. Day was the first British journalist to interview Egypt's President Nasser after the Suez Crisis. In 1958, he interviewed Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, in what the Daily Express called: \"the most vigorous cross-examination a prime minister has been subjected to in public\". The interview turned Day into ", "Thomas B. Day\n Communication. He advocated for affirmative action programs and selected Mary Alice Hill in 1983 to be the first female athletic director at a university with a Division I-A football program. Facing budget shortfalls in 1992, Day proposed sharp cuts that would have eliminated whole departments and laid off faculty. In August 1992, faculty passed a vote of no confidence in Day and asked the California State University Board of Trustees to replace him. An improvement in the budget situation led to the cuts being rescinded, but Day remained unpopular on campus, and was ultimately asked to resign, ostensibly for health reasons. Day was a member of the National Science Board from 1984 to 1996 and a vice-chairman from 1990 to 1994. He was also a Senior Fellow of the California Council on Science and Technology and a former board member.", "Walter Percy Day\n A meeting with Alexander Korda opened up new perspectives for the Day studio. Day worked with Korda on The Private Life of Henry VIII (1933) a film starring Charles Laughton. Day accordingly established a studio in Iver (Buckinghamshire) and from 1936, directed the matte department at Denham Studios. The artist painted mattes and created trick shots for numerous films by Korda and his stable of directors, who included his brother Zoltan Korda, Anthony Asquith, William Cameron Menzies (Things to Come, 1936), Michael Powell, and Lothar Mendes. In 1946 Day joined the Korda group as Director of Special Effects at Korda's new ", "Question Time (TV programme)\n Veteran broadcaster Sir Robin Day was the programme's first chair, presenting it for nearly 10 years until June 1989. Question Time soon gained popularity under Day's lead, with his quick wit and interrogation skills. His famous catchphrase when he had introduced the panel was: \"There they are, and here we go.\" The programme was mainly filmed at the Greenwood Theatre in London on the south side of London Bridge. Day's last appearance as presenter was broadcast from Paris on 12 July 1989. He was allowed to choose his own guests.", "The Day (1960 film)\n Although Finch was best known as an actor, he had worked as a writer and director before, notably on stage. He also helped make the documentary Primitive Peoples (1949)." ]
What is the religion of Franciszek Rogaczewski?
[ "Catholic Church", "Roman Catholic Church", "Church", "Roman Apostolic Catholic Church" ]
religion
Franciszek Rogaczewski
3,093,191
78
[ { "id": "1972952", "title": "Józef Roszyński", "text": " Józef Roszyński (born August 18, 1962 in Nidzica) is a Polish clergyman and bishop for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Wewak. He was appointed bishop in 2015.", "score": "1.4817828" }, { "id": "1026969", "title": "Wojciech Roszkowski", "text": " Wojciech Roszkowski OOB (born 20 June 1947 in Warsaw) is a Polish nobleman, economic historian and writer, specializing in Polish and European history of the 20th and 21st century. He was a politician and Member of the European Parliament (MEP) in 2004–2009. From 1980 to 1983 he was a member of the independent self-governing trade union Solidarność. From 1990 to 1993 he served as vice-rector of Warsaw School of Economics. He is a fellow of Collegium Invisibile and a signatory of the Prague Declaration on European Conscience and Communism. Under the pseudonym Andrzej Albert, he has published books about 20th-century Polish history, focusing on 1918–1980, as well as a synthesis of the political history of the world post-1945. The books were edited in single and three-band releases, in Polish and English. His book \"The World of Christ\", a complete history of the world depicted during the lifetime of Jesus Christ, was published in 2016 after over fifty years of work. He is one of Poland's most popular authors. In 2019 \"The Shattered Mirror – The Downfall of Western Civilization\" was one of Poland's most read books.", "score": "1.4613974" }, { "id": "12460900", "title": "Franciszek Blachnicki", "text": " Franciszek Blachnicki (24 March 1921 – 27 February 1987) was a Polish Roman Catholic priest and the founder of the Light-Life movement - also known as the Oasis Movement - and the Secular Institute of the Immaculate Mother of the Church. He founded several other movements and religious congregations that would address a range of social and ethical issues. These issues included anti-alcoholism and human rights. His movements first came about after starting out as simple retreats designed for both altar servers and families that later began to address a series of issues in Poland at the time. His concern for human rights came during the communist era in Poland as well as his experiences as a prisoner of war during World War II in which he was incarcerated in Auschwitz and other concentration camps under the German Nazi regime. Blachnicki's beatification process opened in Poland in the 1990s and he became titled as a Servant of God upon the cause's commencement. The decisive moment in the process came on 30 September 2015 after Pope Francis confirmed his heroic virtue and titled him as Venerable.", "score": "1.4565789" }, { "id": "30063021", "title": "Irreligion in Poland", "text": " person could openly admit their atheism or agnosticism. The initiative aims to promote ideological assertiveness among the unbelievers, checking the presence of believers in the social life and the consolidation and strengthening of cooperation between free thinkers. Many leading Polish media have written dozens of articles about this initiative, causing a discussion on the situation of unbelievers in Poland (Gazeta Wyborcza, Cross-section, Overview, Republic, Newsweek, Tribune, Gazeta Pomorska, Kurier Lubelski, Wirtualna Polska, Życie Warszawy ), and on the radio TOK FM was a debate about atheism between the academic priest Gregory Michalczyk and the founder and then-president of the Polish Rationalist Association Mariusz Agnosiewicz. After two ", "score": "1.4552982" }, { "id": "9414744", "title": "Franciszek", "text": " army sergeant whose life was spared when Saint Maximilian Kolbe sacrificed his life for Gajowniczek at Auschwitz ; Franciszek Gąsienica Groń (born 1931), Polish Olympic skier ; Franciszek Gąsior (born 1947), Polish Olympic handball player ; Franciszek Grocholski (1730–1792), Polish nobleman and politician ; Franciszek Gruszka (1910–1940), Polish aviator who flew with the RAF during the Battle of Britain ; Franciszek Hodur (1866–1953), Polish prelate of the Polish National Catholic Church ; Franciszek Jamroż (contemporary), Polish politician, former Mayor of Gdańsk; imprisoned for corruption and bribery ; Franciszek Jarecki (born 1931), Polish Air Force aviator who defected to the West with a MIG-15 in 1953 ; Franciszek ", "score": "1.4351329" }, { "id": "8333084", "title": "Franciszek Siarczyński", "text": " Franciszek Siarczyński (1758–1829) was a Polish Roman Catholic priest, member of the Piarist religious order, historian, geographer, teacher, writer and publicist. He was a lecturer of grammar, history and geography at the Collegium Nobilium in Warsaw, Poland from 1781 to 1785. He was a regular guest at the Thursday Dinners held by the King of Poland, Stanisław August Poniatowski in the era of the Enlightenment in Poland. He was the author of three volumes of ‘Geografii, czyli opisania naturalnego, historycznego i politycznego krajów i narodów’ (Geography, natural history, history and politics of the country and its citizens). At the time of the Kościuszko Uprising in ", "score": "1.4303267" }, { "id": "9585159", "title": "Szymon Niemiec", "text": " the Church by Archbishop Terry Flynn. In May 2007 he published his first book: Rainbow Humming Bird on the Butt. From 2008, Niemiec became a member of the National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association, and president of the board of \"Friends of Szymon\" foundation. In October 2019, Niemiec was interrogated by police under suspicion of offending religious feelings \"by insulting the object of worship in the form of a Roman Catholic Mass\"; police had received more than 150 complaints regarding the incident. He had held an ecumenical, LGBT religious service for Warsaw's 2019 Equality Parade, criticized by the Roman Catholic Episcopal Conference of Poland and Law and Justice politicians. Niemiec had held similar services every year since 2010 with little controversy. Niemiec and Julia Maciocha, president of the committee which organizes Equality Parade, stated that the complaint violates the constitutional guarantee of freedom of religion.", "score": "1.4281948" }, { "id": "3772846", "title": "Józef Rogacki", "text": " Józef Rogacki (born 21 November 1953, in Gorzałów) is a Polish politician who is a current Member of Kuyavian-Pomeranian Regional Assembly.", "score": "1.4240685" }, { "id": "9414748", "title": "Franciszek", "text": " activist ; Franciszek Pieczka (born 1928), Polish film and stage actor ; Franciszek Piper (born 1941), Polish scholar, historian and author; specializing in the Holocaust ; Franciszek Pius Radziwiłł (1878–1944), Polish nobleman and political activist ; Franciszek Pokorny (fl. mid-20th century), Polish military officer and cryptographer ; Franciszek Przysiężniak (1909–1975), Polish military officer and anticommunist resistance fighter; recipient of the Virtuti Militari ; Franciszek Rychnowski (1850–1929), Polish engineer and an inventor ; Franciszek Salezy Dmochowski (1801–1871), Polish writer, poet, translator, critic, and journalist ; Franciszek Salezy Jezierski (1740–1791), Polish priest, writer, and activist of the Enlightenment period ; Franciszek Salezy Potocki (1700–1772), Polish-Lithuanian nobleman; Knight of ", "score": "1.4216335" }, { "id": "29484338", "title": "Jacek Rostowski", "text": " Jan Anthony Vincent-Rostowski, also known as Jacek Rostowski (born 30 April 1951, London), is a British-Polish economist and politician who served as Minister of Finance and Deputy Prime Minister of the Republic of Poland. He was a candidate for Change UK in London at the 2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom.", "score": "1.4215119" }, { "id": "9414749", "title": "Franciszek", "text": " Order of the White Eagle ; Franciszek Sebastian Lubomirski (diet 1699), Polish nobleman ; Franciszek Siarczyński (1758–1829), Polish Roman Catholic Piarist priest, historian, geographer, teacher, and writer ; Franciszek Smuda (born 1948), Polish professional football player, coach, and manager ; Franciszek Smuglewicz (1745–1807), Polish-Lithuanian draftsman and painter ; Franciszek Starowieyski (1930–2009), Polish artist ; Franciszek Stefaniuk (born 1944), Polish politician from Chełm ; Franciszek Sulik (1908–2000), Polish-Australian chess master ; Franciszek Szymczyk (1892–1976), Polish Olympic track cyclist ; Franciszek Trąbalski (1870–1964), Polish socialist politician ; Franciszek Trześniewski (died 1939), Polish gourmand and chef; eponym of the Trześniewski restaurant in Vienna ; Franciszek Walicki (born 1921), Polish ", "score": "1.4186418" }, { "id": "30063015", "title": "Irreligion in Poland", "text": " Atheism and irreligion is uncommon in Poland with Catholic Christianity as the largest faith. However, it is on the rise, which has caused tensions in the country. In a public performance during the 2014 Procession of Atheists in Poland commemorated Kazimierz Łyszczyński, who is considered the first Polish atheist.", "score": "1.4173872" }, { "id": "2618605", "title": "Church of St Francis in Warsaw", "text": "Constantine Francis Mokronowski (d. 1733), the standard-bearer of land in Warsaw ; Ladislaus Grzegorzewski (d. 1758), Castellan Ciechanow, General royal guard 1736 ; Father Anthony Kaczanowski (d. 1896) ; Henryk Perzyński (d. 1898), ; Sabina Wróblewska (d. 1904) ", "score": "1.4172938" }, { "id": "4773342", "title": "St. Hedwig's (Milwaukee)", "text": " was appointed and his first Mass was said on December 11, 1885. Father Rogozinski had been born in Poland in 1835 and had been ordained in Łowicz in 1861, just as another national uprising was taking place against the Tsar. The provisional Polish government had chosen Rogozinski to administer the oath of allegiance to the rebels. After the uprising failed, Rogozinski tried to escape to Galicia, but was detained by the Russian police and imprisoned in Olomuniec for 11 months. After his release, he journeyed to America, finally settling in Milwaukee. Father Rogozinski, who was revered by the local ", "score": "1.4147344" }, { "id": "9414745", "title": "Franciszek", "text": " Jaskulski (1913–1947), Polish soldier and commander in the anticommunist Freedom and Independence organization ; Franciszek Kamieński (1851–1912), Polish botanist ; Franciszek Kamiński (1902–2000), Polish general and activist of the peasant movement ; Franciszek Kareu (1731–1802), Belarusian Jesuit priest; Superior General of the Society of Jesus 1801–02 ; Franciszek Karpiński (1741–1825), Polish poet of the Age of Enlightenment ; Franciszek Karwowski (1895–2005), Austria-Hungary World War I veteran ; Franciszek Kasparek (1844–1903), Polish jurist, professor of law, and rector of Kraków University ; Franciszek Kleeberg (1888–1941), Polish general officer in the Austro-Hungarian army and subsequently in the Polish Legions ; Franciszek Kniaźnin (1750–1807), Polish dramatist and writer ; Franciszek ", "score": "1.4135838" }, { "id": "12507334", "title": "Karol Grycz-Śmiłowski", "text": " Karol Grycz-Śmiłowski (17 September 1885 in Śmiłowice – 16 February 1959 in Kraków) was a Polish Lutheran priest who sought to reestablish the Polish Brethren of the period 1565-1658. Grycz-Śmiłowski was head of the Lutheran pastoral care service in Kraków. In 1934 he published A contemporary faith from the Holy Land (\"Z ziemi świętej nowoczesne Wierzę\") in which he presented himself as a free thinker, heir to the Polish Brethren. In 1936 he founded a small group started to publish the quarterly magazine Free Religious Thought (\"Wolna Myśl Religijna\"). In 1937 at a meeting in Łódź he founded the free religious association \"Bracia Polscy\", which in ", "score": "1.4135742" }, { "id": "12736770", "title": "Jan Woleński", "text": " Woleński is active in Poland's atheist movement. In the 1960s he was a member of the government-sponsored Association of Atheists and Freethinkers, and since 2007 he is a member of the Honorary Committee of the Polish Rationalist Association. He is widely recognized in Poland as an atheist and has promoted the replacement of religion classes with philosophy classes in Polish schools. Woleński is involved in the secular Jewish movement, writing on the common Polish-Jewish past and on today's Polish-Jewish relations. He is a member of B'nai B'rith and was deputy president of its Polish chapter from 2007 to 2012. He was a member of the Polish United Workers Party (the Polish communist party) from 1965 to 1981. From 1980 to 1990 he was a member of the Solidarity (Polish trade union) movement.", "score": "1.4119766" }, { "id": "3168888", "title": "Róża Czacka", "text": " to travel a considerable distance from that part of Poland to Warsaw and Laski. His broad intellectual horizons and numerous contacts, however, opened up new perspectives for the FSC. On his initiative, new institutions and centers were founded, including the Library of Religious Knowledge, a publishing house and the Verbum bookshop as well as a retreat house. From 1930, Fr Korniłowicz finally set up permanent residence Laski. University students and young intelligentsia were attracted to his so-called ‘Circle’. Some of them consequently entered the FSC or the Third Order of St Francis. Czacka’s decision to include lay co-workers from the Society for the ", "score": "1.4097141" }, { "id": "30063018", "title": "Irreligion in Poland", "text": " Warsaw Circle of Intellectuals. They were also issued a letter Rationalist. In the twentieth and twenty first centuries Poles declaring a lifelong or temporary atheistic worldview include Tadeusz Boy-Żeleński, Tadeusz Kotarbiński, Irena Krzywicka, Witold Gombrowicz, Władysław Gomułka, Jan Kott, Jeremi Przybora, Wisława Szymborska, Stanisław Lem, Tadeusz Różewicz, Marek Edelman, Jerzy Kawalerowicz, Zygmunt Bauman, Maria Janion, Tadeusz Łomnicki, Włodzimierz Ptak, Jacek Kuroń, Kazimierz Kutz, Jerzy Urban, Roman Polański, Jerzy Vetulani, Karol Modzelewski, Zbigniew Religa, Jan Woleński, Andrzej Sapkowski, Kora Jackowska, Lech Janerka, Wanda Nowicka, Magdalena Środa, Jacek Kaczmarski, Aleksander Kwaśniewski, Kazik Staszewski, Kuba Wojewódzki, Janusz Palikot, Jan Hartman, Maria Peszek, Dorota Nieznalska, Robert Biedroń. After World War ", "score": "1.408552" }, { "id": "9414743", "title": "Franciszek", "text": " (1906–1964), Polish Olympic rower ; Franciszek Bukaty (1747–1797), Polish diplomat ; Franciszek Cebulak (1906–1960), Polish Olympic football (soccer) player ; Franciszek Chalupka (1856–1909), Polish theologian; founder of the first Polish-American parishes in New England ; Franciszek Czapek (1811–unknown), Czech-Polish watchmaker ; Franciszek Dionizy Kniaźnin (1750–1807), Polish poet of the Enlightenment period ; Franciszek Dobrowolski (1830–1896), Polish theater director ; Franciszek Ferdynant Lubomirski (1710–1774), Polish nobleman and Knight of the Order of the White Eagle ; Franciszek Fiszer (1860–1937), Polish bon vivant, gourmand, erudite, and philosopher ; Franciszek Gągor (1951–2010), Polish general officer, Chief of the General Staff of the Polish Army since 2006 ; Franciszek Gajowniczek (1901–1995), ", "score": "1.4066529" } ]
[ "Józef Roszyński\n Józef Roszyński (born August 18, 1962 in Nidzica) is a Polish clergyman and bishop for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Wewak. He was appointed bishop in 2015.", "Wojciech Roszkowski\n Wojciech Roszkowski OOB (born 20 June 1947 in Warsaw) is a Polish nobleman, economic historian and writer, specializing in Polish and European history of the 20th and 21st century. He was a politician and Member of the European Parliament (MEP) in 2004–2009. From 1980 to 1983 he was a member of the independent self-governing trade union Solidarność. From 1990 to 1993 he served as vice-rector of Warsaw School of Economics. He is a fellow of Collegium Invisibile and a signatory of the Prague Declaration on European Conscience and Communism. Under the pseudonym Andrzej Albert, he has published books about 20th-century Polish history, focusing on 1918–1980, as well as a synthesis of the political history of the world post-1945. The books were edited in single and three-band releases, in Polish and English. His book \"The World of Christ\", a complete history of the world depicted during the lifetime of Jesus Christ, was published in 2016 after over fifty years of work. He is one of Poland's most popular authors. In 2019 \"The Shattered Mirror – The Downfall of Western Civilization\" was one of Poland's most read books.", "Franciszek Blachnicki\n Franciszek Blachnicki (24 March 1921 – 27 February 1987) was a Polish Roman Catholic priest and the founder of the Light-Life movement - also known as the Oasis Movement - and the Secular Institute of the Immaculate Mother of the Church. He founded several other movements and religious congregations that would address a range of social and ethical issues. These issues included anti-alcoholism and human rights. His movements first came about after starting out as simple retreats designed for both altar servers and families that later began to address a series of issues in Poland at the time. His concern for human rights came during the communist era in Poland as well as his experiences as a prisoner of war during World War II in which he was incarcerated in Auschwitz and other concentration camps under the German Nazi regime. Blachnicki's beatification process opened in Poland in the 1990s and he became titled as a Servant of God upon the cause's commencement. The decisive moment in the process came on 30 September 2015 after Pope Francis confirmed his heroic virtue and titled him as Venerable.", "Irreligion in Poland\n person could openly admit their atheism or agnosticism. The initiative aims to promote ideological assertiveness among the unbelievers, checking the presence of believers in the social life and the consolidation and strengthening of cooperation between free thinkers. Many leading Polish media have written dozens of articles about this initiative, causing a discussion on the situation of unbelievers in Poland (Gazeta Wyborcza, Cross-section, Overview, Republic, Newsweek, Tribune, Gazeta Pomorska, Kurier Lubelski, Wirtualna Polska, Życie Warszawy ), and on the radio TOK FM was a debate about atheism between the academic priest Gregory Michalczyk and the founder and then-president of the Polish Rationalist Association Mariusz Agnosiewicz. After two ", "Franciszek\n army sergeant whose life was spared when Saint Maximilian Kolbe sacrificed his life for Gajowniczek at Auschwitz ; Franciszek Gąsienica Groń (born 1931), Polish Olympic skier ; Franciszek Gąsior (born 1947), Polish Olympic handball player ; Franciszek Grocholski (1730–1792), Polish nobleman and politician ; Franciszek Gruszka (1910–1940), Polish aviator who flew with the RAF during the Battle of Britain ; Franciszek Hodur (1866–1953), Polish prelate of the Polish National Catholic Church ; Franciszek Jamroż (contemporary), Polish politician, former Mayor of Gdańsk; imprisoned for corruption and bribery ; Franciszek Jarecki (born 1931), Polish Air Force aviator who defected to the West with a MIG-15 in 1953 ; Franciszek ", "Franciszek Siarczyński\n Franciszek Siarczyński (1758–1829) was a Polish Roman Catholic priest, member of the Piarist religious order, historian, geographer, teacher, writer and publicist. He was a lecturer of grammar, history and geography at the Collegium Nobilium in Warsaw, Poland from 1781 to 1785. He was a regular guest at the Thursday Dinners held by the King of Poland, Stanisław August Poniatowski in the era of the Enlightenment in Poland. He was the author of three volumes of ‘Geografii, czyli opisania naturalnego, historycznego i politycznego krajów i narodów’ (Geography, natural history, history and politics of the country and its citizens). At the time of the Kościuszko Uprising in ", "Szymon Niemiec\n the Church by Archbishop Terry Flynn. In May 2007 he published his first book: Rainbow Humming Bird on the Butt. From 2008, Niemiec became a member of the National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association, and president of the board of \"Friends of Szymon\" foundation. In October 2019, Niemiec was interrogated by police under suspicion of offending religious feelings \"by insulting the object of worship in the form of a Roman Catholic Mass\"; police had received more than 150 complaints regarding the incident. He had held an ecumenical, LGBT religious service for Warsaw's 2019 Equality Parade, criticized by the Roman Catholic Episcopal Conference of Poland and Law and Justice politicians. Niemiec had held similar services every year since 2010 with little controversy. Niemiec and Julia Maciocha, president of the committee which organizes Equality Parade, stated that the complaint violates the constitutional guarantee of freedom of religion.", "Józef Rogacki\n Józef Rogacki (born 21 November 1953, in Gorzałów) is a Polish politician who is a current Member of Kuyavian-Pomeranian Regional Assembly.", "Franciszek\n activist ; Franciszek Pieczka (born 1928), Polish film and stage actor ; Franciszek Piper (born 1941), Polish scholar, historian and author; specializing in the Holocaust ; Franciszek Pius Radziwiłł (1878–1944), Polish nobleman and political activist ; Franciszek Pokorny (fl. mid-20th century), Polish military officer and cryptographer ; Franciszek Przysiężniak (1909–1975), Polish military officer and anticommunist resistance fighter; recipient of the Virtuti Militari ; Franciszek Rychnowski (1850–1929), Polish engineer and an inventor ; Franciszek Salezy Dmochowski (1801–1871), Polish writer, poet, translator, critic, and journalist ; Franciszek Salezy Jezierski (1740–1791), Polish priest, writer, and activist of the Enlightenment period ; Franciszek Salezy Potocki (1700–1772), Polish-Lithuanian nobleman; Knight of ", "Jacek Rostowski\n Jan Anthony Vincent-Rostowski, also known as Jacek Rostowski (born 30 April 1951, London), is a British-Polish economist and politician who served as Minister of Finance and Deputy Prime Minister of the Republic of Poland. He was a candidate for Change UK in London at the 2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom.", "Franciszek\n Order of the White Eagle ; Franciszek Sebastian Lubomirski (diet 1699), Polish nobleman ; Franciszek Siarczyński (1758–1829), Polish Roman Catholic Piarist priest, historian, geographer, teacher, and writer ; Franciszek Smuda (born 1948), Polish professional football player, coach, and manager ; Franciszek Smuglewicz (1745–1807), Polish-Lithuanian draftsman and painter ; Franciszek Starowieyski (1930–2009), Polish artist ; Franciszek Stefaniuk (born 1944), Polish politician from Chełm ; Franciszek Sulik (1908–2000), Polish-Australian chess master ; Franciszek Szymczyk (1892–1976), Polish Olympic track cyclist ; Franciszek Trąbalski (1870–1964), Polish socialist politician ; Franciszek Trześniewski (died 1939), Polish gourmand and chef; eponym of the Trześniewski restaurant in Vienna ; Franciszek Walicki (born 1921), Polish ", "Irreligion in Poland\n Atheism and irreligion is uncommon in Poland with Catholic Christianity as the largest faith. However, it is on the rise, which has caused tensions in the country. In a public performance during the 2014 Procession of Atheists in Poland commemorated Kazimierz Łyszczyński, who is considered the first Polish atheist.", "Church of St Francis in Warsaw\nConstantine Francis Mokronowski (d. 1733), the standard-bearer of land in Warsaw ; Ladislaus Grzegorzewski (d. 1758), Castellan Ciechanow, General royal guard 1736 ; Father Anthony Kaczanowski (d. 1896) ; Henryk Perzyński (d. 1898), ; Sabina Wróblewska (d. 1904) ", "St. Hedwig's (Milwaukee)\n was appointed and his first Mass was said on December 11, 1885. Father Rogozinski had been born in Poland in 1835 and had been ordained in Łowicz in 1861, just as another national uprising was taking place against the Tsar. The provisional Polish government had chosen Rogozinski to administer the oath of allegiance to the rebels. After the uprising failed, Rogozinski tried to escape to Galicia, but was detained by the Russian police and imprisoned in Olomuniec for 11 months. After his release, he journeyed to America, finally settling in Milwaukee. Father Rogozinski, who was revered by the local ", "Franciszek\n Jaskulski (1913–1947), Polish soldier and commander in the anticommunist Freedom and Independence organization ; Franciszek Kamieński (1851–1912), Polish botanist ; Franciszek Kamiński (1902–2000), Polish general and activist of the peasant movement ; Franciszek Kareu (1731–1802), Belarusian Jesuit priest; Superior General of the Society of Jesus 1801–02 ; Franciszek Karpiński (1741–1825), Polish poet of the Age of Enlightenment ; Franciszek Karwowski (1895–2005), Austria-Hungary World War I veteran ; Franciszek Kasparek (1844–1903), Polish jurist, professor of law, and rector of Kraków University ; Franciszek Kleeberg (1888–1941), Polish general officer in the Austro-Hungarian army and subsequently in the Polish Legions ; Franciszek Kniaźnin (1750–1807), Polish dramatist and writer ; Franciszek ", "Karol Grycz-Śmiłowski\n Karol Grycz-Śmiłowski (17 September 1885 in Śmiłowice – 16 February 1959 in Kraków) was a Polish Lutheran priest who sought to reestablish the Polish Brethren of the period 1565-1658. Grycz-Śmiłowski was head of the Lutheran pastoral care service in Kraków. In 1934 he published A contemporary faith from the Holy Land (\"Z ziemi świętej nowoczesne Wierzę\") in which he presented himself as a free thinker, heir to the Polish Brethren. In 1936 he founded a small group started to publish the quarterly magazine Free Religious Thought (\"Wolna Myśl Religijna\"). In 1937 at a meeting in Łódź he founded the free religious association \"Bracia Polscy\", which in ", "Jan Woleński\n Woleński is active in Poland's atheist movement. In the 1960s he was a member of the government-sponsored Association of Atheists and Freethinkers, and since 2007 he is a member of the Honorary Committee of the Polish Rationalist Association. He is widely recognized in Poland as an atheist and has promoted the replacement of religion classes with philosophy classes in Polish schools. Woleński is involved in the secular Jewish movement, writing on the common Polish-Jewish past and on today's Polish-Jewish relations. He is a member of B'nai B'rith and was deputy president of its Polish chapter from 2007 to 2012. He was a member of the Polish United Workers Party (the Polish communist party) from 1965 to 1981. From 1980 to 1990 he was a member of the Solidarity (Polish trade union) movement.", "Róża Czacka\n to travel a considerable distance from that part of Poland to Warsaw and Laski. His broad intellectual horizons and numerous contacts, however, opened up new perspectives for the FSC. On his initiative, new institutions and centers were founded, including the Library of Religious Knowledge, a publishing house and the Verbum bookshop as well as a retreat house. From 1930, Fr Korniłowicz finally set up permanent residence Laski. University students and young intelligentsia were attracted to his so-called ‘Circle’. Some of them consequently entered the FSC or the Third Order of St Francis. Czacka’s decision to include lay co-workers from the Society for the ", "Irreligion in Poland\n Warsaw Circle of Intellectuals. They were also issued a letter Rationalist. In the twentieth and twenty first centuries Poles declaring a lifelong or temporary atheistic worldview include Tadeusz Boy-Żeleński, Tadeusz Kotarbiński, Irena Krzywicka, Witold Gombrowicz, Władysław Gomułka, Jan Kott, Jeremi Przybora, Wisława Szymborska, Stanisław Lem, Tadeusz Różewicz, Marek Edelman, Jerzy Kawalerowicz, Zygmunt Bauman, Maria Janion, Tadeusz Łomnicki, Włodzimierz Ptak, Jacek Kuroń, Kazimierz Kutz, Jerzy Urban, Roman Polański, Jerzy Vetulani, Karol Modzelewski, Zbigniew Religa, Jan Woleński, Andrzej Sapkowski, Kora Jackowska, Lech Janerka, Wanda Nowicka, Magdalena Środa, Jacek Kaczmarski, Aleksander Kwaśniewski, Kazik Staszewski, Kuba Wojewódzki, Janusz Palikot, Jan Hartman, Maria Peszek, Dorota Nieznalska, Robert Biedroń. After World War ", "Franciszek\n (1906–1964), Polish Olympic rower ; Franciszek Bukaty (1747–1797), Polish diplomat ; Franciszek Cebulak (1906–1960), Polish Olympic football (soccer) player ; Franciszek Chalupka (1856–1909), Polish theologian; founder of the first Polish-American parishes in New England ; Franciszek Czapek (1811–unknown), Czech-Polish watchmaker ; Franciszek Dionizy Kniaźnin (1750–1807), Polish poet of the Enlightenment period ; Franciszek Dobrowolski (1830–1896), Polish theater director ; Franciszek Ferdynant Lubomirski (1710–1774), Polish nobleman and Knight of the Order of the White Eagle ; Franciszek Fiszer (1860–1937), Polish bon vivant, gourmand, erudite, and philosopher ; Franciszek Gągor (1951–2010), Polish general officer, Chief of the General Staff of the Polish Army since 2006 ; Franciszek Gajowniczek (1901–1995), " ]
In what city was Jean-Georges Lefranc de Pompignan born?
[ "Montauban", "Rive-Civique" ]
place of birth
Jean Georges Lefranc de Pompignan
1,076,870
68
[ { "id": "27218764", "title": "Jean-Jacques Lefranc, Marquis de Pompignan", "text": " Jean-Jacques Lefranc (also Le Franc), Marquis de Pompignan (10 August 1709 – 1 November 1784) was a French man of letters and erudition, who published a considerable output of theatrical work, poems, literary criticism, and polemics; treatises on archeology, nature, travel and many other subjects; and a wide selection of highly regarded translations of the classics and other works from several European languages including English. His life and career, as well as his literary and other works are noteworthy today because of their location at the very center of the French Enlightenment; and although some of the positions he took are also considered to have been ", "score": "1.8109391" }, { "id": "27218769", "title": "Jean-Jacques Lefranc, Marquis de Pompignan", "text": " the Parlement de Toulouse, where Jean-Jacques was also to have a brief tenure. His education was entrusted to \" ... the most skillful masters at the Capital, where he found himself among the disciples of the celebrated Pere Poré. The student made rapid progress, and was not slow in showing proof of a talent as rare as it was precocious. After successfully completing his classical studies [at the Collège de Louis-le-Grand], he remained in Paris to attend the School of Law.\" Voltaire, fifteen years older than Lefranc, attended this school from 1704 to 1711, and was also influenced by Pere Poré. He joined the staff of the Cours des Aides in 1730, during ", "score": "1.7952218" }, { "id": "1352357", "title": "Lefranc", "text": "Christelle Lefranc (born 1980), French fashion model from Paris, France ; Jean Georges Lefranc de Pompignan (1715–1790), French clergyman and younger brother of Jean-Jacques ; Jean-Jacques Lefranc, Marquis de Pompignan (1709–1784), French jurist, man of letters and gardener ; Jean-Marc Lefranc (born 1947), member of the National Assembly of France ; Victor Lefranc (1809–1883), French lawyer and politician, moderated republican, Minister of Agriculture and Trade, then Interior Minister Lefranc may refer to: ", "score": "1.7632902" }, { "id": "27218772", "title": "Jean-Jacques Lefranc, Marquis de Pompignan", "text": " His marriage with a wealthy widow enabled him to devote himself fully to literature, and also funded his campaign for a seat in the Académie française, which was achieved in 1759. However, on his formal induction into the Academie in 1760, he made an ill-considered speech violently attacking the Encyclopaedists, many of whom were in his audience and had voted for him. Lefranc soon had reason to repent of his action, for the epigrams and stories circulated by those he had attacked made it difficult for him to remain in Paris, and he returned to his native town, where he spent the rest of his life gardening, writing poetry and translating from the classics. Jean-François de la Harpe, who is severe enough on Lefranc in his correspondence, does his abilities full justice in his Cours littéraire, and ranks him next to JB Rousseau among French lyric poets. With those of other 18th-century poets his works may be studied in the Petits poètes français (1838) of Prosper Poitevin. His Œuvres complètes (5 vols.) were published in 1781, selections (2 vols.) in 1800, 1813, 1822.", "score": "1.746814" }, { "id": "3428205", "title": "Jean Georges Lefranc de Pompignan", "text": " Jean Georges Lefranc de Pompignan (22 February 1715 in Montauban – 29 December 1790 in Paris) was a French clergyman, younger brother of Jean-Jacques Lefranc, Marquis de Pompignan. Pompignan was the archbishop of Vienne against whose defense of the faith Voltaire launched the good-natured mockery of Les Lettres d'un Quaker. Elected to the Estates General, he passed over to the Liberal side, and led the 149 members of the clergy who united with the third estate to form the National Assembly. He was one of its first presidents, and was minister of public worship when the Civil Constitution of the Clergy was forced upon the clergy.", "score": "1.7406579" }, { "id": "27218774", "title": "Jean-Jacques Lefranc, Marquis de Pompignan", "text": " Jean-Jaques' younger brother, Jean Georges Lefranc de Pompignan, rose through the hierarchy to become Archbishop of Vienne and a favourite of the king, whose eulogy he delivered. Pompignan was also the alleged biological father of the French suffragist and playwright Olympe de Gouges (1748-1793).", "score": "1.7045201" }, { "id": "27218768", "title": "Jean-Jacques Lefranc, Marquis de Pompignan", "text": " Lefranc de Pompignan nearby). At the same time, lands were purchased at Pompignan (some 20 km to the southwest of Montauban) to provide a convenient rural retreat. Jean-Jacques' father, Jacques Lefranc, was the third of the name to become president of the Cour des Aides, and he was to be followed by his eldest son and grandson. The family retained the seat at Cayx, and the beautifully sited old chateau was where Jean-Jacques and his brother were reared; as a young man he styled himself Lefranc de Caix. His mother, born Mademoiselle de Caulet, was of the same millieu, her father serving as a \"president of the morter\" - a judicial rank - ", "score": "1.704154" }, { "id": "25141935", "title": "Château de Pompignan", "text": " is, of a marquis). His son, Jean-Georges-Louis-Lefranc de Pompignan (1760–1840) inherited the chateau and the marquisate on the death of his father in 1784. John Stuart Mill, the English thinker and politician, began a formative year visiting France at the age of 14 with a two-week stay at Pompignan in June 1820. In long letters to his father (who financed the educational trip), the precocious Mill details his extensive reading in the library of the chateau, including almost one work per day by Voltaire, Lefranc's main enemy, without once referring to the marquis' own works. Even by then something of a connoisseur of gardens, he walked in ", "score": "1.6753223" }, { "id": "27218770", "title": "Jean-Jacques Lefranc, Marquis de Pompignan", "text": " presidency of his uncle, the abbé Louis Lefranc, who had succeeded his brother, Jean-Jacques' father Jacques, on the death of the latter in 1719. When Louis died in 1745, Jean-Jacques, who had by then served for fifteen years as a general advocate at the court, although expected to succeed him in turn, was not yet old enough to be awarded the position, and had to wait until early 1747 to take over its presidency. The same year he was also appointed conseiller d'honneur of the Toulouse parlement, but his opposition to the abuses of the royal power, especially in the matter of taxation, brought him so much trouble that he resigned almost immediately.", "score": "1.6703982" }, { "id": "27218767", "title": "Jean-Jacques Lefranc, Marquis de Pompignan", "text": " The Lefranc family were originally landlords of the Château de Cayx (or see Château de Caïx on French Wiki, which gives more detail), overlooking a bend on the Lot some 12 km northwest of Cahors. Successive Lefrancs had served since 1640 as hereditary presidents of the regional Cours des Aides, which was located in Cahors. When Louis XIV ordered the court to be moved to Montauban (some 60 km south of Cahors over difficult roads), during the presidency of Jacques Lefranc in the early years of the 18th century, the family built a town house in Montauban as their local residence. It still stands impressively today at 10 rue Armand Cambon (there is a ", "score": "1.6565704" }, { "id": "25141922", "title": "Château de Pompignan", "text": " the garden project, and major structural elements were put in place between 1766 and 1774. It was finally judged complete by its author (who was then 71 years old) in 1780, 35 years after he had started. Jean-Georges-Louis-Marie Lefranc de Pompignan (1760–1840), son of the builder, inherited the estate on the death of his father in 1784. Like his father, he too married well, and was in a position to attend to his country estates. It appears as if he also commissioned works in the park, and it is not possible at present to distinguish which Lefranc was responsible for which part of the garden.", "score": "1.6559163" }, { "id": "5746383", "title": "Olympe de Gouges", "text": " credible. The Pompignan family had longstanding close ties to the Mouisset family of Marie Gouze's mother, Anne. When Anne was born in 1712, the eldest Pompignan son, Jean-Jacques Lefranc de Pompignan (age five), was her godfather. Anne's father tutored him as he grew. During their childhoods, Pompignan became close to Anne, but was separated from her in 1734 when he was sent to Paris. Anne married Pierre Gouze, a butcher, in 1737 and had three children before Marie, a son and two girls. Pompignan returned to Montauban in 1747, the year before Marie's birth. Pierre was legally recognized as Marie's father. ", "score": "1.6453671" }, { "id": "27218766", "title": "Jean-Jacques Lefranc, Marquis de Pompignan", "text": " His library of some 25,000 volumes was sold after his death by his son, and became founding collections for no less than three learned institution in Toulouse. He built a neo-classical chateau at Pompignan, and over a period of thirty-five years created one of the earliest and most extensive parcs à fabriques (or French landscape garden). The chateau stands in good order today, and although the park and its follies have been neglected, the extensive hydrological system still functions. In May 2011 the decision was taken to route the planned Bordeaux-Toulouse TGV and high-speed freight rail lines through the center of the Lefranc's landscape park.", "score": "1.637906" }, { "id": "27218765", "title": "Jean-Jacques Lefranc, Marquis de Pompignan", "text": " contributions to the counter-Enlightenment tendencies that were being articulated in parallel, he remains, in many respects, the typical Enlightenment man. The prolific volumes of literary works are now of academic interest only, mainly to flesh out aspects of the culture of the time, which embraced a period in which tensions that were to explode in the French Revolution five years after his death were still held in check. Lefranc is remembered today, if he is at all, as a consequence of the maiden speech he gave at the Académie française in 1760, which led to him becoming forever known and defined as \"the enemy of ", "score": "1.6229496" }, { "id": "32206536", "title": "1709 in France", "text": "7 February – Charles de Brosses, writer (died 1777) ; 24 February – Jacques de Vaucanson, engineer and inventor (died 1782) ; 14 April – Charles Collé, dramatist (died 1783) ; 7 August – Jean-Jacques Lefranc, Marquis de Pompignan, polymath (died 1784) ; 29 August – Jean-Baptiste-Louis Gresset, poet and dramatist (died 1777) ; 3 September – Joan Claudi Peiròt, Occitan writer (died 1795) ; 23 November – Julien Offray de La Mettrie, physician and philosopher (died 1751) ; Full date missing – Jean Girardet, painter of portrait miniatures (died 1778) ", "score": "1.6199802" }, { "id": "27218773", "title": "Jean-Jacques Lefranc, Marquis de Pompignan", "text": " Beginning in 1745, Lefranc rebuilt the manor house at Pompignan as the present neoclassical Chateau de Pompignan, and over a period of thirty-five years created a very extensive landscape garden, containing many follies, or architectural constructions to enhance the natural and created landscape. These included ruined temples, a gothic bridge, pleasure houses, and an extensive hydraulic and reservoir system which managed a lake and fishpond, streams, fountains and the water for the house.", "score": "1.5998371" }, { "id": "31176542", "title": "Abel Lefranc", "text": " Lefranc was born in Élincourt-Sainte-Marguerite. After studying at the École Nationale des Chartes, where he wrote a thesis on the history and organization of the town of Noyon until the end of the 13th century (1886). He left to study in Leipzig and Berlin (1887), where he prepared a report on the teaching of history in Germany, which he believed to be the most advanced in the world.", "score": "1.5820138" }, { "id": "2152100", "title": "1784 in France", "text": "29 January – Abbé François Blanchet, intellectual (born 1707) ; 15 February – Pierre Macquer, chemist (born 1718) ; 7 March – Jean-Baptiste-Louis-Théodore de Tschudi, botanist and poet (born 1734) ; 30 March – Emmanuel de Croÿ-Solre, military officer (born 1718) ; 30 July – Denis Diderot, philosopher (born 1713). ; 1 September – Jean-François Séguier, botanist and astronomer (born 1703) ; 1 November – Jean-Jacques Lefranc, Marquis de Pompignan, man of letters and erudition (born 1709) ", "score": "1.573051" }, { "id": "25141934", "title": "Château de Pompignan", "text": " began his association with the Cours des Aides in 1730, and took over its presidency in 1747. He began working on the chateau in 1745, a project that was to take 35 years to complete. His marriage to a rich and ambitious widow in 1757 obviated the need to work for the state, and she encouraged his literary and paid for his architectural projects. Jean-Jacques Lefranc was elevated to the marquisate by royal appointment, for services rendered (in defending monarchical and ecclesiastical powers against opposition generated by the Encyclopédistes) in 1763, and from this point his garden began to get recognition as a proper parc du chateau ", "score": "1.5687548" }, { "id": "30120565", "title": "Jacques de Juigné", "text": " Le Clerc de Juigné was born on 16 February 1874 in Paris, France.", "score": "1.5590119" } ]
[ "Jean-Jacques Lefranc, Marquis de Pompignan\n Jean-Jacques Lefranc (also Le Franc), Marquis de Pompignan (10 August 1709 – 1 November 1784) was a French man of letters and erudition, who published a considerable output of theatrical work, poems, literary criticism, and polemics; treatises on archeology, nature, travel and many other subjects; and a wide selection of highly regarded translations of the classics and other works from several European languages including English. His life and career, as well as his literary and other works are noteworthy today because of their location at the very center of the French Enlightenment; and although some of the positions he took are also considered to have been ", "Jean-Jacques Lefranc, Marquis de Pompignan\n the Parlement de Toulouse, where Jean-Jacques was also to have a brief tenure. His education was entrusted to \" ... the most skillful masters at the Capital, where he found himself among the disciples of the celebrated Pere Poré. The student made rapid progress, and was not slow in showing proof of a talent as rare as it was precocious. After successfully completing his classical studies [at the Collège de Louis-le-Grand], he remained in Paris to attend the School of Law.\" Voltaire, fifteen years older than Lefranc, attended this school from 1704 to 1711, and was also influenced by Pere Poré. He joined the staff of the Cours des Aides in 1730, during ", "Lefranc\nChristelle Lefranc (born 1980), French fashion model from Paris, France ; Jean Georges Lefranc de Pompignan (1715–1790), French clergyman and younger brother of Jean-Jacques ; Jean-Jacques Lefranc, Marquis de Pompignan (1709–1784), French jurist, man of letters and gardener ; Jean-Marc Lefranc (born 1947), member of the National Assembly of France ; Victor Lefranc (1809–1883), French lawyer and politician, moderated republican, Minister of Agriculture and Trade, then Interior Minister Lefranc may refer to: ", "Jean-Jacques Lefranc, Marquis de Pompignan\n His marriage with a wealthy widow enabled him to devote himself fully to literature, and also funded his campaign for a seat in the Académie française, which was achieved in 1759. However, on his formal induction into the Academie in 1760, he made an ill-considered speech violently attacking the Encyclopaedists, many of whom were in his audience and had voted for him. Lefranc soon had reason to repent of his action, for the epigrams and stories circulated by those he had attacked made it difficult for him to remain in Paris, and he returned to his native town, where he spent the rest of his life gardening, writing poetry and translating from the classics. Jean-François de la Harpe, who is severe enough on Lefranc in his correspondence, does his abilities full justice in his Cours littéraire, and ranks him next to JB Rousseau among French lyric poets. With those of other 18th-century poets his works may be studied in the Petits poètes français (1838) of Prosper Poitevin. His Œuvres complètes (5 vols.) were published in 1781, selections (2 vols.) in 1800, 1813, 1822.", "Jean Georges Lefranc de Pompignan\n Jean Georges Lefranc de Pompignan (22 February 1715 in Montauban – 29 December 1790 in Paris) was a French clergyman, younger brother of Jean-Jacques Lefranc, Marquis de Pompignan. Pompignan was the archbishop of Vienne against whose defense of the faith Voltaire launched the good-natured mockery of Les Lettres d'un Quaker. Elected to the Estates General, he passed over to the Liberal side, and led the 149 members of the clergy who united with the third estate to form the National Assembly. He was one of its first presidents, and was minister of public worship when the Civil Constitution of the Clergy was forced upon the clergy.", "Jean-Jacques Lefranc, Marquis de Pompignan\n Jean-Jaques' younger brother, Jean Georges Lefranc de Pompignan, rose through the hierarchy to become Archbishop of Vienne and a favourite of the king, whose eulogy he delivered. Pompignan was also the alleged biological father of the French suffragist and playwright Olympe de Gouges (1748-1793).", "Jean-Jacques Lefranc, Marquis de Pompignan\n Lefranc de Pompignan nearby). At the same time, lands were purchased at Pompignan (some 20 km to the southwest of Montauban) to provide a convenient rural retreat. Jean-Jacques' father, Jacques Lefranc, was the third of the name to become president of the Cour des Aides, and he was to be followed by his eldest son and grandson. The family retained the seat at Cayx, and the beautifully sited old chateau was where Jean-Jacques and his brother were reared; as a young man he styled himself Lefranc de Caix. His mother, born Mademoiselle de Caulet, was of the same millieu, her father serving as a \"president of the morter\" - a judicial rank - ", "Château de Pompignan\n is, of a marquis). His son, Jean-Georges-Louis-Lefranc de Pompignan (1760–1840) inherited the chateau and the marquisate on the death of his father in 1784. John Stuart Mill, the English thinker and politician, began a formative year visiting France at the age of 14 with a two-week stay at Pompignan in June 1820. In long letters to his father (who financed the educational trip), the precocious Mill details his extensive reading in the library of the chateau, including almost one work per day by Voltaire, Lefranc's main enemy, without once referring to the marquis' own works. Even by then something of a connoisseur of gardens, he walked in ", "Jean-Jacques Lefranc, Marquis de Pompignan\n presidency of his uncle, the abbé Louis Lefranc, who had succeeded his brother, Jean-Jacques' father Jacques, on the death of the latter in 1719. When Louis died in 1745, Jean-Jacques, who had by then served for fifteen years as a general advocate at the court, although expected to succeed him in turn, was not yet old enough to be awarded the position, and had to wait until early 1747 to take over its presidency. The same year he was also appointed conseiller d'honneur of the Toulouse parlement, but his opposition to the abuses of the royal power, especially in the matter of taxation, brought him so much trouble that he resigned almost immediately.", "Jean-Jacques Lefranc, Marquis de Pompignan\n The Lefranc family were originally landlords of the Château de Cayx (or see Château de Caïx on French Wiki, which gives more detail), overlooking a bend on the Lot some 12 km northwest of Cahors. Successive Lefrancs had served since 1640 as hereditary presidents of the regional Cours des Aides, which was located in Cahors. When Louis XIV ordered the court to be moved to Montauban (some 60 km south of Cahors over difficult roads), during the presidency of Jacques Lefranc in the early years of the 18th century, the family built a town house in Montauban as their local residence. It still stands impressively today at 10 rue Armand Cambon (there is a ", "Château de Pompignan\n the garden project, and major structural elements were put in place between 1766 and 1774. It was finally judged complete by its author (who was then 71 years old) in 1780, 35 years after he had started. Jean-Georges-Louis-Marie Lefranc de Pompignan (1760–1840), son of the builder, inherited the estate on the death of his father in 1784. Like his father, he too married well, and was in a position to attend to his country estates. It appears as if he also commissioned works in the park, and it is not possible at present to distinguish which Lefranc was responsible for which part of the garden.", "Olympe de Gouges\n credible. The Pompignan family had longstanding close ties to the Mouisset family of Marie Gouze's mother, Anne. When Anne was born in 1712, the eldest Pompignan son, Jean-Jacques Lefranc de Pompignan (age five), was her godfather. Anne's father tutored him as he grew. During their childhoods, Pompignan became close to Anne, but was separated from her in 1734 when he was sent to Paris. Anne married Pierre Gouze, a butcher, in 1737 and had three children before Marie, a son and two girls. Pompignan returned to Montauban in 1747, the year before Marie's birth. Pierre was legally recognized as Marie's father. ", "Jean-Jacques Lefranc, Marquis de Pompignan\n His library of some 25,000 volumes was sold after his death by his son, and became founding collections for no less than three learned institution in Toulouse. He built a neo-classical chateau at Pompignan, and over a period of thirty-five years created one of the earliest and most extensive parcs à fabriques (or French landscape garden). The chateau stands in good order today, and although the park and its follies have been neglected, the extensive hydrological system still functions. In May 2011 the decision was taken to route the planned Bordeaux-Toulouse TGV and high-speed freight rail lines through the center of the Lefranc's landscape park.", "Jean-Jacques Lefranc, Marquis de Pompignan\n contributions to the counter-Enlightenment tendencies that were being articulated in parallel, he remains, in many respects, the typical Enlightenment man. The prolific volumes of literary works are now of academic interest only, mainly to flesh out aspects of the culture of the time, which embraced a period in which tensions that were to explode in the French Revolution five years after his death were still held in check. Lefranc is remembered today, if he is at all, as a consequence of the maiden speech he gave at the Académie française in 1760, which led to him becoming forever known and defined as \"the enemy of ", "1709 in France\n7 February – Charles de Brosses, writer (died 1777) ; 24 February – Jacques de Vaucanson, engineer and inventor (died 1782) ; 14 April – Charles Collé, dramatist (died 1783) ; 7 August – Jean-Jacques Lefranc, Marquis de Pompignan, polymath (died 1784) ; 29 August – Jean-Baptiste-Louis Gresset, poet and dramatist (died 1777) ; 3 September – Joan Claudi Peiròt, Occitan writer (died 1795) ; 23 November – Julien Offray de La Mettrie, physician and philosopher (died 1751) ; Full date missing – Jean Girardet, painter of portrait miniatures (died 1778) ", "Jean-Jacques Lefranc, Marquis de Pompignan\n Beginning in 1745, Lefranc rebuilt the manor house at Pompignan as the present neoclassical Chateau de Pompignan, and over a period of thirty-five years created a very extensive landscape garden, containing many follies, or architectural constructions to enhance the natural and created landscape. These included ruined temples, a gothic bridge, pleasure houses, and an extensive hydraulic and reservoir system which managed a lake and fishpond, streams, fountains and the water for the house.", "Abel Lefranc\n Lefranc was born in Élincourt-Sainte-Marguerite. After studying at the École Nationale des Chartes, where he wrote a thesis on the history and organization of the town of Noyon until the end of the 13th century (1886). He left to study in Leipzig and Berlin (1887), where he prepared a report on the teaching of history in Germany, which he believed to be the most advanced in the world.", "1784 in France\n29 January – Abbé François Blanchet, intellectual (born 1707) ; 15 February – Pierre Macquer, chemist (born 1718) ; 7 March – Jean-Baptiste-Louis-Théodore de Tschudi, botanist and poet (born 1734) ; 30 March – Emmanuel de Croÿ-Solre, military officer (born 1718) ; 30 July – Denis Diderot, philosopher (born 1713). ; 1 September – Jean-François Séguier, botanist and astronomer (born 1703) ; 1 November – Jean-Jacques Lefranc, Marquis de Pompignan, man of letters and erudition (born 1709) ", "Château de Pompignan\n began his association with the Cours des Aides in 1730, and took over its presidency in 1747. He began working on the chateau in 1745, a project that was to take 35 years to complete. His marriage to a rich and ambitious widow in 1757 obviated the need to work for the state, and she encouraged his literary and paid for his architectural projects. Jean-Jacques Lefranc was elevated to the marquisate by royal appointment, for services rendered (in defending monarchical and ecclesiastical powers against opposition generated by the Encyclopédistes) in 1763, and from this point his garden began to get recognition as a proper parc du chateau ", "Jacques de Juigné\n Le Clerc de Juigné was born on 16 February 1874 in Paris, France." ]
In what country is Eshkevar-e Sofla Rural District?
[ "Iran", "Islamic Republic of Iran", "Persia", "ir", "Islamic Rep. Iran", "🇮🇷" ]
country
Eshkevar-e Sofla Rural District
707,881
46
[ { "id": "4534750", "title": "Sofla Rural District (Isfahan Province)", "text": " Sofla Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in Zavareh District, Ardestan County, Isfahan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 784, in 330 families. The rural district has 22 villages.", "score": "1.8016771" }, { "id": "11842255", "title": "Fishvar Rural District", "text": " Fishvar Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in Central District, Evaz County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population (including Fishvar, which was subsequently detached from the rural district and promoted to city status) was 5,920, in 1,046 families; excluding Fishvar, the population (as of 2006) was 719, in 126 families. The rural district has 6 villages.", "score": "1.6737071" }, { "id": "11482016", "title": "Sofla Rural District (Fars Province)", "text": " Sofla Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in the Central District of Kharameh County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 6,618, in 1,611 families. The rural district has 17 villages.", "score": "1.6603501" }, { "id": "10387168", "title": "Kavar Rural District", "text": " Kavar Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in the Central District of Kavar County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 23,118, in 4,982 families. The rural district has 19 villages.", "score": "1.6421804" }, { "id": "918048", "title": "Qasabeh-ye Gharbi Rural District", "text": " Qasabeh-ye Gharbi Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in the Central District of Sabzevar County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 8,701, in 2,589 families. The rural district has 24 villages.", "score": "1.6136045" }, { "id": "9737786", "title": "Esfarvarin District", "text": " Esfarvarin District is a district (bakhsh) in Takestan County, Qazvin Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 28,845, in 6,583 families. The District has one city: Esfarvarin. The District has two rural districts (dehestan): Ak Rural District and Khorramabad Rural District.", "score": "1.6132374" }, { "id": "918049", "title": "Qasabeh-ye Sharqi Rural District", "text": " Qasabeh-ye Sharqi Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in the Central District of Sabzevar County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 7,664, in 2,129 families. The rural district has 17 villages.", "score": "1.6089956" }, { "id": "10387167", "title": "Farmeshkhan Rural District", "text": " Farmeshkhan Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in the Central District of Kavar County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 6,300, in 1,429 families. The rural district has 14 villages.", "score": "1.6087456" }, { "id": "7713098", "title": "Esfarjan Rural District", "text": " Esfarjan Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in the Central District of Shahreza County, Isfahan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 6,760, in 1,934 families. The rural district has 5 villages.", "score": "1.6030822" }, { "id": "12652909", "title": "Keshavarz Rural District", "text": " Keshavarz Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in Keshavarz District, Shahin Dezh County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 11,179, in 2,516 families. The rural district has 22 villages.", "score": "1.5935019" }, { "id": "918037", "title": "Karrab Rural District", "text": " Karrab Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in the Central District of Sabzevar County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 3,335, in 1,106 families. The rural district has 9 villages.", "score": "1.5916241" }, { "id": "11683312", "title": "Eshkanan Rural District", "text": " Eshkanan Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in Eshkanan District, Lamerd County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 3,813, in 829 families. The rural district has 16 villages.", "score": "1.5888777" }, { "id": "7339189", "title": "Eypak Rural District", "text": " Eypak Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in the Central District of Eshtehard County, Alborz Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,174, in 284 families. The rural district has 5 villages.", "score": "1.5880934" }, { "id": "32998725", "title": "Keshvar Rural District", "text": " Keshvar Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in Papi District, Khorramabad County, Lorestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,873, in 418 families. The rural district has 43 villages.", "score": "1.5873954" }, { "id": "6923977", "title": "Central District (Sabzevar County)", "text": " The Central District of Sabzevar County is a district (bakhsh) in Sabzevar County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 233,744, in 64,532 families. The District has one city: Sabzevar. The District has four rural districts (dehestan): Karrab Rural District, Qasabeh-ye Gharbi Rural District, Qasabeh-ye Sharqi Rural District, and Robat Rural District.", "score": "1.5770313" }, { "id": "12530292", "title": "Ramjerd-e Yek Rural District", "text": " Ramjerd-e Yek Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in the Central District of Marvdasht County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 10,138, in 2,254 families. The rural district has 22 villages.", "score": "1.5721874" }, { "id": "10387161", "title": "Central District (Kavar County)", "text": " The Central District of Kavar County is a district (bakhsh) in Kavar County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 72,423, in 15,570 families. The District has one city: Kavar. The District has three rural districts (dehestan): Farmeshkhan Rural District, Kavar Rural District, and Tasuj Rural District.", "score": "1.5648799" }, { "id": "9717241", "title": "Il Gavark Rural District", "text": " Il Gavark Rural District or Gawerk is a rural district (dehestan) in the Central District of Bukan County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 5,798, in 919 families. The rural district has 22 villages that is homeland of Gawerk tribe.", "score": "1.5645566" }, { "id": "6738098", "title": "Biabanak Rural District", "text": " Biabanak Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in the Central District of Khur and Biabanak County, Isfahan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population (including Farrokhi, which was subsequently detached from the rural district and promoted to city status) was 4,710, in 1,219 families; excluding Farrokhi, the population (as of 2006) was 1,995, in 551 families. The rural district has 16 villages.", "score": "1.5645392" }, { "id": "4534741", "title": "Rigestan Rural District", "text": " Rigestan Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in Zavareh District, Ardestan County, Isfahan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 4,157, in 1,102 families. The rural district has 25 villages.", "score": "1.561377" } ]
[ "Sofla Rural District (Isfahan Province)\n Sofla Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in Zavareh District, Ardestan County, Isfahan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 784, in 330 families. The rural district has 22 villages.", "Fishvar Rural District\n Fishvar Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in Central District, Evaz County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population (including Fishvar, which was subsequently detached from the rural district and promoted to city status) was 5,920, in 1,046 families; excluding Fishvar, the population (as of 2006) was 719, in 126 families. The rural district has 6 villages.", "Sofla Rural District (Fars Province)\n Sofla Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in the Central District of Kharameh County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 6,618, in 1,611 families. The rural district has 17 villages.", "Kavar Rural District\n Kavar Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in the Central District of Kavar County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 23,118, in 4,982 families. The rural district has 19 villages.", "Qasabeh-ye Gharbi Rural District\n Qasabeh-ye Gharbi Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in the Central District of Sabzevar County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 8,701, in 2,589 families. The rural district has 24 villages.", "Esfarvarin District\n Esfarvarin District is a district (bakhsh) in Takestan County, Qazvin Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 28,845, in 6,583 families. The District has one city: Esfarvarin. The District has two rural districts (dehestan): Ak Rural District and Khorramabad Rural District.", "Qasabeh-ye Sharqi Rural District\n Qasabeh-ye Sharqi Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in the Central District of Sabzevar County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 7,664, in 2,129 families. The rural district has 17 villages.", "Farmeshkhan Rural District\n Farmeshkhan Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in the Central District of Kavar County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 6,300, in 1,429 families. The rural district has 14 villages.", "Esfarjan Rural District\n Esfarjan Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in the Central District of Shahreza County, Isfahan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 6,760, in 1,934 families. The rural district has 5 villages.", "Keshavarz Rural District\n Keshavarz Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in Keshavarz District, Shahin Dezh County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 11,179, in 2,516 families. The rural district has 22 villages.", "Karrab Rural District\n Karrab Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in the Central District of Sabzevar County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 3,335, in 1,106 families. The rural district has 9 villages.", "Eshkanan Rural District\n Eshkanan Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in Eshkanan District, Lamerd County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 3,813, in 829 families. The rural district has 16 villages.", "Eypak Rural District\n Eypak Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in the Central District of Eshtehard County, Alborz Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,174, in 284 families. The rural district has 5 villages.", "Keshvar Rural District\n Keshvar Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in Papi District, Khorramabad County, Lorestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,873, in 418 families. The rural district has 43 villages.", "Central District (Sabzevar County)\n The Central District of Sabzevar County is a district (bakhsh) in Sabzevar County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 233,744, in 64,532 families. The District has one city: Sabzevar. The District has four rural districts (dehestan): Karrab Rural District, Qasabeh-ye Gharbi Rural District, Qasabeh-ye Sharqi Rural District, and Robat Rural District.", "Ramjerd-e Yek Rural District\n Ramjerd-e Yek Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in the Central District of Marvdasht County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 10,138, in 2,254 families. The rural district has 22 villages.", "Central District (Kavar County)\n The Central District of Kavar County is a district (bakhsh) in Kavar County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 72,423, in 15,570 families. The District has one city: Kavar. The District has three rural districts (dehestan): Farmeshkhan Rural District, Kavar Rural District, and Tasuj Rural District.", "Il Gavark Rural District\n Il Gavark Rural District or Gawerk is a rural district (dehestan) in the Central District of Bukan County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 5,798, in 919 families. The rural district has 22 villages that is homeland of Gawerk tribe.", "Biabanak Rural District\n Biabanak Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in the Central District of Khur and Biabanak County, Isfahan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population (including Farrokhi, which was subsequently detached from the rural district and promoted to city status) was 4,710, in 1,219 families; excluding Farrokhi, the population (as of 2006) was 1,995, in 551 families. The rural district has 16 villages.", "Rigestan Rural District\n Rigestan Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in Zavareh District, Ardestan County, Isfahan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 4,157, in 1,102 families. The rural district has 25 villages." ]
What is the capital of Saanen District?
[ "Saanen" ]
capital
Saanen District
5,006,891
48
[ { "id": "27773510", "title": "Saanen", "text": " Saanen (Gessenay) is a municipality in the canton of Bern in Switzerland. It is the capital of the Obersimmental-Saanen administrative district.", "score": "1.6955031" }, { "id": "26801045", "title": "Saanen District", "text": " Saanen District was one of the 26 administrative districts in the canton of Bern, Switzerland. Its capital was the municipality of Saanen. The district had an area of 241 km² and consisted of 3 municipalities:", "score": "1.6903007" }, { "id": "27773534", "title": "Saanen", "text": " Saanen is twinned with:", "score": "1.6858095" }, { "id": "27773522", "title": "Saanen", "text": " Saanen has a population of. , 24.6% of the population are resident foreign nationals. Over the last 10 years (2000–2010) the population has changed at a rate of 5.4%. Migration accounted for 6.1%, while births and deaths accounted for 1.4%. Most of the population speaks German (5,676 or 82.1%) as their first language, French is the second most common (247 or 3.6%) and Portuguese is the third (239 or 3.5%). There are 120 people who speak Italian and 5 people who speak Romansh. , the population was 50.2% male and 49.8% female. The population was made up of 2,584 Swiss men (37.2% of the population) and 906 ", "score": "1.6494031" }, { "id": "27773520", "title": "Saanen", "text": " Saanen has an area of. Of this area, 61.4 km2 or 51.3% is used for agricultural purposes, while 42.21 km2 or 35.3% is forested. Of the rest of the land, 5.46 km2 or 4.6% is settled (buildings or roads), 0.68 km2 or 0.6% is either rivers or lakes and 9.99 km2 or 8.3% is unproductive land. Of the built up area, housing and buildings made up 2.4% and transportation infrastructure made up 1.4%. Out of the forested land, 27.6% of the total land area is heavily forested and 5.5% is covered with orchards or small clusters of trees. Of the agricultural land, 15.3% is pastures and 35.9% is used for alpine pastures. All the water in the municipality is flowing water. Of the unproductive areas, 4.8% is unproductive vegetation and 3.5% is too rocky for vegetation. The municipality is located in the upper Saane valley. It consists of the economic center and district capital, the village of Saanen along with the villages of Gstaad, Abländschen, Bissen, Ebnit, Gruben, Grund, Kalberhöni, Saanen, Saanenmöser, Schönried, and Turbach.", "score": "1.5674756" }, { "id": "27773524", "title": "Saanen", "text": " were 3,147 married individuals, 390 widows or widowers and 273 individuals who are divorced. , there were 2,660 private households in the municipality, and an average of 2.3 persons per household. There were 1,006 households that consist of only one person and 205 households with five or more people. , a total of 2,446 apartments (48.8% of the total) were permanently occupied, while 2,325 apartments (46.4%) were seasonally occupied and 242 apartments (4.8%) were empty. , the construction rate of new housing units was 5.4 new units per 1000 residents. The vacancy rate for the municipality,, was 1.48%. The historical population is given in the following chart:", "score": "1.565327" }, { "id": "27773526", "title": "Saanen", "text": " In the 2007 federal election the most popular party was the SVP which received 54.58% of the vote. The next three most popular parties were the FDP (17.06%), the SPS (8.03%) and the Green Party (5.92%). In the federal election, a total of 2,084 votes were cast, and the voter turnout was 48.8%.", "score": "1.5559163" }, { "id": "27773527", "title": "Saanen", "text": " , Saanen had an unemployment rate of 1.8%. , there were 491 people employed in the primary economic sector and about 202 businesses involved in this sector. 1,199 people were employed in the secondary sector and there were 110 businesses in this sector. 3,969 people were employed in the tertiary sector, with 414 businesses in this sector. the total number of full-time equivalent jobs was 4,852. The number of jobs in the primary sector was 298, of which 290 were in agriculture and 8 were in forestry or lumber production. The number of jobs in the secondary sector was 1,117 of which 188 or (16.8%) were in manufacturing and 891 (79.8%) were in construction. The number of jobs in the tertiary sector was 3,437. In the tertiary ", "score": "1.4969695" }, { "id": "27773517", "title": "Saanen", "text": " suffered, but it has expanded since 1945. Between the wars, a small weaving industry developed which helped support the municipality. After the war a number of small local industries also developed in the area. The major employer at the beginning of the 21st century was Bergbahnen Destination Gstaad AG, a company that brings together more than 60 different cable cars and lifts in the region. There are 11 school buildings in Saanen, including a secondary school, which was first built in 1867. The Businessmen's Vocational School opened in 1908 and is now the Saanenland-Obersimmental business school, which is part of the Thun business school. The District Hospital opened in 1905.", "score": "1.4925754" }, { "id": "27773523", "title": "Saanen", "text": " non-Swiss men. There were 2,661 Swiss women (38.3%) and 804 (11.6%) non-Swiss women. Of the population in the municipality, 3,000 or about 43.4% were born in Saanen and lived there in 2000. There were 1,267 or 18.3% who were born in the same canton, while 842 or 12.2% were born somewhere else in Switzerland, and 1,392 or 20.1% were born outside of Switzerland. , children and teenagers (0–19 years old) make up 24.3% of the population, while adults (20–64 years old) make up 60.3% and seniors (over 64 years old) make up 15.4%. , there were 3,104 people who were single and never married in the municipality. ", "score": "1.4901483" }, { "id": "27773514", "title": "Saanen", "text": " surrounding district enjoyed a great deal of independence during the 16th century. However, in 1555 the last Count of Gruyère lost the entire district to Bern when his county went bankrupt. Bern took over the entire valley in the following year and introduced the Protestant Reformation. The Bernese bailiff administered the districts of Gessenay (Saanen) and Pays-d'Enhaut until the great fire of 1575 which destroyed much of the town. The bailiff then moved to the former monastery of Mont Rouge. The district covered eleven separate Bäuerten or agricultural collectives or farming villages and the towns of Saanen and Gstaad. The main sources of income were seasonal alpine herding, forestry and providing ", "score": "1.4820998" }, { "id": "27773515", "title": "Saanen", "text": " and extra oxen for wagon trains coming over the mule trails. Saanen was the market town for the surrounding villages, with weekly and yearly markets in the town. There were two taverns in Saanen for merchants and travelers. The village church of St. Mauritius was built in 1228. It was expanded in 1444-47 and the wall paintings are from the second half of the 15th century. Other churches in the area included the St. Anna chapel, built in 1511, the St. John's chapel and the Plague chapel. The parish was administered by a group of five or six priests and chaplains. Until the 1798 French invasion, the Pays-d'Enhaut and Saanen districts ", "score": "1.4628931" }, { "id": "31636960", "title": "Obersimmental-Saanen (administrative district)", "text": " Obersimmental-Saanen District in the Canton of Bern was created on 1 January 2010. It is part of the Oberland administrative region. It contains 7 municipalities with an area of 574.88 km2 and a population of 16,784.", "score": "1.4604924" }, { "id": "27773525", "title": "Saanen", "text": " The Alte Kastlanei and the Church are listed as Swiss heritage site of national significance. The entire village of Saanen is part of the Inventory of Swiss Heritage Sites.", "score": "1.4570892" }, { "id": "27773519", "title": "Saanen", "text": " Abländschen is a small hamlet in the upper Jaun valley. It is the only Bernese settlement in the otherwise Fribourg valley. Its population was 52 in 1990, down from a peak of 132 in 1888. The area was transferred in 1555 along with the rest of the Saanen parish from the Counts of Gruyere to Bern. Abländschen has always been hard to reach from Saanen and even today it can only be reached by a road from Boltigen over the Jaun Pass. Agriculture is still important to this day and is still the most important source of income. About one-third of the farms have a home farm, a spring pasture and alpine shelters. However, almost all farmers also have a second job either in forestry, tourism or as commuters to another town for weekday work.", "score": "1.4466597" }, { "id": "27773511", "title": "Saanen", "text": " Saanen is first mentioned in 1228 as Gissinay. In 1340 it was mentioned as Sanon. During the Bronze Age there was a hill fort on the Cholis Grind near the modern village of Saanen. The region was occupied by the Gallo-Romans until the 10th or 11th century when the Alamanni began to drive them out. This migration created the modern language borders in Switzerland. During the Middle Ages several forts were built to guard the mule trails into the Valais and Vaud. These included the Kramburg (which was first mentioned in 1331 but is now covered by later construction), the Swabia Ried tower (11th-12th century) and the Schönried tower (remains are ", "score": "1.4447727" }, { "id": "27773516", "title": "Saanen", "text": " jointly administered. Under the Helvetic Republic, Pays-d'Enhaut became part of the Canton of Léman while Saanen and the rest of the district became part of the Canton of Oberland. When the Helvetic Republic collapsed in 1803, Saanen and its district became a district in the new Canton of Bern. In 1833, Saanen became a political municipality. In 1845 the Zweisimmen-Saanen road replaced the old mule trail and the town got postal service. Around 1900, tourism began to grow in Saanen and Gstaad and new hotels opened. The opening of the Montreux-Oberland Bernois rail road in 1905, made it easier for tourists to visit. During both World Wars, the tourism industry in ", "score": "1.4343184" }, { "id": "27773528", "title": "Saanen", "text": " 907 or 26.4% were in wholesale or retail sales or the repair of motor vehicles, 212 or 6.2% were in the movement and storage of goods, 1,156 or 33.6% were in a hotel or restaurant, 12 or 0.3% were in the information industry, 95 or 2.8% were the insurance or financial industry, 192 or 5.6% were technical professionals or scientists, 108 or 3.1% were in education and 235 or 6.8% were in health care. , there were 1,013 workers who commuted into the municipality and 256 workers who commuted away. The municipality is a net importer of workers, with about 4.0 workers entering the municipality for every one leaving. Of the working population, 5.7% used public transportation to get to work, and 44.3% used a private car.", "score": "1.4252727" }, { "id": "27773521", "title": "Saanen", "text": " The blazon of the municipal coat of arms is Gules a Crane rising Argent beaked and membered Or on a Mount of 3 Coupeaux of the second.", "score": "1.4193828" }, { "id": "27773531", "title": "Saanen", "text": " with a total of 109 students in the municipality. Of the kindergarten students, 27.5% were permanent or temporary residents of Switzerland (not citizens) and 29.4% have a different mother language than the classroom language. The municipality had 17 primary classes and 335 students. Of the primary students, 13.1% were permanent or temporary residents of Switzerland (not citizens) and 18.5% have a different mother language than the classroom language. During the same year, there were 16 lower secondary classes with a total of 228 students. There were 10.1% who were permanent or temporary residents of Switzerland (not citizens) and 14.9% have a different mother language than the classroom language. , there were 238 students in Saanen who came from another municipality, while 51 residents attended schools outside the municipality.", "score": "1.4106317" } ]
[ "Saanen\n Saanen (Gessenay) is a municipality in the canton of Bern in Switzerland. It is the capital of the Obersimmental-Saanen administrative district.", "Saanen District\n Saanen District was one of the 26 administrative districts in the canton of Bern, Switzerland. Its capital was the municipality of Saanen. The district had an area of 241 km² and consisted of 3 municipalities:", "Saanen\n Saanen is twinned with:", "Saanen\n Saanen has a population of. , 24.6% of the population are resident foreign nationals. Over the last 10 years (2000–2010) the population has changed at a rate of 5.4%. Migration accounted for 6.1%, while births and deaths accounted for 1.4%. Most of the population speaks German (5,676 or 82.1%) as their first language, French is the second most common (247 or 3.6%) and Portuguese is the third (239 or 3.5%). There are 120 people who speak Italian and 5 people who speak Romansh. , the population was 50.2% male and 49.8% female. The population was made up of 2,584 Swiss men (37.2% of the population) and 906 ", "Saanen\n Saanen has an area of. Of this area, 61.4 km2 or 51.3% is used for agricultural purposes, while 42.21 km2 or 35.3% is forested. Of the rest of the land, 5.46 km2 or 4.6% is settled (buildings or roads), 0.68 km2 or 0.6% is either rivers or lakes and 9.99 km2 or 8.3% is unproductive land. Of the built up area, housing and buildings made up 2.4% and transportation infrastructure made up 1.4%. Out of the forested land, 27.6% of the total land area is heavily forested and 5.5% is covered with orchards or small clusters of trees. Of the agricultural land, 15.3% is pastures and 35.9% is used for alpine pastures. All the water in the municipality is flowing water. Of the unproductive areas, 4.8% is unproductive vegetation and 3.5% is too rocky for vegetation. The municipality is located in the upper Saane valley. It consists of the economic center and district capital, the village of Saanen along with the villages of Gstaad, Abländschen, Bissen, Ebnit, Gruben, Grund, Kalberhöni, Saanen, Saanenmöser, Schönried, and Turbach.", "Saanen\n were 3,147 married individuals, 390 widows or widowers and 273 individuals who are divorced. , there were 2,660 private households in the municipality, and an average of 2.3 persons per household. There were 1,006 households that consist of only one person and 205 households with five or more people. , a total of 2,446 apartments (48.8% of the total) were permanently occupied, while 2,325 apartments (46.4%) were seasonally occupied and 242 apartments (4.8%) were empty. , the construction rate of new housing units was 5.4 new units per 1000 residents. The vacancy rate for the municipality,, was 1.48%. The historical population is given in the following chart:", "Saanen\n In the 2007 federal election the most popular party was the SVP which received 54.58% of the vote. The next three most popular parties were the FDP (17.06%), the SPS (8.03%) and the Green Party (5.92%). In the federal election, a total of 2,084 votes were cast, and the voter turnout was 48.8%.", "Saanen\n , Saanen had an unemployment rate of 1.8%. , there were 491 people employed in the primary economic sector and about 202 businesses involved in this sector. 1,199 people were employed in the secondary sector and there were 110 businesses in this sector. 3,969 people were employed in the tertiary sector, with 414 businesses in this sector. the total number of full-time equivalent jobs was 4,852. The number of jobs in the primary sector was 298, of which 290 were in agriculture and 8 were in forestry or lumber production. The number of jobs in the secondary sector was 1,117 of which 188 or (16.8%) were in manufacturing and 891 (79.8%) were in construction. The number of jobs in the tertiary sector was 3,437. In the tertiary ", "Saanen\n suffered, but it has expanded since 1945. Between the wars, a small weaving industry developed which helped support the municipality. After the war a number of small local industries also developed in the area. The major employer at the beginning of the 21st century was Bergbahnen Destination Gstaad AG, a company that brings together more than 60 different cable cars and lifts in the region. There are 11 school buildings in Saanen, including a secondary school, which was first built in 1867. The Businessmen's Vocational School opened in 1908 and is now the Saanenland-Obersimmental business school, which is part of the Thun business school. The District Hospital opened in 1905.", "Saanen\n non-Swiss men. There were 2,661 Swiss women (38.3%) and 804 (11.6%) non-Swiss women. Of the population in the municipality, 3,000 or about 43.4% were born in Saanen and lived there in 2000. There were 1,267 or 18.3% who were born in the same canton, while 842 or 12.2% were born somewhere else in Switzerland, and 1,392 or 20.1% were born outside of Switzerland. , children and teenagers (0–19 years old) make up 24.3% of the population, while adults (20–64 years old) make up 60.3% and seniors (over 64 years old) make up 15.4%. , there were 3,104 people who were single and never married in the municipality. ", "Saanen\n surrounding district enjoyed a great deal of independence during the 16th century. However, in 1555 the last Count of Gruyère lost the entire district to Bern when his county went bankrupt. Bern took over the entire valley in the following year and introduced the Protestant Reformation. The Bernese bailiff administered the districts of Gessenay (Saanen) and Pays-d'Enhaut until the great fire of 1575 which destroyed much of the town. The bailiff then moved to the former monastery of Mont Rouge. The district covered eleven separate Bäuerten or agricultural collectives or farming villages and the towns of Saanen and Gstaad. The main sources of income were seasonal alpine herding, forestry and providing ", "Saanen\n and extra oxen for wagon trains coming over the mule trails. Saanen was the market town for the surrounding villages, with weekly and yearly markets in the town. There were two taverns in Saanen for merchants and travelers. The village church of St. Mauritius was built in 1228. It was expanded in 1444-47 and the wall paintings are from the second half of the 15th century. Other churches in the area included the St. Anna chapel, built in 1511, the St. John's chapel and the Plague chapel. The parish was administered by a group of five or six priests and chaplains. Until the 1798 French invasion, the Pays-d'Enhaut and Saanen districts ", "Obersimmental-Saanen (administrative district)\n Obersimmental-Saanen District in the Canton of Bern was created on 1 January 2010. It is part of the Oberland administrative region. It contains 7 municipalities with an area of 574.88 km2 and a population of 16,784.", "Saanen\n The Alte Kastlanei and the Church are listed as Swiss heritage site of national significance. The entire village of Saanen is part of the Inventory of Swiss Heritage Sites.", "Saanen\n Abländschen is a small hamlet in the upper Jaun valley. It is the only Bernese settlement in the otherwise Fribourg valley. Its population was 52 in 1990, down from a peak of 132 in 1888. The area was transferred in 1555 along with the rest of the Saanen parish from the Counts of Gruyere to Bern. Abländschen has always been hard to reach from Saanen and even today it can only be reached by a road from Boltigen over the Jaun Pass. Agriculture is still important to this day and is still the most important source of income. About one-third of the farms have a home farm, a spring pasture and alpine shelters. However, almost all farmers also have a second job either in forestry, tourism or as commuters to another town for weekday work.", "Saanen\n Saanen is first mentioned in 1228 as Gissinay. In 1340 it was mentioned as Sanon. During the Bronze Age there was a hill fort on the Cholis Grind near the modern village of Saanen. The region was occupied by the Gallo-Romans until the 10th or 11th century when the Alamanni began to drive them out. This migration created the modern language borders in Switzerland. During the Middle Ages several forts were built to guard the mule trails into the Valais and Vaud. These included the Kramburg (which was first mentioned in 1331 but is now covered by later construction), the Swabia Ried tower (11th-12th century) and the Schönried tower (remains are ", "Saanen\n jointly administered. Under the Helvetic Republic, Pays-d'Enhaut became part of the Canton of Léman while Saanen and the rest of the district became part of the Canton of Oberland. When the Helvetic Republic collapsed in 1803, Saanen and its district became a district in the new Canton of Bern. In 1833, Saanen became a political municipality. In 1845 the Zweisimmen-Saanen road replaced the old mule trail and the town got postal service. Around 1900, tourism began to grow in Saanen and Gstaad and new hotels opened. The opening of the Montreux-Oberland Bernois rail road in 1905, made it easier for tourists to visit. During both World Wars, the tourism industry in ", "Saanen\n 907 or 26.4% were in wholesale or retail sales or the repair of motor vehicles, 212 or 6.2% were in the movement and storage of goods, 1,156 or 33.6% were in a hotel or restaurant, 12 or 0.3% were in the information industry, 95 or 2.8% were the insurance or financial industry, 192 or 5.6% were technical professionals or scientists, 108 or 3.1% were in education and 235 or 6.8% were in health care. , there were 1,013 workers who commuted into the municipality and 256 workers who commuted away. The municipality is a net importer of workers, with about 4.0 workers entering the municipality for every one leaving. Of the working population, 5.7% used public transportation to get to work, and 44.3% used a private car.", "Saanen\n The blazon of the municipal coat of arms is Gules a Crane rising Argent beaked and membered Or on a Mount of 3 Coupeaux of the second.", "Saanen\n with a total of 109 students in the municipality. Of the kindergarten students, 27.5% were permanent or temporary residents of Switzerland (not citizens) and 29.4% have a different mother language than the classroom language. The municipality had 17 primary classes and 335 students. Of the primary students, 13.1% were permanent or temporary residents of Switzerland (not citizens) and 18.5% have a different mother language than the classroom language. During the same year, there were 16 lower secondary classes with a total of 228 students. There were 10.1% who were permanent or temporary residents of Switzerland (not citizens) and 14.9% have a different mother language than the classroom language. , there were 238 students in Saanen who came from another municipality, while 51 residents attended schools outside the municipality." ]
In what country is Ježov?
[ "Czech Republic", "CZR", "cz", "Česko", "Česká republika", "ČR", "cze", "CZE", "Czechia" ]
country
Ježov (Hodonín District)
1,791,858
47
[ { "id": "13639123", "title": "Vladimir Kuzov", "text": " Vladimir Parvanov Kuzov (Владимир Първанов Кузов) is a Bulgarian politician. He was an MP in the 40th National Assembly. In early 2009, several months before the end of the mandate of the National Assembly, Kouzov received a suspended sentence for child sexual abuse. and his status as an MP was taken away.", "score": "1.4496222" }, { "id": "28670162", "title": "Dmitry Mazo", "text": " in Kaluga, 1987- 2nd prize ; Administrative center of the municipal settlement of Gzhel, 1988. * In a residential district, in 700 — apartments in Volsk, Russia, 1988. Music Theater in Vologda. Russia. ; Youth Leisure Center in Volsk, Russia. * Renovation of Tate Britain in London - Caro and Hockney exhibitions, the United Kingdom, 1989. ; Master plan of the new town of Tel-Zafit, Israel. ; Conference Center in Haifa, 1990 ; Design of Tel-Zafit districts, Israel, 1991. ; Draft plan of a new town — Tel-Felicia, 1991 * Planning of a residential district in El’ad, 1992 * Competition for governmental buildings in Berlin, Germany, 1993 ; 1994 Master plan ", "score": "1.4449656" }, { "id": "14289678", "title": "Ježovy", "text": " Ježovy is a village and municipality (obec) in Klatovy District in the Plzeň Region of the Czech Republic. The municipality covers an area of 11.47 km2, and has a population of 248 (as at 28 August 2006). In 2019 it was recorded as 243. Ježovy is located approximately 11 km north of Klatovy, 31 km south of Plzeň, and 108 km south-west of Prague.", "score": "1.4402299" }, { "id": "4761223", "title": "Chingiz Allazov", "text": " Chingiz Allazov was born in the village of Jandar in Gardabani district, situated on the border between Georgia and Azerbaijan. His family moved to Minsk, Belarus in 1994. He holds a business degree.", "score": "1.4327061" }, { "id": "11524565", "title": "Kazazov", "text": " Kazazov (Казазов) is a rural locality (a khutor) in Pchegatlukayskoye Rural Settlement of Teuchezhsky District, the Republic of Adygea, Russia. The population was 274 as of 2018. There are 13 streets.", "score": "1.4309943" }, { "id": "28670165", "title": "Dmitry Mazo", "text": " in Jaffa, 2012. ; Book Network Store (concept design), 2012. ; New Central Bus Station, Tel Aviv (concept design), 2012. ; Park of the National Unity and Reconciliation, MO, Russia. ; Expansion of the central exhibition grounds of Tel Aviv, Israel. ; New Central Bus Station of Tel Aviv, Israel. ; Sports center with seating for 300, Moscow, Russia ; Residential, commercial and office buildings, Jaffa, Tel Aviv, Israel. ; Pavilion of the central underground station, Baku, Azerbaijan. ; Entertainment and Game Center of Torzhok, Russia. ; The general plan of Hod HaSharon, Israel. ; Residential areas in Israel, Russia, Ukraine. ; Industrial zones and industrial parks in Israel and Russia. ", "score": "1.4184071" }, { "id": "25304030", "title": "Jehoshua Rozenman", "text": " Jehoshua Rozenman (יהושע רוזנמן, born June 21, 1955 in Tel Aviv, Israel) is a Dutch/Israeli sculptor. Rozenman moved to the Netherlands in 1979 when he was accepted as a student to the Rijksacademie voor Beeldende Kunsten (National Academy of Arts) in Amsterdam. He graduated in 1984, and became a Dutch citizen and then stayed in the Netherlands. Rozenman worked for six years in New York and Amsterdam beginning in 2007. Rozenman relocated to Berlin, Germany in 2013. Rozenman divides his time living and travelling between Germany and the Netherlands. In 2006, he married the Dutch Democrats 66 politician and human rights activist Boris Dittrich.", "score": "1.3931584" }, { "id": "28670164", "title": "Dmitry Mazo", "text": " Israel. ; 2003. Residential district for 7,700 apartments. Hod HaSharon, Israel. ; Synagogue and cultural center in Volgograd, Russia, 2004. * Center of the school district in Ashdod, 2005. ; Design of the central complex of Olympic facilities in Sochi for the Winter Olympics-2014. Russia, 2006. * Complex of the Far Eastern Federal University in Russky island, Vladivostok. The 1st line - APEC Summit facilities - 2008. ; 2009, new above-ground pavilion of «Baksovet» underground station. Baku, Azerbaijan ; The Centre for sports and leisure in Rostov, 2009. ; Museum of music of the Conservatorium in Safed (concept design stage), 2011. ; Construction of residential, commercial and office buildings at Yefet ", "score": "1.3819575" }, { "id": "28430085", "title": "Nikolay Jeliazkov", "text": " Nikolay Jeliazkov or Zheliazkov (Николай Желязков) (born February 26, 1970) is a former Bulgarian male volleyball player and coach. He was part of the Bulgaria men's national volleyball team at the 1994 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Championship and 1996 Summer Olympics. After his retirement he became a volleyball coach. He was coach of Bulgaria men's national volleyball team at the 2015 European Games in Baku, Azerbaijan.", "score": "1.3810674" }, { "id": "12524761", "title": "Daphne jezoensis", "text": " Daphne jezoensis is a shrub, of the family Thymelaeaceae. It is native to northern Japan and parts of eastern Russia. It has been treated as either a subspecies or a variety of Daphne kamtschatica.", "score": "1.3656497" }, { "id": "27805343", "title": "Encho Keryazov", "text": " of other Bulgarian celebrities, which promotes talented young people engaged in science, arts and sports, giving creative and financial support. The Foundation has gained national and international attention, so that the annual awards, held since 2012 in Keryazov's hometown Yambol, where the awards are given to children and young people, are in the presence of the Bulgarian Minister of Foreign Affairs Kristian Vigenin, the Minister of Culture Weschdi Raschidow and ambassadors from Germany and the Netherlands. During the charity gala in January 2015 he gathered high-level international circus artists in Yambol, including the clown David Larible. The preliminary peak of his social commitment is a benefit-gala in Sofia in ", "score": "1.3625519" }, { "id": "14635757", "title": "Shchuchinsk", "text": "🇦🇲 Jermuk, Armenia ", "score": "1.3618681" }, { "id": "2423247", "title": "Lozova railway station", "text": " Lozova (Лозова) is a main hub and a railway junction in East Ukraine. It is the second busiest railway station in Kharkiv Oblast after Kharkiv Railway Station. It is located 156.3 km south of Russia and is a subsidy of Southern Railways an administrative branch of Ukrainian Railways.", "score": "1.3590744" }, { "id": "2031522", "title": "Tzova", "text": " Tzova (צוֹבָה), also Palmach Tzova (פלמ\"ח צובה) or Tzuba is a kibbutz in central Israel. Located in the Judean Hills, on the western outskirts of Jerusalem, it falls under the jurisdiction of Mateh Yehuda Regional Council. In it had a population of.", "score": "1.3589168" }, { "id": "28722886", "title": "Armillaria jezoensis", "text": " Armillaria jezoensis is a species of mushroom in the family Physalacriaceae. Found in Japan, it was described as new to science in 1994.", "score": "1.357504" }, { "id": "33073392", "title": "Ježa", "text": " Ježa is a linear settlement on a terrace above the Sava River east of Črnuče and southeast of the railroad to Kamnik. Most of the houses are along the road to Nadgorica, and a few extend onto the bank towards the plain along the Sava. The soil is sandy, and there are fields to the north and south of the settlement.", "score": "1.3542787" }, { "id": "7295940", "title": "List of Jewish architects", "text": " of the leading architects of Erez Israel and Israel; designed several new Israeli cities, such as Afula and Herzliya. Germany, Erez Israel, Israel ; Nataliya Kazhdan (de) (ru) (Russian: Наталия Абрамовна Каждан) (1941, USSR–2017, Moscow, USSR), was a distinguished Soviet and Russian architect and educator. USSR, Russia ; Yakov Kazhdan (Russian: Яков Шаевич Каждан) (3 February 1922–), is a Soviet and Russian architectural educator. USSR, Russia ; Vladimir Khavin (ru) (Russian: Владимир Иосифович Хавин) (27 July 1931, Moscow, USSR–2005, Moscow, Russia), was a Soviet and Russian architect. USSR, Russia ; Izrail Khazanovsky (ru) (Russian: Израиль Самойлович Хазановский) (1901, Orel, Russian Empire–1985, Kharkiv, USSR), ", "score": "1.3486261" }, { "id": "27401582", "title": "Sergey Chemezov", "text": " LLC. Since 2003, Stanislav Chemezov has been the co-owner (together with Vladimir Artyakov's son, Dmitri) of the Meridian hotel facilities in Gelendzhik. Stanislav Chemezov is the only founder of Interbusinessgroup LLC (ООО «Интербизнесгрупп») which has the shares in several construction companies, Russian Industrial Nanotechnologies («Русские промышленные нанотехнологии»), I.A.D. business industry («И.А.Д. бизнеc индустрия») and shares in Natural and Organic Products LLC (ООО «Натуральные и органические продукты») which is one of several companies clustered around Andrey Dolzhich's (Андрей Должич) Virgin Islands firm Natural and Organic Products, Inc that sells soil improvers to Persian Gulf countries including the soil near Bahrain's Royal Palace which now have palm trees growing in soil improvers from Dolzhich's firm. According to other information accessed in May 2009, Chemezov's second son was studying in a medical institute. His youngest son Sergey was in primary school and his daughter was a graduate student at MGIMO University.", "score": "1.3469806" }, { "id": "12108492", "title": "Jaroměř", "text": " Jaroměř (Jermer) is a town in Náchod District in the Hradec Králové Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 12,000 inhabitants. It is known for the Josefov Fortress. Josefov is well preserved and is protected by law as an urban monument reservation, the town centre of Jaroměř is proceted as an urban monument zone.", "score": "1.3454627" }, { "id": "11524566", "title": "Kazazov", "text": " Kazazov is located 18 km west of Ponezhukay (the district's administrative centre) by road. Adygeysk is the nearest rural locality.", "score": "1.3423235" } ]
[ "Vladimir Kuzov\n Vladimir Parvanov Kuzov (Владимир Първанов Кузов) is a Bulgarian politician. He was an MP in the 40th National Assembly. In early 2009, several months before the end of the mandate of the National Assembly, Kouzov received a suspended sentence for child sexual abuse. and his status as an MP was taken away.", "Dmitry Mazo\n in Kaluga, 1987- 2nd prize ; Administrative center of the municipal settlement of Gzhel, 1988. * In a residential district, in 700 — apartments in Volsk, Russia, 1988. Music Theater in Vologda. Russia. ; Youth Leisure Center in Volsk, Russia. * Renovation of Tate Britain in London - Caro and Hockney exhibitions, the United Kingdom, 1989. ; Master plan of the new town of Tel-Zafit, Israel. ; Conference Center in Haifa, 1990 ; Design of Tel-Zafit districts, Israel, 1991. ; Draft plan of a new town — Tel-Felicia, 1991 * Planning of a residential district in El’ad, 1992 * Competition for governmental buildings in Berlin, Germany, 1993 ; 1994 Master plan ", "Ježovy\n Ježovy is a village and municipality (obec) in Klatovy District in the Plzeň Region of the Czech Republic. The municipality covers an area of 11.47 km2, and has a population of 248 (as at 28 August 2006). In 2019 it was recorded as 243. Ježovy is located approximately 11 km north of Klatovy, 31 km south of Plzeň, and 108 km south-west of Prague.", "Chingiz Allazov\n Chingiz Allazov was born in the village of Jandar in Gardabani district, situated on the border between Georgia and Azerbaijan. His family moved to Minsk, Belarus in 1994. He holds a business degree.", "Kazazov\n Kazazov (Казазов) is a rural locality (a khutor) in Pchegatlukayskoye Rural Settlement of Teuchezhsky District, the Republic of Adygea, Russia. The population was 274 as of 2018. There are 13 streets.", "Dmitry Mazo\n in Jaffa, 2012. ; Book Network Store (concept design), 2012. ; New Central Bus Station, Tel Aviv (concept design), 2012. ; Park of the National Unity and Reconciliation, MO, Russia. ; Expansion of the central exhibition grounds of Tel Aviv, Israel. ; New Central Bus Station of Tel Aviv, Israel. ; Sports center with seating for 300, Moscow, Russia ; Residential, commercial and office buildings, Jaffa, Tel Aviv, Israel. ; Pavilion of the central underground station, Baku, Azerbaijan. ; Entertainment and Game Center of Torzhok, Russia. ; The general plan of Hod HaSharon, Israel. ; Residential areas in Israel, Russia, Ukraine. ; Industrial zones and industrial parks in Israel and Russia. ", "Jehoshua Rozenman\n Jehoshua Rozenman (יהושע רוזנמן, born June 21, 1955 in Tel Aviv, Israel) is a Dutch/Israeli sculptor. Rozenman moved to the Netherlands in 1979 when he was accepted as a student to the Rijksacademie voor Beeldende Kunsten (National Academy of Arts) in Amsterdam. He graduated in 1984, and became a Dutch citizen and then stayed in the Netherlands. Rozenman worked for six years in New York and Amsterdam beginning in 2007. Rozenman relocated to Berlin, Germany in 2013. Rozenman divides his time living and travelling between Germany and the Netherlands. In 2006, he married the Dutch Democrats 66 politician and human rights activist Boris Dittrich.", "Dmitry Mazo\n Israel. ; 2003. Residential district for 7,700 apartments. Hod HaSharon, Israel. ; Synagogue and cultural center in Volgograd, Russia, 2004. * Center of the school district in Ashdod, 2005. ; Design of the central complex of Olympic facilities in Sochi for the Winter Olympics-2014. Russia, 2006. * Complex of the Far Eastern Federal University in Russky island, Vladivostok. The 1st line - APEC Summit facilities - 2008. ; 2009, new above-ground pavilion of «Baksovet» underground station. Baku, Azerbaijan ; The Centre for sports and leisure in Rostov, 2009. ; Museum of music of the Conservatorium in Safed (concept design stage), 2011. ; Construction of residential, commercial and office buildings at Yefet ", "Nikolay Jeliazkov\n Nikolay Jeliazkov or Zheliazkov (Николай Желязков) (born February 26, 1970) is a former Bulgarian male volleyball player and coach. He was part of the Bulgaria men's national volleyball team at the 1994 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Championship and 1996 Summer Olympics. After his retirement he became a volleyball coach. He was coach of Bulgaria men's national volleyball team at the 2015 European Games in Baku, Azerbaijan.", "Daphne jezoensis\n Daphne jezoensis is a shrub, of the family Thymelaeaceae. It is native to northern Japan and parts of eastern Russia. It has been treated as either a subspecies or a variety of Daphne kamtschatica.", "Encho Keryazov\n of other Bulgarian celebrities, which promotes talented young people engaged in science, arts and sports, giving creative and financial support. The Foundation has gained national and international attention, so that the annual awards, held since 2012 in Keryazov's hometown Yambol, where the awards are given to children and young people, are in the presence of the Bulgarian Minister of Foreign Affairs Kristian Vigenin, the Minister of Culture Weschdi Raschidow and ambassadors from Germany and the Netherlands. During the charity gala in January 2015 he gathered high-level international circus artists in Yambol, including the clown David Larible. The preliminary peak of his social commitment is a benefit-gala in Sofia in ", "Shchuchinsk\n🇦🇲 Jermuk, Armenia ", "Lozova railway station\n Lozova (Лозова) is a main hub and a railway junction in East Ukraine. It is the second busiest railway station in Kharkiv Oblast after Kharkiv Railway Station. It is located 156.3 km south of Russia and is a subsidy of Southern Railways an administrative branch of Ukrainian Railways.", "Tzova\n Tzova (צוֹבָה), also Palmach Tzova (פלמ\"ח צובה) or Tzuba is a kibbutz in central Israel. Located in the Judean Hills, on the western outskirts of Jerusalem, it falls under the jurisdiction of Mateh Yehuda Regional Council. In it had a population of.", "Armillaria jezoensis\n Armillaria jezoensis is a species of mushroom in the family Physalacriaceae. Found in Japan, it was described as new to science in 1994.", "Ježa\n Ježa is a linear settlement on a terrace above the Sava River east of Črnuče and southeast of the railroad to Kamnik. Most of the houses are along the road to Nadgorica, and a few extend onto the bank towards the plain along the Sava. The soil is sandy, and there are fields to the north and south of the settlement.", "List of Jewish architects\n of the leading architects of Erez Israel and Israel; designed several new Israeli cities, such as Afula and Herzliya. Germany, Erez Israel, Israel ; Nataliya Kazhdan (de) (ru) (Russian: Наталия Абрамовна Каждан) (1941, USSR–2017, Moscow, USSR), was a distinguished Soviet and Russian architect and educator. USSR, Russia ; Yakov Kazhdan (Russian: Яков Шаевич Каждан) (3 February 1922–), is a Soviet and Russian architectural educator. USSR, Russia ; Vladimir Khavin (ru) (Russian: Владимир Иосифович Хавин) (27 July 1931, Moscow, USSR–2005, Moscow, Russia), was a Soviet and Russian architect. USSR, Russia ; Izrail Khazanovsky (ru) (Russian: Израиль Самойлович Хазановский) (1901, Orel, Russian Empire–1985, Kharkiv, USSR), ", "Sergey Chemezov\n LLC. Since 2003, Stanislav Chemezov has been the co-owner (together with Vladimir Artyakov's son, Dmitri) of the Meridian hotel facilities in Gelendzhik. Stanislav Chemezov is the only founder of Interbusinessgroup LLC (ООО «Интербизнесгрупп») which has the shares in several construction companies, Russian Industrial Nanotechnologies («Русские промышленные нанотехнологии»), I.A.D. business industry («И.А.Д. бизнеc индустрия») and shares in Natural and Organic Products LLC (ООО «Натуральные и органические продукты») which is one of several companies clustered around Andrey Dolzhich's (Андрей Должич) Virgin Islands firm Natural and Organic Products, Inc that sells soil improvers to Persian Gulf countries including the soil near Bahrain's Royal Palace which now have palm trees growing in soil improvers from Dolzhich's firm. According to other information accessed in May 2009, Chemezov's second son was studying in a medical institute. His youngest son Sergey was in primary school and his daughter was a graduate student at MGIMO University.", "Jaroměř\n Jaroměř (Jermer) is a town in Náchod District in the Hradec Králové Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 12,000 inhabitants. It is known for the Josefov Fortress. Josefov is well preserved and is protected by law as an urban monument reservation, the town centre of Jaroměř is proceted as an urban monument zone.", "Kazazov\n Kazazov is located 18 km west of Ponezhukay (the district's administrative centre) by road. Adygeysk is the nearest rural locality." ]
What is the capital of canton of Antibes-Biot?
[ "Antibes" ]
capital
Canton of Antibes-Biot
1,201,284
53
[ { "id": "27189460", "title": "Canton of Antibes-3", "text": "1) Antibes (partly) ; 2) Biot The canton of Antibes-3 is an administrative division of the Alpes-Maritimes department, southeastern France. It was created at the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. Its seat is in Antibes. It consists of the following communes:", "score": "1.8360534" }, { "id": "27189454", "title": "Canton of Antibes-2", "text": "1) Antibes (partly) The canton of Antibes-2 is an administrative division of the Alpes-Maritimes department, southeastern France. It was created at the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. Its seat is in Antibes. It consists of the following communes:", "score": "1.6267877" }, { "id": "27189436", "title": "Canton of Antibes-1", "text": "1) Antibes (partly) ; 2) Vallauris The canton of Antibes-1 is an administrative division of the Alpes-Maritimes department, southeastern France. It was created at the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. Its seat is in Antibes. It consists of the following communes:", "score": "1.5671341" }, { "id": "15335723", "title": "Biot, Alpes-Maritimes", "text": " Biot is located between Cannes and Nice on the border of the town of Antibes. Biot along with Antibes, Mougins, Valbonne and Vallauris make up the Sophia-Antipolis technopole.", "score": "1.5362768" }, { "id": "15335719", "title": "Biot, Alpes-Maritimes", "text": " Biot (Biòt) is a small fortified medieval hilltop village in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d’Azur near Antibes, between Nice and Cannes. Many people come to Biot for its renowned cubist art museum of Fernand Leger as well as the winding cobbled lanes on the elevated fort. This stunning village that is now famous for its ceramics and glassblowing, dates back to prehistoric times. In 154 BC, for a long period of time, Celto-Ligurians ( the Oxybians and Deceates tribes) controlled the region. There was discord between the tribes and the town of Antipolis (Antibes), who then asked the Romans for help. Romans settled in Biot in 154 BC which they ", "score": "1.5358737" }, { "id": "30002445", "title": "Antibes", "text": " Antibes (, also, ; Antíbol) is a coastal city in the Alpes-Maritimes department of southeastern France, on the Côte d'Azur between Cannes and Nice. The town of Juan-les-Pins is in the commune of Antibes and the Sophia Antipolis technology park is northwest of it.", "score": "1.4714291" }, { "id": "15106353", "title": "Canton of Fribourg", "text": "Broye capital Estavayer-le-Lac ; Glâne capital Romont ; Gruyère (German Greyerz) capital Bulle ; Sarine (German Saane) capital Fribourg ; Lake (French Lac, German See) capital Morat ; Sense (French Singine) capital Tafers ; Veveyse (German Vivisbach) capital Châtel-Saint-Denis The Canton is divided into seven districts:", "score": "1.4213595" }, { "id": "30002462", "title": "Antibes", "text": " On 25 May 1999, the town was the first in the départment to sign the State Environment Charter, which pledges to actively conserve the natural environment.", "score": "1.4181042" }, { "id": "15690845", "title": "Communauté d'agglomération de Sophia Antipolis", "text": " The Communauté d'agglomération de Sophia Antipolis (CASA) is the communauté d'agglomération, an intercommunal structure, centred on the city of Antibes. It is located in the Alpes-Maritimes department, in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur region, southeastern France. It was created in 2002, and takes its name from the technology park Sophia Antipolis. Its population was 179,920 in 2014, of which 76,981 in Antibes.", "score": "1.4105262" }, { "id": "16524568", "title": "Aigues-Mortes", "text": " The town is the capital of the canton of the same name whose general councillor is Leopold Rosso, deputy mayor of Le Grau-du-Roi and president of the Community of Communes Terre de Camargue (UMP). The canton is part of the arrondissement of Nîmes and the second electoral district of Gard where the member is Gilbert Collard (FN ).", "score": "1.3721607" }, { "id": "11407371", "title": "Canton of Saint-Jean-de-Braye", "text": "1) Boigny-sur-Bionne ; 2) Bou ; 3) Chécy ; 4) Combleux ; 5) Mardié ; 6) Saint-Jean-de-Braye ; 7) Semoy The canton of Saint-Jean-de-Braye is an administrative division of the Loiret department, in central France. Its borders were modified at the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. Its seat is in Saint-Jean-de-Braye. The population of the canton as of 1 January 2018 is 39,328. It consists of the following communes:", "score": "1.3717043" }, { "id": "1250640", "title": "Baignes-Sainte-Radegonde", "text": " As capital of the Canton, Baignes has a police station, a first aid station, and a post office.", "score": "1.3660336" }, { "id": "30002482", "title": "Antibes", "text": " The Antibes station is the railway station serving the town, offering connections to Nice, Cannes, Marseille, Grasse, St Raphael, Les Arcs, Milan, Ventimiliga, Paris and several other destinations. This railway station is in the centre of town. There is another railway station, Juan-les-Pins. The nearest airports are Nice Côte d'Azur Airport and Cannes Airport.", "score": "1.3646903" }, { "id": "30002481", "title": "Antibes", "text": "Marché Provençal ", "score": "1.3634728" }, { "id": "14194596", "title": "Delémont", "text": " Delémont (Delsberg, ) is the capital of the Swiss canton of Jura. The city has approximately 12,000 inhabitants.", "score": "1.3524928" }, { "id": "27313470", "title": "Ambert", "text": " Ambert is the seat of the canton of Ambert and the arrondissement of Ambert. It is a sub-prefecture of the department. The arrondissement consists of eight cantons (before March 2015).", "score": "1.3461094" }, { "id": "27191158", "title": "Canton of Nice-7", "text": "1) Nice (partly) ; 2) Saint-André-de-la-Roche ; 3) La Trinité The canton of Nice-7 is an administrative division of the Alpes-Maritimes department, southeastern France. Its borders were modified at the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. Its seat is in Nice. It consists of the following communes:", "score": "1.3390465" }, { "id": "30002463", "title": "Antibes", "text": " Sport is an important part of the local culture; the town hosts the National Training Centre for basketball. The now demolished Jean Bunoz Sports Hall hosted several games of the 1999 FIBA EuroBasket. The city is home to Olympique Antibes, a professional basketball team of France's top division LNB Pro A, which plays its home games at the Azur Arena Antibes.", "score": "1.3352127" }, { "id": "30002457", "title": "Antibes", "text": " With the death in 1481 of Count Charles III, Provence was inherited by King Louis XI of France and thereby annexed to France. As Antibes was in the far southeast of the County of Provence it therefore became the border town at France's southeastern extremity, guarding the frontier with the County of Nice, which was part of the Savoyard state. As such it was on the front line during the Italian Wars waged by France against Emperor Charles V, and was sacked in 1536 by Andrea Doria, a Genoese admiral in imperial service. Henry II of France therefore ordered the construction of Fort Carré in 1550 to guard the town against any ", "score": "1.3281071" }, { "id": "30002471", "title": "Antibes", "text": " Villa Thuret is now managed by the INRA (National Institute of Agronomic Research). The collection of trees and exotic plants, and the rich earth, provide many opportunities for learning, and the cross-fertilisation of plant species that grow on the Mediterranean coast. ; Marineland: In 1970, Roland de la Poype created this animal exhibition park in Antibes. First, it was a small oceanarium with a few pools and animals, but now it is one of the biggest in the world and receives more than 1,200,000 visitors per year. It is the only French sea park featuring two cetacean species: killer whales and dolphins. ", "score": "1.3262895" } ]
[ "Canton of Antibes-3\n1) Antibes (partly) ; 2) Biot The canton of Antibes-3 is an administrative division of the Alpes-Maritimes department, southeastern France. It was created at the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. Its seat is in Antibes. It consists of the following communes:", "Canton of Antibes-2\n1) Antibes (partly) The canton of Antibes-2 is an administrative division of the Alpes-Maritimes department, southeastern France. It was created at the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. Its seat is in Antibes. It consists of the following communes:", "Canton of Antibes-1\n1) Antibes (partly) ; 2) Vallauris The canton of Antibes-1 is an administrative division of the Alpes-Maritimes department, southeastern France. It was created at the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. Its seat is in Antibes. It consists of the following communes:", "Biot, Alpes-Maritimes\n Biot is located between Cannes and Nice on the border of the town of Antibes. Biot along with Antibes, Mougins, Valbonne and Vallauris make up the Sophia-Antipolis technopole.", "Biot, Alpes-Maritimes\n Biot (Biòt) is a small fortified medieval hilltop village in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d’Azur near Antibes, between Nice and Cannes. Many people come to Biot for its renowned cubist art museum of Fernand Leger as well as the winding cobbled lanes on the elevated fort. This stunning village that is now famous for its ceramics and glassblowing, dates back to prehistoric times. In 154 BC, for a long period of time, Celto-Ligurians ( the Oxybians and Deceates tribes) controlled the region. There was discord between the tribes and the town of Antipolis (Antibes), who then asked the Romans for help. Romans settled in Biot in 154 BC which they ", "Antibes\n Antibes (, also, ; Antíbol) is a coastal city in the Alpes-Maritimes department of southeastern France, on the Côte d'Azur between Cannes and Nice. The town of Juan-les-Pins is in the commune of Antibes and the Sophia Antipolis technology park is northwest of it.", "Canton of Fribourg\nBroye capital Estavayer-le-Lac ; Glâne capital Romont ; Gruyère (German Greyerz) capital Bulle ; Sarine (German Saane) capital Fribourg ; Lake (French Lac, German See) capital Morat ; Sense (French Singine) capital Tafers ; Veveyse (German Vivisbach) capital Châtel-Saint-Denis The Canton is divided into seven districts:", "Antibes\n On 25 May 1999, the town was the first in the départment to sign the State Environment Charter, which pledges to actively conserve the natural environment.", "Communauté d'agglomération de Sophia Antipolis\n The Communauté d'agglomération de Sophia Antipolis (CASA) is the communauté d'agglomération, an intercommunal structure, centred on the city of Antibes. It is located in the Alpes-Maritimes department, in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur region, southeastern France. It was created in 2002, and takes its name from the technology park Sophia Antipolis. Its population was 179,920 in 2014, of which 76,981 in Antibes.", "Aigues-Mortes\n The town is the capital of the canton of the same name whose general councillor is Leopold Rosso, deputy mayor of Le Grau-du-Roi and president of the Community of Communes Terre de Camargue (UMP). The canton is part of the arrondissement of Nîmes and the second electoral district of Gard where the member is Gilbert Collard (FN ).", "Canton of Saint-Jean-de-Braye\n1) Boigny-sur-Bionne ; 2) Bou ; 3) Chécy ; 4) Combleux ; 5) Mardié ; 6) Saint-Jean-de-Braye ; 7) Semoy The canton of Saint-Jean-de-Braye is an administrative division of the Loiret department, in central France. Its borders were modified at the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. Its seat is in Saint-Jean-de-Braye. The population of the canton as of 1 January 2018 is 39,328. It consists of the following communes:", "Baignes-Sainte-Radegonde\n As capital of the Canton, Baignes has a police station, a first aid station, and a post office.", "Antibes\n The Antibes station is the railway station serving the town, offering connections to Nice, Cannes, Marseille, Grasse, St Raphael, Les Arcs, Milan, Ventimiliga, Paris and several other destinations. This railway station is in the centre of town. There is another railway station, Juan-les-Pins. The nearest airports are Nice Côte d'Azur Airport and Cannes Airport.", "Antibes\nMarché Provençal ", "Delémont\n Delémont (Delsberg, ) is the capital of the Swiss canton of Jura. The city has approximately 12,000 inhabitants.", "Ambert\n Ambert is the seat of the canton of Ambert and the arrondissement of Ambert. It is a sub-prefecture of the department. The arrondissement consists of eight cantons (before March 2015).", "Canton of Nice-7\n1) Nice (partly) ; 2) Saint-André-de-la-Roche ; 3) La Trinité The canton of Nice-7 is an administrative division of the Alpes-Maritimes department, southeastern France. Its borders were modified at the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. Its seat is in Nice. It consists of the following communes:", "Antibes\n Sport is an important part of the local culture; the town hosts the National Training Centre for basketball. The now demolished Jean Bunoz Sports Hall hosted several games of the 1999 FIBA EuroBasket. The city is home to Olympique Antibes, a professional basketball team of France's top division LNB Pro A, which plays its home games at the Azur Arena Antibes.", "Antibes\n With the death in 1481 of Count Charles III, Provence was inherited by King Louis XI of France and thereby annexed to France. As Antibes was in the far southeast of the County of Provence it therefore became the border town at France's southeastern extremity, guarding the frontier with the County of Nice, which was part of the Savoyard state. As such it was on the front line during the Italian Wars waged by France against Emperor Charles V, and was sacked in 1536 by Andrea Doria, a Genoese admiral in imperial service. Henry II of France therefore ordered the construction of Fort Carré in 1550 to guard the town against any ", "Antibes\n Villa Thuret is now managed by the INRA (National Institute of Agronomic Research). The collection of trees and exotic plants, and the rich earth, provide many opportunities for learning, and the cross-fertilisation of plant species that grow on the Mediterranean coast. ; Marineland: In 1970, Roland de la Poype created this animal exhibition park in Antibes. First, it was a small oceanarium with a few pools and animals, but now it is one of the biggest in the world and receives more than 1,200,000 visitors per year. It is the only French sea park featuring two cetacean species: killer whales and dolphins. " ]
What sport does Kiribati men's national basketball team play?
[ "basketball", "hoops", "b-ball", "basket ball", "BB", "Basketball" ]
sport
Kiribati men's national basketball team
2,885,834
70
[ { "id": "6583899", "title": "Football in Kiribati", "text": " The sport of football in the country of Kiribati is run by the Kiribati Islands Football Association. The association administers the national men's football team and national women's football team as well as the Kiribati National Championship.", "score": "1.5931942" }, { "id": "7661195", "title": "Kiribati national football team", "text": " The Kiribati national football team is the national men's football team of Kiribati and is controlled by the Kiribati Islands Football Association. Kiribati is not a member of FIFA but is an associate member of the Oceania Football Confederation (OFC), and is therefore not eligible to enter the FIFA World Cup but may enter the OFC Nations Cup. It became a provisional member of the N.F.-Board on 10 December 2005. Kiribati is also a member of the ConIFA.", "score": "1.5926178" }, { "id": "12403213", "title": "Kiribati", "text": " Kiribati has competed at the Commonwealth Games since 1998 and the Summer Olympics since 2004. It sent three competitors to its first Olympics, two sprinters and a weightlifter. Kiribati won its first ever Commonwealth Games medal at the 2014 Commonwealth Games when weightlifter David Katoatau won Gold in the 105 kg Group. Football is the most popular sport. Kiribati Islands Football Federation (KIFF) is an associate member of the Oceania Football Confederation, but not of world-governing body FIFA. Instead, they are member of ConIFA. Kiribati National team has played ten matches, all of which it has lost, and all at the Pacific Games from 1979 to 2011. The Kiribati football stadium is Bairiki National Stadium, which has a capacity of 2,500. The is home to a number of local sporting teams.", "score": "1.5514622" }, { "id": "7661201", "title": "Kiribati national football team", "text": " (1) Represented by a club team.", "score": "1.5482433" }, { "id": "7528035", "title": "Kiribati National Championship", "text": " The Kiribati National Championship is the top division of competitive football in the nation of Kiribati, founded in 2002 by the Kiribati Islands Football Association, the nations football governing body. The association and the National Championships are based in the capital city, South Tarawa. The competition reunites only temporary council teams (one council team on each island, two council teams on Tabiteuea and 3 teams on Tarawa) and is disputed during Te Runga, the National Games held every two years.", "score": "1.5432267" }, { "id": "1189006", "title": "Kiribati women's national football team", "text": " Kiribati have played six international matches up to July 2019 where they scored 2 goals and conceded 38 in the Football at the 2003 South Pacific Games – Women's tournament. Kiribati's first match took place in Nausori, Fiji on 30 June 2003 when they played Papua New Guinea, losing 13–0 in a South Pacific Games match. The side have never won a match but came very close when they lost 2–1 to Tonga on 7 July 2003 also in the South Pacific Games in Fiji. Kiribati's only two goals in the 2003 Pacific games were scored by Moaniti Teuea versus Tonga in the 48th minute. and versus Tahiti in the 10th minute. On 6 May 2016, Kiribati was formally accepted as the newest member of ConIFA (Confederation of Independent Football Associations), becoming the first ever Oceanic member to join the federation. As of July 2019, Kiribati's women's team have played no games under ConIFA.", "score": "1.5430509" }, { "id": "7528036", "title": "Kiribati National Championship", "text": "Abaiang ; Butaritari ; Makin ; Marakei ; North Tarawa ", "score": "1.5375209" }, { "id": "7661196", "title": "Kiribati national football team", "text": " Kiribati have only ever played 11 International matches up to April 2012 where they scored 7 goals and conceded 125. All of these matches were played away from home due to the lack of grass pitches in the archipelago. The Bairiki National Stadium has a sand pitch rather than grass. Kiribati's first match took place in Fiji on 30 August 1979 when they played Fiji, losing 24–0 in a South Pacific Games match. The side have never won a match but came very close when they lost 3–2 to fellow minnows Tuvalu on 30 June 2003 in Pool A of the South Pacific Games in Fiji, as well ", "score": "1.5321505" }, { "id": "7661199", "title": "Kiribati national football team", "text": "Squad selected for the 2011 Pacific Games. - style=\"background:#dfedfd;\" - style=\"background:#dfedfd;\" - style=\"background:#dfedfd;\" ! colspan=\"9\" style=\"background:#b0d3fb; text-align:left;\"| ! colspan=\"9\" style=\"background:#b0d3fb; text-align:left;\"| ! colspan=\"9\" style=\"background:#b0d3fb; text-align:left;\"|", "score": "1.5271564" }, { "id": "28620014", "title": "Outline of Kiribati", "text": "Football in Kiribati ; Kiribati at the Olympics Sports in Kiribati", "score": "1.5251901" }, { "id": "11954341", "title": "List of Kiribati international footballers", "text": " The Kiribati national football team represents the country of Kiribati in international association football. It is fielded by the Kiribati Islands Football Federation, the governing body of football in Kiribati, and competes as an associate member of the Oceania Football Confederation (OFC), which encompasses the countries of Oceania. Kiribati played their first international match on 30 August 1983 in a 24–0 loss to Fiji in Suva. Kiribati have only competed in Pacific Games, and all players who have played in at least one match, either as a member of the starting eleven or as a substitute, are listed below. Each player's details include his playing position while with the team, the number of caps earned and goals scored in all international matches, and details of the first and most recent matches played in. The names are initially ordered by number of caps (in descending order), then by date of debut, then by alphabetical order. All statistics are correct up to and including the match played on 5 September 2011.", "score": "1.5196342" }, { "id": "1189005", "title": "Kiribati women's national football team", "text": " The Kiribati women's national football team is the women's national football team of Kiribati and is controlled by the Kiribati Islands Football Association. Kiribati is not a member of FIFA or of the Oceania Football Confederation (OFC), and is therefore not eligible to enter the FIFA Women's World Cup. Kiribati is a member of ConIFA, though there have been no women's tournaments to date for the side to participate in.", "score": "1.5152757" }, { "id": "7661197", "title": "Kiribati national football team", "text": " losing 4–2 in penalties to Tuvalu in the consolation round of the 1979 South Pacific Games. Kiribati's only two goals in the 2011 Pacific games were scored by Karotu Bakaane versus Papua New Guinea and Erene Bakineti versus Tahiti, but in the 2003 competition, both goals against Tuvalu came from Lawrence Nemeia on the 26th minute and the 46th minute. In 2012, Scotsman Kevin McGreskin became the team's coach, with the aim of improving its results and obtaining recognition from FIFA. On 10 April 2015, Jake Kewley was officially appointed as the Manager and Ambassador for the Kiribati Islands National Football Team with the remit of liaising ", "score": "1.5128999" }, { "id": "9859788", "title": "Kiribati at the 2015 Pacific Games", "text": "Women Kimarawa Mourongo ; Taoriba Biniati ; Marebu Tekaai ; Tokaratororo Tikataake ; Lucy Ioneba ; Maritere Bani ; Joan Tonga ; Marenoa Tebakia ; Anee Taake ; Temaateke Kaero Men Rhynner Riwata ; Moantau Tiaontin ; Kiatamoa Kautuna ; James Ruateiti ; Titau Tautii ; Tebubua Mweia ; Aviata Kenana ; Ukenio Teurakai ; Ribae Amoti ; Tuteau Pine ; Korimaraa Matang ; Tibaua Taraitebure Kiribati qualified men's and women's touch rugby teams (22 players): 4th – Women's tournament 7th – Men's tournament", "score": "1.51198" }, { "id": "1189010", "title": "Kiribati women's national football team", "text": "Squad selected for the 2003 Pacific Games. - style=\"background:#dfedfd;\" ! colspan=\"9\" style=\"background:#b0d3fb; text-align:left;\"|", "score": "1.5047445" }, { "id": "7851550", "title": "Kiribati at the 2017 Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games", "text": " Kiribati competed at the 2017 Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games held in Ashgabat, Turkmenistan from September 17-27. Kiribati sent a delegation of 12 competitors in 3 different sports. Kiribati couldn't receive any medal at the Games. Kiribati made its first appearance at an Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games for the first time along with other Oceania nations.", "score": "1.4894419" }, { "id": "7528038", "title": "Kiribati National Championship", "text": "Abemama ; Banaba ; Nonouti ; Onotoa ; Tabiteuea North ", "score": "1.489311" }, { "id": "6583920", "title": "Kiribati Islands Football Federation", "text": "Kiribati National Championship ; The KIFA organises the Kiribati football league in which clubs from all over the nation play each other. ", "score": "1.4860265" }, { "id": "13861677", "title": "Kiribati at the 2011 Pacific Games", "text": "Men ; Tarariki Tarotu ; Tiaon Miika ; Kaake Kamta ; Kaben Ioteba ; Enri Tenukai ; Nabaruru Batiri ; Atanuea Eritara ; Antin Nanotaake ; Atino Baraniko ; Jeff Jong ; Joseph Yan ; Beniamina Kaintikuaba ; Erene Bwakineti ; Karotu Bakaane ; Martin Miriata ; Barurunteiti Kaiorake ; Biitamatang Keakea ; Tongarua Akori Kiribati has qualified a men's team. Each team can consist of a maximum of 21 athletes. ", "score": "1.4845331" }, { "id": "1189008", "title": "Kiribati women's national football team", "text": "2003 – Round 1 ; 2007 to 2019 – Did not enter ", "score": "1.4836388" } ]
[ "Football in Kiribati\n The sport of football in the country of Kiribati is run by the Kiribati Islands Football Association. The association administers the national men's football team and national women's football team as well as the Kiribati National Championship.", "Kiribati national football team\n The Kiribati national football team is the national men's football team of Kiribati and is controlled by the Kiribati Islands Football Association. Kiribati is not a member of FIFA but is an associate member of the Oceania Football Confederation (OFC), and is therefore not eligible to enter the FIFA World Cup but may enter the OFC Nations Cup. It became a provisional member of the N.F.-Board on 10 December 2005. Kiribati is also a member of the ConIFA.", "Kiribati\n Kiribati has competed at the Commonwealth Games since 1998 and the Summer Olympics since 2004. It sent three competitors to its first Olympics, two sprinters and a weightlifter. Kiribati won its first ever Commonwealth Games medal at the 2014 Commonwealth Games when weightlifter David Katoatau won Gold in the 105 kg Group. Football is the most popular sport. Kiribati Islands Football Federation (KIFF) is an associate member of the Oceania Football Confederation, but not of world-governing body FIFA. Instead, they are member of ConIFA. Kiribati National team has played ten matches, all of which it has lost, and all at the Pacific Games from 1979 to 2011. The Kiribati football stadium is Bairiki National Stadium, which has a capacity of 2,500. The is home to a number of local sporting teams.", "Kiribati national football team\n (1) Represented by a club team.", "Kiribati National Championship\n The Kiribati National Championship is the top division of competitive football in the nation of Kiribati, founded in 2002 by the Kiribati Islands Football Association, the nations football governing body. The association and the National Championships are based in the capital city, South Tarawa. The competition reunites only temporary council teams (one council team on each island, two council teams on Tabiteuea and 3 teams on Tarawa) and is disputed during Te Runga, the National Games held every two years.", "Kiribati women's national football team\n Kiribati have played six international matches up to July 2019 where they scored 2 goals and conceded 38 in the Football at the 2003 South Pacific Games – Women's tournament. Kiribati's first match took place in Nausori, Fiji on 30 June 2003 when they played Papua New Guinea, losing 13–0 in a South Pacific Games match. The side have never won a match but came very close when they lost 2–1 to Tonga on 7 July 2003 also in the South Pacific Games in Fiji. Kiribati's only two goals in the 2003 Pacific games were scored by Moaniti Teuea versus Tonga in the 48th minute. and versus Tahiti in the 10th minute. On 6 May 2016, Kiribati was formally accepted as the newest member of ConIFA (Confederation of Independent Football Associations), becoming the first ever Oceanic member to join the federation. As of July 2019, Kiribati's women's team have played no games under ConIFA.", "Kiribati National Championship\nAbaiang ; Butaritari ; Makin ; Marakei ; North Tarawa ", "Kiribati national football team\n Kiribati have only ever played 11 International matches up to April 2012 where they scored 7 goals and conceded 125. All of these matches were played away from home due to the lack of grass pitches in the archipelago. The Bairiki National Stadium has a sand pitch rather than grass. Kiribati's first match took place in Fiji on 30 August 1979 when they played Fiji, losing 24–0 in a South Pacific Games match. The side have never won a match but came very close when they lost 3–2 to fellow minnows Tuvalu on 30 June 2003 in Pool A of the South Pacific Games in Fiji, as well ", "Kiribati national football team\nSquad selected for the 2011 Pacific Games. - style=\"background:#dfedfd;\" - style=\"background:#dfedfd;\" - style=\"background:#dfedfd;\" ! colspan=\"9\" style=\"background:#b0d3fb; text-align:left;\"| ! colspan=\"9\" style=\"background:#b0d3fb; text-align:left;\"| ! colspan=\"9\" style=\"background:#b0d3fb; text-align:left;\"|", "Outline of Kiribati\nFootball in Kiribati ; Kiribati at the Olympics Sports in Kiribati", "List of Kiribati international footballers\n The Kiribati national football team represents the country of Kiribati in international association football. It is fielded by the Kiribati Islands Football Federation, the governing body of football in Kiribati, and competes as an associate member of the Oceania Football Confederation (OFC), which encompasses the countries of Oceania. Kiribati played their first international match on 30 August 1983 in a 24–0 loss to Fiji in Suva. Kiribati have only competed in Pacific Games, and all players who have played in at least one match, either as a member of the starting eleven or as a substitute, are listed below. Each player's details include his playing position while with the team, the number of caps earned and goals scored in all international matches, and details of the first and most recent matches played in. The names are initially ordered by number of caps (in descending order), then by date of debut, then by alphabetical order. All statistics are correct up to and including the match played on 5 September 2011.", "Kiribati women's national football team\n The Kiribati women's national football team is the women's national football team of Kiribati and is controlled by the Kiribati Islands Football Association. Kiribati is not a member of FIFA or of the Oceania Football Confederation (OFC), and is therefore not eligible to enter the FIFA Women's World Cup. Kiribati is a member of ConIFA, though there have been no women's tournaments to date for the side to participate in.", "Kiribati national football team\n losing 4–2 in penalties to Tuvalu in the consolation round of the 1979 South Pacific Games. Kiribati's only two goals in the 2011 Pacific games were scored by Karotu Bakaane versus Papua New Guinea and Erene Bakineti versus Tahiti, but in the 2003 competition, both goals against Tuvalu came from Lawrence Nemeia on the 26th minute and the 46th minute. In 2012, Scotsman Kevin McGreskin became the team's coach, with the aim of improving its results and obtaining recognition from FIFA. On 10 April 2015, Jake Kewley was officially appointed as the Manager and Ambassador for the Kiribati Islands National Football Team with the remit of liaising ", "Kiribati at the 2015 Pacific Games\nWomen Kimarawa Mourongo ; Taoriba Biniati ; Marebu Tekaai ; Tokaratororo Tikataake ; Lucy Ioneba ; Maritere Bani ; Joan Tonga ; Marenoa Tebakia ; Anee Taake ; Temaateke Kaero Men Rhynner Riwata ; Moantau Tiaontin ; Kiatamoa Kautuna ; James Ruateiti ; Titau Tautii ; Tebubua Mweia ; Aviata Kenana ; Ukenio Teurakai ; Ribae Amoti ; Tuteau Pine ; Korimaraa Matang ; Tibaua Taraitebure Kiribati qualified men's and women's touch rugby teams (22 players): 4th – Women's tournament 7th – Men's tournament", "Kiribati women's national football team\nSquad selected for the 2003 Pacific Games. - style=\"background:#dfedfd;\" ! colspan=\"9\" style=\"background:#b0d3fb; text-align:left;\"|", "Kiribati at the 2017 Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games\n Kiribati competed at the 2017 Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games held in Ashgabat, Turkmenistan from September 17-27. Kiribati sent a delegation of 12 competitors in 3 different sports. Kiribati couldn't receive any medal at the Games. Kiribati made its first appearance at an Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games for the first time along with other Oceania nations.", "Kiribati National Championship\nAbemama ; Banaba ; Nonouti ; Onotoa ; Tabiteuea North ", "Kiribati Islands Football Federation\nKiribati National Championship ; The KIFA organises the Kiribati football league in which clubs from all over the nation play each other. ", "Kiribati at the 2011 Pacific Games\nMen ; Tarariki Tarotu ; Tiaon Miika ; Kaake Kamta ; Kaben Ioteba ; Enri Tenukai ; Nabaruru Batiri ; Atanuea Eritara ; Antin Nanotaake ; Atino Baraniko ; Jeff Jong ; Joseph Yan ; Beniamina Kaintikuaba ; Erene Bwakineti ; Karotu Bakaane ; Martin Miriata ; Barurunteiti Kaiorake ; Biitamatang Keakea ; Tongarua Akori Kiribati has qualified a men's team. Each team can consist of a maximum of 21 athletes. ", "Kiribati women's national football team\n2003 – Round 1 ; 2007 to 2019 – Did not enter " ]
In what country is Graitschen bei Bürgel?
[ "Germany", "FRG", "BRD", "Bundesrepublik Deutschland", "Federal Republic of Germany", "de", "Deutschland", "GER", "BR Deutschland", "DE" ]
country
Graitschen bei Bürgel
5,172,941
66
[ { "id": "8067905", "title": "Graitschen bei Bürgel", "text": " Graitschen bei Bürgel is a municipality in the district Saale-Holzland, in Thuringia, Germany.", "score": "1.860688" }, { "id": "1884861", "title": "Burg Grenchen", "text": " The Burg Grenchen, also known as Bettleschloss, was a hill castle located above the present-day municipalities of Grenchen and Bettlach in the Canton of Solothurn, Switzerland. It is one of the early clearing castles in the Jura Mountains in Switzerland.", "score": "1.470184" }, { "id": "31513158", "title": "Grgelj", "text": " Grgelj (Beim Gergel, Beim Görgel ) is a dispersed settlement that stretches along the left bank of the Kolpa River in the Municipality of Kostel in southern Slovenia. The area is part of the traditional region of Lower Carniola and is now included in the Southeast Slovenia Statistical Region.", "score": "1.4501352" }, { "id": "5953875", "title": "Bürgel", "text": " Within the German Empire (1871-1918), Bürgel was part of the Grand Duchy of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach.", "score": "1.437921" }, { "id": "5953874", "title": "Bürgel", "text": " Bürgel is a town in the Saale-Holzland district, in Thuringia, Germany. It is situated 12 km east of Jena. It contains the Benedictine monastery of Bürgel Abbey.", "score": "1.4330618" }, { "id": "31090484", "title": "Grazer Wechselseitige Versicherung", "text": " GRAWE is the fifth largest insurance group in Austria. GRAWE has subsidiaries in Central and Eastern European countries such as Slovenia, Croatia, Hungary, Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Ukraine, Bulgaria, Romania, Moldova, Macedonia, and Montenegro.", "score": "1.4235699" }, { "id": "4947357", "title": "Großlittgen", "text": " Großlittgen (in Eifel dialect: Gruhssleehtchen) is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bernkastel-Wittlich district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.", "score": "1.418043" }, { "id": "7440918", "title": "Buocher Höhe", "text": " To the northeast the ridge is bounded by the Buchenbach valley. At its northeastern edge, on the sides of the valley are the villages of Lehnenberg, Spechtshof and Reichenbach. To the east, at open field system of Roter Stich, the Buocher Höhe is linked to the Berglen region by the saddle between Hößlinswart in the north and Rohrbronn in the south. To the south the ridge drops into the Rems valley towards Geradstetten and Grunbach, the so-called Remshalde (which gives its name to the super-municipality of Remshalden); on the hillside is the Gundelsbach stream and the Ziegenberg. In the woods there are the open field systems of Hohe Straße, Marschallhölzle, Brand, Glockenholz and Eichenwald. To the southwest are the settlements of Groß- and Kleinheppach with the Kleinheppacher Kopf hill. The Hanweiler Saddle separates the Buocher Höhe from the Korber Kopf and Hohreusch. Towards Winnenden the Buocher Höhe descends via the \"Großer Roßberg\" hill via the terrace of Breuningsweiler, \"Haselstein\", Kleinen Roßberg and Stöckach. The agricultural parts of the Buocher Höhe include the clearances of the Remshalden village of Buoch, the terrace of Breuningsweiler and the scattered orchards of Lehnenberg, Spechtshof and Reichenbach.", "score": "1.404026" }, { "id": "26580477", "title": "Burg Graurheindorf", "text": " The building is privately owned and used as a dwelling. The castle, the park and a stone path cross stand as a Denkmalschutzgesetz (Nordrhein-Westfalen) under Cultural heritage management.", "score": "1.3990289" }, { "id": "27078111", "title": "Burgruine Greifenfels", "text": " Burgruine Greifenfels is a castle in Carinthia, Austria.", "score": "1.3986223" }, { "id": "2992680", "title": "Dautphetal", "text": " Along with the many events organized by local village fraternities and sororities (Burschenschaften and Mädchenschaften), the Christmas Market in Buchenau has grown to quite a size. A particular high point is the Grenzgangsfest, held every seven years in Buchenau and relating to an old custom that centuries ago was designed to limit encroachment on the village's woodlands by neighbouring communities. The next Grenzgangsfest is in 2020.", "score": "1.3978778" }, { "id": "9283323", "title": "Burgdorf-Peine Geest", "text": " The Burgdorf-Peine Geest (Burgdorf-Peiner Geest) is a geest landscape, dominated by end and ground moraines, between Hanover and Brunswick in North Germany, with an area of about 550 km2. Its natural borders are the Aller depression in the north, the Hildesheim Börde and, in places, the Mittelland Canal in the south the Oker valley in the east and the Hanoverian Moor Geest in the west. Today it is bordered by the cities of Hanover and Brunswick and the towns of Burgdorf, Uetze, Vechelde, Peine and Lehrte. The whole geest region with its rural settlements has a distinctly rural character, with the exception of ", "score": "1.3941534" }, { "id": "30481888", "title": "Greifenstein", "text": "Greifenstein Castle with bell museum, formerly owned by the princes of Solms-Braunfels ; the Altes Haus (\"Old House\") in Holzhausen ; church with village well and 1000-year-old oak in Allendorf ; Beilstein Castle (partially reconstructed ruins), first mentioned in 1229, formerly owned by the Counts of Nassau-Beilstein, and church in Beilstein Each constituent community has half-timbered houses, built in different styles, that are well worth seeing. Moreover, there are the following attractions: For athletes, the community has over 100 km of well built cycling and hiking trails. One attraction is the Ulmbach Reservoir between Holzhausen and Beilstein. It offers a campground, a sunbathing field and a bathing area. In summer, the DLRG sees to safety. The pathway (about 2.7 km long) is used by many hikers, cyclists, inline skaters and Nordic walkers. In Arborn is a weekend cottage neighbourhood that has an outdoor swimming pool at its disposal. A further outdoor swimming pool is to be found in Nenderoth. Skilifts for winter sports can be found in Greifenstein and Arborn. Since 2002 there has been in Allendorf the Outdoor-Center-Lahntal, a nature-linked leisure and adventure park. Overnight stays in tepees, and workshops for adults and children may be booked here.", "score": "1.3921411" }, { "id": "11798527", "title": "Hohenfreyberg Castle", "text": "Klaus Leidorf, Peter Ettel: Burgen in Bavaria. 7000 Jahre Burgengeschichte in der Luftbild. Theiss, Stuttgart, 1999, ISBN: 3-8062-1364-X, pp. 154–155. ; Toni Nessler: Burgen in the Allgäu. Vol. 2: Burgruinen im Westallgäu und im angrenzenden Vorarlberg, im württembergischen Allgäu, im nördlichen Allgäu um Memmingen, im nordöstlichen Allgäu um Kaufbeuren und Obergünzburg sowie im östlichen Allgäu und im angrenzenden Tyrol. Allgäuer Zeitungsverlag, Kempten, 1985, ISBN: 3-88006-115-7, pp. 232–242. ; Joachim Zeune: Burgenführer Ostallgäu and Außerfern, Tyrol. Bergvesten und Talsperren Burgenregion Ostallgäu-Außerfern. Tourismusverband Ostallgäu, Marktoberdorf, 1998. ; Joachim Zeune: Burgenregion Allgäu. Ein Burgenführer. Zeune u. Koop, Eisenberg-Zell, 2008. ", "score": "1.3855536" }, { "id": "9283325", "title": "Burgdorf-Peine Geest", "text": " The landscape is dominated by arable fields, in which rye, oats and potatoes produce good returns. Asparagus is also widely grown on the dry, sandy soils, Burgdorf Asparagus (Burgdorfer Spargel) being particularly well known in Germany as a whole. The grazing of cattle is also a common mode of farming due to the poor soils. Near Hänigsen a loamy ground moraine rises close to the surface which improves the soil quality. The sandy parts of the geest are mainly covered with pine woods exploited by the forestry industry. Deciduous woods occur here and there in the shape of English oak and birch woods.", "score": "1.3828903" }, { "id": "1339834", "title": "Großräschen", "text": " Großräschen (Sorbian: Rań) is a town in Lower Lusatia, in Germany. Administratively, it is part of the district of Oberspreewald-Lausitz, in the state of Brandenburg.", "score": "1.382769" }, { "id": "2049382", "title": "Grosbliederstroff", "text": "🇩🇪 Kleinblittersdorf (Germany) ", "score": "1.3827596" }, { "id": "9584960", "title": "Burgkirchen, Austria", "text": " Burgkirchen lies in the Innviertel. About 30 percent of the municipality is forest and 61 percent farmland. It is also close the river Inn and is 8 km from the Austria–Germany border.", "score": "1.3812892" }, { "id": "31090486", "title": "Grazer Wechselseitige Versicherung", "text": " GRAWE has agreements with Kärntner Landesversicherung (Carinthian insurance), Niederösterreichischen Versicherung (Lower Austrian insurance), Oberösterreichischen Versicherung (Upper Austrian insurance), Tiroler Versicherung (Tirolean insurance), and Vorarlberger Landesversicherung (Vorarlberg insurance). The network is called the Vereinigung Österreichischer Länderversicherer (Insurers association of Austrian countries).", "score": "1.3763237" }, { "id": "9584959", "title": "Burgkirchen, Austria", "text": " Burgkirchen is a municipality in the district Braunau am Inn in the Austrian state of Upper Austria.", "score": "1.3759617" } ]
[ "Graitschen bei Bürgel\n Graitschen bei Bürgel is a municipality in the district Saale-Holzland, in Thuringia, Germany.", "Burg Grenchen\n The Burg Grenchen, also known as Bettleschloss, was a hill castle located above the present-day municipalities of Grenchen and Bettlach in the Canton of Solothurn, Switzerland. It is one of the early clearing castles in the Jura Mountains in Switzerland.", "Grgelj\n Grgelj (Beim Gergel, Beim Görgel ) is a dispersed settlement that stretches along the left bank of the Kolpa River in the Municipality of Kostel in southern Slovenia. The area is part of the traditional region of Lower Carniola and is now included in the Southeast Slovenia Statistical Region.", "Bürgel\n Within the German Empire (1871-1918), Bürgel was part of the Grand Duchy of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach.", "Bürgel\n Bürgel is a town in the Saale-Holzland district, in Thuringia, Germany. It is situated 12 km east of Jena. It contains the Benedictine monastery of Bürgel Abbey.", "Grazer Wechselseitige Versicherung\n GRAWE is the fifth largest insurance group in Austria. GRAWE has subsidiaries in Central and Eastern European countries such as Slovenia, Croatia, Hungary, Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Ukraine, Bulgaria, Romania, Moldova, Macedonia, and Montenegro.", "Großlittgen\n Großlittgen (in Eifel dialect: Gruhssleehtchen) is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bernkastel-Wittlich district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.", "Buocher Höhe\n To the northeast the ridge is bounded by the Buchenbach valley. At its northeastern edge, on the sides of the valley are the villages of Lehnenberg, Spechtshof and Reichenbach. To the east, at open field system of Roter Stich, the Buocher Höhe is linked to the Berglen region by the saddle between Hößlinswart in the north and Rohrbronn in the south. To the south the ridge drops into the Rems valley towards Geradstetten and Grunbach, the so-called Remshalde (which gives its name to the super-municipality of Remshalden); on the hillside is the Gundelsbach stream and the Ziegenberg. In the woods there are the open field systems of Hohe Straße, Marschallhölzle, Brand, Glockenholz and Eichenwald. To the southwest are the settlements of Groß- and Kleinheppach with the Kleinheppacher Kopf hill. The Hanweiler Saddle separates the Buocher Höhe from the Korber Kopf and Hohreusch. Towards Winnenden the Buocher Höhe descends via the \"Großer Roßberg\" hill via the terrace of Breuningsweiler, \"Haselstein\", Kleinen Roßberg and Stöckach. The agricultural parts of the Buocher Höhe include the clearances of the Remshalden village of Buoch, the terrace of Breuningsweiler and the scattered orchards of Lehnenberg, Spechtshof and Reichenbach.", "Burg Graurheindorf\n The building is privately owned and used as a dwelling. The castle, the park and a stone path cross stand as a Denkmalschutzgesetz (Nordrhein-Westfalen) under Cultural heritage management.", "Burgruine Greifenfels\n Burgruine Greifenfels is a castle in Carinthia, Austria.", "Dautphetal\n Along with the many events organized by local village fraternities and sororities (Burschenschaften and Mädchenschaften), the Christmas Market in Buchenau has grown to quite a size. A particular high point is the Grenzgangsfest, held every seven years in Buchenau and relating to an old custom that centuries ago was designed to limit encroachment on the village's woodlands by neighbouring communities. The next Grenzgangsfest is in 2020.", "Burgdorf-Peine Geest\n The Burgdorf-Peine Geest (Burgdorf-Peiner Geest) is a geest landscape, dominated by end and ground moraines, between Hanover and Brunswick in North Germany, with an area of about 550 km2. Its natural borders are the Aller depression in the north, the Hildesheim Börde and, in places, the Mittelland Canal in the south the Oker valley in the east and the Hanoverian Moor Geest in the west. Today it is bordered by the cities of Hanover and Brunswick and the towns of Burgdorf, Uetze, Vechelde, Peine and Lehrte. The whole geest region with its rural settlements has a distinctly rural character, with the exception of ", "Greifenstein\nGreifenstein Castle with bell museum, formerly owned by the princes of Solms-Braunfels ; the Altes Haus (\"Old House\") in Holzhausen ; church with village well and 1000-year-old oak in Allendorf ; Beilstein Castle (partially reconstructed ruins), first mentioned in 1229, formerly owned by the Counts of Nassau-Beilstein, and church in Beilstein Each constituent community has half-timbered houses, built in different styles, that are well worth seeing. Moreover, there are the following attractions: For athletes, the community has over 100 km of well built cycling and hiking trails. One attraction is the Ulmbach Reservoir between Holzhausen and Beilstein. It offers a campground, a sunbathing field and a bathing area. In summer, the DLRG sees to safety. The pathway (about 2.7 km long) is used by many hikers, cyclists, inline skaters and Nordic walkers. In Arborn is a weekend cottage neighbourhood that has an outdoor swimming pool at its disposal. A further outdoor swimming pool is to be found in Nenderoth. Skilifts for winter sports can be found in Greifenstein and Arborn. Since 2002 there has been in Allendorf the Outdoor-Center-Lahntal, a nature-linked leisure and adventure park. Overnight stays in tepees, and workshops for adults and children may be booked here.", "Hohenfreyberg Castle\nKlaus Leidorf, Peter Ettel: Burgen in Bavaria. 7000 Jahre Burgengeschichte in der Luftbild. Theiss, Stuttgart, 1999, ISBN: 3-8062-1364-X, pp. 154–155. ; Toni Nessler: Burgen in the Allgäu. Vol. 2: Burgruinen im Westallgäu und im angrenzenden Vorarlberg, im württembergischen Allgäu, im nördlichen Allgäu um Memmingen, im nordöstlichen Allgäu um Kaufbeuren und Obergünzburg sowie im östlichen Allgäu und im angrenzenden Tyrol. Allgäuer Zeitungsverlag, Kempten, 1985, ISBN: 3-88006-115-7, pp. 232–242. ; Joachim Zeune: Burgenführer Ostallgäu and Außerfern, Tyrol. Bergvesten und Talsperren Burgenregion Ostallgäu-Außerfern. Tourismusverband Ostallgäu, Marktoberdorf, 1998. ; Joachim Zeune: Burgenregion Allgäu. Ein Burgenführer. Zeune u. Koop, Eisenberg-Zell, 2008. ", "Burgdorf-Peine Geest\n The landscape is dominated by arable fields, in which rye, oats and potatoes produce good returns. Asparagus is also widely grown on the dry, sandy soils, Burgdorf Asparagus (Burgdorfer Spargel) being particularly well known in Germany as a whole. The grazing of cattle is also a common mode of farming due to the poor soils. Near Hänigsen a loamy ground moraine rises close to the surface which improves the soil quality. The sandy parts of the geest are mainly covered with pine woods exploited by the forestry industry. Deciduous woods occur here and there in the shape of English oak and birch woods.", "Großräschen\n Großräschen (Sorbian: Rań) is a town in Lower Lusatia, in Germany. Administratively, it is part of the district of Oberspreewald-Lausitz, in the state of Brandenburg.", "Grosbliederstroff\n🇩🇪 Kleinblittersdorf (Germany) ", "Burgkirchen, Austria\n Burgkirchen lies in the Innviertel. About 30 percent of the municipality is forest and 61 percent farmland. It is also close the river Inn and is 8 km from the Austria–Germany border.", "Grazer Wechselseitige Versicherung\n GRAWE has agreements with Kärntner Landesversicherung (Carinthian insurance), Niederösterreichischen Versicherung (Lower Austrian insurance), Oberösterreichischen Versicherung (Upper Austrian insurance), Tiroler Versicherung (Tirolean insurance), and Vorarlberger Landesversicherung (Vorarlberg insurance). The network is called the Vereinigung Österreichischer Länderversicherer (Insurers association of Austrian countries).", "Burgkirchen, Austria\n Burgkirchen is a municipality in the district Braunau am Inn in the Austrian state of Upper Austria." ]
Who is the author of The Latimers?
[ "Henry Christopher McCook", "McCook" ]
author
The Latimers
5,937,197
75
[ { "id": "3314667", "title": "Jonathan Latimer", "text": " None known", "score": "1.7060792" }, { "id": "12043290", "title": "The Latimers", "text": " The Latimers : A Tale of the Western Insurrection of 1794 is an historical novel by the American writer and Presbyterian clergyman Henry Christopher McCook (1837–1911) set in 1790s Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The novel tells the story of Scotch-Irish American pioneers during the Whiskey Rebellion.", "score": "1.5603468" }, { "id": "3314660", "title": "Jonathan Latimer", "text": " Jonathan Wyatt Latimer (October 23, 1906 – June 23, 1983) was an American crime writer known his novels and screenplays. Before becoming an author, Latimer was a journalist in Chicago.", "score": "1.540185" }, { "id": "3314662", "title": "Jonathan Latimer", "text": " Latimer became a journalist at the Chicago Herald Examiner and later for the Chicago Tribune, writing about crime and meeting Al Capone and Bugs Moran, among others. In the mid-1930s, he turned to writing fiction, starting with a series of novels featuring private eye William Crane, in which he introduced his typical blend of hardboiled crime fiction and elements of screwball comedy.", "score": "1.5260704" }, { "id": "4434369", "title": "Lewis Howard Latimer", "text": "A book of poetry called Poems of Love and Life. ; A technical book, Incandescent Electric Lighting (1890). ; Various pieces for African-American journals. ; A petition to Mayor Seth Low to restore a member to the Brooklyn School Board. Latimer played the violin and flute, painted portraits and wrote plays. He was an early advocate of civil rights. In 1895 Lewis wrote a statement in connection with the National Conference of Colored Men about equality, security, and opportunity.", "score": "1.5109015" }, { "id": "9604969", "title": "Elizabeth Wormeley Latimer", "text": " Mary Elizabeth Wormeley Latimer (July 26, 1822 – January 4, 1904 ) was an English-American writer, both of original works and translations.", "score": "1.4862697" }, { "id": "9321409", "title": "Jon Latimer", "text": " Jonathan David Latimer (1964 – 4 January 2009) was an historian and writer based in Wales. His books include Operation Compass 1940 (Osprey, 2000), Tobruk 1941 (Osprey, 2001), Deception in War (John Murray, 2001), Alamein (John Murray, 2002), Burma: The Forgotten War (John Murray, 2004) and 1812: War with America (Harvard University Press, 2007) which won a Distinguished Book Award from the Society for Military History and was shortlisted for the George Washington Book Prize. Born in Prestatyn, Wales, Latimer was educated at Christleton County High School, Chester. He studied for a geography degree at University College, Swansea but switched course to graduate in oceanography. He worked as an oceanographer until becoming a full-time writer in 1997. In 2003, he became an honorary research fellow at his alma mater (by this time Swansea University) and was appointed as a part-time lecturer in history on the BA (Hons) degree ", "score": "1.4641856" }, { "id": "14238804", "title": "Alan Noel Latimer Munby", "text": " Alan Noel Latimer ('Tim') Munby (1913–1974) was an English author, writer and librarian.", "score": "1.4597723" }, { "id": "9362689", "title": "Latimer (surname)", "text": " Latimer is the surname of:", "score": "1.4595509" }, { "id": "26966025", "title": "Margery Latimer", "text": " Margery Bodine Latimer (February 6, 1899 – August 16, 1932), born in Portage, Wisconsin, was an American writer, feminist theorist, and social activist. She moved to New York City before finishing college and became involved in its cultural life. Latimer published two highly acclaimed novels, We Are Incredible (1928) and This is My Body (1930), and two collections of short stories, Nellie Bloom and Other Stories (1929), and Guardian Angel and Other Stories (1932). (This was reprinted in a new edition in 1984.) Her formally experimental fiction was greatly influenced by the modernism of the 1920s. Reviewers of the period compared her to Gertrude Stein, James Joyce, and D. H. Lawrence. Her work reflects her feminist, socialist, and anti-racist ideals.", "score": "1.4567642" }, { "id": "26966028", "title": "Margery Latimer", "text": " Before her first novel was published in 1928, Latimer had stories published in Century, The American Caravan, The Bookman (New York) and other journals. Her essay, \"The New Freedom\", was published in 1924 in The Reviewer. According to scholar Joy Castro, it casts women as \"potential literary progenitors.\" Latimer writes of \"the word ... made flesh, and it is flesh with a mind of its own, infused with the possibility of change...\" Latimer's novels, We Are Incredible (1928) and This is My Body (1930), were highly acclaimed. Her debut novel received notices in the New York Times, McCall's, The Saturday Review of Literature, Chicago Tribune, and others. In addition, she published two collections of short stories, Nellie Bloom and Other Stories (1929), and Guardian Angel and Other Stories (1932). Her fiction was considered formally experimental and influenced by the modernism of the 1920s. Reviewers of the period compared her to Gertrude Stein, James Joyce, and D. H. Lawrence. Latimer expressed her principles of feminism, socialism, and anti-racism in her work. ", "score": "1.4489276" }, { "id": "365499", "title": "Latimer Trust", "text": " Since 2001 the Trust has resumed its publishing activities, and maintains the interest in research by funding posts and offering small grants. The first Director of Research (2006- ) is Gerald Bray; Research Fellows have been Matthew Sleeman (2001-5), Andrew Atherstone (2005- ) and Kirsten Birkett (2013-). The Trust has been approached by international organisations to publish significant works, such as ‘Being Faithful’ and its predecessor, ‘The Way, The Truth and the Life’ for GAFCON (now the Fellowship of Confessing Anglicans ).", "score": "1.4331679" }, { "id": "3314666", "title": "Jonathan Latimer", "text": "Dark Memory (1940) ", "score": "1.430378" }, { "id": "32429059", "title": "Caroline Latimer", "text": " Caroline Wormeley Latimer (March 28, 1860 – 1933) was an American physiologist known for her studies of rigor mortis and the salivary glands, and her popular science writing, which was widely read by women and girls.", "score": "1.4280062" }, { "id": "14782836", "title": "Selected Program Notes from the Retrospective Exhibition of Theresa Rosenberg Latimer", "text": " \"Selected Program Notes from the Retrospective Exhibition of Theresa Rosenberg Latimer\" is a 2013 fantasy story by Kenneth Schneyer. It was first published in the Mythic Delirium Books anthology Clockwork Phoenix 4. An audio version was subsequently released on PodCastle, read by Peter Wood.", "score": "1.424462" }, { "id": "31344258", "title": "George Latimer Apperson", "text": " The following list has come from a search on the Jisc Library Hub Discover database., with details checked by looking at advertisements and reviews for the works at the time of publication in the British Newspaper Archive.", "score": "1.411425" }, { "id": "26966026", "title": "Margery Latimer", "text": " Latimer was the younger daughter of Clark Watt Latimer and Laura Augusta née Bodine. Her Yankee ancestry included New England pioneers Anne Bradstreet and John Cotton. Latimer published a short story in a local paper in 1917. This caught the attention of her Portage neighbor Zona Gale, a well-known writer, journalist, and suffragist. Gale became the first woman to win the Pulitzer Prize for drama. She became Latimer's mentor and confidante. Latimer attended Wooster College, but withdrew quickly, then attended the University of Wisconsin–Madison. She withdrew again and moved to New York City, where she started a playwriting course at Columbia University. Gale established a Zona Gale scholarship, tailor-made for Latimer, its first recipient. The younger woman returned to the University of Wisconsin–Madison in 1922. She worked on the campus literary magazine as editor and contributor, and became part of a circle of writers there. She withdrew ", "score": "1.4087911" }, { "id": "9604971", "title": "Elizabeth Wormeley Latimer", "text": " She was educated by tutors and at a school in Ipswich, Massachusetts. Early travels also helped educate her. She spent the winter of 1842 in Boston as the guest of the family of George Ticknor, and in that environment received much encouragement of her interest in literature. The daughter resided several years in Newport, Rhode Island, and in 1856, after gaining a reputation as a writer. After spending several years raising her children, she began writing again in 1876.", "score": "1.4049294" }, { "id": "31353349", "title": "Matt Latimer", "text": " Latimer married Anna (née Sproul) in 2012. Sproul is a literary agent and graduate of Columbia University and the University of Oxford.", "score": "1.3991632" }, { "id": "10898215", "title": "List of English writers (K–Q)", "text": " writer • Emilia Lanier or Lanyer, (1569–1645) poet • R. F. Langley (1938–2011), poet • Nathaniel Lardner (1684–1768), theologian • Philip Larkin (1922–1985), poet • Michael Laskey (born 1944), poet and editor • Harold Laski (1893–1950), political writer • Marghanita Laski (1915–1988), novelist and broadcaster • David Lassman (born 1963), writer and scriptwriter • Francis Lathom (1774–1832), novelist and playwright • Hugh Latimer (c. 1487–1555), preacher, bishop and martyr • William Laud (1573–1645), theologian, archbishop and martyr • Hugh Laurie (born 1959), novelist and actor • William Law (1686–1761), theologian. • D. H. Lawrence (1885–1930), novelist and poet, Sons and ", "score": "1.3967888" } ]
[ "Jonathan Latimer\n None known", "The Latimers\n The Latimers : A Tale of the Western Insurrection of 1794 is an historical novel by the American writer and Presbyterian clergyman Henry Christopher McCook (1837–1911) set in 1790s Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The novel tells the story of Scotch-Irish American pioneers during the Whiskey Rebellion.", "Jonathan Latimer\n Jonathan Wyatt Latimer (October 23, 1906 – June 23, 1983) was an American crime writer known his novels and screenplays. Before becoming an author, Latimer was a journalist in Chicago.", "Jonathan Latimer\n Latimer became a journalist at the Chicago Herald Examiner and later for the Chicago Tribune, writing about crime and meeting Al Capone and Bugs Moran, among others. In the mid-1930s, he turned to writing fiction, starting with a series of novels featuring private eye William Crane, in which he introduced his typical blend of hardboiled crime fiction and elements of screwball comedy.", "Lewis Howard Latimer\nA book of poetry called Poems of Love and Life. ; A technical book, Incandescent Electric Lighting (1890). ; Various pieces for African-American journals. ; A petition to Mayor Seth Low to restore a member to the Brooklyn School Board. Latimer played the violin and flute, painted portraits and wrote plays. He was an early advocate of civil rights. In 1895 Lewis wrote a statement in connection with the National Conference of Colored Men about equality, security, and opportunity.", "Elizabeth Wormeley Latimer\n Mary Elizabeth Wormeley Latimer (July 26, 1822 – January 4, 1904 ) was an English-American writer, both of original works and translations.", "Jon Latimer\n Jonathan David Latimer (1964 – 4 January 2009) was an historian and writer based in Wales. His books include Operation Compass 1940 (Osprey, 2000), Tobruk 1941 (Osprey, 2001), Deception in War (John Murray, 2001), Alamein (John Murray, 2002), Burma: The Forgotten War (John Murray, 2004) and 1812: War with America (Harvard University Press, 2007) which won a Distinguished Book Award from the Society for Military History and was shortlisted for the George Washington Book Prize. Born in Prestatyn, Wales, Latimer was educated at Christleton County High School, Chester. He studied for a geography degree at University College, Swansea but switched course to graduate in oceanography. He worked as an oceanographer until becoming a full-time writer in 1997. In 2003, he became an honorary research fellow at his alma mater (by this time Swansea University) and was appointed as a part-time lecturer in history on the BA (Hons) degree ", "Alan Noel Latimer Munby\n Alan Noel Latimer ('Tim') Munby (1913–1974) was an English author, writer and librarian.", "Latimer (surname)\n Latimer is the surname of:", "Margery Latimer\n Margery Bodine Latimer (February 6, 1899 – August 16, 1932), born in Portage, Wisconsin, was an American writer, feminist theorist, and social activist. She moved to New York City before finishing college and became involved in its cultural life. Latimer published two highly acclaimed novels, We Are Incredible (1928) and This is My Body (1930), and two collections of short stories, Nellie Bloom and Other Stories (1929), and Guardian Angel and Other Stories (1932). (This was reprinted in a new edition in 1984.) Her formally experimental fiction was greatly influenced by the modernism of the 1920s. Reviewers of the period compared her to Gertrude Stein, James Joyce, and D. H. Lawrence. Her work reflects her feminist, socialist, and anti-racist ideals.", "Margery Latimer\n Before her first novel was published in 1928, Latimer had stories published in Century, The American Caravan, The Bookman (New York) and other journals. Her essay, \"The New Freedom\", was published in 1924 in The Reviewer. According to scholar Joy Castro, it casts women as \"potential literary progenitors.\" Latimer writes of \"the word ... made flesh, and it is flesh with a mind of its own, infused with the possibility of change...\" Latimer's novels, We Are Incredible (1928) and This is My Body (1930), were highly acclaimed. Her debut novel received notices in the New York Times, McCall's, The Saturday Review of Literature, Chicago Tribune, and others. In addition, she published two collections of short stories, Nellie Bloom and Other Stories (1929), and Guardian Angel and Other Stories (1932). Her fiction was considered formally experimental and influenced by the modernism of the 1920s. Reviewers of the period compared her to Gertrude Stein, James Joyce, and D. H. Lawrence. Latimer expressed her principles of feminism, socialism, and anti-racism in her work. ", "Latimer Trust\n Since 2001 the Trust has resumed its publishing activities, and maintains the interest in research by funding posts and offering small grants. The first Director of Research (2006- ) is Gerald Bray; Research Fellows have been Matthew Sleeman (2001-5), Andrew Atherstone (2005- ) and Kirsten Birkett (2013-). The Trust has been approached by international organisations to publish significant works, such as ‘Being Faithful’ and its predecessor, ‘The Way, The Truth and the Life’ for GAFCON (now the Fellowship of Confessing Anglicans ).", "Jonathan Latimer\nDark Memory (1940) ", "Caroline Latimer\n Caroline Wormeley Latimer (March 28, 1860 – 1933) was an American physiologist known for her studies of rigor mortis and the salivary glands, and her popular science writing, which was widely read by women and girls.", "Selected Program Notes from the Retrospective Exhibition of Theresa Rosenberg Latimer\n \"Selected Program Notes from the Retrospective Exhibition of Theresa Rosenberg Latimer\" is a 2013 fantasy story by Kenneth Schneyer. It was first published in the Mythic Delirium Books anthology Clockwork Phoenix 4. An audio version was subsequently released on PodCastle, read by Peter Wood.", "George Latimer Apperson\n The following list has come from a search on the Jisc Library Hub Discover database., with details checked by looking at advertisements and reviews for the works at the time of publication in the British Newspaper Archive.", "Margery Latimer\n Latimer was the younger daughter of Clark Watt Latimer and Laura Augusta née Bodine. Her Yankee ancestry included New England pioneers Anne Bradstreet and John Cotton. Latimer published a short story in a local paper in 1917. This caught the attention of her Portage neighbor Zona Gale, a well-known writer, journalist, and suffragist. Gale became the first woman to win the Pulitzer Prize for drama. She became Latimer's mentor and confidante. Latimer attended Wooster College, but withdrew quickly, then attended the University of Wisconsin–Madison. She withdrew again and moved to New York City, where she started a playwriting course at Columbia University. Gale established a Zona Gale scholarship, tailor-made for Latimer, its first recipient. The younger woman returned to the University of Wisconsin–Madison in 1922. She worked on the campus literary magazine as editor and contributor, and became part of a circle of writers there. She withdrew ", "Elizabeth Wormeley Latimer\n She was educated by tutors and at a school in Ipswich, Massachusetts. Early travels also helped educate her. She spent the winter of 1842 in Boston as the guest of the family of George Ticknor, and in that environment received much encouragement of her interest in literature. The daughter resided several years in Newport, Rhode Island, and in 1856, after gaining a reputation as a writer. After spending several years raising her children, she began writing again in 1876.", "Matt Latimer\n Latimer married Anna (née Sproul) in 2012. Sproul is a literary agent and graduate of Columbia University and the University of Oxford.", "List of English writers (K–Q)\n writer • Emilia Lanier or Lanyer, (1569–1645) poet • R. F. Langley (1938–2011), poet • Nathaniel Lardner (1684–1768), theologian • Philip Larkin (1922–1985), poet • Michael Laskey (born 1944), poet and editor • Harold Laski (1893–1950), political writer • Marghanita Laski (1915–1988), novelist and broadcaster • David Lassman (born 1963), writer and scriptwriter • Francis Lathom (1774–1832), novelist and playwright • Hugh Latimer (c. 1487–1555), preacher, bishop and martyr • William Laud (1573–1645), theologian, archbishop and martyr • Hugh Laurie (born 1959), novelist and actor • William Law (1686–1761), theologian. • D. H. Lawrence (1885–1930), novelist and poet, Sons and " ]
Who was the screenwriter for Three Loves in Rio?
[ "Carlos Hugo Christensen" ]
screenwriter
Three Loves in Rio
5,988,419
60
[ { "id": "16215628", "title": "Three Loves in Rio", "text": " Three Loves in Rio (Meus Amores no Rio, Mis amores en Río) is a 1959 Brazilian-Argentine drama film directed by Carlos Hugo Christensen. It was entered into the 9th Berlin International Film Festival.", "score": "1.7865539" }, { "id": "306889", "title": "Rio, I Love You", "text": " The participating directors were Brazilians Carlos Saldanha (Ice Age and Rio), José Padilha (Elite Squad), Andrucha Waddington (The House of Sand) and Fernando Meirelles (City of God), the Lebanese director Nadine Labaki (Caramel), the Mexican screenwriter Guillermo Arriaga (Babel), the Australian director Stephan Elliott (The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert), the Italian director Paolo Sorrentino (The Great Beauty), the American actor and director John Turturro, and the South Korean director Im Sang-soo (A Good Lawyer's Wife, The Housemaid). The opening and closing sequences, plus the transitions were directed by Brazilian Vicente Amorim, while musician Gilberto Gil composed the theme song. Those responsible for producing the film, among them Rio Filme, disclosed that the cost of production was R$20 million.", "score": "1.6519153" }, { "id": "9695232", "title": "Rene Belmonte", "text": " Renê Belmonte (born January 27, 1971 in São Paulo) is a Brazilian TV and movie screenwriter. Belmonte studied advertising at ESPM in São Paulo then studied moviewriting in London at City Lit. After moving to Rio de Janeiro in 2001 he worked at Total Entertainment for three years, evaluating and developing projects in-house. Since 1999 he has been giving screenwriting courses and workshops for different schools and entities. In television he was segment producer and headwriter for the reality show Temptation Island Brazil (for SBT) and staff writer of the comedy show Sob Nova Direção (TV Globo). In 2006 he was the creator and headwriter of the sitcom Avassaladoras for Fox Television and Record. For the big screen he wrote Sexo, amor e traição (2004), directed by Jorge Fernando, and Se eu fosse você (2006), directed by Daniel Filho, two of the biggest hits in the recent Brazilian filmography. His latest works include the German film Showdebola, directed by Alexander Pickl, and Sexo com Amor, directed by Wolf Maya, with a 2008 summer release date. He also wrote the script of Entre Sábanas, a Colombian film by Gustavo Nieto Roa currently filming in Bogotá.", "score": "1.6125224" }, { "id": "306888", "title": "Rio, I Love You", "text": " Rio, I Love You (Rio, Eu Te Amo) is a 2014 Brazilian anthology film starring an ensemble cast of actors of various nationalities. It's the third film in the Cities of Love franchise (following 2006's Paris, je t'aime and the 2008 film New York, I Love You), created and produced by Emmanuel Benbihy.", "score": "1.6056757" }, { "id": "13427817", "title": "Michael James Love", "text": " Tina Modotti for Mick Jagger's Jagged Films and Warner Brothers. In 2010 Love wrote the screenplay for the Spanish language film La Leyenda De Las Arcas released in 2011. Most recently, Michael wrote the original screenplay for the English language historical epic Cristiada directed by Dean Wright and produced by NewLand Films about the Cristero War in Mexico (1926–1929), starring Andy García, Peter O'Toole, Bruce Greenwood, Eva Longoria, and Rubén Blades. \"Cristiada\" aka \"For Greater Glory\" was released internationally by Relativity Media and Arc Entertainment and was nominated for five Alma Awards. As a writer, producer, director, Michael Love made three feature films ", "score": "1.5882581" }, { "id": "16215629", "title": "Three Loves in Rio", "text": "Susana Freyre ; Jardel Filho ; Domingo Alzugaray ; Fábio Cardoso ; Agildo Ribeiro ; Diana Morel ; Dina Lisboa ; Humberto Catalano ; Afonso Stuart ; Blanca Tapia ; Vicente Rubino ; Carlos Infante ; Marga de los Llanos ; Orlando Guy ; Antonio Ventura ; Antonio Camargo ", "score": "1.5642626" }, { "id": "6096680", "title": "Three to Tango", "text": " In March 1998 it was announced Matthew Perry and Neve Campbell were in talks with Outlaw Productions and Warner Bros. to headline Three to Tango written by Rodney Patrick Vaccaro, with rewrite by Aileen Brosh. The film was slated to be the directorial debut of Damon Santostefano following dropping out of directing Tristar's Idle Hands.", "score": "1.5560074" }, { "id": "31246332", "title": "Primum Entertainment Group", "text": " At the Cannes Film Festival in May 2009, Primum Entertainment Group acquired the license to produce Rio, Eu Te Amo the next film in the series of Cities of Love motion pictures following Paris, je t'aime and New York, I Love You. This film is currently in development.", "score": "1.5435886" }, { "id": "26697341", "title": "Manoel de Oliveira", "text": " life relationship between Fanny Owen, Amor de Perdição author Camilo Castelo Branco and Branco's best friend Jose Augusto. Oliveira's wife was a distant relative of Owen and had access to private letter's written by all three protagonists in the film. The film was screened to great acclaim at the Director's Fortnight at the 1981 Cannes Film Festival and furthered Oliveira's global recognition. In addition to Francisca, Oliveira adapted six other novels or stories from author Agustina Bessa-Luís, as well as collaborated on the screenplay for the documentary Visita ou Memórias e Confissões. This was also the first film which Oliveira ", "score": "1.5414988" }, { "id": "30959656", "title": "The Third Bank of the River", "text": " The Third Bank of the River (A Terceira Margem do Rio) is a 1994 Brazilian drama film directed by Nelson Pereira dos Santos. It is based on the short stories \"A Menina de Lá\", \"Os Irmãos Dagobé\", \"Fatalidade\", \"Seqüência\", and \"A Terceira Margem do Rio\" by João Guimarães Rosa compiled into the book Primeiras Estórias. It was entered into the 44th Berlin International Film Festival.", "score": "1.5325842" }, { "id": "31091024", "title": "Richard Alfieri", "text": " Prize at the New York Film and Television Festival and a Writers Guild Award nomination for his teleplay for the film A Friendship in Vienna. He also received both a Writers Guild Award and an Emmy Award nomination for his work on Norman Lear’s ABC special I Love Liberty. He wrote the feature film Echoes and the novel Ricardo - Diary of a Matinee Idol, which he adapted into the screenplay Moonlight Blonde. He also wrote the film adaptation of Robert James Waller's novel Puerto Vallarta Squeeze. His play \"The Sisters\", suggested by Anton Chekhov's Three Sisters, premiered at the Pasadena Playhouse. Alfieri adapted the ", "score": "1.5323579" }, { "id": "26363460", "title": "Khaled Mouzanar", "text": "2014: Rio, I Love You (Co-Writer of the segment \"O Milagre\") ; 2018: Capernaum (film) (Co-Writer) ; 2020: Mayroun and the Unicorn (short film for Netflix Homemade serie) (Co-Director) ", "score": "1.5311549" }, { "id": "2606449", "title": "Three Men of the River", "text": " Three Men of the River (Tres hombres del río) is a 1943 Argentine crime drama film directed by Mario Soffici and starring Elisa Galvé and José Olarra. The film is based on an old Argentine legend about an Aztec girl who is raped and murdered by vandals and dumped in a river. A flower blossoms at the place in which she was killed and misfortune falls upon the culprits. Three Men of the River was one of the most critically acclaimed films of 1943 in Argentina, winning five Silver Condor awards at the 1944 Argentine Film Critics Association Awards, with cinematographers Leo Fleider and Francis Boeniger winning the Silver Condor Awards for Best Camera Operator and Best Cinematography respectively, and Leticia Scuri winning the Silver Condor Award for Best Supporting Actress. The film also won Best Original Screenplay and Best Music. At the Argentine Academy of Cinematography Arts and Sciences awards it also won Best Director for Soffici, Best Original Screenplay, Best Supporting Actress for Scuri, and Best Cinematography and Best Camera Operator for Boeniger and Fleider.", "score": "1.5289471" }, { "id": "13388781", "title": "Fernanda Montenegro", "text": " known as Rio's Love Song), which garnered its director Carlos \"Cacá\" Diegues a Best Director Award in the Havana Film Festival. She then moved, in 1997, to a small appearance in O Que é Isso, Companheiro? (internationally known as Four Days in September), which starred American actor Alan Arkin and chronicled the kidnapping of American consul Charles Burke Elbrick by rebellious political activists who opposed the military dictatorship in Brazil, based on the memoirs of Brazilian politician Fernando Gabeira. The movie had significant international repercussion, welcoming nominations to the Golden Bear in the Berlin International Film Festival and to the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film.", "score": "1.5271201" }, { "id": "30730621", "title": "Aluizio Abranches", "text": " Aluizio Abranches is a Brazilian film director. Graduated in cinema at London Film School and in economics at Universidade Cândido Mendes, Aluizio became known for taking to the cinema screens challenging projects, both in their strategies of creation as well in their themes, with a prestigious crew and great cast. His mostly recurrent themes are family and love, as a counterpoint to a world full of violence, fear and intolerance. A Glass of Rage is based on the novel of the Brazilian writer Raduan Nassar. The Three Marias is a shakespearean tragedy in the countryside of Pernambuco. From Beginning to End addresses unconditional love between two brothers and it is the third film that Aluizio Works with Julia Lemmertz, who stars the movie with Fábio Assunção, Rafael Cardoso and João Gabriel Vasconcellos. In Happily Married, Aluizio rejoins the partnership with Alexandre Borges, who stars in the comedy with Camila Morgado.", "score": "1.5171511" }, { "id": "5233974", "title": "Letters from Three Lovers", "text": " Letters from Three Lovers is a 1973 made-for-television drama film directed by John Erman. An ABC Movie of the Week and a sequel to The Letters (1973), the film is co-produced by Aaron Spelling, written by Ann Marcus and stars Martin Sheen, Belinda Montgomery, Robert Sterling, June Allyson, Ken Berry and Juliet Mills, among others.", "score": "1.5126308" }, { "id": "13427816", "title": "Michael James Love", "text": " Michael James Love (aka Michael Love) is a screenwriter, producer, and director Love grew up in Mexico City of American parents and attended Cal Arts at Valencia California. In 1987 Love wrote the screenplay for the Academy Award-nominated Gaby: A True Story directed by Luis Mandoki about Gabriela Brimmer, the Mexican poet with cerebral palsy, starring Liv Ullmann, Robert Loggia, and Norma Aleandro. In 1993 Love wrote the original screenplays for the ABC movie of the week Shattering the Silence and in 1996 the Spanish-language feature film Extranos Caminos. Love has written many other screenplays, including Mavericks for Playtone, Icon and Universal Studios, ", "score": "1.5106423" }, { "id": "12755905", "title": "That Man from Rio", "text": " The film was nominated for Best Original Screenplay at the Academy Awards.", "score": "1.5083773" }, { "id": "13424329", "title": "Brazil (1985 film)", "text": " Gilliam developed the story and wrote the first draft of the screenplay with Charles Alverson, who was paid for his work but was ultimately uncredited in the final film. For nearly 20 years, Gilliam denied that Alverson had made any material contribution to the script. When the first draft was published and original in-progress documents emerged from Alverson's files, however, Gilliam begrudgingly changed his story. This was too late for either credit on the film or a listing on the failed Oscar nomination for Alverson; he has said that he would not have minded the Oscar nomination, even though he didn't think much of the script or the finished film. Gilliam, McKeown, and Stoppard ", "score": "1.5059524" }, { "id": "1943345", "title": "Laura Malin", "text": " Laura started writing for film and television projects out of the country, in Angola, where she wrote the TV series called Novos Quilombos; Paris, where she developed a drama series for mobiles; and in the US. Laura worked as a screenwriter on the set of The River Murders, a feature film she adapted for a Brazilian character on location (Spokane, WA). In 2009, Laura was Artistic Director at the first edition of the Hollywood Brazilian Film Festival’s first edition in Los Angeles. The following year, Laura wrote and produced the short film Viver! that premiered at the Cannes Short Film Corner.", "score": "1.5022948" } ]
[ "Three Loves in Rio\n Three Loves in Rio (Meus Amores no Rio, Mis amores en Río) is a 1959 Brazilian-Argentine drama film directed by Carlos Hugo Christensen. It was entered into the 9th Berlin International Film Festival.", "Rio, I Love You\n The participating directors were Brazilians Carlos Saldanha (Ice Age and Rio), José Padilha (Elite Squad), Andrucha Waddington (The House of Sand) and Fernando Meirelles (City of God), the Lebanese director Nadine Labaki (Caramel), the Mexican screenwriter Guillermo Arriaga (Babel), the Australian director Stephan Elliott (The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert), the Italian director Paolo Sorrentino (The Great Beauty), the American actor and director John Turturro, and the South Korean director Im Sang-soo (A Good Lawyer's Wife, The Housemaid). The opening and closing sequences, plus the transitions were directed by Brazilian Vicente Amorim, while musician Gilberto Gil composed the theme song. Those responsible for producing the film, among them Rio Filme, disclosed that the cost of production was R$20 million.", "Rene Belmonte\n Renê Belmonte (born January 27, 1971 in São Paulo) is a Brazilian TV and movie screenwriter. Belmonte studied advertising at ESPM in São Paulo then studied moviewriting in London at City Lit. After moving to Rio de Janeiro in 2001 he worked at Total Entertainment for three years, evaluating and developing projects in-house. Since 1999 he has been giving screenwriting courses and workshops for different schools and entities. In television he was segment producer and headwriter for the reality show Temptation Island Brazil (for SBT) and staff writer of the comedy show Sob Nova Direção (TV Globo). In 2006 he was the creator and headwriter of the sitcom Avassaladoras for Fox Television and Record. For the big screen he wrote Sexo, amor e traição (2004), directed by Jorge Fernando, and Se eu fosse você (2006), directed by Daniel Filho, two of the biggest hits in the recent Brazilian filmography. His latest works include the German film Showdebola, directed by Alexander Pickl, and Sexo com Amor, directed by Wolf Maya, with a 2008 summer release date. He also wrote the script of Entre Sábanas, a Colombian film by Gustavo Nieto Roa currently filming in Bogotá.", "Rio, I Love You\n Rio, I Love You (Rio, Eu Te Amo) is a 2014 Brazilian anthology film starring an ensemble cast of actors of various nationalities. It's the third film in the Cities of Love franchise (following 2006's Paris, je t'aime and the 2008 film New York, I Love You), created and produced by Emmanuel Benbihy.", "Michael James Love\n Tina Modotti for Mick Jagger's Jagged Films and Warner Brothers. In 2010 Love wrote the screenplay for the Spanish language film La Leyenda De Las Arcas released in 2011. Most recently, Michael wrote the original screenplay for the English language historical epic Cristiada directed by Dean Wright and produced by NewLand Films about the Cristero War in Mexico (1926–1929), starring Andy García, Peter O'Toole, Bruce Greenwood, Eva Longoria, and Rubén Blades. \"Cristiada\" aka \"For Greater Glory\" was released internationally by Relativity Media and Arc Entertainment and was nominated for five Alma Awards. As a writer, producer, director, Michael Love made three feature films ", "Three Loves in Rio\nSusana Freyre ; Jardel Filho ; Domingo Alzugaray ; Fábio Cardoso ; Agildo Ribeiro ; Diana Morel ; Dina Lisboa ; Humberto Catalano ; Afonso Stuart ; Blanca Tapia ; Vicente Rubino ; Carlos Infante ; Marga de los Llanos ; Orlando Guy ; Antonio Ventura ; Antonio Camargo ", "Three to Tango\n In March 1998 it was announced Matthew Perry and Neve Campbell were in talks with Outlaw Productions and Warner Bros. to headline Three to Tango written by Rodney Patrick Vaccaro, with rewrite by Aileen Brosh. The film was slated to be the directorial debut of Damon Santostefano following dropping out of directing Tristar's Idle Hands.", "Primum Entertainment Group\n At the Cannes Film Festival in May 2009, Primum Entertainment Group acquired the license to produce Rio, Eu Te Amo the next film in the series of Cities of Love motion pictures following Paris, je t'aime and New York, I Love You. This film is currently in development.", "Manoel de Oliveira\n life relationship between Fanny Owen, Amor de Perdição author Camilo Castelo Branco and Branco's best friend Jose Augusto. Oliveira's wife was a distant relative of Owen and had access to private letter's written by all three protagonists in the film. The film was screened to great acclaim at the Director's Fortnight at the 1981 Cannes Film Festival and furthered Oliveira's global recognition. In addition to Francisca, Oliveira adapted six other novels or stories from author Agustina Bessa-Luís, as well as collaborated on the screenplay for the documentary Visita ou Memórias e Confissões. This was also the first film which Oliveira ", "The Third Bank of the River\n The Third Bank of the River (A Terceira Margem do Rio) is a 1994 Brazilian drama film directed by Nelson Pereira dos Santos. It is based on the short stories \"A Menina de Lá\", \"Os Irmãos Dagobé\", \"Fatalidade\", \"Seqüência\", and \"A Terceira Margem do Rio\" by João Guimarães Rosa compiled into the book Primeiras Estórias. It was entered into the 44th Berlin International Film Festival.", "Richard Alfieri\n Prize at the New York Film and Television Festival and a Writers Guild Award nomination for his teleplay for the film A Friendship in Vienna. He also received both a Writers Guild Award and an Emmy Award nomination for his work on Norman Lear’s ABC special I Love Liberty. He wrote the feature film Echoes and the novel Ricardo - Diary of a Matinee Idol, which he adapted into the screenplay Moonlight Blonde. He also wrote the film adaptation of Robert James Waller's novel Puerto Vallarta Squeeze. His play \"The Sisters\", suggested by Anton Chekhov's Three Sisters, premiered at the Pasadena Playhouse. Alfieri adapted the ", "Khaled Mouzanar\n2014: Rio, I Love You (Co-Writer of the segment \"O Milagre\") ; 2018: Capernaum (film) (Co-Writer) ; 2020: Mayroun and the Unicorn (short film for Netflix Homemade serie) (Co-Director) ", "Three Men of the River\n Three Men of the River (Tres hombres del río) is a 1943 Argentine crime drama film directed by Mario Soffici and starring Elisa Galvé and José Olarra. The film is based on an old Argentine legend about an Aztec girl who is raped and murdered by vandals and dumped in a river. A flower blossoms at the place in which she was killed and misfortune falls upon the culprits. Three Men of the River was one of the most critically acclaimed films of 1943 in Argentina, winning five Silver Condor awards at the 1944 Argentine Film Critics Association Awards, with cinematographers Leo Fleider and Francis Boeniger winning the Silver Condor Awards for Best Camera Operator and Best Cinematography respectively, and Leticia Scuri winning the Silver Condor Award for Best Supporting Actress. The film also won Best Original Screenplay and Best Music. At the Argentine Academy of Cinematography Arts and Sciences awards it also won Best Director for Soffici, Best Original Screenplay, Best Supporting Actress for Scuri, and Best Cinematography and Best Camera Operator for Boeniger and Fleider.", "Fernanda Montenegro\n known as Rio's Love Song), which garnered its director Carlos \"Cacá\" Diegues a Best Director Award in the Havana Film Festival. She then moved, in 1997, to a small appearance in O Que é Isso, Companheiro? (internationally known as Four Days in September), which starred American actor Alan Arkin and chronicled the kidnapping of American consul Charles Burke Elbrick by rebellious political activists who opposed the military dictatorship in Brazil, based on the memoirs of Brazilian politician Fernando Gabeira. The movie had significant international repercussion, welcoming nominations to the Golden Bear in the Berlin International Film Festival and to the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film.", "Aluizio Abranches\n Aluizio Abranches is a Brazilian film director. Graduated in cinema at London Film School and in economics at Universidade Cândido Mendes, Aluizio became known for taking to the cinema screens challenging projects, both in their strategies of creation as well in their themes, with a prestigious crew and great cast. His mostly recurrent themes are family and love, as a counterpoint to a world full of violence, fear and intolerance. A Glass of Rage is based on the novel of the Brazilian writer Raduan Nassar. The Three Marias is a shakespearean tragedy in the countryside of Pernambuco. From Beginning to End addresses unconditional love between two brothers and it is the third film that Aluizio Works with Julia Lemmertz, who stars the movie with Fábio Assunção, Rafael Cardoso and João Gabriel Vasconcellos. In Happily Married, Aluizio rejoins the partnership with Alexandre Borges, who stars in the comedy with Camila Morgado.", "Letters from Three Lovers\n Letters from Three Lovers is a 1973 made-for-television drama film directed by John Erman. An ABC Movie of the Week and a sequel to The Letters (1973), the film is co-produced by Aaron Spelling, written by Ann Marcus and stars Martin Sheen, Belinda Montgomery, Robert Sterling, June Allyson, Ken Berry and Juliet Mills, among others.", "Michael James Love\n Michael James Love (aka Michael Love) is a screenwriter, producer, and director Love grew up in Mexico City of American parents and attended Cal Arts at Valencia California. In 1987 Love wrote the screenplay for the Academy Award-nominated Gaby: A True Story directed by Luis Mandoki about Gabriela Brimmer, the Mexican poet with cerebral palsy, starring Liv Ullmann, Robert Loggia, and Norma Aleandro. In 1993 Love wrote the original screenplays for the ABC movie of the week Shattering the Silence and in 1996 the Spanish-language feature film Extranos Caminos. Love has written many other screenplays, including Mavericks for Playtone, Icon and Universal Studios, ", "That Man from Rio\n The film was nominated for Best Original Screenplay at the Academy Awards.", "Brazil (1985 film)\n Gilliam developed the story and wrote the first draft of the screenplay with Charles Alverson, who was paid for his work but was ultimately uncredited in the final film. For nearly 20 years, Gilliam denied that Alverson had made any material contribution to the script. When the first draft was published and original in-progress documents emerged from Alverson's files, however, Gilliam begrudgingly changed his story. This was too late for either credit on the film or a listing on the failed Oscar nomination for Alverson; he has said that he would not have minded the Oscar nomination, even though he didn't think much of the script or the finished film. Gilliam, McKeown, and Stoppard ", "Laura Malin\n Laura started writing for film and television projects out of the country, in Angola, where she wrote the TV series called Novos Quilombos; Paris, where she developed a drama series for mobiles; and in the US. Laura worked as a screenwriter on the set of The River Murders, a feature film she adapted for a Brazilian character on location (Spokane, WA). In 2009, Laura was Artistic Director at the first edition of the Hollywood Brazilian Film Festival’s first edition in Los Angeles. The following year, Laura wrote and produced the short film Viver! that premiered at the Cannes Short Film Corner." ]
Who is the author of Darkvision?
[ "Bruce Cordell", "Bruce Robert Cordell", "Bruce R. Cordell" ]
author
Darkvision (novel)
1,112,731
54
[ { "id": "26385644", "title": "Darkvision (novel)", "text": " Darkvision is a fantasy novel by Bruce Cordell, set in the world of the Forgotten Realms, and based on the Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game. It is the third novel in \"The Wizards\" series. It was published in paperback in September 2006.", "score": "1.8292879" }, { "id": "26385646", "title": "Darkvision (novel)", "text": " Pat Ferrara of mania.com comments: \"Another stand-alone novel of The Wizards series, Darkvision hits the scene under the experienced wing of Forgotten Realms guru Bruce R. Cordell.\"", "score": "1.7568957" }, { "id": "26385645", "title": "Darkvision (novel)", "text": " Haunted by nightmares and driven by desire, Ususi ventured alone into the outside world her people abandoned centuries ago, and tracks down the relics that brought both prosperity and doom to her people.", "score": "1.6603078" }, { "id": "13237809", "title": "Dark Visions", "text": " Dark Visions is a horror fiction compilation, with three short stories by Stephen King, three by Dan Simmons and a novella by George R. R. Martin. It was published by Orion on August 10, 1989. The collection was first published, with the same seven stories, under the title Night Visions 5, by Dark Harvest on July 1, 1988. The book was also issued under the titles Dark Love and The Skin Trade. Two of the stories by King, \"Sneakers\" and \"Dedication\", were later included in his 1993 anthology Nightmares & Dreamscapes. All three stories by Simmons were later included in his 1990 collection Prayers to Broken Stones. Martin's The Skin Trade was later included in Quartet: Four Tales from the Crossroads (2001) and Dreamsongs: A RRetrospective (2003).", "score": "1.5104823" }, { "id": "11279613", "title": "The Dark Design", "text": " The Dark Design (1977) is a science fiction novel by American writer Philip José Farmer, the third in the series of Riverworld books. The title is derived from lines in Sir Richard Francis Burton's poem The Kasîdah of Hâjî Abdû El-Yezdî:", "score": "1.5009494" }, { "id": "15582703", "title": "Ulrich Kiesow", "text": " Ulrich Kiesow was one of the co-founders of Fantasy Productions (FanPro) in 1983, together with Werner Fuchs and Hans Joachim Alpers. He was the translator of the first German language editions for both Tunnels & Trolls, which was the first German language RPG rule book, and Dungeons & Dragons. Most importantly, Kiesow was the creator of the pen and paper role-playing game The Dark Eye and its accompanying universe. Besides contributing to many publications regarding this game, Kiesow used the pseudonym Andreas Blumenkamp to write satirical articles for the now defunct German roleplaying game magazine Wunderwelten that was produced by FanPro. Kiesow suffered a severe heart attack in August 1995. While recovering he began to write the Dark Eye novel Das zerbrochene Rad (The broken wheel, a symbol for death in the universe of The Dark Eye). The novel had just been completed when Kiesow died of heart failure in his home on January 30, 1997.", "score": "1.4946971" }, { "id": "15320110", "title": "The Dark Eye (video game)", "text": "Adventure Classic Gaming feature (2008) ; CoreGamers article and interview with creator Russell Lees (2008) ; Interview with creator Russell Lees on general development process (2009) ", "score": "1.4774556" }, { "id": "2282409", "title": "Here the Dark", "text": " Here the Dark is a 2020 book by David Bergen. After a successful career as a novelist, Bergen returns to his original genre, short fiction. This book contains a novella and seven short stories that span his writing career. The book was shortlisted for the Giller Prize in 2020. The book won the 2021 McNally Robinson Book of the Year Award.", "score": "1.4756691" }, { "id": "10973029", "title": "Rob Hood", "text": " This collection brings together all Hood's 44 ghost stories, published from 1986 to 2015, three of them written especially for the book: \"After Image\", \"Double Speak\" and a 22,000-word novella, \"The Whimper\". Seen by the publisher as a \"reference collection\", the volume includes an introduction by World Fantasy Award-winning editor, Danel Olson, notes by the author and a bibliography that lists complete publication details, awards and commendations for each story. With the publication of this book, the publisher announced that Peripheral Visions would be the first in a new series of quality dark fiction works under the imprint Dark Phases. The book won the Australian Shadows Award for Best Collected Work of 2015. The Awards stated: \"Peripheral Visions is an ambitious project, a veritable door-stopper of a hardback comprising nearly 800 pages and 29 years of published work. Author Robert Hood demonstrates a dazzling breadth of treatments united under the overarching ghost story theme, writing with intelligence and insight\".", "score": "1.47205" }, { "id": "32614332", "title": "Andrew Paquette", "text": "Dreamer: 20 years of psychic dreams and how they changed my life, published by O-Books/John Hunt Publishing Ltd, Winchester, UK ; Computer Graphics for Artists: an Introduction, published by Springer/Verlag, London ; Computer Graphics for Artists II: Characters and Environments, published by Springer/Verlag, London ; Peripheral Vision (screenplay), published by Black Coat Press in 2004. ", "score": "1.4720106" }, { "id": "773271", "title": "John Sinclair (German fiction)", "text": " been written exclusively by Helmut Rellergerd under the nom-de-plume of Jason Dark. Only a few of the earliest stories have been written by other authors. As of late, creation of new stories is divided among Rellergerd and several new authors, each of them writing separate full episodes; the new writers are attributed for their respective stories. For example, the Oculus duology (2017) was written by Wolfgang Hohlbein, while forensic biologist Mark Benecke was the author of the novel Brandmal. Over the decades the Spanish painter Vicenç Badalona Ballestar has created numerous paintings and illustrations for the bestselling series. Other artists that contributed artworks and cover designs for John ", "score": "1.4717623" }, { "id": "32617874", "title": "Ronald Kelly", "text": " the small press horror magazines of that era, appearing regularly in independently-published magazines such as Cemetery Dance, Deathrealm, Noctulpa, and numerous others. His first novel, Hindsight was released by Zebra Books in 1990. His audiobook collection, Dark Dixie: Tales of Southern Horror, was on the nominating ballot of the 1992 Grammy Awards for Best Spoken Word or Non-Musical Album. Zebra published seven of Ronald Kelly's novels from 1990 to 1996. Ronald's short fiction work has been published by Cemetery Dance, Borderlands 3, Deathrealm, Dark at Heart, Hot Blood: Seeds of Fear, and many more. After selling hundreds of thousands of books, the bottom dropped ", "score": "1.4678781" }, { "id": "11405904", "title": "Video Watchdog", "text": " As a company, Video Watchdog also published two books written by editor Lucas. The Video Watchdog Book, released September 1992, is a collection of articles, essays, and lists that originated in other magazines, including Film Comment and Fangoria. Mario Bava All the Colors of the Dark, published September 2007, is a copiously illustrated, 1128-page critical biography of Italian director and cinematographer Mario Bava. It received a Rondo Hatton Classic Horror Award as the Best Book of 2007, as well as an Independent Publishers Award bronze medal and a Saturn Award for Special Achievement.", "score": "1.4656609" }, { "id": "29078694", "title": "2020 Visions", "text": " 2020 Visions (sometimes called 20/20 Visions) is a science fiction comic book written by Jamie Delano and drawn by four artists. Originally serialized as a twelve-issue full-color limited series from 1997 to 1998 at the Vertigo imprint of DC Comics, it was later collected in black-and-white in a 2004 hardcover by Cyberosia Publishing and a 2005 trade paperback by Speakeasy Comics. A new edition of the trade paperback was released in color in 2019 by ComicMix.", "score": "1.4636792" }, { "id": "29057684", "title": "Randall Dark", "text": " Randall P. Dark is a Canadian writer, director, and producer recognized as an early proponent of HDTV.", "score": "1.46365" }, { "id": "807785", "title": "Paul Kidd", "text": " Before pursuing a career in writing Kidd had worked at Beam Software, an Australia-based game developer. He is credited as, among other things, the writer, director and lead designer of Nightshade, an action-adventure title for the NES. He is also credited as the lead designer for Shadowrun. Kidd's first book, entitled Mus of Kerbridge, was released in 1995 and received a short-list nomination for the 1995 Aurealis Awards best fantasy novel. He has since released six more stand alone novels, written a two book series and has contributed to two of the Dungeons & Dragons novel series, Forgotten Realms: Nobles and Greyhawk. His novel releases include White Plume Mountain (WOTC), Descent into the Depths of the Earth (WOTC), A Whisper of Wings (Vision), The Rats of Acomar (Vision), The Fangs of K'aath (United Press UK), Lilith (Vision), Petal Storm (Vision), Neue Europa (Vision), and the Petal Storm graphic novel series. Kidd also has written a non-fiction strategy guide based on the video game Discworld II: Missing Presumed...!? and has written two short stories which were published in Dragon Magazine. Kidd lives in Perth, Australia.", "score": "1.455282" }, { "id": "5370547", "title": "Bill Blunden (author)", "text": " William Alva Blunden (born December 3, 1969) is the author of several books including The Rootkit Arsenal: Escape and Evasion in the Dark Corners of the System, Behold A Pale Farce: Cyberwar, Threat Inflation & The Malware Industrial Complex, Cube Farm, and Software Exorcism. The jacket of the former work lists his credentials MCSE, MCITP, and Enterprise Administrator. He is also active in the social sciences space and helped author articles appearing in Peace and Conflict: Journal of Peace Psychology.", "score": "1.4490261" }, { "id": "25510165", "title": "Bernhard Hennen", "text": " He graduated from the University of Cologne. He worked as a journalist for various newspapers and radio stations. He began his writing career with Das Jahr des Greifen which he co-authored with Wolfgang Hohlbein in 1994. He followed up with four historical novels published 1996–1999 before returning to the fantasy genre in the 2000s. He also wrote for the role-playing game The Dark Eye.", "score": "1.4394578" }, { "id": "4324879", "title": "Fantasy Productions", "text": " took over as Line Editor, and six months later, FanPro licensed Battletech as well and hired Randall Bills to continue with his job as Battletech Line Editor; that made Bills FanPro LLC's second and only other employee. FanPro LLC also began expanding into translations of German RPGs, their first being The Dark Eye (2003), a translation of Germany's top fantasy RPG, Das Schwarze Auge (1984) – which had recently been released in a fourth edition (2002) by the German Fantasy Productions. The Dark Eye, like FanPro's FASA lines, depended on a metaplot, this one advanced through adventures and Fantasy Productions' Aventurische Bote magazine. However, The Dark Eye did not sell ", "score": "1.4334245" }, { "id": "28486577", "title": "Double Vision (novel)", "text": " Double Vision is a novel by Pat Barker, published in 2003. The Observer described the book as a \"strongly written, oddly constructed new novel\".", "score": "1.4294411" } ]
[ "Darkvision (novel)\n Darkvision is a fantasy novel by Bruce Cordell, set in the world of the Forgotten Realms, and based on the Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game. It is the third novel in \"The Wizards\" series. It was published in paperback in September 2006.", "Darkvision (novel)\n Pat Ferrara of mania.com comments: \"Another stand-alone novel of The Wizards series, Darkvision hits the scene under the experienced wing of Forgotten Realms guru Bruce R. Cordell.\"", "Darkvision (novel)\n Haunted by nightmares and driven by desire, Ususi ventured alone into the outside world her people abandoned centuries ago, and tracks down the relics that brought both prosperity and doom to her people.", "Dark Visions\n Dark Visions is a horror fiction compilation, with three short stories by Stephen King, three by Dan Simmons and a novella by George R. R. Martin. It was published by Orion on August 10, 1989. The collection was first published, with the same seven stories, under the title Night Visions 5, by Dark Harvest on July 1, 1988. The book was also issued under the titles Dark Love and The Skin Trade. Two of the stories by King, \"Sneakers\" and \"Dedication\", were later included in his 1993 anthology Nightmares & Dreamscapes. All three stories by Simmons were later included in his 1990 collection Prayers to Broken Stones. Martin's The Skin Trade was later included in Quartet: Four Tales from the Crossroads (2001) and Dreamsongs: A RRetrospective (2003).", "The Dark Design\n The Dark Design (1977) is a science fiction novel by American writer Philip José Farmer, the third in the series of Riverworld books. The title is derived from lines in Sir Richard Francis Burton's poem The Kasîdah of Hâjî Abdû El-Yezdî:", "Ulrich Kiesow\n Ulrich Kiesow was one of the co-founders of Fantasy Productions (FanPro) in 1983, together with Werner Fuchs and Hans Joachim Alpers. He was the translator of the first German language editions for both Tunnels & Trolls, which was the first German language RPG rule book, and Dungeons & Dragons. Most importantly, Kiesow was the creator of the pen and paper role-playing game The Dark Eye and its accompanying universe. Besides contributing to many publications regarding this game, Kiesow used the pseudonym Andreas Blumenkamp to write satirical articles for the now defunct German roleplaying game magazine Wunderwelten that was produced by FanPro. Kiesow suffered a severe heart attack in August 1995. While recovering he began to write the Dark Eye novel Das zerbrochene Rad (The broken wheel, a symbol for death in the universe of The Dark Eye). The novel had just been completed when Kiesow died of heart failure in his home on January 30, 1997.", "The Dark Eye (video game)\nAdventure Classic Gaming feature (2008) ; CoreGamers article and interview with creator Russell Lees (2008) ; Interview with creator Russell Lees on general development process (2009) ", "Here the Dark\n Here the Dark is a 2020 book by David Bergen. After a successful career as a novelist, Bergen returns to his original genre, short fiction. This book contains a novella and seven short stories that span his writing career. The book was shortlisted for the Giller Prize in 2020. The book won the 2021 McNally Robinson Book of the Year Award.", "Rob Hood\n This collection brings together all Hood's 44 ghost stories, published from 1986 to 2015, three of them written especially for the book: \"After Image\", \"Double Speak\" and a 22,000-word novella, \"The Whimper\". Seen by the publisher as a \"reference collection\", the volume includes an introduction by World Fantasy Award-winning editor, Danel Olson, notes by the author and a bibliography that lists complete publication details, awards and commendations for each story. With the publication of this book, the publisher announced that Peripheral Visions would be the first in a new series of quality dark fiction works under the imprint Dark Phases. The book won the Australian Shadows Award for Best Collected Work of 2015. The Awards stated: \"Peripheral Visions is an ambitious project, a veritable door-stopper of a hardback comprising nearly 800 pages and 29 years of published work. Author Robert Hood demonstrates a dazzling breadth of treatments united under the overarching ghost story theme, writing with intelligence and insight\".", "Andrew Paquette\nDreamer: 20 years of psychic dreams and how they changed my life, published by O-Books/John Hunt Publishing Ltd, Winchester, UK ; Computer Graphics for Artists: an Introduction, published by Springer/Verlag, London ; Computer Graphics for Artists II: Characters and Environments, published by Springer/Verlag, London ; Peripheral Vision (screenplay), published by Black Coat Press in 2004. ", "John Sinclair (German fiction)\n been written exclusively by Helmut Rellergerd under the nom-de-plume of Jason Dark. Only a few of the earliest stories have been written by other authors. As of late, creation of new stories is divided among Rellergerd and several new authors, each of them writing separate full episodes; the new writers are attributed for their respective stories. For example, the Oculus duology (2017) was written by Wolfgang Hohlbein, while forensic biologist Mark Benecke was the author of the novel Brandmal. Over the decades the Spanish painter Vicenç Badalona Ballestar has created numerous paintings and illustrations for the bestselling series. Other artists that contributed artworks and cover designs for John ", "Ronald Kelly\n the small press horror magazines of that era, appearing regularly in independently-published magazines such as Cemetery Dance, Deathrealm, Noctulpa, and numerous others. His first novel, Hindsight was released by Zebra Books in 1990. His audiobook collection, Dark Dixie: Tales of Southern Horror, was on the nominating ballot of the 1992 Grammy Awards for Best Spoken Word or Non-Musical Album. Zebra published seven of Ronald Kelly's novels from 1990 to 1996. Ronald's short fiction work has been published by Cemetery Dance, Borderlands 3, Deathrealm, Dark at Heart, Hot Blood: Seeds of Fear, and many more. After selling hundreds of thousands of books, the bottom dropped ", "Video Watchdog\n As a company, Video Watchdog also published two books written by editor Lucas. The Video Watchdog Book, released September 1992, is a collection of articles, essays, and lists that originated in other magazines, including Film Comment and Fangoria. Mario Bava All the Colors of the Dark, published September 2007, is a copiously illustrated, 1128-page critical biography of Italian director and cinematographer Mario Bava. It received a Rondo Hatton Classic Horror Award as the Best Book of 2007, as well as an Independent Publishers Award bronze medal and a Saturn Award for Special Achievement.", "2020 Visions\n 2020 Visions (sometimes called 20/20 Visions) is a science fiction comic book written by Jamie Delano and drawn by four artists. Originally serialized as a twelve-issue full-color limited series from 1997 to 1998 at the Vertigo imprint of DC Comics, it was later collected in black-and-white in a 2004 hardcover by Cyberosia Publishing and a 2005 trade paperback by Speakeasy Comics. A new edition of the trade paperback was released in color in 2019 by ComicMix.", "Randall Dark\n Randall P. Dark is a Canadian writer, director, and producer recognized as an early proponent of HDTV.", "Paul Kidd\n Before pursuing a career in writing Kidd had worked at Beam Software, an Australia-based game developer. He is credited as, among other things, the writer, director and lead designer of Nightshade, an action-adventure title for the NES. He is also credited as the lead designer for Shadowrun. Kidd's first book, entitled Mus of Kerbridge, was released in 1995 and received a short-list nomination for the 1995 Aurealis Awards best fantasy novel. He has since released six more stand alone novels, written a two book series and has contributed to two of the Dungeons & Dragons novel series, Forgotten Realms: Nobles and Greyhawk. His novel releases include White Plume Mountain (WOTC), Descent into the Depths of the Earth (WOTC), A Whisper of Wings (Vision), The Rats of Acomar (Vision), The Fangs of K'aath (United Press UK), Lilith (Vision), Petal Storm (Vision), Neue Europa (Vision), and the Petal Storm graphic novel series. Kidd also has written a non-fiction strategy guide based on the video game Discworld II: Missing Presumed...!? and has written two short stories which were published in Dragon Magazine. Kidd lives in Perth, Australia.", "Bill Blunden (author)\n William Alva Blunden (born December 3, 1969) is the author of several books including The Rootkit Arsenal: Escape and Evasion in the Dark Corners of the System, Behold A Pale Farce: Cyberwar, Threat Inflation & The Malware Industrial Complex, Cube Farm, and Software Exorcism. The jacket of the former work lists his credentials MCSE, MCITP, and Enterprise Administrator. He is also active in the social sciences space and helped author articles appearing in Peace and Conflict: Journal of Peace Psychology.", "Bernhard Hennen\n He graduated from the University of Cologne. He worked as a journalist for various newspapers and radio stations. He began his writing career with Das Jahr des Greifen which he co-authored with Wolfgang Hohlbein in 1994. He followed up with four historical novels published 1996–1999 before returning to the fantasy genre in the 2000s. He also wrote for the role-playing game The Dark Eye.", "Fantasy Productions\n took over as Line Editor, and six months later, FanPro licensed Battletech as well and hired Randall Bills to continue with his job as Battletech Line Editor; that made Bills FanPro LLC's second and only other employee. FanPro LLC also began expanding into translations of German RPGs, their first being The Dark Eye (2003), a translation of Germany's top fantasy RPG, Das Schwarze Auge (1984) – which had recently been released in a fourth edition (2002) by the German Fantasy Productions. The Dark Eye, like FanPro's FASA lines, depended on a metaplot, this one advanced through adventures and Fantasy Productions' Aventurische Bote magazine. However, The Dark Eye did not sell ", "Double Vision (novel)\n Double Vision is a novel by Pat Barker, published in 2003. The Observer described the book as a \"strongly written, oddly constructed new novel\"." ]
Who was the director of The Kiss?
[ "Dell Henderson" ]
director
The Kiss (1916 film)
1,424,994
96
[ { "id": "6061582", "title": "The Kiss (2003 film)", "text": " The Kiss is a 2003 direct-to-video film starring Francoise Surel, Eliza Dushku, Terence Stamp, and Billy Zane. It tells the story of a book editor (Surel) who is entranced by a certain old manuscript about a romance. Unfortunately, she discovers that the story is unfinished, so with her roommate (Dushku) she attempts to find the author, only to be disappointed that he (Stamp) is nothing more than a broken man after his wife's death. The editor forms a close friendship with him, and they find the meaning of true love.", "score": "1.5288229" }, { "id": "12619845", "title": "Kiss (1963 film)", "text": " Kiss is a 1963 silent American experimental film directed by Andy Warhol, which runs 50 minutes and features various couples – man and woman, woman and woman, man and man – kissing for 3½ minutes each. The film features Naomi Levine, Barbara Rubin, Gerard Malanga, Rufus Collins, Johnny Dodd, Ed Sanders, Mark Lancaster, Fred Herko, Baby Jane Holzer, Robert Indiana, Andrew Meyer, John Palmer, Pierre Restany, Harold Stevenson, Philip van Rensselaer, Charlotte Gilbertson, Marisol, Steven Holden, and unidentified others. In 1964, La Monte Young provided a loud minimalist drone soundtrack to Kiss when shown as small TV-sized projections at the entrance lobby to the third New York Film Festival held at Lincoln Center. Kiss was followed by Eat (1963), Sleep (1964), Blow Job (1963) and Blue Movie (1969). This was one of the first films Warhol made at The Factory in New York City.", "score": "1.5227948" }, { "id": "26690703", "title": "Ulysses Davis", "text": " Ulysses Davis (November 5, 1872 – October 1, 1924), was an American film director. He directed 86 films between 1911 and 1916, some at Champion Film Company. He is probably best remembered today for having directed The Kiss, a 1914 film starring Margaret Gibson and William Desmond Taylor. He was born in South Amboy, New Jersey, United States. He died in Chicago and is buried at Waldheim Jewish Cemetery in Forest Park, Illinois.", "score": "1.5128853" }, { "id": "1471121", "title": "The Kiss (1988 film)", "text": " The screenplay for The Kiss was written by Stephen Volk, who had previously written Gothic (1986) for Ken Russell, and would follow The Kiss with William Friedkin's The Guardian (1990). Though set in Albany, New York, the film was shot on location in Montreal, Québec, Canada. Describing the film, director Pen Densham described it as \"somewhere between The Exorcist and Poltergeist.\" The film had the working title The Host.", "score": "1.5091794" }, { "id": "25594887", "title": "The Kiss (1958 film)", "text": " The Kiss is a 1958 short film written and produced by John Hayes. It was the first major film by Hayes, who would go on to find fame as the writer, producer, and director of B-movie genre films such as Garden of the Dead. The film was nominated for the 1958 Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film but lost to Disney's Grand Canyon.", "score": "1.5045104" }, { "id": "1471114", "title": "The Kiss (1988 film)", "text": " The Kiss is a 1988 supernatural horror film directed by Pen Densham and starring Joanna Pacula and Meredith Salenger. The plot follows two young women who find themselves haunted by an ancient parasitic curse that was passed on to one of them by a kiss. Film critic Harry M. Benshoff has claimed the film to be an allegory of the AIDS epidemic of the late 1980s.", "score": "1.5019414" }, { "id": "8961488", "title": "John Hayes (director)", "text": " John Patrick Hayes (March 1, 1930 – August 21, 2000) was an American film director, producer, screenwriter, and actor. He began his career as a screenwriter, writing 1959's The Kiss, which earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Short Film. Hayes is best known for directing low-budget B-movie features and later, exploitation films.", "score": "1.4873856" }, { "id": "4753308", "title": "Gary Fleder", "text": " several artists who have become recurring collaborators, including production designer/art director Nelson Coates, costume designer Abigail Murray, script supervisor Elizabeth Ludwick, and composer Steve Weisberg. Since then, Fleder has directed a series of thrillers, including Kiss the Girls (1997), starring Ashley Judd and Morgan Freeman; Don't Say a Word (2001), featuring Brittany Murphy and Michael Douglas; Impostor (2002), a sci-fi thriller based on a Philip K. Dick short story, starring Gary Sinise, Madeleine Stowe, and Vincent D’Onofrio; and Runaway Jury (2003), starring John Cusack and Academy Award winners Gene Hackman and Dustin Hoffman, and based on the novel by John Grisham. The ", "score": "1.4806628" }, { "id": "4529789", "title": "Bill Aucoin", "text": " Born in 1943 in Ayer, Massachusetts, Aucoin attended Northeastern University and graduated with a degree in film. He worked at WGBH in Boston during his college years and after. Aucoin later worked at Teletape Productions as a cinematographer. Credited with discovering Kiss, Aucoin managed the group for nearly a decade. He was fired in 1982 due to a dispute about the band's appearance plus his drug abuse, but later worked with the band on various DVD projects. Aucoin produced a television show called Supermarket Sweep in the early 1970s. From 2005 to 2007, Aucoin went into the Broadway business with a staging of The Who's Quadrophenia, which showed intermittently for two years in Anaheim and Los Angeles. Aucoin had reentered the management business with his company Aucoin Globe Entertainment, at the time of his death of surgical complications from prostate cancer. He was survived by partner Roman Fernandez and sisters Betty Britton and Janet Bankowski. A statement from Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons described him as \"our irreplaceable original manager, mentor and dear friend… Words cannot convey his impact on us or those close to him.\"", "score": "1.4533141" }, { "id": "1471122", "title": "The Kiss (1988 film)", "text": " Principal photography began in Montreal on August 25, 1987. The church sequences were filmed at St. Martin's Church in Westmount. Its special effects team was made up of Charles Carter, and Chris Walas, who supplied the special effects on Gremlins (1984) and David Cronenberg's The Fly (1986).", "score": "1.4421923" }, { "id": "2622582", "title": "Howard Kissel", "text": " Howard William Kissel (October 29, 1942 – February 24, 2012) was an American theater critic based in New York City. Before serving as the chief theatre critic for the Daily News for twenty years, Kissel was the arts editor for Women's Wear Daily. He also wrote a column for The Huffington Post. Kissel also authored a biography on theater producer David Merrick, entitled David Merrick, the Abominable Showman, which was published in 1993. Kissel was born on October 29, 1942 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin and attended Shorewood High School. He graduated from Columbia University in 1964 and obtained his master's from Northwestern University. He was married to Christine Buck from 1974 until her death in 2006. Kissel died in Manhattan on February 24, 2012, aged 69. According to his sister, he had been suffering from health complications following a liver transplant in 2010.", "score": "1.4383261" }, { "id": "2541211", "title": "The Kiss (Modern Family)", "text": " \"The Kiss\" was written by Abraham Higginbotham and directed by Scott Ellis. It is Abraham Higginbotham's first writing credit as he is part of the new writers who joined at the beginning of the production season. The episode guest starred Aaron Sanders as Jeremy, the boy Alex likes. Abraham had previously worked with Jesse Tyler Ferguson on the short lived sitcom, Do Not Disturb. The episode was also the fourth episode made and was filmed during late-August. The episode originally aired September 29, 2010. The episode deals with some criticism from some quarters for the first season's portrayal of Cameron and Mitchell as not being physically affectionate with each other. The criticism spawned a Facebook campaign to demand Mitchell and Cameron be allowed to kiss. It was also criticized by ", "score": "1.4286073" }, { "id": "8008458", "title": "Jeffery Kissoon", "text": " A regular director of theatre, Kissoon is a member of the board of directors of the Shared Experience company and the Warehouse Theatre in Croydon, London. He has tutored younger actors, writers and directors, and values the rehearsal process. He played the lead role in the Mark Norfolk film Ham and the Piper (2012), and also directed Norfolk's theatre productions Knock Down Ginger, staged in 2003, Naked Soldiers, 2010 and Where The Flowers Grow, 2011, at the Warehouse Theatre. He reprised his role as Antony in Suzman's production of Antony and Cleopatra, appearing opposite Kim Cattrall as Cleopatra, at the Liverpool Playhouse in 2010.", "score": "1.4241319" }, { "id": "3366294", "title": "Judas Kiss (2011 film)", "text": " Failed filmmaker Zach Wells is asked by his friend and hotshot director, Topher Shadoe, to take his place as judge in the annual Keystone Film Festival, held in Zach's alma mater, Keystone Summit University. Zach is initially reluctant, as it brings memories of the festival defining his life for the worse: he won the festival 15 years ago, which convinced him to drop out of college and move to Hollywood, where his career struggled. The night before the judging, Zach goes to a gay bar where he has sex with a younger patron. To his shock, Zach finds out that the patron is a ", "score": "1.4159381" }, { "id": "6108700", "title": "David Grant (producer)", "text": "Love Variations (1969, director as ‘Terry Gould’) ; Sex, Love and Marriage (1970, director as ‘Terry Gould’) ; Sinderella (1972, co-producer, writer) ; Au Pair Girls (1972, story) ; Snow White and the Seven Perverts (1973, co-producer, writer) ; Secrets of a Door-to-Door Salesman (1973, producer) ; The Over-Amorous Artist a.k.a. Just One More Time (1974, producer) ; The Great McGonagall (1974, producer) ; Pink Orgasm (1975, uncompleted, footage later edited into ‘Who Bears Sins’ (1987)) ; Girls Come First (1975, co-producer) ; Dear Marjorie Boobs (1976, producer) ; The Office Party (1976, director,producer, writer) ; Escape to Entebbe (1976 co-director,producer) ; Under the Bed (1977, director, co-producer) ; Submission (1977, director) ; Over Exposed (1977, footage later edited into ‘Who Bears Sins’ (1987)) ; The Kiss (1977, co-producer) ; End of Term (1978, producer) ; Marcia (1977, script/co-director) ; You’re Driving Me Crazy (1978, director, co-writer) ; Love is Beautiful (1978, unfilmed) ; The London Programme (1979, TV, Interviewee) ; Electric Blue 001 (1980, video, includes Grant's Snow White and the Seven Perverts, no other Grant involvement) ; Who Bears Sins (1987, director, video compilation) ", "score": "1.415555" }, { "id": "11722339", "title": "Alexander Kiss", "text": " Alexander Nikolaevich Kiss (Александр Николаевич Кисс; October 2, 1921 - November 18, 1990) was a Soviet circus artist, juggler, director, People's Artist of the RSFSR.", "score": "1.4071394" }, { "id": "27860001", "title": "The Kiss (1914 film)", "text": " The Kiss is a 1914 Vitagraph silent drama short motion picture starring Margaret Gibson, George Holt, William Desmond Taylor, and Myrtle Gonzalez. Directed by Ulysses Davis, the screenplay was based on a story by Marc Edmund Jones. Long thought to have been a lost film, a copy was found and put on YouTube. The film is the only known surviving film in which director William Desmond Taylor appears as an actor. In 1964 Taylor's co-star Margaret Gibson, shortly before her death, reportedly confessed to having murdered him in 1922.", "score": "1.40503" }, { "id": "1471124", "title": "The Kiss (1988 film)", "text": " The film received mixed reviews from critics, and holds a 41% rating on internet review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes. Janet Maslin of The New York Times called the film \"rich in disgusting special effects and poor in every other regard,\" and remarked its unimpressive performances. Time Out called the film a \"daft and derivative possession pic,\" noting Mimi Kuzyk as providing \"the only shred of credible humanity.\" LA Weekly described the film as a \"still, regurgitated mess of genre stew.\" Variety criticized the film for lacking development in its supernatural plot, adding, \"if the setups were hokier, they might have been funny.\" Roger Hurlburt of the Sun-Sentinel noted: \"The Kiss has ", "score": "1.4034152" }, { "id": "11257408", "title": "Black Kiss", "text": " The series is set in Los Angeles in the 1980s and opens with Dagmar Laine, a transsexual prostitute and lover to former 1950s film star Beverly Grove, searching for a reel of film taken from the Vatican's collection of pornography. The reel has been sent to Father Frank Murtaugh by his brother who is a Cardinal in the Vatican. Laine tries to grab the reel from Father Murtaugh but the reel is stolen by a nun. Laine and Grove then get Cass Pollack, a jazz musician and ex-heroin addict who is on the run from the Mafia, to steal the reel in return for them providing Pollack with an alibi. Pollack ", "score": "1.401634" }, { "id": "471797", "title": "Killer's Kiss", "text": " When released, the staff at Variety magazine gave the film a mixed review, and wrote, \"Ex-Look photographer Stanley Kubrick turned out Killer's Kiss on the proverbial shoestring. Kiss was more than a warm-up for Kubrick's talents, for not only did he co-produce but he directed, photographed and edited the venture from his own screenplay [originally written by Howard Sackler] and original story...Kubrick's low-key lensing occasionally catches the flavor of the seamy side of Gotham life. His scenes of tawdry Broadway, gloomy tenements and grotesque brick-and-stone structures that make up Manhattan's downtown eastside loft district help offset the script's deficiencies.\" More recently, New York Times film critic Janet Maslin reviewed the film, and wrote, \"Killer's Kiss brought ", "score": "1.3992982" } ]
[ "The Kiss (2003 film)\n The Kiss is a 2003 direct-to-video film starring Francoise Surel, Eliza Dushku, Terence Stamp, and Billy Zane. It tells the story of a book editor (Surel) who is entranced by a certain old manuscript about a romance. Unfortunately, she discovers that the story is unfinished, so with her roommate (Dushku) she attempts to find the author, only to be disappointed that he (Stamp) is nothing more than a broken man after his wife's death. The editor forms a close friendship with him, and they find the meaning of true love.", "Kiss (1963 film)\n Kiss is a 1963 silent American experimental film directed by Andy Warhol, which runs 50 minutes and features various couples – man and woman, woman and woman, man and man – kissing for 3½ minutes each. The film features Naomi Levine, Barbara Rubin, Gerard Malanga, Rufus Collins, Johnny Dodd, Ed Sanders, Mark Lancaster, Fred Herko, Baby Jane Holzer, Robert Indiana, Andrew Meyer, John Palmer, Pierre Restany, Harold Stevenson, Philip van Rensselaer, Charlotte Gilbertson, Marisol, Steven Holden, and unidentified others. In 1964, La Monte Young provided a loud minimalist drone soundtrack to Kiss when shown as small TV-sized projections at the entrance lobby to the third New York Film Festival held at Lincoln Center. Kiss was followed by Eat (1963), Sleep (1964), Blow Job (1963) and Blue Movie (1969). This was one of the first films Warhol made at The Factory in New York City.", "Ulysses Davis\n Ulysses Davis (November 5, 1872 – October 1, 1924), was an American film director. He directed 86 films between 1911 and 1916, some at Champion Film Company. He is probably best remembered today for having directed The Kiss, a 1914 film starring Margaret Gibson and William Desmond Taylor. He was born in South Amboy, New Jersey, United States. He died in Chicago and is buried at Waldheim Jewish Cemetery in Forest Park, Illinois.", "The Kiss (1988 film)\n The screenplay for The Kiss was written by Stephen Volk, who had previously written Gothic (1986) for Ken Russell, and would follow The Kiss with William Friedkin's The Guardian (1990). Though set in Albany, New York, the film was shot on location in Montreal, Québec, Canada. Describing the film, director Pen Densham described it as \"somewhere between The Exorcist and Poltergeist.\" The film had the working title The Host.", "The Kiss (1958 film)\n The Kiss is a 1958 short film written and produced by John Hayes. It was the first major film by Hayes, who would go on to find fame as the writer, producer, and director of B-movie genre films such as Garden of the Dead. The film was nominated for the 1958 Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film but lost to Disney's Grand Canyon.", "The Kiss (1988 film)\n The Kiss is a 1988 supernatural horror film directed by Pen Densham and starring Joanna Pacula and Meredith Salenger. The plot follows two young women who find themselves haunted by an ancient parasitic curse that was passed on to one of them by a kiss. Film critic Harry M. Benshoff has claimed the film to be an allegory of the AIDS epidemic of the late 1980s.", "John Hayes (director)\n John Patrick Hayes (March 1, 1930 – August 21, 2000) was an American film director, producer, screenwriter, and actor. He began his career as a screenwriter, writing 1959's The Kiss, which earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Short Film. Hayes is best known for directing low-budget B-movie features and later, exploitation films.", "Gary Fleder\n several artists who have become recurring collaborators, including production designer/art director Nelson Coates, costume designer Abigail Murray, script supervisor Elizabeth Ludwick, and composer Steve Weisberg. Since then, Fleder has directed a series of thrillers, including Kiss the Girls (1997), starring Ashley Judd and Morgan Freeman; Don't Say a Word (2001), featuring Brittany Murphy and Michael Douglas; Impostor (2002), a sci-fi thriller based on a Philip K. Dick short story, starring Gary Sinise, Madeleine Stowe, and Vincent D’Onofrio; and Runaway Jury (2003), starring John Cusack and Academy Award winners Gene Hackman and Dustin Hoffman, and based on the novel by John Grisham. The ", "Bill Aucoin\n Born in 1943 in Ayer, Massachusetts, Aucoin attended Northeastern University and graduated with a degree in film. He worked at WGBH in Boston during his college years and after. Aucoin later worked at Teletape Productions as a cinematographer. Credited with discovering Kiss, Aucoin managed the group for nearly a decade. He was fired in 1982 due to a dispute about the band's appearance plus his drug abuse, but later worked with the band on various DVD projects. Aucoin produced a television show called Supermarket Sweep in the early 1970s. From 2005 to 2007, Aucoin went into the Broadway business with a staging of The Who's Quadrophenia, which showed intermittently for two years in Anaheim and Los Angeles. Aucoin had reentered the management business with his company Aucoin Globe Entertainment, at the time of his death of surgical complications from prostate cancer. He was survived by partner Roman Fernandez and sisters Betty Britton and Janet Bankowski. A statement from Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons described him as \"our irreplaceable original manager, mentor and dear friend… Words cannot convey his impact on us or those close to him.\"", "The Kiss (1988 film)\n Principal photography began in Montreal on August 25, 1987. The church sequences were filmed at St. Martin's Church in Westmount. Its special effects team was made up of Charles Carter, and Chris Walas, who supplied the special effects on Gremlins (1984) and David Cronenberg's The Fly (1986).", "Howard Kissel\n Howard William Kissel (October 29, 1942 – February 24, 2012) was an American theater critic based in New York City. Before serving as the chief theatre critic for the Daily News for twenty years, Kissel was the arts editor for Women's Wear Daily. He also wrote a column for The Huffington Post. Kissel also authored a biography on theater producer David Merrick, entitled David Merrick, the Abominable Showman, which was published in 1993. Kissel was born on October 29, 1942 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin and attended Shorewood High School. He graduated from Columbia University in 1964 and obtained his master's from Northwestern University. He was married to Christine Buck from 1974 until her death in 2006. Kissel died in Manhattan on February 24, 2012, aged 69. According to his sister, he had been suffering from health complications following a liver transplant in 2010.", "The Kiss (Modern Family)\n \"The Kiss\" was written by Abraham Higginbotham and directed by Scott Ellis. It is Abraham Higginbotham's first writing credit as he is part of the new writers who joined at the beginning of the production season. The episode guest starred Aaron Sanders as Jeremy, the boy Alex likes. Abraham had previously worked with Jesse Tyler Ferguson on the short lived sitcom, Do Not Disturb. The episode was also the fourth episode made and was filmed during late-August. The episode originally aired September 29, 2010. The episode deals with some criticism from some quarters for the first season's portrayal of Cameron and Mitchell as not being physically affectionate with each other. The criticism spawned a Facebook campaign to demand Mitchell and Cameron be allowed to kiss. It was also criticized by ", "Jeffery Kissoon\n A regular director of theatre, Kissoon is a member of the board of directors of the Shared Experience company and the Warehouse Theatre in Croydon, London. He has tutored younger actors, writers and directors, and values the rehearsal process. He played the lead role in the Mark Norfolk film Ham and the Piper (2012), and also directed Norfolk's theatre productions Knock Down Ginger, staged in 2003, Naked Soldiers, 2010 and Where The Flowers Grow, 2011, at the Warehouse Theatre. He reprised his role as Antony in Suzman's production of Antony and Cleopatra, appearing opposite Kim Cattrall as Cleopatra, at the Liverpool Playhouse in 2010.", "Judas Kiss (2011 film)\n Failed filmmaker Zach Wells is asked by his friend and hotshot director, Topher Shadoe, to take his place as judge in the annual Keystone Film Festival, held in Zach's alma mater, Keystone Summit University. Zach is initially reluctant, as it brings memories of the festival defining his life for the worse: he won the festival 15 years ago, which convinced him to drop out of college and move to Hollywood, where his career struggled. The night before the judging, Zach goes to a gay bar where he has sex with a younger patron. To his shock, Zach finds out that the patron is a ", "David Grant (producer)\nLove Variations (1969, director as ‘Terry Gould’) ; Sex, Love and Marriage (1970, director as ‘Terry Gould’) ; Sinderella (1972, co-producer, writer) ; Au Pair Girls (1972, story) ; Snow White and the Seven Perverts (1973, co-producer, writer) ; Secrets of a Door-to-Door Salesman (1973, producer) ; The Over-Amorous Artist a.k.a. Just One More Time (1974, producer) ; The Great McGonagall (1974, producer) ; Pink Orgasm (1975, uncompleted, footage later edited into ‘Who Bears Sins’ (1987)) ; Girls Come First (1975, co-producer) ; Dear Marjorie Boobs (1976, producer) ; The Office Party (1976, director,producer, writer) ; Escape to Entebbe (1976 co-director,producer) ; Under the Bed (1977, director, co-producer) ; Submission (1977, director) ; Over Exposed (1977, footage later edited into ‘Who Bears Sins’ (1987)) ; The Kiss (1977, co-producer) ; End of Term (1978, producer) ; Marcia (1977, script/co-director) ; You’re Driving Me Crazy (1978, director, co-writer) ; Love is Beautiful (1978, unfilmed) ; The London Programme (1979, TV, Interviewee) ; Electric Blue 001 (1980, video, includes Grant's Snow White and the Seven Perverts, no other Grant involvement) ; Who Bears Sins (1987, director, video compilation) ", "Alexander Kiss\n Alexander Nikolaevich Kiss (Александр Николаевич Кисс; October 2, 1921 - November 18, 1990) was a Soviet circus artist, juggler, director, People's Artist of the RSFSR.", "The Kiss (1914 film)\n The Kiss is a 1914 Vitagraph silent drama short motion picture starring Margaret Gibson, George Holt, William Desmond Taylor, and Myrtle Gonzalez. Directed by Ulysses Davis, the screenplay was based on a story by Marc Edmund Jones. Long thought to have been a lost film, a copy was found and put on YouTube. The film is the only known surviving film in which director William Desmond Taylor appears as an actor. In 1964 Taylor's co-star Margaret Gibson, shortly before her death, reportedly confessed to having murdered him in 1922.", "The Kiss (1988 film)\n The film received mixed reviews from critics, and holds a 41% rating on internet review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes. Janet Maslin of The New York Times called the film \"rich in disgusting special effects and poor in every other regard,\" and remarked its unimpressive performances. Time Out called the film a \"daft and derivative possession pic,\" noting Mimi Kuzyk as providing \"the only shred of credible humanity.\" LA Weekly described the film as a \"still, regurgitated mess of genre stew.\" Variety criticized the film for lacking development in its supernatural plot, adding, \"if the setups were hokier, they might have been funny.\" Roger Hurlburt of the Sun-Sentinel noted: \"The Kiss has ", "Black Kiss\n The series is set in Los Angeles in the 1980s and opens with Dagmar Laine, a transsexual prostitute and lover to former 1950s film star Beverly Grove, searching for a reel of film taken from the Vatican's collection of pornography. The reel has been sent to Father Frank Murtaugh by his brother who is a Cardinal in the Vatican. Laine tries to grab the reel from Father Murtaugh but the reel is stolen by a nun. Laine and Grove then get Cass Pollack, a jazz musician and ex-heroin addict who is on the run from the Mafia, to steal the reel in return for them providing Pollack with an alibi. Pollack ", "Killer's Kiss\n When released, the staff at Variety magazine gave the film a mixed review, and wrote, \"Ex-Look photographer Stanley Kubrick turned out Killer's Kiss on the proverbial shoestring. Kiss was more than a warm-up for Kubrick's talents, for not only did he co-produce but he directed, photographed and edited the venture from his own screenplay [originally written by Howard Sackler] and original story...Kubrick's low-key lensing occasionally catches the flavor of the seamy side of Gotham life. His scenes of tawdry Broadway, gloomy tenements and grotesque brick-and-stone structures that make up Manhattan's downtown eastside loft district help offset the script's deficiencies.\" More recently, New York Times film critic Janet Maslin reviewed the film, and wrote, \"Killer's Kiss brought " ]
Who was the producer of The Easiest Way?
[ "Clara Kimball Young", "Clara Kimball", "Edith Matilda Clara Kimball" ]
producer
The Easiest Way (1917 film)
801,960
78
[ { "id": "13751140", "title": "The Easiest Way", "text": " The Easiest Way is a 1931 American pre-Code MGM drama film directed by Jack Conway. Adapted from the 1909 play of the same name written by Eugene Walter and directed by David Belasco, the film stars Constance Bennett, Adolphe Menjou, Robert Montgomery, Marjorie Rambeau, Anita Page, and Clark Gable", "score": "1.7525222" }, { "id": "3083220", "title": "Mabel Katz", "text": " She is the author of The Easiest Way book series based on Ho'oponopono. The first book of the series was The Easiest Way; Solve Your Problems and Take The Road to Love, Happiness, Wealth and The Life of Your Dreams. In the book, she told her own story about finding her identity and freedom using this technique. The book has been translated into 15 languages. Other books in the series include The Easiest Way to Live, The Easiest Way Pocket Edition and The Easiest Way to Understanding Ho’oponopono that later became part of The Easiest Way and then was released as The Easiest Way Special Edition. In 2011, she wrote the fifth book of this series titled, Easiest Way to Grow.", "score": "1.6579013" }, { "id": "13751146", "title": "The Easiest Way", "text": "Lynton Brent as Brockton Associate (uncredited) ; Jack Hanlon as Andy Murdock (uncredited) ; John Harron as Chris Swoboda, Laura's Suitor (uncredited) ; Dell Henderson as Bud Williams (uncredited) ; Hedda Hopper as Mrs. Clara Williams (uncredited) ; Charles Judels as Mr. Gensler (uncredited) ", "score": "1.6380874" }, { "id": "13751154", "title": "The Easiest Way", "text": " Warner Archive Collection released the first Region 1 DVD on March 10, 2010.", "score": "1.5982702" }, { "id": "10709412", "title": "The Easy Way (Jimmy Giuffre album)", "text": " The Easy Way is an album by American jazz composer and arranger Jimmy Giuffre which was released on the Verve label in 1959.", "score": "1.5932608" }, { "id": "9111453", "title": "The Easy Way (film)", "text": " The Easy Way (Sans arme, ni haine, ni violence; ) is a 2008 French heist film directed by Jean-Paul Rouve, who also stars in the titular role as the real life thief Albert Spaggiari, who organized a break-in into a Société Générale bank in Nice, France in 1976. The original French title refers to the note Albert Spaggiari left in the bank after completing the robbery. Part of the movie was shot in Portugal at the Hotel Palácio Estoril, a 5-star hotel where some scenes of the James Bond film On Her Majesty's Secret Service were also shot.", "score": "1.5738008" }, { "id": "27741745", "title": "His Way (film)", "text": " His Way is a 2011 television documentary film about Jerry Weintraub, an American film producer and former chairman and CEO of United Artists. The film was directed by Douglas McGrath. The film features interviews with Weintraub, Jane Morgan, George H. W. Bush, Barbara Bush, George Clooney, Brad Pitt, Julia Roberts, Elliott Gould, Ellen Barkin, James Caan, Matt Damon and Bruce Willis.", "score": "1.568657" }, { "id": "13445948", "title": "The Easy Way (Eddy Arnold album)", "text": " The Easy Way is an album by American country music singer Eddy Arnold. It was released by RCA Victor in 1965. The album debuted on Billboard magazine's Top Country Albums chart on June 19, 1965, spent two weeks at No. 1, and remained on the chart for a total of 19 weeks. AllMusic gave the album a rating of four stars. Reviewer Greg Adams called it \"one of the most invigorating and enjoyable of his mid-'60s LPs.\"", "score": "1.5633829" }, { "id": "5380602", "title": "Easy Way (song)", "text": " An accompanying music video for \"Easy Way\" was directed by Parris Stewart. It was released on January 29, 2020.", "score": "1.5583087" }, { "id": "5723441", "title": "The Hardest Way", "text": " The Hardest Way is an album by the American garage punk band The Original Sins. It was released in 1989 by Psonik Records. The CD version of the album includes bonus tracks taken from the band's Australia-only extended play, Party's Over.", "score": "1.5511112" }, { "id": "13751151", "title": "The Easiest Way", "text": " One foreign-language version was produced by MGM in French. It was titled Quand on est belle and starred Lili Damita in the part that Constance Bennett played in the English-language version.", "score": "1.5508454" }, { "id": "30486158", "title": "'Way Out (TV series)", "text": " Source:", "score": "1.5469105" }, { "id": "9111454", "title": "The Easy Way (film)", "text": " In 1977 in Nice, Albert Spaggiari is arrested by the police and brought to a judge's office for interrogation, but he manages to escape by jumping out of the window and riding off on a motorcycle with an accomplice. He travels to South America where he meets new faces including a mysterious journalist who wants to interview him about the heist and his whereabouts.", "score": "1.5173466" }, { "id": "31205703", "title": "Angela Martini", "text": " In 2019, Angela Martini debuted as a producer in A Way Out (2018) and then produced The Fusion (2020).", "score": "1.5144973" }, { "id": "13751153", "title": "The Easiest Way", "text": " According to MGM records the film earned $654,000 in the United States and Canada and $249,000 elsewhere resulting in a profit of $193,000.", "score": "1.5121539" }, { "id": "10709415", "title": "The Easy Way (Jimmy Giuffre album)", "text": "Jimmy Giuffre – clarinet, tenor saxophone, baritone saxophone ; Jim Hall – guitar ; Ray Brown – bass ", "score": "1.5113988" }, { "id": "13414312", "title": "French Way", "text": "The Way (2010) ", "score": "1.5040853" }, { "id": "30807661", "title": "Dave Way", "text": " Dave Way is an American producer, mixer and audio engineer based in Los Angeles, California, United States. He has worked with Fiona Apple, Sheryl Crow, Kesha, Pink, Christina Aguilera, Macy Gray, Ringo Starr, Shakira, Phoebe Bridgers, John Doe, Savage Garden, Michael Jackson, Spice Girls, Norah Jones, Beck, Eric Clapton, Neil Young, Babyface, Ziggy Marley, Weird Al Yankovic, Paul McCartney, Mick Jagger, Stevie Wonder, Gwen Stefani, Chris Botti, Jakob Dylan, Andrew WK, Foo Fighters, TLC, Guy, Toni Braxton, Boyz II Men, Kool Moe Dee, Heavy D. & The Boyz, Ayumi Hamasaki, Ronan Keating and many more. He is a four-time Grammy Award-winner as well as a songwriter and is co-writer of the number one ", "score": "1.5016875" }, { "id": "29624869", "title": "Six Ways to Sunday", "text": "Dorothy Aufiero – co-producer, ; Adam Bernstein – producer, ; David Collins – producer, ; Marc Gerald – co-producer, ; Charles Johnson – executive producer, ; Michael Naughton – producer, ; Chipp Sandground – co-executive producer, ; Jonathan Shoemaker – line producer, ; Todd Shuster – co-executive producer, ; Daniel Sollinger – executive producer, ; Michael Williams – co-producer ", "score": "1.4994684" }, { "id": "30842953", "title": "By Any Means (2008 TV series)", "text": " After Long Way Round and Long Way Down, Boorman and producer Russ Malkin conceived By Any Means in late 2007. Travelling across 24 countries, the crew comprised only Boorman, Malkin and a cameraman, Paul \"Mungo\" Mungeam.", "score": "1.4972365" } ]
[ "The Easiest Way\n The Easiest Way is a 1931 American pre-Code MGM drama film directed by Jack Conway. Adapted from the 1909 play of the same name written by Eugene Walter and directed by David Belasco, the film stars Constance Bennett, Adolphe Menjou, Robert Montgomery, Marjorie Rambeau, Anita Page, and Clark Gable", "Mabel Katz\n She is the author of The Easiest Way book series based on Ho'oponopono. The first book of the series was The Easiest Way; Solve Your Problems and Take The Road to Love, Happiness, Wealth and The Life of Your Dreams. In the book, she told her own story about finding her identity and freedom using this technique. The book has been translated into 15 languages. Other books in the series include The Easiest Way to Live, The Easiest Way Pocket Edition and The Easiest Way to Understanding Ho’oponopono that later became part of The Easiest Way and then was released as The Easiest Way Special Edition. In 2011, she wrote the fifth book of this series titled, Easiest Way to Grow.", "The Easiest Way\nLynton Brent as Brockton Associate (uncredited) ; Jack Hanlon as Andy Murdock (uncredited) ; John Harron as Chris Swoboda, Laura's Suitor (uncredited) ; Dell Henderson as Bud Williams (uncredited) ; Hedda Hopper as Mrs. Clara Williams (uncredited) ; Charles Judels as Mr. Gensler (uncredited) ", "The Easiest Way\n Warner Archive Collection released the first Region 1 DVD on March 10, 2010.", "The Easy Way (Jimmy Giuffre album)\n The Easy Way is an album by American jazz composer and arranger Jimmy Giuffre which was released on the Verve label in 1959.", "The Easy Way (film)\n The Easy Way (Sans arme, ni haine, ni violence; ) is a 2008 French heist film directed by Jean-Paul Rouve, who also stars in the titular role as the real life thief Albert Spaggiari, who organized a break-in into a Société Générale bank in Nice, France in 1976. The original French title refers to the note Albert Spaggiari left in the bank after completing the robbery. Part of the movie was shot in Portugal at the Hotel Palácio Estoril, a 5-star hotel where some scenes of the James Bond film On Her Majesty's Secret Service were also shot.", "His Way (film)\n His Way is a 2011 television documentary film about Jerry Weintraub, an American film producer and former chairman and CEO of United Artists. The film was directed by Douglas McGrath. The film features interviews with Weintraub, Jane Morgan, George H. W. Bush, Barbara Bush, George Clooney, Brad Pitt, Julia Roberts, Elliott Gould, Ellen Barkin, James Caan, Matt Damon and Bruce Willis.", "The Easy Way (Eddy Arnold album)\n The Easy Way is an album by American country music singer Eddy Arnold. It was released by RCA Victor in 1965. The album debuted on Billboard magazine's Top Country Albums chart on June 19, 1965, spent two weeks at No. 1, and remained on the chart for a total of 19 weeks. AllMusic gave the album a rating of four stars. Reviewer Greg Adams called it \"one of the most invigorating and enjoyable of his mid-'60s LPs.\"", "Easy Way (song)\n An accompanying music video for \"Easy Way\" was directed by Parris Stewart. It was released on January 29, 2020.", "The Hardest Way\n The Hardest Way is an album by the American garage punk band The Original Sins. It was released in 1989 by Psonik Records. The CD version of the album includes bonus tracks taken from the band's Australia-only extended play, Party's Over.", "The Easiest Way\n One foreign-language version was produced by MGM in French. It was titled Quand on est belle and starred Lili Damita in the part that Constance Bennett played in the English-language version.", "'Way Out (TV series)\n Source:", "The Easy Way (film)\n In 1977 in Nice, Albert Spaggiari is arrested by the police and brought to a judge's office for interrogation, but he manages to escape by jumping out of the window and riding off on a motorcycle with an accomplice. He travels to South America where he meets new faces including a mysterious journalist who wants to interview him about the heist and his whereabouts.", "Angela Martini\n In 2019, Angela Martini debuted as a producer in A Way Out (2018) and then produced The Fusion (2020).", "The Easiest Way\n According to MGM records the film earned $654,000 in the United States and Canada and $249,000 elsewhere resulting in a profit of $193,000.", "The Easy Way (Jimmy Giuffre album)\nJimmy Giuffre – clarinet, tenor saxophone, baritone saxophone ; Jim Hall – guitar ; Ray Brown – bass ", "French Way\nThe Way (2010) ", "Dave Way\n Dave Way is an American producer, mixer and audio engineer based in Los Angeles, California, United States. He has worked with Fiona Apple, Sheryl Crow, Kesha, Pink, Christina Aguilera, Macy Gray, Ringo Starr, Shakira, Phoebe Bridgers, John Doe, Savage Garden, Michael Jackson, Spice Girls, Norah Jones, Beck, Eric Clapton, Neil Young, Babyface, Ziggy Marley, Weird Al Yankovic, Paul McCartney, Mick Jagger, Stevie Wonder, Gwen Stefani, Chris Botti, Jakob Dylan, Andrew WK, Foo Fighters, TLC, Guy, Toni Braxton, Boyz II Men, Kool Moe Dee, Heavy D. & The Boyz, Ayumi Hamasaki, Ronan Keating and many more. He is a four-time Grammy Award-winner as well as a songwriter and is co-writer of the number one ", "Six Ways to Sunday\nDorothy Aufiero – co-producer, ; Adam Bernstein – producer, ; David Collins – producer, ; Marc Gerald – co-producer, ; Charles Johnson – executive producer, ; Michael Naughton – producer, ; Chipp Sandground – co-executive producer, ; Jonathan Shoemaker – line producer, ; Todd Shuster – co-executive producer, ; Daniel Sollinger – executive producer, ; Michael Williams – co-producer ", "By Any Means (2008 TV series)\n After Long Way Round and Long Way Down, Boorman and producer Russ Malkin conceived By Any Means in late 2007. Travelling across 24 countries, the crew comprised only Boorman, Malkin and a cameraman, Paul \"Mungo\" Mungeam." ]
Who is the author of Patience?
[ "Jason Sherman", "Jason Sherman" ]
author
Patience (play)
5,390,803
65
[ { "id": "11374351", "title": "John Patience", "text": " He is trained in typography and book design and he has been a published author and illustrator of children's books since 1979, with more than 140 published titles to date, selling all around the world.", "score": "1.6488953" }, { "id": "31425993", "title": "Patience Ward", "text": "Attribution ", "score": "1.5985732" }, { "id": "11374350", "title": "John Patience", "text": " John Patience is an English author and illustrator. He is best known for his Fern Hollow series of books for young children.", "score": "1.5137047" }, { "id": "33013110", "title": "Patience (play)", "text": " Patience is a play written and published in 1998 by Jason Sherman (Doollie.com). It is about Reuben, who one day loses everything. The play follows a path similar to David Mamet's play Edmond. It traces a psychological journey through Reuben's head while he tries to figure out how everything happened. The play was written at a time when the story would hit home for a lot of middle-aged, middle-class men.", "score": "1.5041188" }, { "id": "5234362", "title": "The Patience Stone", "text": " The Patience Stone (Syngué sabour. Pierre de patience) is a 2008 novel by the French-Afghan writer Atiq Rahimi. It is also known as Stone of Patience. It received the Prix Goncourt.", "score": "1.4966283" }, { "id": "28911675", "title": "Patience Gray", "text": " Patience Jean Gray (31 October 1917 – 10 March 2005) was an English cookery and travel writer of the mid-20th century. Her two most popular books were Plats Du Jour (1957) – written with Primrose Boyd, about French cooking – and Honey From A Weed (1986), an account of the Mediterranean way of life.", "score": "1.4767139" }, { "id": "8777693", "title": "Patience and Sarah", "text": " Patience and Sarah is a 1969 historical fiction novel with strong lesbian themes by Alma Routsong, using the pen name Isabel Miller. It was originally self-published under the title A Place for Us and eventually found a publisher as Patience and Sarah in 1971. Routsong's novel is based on a real-life painter named Mary Ann Willson who lived with her companion Miss Brundage as a \"farmerette\" in the early 19th century in Greene County, New York. Routsong said she came upon Willson's work in a folk art museum in Cooperstown and was inspired to write the story after reading the description of Willson and Brundage. It tells the story ", "score": "1.4648876" }, { "id": "8777701", "title": "Patience and Sarah", "text": " Routsong originally published 1,000 copies of the book using her own money, selling them on street corners in New York City and at meetings of the Daughters of Bilitis. She contacted Gene Damon (Barbara Grier) at The Ladder, who also promoted the book in the book review section of the magazine, calling it \"a gem\" and that, \"it very much belongs with that small bookshelf full of basic classics of Lesbian literature.\" Grier also had to assure their readership, who had to order the book directly from Routsong that she was an actual person, not a police agency. Routsong then resubmitted the novel to publishers under a pseudonym.", "score": "1.462311" }, { "id": "30854375", "title": "The Patience of Maigret", "text": " The Patience of Maigret is a 1939 detective novel by the Belgian writer Georges Simenon featuring his character Jules Maigret.", "score": "1.4525931" }, { "id": "6928888", "title": "Patience (poem)", "text": " Though the real name of the author, called \"The Pearl Poet\", is unknown, some inferences about him/her can be drawn from an informed reading of his/her works. The original manuscript is known in academic circles as Cotton Nero A.x, following a naming system used by one of its owners, Robert Cotton, a collector of Medieval English texts. Before the manuscript came into Cotton's possession, it was in the library of Henry Savile of Bank in Yorkshire. Little is known about its previous ownership, and until 1824, when the manuscript was introduced to the academic community in a second edition of Thomas Warton's History edited by Richard ", "score": "1.4502618" }, { "id": "29864577", "title": "John Navone", "text": " (Translation from Italian) \"It (patience) is a theme that I (Pope Francis) have pondered over the years after my having read the book of John Navone, an Italian American author, with the striking title, The Theology of Failure, in which he explains how Jesus lived patiently. In the experience of limits, he (Pope Francis) adds, patience is forged in dialogue with human limits/limitations. There are times when our lives do not call so much for our \"doing\" as for our \"enduring,\" for bearing up (from the Greek hypomone) with our own limitations and those of others. Being patient – he explains – means accepting the fact that it takes time to mature and develop. Living with patience allows for time to integrate and shape our lives.\"", "score": "1.4427223" }, { "id": "30317828", "title": "Seeing with the Eyes of Love", "text": " calls upon us to be both patient and impatient. Without a certain measure of impatience, you're not likely to cut through all the... fetters that tie you to limited, self-willed living.... I was... impatient... in the first half of my spiritual life, almost reckless... But in the second half I came to realize that... Even to have come as far as I had was due entirely to the grace of God.\" Seeing with the Eyes of Love concludes with a 22-page afterword by Carol Flinders that profiles the Imitation's presumed author, Thomas à Kempis (c. 1380 – 1471), and the times in which he lived. She states that the ", "score": "1.4367495" }, { "id": "6928883", "title": "Patience (poem)", "text": " Patience (Middle English: Pacience) is a Middle English alliterative poem written in the late 14th century. Its unknown author, designated the \"Pearl Poet\" or \"Gawain-Poet\", also appears, on the basis of dialect and stylistic evidence, to be the author of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, Pearl, and Cleanness (all ca. 1360–1395) and may have composed St. Erkenwald. This is thought to be true because the techniques and vocabulary of regional dialect of the unknown author is that of Northwest Midlands, located between Shropshire and Lancashire. The manuscript, Cotton Nero A.x is in the British Library. The first published edition was in Early English ", "score": "1.4356377" }, { "id": "8777694", "title": "Patience and Sarah", "text": " two women in Connecticut in 1816 who fall in love and decide to leave their homes to buy a farm in another state or territory and live in a Boston marriage. The story addresses the limited opportunities and roles of women in early America, gender expression, and the interpretation of religion in everyday life. Sarah Waters, author of Tipping the Velvet and other historical novels with lesbian themes, has said that this book was an influence on her writing. She received the book from a girlfriend in 1988 at age 22 and was \"struck by the lyricism and economy of it, by its gentle humour, and by its sexiness.\"", "score": "1.430988" }, { "id": "6928889", "title": "Patience (poem)", "text": " it was almost entirely unknown. Now held in the British Library, it has been dated to the late 14th century, so the poet was a contemporary of Geoffrey Chaucer, author of The Canterbury Tales, though it is highly unlikely that they ever met. The three other works found in the same manuscript as Pearl (commonly known as Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, Pearl, and Cleanness or Purity) are often considered to be written by the same author. However, the manuscript containing these poems was transcribed by a copyist and not by the original poet, known by scribal errors. Suggested emandations may be found in \"Patience: ", "score": "1.4257007" }, { "id": "8777702", "title": "Patience and Sarah", "text": "Following its October 1971 publication, the novel was the first ever to be recognized with a Stonewall Book Award. ; In 1999 Patience and Sarah was listed #24 on the Publishing Triangle's list of 100 Best Lesbian and Gay Novels. ", "score": "1.4252739" }, { "id": "8777703", "title": "Patience and Sarah", "text": " The novel was adapted into an opera by Paula M. Kimper, to a libretto by Wende Persons. It debuted at the Lincoln Center Festival in 1998, and has been revived several times since. Alma Routsong gave her approval to the project shortly before her death, but did not survive to hear more than a few songs from the score performed privately. The idea for the opera originated with Persons's crush on a soprano in 1981, when Persons wrote the music to impress her. When she was rejected, she kept the work until she met Kimper and they both revived its creation in 1989. Concerning the 1996 pre-premiere of the semi-staged final draft, with piano accompaniment, The New York Times claimed it had \"an accessible, attractively lyrical score\" and ", "score": "1.4231385" }, { "id": "26142132", "title": "Patience of Angels", "text": " \"Patience of Angels\" is the first single by Scottish singer/songwriter Eddi Reader released from her eponymous second album. The song was written by Boo Hewerdine. It was released in June 1994 and peaked at number 33 in the UK Singles Chart.", "score": "1.4198464" }, { "id": "30489807", "title": "He Wouldn't Kill Patience", "text": " He Wouldn't Kill Patience is a mystery novel by the American writer John Dickson Carr, who published it under the name of Carter Dickson. It is a locked room mystery and features the series detective Sir Henry Merrivale and his long-time associate, Scotland Yard's Chief Inspector Humphrey Masters.", "score": "1.4178605" }, { "id": "30532785", "title": "Gertrude Atherton", "text": " series he was editing for Cassells Pocket Library, which she wrote as A Whirl Asunder (1895). Once Patience Sparhawk and Her Times, A Novel was published, William Robertson Nicoll gave a review of it in the April 12, 1897 edition of The Bookman that said it was \"crude\" in its portrayal of a clever young woman with burning interest in life and identified it as a protest against the tame American novel. In the May 15 issue of The New York Times, the reviewer said that Atherton had \"incontestable\" ability and a \"very original talent\" while noting that the book offered a series of ", "score": "1.4133377" } ]
[ "John Patience\n He is trained in typography and book design and he has been a published author and illustrator of children's books since 1979, with more than 140 published titles to date, selling all around the world.", "Patience Ward\nAttribution ", "John Patience\n John Patience is an English author and illustrator. He is best known for his Fern Hollow series of books for young children.", "Patience (play)\n Patience is a play written and published in 1998 by Jason Sherman (Doollie.com). It is about Reuben, who one day loses everything. The play follows a path similar to David Mamet's play Edmond. It traces a psychological journey through Reuben's head while he tries to figure out how everything happened. The play was written at a time when the story would hit home for a lot of middle-aged, middle-class men.", "The Patience Stone\n The Patience Stone (Syngué sabour. Pierre de patience) is a 2008 novel by the French-Afghan writer Atiq Rahimi. It is also known as Stone of Patience. It received the Prix Goncourt.", "Patience Gray\n Patience Jean Gray (31 October 1917 – 10 March 2005) was an English cookery and travel writer of the mid-20th century. Her two most popular books were Plats Du Jour (1957) – written with Primrose Boyd, about French cooking – and Honey From A Weed (1986), an account of the Mediterranean way of life.", "Patience and Sarah\n Patience and Sarah is a 1969 historical fiction novel with strong lesbian themes by Alma Routsong, using the pen name Isabel Miller. It was originally self-published under the title A Place for Us and eventually found a publisher as Patience and Sarah in 1971. Routsong's novel is based on a real-life painter named Mary Ann Willson who lived with her companion Miss Brundage as a \"farmerette\" in the early 19th century in Greene County, New York. Routsong said she came upon Willson's work in a folk art museum in Cooperstown and was inspired to write the story after reading the description of Willson and Brundage. It tells the story ", "Patience and Sarah\n Routsong originally published 1,000 copies of the book using her own money, selling them on street corners in New York City and at meetings of the Daughters of Bilitis. She contacted Gene Damon (Barbara Grier) at The Ladder, who also promoted the book in the book review section of the magazine, calling it \"a gem\" and that, \"it very much belongs with that small bookshelf full of basic classics of Lesbian literature.\" Grier also had to assure their readership, who had to order the book directly from Routsong that she was an actual person, not a police agency. Routsong then resubmitted the novel to publishers under a pseudonym.", "The Patience of Maigret\n The Patience of Maigret is a 1939 detective novel by the Belgian writer Georges Simenon featuring his character Jules Maigret.", "Patience (poem)\n Though the real name of the author, called \"The Pearl Poet\", is unknown, some inferences about him/her can be drawn from an informed reading of his/her works. The original manuscript is known in academic circles as Cotton Nero A.x, following a naming system used by one of its owners, Robert Cotton, a collector of Medieval English texts. Before the manuscript came into Cotton's possession, it was in the library of Henry Savile of Bank in Yorkshire. Little is known about its previous ownership, and until 1824, when the manuscript was introduced to the academic community in a second edition of Thomas Warton's History edited by Richard ", "John Navone\n (Translation from Italian) \"It (patience) is a theme that I (Pope Francis) have pondered over the years after my having read the book of John Navone, an Italian American author, with the striking title, The Theology of Failure, in which he explains how Jesus lived patiently. In the experience of limits, he (Pope Francis) adds, patience is forged in dialogue with human limits/limitations. There are times when our lives do not call so much for our \"doing\" as for our \"enduring,\" for bearing up (from the Greek hypomone) with our own limitations and those of others. Being patient – he explains – means accepting the fact that it takes time to mature and develop. Living with patience allows for time to integrate and shape our lives.\"", "Seeing with the Eyes of Love\n calls upon us to be both patient and impatient. Without a certain measure of impatience, you're not likely to cut through all the... fetters that tie you to limited, self-willed living.... I was... impatient... in the first half of my spiritual life, almost reckless... But in the second half I came to realize that... Even to have come as far as I had was due entirely to the grace of God.\" Seeing with the Eyes of Love concludes with a 22-page afterword by Carol Flinders that profiles the Imitation's presumed author, Thomas à Kempis (c. 1380 – 1471), and the times in which he lived. She states that the ", "Patience (poem)\n Patience (Middle English: Pacience) is a Middle English alliterative poem written in the late 14th century. Its unknown author, designated the \"Pearl Poet\" or \"Gawain-Poet\", also appears, on the basis of dialect and stylistic evidence, to be the author of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, Pearl, and Cleanness (all ca. 1360–1395) and may have composed St. Erkenwald. This is thought to be true because the techniques and vocabulary of regional dialect of the unknown author is that of Northwest Midlands, located between Shropshire and Lancashire. The manuscript, Cotton Nero A.x is in the British Library. The first published edition was in Early English ", "Patience and Sarah\n two women in Connecticut in 1816 who fall in love and decide to leave their homes to buy a farm in another state or territory and live in a Boston marriage. The story addresses the limited opportunities and roles of women in early America, gender expression, and the interpretation of religion in everyday life. Sarah Waters, author of Tipping the Velvet and other historical novels with lesbian themes, has said that this book was an influence on her writing. She received the book from a girlfriend in 1988 at age 22 and was \"struck by the lyricism and economy of it, by its gentle humour, and by its sexiness.\"", "Patience (poem)\n it was almost entirely unknown. Now held in the British Library, it has been dated to the late 14th century, so the poet was a contemporary of Geoffrey Chaucer, author of The Canterbury Tales, though it is highly unlikely that they ever met. The three other works found in the same manuscript as Pearl (commonly known as Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, Pearl, and Cleanness or Purity) are often considered to be written by the same author. However, the manuscript containing these poems was transcribed by a copyist and not by the original poet, known by scribal errors. Suggested emandations may be found in \"Patience: ", "Patience and Sarah\nFollowing its October 1971 publication, the novel was the first ever to be recognized with a Stonewall Book Award. ; In 1999 Patience and Sarah was listed #24 on the Publishing Triangle's list of 100 Best Lesbian and Gay Novels. ", "Patience and Sarah\n The novel was adapted into an opera by Paula M. Kimper, to a libretto by Wende Persons. It debuted at the Lincoln Center Festival in 1998, and has been revived several times since. Alma Routsong gave her approval to the project shortly before her death, but did not survive to hear more than a few songs from the score performed privately. The idea for the opera originated with Persons's crush on a soprano in 1981, when Persons wrote the music to impress her. When she was rejected, she kept the work until she met Kimper and they both revived its creation in 1989. Concerning the 1996 pre-premiere of the semi-staged final draft, with piano accompaniment, The New York Times claimed it had \"an accessible, attractively lyrical score\" and ", "Patience of Angels\n \"Patience of Angels\" is the first single by Scottish singer/songwriter Eddi Reader released from her eponymous second album. The song was written by Boo Hewerdine. It was released in June 1994 and peaked at number 33 in the UK Singles Chart.", "He Wouldn't Kill Patience\n He Wouldn't Kill Patience is a mystery novel by the American writer John Dickson Carr, who published it under the name of Carter Dickson. It is a locked room mystery and features the series detective Sir Henry Merrivale and his long-time associate, Scotland Yard's Chief Inspector Humphrey Masters.", "Gertrude Atherton\n series he was editing for Cassells Pocket Library, which she wrote as A Whirl Asunder (1895). Once Patience Sparhawk and Her Times, A Novel was published, William Robertson Nicoll gave a review of it in the April 12, 1897 edition of The Bookman that said it was \"crude\" in its portrayal of a clever young woman with burning interest in life and identified it as a protest against the tame American novel. In the May 15 issue of The New York Times, the reviewer said that Atherton had \"incontestable\" ability and a \"very original talent\" while noting that the book offered a series of " ]
In what city was Liam Carroll born?
[ "Kinnitty" ]
place of birth
Liam Carroll (hurler)
1,208,142
43
[ { "id": "1536788", "title": "Patrick J. Carroll", "text": " Carroll was born in England in 1991 and attended the Preparatory School for Monkton Combe School, Bath. He and his family emigrated to New Zealand in 2004 and he was educated at St Andrew's College, Christchurch. He is a graduate of NZ Drama school Toi Whakaari, with a Bachelor of Performing Arts and has worked with Long Cloud Youth Theatre and travelled to London's Globe Theatre with Shakespeare Globe Centre New Zealand. In 2014 Carroll attended the Buffon/Le Jeu at L'Ecole Phillipe Gaulier in Paris. He also played in Shakespeare's Measure for Measure, Strindberg's A Dream-play, and As You Like It. He is represented by Auckland Actors and has played as Thomas Klopper in the award-winning staging of The Book of Everything in 2015/2016 at the Silo Theatre. Over these years, Carroll has performed in Alice In Wonderland, The ", "score": "1.705306" }, { "id": "5757270", "title": "Jim Carroll", "text": " Carroll was born to a working-class family of Irish descent, and grew up in New York City's Lower East Side. When he was about 11 (in the sixth grade) his family moved north to Inwood in Upper Manhattan. He was taught by the LaSalle Christian Brothers. In fall 1963, he entered Rice High School in Harlem, but was soon awarded a scholarship to the elite Trinity School. He attended Trinity from 1964 to 1968. Carroll was a basketball star in high school, but also developed an addiction to heroin. He financed his drug habit by engaging in prostitution in the vicinity of 53rd Street and Third Avenue in Manhattan. Carroll briefly attended Wagner College and Columbia University. He dated Patti Smith.", "score": "1.6996528" }, { "id": "3227237", "title": "Rocky Carroll", "text": " Carroll was born Roscoe Carroll in Cincinnati, Ohio, on July 8, 1963. His acting career is rooted in the theater. In 1981, Carroll graduated from the famed School for Creative and Performing Arts (SCPA) in Cincinnati Ohio, in the Cincinnati Public School District. Determined to further his knowledge of acting, he attended The Conservatory of Theatre Arts at Webster University in St. Louis, where he graduated with a B.F.A. degree. Carroll would later receive an honorary degree from his alma mater in 2009. After graduating, Carroll decided to test the waters by moving to New York City, the heart of the theater community. There, he introduced many young children to the works of William Shakespeare by participating in Joe Papp's \"Shakespeare on Broadway\" series.", "score": "1.6902957" }, { "id": "10158998", "title": "Adam Carroll (American musician)", "text": " Carroll was born in 1975 in Tyler, Texas. His father is an attorney and his mother, a musician and choir director. He studied classical guitar and creative writing briefly at Tyler Junior College. He left college in his early 20s, around 1995, and began performing in the Austin-Dallas-San Antonio area, initially in coffeehouses and later at pubs and clubs throughout the region. In 1998, he released his debut South of Town which was followed by Lookin' Out the Screen Door in 2000 and Adam Carroll Live in 2002. All three were produced by Grammy Award-winning producer Lloyd Maines. While on the road, Carroll opened for some of East ", "score": "1.6893808" }, { "id": "5932409", "title": "Lawrence Carroll", "text": " Carroll was born to George and Mary Carroll (Gaynor) in Melbourne, Australia. He moved to Santa Monica, California, with his parents and older brother Ronald in 1958. In 1960 his family relocated to Newbury Park, a suburb located 45 minutes north of Los Angeles. He attended Newbury Park High School and later worked as a chef to pay for his studies at Moorpark Junior College and then later the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, where he studied art on a full scholarship.", "score": "1.6822138" }, { "id": "2965575", "title": "Liz Carroll", "text": " Carroll's parents were born in Ireland; her father Kevin was from Brocca, County Offaly, and her mother Eileen was from Ballyhahill, West Limerick. Her maternal grandfather played the violin and her father played button accordion. Carroll was born September 19, 1956, in Chicago, Illinois and raised on Chicago's south side. She took classical music lessons from nuns at Visitation Catholic School. On Sunday nights, Carroll and her family visited a south side Irish pub that hosted a live radio show featuring traditional Irish music. She earned a degree in social psychology at DePaul University. Carroll's influences include Chicago-born Irish fiddler John McGreevy, Irish button accordionist Joe Cooley, Irish fiddler Sean McGuire, 1983 National Heritage Award-winning uilleann piper Joe Shannon, and pianist Eleanor Neary.", "score": "1.6790811" }, { "id": "16233686", "title": "Mickey Carroll", "text": " Born Michael Finocchiaro in St. Louis, Missouri, Carroll was the son of Italian immigrants. He was born along with a twin sister, who, unlike Carroll, was of average size. As a child Carroll began dance lessons at the Fox Theater in St. Louis. At 17 he was one of six bellhops in the 'Call for Phillip Morris' live radio ads, and at 18 was appearing in shows with Mae West. While under contract to MGM, he went to school with Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney. It was Garland herself who offered him a part in The Wizard of Oz. Carroll was cast as Munchkinland's \"Town Crier\". His costume consisted of a purple cloak with a yellow flower sticking out of his striped vest. He also marched as a \"Munchkin Soldier\", and as one of the candy-striped \"Fiddlers\" ", "score": "1.6578122" }, { "id": "5892433", "title": "Noel Carroll (athlete)", "text": " Noel Carroll was born in Annagassan, County Louth, in 1941, and left school to join the Army where he began running. In 1962, while competing in the Millrose Games in New York City, he was recruited by \"Jumbo Elliott\" and attended Villanova University, where he joined the university's athletics team, the Villanova Wildcats and won a number of track championships. At Villanova, he ran a sub-four-minute mile and in 1964, was the anchor for the team which broke the 4 x 880 yard relay World Record. In the same year, he also set the European Indoor record for the 880 yards and competed in the Olympic Games in Tokyo in the Men's 800 metres finishing just outside of ", "score": "1.6449115" }, { "id": "6785423", "title": "Leo G. Carroll", "text": " Carroll was born in Weedon Bec, Northamptonshire, to William and Catherine Carroll. His Roman Catholic parents named him after then-Pope Leo XIII. In 1897, his family lived in York, where his Irish-born father was a foreman in an ordnance store. In the 1901 census for West Ham, Essex, his occupation is listed as \"wine trade clerk\". In the 1911 census, he is living at the same address and described as a \"dramatic agent\".", "score": "1.6442437" }, { "id": "30748040", "title": "Adam Carroll (Irish musician)", "text": " Carroll was born and raised in Cloyne, County Cork, Ireland. Carroll's musical career began when he formed Time Is A Thief in 2007 with James Keane who were in school together and friends Micheal Murphy & Pierce Day (Day later replaced by Jeffrey Hayes). He is vocalist in London-based band Zoax which formed in 2013, also in the band are Joe Copcutt, Doug Wotherspoon, Sean Weir & Jonathan Rogers. In 2018 Carroll formed The Gore Club with Joe Copcutt.", "score": "1.6379843" }, { "id": "11412798", "title": "James Carroll (actor)", "text": " Carroll was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in the United States. He moved from the U.S. to Toronto during the 1970s after performing in stage productions in the Canadian city. In addition to acting, Carroll later worked as the stage manager at The Second City improv club in Toronto. His other television roles included Anne of Green Gables: A New Beginning in 2008, as well as commercials. Carroll originally left the entertainment industry and moved to Huntsville, Ontario, to live closer to his daughter Emma. He soon became involved with Hunters Bay Radio, the local community radio station, as an afternoon host in 2010. Carroll and his colleagues oversaw the expansion of Hunters Bay Radio into a full FM station with 60 employees which now broadcasts across Muskoka's cottage country and the Almaguin Highlands.", "score": "1.6339719" }, { "id": "10158997", "title": "Adam Carroll (American musician)", "text": " Adam Carroll (born 1975) is an Americana singer-songwriter who was born in Tyler, Texas, and has spent most of his career in the Austin, Texas area. Carroll has eight albums to his credit, all indie releases, beginning with 2000's South of Town. His songwriting, which focuses on life in Texas, Louisiana and Oklahoma, is widely respected and has been compared to the work of Texas greats such as Guy Clark and Townes Van Zandt. He was honored in 2016 with the release Highway Prayer: A Tribute to Adam Carroll, which features recordings of his songs by some of Austin's leading Americana music artists, including Slaid Cleaves, James McMurtry, Terri Hendrix and Tim Easton.", "score": "1.63274" }, { "id": "6097315", "title": "Jack Carroll (comedian)", "text": " Carroll was born 11 weeks prematurely and he developed cerebral palsy. In 2012, he won a Pride of Britain Award in the \"Teenager of Courage\" category. Carroll lives in Hipperholme, West Yorkshire, with his parents. He is a Leeds United F.C fan and on 31 August 2013, he performed at Elland Road at the launch of the club's Families United initiative.", "score": "1.628032" }, { "id": "7393971", "title": "Liam Cunningham", "text": " Cunningham was born in East Wall, which is an inner city area of the Northside of Dublin. He grew up in Kilmore West with his three sisters and a brother. Cunningham left secondary school at 15 and pursued a career as an electrician. In the 1980s, Cunningham moved to Zimbabwe for three years where he maintained electrical equipment at a safari park and trained Zimbabwean electricians. After returning to Ireland, Cunningham became dissatisfied with his work as an electrician and decided to pursue his interest in acting. He attended acting classes and began to work in local theatre, including Royal Shakespeare Company. He appeared in a production of Studs at The Tricycle Theatre in Kilburn, London.", "score": "1.6176245" }, { "id": "11137232", "title": "Curtis Carroll", "text": " Carroll was born in Washington, D.C. and later moved to East Oakland, where he grew up, amidst the crack epidemic in the United States. His mother was a waitress at a bowling alley and the family was often on welfare. He later befriended his mother's drug dealer, who taught him to steal quarters from arcade machines. Carroll was eventually caught and sentenced to juvenile hall.", "score": "1.614074" }, { "id": "5401511", "title": "Liam Aiken", "text": " Aiken was born in New York City, the only child of Moya Aiken, an Irish-born artist; and Bill Aiken, an MTV producer, who is of Scots-Irish descent. Bill died of esophageal cancer in September 1992, at age 34, when Liam was two years old. Aiken grew up in New Jersey and attended Dwight-Englewood School, graduating in 2008. He then went on to major in film at New York University. , Aiken resides in Los Angeles.", "score": "1.5957885" }, { "id": "5041541", "title": "Bill Carroll (broadcaster)", "text": " Carroll was born in Scotland on July 29, 1959 and grew up in Coatbridge near Glasgow. He came with his family to Toronto, Ontario, Canada in the late 1960s. The family first lived in Don Mills in an apartment (later in a townhouse in Scarborough), where he attended Stephen Leacock Collegiate Institute, a few years before Mike Myers. Bill married Sylvie LaPointe in July 2003. They have two children, Killian and Magalie. Like Bill's father, Magalie was born with spina bifida. Bill has cited as one of the reasons for his relocation to California was to be closer to Ramon Cuevas, a physical therapist who had worked with Magalie.", "score": "1.5950043" }, { "id": "15282437", "title": "Canice Carroll", "text": " Canice Michael Carroll (born 16 January 1999) is a professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Oxford City. Carroll is a product of the Oxford United youth system and began his professional career with the club, before moving to Brentford in 2018. After loan spells at Swindon Town and Carlisle United and a short period with Stevenage, he moved to Scotland to join Queen's Park in 2020. Born in England, Carroll was capped by the Republic of Ireland at youth level and has played club football in England and Scotland.", "score": "1.5921214" }, { "id": "4113424", "title": "Liam Carroll (hurler)", "text": " Liam Carroll is an Irish retired hurler who played as a midfielder for the Offaly senior team. Born in Kinnitty, County Offaly, Carroll first played competitive hurling in his youth. He made his senior debut with Offaly during the 1984 championship and immediately became a regular member of the team. During his career Carroll won one Leinster medal. He was an All-Ireland runner-up on one occasion. At club level Carroll is a three-time championship medallist with Kinnitty. His retirement came following the conclusion of the 1985-86 National League.", "score": "1.5908687" }, { "id": "10369701", "title": "Andy Carroll", "text": " Born in Gateshead, Tyne and Wear, Carroll attended Brighton Avenue Primary School and Joseph Swan School. He is a model for clothing retail company H&M and has fronted a campaign led by fashion designer Alexander Wang. In November 2014, Carroll became engaged to reality TV star Billi Mucklow. The couple live in Essex. Their son, Arlo, was born in June 2015. He has two children, Emilie Rose and Lucas, from a previous relationship. In November 2017, Mucklow and Carroll had a second child, Wolf Nine. In November 2016, Carroll was approached by two men on motorcycles while driving near his home in Brentwood, Essex. Armed with a handgun, they attempted to steal his £22,000 watch but failed. Carroll was then chased in his car for about 20 minutes as he drove back to West Ham's training ground in Rush Green to get help from security staff. In September 2017, 22-year-old Jack O'Brien was found guilty of the attempted robbery. He was sentenced to six years in prison for the offence. In May 2019, Carroll was listed as the 14th-wealthiest sports person aged 30 or under in The Sunday Times Rich List, his personal wealth having increased to £19m.", "score": "1.5826409" } ]
[ "Patrick J. Carroll\n Carroll was born in England in 1991 and attended the Preparatory School for Monkton Combe School, Bath. He and his family emigrated to New Zealand in 2004 and he was educated at St Andrew's College, Christchurch. He is a graduate of NZ Drama school Toi Whakaari, with a Bachelor of Performing Arts and has worked with Long Cloud Youth Theatre and travelled to London's Globe Theatre with Shakespeare Globe Centre New Zealand. In 2014 Carroll attended the Buffon/Le Jeu at L'Ecole Phillipe Gaulier in Paris. He also played in Shakespeare's Measure for Measure, Strindberg's A Dream-play, and As You Like It. He is represented by Auckland Actors and has played as Thomas Klopper in the award-winning staging of The Book of Everything in 2015/2016 at the Silo Theatre. Over these years, Carroll has performed in Alice In Wonderland, The ", "Jim Carroll\n Carroll was born to a working-class family of Irish descent, and grew up in New York City's Lower East Side. When he was about 11 (in the sixth grade) his family moved north to Inwood in Upper Manhattan. He was taught by the LaSalle Christian Brothers. In fall 1963, he entered Rice High School in Harlem, but was soon awarded a scholarship to the elite Trinity School. He attended Trinity from 1964 to 1968. Carroll was a basketball star in high school, but also developed an addiction to heroin. He financed his drug habit by engaging in prostitution in the vicinity of 53rd Street and Third Avenue in Manhattan. Carroll briefly attended Wagner College and Columbia University. He dated Patti Smith.", "Rocky Carroll\n Carroll was born Roscoe Carroll in Cincinnati, Ohio, on July 8, 1963. His acting career is rooted in the theater. In 1981, Carroll graduated from the famed School for Creative and Performing Arts (SCPA) in Cincinnati Ohio, in the Cincinnati Public School District. Determined to further his knowledge of acting, he attended The Conservatory of Theatre Arts at Webster University in St. Louis, where he graduated with a B.F.A. degree. Carroll would later receive an honorary degree from his alma mater in 2009. After graduating, Carroll decided to test the waters by moving to New York City, the heart of the theater community. There, he introduced many young children to the works of William Shakespeare by participating in Joe Papp's \"Shakespeare on Broadway\" series.", "Adam Carroll (American musician)\n Carroll was born in 1975 in Tyler, Texas. His father is an attorney and his mother, a musician and choir director. He studied classical guitar and creative writing briefly at Tyler Junior College. He left college in his early 20s, around 1995, and began performing in the Austin-Dallas-San Antonio area, initially in coffeehouses and later at pubs and clubs throughout the region. In 1998, he released his debut South of Town which was followed by Lookin' Out the Screen Door in 2000 and Adam Carroll Live in 2002. All three were produced by Grammy Award-winning producer Lloyd Maines. While on the road, Carroll opened for some of East ", "Lawrence Carroll\n Carroll was born to George and Mary Carroll (Gaynor) in Melbourne, Australia. He moved to Santa Monica, California, with his parents and older brother Ronald in 1958. In 1960 his family relocated to Newbury Park, a suburb located 45 minutes north of Los Angeles. He attended Newbury Park High School and later worked as a chef to pay for his studies at Moorpark Junior College and then later the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, where he studied art on a full scholarship.", "Liz Carroll\n Carroll's parents were born in Ireland; her father Kevin was from Brocca, County Offaly, and her mother Eileen was from Ballyhahill, West Limerick. Her maternal grandfather played the violin and her father played button accordion. Carroll was born September 19, 1956, in Chicago, Illinois and raised on Chicago's south side. She took classical music lessons from nuns at Visitation Catholic School. On Sunday nights, Carroll and her family visited a south side Irish pub that hosted a live radio show featuring traditional Irish music. She earned a degree in social psychology at DePaul University. Carroll's influences include Chicago-born Irish fiddler John McGreevy, Irish button accordionist Joe Cooley, Irish fiddler Sean McGuire, 1983 National Heritage Award-winning uilleann piper Joe Shannon, and pianist Eleanor Neary.", "Mickey Carroll\n Born Michael Finocchiaro in St. Louis, Missouri, Carroll was the son of Italian immigrants. He was born along with a twin sister, who, unlike Carroll, was of average size. As a child Carroll began dance lessons at the Fox Theater in St. Louis. At 17 he was one of six bellhops in the 'Call for Phillip Morris' live radio ads, and at 18 was appearing in shows with Mae West. While under contract to MGM, he went to school with Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney. It was Garland herself who offered him a part in The Wizard of Oz. Carroll was cast as Munchkinland's \"Town Crier\". His costume consisted of a purple cloak with a yellow flower sticking out of his striped vest. He also marched as a \"Munchkin Soldier\", and as one of the candy-striped \"Fiddlers\" ", "Noel Carroll (athlete)\n Noel Carroll was born in Annagassan, County Louth, in 1941, and left school to join the Army where he began running. In 1962, while competing in the Millrose Games in New York City, he was recruited by \"Jumbo Elliott\" and attended Villanova University, where he joined the university's athletics team, the Villanova Wildcats and won a number of track championships. At Villanova, he ran a sub-four-minute mile and in 1964, was the anchor for the team which broke the 4 x 880 yard relay World Record. In the same year, he also set the European Indoor record for the 880 yards and competed in the Olympic Games in Tokyo in the Men's 800 metres finishing just outside of ", "Leo G. Carroll\n Carroll was born in Weedon Bec, Northamptonshire, to William and Catherine Carroll. His Roman Catholic parents named him after then-Pope Leo XIII. In 1897, his family lived in York, where his Irish-born father was a foreman in an ordnance store. In the 1901 census for West Ham, Essex, his occupation is listed as \"wine trade clerk\". In the 1911 census, he is living at the same address and described as a \"dramatic agent\".", "Adam Carroll (Irish musician)\n Carroll was born and raised in Cloyne, County Cork, Ireland. Carroll's musical career began when he formed Time Is A Thief in 2007 with James Keane who were in school together and friends Micheal Murphy & Pierce Day (Day later replaced by Jeffrey Hayes). He is vocalist in London-based band Zoax which formed in 2013, also in the band are Joe Copcutt, Doug Wotherspoon, Sean Weir & Jonathan Rogers. In 2018 Carroll formed The Gore Club with Joe Copcutt.", "James Carroll (actor)\n Carroll was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in the United States. He moved from the U.S. to Toronto during the 1970s after performing in stage productions in the Canadian city. In addition to acting, Carroll later worked as the stage manager at The Second City improv club in Toronto. His other television roles included Anne of Green Gables: A New Beginning in 2008, as well as commercials. Carroll originally left the entertainment industry and moved to Huntsville, Ontario, to live closer to his daughter Emma. He soon became involved with Hunters Bay Radio, the local community radio station, as an afternoon host in 2010. Carroll and his colleagues oversaw the expansion of Hunters Bay Radio into a full FM station with 60 employees which now broadcasts across Muskoka's cottage country and the Almaguin Highlands.", "Adam Carroll (American musician)\n Adam Carroll (born 1975) is an Americana singer-songwriter who was born in Tyler, Texas, and has spent most of his career in the Austin, Texas area. Carroll has eight albums to his credit, all indie releases, beginning with 2000's South of Town. His songwriting, which focuses on life in Texas, Louisiana and Oklahoma, is widely respected and has been compared to the work of Texas greats such as Guy Clark and Townes Van Zandt. He was honored in 2016 with the release Highway Prayer: A Tribute to Adam Carroll, which features recordings of his songs by some of Austin's leading Americana music artists, including Slaid Cleaves, James McMurtry, Terri Hendrix and Tim Easton.", "Jack Carroll (comedian)\n Carroll was born 11 weeks prematurely and he developed cerebral palsy. In 2012, he won a Pride of Britain Award in the \"Teenager of Courage\" category. Carroll lives in Hipperholme, West Yorkshire, with his parents. He is a Leeds United F.C fan and on 31 August 2013, he performed at Elland Road at the launch of the club's Families United initiative.", "Liam Cunningham\n Cunningham was born in East Wall, which is an inner city area of the Northside of Dublin. He grew up in Kilmore West with his three sisters and a brother. Cunningham left secondary school at 15 and pursued a career as an electrician. In the 1980s, Cunningham moved to Zimbabwe for three years where he maintained electrical equipment at a safari park and trained Zimbabwean electricians. After returning to Ireland, Cunningham became dissatisfied with his work as an electrician and decided to pursue his interest in acting. He attended acting classes and began to work in local theatre, including Royal Shakespeare Company. He appeared in a production of Studs at The Tricycle Theatre in Kilburn, London.", "Curtis Carroll\n Carroll was born in Washington, D.C. and later moved to East Oakland, where he grew up, amidst the crack epidemic in the United States. His mother was a waitress at a bowling alley and the family was often on welfare. He later befriended his mother's drug dealer, who taught him to steal quarters from arcade machines. Carroll was eventually caught and sentenced to juvenile hall.", "Liam Aiken\n Aiken was born in New York City, the only child of Moya Aiken, an Irish-born artist; and Bill Aiken, an MTV producer, who is of Scots-Irish descent. Bill died of esophageal cancer in September 1992, at age 34, when Liam was two years old. Aiken grew up in New Jersey and attended Dwight-Englewood School, graduating in 2008. He then went on to major in film at New York University. , Aiken resides in Los Angeles.", "Bill Carroll (broadcaster)\n Carroll was born in Scotland on July 29, 1959 and grew up in Coatbridge near Glasgow. He came with his family to Toronto, Ontario, Canada in the late 1960s. The family first lived in Don Mills in an apartment (later in a townhouse in Scarborough), where he attended Stephen Leacock Collegiate Institute, a few years before Mike Myers. Bill married Sylvie LaPointe in July 2003. They have two children, Killian and Magalie. Like Bill's father, Magalie was born with spina bifida. Bill has cited as one of the reasons for his relocation to California was to be closer to Ramon Cuevas, a physical therapist who had worked with Magalie.", "Canice Carroll\n Canice Michael Carroll (born 16 January 1999) is a professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Oxford City. Carroll is a product of the Oxford United youth system and began his professional career with the club, before moving to Brentford in 2018. After loan spells at Swindon Town and Carlisle United and a short period with Stevenage, he moved to Scotland to join Queen's Park in 2020. Born in England, Carroll was capped by the Republic of Ireland at youth level and has played club football in England and Scotland.", "Liam Carroll (hurler)\n Liam Carroll is an Irish retired hurler who played as a midfielder for the Offaly senior team. Born in Kinnitty, County Offaly, Carroll first played competitive hurling in his youth. He made his senior debut with Offaly during the 1984 championship and immediately became a regular member of the team. During his career Carroll won one Leinster medal. He was an All-Ireland runner-up on one occasion. At club level Carroll is a three-time championship medallist with Kinnitty. His retirement came following the conclusion of the 1985-86 National League.", "Andy Carroll\n Born in Gateshead, Tyne and Wear, Carroll attended Brighton Avenue Primary School and Joseph Swan School. He is a model for clothing retail company H&M and has fronted a campaign led by fashion designer Alexander Wang. In November 2014, Carroll became engaged to reality TV star Billi Mucklow. The couple live in Essex. Their son, Arlo, was born in June 2015. He has two children, Emilie Rose and Lucas, from a previous relationship. In November 2017, Mucklow and Carroll had a second child, Wolf Nine. In November 2016, Carroll was approached by two men on motorcycles while driving near his home in Brentwood, Essex. Armed with a handgun, they attempted to steal his £22,000 watch but failed. Carroll was then chased in his car for about 20 minutes as he drove back to West Ham's training ground in Rush Green to get help from security staff. In September 2017, 22-year-old Jack O'Brien was found guilty of the attempted robbery. He was sentenced to six years in prison for the offence. In May 2019, Carroll was listed as the 14th-wealthiest sports person aged 30 or under in The Sunday Times Rich List, his personal wealth having increased to £19m." ]
What sport does Gergő Kovács play?
[ "association football", "football", "soccer" ]
sport
Gergő Kovács
175,358
56
[ { "id": "1025387", "title": "Gergely Kiss", "text": " Dr. Gergely \"Gergő\" Kiss (born 21 September 1977) is a Hungarian former water polo player. He was considered to be one of the best left-handed water polo players of his time. Kiss is one of ten male athletes who won three Olympic gold medals in water polo. He played on the right side, but moved to 2-meters on offense sometimes. Kiss dominated internationally in the 2004 Olympics in Athens, especially in final match against Serbia and Montenegro. The Hungarian team was not at its best in the first quarter, but Kiss was able to score thrice, helping them to keep up with their opponent. After the Hungarian side came back to tie the game in the fourth quarter, Kiss put in the game-winning goal on a 'power play' opportunity. He was voted to be in the all-star team along with teammate Tamás Kásás. Kiss first became known internationally at Olympic level during the 2000 Olympics in Sydney helping Hungary win gold in the finals. Kiss, nicknamed Geri, was greatly influenced by his coach Dénes Kemény. He finished studying law in 2005.", "score": "1.7173342" }, { "id": "7378000", "title": "Gergő Kocsis", "text": " Gergő Kocsis (born 7 March 1994) is a Hungarian football player who plays for Mezőkövesd-Zsóry SE. He previously also played in Slovakia, Czechia, Germany and Poland.", "score": "1.6907506" }, { "id": "27949254", "title": "Gergő Beliczky", "text": " Born in Budapest, Beliczky has played in Hungary and the Netherlands for Vasas SC, Zwolle, Ferencváros and Pápa.", "score": "1.6863401" }, { "id": "218617", "title": "Gergő Nagy (ice hockey)", "text": " Gergo Nagy (born October 10, 1989) is a Hungarian professional ice hockey forward. He is currently playing with Hungarian club, Ferencvárosi TC who compete in the Erste Liga. Nagy returned to Alba Volan on July 1, 2015, after two North American seasons within the Chicago Wolves organization of the American Hockey League (AHL). Nagy competed at the 2009 Men's World Ice Hockey Championships and 2016 Men's World Ice Hockey Championships as a member of the Hungary men's national ice hockey team.", "score": "1.6288244" }, { "id": "29005089", "title": "István Kovács (water polo)", "text": " István Kovács (born 28 February 1957 in Budapest, Hungary ) is a Hungarian water polo player and coach. He was the head coach of the Romania men's national water polo team at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, where his team finished tenth in the end.", "score": "1.6139828" }, { "id": "1497490", "title": "Gergő Lovrencsics", "text": " Gergő Lovrencsics (born 1 September 1988) is a Hungarian professional footballer who plays as a right winger or right-back for Prva HNL side Hajduk Split and the Hungary national team.", "score": "1.5921718" }, { "id": "2088259", "title": "Nicolae Kovács", "text": " Nicolae Kovács (Kovács Miklós, sometimes rendered as Nicolae Covaci, 29 December 1911 – 7 July 1977) was a Romanian-Hungarian football player and coach. He was a dual international football player and played both for Romania and Hungary. For the Romania national football team, he won 37 caps and participated in the 1930, 1934 and 1938 World Cups, being one of five players to have appeared in all three of the pre-war World Cups. The other players were Edmond Delfour, Étienne Mattler, Bernard Voorhoof and Rudolf Bürger, according to official FIFA match reports. Later, he also represented the Hungary national football team once. He was the older brother of Ștefan Kovács, the famous coach who led AFC Ajax to two European Cups in 1972 and 1973.", "score": "1.5921704" }, { "id": "6917974", "title": "Péter Kovács (footballer)", "text": " Péter Kovács (born 7 February 1978) is a Hungarian former professional footballer played as a forward for Újpest and Vác in Hungary, for Lahti and Haka in Finland, for Tromsø, Viking, Strømsgodset, Odd Grenland, Sarpsborg 08, Sandefjord and Arendal in Norway, and for Lierse in Belgium.", "score": "1.5887172" }, { "id": "2920440", "title": "Gergõ Wöller", "text": " Gergõ Wöller (born March 18, 1983 in Szombathely) is an amateur Hungarian freestyle wrestler, who competed in the men's lightweight category. He represented his nation Hungary at the 2004 Summer Olympics, and later picked up three bronze medals at the European Wrestling Championships. Throughout his sporting career, Woller has been training under his personal coach and mentor Levente Kovács for Vasi Volan Sports Club (Vasi Volán Sportegyesület) in Budapest. Woller qualified for Hungary in the men's 60 kg class at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens by placing third and receiving a berth from the Olympic Qualification Tournament in Sofia, Bulgaria. He lost two straight matches each to Kyrgyzstan's Ulan Nadyrbek Uulu (0–3) and Ukraine's Vasyl Fedoryshyn (0–3) in a three-man preliminary pool, finishing only in third place and nineteenth overall in the final standings without ", "score": "1.5839878" }, { "id": "29934404", "title": "Zoltán Kovács (footballer, born 1973)", "text": " Zoltán Kovács (born 24 September 1973) is a retired Hungarian footballer who used to plays as a striker. Kovács was the captain, and fan's favourite for Újpest. In 2008 Christmas Kovács retired from the professional football, although he continues his career in his youth club, Nagytétény in amateur level (fourth tier).", "score": "1.5785995" }, { "id": "1884679", "title": "Zoltán Kovács (ice hockey)", "text": " Kovács was born on 2 January 1962, in Budapest. He began playing ice hockey with in 1972. He later played for the Hungary men's national under-18 ice hockey team at the 1979 IIHF European U18 Championship and the 1980 IIHF European U18 Championship; and then for the Hungary men's national junior ice hockey team in Pool B of the 1980 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships. Kovács played hockey professionally from 1980 to 1990 with Ferencvárosi TC in Budapest. He won OB I bajnokság championships in 1984 and 1989, and finished his career playing with Dunaújvárosi Acélbikák. He began coaching the Ferencvárosi TC junior team in 1984 while he was playing on the senior team, and coached the Hungary men's national under-16 team from 1987 to 2000. He later coached for MAC Budapest from 2000 to 2008. Notable players on his teams include Levente Szuper, Balázs Sebők and Krisztián Nagy. During his coaching career, Kovács completed a Master of Physical Education degree in 1992 at the at Semmelweis University, and later earned a Bachelor of Economics degree from Corvinus University of Budapest.", "score": "1.5751692" }, { "id": "8115296", "title": "Gergő Oláh", "text": " Gergő Oláh (born 18 February 1989 in Gyula) is a Hungarian football defender player who currently plays for Debreceni VSC. He made his professional debut in the 2012–13 Nemzeti Bajnokság I against Kaposvári Rákóczi FC.", "score": "1.5625577" }, { "id": "29934405", "title": "Zoltán Kovács (footballer, born 1973)", "text": "Nemzeti Bajnokság I Runners-up: 1997, 2006 ; Nemzeti Bajnokság I Third place: 1999 ; Chinese Super League Champions: 2004 ; CSL Cup Runner-up: 2004 ", "score": "1.5542793" }, { "id": "14344490", "title": "Gábor Köves", "text": " Gábor Köves (born 7 January 1970 in Budapest) is a retired Hungarian Olympian tennis player. Seoul gold medalists Ken Flach and Robert Seguso stopped him and partner László Markovits in the second round in the 1988 Summer Olympics. Gabor Köves is currently the captain of the Hungary Davis Cup team since December 2016 when Zoltan Kuharszky stepped down due to conflict of interest, because he became Máté Valkusz's personal coach who is a member of the Hungarian Davis Cup team.", "score": "1.5533782" }, { "id": "1884681", "title": "Zoltán Kovács (ice hockey)", "text": " to run more like a business, and that his role would be to increase the popularity of hockey in Hungary and include sport diplomacy with other national federations. He became chairman of the technical committee, to develop the men's and women's national teams, and the domestic youth hockey leagues. He arranged for professional Hungarian hockey players to teach skills to youth players, and sought to coordinate competitive youth leagues within Hungary and Austria. He wants to see new arenas built in each county of Hungary to host top-level hockey, and to provide new clubs with equipment and coaching mentors. He felt his greatest success was having the Canada men's national ice hockey team play to a sold-out crowd in the László Papp Budapest Sports Arena and showcase National Hockey League talent to Hungarians. He wants Hungary to host the top level of the Ice Hockey World Championships.", "score": "1.5425067" }, { "id": "12626152", "title": "List of Hungarians", "text": " New York Giants and the Buffalo Bills ; Dr. Sándor Gombos (1895–1968), saber fencer, Olympic champion ; Gyula Grosics, goalkeeper for Golden Magyar soccer team undefeated from 1950 to 1954 ; Béla Guttmann (1900–1981), midfielder, national team football player, international coach; forced laborer in the Holocaust ; Andrea Gyarmati, Olympic swimmer silver (100-meter backstroke) and bronze (100-meter butterfly); world championships bronze (200-meter backstroke), International Swimming Hall of Fame ; Dezső Gyarmati, water polo player (triple Olympic champion) ; Alfréd Hajós (born Arnold Guttmann; 1878–1955), swimmer three-time Olympic champion (100-meter freestyle, 800-meter freestyle relay, 1,500-meter freestyle), International Swimming Hall of Fame ; Mickey ", "score": "1.539233" }, { "id": "2443021", "title": "Gergely Kocsárdi", "text": " Gergely Kocsárdi (born 24 November 1975 in Zalaegerszeg) is a Hungarian football player. In the season 2007/08, he left Zalaegerszegi TE and join the Slovenian club Nafta Lendava. However, in the second part of the season he decided to return to Zalaegerszegi TE. Since his return, he played his first match on 29 February 2008 against Újpest FC which they won quite comfortably on the scoreline of 4-1; in front 6000 home fans. From the second part of the season till the end of the season 2007/08, he had featured in 10 matches and he managed to play in 7 matches for a full 90 minutes. Despite winning the Hungarian Championship in the season 2001/02, and being a member of the Zalaegerszegi TE team which shocked world football when they beat Manchester United in the first leg of the 2002–2003 UEFA Champion's League 3rd preliminary round; he has never managed in this career to win even a single cap for this country. He was member of the Hungarian under-19 team.", "score": "1.5374699" }, { "id": "32272628", "title": "József Kovács (footballer)", "text": " József Kovács (born 3 April 1949 in Balatonlelle) was a Hungarian football midfielder who played for Videoton SC and Újpesti Dózsa. He won a silver medal in football at the 1972 Summer Olympics, and also participated in UEFA Euro 1972 for the Hungary national football team.", "score": "1.5335425" }, { "id": "12578958", "title": "Csaba Kovács", "text": " Csaba Kovacs (born March 18, 1984) is a Hungarian professional ice hockey player who is currently playing with Újpesti TE of the Erste Liga. He previously spent the entirety of his career with Alba Volán Székesfehérvár who competed in the Austrian Hockey League (EBEL) before joining MAC Budapest in 2016.", "score": "1.5315686" }, { "id": "4917385", "title": "Gergő Zalánki", "text": " Gergő Zalánki (born 26 February 1995) is a Hungarian water polo player. He was part of the national team of Hungary at the 2016 Summer Olympics.", "score": "1.5297453" } ]
[ "Gergely Kiss\n Dr. Gergely \"Gergő\" Kiss (born 21 September 1977) is a Hungarian former water polo player. He was considered to be one of the best left-handed water polo players of his time. Kiss is one of ten male athletes who won three Olympic gold medals in water polo. He played on the right side, but moved to 2-meters on offense sometimes. Kiss dominated internationally in the 2004 Olympics in Athens, especially in final match against Serbia and Montenegro. The Hungarian team was not at its best in the first quarter, but Kiss was able to score thrice, helping them to keep up with their opponent. After the Hungarian side came back to tie the game in the fourth quarter, Kiss put in the game-winning goal on a 'power play' opportunity. He was voted to be in the all-star team along with teammate Tamás Kásás. Kiss first became known internationally at Olympic level during the 2000 Olympics in Sydney helping Hungary win gold in the finals. Kiss, nicknamed Geri, was greatly influenced by his coach Dénes Kemény. He finished studying law in 2005.", "Gergő Kocsis\n Gergő Kocsis (born 7 March 1994) is a Hungarian football player who plays for Mezőkövesd-Zsóry SE. He previously also played in Slovakia, Czechia, Germany and Poland.", "Gergő Beliczky\n Born in Budapest, Beliczky has played in Hungary and the Netherlands for Vasas SC, Zwolle, Ferencváros and Pápa.", "Gergő Nagy (ice hockey)\n Gergo Nagy (born October 10, 1989) is a Hungarian professional ice hockey forward. He is currently playing with Hungarian club, Ferencvárosi TC who compete in the Erste Liga. Nagy returned to Alba Volan on July 1, 2015, after two North American seasons within the Chicago Wolves organization of the American Hockey League (AHL). Nagy competed at the 2009 Men's World Ice Hockey Championships and 2016 Men's World Ice Hockey Championships as a member of the Hungary men's national ice hockey team.", "István Kovács (water polo)\n István Kovács (born 28 February 1957 in Budapest, Hungary ) is a Hungarian water polo player and coach. He was the head coach of the Romania men's national water polo team at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, where his team finished tenth in the end.", "Gergő Lovrencsics\n Gergő Lovrencsics (born 1 September 1988) is a Hungarian professional footballer who plays as a right winger or right-back for Prva HNL side Hajduk Split and the Hungary national team.", "Nicolae Kovács\n Nicolae Kovács (Kovács Miklós, sometimes rendered as Nicolae Covaci, 29 December 1911 – 7 July 1977) was a Romanian-Hungarian football player and coach. He was a dual international football player and played both for Romania and Hungary. For the Romania national football team, he won 37 caps and participated in the 1930, 1934 and 1938 World Cups, being one of five players to have appeared in all three of the pre-war World Cups. The other players were Edmond Delfour, Étienne Mattler, Bernard Voorhoof and Rudolf Bürger, according to official FIFA match reports. Later, he also represented the Hungary national football team once. He was the older brother of Ștefan Kovács, the famous coach who led AFC Ajax to two European Cups in 1972 and 1973.", "Péter Kovács (footballer)\n Péter Kovács (born 7 February 1978) is a Hungarian former professional footballer played as a forward for Újpest and Vác in Hungary, for Lahti and Haka in Finland, for Tromsø, Viking, Strømsgodset, Odd Grenland, Sarpsborg 08, Sandefjord and Arendal in Norway, and for Lierse in Belgium.", "Gergõ Wöller\n Gergõ Wöller (born March 18, 1983 in Szombathely) is an amateur Hungarian freestyle wrestler, who competed in the men's lightweight category. He represented his nation Hungary at the 2004 Summer Olympics, and later picked up three bronze medals at the European Wrestling Championships. Throughout his sporting career, Woller has been training under his personal coach and mentor Levente Kovács for Vasi Volan Sports Club (Vasi Volán Sportegyesület) in Budapest. Woller qualified for Hungary in the men's 60 kg class at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens by placing third and receiving a berth from the Olympic Qualification Tournament in Sofia, Bulgaria. He lost two straight matches each to Kyrgyzstan's Ulan Nadyrbek Uulu (0–3) and Ukraine's Vasyl Fedoryshyn (0–3) in a three-man preliminary pool, finishing only in third place and nineteenth overall in the final standings without ", "Zoltán Kovács (footballer, born 1973)\n Zoltán Kovács (born 24 September 1973) is a retired Hungarian footballer who used to plays as a striker. Kovács was the captain, and fan's favourite for Újpest. In 2008 Christmas Kovács retired from the professional football, although he continues his career in his youth club, Nagytétény in amateur level (fourth tier).", "Zoltán Kovács (ice hockey)\n Kovács was born on 2 January 1962, in Budapest. He began playing ice hockey with in 1972. He later played for the Hungary men's national under-18 ice hockey team at the 1979 IIHF European U18 Championship and the 1980 IIHF European U18 Championship; and then for the Hungary men's national junior ice hockey team in Pool B of the 1980 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships. Kovács played hockey professionally from 1980 to 1990 with Ferencvárosi TC in Budapest. He won OB I bajnokság championships in 1984 and 1989, and finished his career playing with Dunaújvárosi Acélbikák. He began coaching the Ferencvárosi TC junior team in 1984 while he was playing on the senior team, and coached the Hungary men's national under-16 team from 1987 to 2000. He later coached for MAC Budapest from 2000 to 2008. Notable players on his teams include Levente Szuper, Balázs Sebők and Krisztián Nagy. During his coaching career, Kovács completed a Master of Physical Education degree in 1992 at the at Semmelweis University, and later earned a Bachelor of Economics degree from Corvinus University of Budapest.", "Gergő Oláh\n Gergő Oláh (born 18 February 1989 in Gyula) is a Hungarian football defender player who currently plays for Debreceni VSC. He made his professional debut in the 2012–13 Nemzeti Bajnokság I against Kaposvári Rákóczi FC.", "Zoltán Kovács (footballer, born 1973)\nNemzeti Bajnokság I Runners-up: 1997, 2006 ; Nemzeti Bajnokság I Third place: 1999 ; Chinese Super League Champions: 2004 ; CSL Cup Runner-up: 2004 ", "Gábor Köves\n Gábor Köves (born 7 January 1970 in Budapest) is a retired Hungarian Olympian tennis player. Seoul gold medalists Ken Flach and Robert Seguso stopped him and partner László Markovits in the second round in the 1988 Summer Olympics. Gabor Köves is currently the captain of the Hungary Davis Cup team since December 2016 when Zoltan Kuharszky stepped down due to conflict of interest, because he became Máté Valkusz's personal coach who is a member of the Hungarian Davis Cup team.", "Zoltán Kovács (ice hockey)\n to run more like a business, and that his role would be to increase the popularity of hockey in Hungary and include sport diplomacy with other national federations. He became chairman of the technical committee, to develop the men's and women's national teams, and the domestic youth hockey leagues. He arranged for professional Hungarian hockey players to teach skills to youth players, and sought to coordinate competitive youth leagues within Hungary and Austria. He wants to see new arenas built in each county of Hungary to host top-level hockey, and to provide new clubs with equipment and coaching mentors. He felt his greatest success was having the Canada men's national ice hockey team play to a sold-out crowd in the László Papp Budapest Sports Arena and showcase National Hockey League talent to Hungarians. He wants Hungary to host the top level of the Ice Hockey World Championships.", "List of Hungarians\n New York Giants and the Buffalo Bills ; Dr. Sándor Gombos (1895–1968), saber fencer, Olympic champion ; Gyula Grosics, goalkeeper for Golden Magyar soccer team undefeated from 1950 to 1954 ; Béla Guttmann (1900–1981), midfielder, national team football player, international coach; forced laborer in the Holocaust ; Andrea Gyarmati, Olympic swimmer silver (100-meter backstroke) and bronze (100-meter butterfly); world championships bronze (200-meter backstroke), International Swimming Hall of Fame ; Dezső Gyarmati, water polo player (triple Olympic champion) ; Alfréd Hajós (born Arnold Guttmann; 1878–1955), swimmer three-time Olympic champion (100-meter freestyle, 800-meter freestyle relay, 1,500-meter freestyle), International Swimming Hall of Fame ; Mickey ", "Gergely Kocsárdi\n Gergely Kocsárdi (born 24 November 1975 in Zalaegerszeg) is a Hungarian football player. In the season 2007/08, he left Zalaegerszegi TE and join the Slovenian club Nafta Lendava. However, in the second part of the season he decided to return to Zalaegerszegi TE. Since his return, he played his first match on 29 February 2008 against Újpest FC which they won quite comfortably on the scoreline of 4-1; in front 6000 home fans. From the second part of the season till the end of the season 2007/08, he had featured in 10 matches and he managed to play in 7 matches for a full 90 minutes. Despite winning the Hungarian Championship in the season 2001/02, and being a member of the Zalaegerszegi TE team which shocked world football when they beat Manchester United in the first leg of the 2002–2003 UEFA Champion's League 3rd preliminary round; he has never managed in this career to win even a single cap for this country. He was member of the Hungarian under-19 team.", "József Kovács (footballer)\n József Kovács (born 3 April 1949 in Balatonlelle) was a Hungarian football midfielder who played for Videoton SC and Újpesti Dózsa. He won a silver medal in football at the 1972 Summer Olympics, and also participated in UEFA Euro 1972 for the Hungary national football team.", "Csaba Kovács\n Csaba Kovacs (born March 18, 1984) is a Hungarian professional ice hockey player who is currently playing with Újpesti TE of the Erste Liga. He previously spent the entirety of his career with Alba Volán Székesfehérvár who competed in the Austrian Hockey League (EBEL) before joining MAC Budapest in 2016.", "Gergő Zalánki\n Gergő Zalánki (born 26 February 1995) is a Hungarian water polo player. He was part of the national team of Hungary at the 2016 Summer Olympics." ]
What sport does Cho Keung-yeon play?
[ "association football", "football", "soccer" ]
sport
Cho Keung-yeon
3,718,561
64
[ { "id": "32628515", "title": "Cho Keung-yeon", "text": " Cho Keung-Yeon (, born on March 18, 1961) is a former South Korea football player. he was top scorer of K-League in 1989.", "score": "1.7045591" }, { "id": "12868872", "title": "Cho Sung-min (basketball)", "text": " During the 2014 Asia Games, Cho hit the game winner in South Korea's game against Iran putting South Korea on top, 79–77. Cho played for the South Korean squad which competed in the 2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup. He averaged 6.2 points, 2.0 rebounds and 2.0 assists per game.", "score": "1.6798515" }, { "id": "31884770", "title": "Cho Se-kwon", "text": " Cho Se-Kwon (born June 26, 1978) is a South Korean former professional football player. As a player he represented Chunnam Dragons, Ulsan Hyundai Horang-i, Goyang Kookmin Bank as well as Chinese clubs Liaoning Hongyun and Chongqing Lifan. While internationally he was a part of the South Korea U23 team that took part in the 2000 Summer Olympics.", "score": "1.6434059" }, { "id": "26694898", "title": "Cho Byung-kuk", "text": " Cho began his professional career in 2002 with K-League club Suwon Samsung Bluewings. He moved to Chunnam Dragons at the end of the 2004 season in a swap deal which saw Kim Nam-Il move to Suwon. In August 2005, he joined Seongnam Ilhwa Chunma. He was part of the South Korea football team in 2004 Summer Olympics, who finished second in Group A, making it through to the next round, before being defeated by silver medal winners Paraguay. In May 2010, he left team to do military service. On 10 January 2014, Cho transferred to Chinese Super League side Shanghai Greenland Shenhua and becomes the first ever South Korean player in history of the Chinese club.", "score": "1.6226311" }, { "id": "4289605", "title": "Cho Young-hun", "text": " While attending Sokcho Commerce High School in Gangwon-do, Cho was considered one of the top high school hitting pitchers nationwide along with Choo Shin-soo and Lee Dae-ho. As the team's ace and cleanup hitter Cho led Sokcho Commerce High School, considered underdogs, to the quarterfinals at the Blue Dragon Flag National Championship and the President's Cup National Championship in 2000. In the same year Cho was selected for the South Korean Junior National Team. The team won the 2000 World Junior Baseball Championship in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, and Cho led the attack alongside Lee Dae-ho, Choo Shin-soo, Kim Tae-kyun and Jeong Keun-woo. Upon leaving high school, Cho was selected 19th overall by the Samsung Lions at the 2001 KBO Draft, but decided to play college baseball at Konkuk University. In his junior year at Konkuk University in 2003, Cho helped his team to win the Fall League of the National Collegiate Championship earning MVP honors with the batting title.", "score": "1.6066992" }, { "id": "26694941", "title": "Cho Jae-jin", "text": " Cho emerged as a national star when he played for South Korea in the 2004 Olympics. He was instrumental in Korea's second half comeback against Mali. Down 3–0, between 55\" and 62\" Cho scored two consecutive goals, both assisted by Kim Dong-Jin. Later in the Mali penalty box, a Mali defender in a vain attempt to defend against Cho, committed an own goal equalizing the game at 3–3. South Korea placed second in Group A and qualified for the next round, in which it was defeated by Paraguay, the runner-up team. Before playing for Shimizu S-Pulse, Cho had played for Suwon Samsung Bluewings but ", "score": "1.5778289" }, { "id": "11179926", "title": "Cho Myung-jun", "text": " Cho Myung-jun (born July 29, 1970) is a South Korean field hockey coach. At the 2012 Summer Olympics he coached the South Korea national field hockey team.", "score": "1.577681" }, { "id": "10982342", "title": "Cho Dong-kee", "text": " Cho Dong-kee (born May 21, 1971) is a retired South Korean professional basketball player lastly with the KBL team Ulsan Mobis Automons.", "score": "1.5748265" }, { "id": "33009188", "title": "Jeong Keun-woo", "text": " was selected for South Korea national team in the 2008 Olympics. In Beijing, he batted 9-for-29 with 4 runs and a RBI, playing as a utility infielder. In the team's third game of round-robin play against Canada, he smacked a solo home run off Mike Johnson in the third inning that held up for a 1-0 win for South Korea. On December 11, 2009, he obtained his second Golden Glove Award as a second baseman, and in 2013 he won his third Golden Glove. He moved through the second draft of the KBO League in 2020. ===Awards and honors ===", "score": "1.5734288" }, { "id": "15392905", "title": "Cho Youn-jeong", "text": " Cho contested the 1992 Summer Olympics as a member of the South Korean women's archery team with Kim Soo-nyung and Lee Eun-kyung. During the ranking round of the women's individual competition she set two Olympic records, scoring 338 points from a distance of 70 metres and 345 points from a distance of 60 metres. Cho and her teammates' total combined score of 4,094 points was additionally a new Olympic record for the women's team competition. Cho defeated Kim, the defending Olympic champion, in the final of the women's individual event, outshooting her teammate by seven points to claim the gold medal. She later achieved her second gold medal in the women's team event after the South Korean team defeated China.", "score": "1.5648767" }, { "id": "5078991", "title": "Cho Jun-ho (judoka)", "text": " Samsung Middle School Busan Sport High School Yongin University", "score": "1.5556982" }, { "id": "6126824", "title": "Cho Yong-seong", "text": " Cho Yong-seong (born January 25, 1986) is a South Korean sport shooter. At the 2012 Summer Olympics he competed in the Men's skeet, finishing in 35th place.", "score": "1.5541443" }, { "id": "9408557", "title": "Cho Dong-chan", "text": " Cho Dong-chan (born July 27, 1983) is South Korean former professional baseball player, who played 16 seasons with the Samsung Lions of the Korea Baseball Organization. His elder brother Cho Dong-hwa is also a professional baseball player for the SK Wyverns. He represented the South Korea national baseball team at the 2006 and 2010 Asian Games.", "score": "1.5501199" }, { "id": "5078989", "title": "Cho Jun-ho (judoka)", "text": " Cho Jun-Ho (, ; born 16 December 1988 in Busan) is a South Korean judoka. He won a bronze medal in the 66 kg event at the 2012 Summer Olympics. He currently coaches the Korean National Women's Judo team. In addition to his judo career, Cho has also made numerous appearances on the Korean television sports variety show Cool Kiz on the Block as a coach. His appearances on the show made news headlines and he became highly searched on Korean search rankings after airings of the show due to his unexpected humour and wit.", "score": "1.5463308" }, { "id": "26495834", "title": "Cho Deok-je", "text": " After playing for Ajou University in his youth career, Cho signed for Daewoo Royals in 1988. The midfielder played over 200 times for Daewoo and was selected in the K League Best XI in 1989. While at Daewoo, the team won the Korean Super League (Now K League 1) in 1991.", "score": "1.545842" }, { "id": "29380057", "title": "Cho Byung-deuk", "text": " Cho Byung-deuk (, born May 26, 1958) is a South Korean former football player and goalkeeper coach. He is regarded as one of the greatest South Korean goalkeepers of all time. He had a supple and nimble body, and accurate goal kick skill. He was the first goalkeeper who recorded an assist in the K League. He played for South Korea at the 1980 AFC Asian Cup, 1986 Asian Games, 1988 Summer Olympics and 1988 AFC Asian Cup. He conceded 29 goals in 44 caps and won the 1986 Asian Games. He was also selected as a member of South Korea squad for the 1986 FIFA World Cup, but was pushed by his rival Oh Yun-kyo to the bench, and didn't appear throughout the tournament.", "score": "1.5424507" }, { "id": "12061296", "title": "Cho Sang-hyun", "text": "1998-99, 2001: Korea national basketball team ; 2001, 2004, 2005, 2009: Korean KBL All Star Game ; 2001: Korean KBL All Star Game Champion 3 point contest ; 2001: Korean KBL Model player ", "score": "1.5418779" }, { "id": "15910172", "title": "Choong Tan Fook", "text": " Choong made his debut in Olympic Games in 2000 Sydney. Partnered with Lee Wan Wah, they advance to the semi finals stage, but lost to South Korean pair Lee Dong-soo and Yoo Yong-sung in the rubber game. The duo played in the bronze medal match against another South Korean Ha Tae-kwon and Kim Dong-moon, but lost in straight game with the score 2–15, 8–15. In 2004 Athens, Choong and Lee had a bye in the first round and defeated Pramote Teerawiwatana and Tesana Panvisvas of Thailand in the second. In the quarterfinals, they lost to Lee Dong-soo & Yoo Yong-sung of South Korea 11–15, 15–11, 15–9. In 2008 Beijing, Choong and Lee competed as the fourth seeded, however they lost to eventual bronze medalist from South Korea ", "score": "1.540013" }, { "id": "6069542", "title": "Kim Yeon-koung", "text": " Kim Yeon-Koung (, ; born 26 February 1988) is a South Korean professional volleyball player and a former member of the FIVB Athletes' Commission. She is an outside hitter and the former captain of the South Korean National Team. She announced her retirement from the national team in August 2021. She currently plays for the Chinese club Shanghai women's volleyball team. Kim signed a three-year contract with Fenerbahçe in 2011 after playing for Heungkuk Life in South Korea for four seasons and JT Marvelous in Japan for two seasons. She signed another two-year extension with Fenerbahçe and extended it for another season in 2016. She spent the 2017–18 season in the Chinese ", "score": "1.5381589" }, { "id": "33009187", "title": "Jeong Keun-woo", "text": " selected for the South Korea national team, and won a bronze medal at the 2006 Asian Games in Doha, Qatar. Jeong had a .323 batting average (4th in the league) in the 2007 KBO season, the first season of a .300-plus batting average, leading his team to the Korean Series Championship. As a member of the South Korea national team, he competed in the 2007 Asian Baseball Championship and 2008 Final Olympic Qualification Tournament. In the 2008 KBO season, Jeong hit .300-plus once again (.317), and ranked 2nd in hits (154) and 3rd in stolen bases (40). On July 16, 2008, ", "score": "1.5350478" } ]
[ "Cho Keung-yeon\n Cho Keung-Yeon (, born on March 18, 1961) is a former South Korea football player. he was top scorer of K-League in 1989.", "Cho Sung-min (basketball)\n During the 2014 Asia Games, Cho hit the game winner in South Korea's game against Iran putting South Korea on top, 79–77. Cho played for the South Korean squad which competed in the 2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup. He averaged 6.2 points, 2.0 rebounds and 2.0 assists per game.", "Cho Se-kwon\n Cho Se-Kwon (born June 26, 1978) is a South Korean former professional football player. As a player he represented Chunnam Dragons, Ulsan Hyundai Horang-i, Goyang Kookmin Bank as well as Chinese clubs Liaoning Hongyun and Chongqing Lifan. While internationally he was a part of the South Korea U23 team that took part in the 2000 Summer Olympics.", "Cho Byung-kuk\n Cho began his professional career in 2002 with K-League club Suwon Samsung Bluewings. He moved to Chunnam Dragons at the end of the 2004 season in a swap deal which saw Kim Nam-Il move to Suwon. In August 2005, he joined Seongnam Ilhwa Chunma. He was part of the South Korea football team in 2004 Summer Olympics, who finished second in Group A, making it through to the next round, before being defeated by silver medal winners Paraguay. In May 2010, he left team to do military service. On 10 January 2014, Cho transferred to Chinese Super League side Shanghai Greenland Shenhua and becomes the first ever South Korean player in history of the Chinese club.", "Cho Young-hun\n While attending Sokcho Commerce High School in Gangwon-do, Cho was considered one of the top high school hitting pitchers nationwide along with Choo Shin-soo and Lee Dae-ho. As the team's ace and cleanup hitter Cho led Sokcho Commerce High School, considered underdogs, to the quarterfinals at the Blue Dragon Flag National Championship and the President's Cup National Championship in 2000. In the same year Cho was selected for the South Korean Junior National Team. The team won the 2000 World Junior Baseball Championship in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, and Cho led the attack alongside Lee Dae-ho, Choo Shin-soo, Kim Tae-kyun and Jeong Keun-woo. Upon leaving high school, Cho was selected 19th overall by the Samsung Lions at the 2001 KBO Draft, but decided to play college baseball at Konkuk University. In his junior year at Konkuk University in 2003, Cho helped his team to win the Fall League of the National Collegiate Championship earning MVP honors with the batting title.", "Cho Jae-jin\n Cho emerged as a national star when he played for South Korea in the 2004 Olympics. He was instrumental in Korea's second half comeback against Mali. Down 3–0, between 55\" and 62\" Cho scored two consecutive goals, both assisted by Kim Dong-Jin. Later in the Mali penalty box, a Mali defender in a vain attempt to defend against Cho, committed an own goal equalizing the game at 3–3. South Korea placed second in Group A and qualified for the next round, in which it was defeated by Paraguay, the runner-up team. Before playing for Shimizu S-Pulse, Cho had played for Suwon Samsung Bluewings but ", "Cho Myung-jun\n Cho Myung-jun (born July 29, 1970) is a South Korean field hockey coach. At the 2012 Summer Olympics he coached the South Korea national field hockey team.", "Cho Dong-kee\n Cho Dong-kee (born May 21, 1971) is a retired South Korean professional basketball player lastly with the KBL team Ulsan Mobis Automons.", "Jeong Keun-woo\n was selected for South Korea national team in the 2008 Olympics. In Beijing, he batted 9-for-29 with 4 runs and a RBI, playing as a utility infielder. In the team's third game of round-robin play against Canada, he smacked a solo home run off Mike Johnson in the third inning that held up for a 1-0 win for South Korea. On December 11, 2009, he obtained his second Golden Glove Award as a second baseman, and in 2013 he won his third Golden Glove. He moved through the second draft of the KBO League in 2020. ===Awards and honors ===", "Cho Youn-jeong\n Cho contested the 1992 Summer Olympics as a member of the South Korean women's archery team with Kim Soo-nyung and Lee Eun-kyung. During the ranking round of the women's individual competition she set two Olympic records, scoring 338 points from a distance of 70 metres and 345 points from a distance of 60 metres. Cho and her teammates' total combined score of 4,094 points was additionally a new Olympic record for the women's team competition. Cho defeated Kim, the defending Olympic champion, in the final of the women's individual event, outshooting her teammate by seven points to claim the gold medal. She later achieved her second gold medal in the women's team event after the South Korean team defeated China.", "Cho Jun-ho (judoka)\n Samsung Middle School Busan Sport High School Yongin University", "Cho Yong-seong\n Cho Yong-seong (born January 25, 1986) is a South Korean sport shooter. At the 2012 Summer Olympics he competed in the Men's skeet, finishing in 35th place.", "Cho Dong-chan\n Cho Dong-chan (born July 27, 1983) is South Korean former professional baseball player, who played 16 seasons with the Samsung Lions of the Korea Baseball Organization. His elder brother Cho Dong-hwa is also a professional baseball player for the SK Wyverns. He represented the South Korea national baseball team at the 2006 and 2010 Asian Games.", "Cho Jun-ho (judoka)\n Cho Jun-Ho (, ; born 16 December 1988 in Busan) is a South Korean judoka. He won a bronze medal in the 66 kg event at the 2012 Summer Olympics. He currently coaches the Korean National Women's Judo team. In addition to his judo career, Cho has also made numerous appearances on the Korean television sports variety show Cool Kiz on the Block as a coach. His appearances on the show made news headlines and he became highly searched on Korean search rankings after airings of the show due to his unexpected humour and wit.", "Cho Deok-je\n After playing for Ajou University in his youth career, Cho signed for Daewoo Royals in 1988. The midfielder played over 200 times for Daewoo and was selected in the K League Best XI in 1989. While at Daewoo, the team won the Korean Super League (Now K League 1) in 1991.", "Cho Byung-deuk\n Cho Byung-deuk (, born May 26, 1958) is a South Korean former football player and goalkeeper coach. He is regarded as one of the greatest South Korean goalkeepers of all time. He had a supple and nimble body, and accurate goal kick skill. He was the first goalkeeper who recorded an assist in the K League. He played for South Korea at the 1980 AFC Asian Cup, 1986 Asian Games, 1988 Summer Olympics and 1988 AFC Asian Cup. He conceded 29 goals in 44 caps and won the 1986 Asian Games. He was also selected as a member of South Korea squad for the 1986 FIFA World Cup, but was pushed by his rival Oh Yun-kyo to the bench, and didn't appear throughout the tournament.", "Cho Sang-hyun\n1998-99, 2001: Korea national basketball team ; 2001, 2004, 2005, 2009: Korean KBL All Star Game ; 2001: Korean KBL All Star Game Champion 3 point contest ; 2001: Korean KBL Model player ", "Choong Tan Fook\n Choong made his debut in Olympic Games in 2000 Sydney. Partnered with Lee Wan Wah, they advance to the semi finals stage, but lost to South Korean pair Lee Dong-soo and Yoo Yong-sung in the rubber game. The duo played in the bronze medal match against another South Korean Ha Tae-kwon and Kim Dong-moon, but lost in straight game with the score 2–15, 8–15. In 2004 Athens, Choong and Lee had a bye in the first round and defeated Pramote Teerawiwatana and Tesana Panvisvas of Thailand in the second. In the quarterfinals, they lost to Lee Dong-soo & Yoo Yong-sung of South Korea 11–15, 15–11, 15–9. In 2008 Beijing, Choong and Lee competed as the fourth seeded, however they lost to eventual bronze medalist from South Korea ", "Kim Yeon-koung\n Kim Yeon-Koung (, ; born 26 February 1988) is a South Korean professional volleyball player and a former member of the FIVB Athletes' Commission. She is an outside hitter and the former captain of the South Korean National Team. She announced her retirement from the national team in August 2021. She currently plays for the Chinese club Shanghai women's volleyball team. Kim signed a three-year contract with Fenerbahçe in 2011 after playing for Heungkuk Life in South Korea for four seasons and JT Marvelous in Japan for two seasons. She signed another two-year extension with Fenerbahçe and extended it for another season in 2016. She spent the 2017–18 season in the Chinese ", "Jeong Keun-woo\n selected for the South Korea national team, and won a bronze medal at the 2006 Asian Games in Doha, Qatar. Jeong had a .323 batting average (4th in the league) in the 2007 KBO season, the first season of a .300-plus batting average, leading his team to the Korean Series Championship. As a member of the South Korea national team, he competed in the 2007 Asian Baseball Championship and 2008 Final Olympic Qualification Tournament. In the 2008 KBO season, Jeong hit .300-plus once again (.317), and ranked 2nd in hits (154) and 3rd in stolen bases (40). On July 16, 2008, " ]
In what city was Maksim Andreyevich Fyodorov born?
[ "Rasskazovo" ]
place of birth
Maksim Fyodorov (footballer, born 1989)
5,060,276
56
[ { "id": "30853944", "title": "Maksim Fyodorov (footballer, born 1989)", "text": " He made his professional debut in the Russian Second Division in 2006 for FC Krylia Sovetov-SOK Dimitrovgrad. He played in the Russian Football National League for FC Dynamo Bryansk in 2010.", "score": "1.8215532" }, { "id": "30853943", "title": "Maksim Fyodorov (footballer, born 1989)", "text": " Maksim Andreyevich Fyodorov (Максим Андреевич Фёдоров; born 5 April 1989) is a Russian former professional footballer.", "score": "1.8129995" }, { "id": "13969227", "title": "Maksim Fyodorov (footballer, born 1986)", "text": " He spent the first five seasons of his senior career in the FC Dynamo Kyiv system, but did not make any appearances for the first squad. He played 3 seasons in the Russian Football National League for 4 different teams.", "score": "1.7678792" }, { "id": "26142046", "title": "Pyotr Fyodorov", "text": " Pyotr Fedorov was born on April 21, 1982 in Moscow, into a family of actors. His father Pyotr Evgenievich Fedorov (October 27, 1959 - March 10, 1999), was a Soviet and Russian theater and film actor, art critic, television presenter (died of cancer at the age of thirty-nine). Grandfather - Yevgeny Fyodorov (born March 3, 1924), is a Soviet and Russian theatrical actor, \"Honored Artist of the RSFSR\", artist of the Vakhtangov State Academic Theater (1945 to present). Pyotr spent his childhood in the Altai, Uimon Valley. He was fond of drawing and wanted to become an artist. The eight-grader moved with his ", "score": "1.7522594" }, { "id": "13969226", "title": "Maksim Fyodorov (footballer, born 1986)", "text": " Maksim Viktorovich Fyodorov (Максим Викторович Фёдоров; born 20 January 1986) is a former Russian professional football player.", "score": "1.7442309" }, { "id": "8093161", "title": "Svyatoslav Fyodorov", "text": " Fyodorov was born in Proskurov, Ukrainian SSR (now Khmelnytskyi, Ukraine), to ethnic Russian parents. Fyodorov graduated from Rostov Medical Institute in Rostov on Don, then worked as a practicing ophthalmologist in a small town in Rostov Oblast.", "score": "1.7439382" }, { "id": "25729652", "title": "Victor Fyodorov", "text": " Viktor Georgiyevich Fyodorov was born in Alma-Ata, Russian Turkestan on 11 November 1885. It was a region in straitened circumstances, being dependent on cattle husbandry and farming. Fyodorov left it behind when he departed for the University of Kharkov; he became one of only 12,500 college students in the entirety of Russia. While at university, he became imbued with Social Democratic Party politics. As those views were considered revolutionary at the time, Fyodorov moved to Belgium in 1908. From there, he went on to France, and found life there enjoyable. When World War I erupted, he was still in France. On 21 August 1914, he volunteered for military service in the 2nd Regiment of the French Foreign Legion. He was assigned to Battalion F, and committed to front line service on 24 October 1914. On 21 November, he was promoted to Caporal.", "score": "1.7402812" }, { "id": "3468226", "title": "Andrey Venediktovich Fyodorov", "text": " Andrey Venediktovich Fyodorov was born on April 19, 1906 in Saint Petersburg. He graduated from the Philological Faculty at the State Institute for the History of Arts in 1929. He was a student of the following philologists and linguists: Lev Vladimirovich Shcherba, Yury Nikolaevich Tynyanov, Viktor Vladimirovich Vinogradov, Viktor Maksimovich Zhirmunsky, Sergey Ignatyevich Bernshteyn, Boris Alexandrovich Larin. From 1930 he taught in high school; from 1956 at the Leningrad State University. In 1960 he became a professor, and he was the chairman of the Department of German Philology from 1963 to 1979. During World War II, Fyodorov was in the army field forces: He worked as a translator, writer of leaflets, and captain of administrative ", "score": "1.7157233" }, { "id": "3468225", "title": "Andrey Venediktovich Fyodorov", "text": " Andrey Venediktovich Fyodorov (Russian: Андре́й Венеди́ктович Фёдоров, April 19, 1906 – November 24, 1997) was a Soviet philologist, translator, literary translation theorist, one of the founders of Soviet translation theory, and professor. For 15 years (1963–1979), he was the chairman of the Department of German Philology at Saint Petersburg State University (formerly Leningrad State University).", "score": "1.7138693" }, { "id": "4822371", "title": "Andrei Fyodorov (footballer)", "text": " Andrei Vitalyevich Fyodorov or Fedorov (Андрей Витальевич Фёдоров) (born 10 April 1971 in Fergana, Uzbek SSR, Soviet Union) is a retired football defender and football coach who works now as a manager of Kazanka Moscow. Fyodorov is a former Uzbekistani international. He is a naturalized Russian citizen.", "score": "1.6911228" }, { "id": "30166516", "title": "Fyodor Vasilyev", "text": " Fyodor Vasilyev was born in Gatchina to a low-level government official, Alexander Vasilyevich Vasilyev, and Olga Emelyanova Polyntseva on 22 February N.S. 1850. His parents married four years later, so he was always considered an illegitimate child. Feodor had to earn his living from the age of 12 – he worked as a mailman, scribe, and assistant to a restorer of pictures. After his father’s death, he became the sole supporter of the family. In 1863, he managed to enter the evening classes of the School of Painting at the Society for Promotion of Artists (Школа Поощрения Художеств). While at school, ", "score": "1.6733513" }, { "id": "8093160", "title": "Svyatoslav Fyodorov", "text": " Svyatoslav Nikolayevich Fyodorov (Святослав Николаевич Фёдоров; born August 8, 1927 – June 2, 2000) was a Russian ophthalmologist, politician, professor, full member of the Russian Academy of Sciences and Russian Academy of Medical Sciences. He is considered to be a pioneer of refractive surgery. He was also one of the candidates in the 1996 Russian presidential election, running as a member of the Party of Workers' Self-Government.", "score": "1.6698016" }, { "id": "31153621", "title": "Nikolay Fyodorov (politician)", "text": " Nikolai Fyodorov was born in 1958 in the village of Chyodino, Mariinsko-Posadsky District of the Chuvash ASSR (now part of Novocheboksarsk), into a large family of a WWII veteran. In 1980, after graduating from the law faculty of Kazan State University, he came to Cheboksary and taught the disciplines \"Soviet law\" and \"Scientific communism\" in 1980–82 and 1985–89 at the Chuvash State University.", "score": "1.6695063" }, { "id": "6171024", "title": "Innokenty Omulevsky", "text": " Innokenty Vasilyevich Fyodorov (Иннокентий Васильевич Фёдоров; 26 October 1836 in Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, Imperial Russia – 26 December 1883 in Saint Petersburg, Imperial Russia) was a Russian writer, poet and translator better known under his pen name Omulevsky (Омулевский) and occasionally referred to as Fyodorov-Omulevsky.", "score": "1.6556656" }, { "id": "10669302", "title": "Yevgeny Yurievich Fyodorov", "text": " Yevgeni Fyodorov (born November 11, 1980) is a retired Russian professional ice hockey centre who last played for Edinburgh Capitals of the Elite Ice Hockey League (EIHL). Fedorov was drafted in the seventh round, 201st overall by the Los Angeles Kings in the 2000 NHL Entry Draft.", "score": "1.6449747" }, { "id": "25179743", "title": "Yevgeny Petrovich Fyodorov", "text": " Fyodorov was born on 28 December 1911 in Strelna in Saint Petersburg Governorate in the family of a worker. He graduated from junior high school in 1926 and in 1929 from a trade school, working as a mechanic in a Leningrad rail depot. He was drafted into the Red Army in 1930. Fyodorov graduated from the Leningrad Military Pilot School in 1932 and the Orenburg Military Pilot School a year later. He joined the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in 1932. Between 1933 and 1937 he served as a pilot in a long range aviation regiment. In 1938 he became a detachment commander. Fyodorov became a squadron commander in the 6th Long Range Aviation Regiment of the 27th Long Range Aviation Division in 1939.", "score": "1.6373672" }, { "id": "7689476", "title": "Aleksey Fyodorov (triple jumper)", "text": " Born in Russia's Smolensk Oblast, Fyodorov had international success at a young age, taking the silver medal at the 2007 World Youth Championships in Athletics. He marked himself out as one of the world's most promising jumpers by clearing sixteen metres in 2008 before winning gold medals at the 2009 European Athletics Junior Championships and 2010 World Junior Championships in Athletics. He was Russia's first world junior champion in that event since Sergey Bykov's win in 1990. His first clearance over seventeen metres was in June 2010 and his mark of 17.12 m was a Russian junior record. In one of the ", "score": "1.6370709" }, { "id": "26142045", "title": "Pyotr Fyodorov", "text": " Pyotr Petrovich Fyodorov (Пётр Петрович Фёдоров, born 21 April 1982) is a Russian actor. He is known for playing the role of Guy Gaal in The Inhabited Island, Gromov in Stalingrad and Yakovlev in The Duelist.", "score": "1.6312659" }, { "id": "29443849", "title": "Vladimir Fyodorov (footballer)", "text": " Vladimir Ivanovich Fyodorov (Владимир Иванович Фёдоров; 5 January 1956 – 11 August 1979) was a Soviet football player. Fyodorov was one of the FC Pakhtakor Tashkent players killed in the 1979 Dniprodzerzhynsk mid-air collision.", "score": "1.6309538" }, { "id": "26142047", "title": "Pyotr Fyodorov", "text": " to Moscow. In 1997, after receiving an incomplete secondary education, he entered the Moscow Theater Art Technical School (MTTU), after which he planned to enter the Stroganov Moscow State University of Arts and Industry, but after his father's death changed his decision and left the school after the second year of training. In 1999, he entered the acting department of the Boris Shchukin Theatre Institute. In 2003 he graduated from the institute. He played a student Belyaev in the graduation performance \"Beautiful People\" based on the play of Ivan Turgenev, where actors Grigory Antipenko and Olga Lomonosova were also engaged. In September ", "score": "1.6279907" } ]
[ "Maksim Fyodorov (footballer, born 1989)\n He made his professional debut in the Russian Second Division in 2006 for FC Krylia Sovetov-SOK Dimitrovgrad. He played in the Russian Football National League for FC Dynamo Bryansk in 2010.", "Maksim Fyodorov (footballer, born 1989)\n Maksim Andreyevich Fyodorov (Максим Андреевич Фёдоров; born 5 April 1989) is a Russian former professional footballer.", "Maksim Fyodorov (footballer, born 1986)\n He spent the first five seasons of his senior career in the FC Dynamo Kyiv system, but did not make any appearances for the first squad. He played 3 seasons in the Russian Football National League for 4 different teams.", "Pyotr Fyodorov\n Pyotr Fedorov was born on April 21, 1982 in Moscow, into a family of actors. His father Pyotr Evgenievich Fedorov (October 27, 1959 - March 10, 1999), was a Soviet and Russian theater and film actor, art critic, television presenter (died of cancer at the age of thirty-nine). Grandfather - Yevgeny Fyodorov (born March 3, 1924), is a Soviet and Russian theatrical actor, \"Honored Artist of the RSFSR\", artist of the Vakhtangov State Academic Theater (1945 to present). Pyotr spent his childhood in the Altai, Uimon Valley. He was fond of drawing and wanted to become an artist. The eight-grader moved with his ", "Maksim Fyodorov (footballer, born 1986)\n Maksim Viktorovich Fyodorov (Максим Викторович Фёдоров; born 20 January 1986) is a former Russian professional football player.", "Svyatoslav Fyodorov\n Fyodorov was born in Proskurov, Ukrainian SSR (now Khmelnytskyi, Ukraine), to ethnic Russian parents. Fyodorov graduated from Rostov Medical Institute in Rostov on Don, then worked as a practicing ophthalmologist in a small town in Rostov Oblast.", "Victor Fyodorov\n Viktor Georgiyevich Fyodorov was born in Alma-Ata, Russian Turkestan on 11 November 1885. It was a region in straitened circumstances, being dependent on cattle husbandry and farming. Fyodorov left it behind when he departed for the University of Kharkov; he became one of only 12,500 college students in the entirety of Russia. While at university, he became imbued with Social Democratic Party politics. As those views were considered revolutionary at the time, Fyodorov moved to Belgium in 1908. From there, he went on to France, and found life there enjoyable. When World War I erupted, he was still in France. On 21 August 1914, he volunteered for military service in the 2nd Regiment of the French Foreign Legion. He was assigned to Battalion F, and committed to front line service on 24 October 1914. On 21 November, he was promoted to Caporal.", "Andrey Venediktovich Fyodorov\n Andrey Venediktovich Fyodorov was born on April 19, 1906 in Saint Petersburg. He graduated from the Philological Faculty at the State Institute for the History of Arts in 1929. He was a student of the following philologists and linguists: Lev Vladimirovich Shcherba, Yury Nikolaevich Tynyanov, Viktor Vladimirovich Vinogradov, Viktor Maksimovich Zhirmunsky, Sergey Ignatyevich Bernshteyn, Boris Alexandrovich Larin. From 1930 he taught in high school; from 1956 at the Leningrad State University. In 1960 he became a professor, and he was the chairman of the Department of German Philology from 1963 to 1979. During World War II, Fyodorov was in the army field forces: He worked as a translator, writer of leaflets, and captain of administrative ", "Andrey Venediktovich Fyodorov\n Andrey Venediktovich Fyodorov (Russian: Андре́й Венеди́ктович Фёдоров, April 19, 1906 – November 24, 1997) was a Soviet philologist, translator, literary translation theorist, one of the founders of Soviet translation theory, and professor. For 15 years (1963–1979), he was the chairman of the Department of German Philology at Saint Petersburg State University (formerly Leningrad State University).", "Andrei Fyodorov (footballer)\n Andrei Vitalyevich Fyodorov or Fedorov (Андрей Витальевич Фёдоров) (born 10 April 1971 in Fergana, Uzbek SSR, Soviet Union) is a retired football defender and football coach who works now as a manager of Kazanka Moscow. Fyodorov is a former Uzbekistani international. He is a naturalized Russian citizen.", "Fyodor Vasilyev\n Fyodor Vasilyev was born in Gatchina to a low-level government official, Alexander Vasilyevich Vasilyev, and Olga Emelyanova Polyntseva on 22 February N.S. 1850. His parents married four years later, so he was always considered an illegitimate child. Feodor had to earn his living from the age of 12 – he worked as a mailman, scribe, and assistant to a restorer of pictures. After his father’s death, he became the sole supporter of the family. In 1863, he managed to enter the evening classes of the School of Painting at the Society for Promotion of Artists (Школа Поощрения Художеств). While at school, ", "Svyatoslav Fyodorov\n Svyatoslav Nikolayevich Fyodorov (Святослав Николаевич Фёдоров; born August 8, 1927 – June 2, 2000) was a Russian ophthalmologist, politician, professor, full member of the Russian Academy of Sciences and Russian Academy of Medical Sciences. He is considered to be a pioneer of refractive surgery. He was also one of the candidates in the 1996 Russian presidential election, running as a member of the Party of Workers' Self-Government.", "Nikolay Fyodorov (politician)\n Nikolai Fyodorov was born in 1958 in the village of Chyodino, Mariinsko-Posadsky District of the Chuvash ASSR (now part of Novocheboksarsk), into a large family of a WWII veteran. In 1980, after graduating from the law faculty of Kazan State University, he came to Cheboksary and taught the disciplines \"Soviet law\" and \"Scientific communism\" in 1980–82 and 1985–89 at the Chuvash State University.", "Innokenty Omulevsky\n Innokenty Vasilyevich Fyodorov (Иннокентий Васильевич Фёдоров; 26 October 1836 in Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, Imperial Russia – 26 December 1883 in Saint Petersburg, Imperial Russia) was a Russian writer, poet and translator better known under his pen name Omulevsky (Омулевский) and occasionally referred to as Fyodorov-Omulevsky.", "Yevgeny Yurievich Fyodorov\n Yevgeni Fyodorov (born November 11, 1980) is a retired Russian professional ice hockey centre who last played for Edinburgh Capitals of the Elite Ice Hockey League (EIHL). Fedorov was drafted in the seventh round, 201st overall by the Los Angeles Kings in the 2000 NHL Entry Draft.", "Yevgeny Petrovich Fyodorov\n Fyodorov was born on 28 December 1911 in Strelna in Saint Petersburg Governorate in the family of a worker. He graduated from junior high school in 1926 and in 1929 from a trade school, working as a mechanic in a Leningrad rail depot. He was drafted into the Red Army in 1930. Fyodorov graduated from the Leningrad Military Pilot School in 1932 and the Orenburg Military Pilot School a year later. He joined the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in 1932. Between 1933 and 1937 he served as a pilot in a long range aviation regiment. In 1938 he became a detachment commander. Fyodorov became a squadron commander in the 6th Long Range Aviation Regiment of the 27th Long Range Aviation Division in 1939.", "Aleksey Fyodorov (triple jumper)\n Born in Russia's Smolensk Oblast, Fyodorov had international success at a young age, taking the silver medal at the 2007 World Youth Championships in Athletics. He marked himself out as one of the world's most promising jumpers by clearing sixteen metres in 2008 before winning gold medals at the 2009 European Athletics Junior Championships and 2010 World Junior Championships in Athletics. He was Russia's first world junior champion in that event since Sergey Bykov's win in 1990. His first clearance over seventeen metres was in June 2010 and his mark of 17.12 m was a Russian junior record. In one of the ", "Pyotr Fyodorov\n Pyotr Petrovich Fyodorov (Пётр Петрович Фёдоров, born 21 April 1982) is a Russian actor. He is known for playing the role of Guy Gaal in The Inhabited Island, Gromov in Stalingrad and Yakovlev in The Duelist.", "Vladimir Fyodorov (footballer)\n Vladimir Ivanovich Fyodorov (Владимир Иванович Фёдоров; 5 January 1956 – 11 August 1979) was a Soviet football player. Fyodorov was one of the FC Pakhtakor Tashkent players killed in the 1979 Dniprodzerzhynsk mid-air collision.", "Pyotr Fyodorov\n to Moscow. In 1997, after receiving an incomplete secondary education, he entered the Moscow Theater Art Technical School (MTTU), after which he planned to enter the Stroganov Moscow State University of Arts and Industry, but after his father's death changed his decision and left the school after the second year of training. In 1999, he entered the acting department of the Boris Shchukin Theatre Institute. In 2003 he graduated from the institute. He played a student Belyaev in the graduation performance \"Beautiful People\" based on the play of Ivan Turgenev, where actors Grigory Antipenko and Olga Lomonosova were also engaged. In September " ]
What is Nandor Balazs's occupation?
[ "physicist" ]
occupation
Nándor Balázs
2,011,238
74
[ { "id": "9389122", "title": "Balázs Bese", "text": " .", "score": "1.7733265" }, { "id": "13090062", "title": "Nándor Balaskó", "text": " Nándor Balaskó (August 30, 1918 – June 28, 1996) was a sculptor from Romania. Balaskó graduated from Silvania National College in 1937. He studied at the Bucharest National University of Arts (1937–40) and the Hungarian University of Fine Arts (1940–43). Then he worked with Ion Andreescu Institute of Fine and Decorative Art in Cluj Napoca. In 1958 he took part in the International Auschwitz-contest. In 1970, Balaskó emigrated to Sintra, Portugal.", "score": "1.7479651" }, { "id": "7670506", "title": "Nándor Litter", "text": " Nándor Litter (born 18 September 1953) is a Hungarian operating engineer and politician (MSZP), who served as Mayor of Nagykanizsa from 2002 to 2006. Formerly he had interests in the oil industry and worked for the MOL Group.", "score": "1.6755409" }, { "id": "4238769", "title": "Nándor Tánczos", "text": " Nándor Steven Tánczos (, Tánczos Nándor; born 29 May 1966) is a New Zealand social ecologist, researcher, educator, activist and political commentator. He is currently a councillor in the Whakatāne District. He is also co-director of He Puna Manawa social and political change agency. Tánczos was a member of the New Zealand Parliament from 1999 to 2008, and represented the Green Party as a list MP.", "score": "1.6308863" }, { "id": "5124311", "title": "Balázs Zamostny", "text": " .", "score": "1.610209" }, { "id": "2162915", "title": "Balázs Slakta", "text": " .", "score": "1.6054149" }, { "id": "29326460", "title": "Balázs Bús", "text": " Balázs Bús (born 29 January 1966) is a Hungarian social worker and politician, who served as Mayor of Óbuda-Békásmegyer (3rd district of Budapest) between 2006 and 2019. Besides that he represented Óbuda-Békásmegyer (Budapest Constituency IV) in the National Assembly of Hungary from 2010 to 2014.", "score": "1.597756" }, { "id": "9203943", "title": "List of Hungarian astronomers", "text": "Rezsabek Nándor ", "score": "1.5911508" }, { "id": "6855677", "title": "Nándor Katona", "text": " Katona Nándor or Nathan Ferdinand Kleinberger (12 September 1864 Szepesófalu (Spišská Stará Ves), Kingdom of Hungary now Slovakia – 1 August 1932, Budapest, Hungary) was a Hungarian Jewish painter. One of seven children of a dismally poor Jewish family he was discovered as a prodigy, brought up and instructed in painting by László Mednyánszky. He later studied in Budapest and Paris, and traveled extensively throughout Western Europe. Most of his works depict scenes of nature from his home region, the Szepes county (Spiš) in particular views of the Tatra Mountains and the area of Késmárk (Kežmarok), which he considered his home town despite having spent much of his life in Budapest. His works are on exhibit at the Hungarian National Gallery in Budapest, the Slovak National Gallery, the Eastern Slovak Gallery in Kassa (Košice) and the Tatra Gallery in Poprad.", "score": "1.5803766" }, { "id": "13090063", "title": "Nándor Balaskó", "text": "1968 • Little Gallery of Fine Arts, Cluj-Napoca ; 1990 • Lisbon 1940, Bucharest, student festival ; 1941, 1942, 1943, Budapest ; 1943, Cluj-Napoca. Solo Exhibitions Selected group exhibitions", "score": "1.5703286" }, { "id": "9042502", "title": "Balázs", "text": "Andre Balazs (born 1957), American hotelier and residential developer ; Árpád Balázs (born 1937), Hungarian classical music composer ; Béla Balázs (1884–1949), Hungarian-Jewish film critic and poet ; Endre Alexander Balazs (1920–2015), Hungarian-American in the New Jersey Inventors Hall of Fame ; Étienne Balázs (1905–1963), Hungary-French sinologist ; Harold Balazs (1928–2017), American sculptor ; Janika Balázs (1925–1988), Serbian musician ; Márton Balázs, (1929–2016), Romanian mathematician of Hungarian descent ; Mihály Balázs (born 1948), Hungarian historian ; Nándor Balázs (1926–2003), Hungarian-American physicist ; Péter Balázs (born 1941), Hungarian politician ; Péter Balázs (canoeist) (born 1982), Hungarian canoeist ; Peter Balazs (mathematician), (born 1970), Austrian mathematician Balázs Orbán (1829–1890), Hungarian writer and politician ", "score": "1.5666246" }, { "id": "29261033", "title": "Nándor Fa", "text": " Nándor Fa is a Hungarian yachtsman, born on 9 July 1953 in Székesfehérvár (Hungary). He is of the adventurer generation having not only done the race but designed and built the boat.", "score": "1.5596557" }, { "id": "14082982", "title": "György Balázs", "text": " György Balázs (Balázs György) (born 24 July 1985 ) is a retired tennis player from Hungary. He played for the Hungarian Davis Cup team in 2010 and 2011 His younger brother Attila also tennis player, they won 5 ITF doubles title with together.", "score": "1.5536847" }, { "id": "13695024", "title": "Balázs Ander", "text": " Ander was born in Nagyatád. He graduated from the Faculty of Humanities of the University of Pécs. He was a history teacher in Barcs. He is married and raised three children.", "score": "1.5487118" }, { "id": "6077795", "title": "Balázs Major", "text": " Balázs Major (born 18 December 1990 in Budapest) is a Hungarian former competitive ice dancer. With Dóra Turóczi, he is the 2014 national champion. They competed in the final segment at two World Junior Championships, finishing 12th in 2010. They also appeared at two World Championships, two European Championships, and two senior Grand Prix events. They were coached by Ilona Berecz in Budapest, and by Muriel Zazoui and Olivier Schoenfelder in Lyon, France.", "score": "1.5443444" }, { "id": "6411109", "title": "Blažej Baláž", "text": " Blažej Baláž (born 29 October 1958 in Nevoľné, Slovakia, former Czechoslovakia) is a contemporary Slovak artist. His practise as an artist is usually associated with political art, environmental, activist, mail-art and neo-conceptualism. After 1988 he began working with text as art, neo-conceptual and post-conceptual texts (intext, outtext).", "score": "1.5379465" }, { "id": "6633025", "title": "Ferdinand Čatloš", "text": " Ferdinand Čatloš (October 7, 1895 – December 16, 1972) - born Csatlós Nándor - was a Slovak military officer and politician. Throughout his short career in the administration of the Slovak Republic he held the post of Minister of Defence. He was also the commanding officer of the Field Army Bernolák during the Invasion of Poland and Operation Barbarossa. On 2 August 1944 he abandoned his post and joined the partisan fighters. At the conclusion of World War II, he was imprisoned for three years by the National Court of Bratislava and released in 1948. He spent the remainder of his life working as an ordinary clerk in Martin, Czechoslovakia.", "score": "1.5298574" }, { "id": "8846684", "title": "Nandor Njergeš", "text": " Nandor Njergeš (Serbian Cyrillic: Haндop Њepгeш, Hungarian: Nyerges Nándor ; born September 4, 1973 ) is a retired Serbian football goalkeeper of Hungarian descent. During his career he played with FK Budućnost Banatski Dvor, renamed in 2005 to FK Banat Zrenjanin.", "score": "1.5286219" }, { "id": "13360395", "title": "Nándor Zsolt", "text": " Nándor Zsolt (May 12, 1887 Esztergom, Austria-Hungary - June 24, 1936 Budapest, Hungary) was a Hungarian violinist, conductor, composer and the professor of violin at the Franz Liszt Academy of Music. He was born in a professional musician family; his father was a conductor and music teacher. After graduating at Esztergom, he entered the Franz Liszt Academy of Music in Budapest, taking violin studies with Jenő Hubay and composition with Hans von Koessler. After completing his studies in Budapest, he continued his musical career in England, where he became the leader of the Queen's Hall Orchestra in London in 1908 at the age of 21. Nándor Zsolt made his soloist debut in London at The Proms in 1909, playing the Tchaikovsky's violin concerto under the baton of Henry ", "score": "1.5259235" }, { "id": "192819", "title": "2008 Canadian honours", "text": "Mr. Béla Balázs ", "score": "1.5226672" } ]
[ "Balázs Bese\n .", "Nándor Balaskó\n Nándor Balaskó (August 30, 1918 – June 28, 1996) was a sculptor from Romania. Balaskó graduated from Silvania National College in 1937. He studied at the Bucharest National University of Arts (1937–40) and the Hungarian University of Fine Arts (1940–43). Then he worked with Ion Andreescu Institute of Fine and Decorative Art in Cluj Napoca. In 1958 he took part in the International Auschwitz-contest. In 1970, Balaskó emigrated to Sintra, Portugal.", "Nándor Litter\n Nándor Litter (born 18 September 1953) is a Hungarian operating engineer and politician (MSZP), who served as Mayor of Nagykanizsa from 2002 to 2006. Formerly he had interests in the oil industry and worked for the MOL Group.", "Nándor Tánczos\n Nándor Steven Tánczos (, Tánczos Nándor; born 29 May 1966) is a New Zealand social ecologist, researcher, educator, activist and political commentator. He is currently a councillor in the Whakatāne District. He is also co-director of He Puna Manawa social and political change agency. Tánczos was a member of the New Zealand Parliament from 1999 to 2008, and represented the Green Party as a list MP.", "Balázs Zamostny\n .", "Balázs Slakta\n .", "Balázs Bús\n Balázs Bús (born 29 January 1966) is a Hungarian social worker and politician, who served as Mayor of Óbuda-Békásmegyer (3rd district of Budapest) between 2006 and 2019. Besides that he represented Óbuda-Békásmegyer (Budapest Constituency IV) in the National Assembly of Hungary from 2010 to 2014.", "List of Hungarian astronomers\nRezsabek Nándor ", "Nándor Katona\n Katona Nándor or Nathan Ferdinand Kleinberger (12 September 1864 Szepesófalu (Spišská Stará Ves), Kingdom of Hungary now Slovakia – 1 August 1932, Budapest, Hungary) was a Hungarian Jewish painter. One of seven children of a dismally poor Jewish family he was discovered as a prodigy, brought up and instructed in painting by László Mednyánszky. He later studied in Budapest and Paris, and traveled extensively throughout Western Europe. Most of his works depict scenes of nature from his home region, the Szepes county (Spiš) in particular views of the Tatra Mountains and the area of Késmárk (Kežmarok), which he considered his home town despite having spent much of his life in Budapest. His works are on exhibit at the Hungarian National Gallery in Budapest, the Slovak National Gallery, the Eastern Slovak Gallery in Kassa (Košice) and the Tatra Gallery in Poprad.", "Nándor Balaskó\n1968 • Little Gallery of Fine Arts, Cluj-Napoca ; 1990 • Lisbon 1940, Bucharest, student festival ; 1941, 1942, 1943, Budapest ; 1943, Cluj-Napoca. Solo Exhibitions Selected group exhibitions", "Balázs\nAndre Balazs (born 1957), American hotelier and residential developer ; Árpád Balázs (born 1937), Hungarian classical music composer ; Béla Balázs (1884–1949), Hungarian-Jewish film critic and poet ; Endre Alexander Balazs (1920–2015), Hungarian-American in the New Jersey Inventors Hall of Fame ; Étienne Balázs (1905–1963), Hungary-French sinologist ; Harold Balazs (1928–2017), American sculptor ; Janika Balázs (1925–1988), Serbian musician ; Márton Balázs, (1929–2016), Romanian mathematician of Hungarian descent ; Mihály Balázs (born 1948), Hungarian historian ; Nándor Balázs (1926–2003), Hungarian-American physicist ; Péter Balázs (born 1941), Hungarian politician ; Péter Balázs (canoeist) (born 1982), Hungarian canoeist ; Peter Balazs (mathematician), (born 1970), Austrian mathematician Balázs Orbán (1829–1890), Hungarian writer and politician ", "Nándor Fa\n Nándor Fa is a Hungarian yachtsman, born on 9 July 1953 in Székesfehérvár (Hungary). He is of the adventurer generation having not only done the race but designed and built the boat.", "György Balázs\n György Balázs (Balázs György) (born 24 July 1985 ) is a retired tennis player from Hungary. He played for the Hungarian Davis Cup team in 2010 and 2011 His younger brother Attila also tennis player, they won 5 ITF doubles title with together.", "Balázs Ander\n Ander was born in Nagyatád. He graduated from the Faculty of Humanities of the University of Pécs. He was a history teacher in Barcs. He is married and raised three children.", "Balázs Major\n Balázs Major (born 18 December 1990 in Budapest) is a Hungarian former competitive ice dancer. With Dóra Turóczi, he is the 2014 national champion. They competed in the final segment at two World Junior Championships, finishing 12th in 2010. They also appeared at two World Championships, two European Championships, and two senior Grand Prix events. They were coached by Ilona Berecz in Budapest, and by Muriel Zazoui and Olivier Schoenfelder in Lyon, France.", "Blažej Baláž\n Blažej Baláž (born 29 October 1958 in Nevoľné, Slovakia, former Czechoslovakia) is a contemporary Slovak artist. His practise as an artist is usually associated with political art, environmental, activist, mail-art and neo-conceptualism. After 1988 he began working with text as art, neo-conceptual and post-conceptual texts (intext, outtext).", "Ferdinand Čatloš\n Ferdinand Čatloš (October 7, 1895 – December 16, 1972) - born Csatlós Nándor - was a Slovak military officer and politician. Throughout his short career in the administration of the Slovak Republic he held the post of Minister of Defence. He was also the commanding officer of the Field Army Bernolák during the Invasion of Poland and Operation Barbarossa. On 2 August 1944 he abandoned his post and joined the partisan fighters. At the conclusion of World War II, he was imprisoned for three years by the National Court of Bratislava and released in 1948. He spent the remainder of his life working as an ordinary clerk in Martin, Czechoslovakia.", "Nandor Njergeš\n Nandor Njergeš (Serbian Cyrillic: Haндop Њepгeш, Hungarian: Nyerges Nándor ; born September 4, 1973 ) is a retired Serbian football goalkeeper of Hungarian descent. During his career he played with FK Budućnost Banatski Dvor, renamed in 2005 to FK Banat Zrenjanin.", "Nándor Zsolt\n Nándor Zsolt (May 12, 1887 Esztergom, Austria-Hungary - June 24, 1936 Budapest, Hungary) was a Hungarian violinist, conductor, composer and the professor of violin at the Franz Liszt Academy of Music. He was born in a professional musician family; his father was a conductor and music teacher. After graduating at Esztergom, he entered the Franz Liszt Academy of Music in Budapest, taking violin studies with Jenő Hubay and composition with Hans von Koessler. After completing his studies in Budapest, he continued his musical career in England, where he became the leader of the Queen's Hall Orchestra in London in 1908 at the age of 21. Nándor Zsolt made his soloist debut in London at The Proms in 1909, playing the Tchaikovsky's violin concerto under the baton of Henry ", "2008 Canadian honours\nMr. Béla Balázs " ]
In what city was Paweł Blehm born?
[ "Olkusz" ]
place of birth
Paweł Blehm
2,715,735
99
[ { "id": "33036353", "title": "Paweł Blehm", "text": " Paweł Blehm (born 17 April 1980 in Olkusz) is a Polish chess grandmaster (2001). He took part in the FIDE World Chess Championship 2000, but was knocked out in the first round by Smbat Lputian. He played for Poland in the Chess Olympiad of 2000. In 2002 he won the Bermuda Open tournament. His handle on the Internet Chess Club is \"Pawelek\".", "score": "1.8370855" }, { "id": "1102737", "title": "Olkusz", "text": "Paweł Blehm, a Polish chess grandmaster ; Marcin Bylica a.k.a. Martin Bylica and Marcin z Olkusza, a Polish astrologer, astronomer ; Paweł Czarnota, a Polish chess Grandmaster ; Antoni Kocjan, a Polish war hero and famous glider engineer ; Henryk Mandelbaum, a Polish survivor of the Holocaust ; Tadeusz Rydzyk, a Roman Catholic priest and Redemptorist ; Dov Berish Einhorn, a Rabbi ", "score": "1.6104312" }, { "id": "25065294", "title": "Paweł Althamer", "text": " Paweł Althamer (born 12 May 1967, Warsaw) is a contemporary Polish sculptor, performer, collaborative artist and creator of installations, and video art.", "score": "1.5247569" }, { "id": "32373415", "title": "Stefan Pawlicki", "text": " Stefan Pawlicki came from a merchant family. He began his education in Danzig (Gdańsk); after his family moved to Greater Poland, he continued it in Pleschen (Pleszew). At age thirteen, he lost his parents during an epidemic. He completed progimnazjum thanks to help from a local parish priest, Father Basiński. He continued his education in 1853–58 at a liceum in Ostrów Wielkopolski, where he was one of the best pupils, thanks to a scholarship from Jan Kanty Działyński of Kórnik. In 1858–62 he studied classical philology at Breslau University. At Breslau (Wrocław) he was secretary and president of the Slavic-Literary Society. In 1862 he ", "score": "1.517924" }, { "id": "5259359", "title": "Michail Paweletz", "text": " Michail Paweletz was born and grew up in Heidelberg, Baden-Württemberg, Germany on March 26, 1965. After graduating from the Bunsen-Gymnasium Heidelberg, he began studying the violin at the Hochschule für Musik und Theater Hamburg, which he completed at the Folkwang University of the Arts in Essen, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. In addition to studying music, he completed acting and speaking training. After studying music, he began in 1995 as a presenter at the ARD-Nachtkonzert and as a speaker for Norddeutscher Rundfunk (NDR). His studies were the prerequisite for his journalistic work at NDR Kultur, where from 1996 he moderated numerous programs, conducted interviews and worked as a reporter. He has been on the ", "score": "1.5171022" }, { "id": "13426506", "title": "Kielce", "text": " Buergenthal (born 1934), American judge, lived in Kielce Ghetto, an author of A Lucky Child ; Rafał Olbiński (born 1943), Polish graphic artist, stage designer and surrealist painter ; Włodzimierz Pawlik (born 1958), Polish Grammy Award-winning jazz pianist and composer ; Krzysztof Klicki (born 1962), president of Kolporter Holding, former owner of Korona Kielce ; Michał Sołowow (born 1962), Polish businessman, billionaire and rally driver, shareholder of Cersanit S.A., Echo Investment, Barlinek, Życie Warszawy, one of the richest Poles ; Piotr Marzec better known as Liroy (born 1971), Polish rapper ; Andrzej Piaseczny (born 1971), popular Polish vocalist ; Dagmara Domińczyk (born 1976), Polish-American actress and author ; Marika Domińczyk (born 1980), Polish-American actress ", "score": "1.5147641" }, { "id": "15507930", "title": "Zgorzelec", "text": "Jakob Böhme (1575–1624), German theologian ; Ryszard Sobczak (born 1967), Polish fencer and Olympic medallist ; Grzegorz Żmija (born 1971), goalkeeper ; Agata Korc (born 1986), Polish swimmer ; Honorata Skarbek (born 1992), Polish singer ", "score": "1.5121301" }, { "id": "32701235", "title": "Chopina Street, Bydgoszcz", "text": " 1920 Late Art Nouveau Michał Łempicki was born on September 14, 1856, near Sztum, Russian Empire (in today's Poland). His father, Michał senior, an opposent to the Alexander II of Russia was sentenced two times by the tsarist regime: the first time he was exiled to Iszy in Siberia, staying, among others, with Polish poets Karol Baliński and Gustaw Zieliński, the second period was spent in Samara, Russian Empire, on the Volga river. There, the young Michał grew up and graduated from junior high school, before going to Saint Petersburg. He gained his diploma of mining engineering at the Institute of Technology. In 1896, he founded the company M. Łempicki ", "score": "1.5115936" }, { "id": "1568620", "title": "1937 in Poland", "text": "January 1. Adam Wiśniewski-Snerg, a science fiction writer is born in Płock, ; January 3. Composer Zygmunt Konieczny is born in Kraków, ; January 12. Composer Marian Sawa is born in Krasnystaw, ; February 6. Opera singer Wiesław Ochman is born in Warsaw, ; February 11. Singer and composer Maciej Kossowski is born in Grudziądz, ; February 13. Opera singer Anna Malewicz-Madey is born in Pinsk, ; May 16. Jan Drzezdzon, a Kashubian writer is born in Domatowo, ; July 19. Rock singer Boguslaw Wyrobek is born in Gdynia, ; August 18. Edward Stachura, a poet and writer, is born in Charvieu-Chavagneux, ; September 17. Musician Urszula Mazurek is born in Toruń, ; November 22. Musician Edward Hulewicz is born in Berezne, ; November 27. Birth of hurdler Cezary Kuleszyński ; December 26. Opera singer Teresa Kubiak is born in Ldzanie near Pabianice. ", "score": "1.5015771" }, { "id": "2225673", "title": "Wilhelm Mach", "text": " He was born in Kamionka near Ropczyce in a peasant family to Wincenty Mach and Apolonia née Białek. He attended a school in Kamionka, and then continued education in Ropczyce, from 1928 in a private school - Miejskie Staroklasyczne Koedukacyjne Gimnazjum in Ropczyce. He debuted with a poem Jesień (Autumn) printed in a school press Przyszłość (Future, issue from 1 September 1928) and a novella Dawne zapusty published in a timely Rola. He continued his education from 1932 at the Władysław Jagiełło Gimnazjum in Dębica, where he edited the school magazine U nas. He graduated from secondary school diploma in 1936. In 1938 he graduated from ", "score": "1.4841398" }, { "id": "31805874", "title": "Bartłomiej", "text": "Bartłomiej Pawełczak (born 1982), Polish rower ; Bartłomiej Pawłowski (born 1992), Polish footballer ; Bartłomiej Pękiel (fl. from 1633–d. ca. 1670), Polish classical music composer ", "score": "1.4815189" }, { "id": "32453775", "title": "Michał Boym", "text": " Michał Boym was born in Lwów, Poland (now Lviv, Ukraine), around 1614, to a well-off family of Hungarian ancestry. His grandfather Jerzy Boim came to Poland from Hungary with the king Stefan Batory, and married Jadwiga Niżniowska. Michał's father, Paweł Jerzy Boim (1581–1641), was a physician to King Sigismund III of Poland. Out of Pawel Jerzy's six sons, the eldest, the ne'er-do-well Jerzy was disinherited; Mikołaj and Jan became merchants; Paweł, a doctor; while Michał and Benedykt Paweł joined the Society of Jesus. The family had their own family chapel in Lviv's central square, which was constructed around the time of Michał's birth. In 1631, Boym ", "score": "1.4777937" }, { "id": "25864396", "title": "Janusz Pawliszyn", "text": " Pawliszyn was born on May 16, 1954, in Gdańsk, Poland. Pawliszyn began his education in Poland by attending the Gdańsk University of Technology for his Bachelor of Science degree in engineering and Master's degree in bioorganic chemistry. Following this, he moved to the United States for his PhD in analytical chemistry at Southern Illinois University.", "score": "1.4722035" }, { "id": "30759524", "title": "Głuchołazy", "text": "Roland Gumpert (born 1944), engineer and founder of the Gumpert sports car company ; Mieczysław Walkiewicz (born 1949), politician, member of the Polish Sejm ; Andrzej Sośnierz (born 1951), politician and physician ; Michał Bajor (born 1957), actor and musician ; (born 1958), activist, author of the logo of the Order of the Smile ; Roman Dąbrowski (born 1972), footballer ; Jakub Ćwiek (born 1982), fantasy writer ; Kamil Bortniczuk (born 1983), politician, member of the Polish Sejm ; (born 1991), female basketball player ", "score": "1.4708624" }, { "id": "2677769", "title": "Wacław Zalewski", "text": " Zalewski was born on 25 August 1917 to a Polish family settled in Samgorodek, Ukraine since the seventeenth century. He took part in the Warsaw Uprising of 1944 in Czerniaków. Went to Tadeusz Czacki High School in Warsaw, where he was in the same graduating class as the poet priest Jan Twardowski. In 1947 he graduated from Warsaw University of Technology, which he began before the war, eventually graduating from the Gdańsk University of Technology.", "score": "1.4643753" }, { "id": "8015537", "title": "Jan Böhmermann", "text": " Böhmermann was born and raised in Bremen. His mother had immigrated to Germany in the early 1970s, and was part of the German minority in Poland. His father died from leukemia when Böhmermann was 17 years old. Even though he remains silent about his private life, it is known that he has multiple children. He served as a lay judge at the local court of Cologne.", "score": "1.4636326" }, { "id": "3241771", "title": "Paweł Olszewski", "text": " Paweł Bartosz Olszewski (born December 11, 1979 in Bydgoszcz, Poland) is a Polish economist and politician, Bydgoszcz City Councillor (2002–05), and member of the Sejm (since 2005).", "score": "1.4625593" }, { "id": "13812390", "title": "Andrzej Wróblewski", "text": " Wróblewski was born in Wilno (modern Vilnius) on 15 June 1927, the son of law professor Bronisław Wróblewski from the Stefan Batory University and the painter Krystyna Wróblewska. He showed artistic talent at a very young age. His education was interrupted by the German invasion of Poland, although he was able to attend some underground courses; his mother introduced him to the art of woodcut which he practiced from 1944 to 1946. Immediately after the end of World War II, following the shifting of Poland's national borders, his family moved from Wilno to Kraków, where he passed the matura exams and became a student in the Painting and Sculpture Department of Poland's oldest art school, the Academy of Fine Arts, where he studied between 1945 and 1952 under Zygmunt Radnicki, Zbigniew Pronaszko (pl), Hanna Rudzka-Cybisowa and Jerzy Fedkowicz. Also between 1945 and 1948 he simultaneously studied art history at the Jagiellonian University, Poland's oldest university (and one of the oldest in the world).", "score": "1.4585698" }, { "id": "25065295", "title": "Paweł Althamer", "text": " In the years 1988-1993, he studied sculpture at the Warsaw Academy of Fine Arts. Since the mid-1990s, he has been collaborating with the Foksal Gallery in Warsaw. In 2000, he participated in Manifesta 3 in Ljubljana, Slovenia. In 2004, he won the Vincent Award from the Broere Charitable Foundation in the Netherlands. In 2007, he presented the exhibition One of many with the Nicola Trussardi Foundation. His longest-running collaboration is with the Nowolipie Group, an organisation in Warsaw for adults with mental or physical disabilities, to whom he has been teaching a Friday night ceramics class since the early 1990s. In 2008 Althamer arranged for the ", "score": "1.4584322" }, { "id": "30125981", "title": "Paweł Wawrzecki", "text": " Paweł Wawrzecki (born February 12, 1950, in Warsaw) is a Polish actor and the son of Stanisław Wawrzecki. He left The Aleksander Zelwerowicz National Academy of Dramatic Art in Warsaw in 1975. He appeared in the television series Aby do świtu... in 1992. He has been the host of Koło Fortuny, the Polish version of Wheel of Fortune, since 1995.", "score": "1.4578645" } ]
[ "Paweł Blehm\n Paweł Blehm (born 17 April 1980 in Olkusz) is a Polish chess grandmaster (2001). He took part in the FIDE World Chess Championship 2000, but was knocked out in the first round by Smbat Lputian. He played for Poland in the Chess Olympiad of 2000. In 2002 he won the Bermuda Open tournament. His handle on the Internet Chess Club is \"Pawelek\".", "Olkusz\nPaweł Blehm, a Polish chess grandmaster ; Marcin Bylica a.k.a. Martin Bylica and Marcin z Olkusza, a Polish astrologer, astronomer ; Paweł Czarnota, a Polish chess Grandmaster ; Antoni Kocjan, a Polish war hero and famous glider engineer ; Henryk Mandelbaum, a Polish survivor of the Holocaust ; Tadeusz Rydzyk, a Roman Catholic priest and Redemptorist ; Dov Berish Einhorn, a Rabbi ", "Paweł Althamer\n Paweł Althamer (born 12 May 1967, Warsaw) is a contemporary Polish sculptor, performer, collaborative artist and creator of installations, and video art.", "Stefan Pawlicki\n Stefan Pawlicki came from a merchant family. He began his education in Danzig (Gdańsk); after his family moved to Greater Poland, he continued it in Pleschen (Pleszew). At age thirteen, he lost his parents during an epidemic. He completed progimnazjum thanks to help from a local parish priest, Father Basiński. He continued his education in 1853–58 at a liceum in Ostrów Wielkopolski, where he was one of the best pupils, thanks to a scholarship from Jan Kanty Działyński of Kórnik. In 1858–62 he studied classical philology at Breslau University. At Breslau (Wrocław) he was secretary and president of the Slavic-Literary Society. In 1862 he ", "Michail Paweletz\n Michail Paweletz was born and grew up in Heidelberg, Baden-Württemberg, Germany on March 26, 1965. After graduating from the Bunsen-Gymnasium Heidelberg, he began studying the violin at the Hochschule für Musik und Theater Hamburg, which he completed at the Folkwang University of the Arts in Essen, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. In addition to studying music, he completed acting and speaking training. After studying music, he began in 1995 as a presenter at the ARD-Nachtkonzert and as a speaker for Norddeutscher Rundfunk (NDR). His studies were the prerequisite for his journalistic work at NDR Kultur, where from 1996 he moderated numerous programs, conducted interviews and worked as a reporter. He has been on the ", "Kielce\n Buergenthal (born 1934), American judge, lived in Kielce Ghetto, an author of A Lucky Child ; Rafał Olbiński (born 1943), Polish graphic artist, stage designer and surrealist painter ; Włodzimierz Pawlik (born 1958), Polish Grammy Award-winning jazz pianist and composer ; Krzysztof Klicki (born 1962), president of Kolporter Holding, former owner of Korona Kielce ; Michał Sołowow (born 1962), Polish businessman, billionaire and rally driver, shareholder of Cersanit S.A., Echo Investment, Barlinek, Życie Warszawy, one of the richest Poles ; Piotr Marzec better known as Liroy (born 1971), Polish rapper ; Andrzej Piaseczny (born 1971), popular Polish vocalist ; Dagmara Domińczyk (born 1976), Polish-American actress and author ; Marika Domińczyk (born 1980), Polish-American actress ", "Zgorzelec\nJakob Böhme (1575–1624), German theologian ; Ryszard Sobczak (born 1967), Polish fencer and Olympic medallist ; Grzegorz Żmija (born 1971), goalkeeper ; Agata Korc (born 1986), Polish swimmer ; Honorata Skarbek (born 1992), Polish singer ", "Chopina Street, Bydgoszcz\n 1920 Late Art Nouveau Michał Łempicki was born on September 14, 1856, near Sztum, Russian Empire (in today's Poland). His father, Michał senior, an opposent to the Alexander II of Russia was sentenced two times by the tsarist regime: the first time he was exiled to Iszy in Siberia, staying, among others, with Polish poets Karol Baliński and Gustaw Zieliński, the second period was spent in Samara, Russian Empire, on the Volga river. There, the young Michał grew up and graduated from junior high school, before going to Saint Petersburg. He gained his diploma of mining engineering at the Institute of Technology. In 1896, he founded the company M. Łempicki ", "1937 in Poland\nJanuary 1. Adam Wiśniewski-Snerg, a science fiction writer is born in Płock, ; January 3. Composer Zygmunt Konieczny is born in Kraków, ; January 12. Composer Marian Sawa is born in Krasnystaw, ; February 6. Opera singer Wiesław Ochman is born in Warsaw, ; February 11. Singer and composer Maciej Kossowski is born in Grudziądz, ; February 13. Opera singer Anna Malewicz-Madey is born in Pinsk, ; May 16. Jan Drzezdzon, a Kashubian writer is born in Domatowo, ; July 19. Rock singer Boguslaw Wyrobek is born in Gdynia, ; August 18. Edward Stachura, a poet and writer, is born in Charvieu-Chavagneux, ; September 17. Musician Urszula Mazurek is born in Toruń, ; November 22. Musician Edward Hulewicz is born in Berezne, ; November 27. Birth of hurdler Cezary Kuleszyński ; December 26. Opera singer Teresa Kubiak is born in Ldzanie near Pabianice. ", "Wilhelm Mach\n He was born in Kamionka near Ropczyce in a peasant family to Wincenty Mach and Apolonia née Białek. He attended a school in Kamionka, and then continued education in Ropczyce, from 1928 in a private school - Miejskie Staroklasyczne Koedukacyjne Gimnazjum in Ropczyce. He debuted with a poem Jesień (Autumn) printed in a school press Przyszłość (Future, issue from 1 September 1928) and a novella Dawne zapusty published in a timely Rola. He continued his education from 1932 at the Władysław Jagiełło Gimnazjum in Dębica, where he edited the school magazine U nas. He graduated from secondary school diploma in 1936. In 1938 he graduated from ", "Bartłomiej\nBartłomiej Pawełczak (born 1982), Polish rower ; Bartłomiej Pawłowski (born 1992), Polish footballer ; Bartłomiej Pękiel (fl. from 1633–d. ca. 1670), Polish classical music composer ", "Michał Boym\n Michał Boym was born in Lwów, Poland (now Lviv, Ukraine), around 1614, to a well-off family of Hungarian ancestry. His grandfather Jerzy Boim came to Poland from Hungary with the king Stefan Batory, and married Jadwiga Niżniowska. Michał's father, Paweł Jerzy Boim (1581–1641), was a physician to King Sigismund III of Poland. Out of Pawel Jerzy's six sons, the eldest, the ne'er-do-well Jerzy was disinherited; Mikołaj and Jan became merchants; Paweł, a doctor; while Michał and Benedykt Paweł joined the Society of Jesus. The family had their own family chapel in Lviv's central square, which was constructed around the time of Michał's birth. In 1631, Boym ", "Janusz Pawliszyn\n Pawliszyn was born on May 16, 1954, in Gdańsk, Poland. Pawliszyn began his education in Poland by attending the Gdańsk University of Technology for his Bachelor of Science degree in engineering and Master's degree in bioorganic chemistry. Following this, he moved to the United States for his PhD in analytical chemistry at Southern Illinois University.", "Głuchołazy\nRoland Gumpert (born 1944), engineer and founder of the Gumpert sports car company ; Mieczysław Walkiewicz (born 1949), politician, member of the Polish Sejm ; Andrzej Sośnierz (born 1951), politician and physician ; Michał Bajor (born 1957), actor and musician ; (born 1958), activist, author of the logo of the Order of the Smile ; Roman Dąbrowski (born 1972), footballer ; Jakub Ćwiek (born 1982), fantasy writer ; Kamil Bortniczuk (born 1983), politician, member of the Polish Sejm ; (born 1991), female basketball player ", "Wacław Zalewski\n Zalewski was born on 25 August 1917 to a Polish family settled in Samgorodek, Ukraine since the seventeenth century. He took part in the Warsaw Uprising of 1944 in Czerniaków. Went to Tadeusz Czacki High School in Warsaw, where he was in the same graduating class as the poet priest Jan Twardowski. In 1947 he graduated from Warsaw University of Technology, which he began before the war, eventually graduating from the Gdańsk University of Technology.", "Jan Böhmermann\n Böhmermann was born and raised in Bremen. His mother had immigrated to Germany in the early 1970s, and was part of the German minority in Poland. His father died from leukemia when Böhmermann was 17 years old. Even though he remains silent about his private life, it is known that he has multiple children. He served as a lay judge at the local court of Cologne.", "Paweł Olszewski\n Paweł Bartosz Olszewski (born December 11, 1979 in Bydgoszcz, Poland) is a Polish economist and politician, Bydgoszcz City Councillor (2002–05), and member of the Sejm (since 2005).", "Andrzej Wróblewski\n Wróblewski was born in Wilno (modern Vilnius) on 15 June 1927, the son of law professor Bronisław Wróblewski from the Stefan Batory University and the painter Krystyna Wróblewska. He showed artistic talent at a very young age. His education was interrupted by the German invasion of Poland, although he was able to attend some underground courses; his mother introduced him to the art of woodcut which he practiced from 1944 to 1946. Immediately after the end of World War II, following the shifting of Poland's national borders, his family moved from Wilno to Kraków, where he passed the matura exams and became a student in the Painting and Sculpture Department of Poland's oldest art school, the Academy of Fine Arts, where he studied between 1945 and 1952 under Zygmunt Radnicki, Zbigniew Pronaszko (pl), Hanna Rudzka-Cybisowa and Jerzy Fedkowicz. Also between 1945 and 1948 he simultaneously studied art history at the Jagiellonian University, Poland's oldest university (and one of the oldest in the world).", "Paweł Althamer\n In the years 1988-1993, he studied sculpture at the Warsaw Academy of Fine Arts. Since the mid-1990s, he has been collaborating with the Foksal Gallery in Warsaw. In 2000, he participated in Manifesta 3 in Ljubljana, Slovenia. In 2004, he won the Vincent Award from the Broere Charitable Foundation in the Netherlands. In 2007, he presented the exhibition One of many with the Nicola Trussardi Foundation. His longest-running collaboration is with the Nowolipie Group, an organisation in Warsaw for adults with mental or physical disabilities, to whom he has been teaching a Friday night ceramics class since the early 1990s. In 2008 Althamer arranged for the ", "Paweł Wawrzecki\n Paweł Wawrzecki (born February 12, 1950, in Warsaw) is a Polish actor and the son of Stanisław Wawrzecki. He left The Aleksander Zelwerowicz National Academy of Dramatic Art in Warsaw in 1975. He appeared in the television series Aby do świtu... in 1992. He has been the host of Koło Fortuny, the Polish version of Wheel of Fortune, since 1995." ]
What genre is Marty Marsala?
[ "jazz", "jazz music", "jass", "jas", "jaz", "Jazz" ]
genre
Marty Marsala
1,465,497
67
[ { "id": "15015275", "title": "Marty Marsala", "text": " Marty Marsala (2 April 1909 – 27 April 1975) was an American jazz trumpeter born in Chicago, perhaps best known for working from 1926-1946 with his brother Joe Marsala in a big band in New York City and Chicago. He had also toured with various artists, such as Chico Marx and Miff Mole, to name a few. During the 1940s Marsala was a celebrated West Coast jazz trumpeter, commuting back and forth from Chicago to San Francisco frequently. In various club settings Marsala shared stages with Earl Hines and Sidney Bechet.", "score": "1.5955346" }, { "id": "6288091", "title": "Joe Marsala", "text": " Joseph Francis Marsala (January 4, 1907 – March 4, 1978) was an Italian-American jazz clarinetist and songwriter. His younger brother was trumpeter Marty Marsala and he was married to jazz harpist Adele Girard.", "score": "1.5946493" }, { "id": "15015276", "title": "Marty Marsala", "text": " Marty Marsala began his professional career playing drums for bands led by Joe Bananas and Red Feilen in Chicago. During the 1920s he switched to the trumpet and soon joined his brother Joe Marsala's band in New York City following years as a freelance musician in Chicago, trumpeting for them from 1936 to 1941. In 1937 and 1938 he also worked with Bob Howard and Tempo King. He worked with the Will Hudson Orchestra and then led a local band for a while, joining Chico Marx's band and playing for them from 1942 to 1943; the band was technically led by Ben Pollack, but performed under Marx's name. He served briefly in the United States Army from 1944–1945. After service he toured between San Francisco and Chicago, playing much dixieland with his brother again as well as Miff Mole and Tony Parenti. He became especially popular in California during these years. In 1955 he moved permanently to San Francisco and began leading his own groups and recording with Kid Ory and Earl Hines. During the 1960s his health deteriorated and he retired from performing in 1965, never recording under his own name.", "score": "1.4965613" }, { "id": "6288092", "title": "Joe Marsala", "text": " He was born in Chicago, Illinois, United States. In the 1920s, Marsala played guitar in clubs in his hometown of Chicago with Ben Pollack and Wingy Manone. After moving to New York City, he recorded and performed with Manone in the 1930s. As a leader, he worked with drummers Buddy Rich, Shelly Manne, and Dave Tough; guitarist Eddie Condon, pianist Joe Bushkin, trumpeter Max Kaminsky, his brother Marty Marsala, and his wife, jazz harpist Adele Girard. In 1948, he left professional performing and entered music publishing. By 1949, he was writing traditional pop songs, including \"Don't Cry, Joe (Let Her Go, Let Her Go, Let Her Go)\", which ", "score": "1.4524345" }, { "id": "6953359", "title": "Marty Chan", "text": " Graffiti Ghoul, which is about Marty, a Chinese boy, trying to solve a mystery with his friend Remi. It has been nominated for a MYRCA (Manitoba Young Readers Choice Award), and has won the Diamond Willow Award. His third children's book The Mystery of the Mad Science Teacher is coming out soon. In March 2009 his new book, True Story, drew a book prize. He has visited many schools, and attended many events in Edmonton. He graduated the University of Alberta with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1989. He has received an Arts Achievement Award and a Performance Award from the City of Edmonton, for his contributions, such as serving as the Chair of the Edmonton Arts Council.", "score": "1.3933634" }, { "id": "26371776", "title": "Marty (rapper)", "text": " Martin Lorenzo Santiago (born June 8, 1987), who goes by the stage name Marty and sometimes Marty Mar, is an American rapper in the Christian hip hop genre. He is part of the duo, Social Club Misfits, with his partner, Fern. His first extended play, Marty for President, was released in 2015. This was his breakthrough release upon the Billboard magazine charts.", "score": "1.3902988" }, { "id": "7578972", "title": "Tony Marsico", "text": " bassist for indie pop singer Matthew Sweet for over 10 years. Marsico recorded the soundtrack to the Oscar winning film Session Man. He has written four books “ I’m Just Here for the Gig”,'Late Nights with Bob Dylan ,'”Wild Thingsand “King of Andalusia”. Marsico has produced two motion pictures Satan's Angel and Camp Burlesque. Marsico leads his own band The Martini Kings and has released 25 albums, with music appearing in HBO'S Entourage and Six Feet Under. Marsico also acted in motion pictures including Roadhouse, Georgia, Somebody to Love, LA Story, Static and She's So Lovely. In 2021 Marsico reformed his band “Cruzados” and is slated to release a new album titled “She’s Automatic”. Marsico lives in Los Angeles California.", "score": "1.3843174" }, { "id": "13676203", "title": "Friendly Rich", "text": " Friendly Rich, born Richard Marsella, is a Canadian music composer and musician from Brampton, Ontario. He has independently released a number of albums of satirical and melodramatic songs. His music has been featured on CBC and The Tom Green Show.", "score": "1.3753703" }, { "id": "13676204", "title": "Friendly Rich", "text": " Marsella earned a Master's degree in music at the University of Toronto under the supervision of Lee Bartel and composer R. Murray Schafer, studying mainly musical instrument construction and parade pedagogy.", "score": "1.3690885" }, { "id": "2428672", "title": "Before the Music Dies", "text": " The film looks at the evolution of American popular music and discusses the marketing of contemporary pop stars. \"The reality is that superficiality is in,\" says Marsalis. \"And depth and quality is kind of out.\"", "score": "1.3598061" }, { "id": "447625", "title": "Mike Miller (guitarist)", "text": " Philharmonic New Music Group he was a soloist alongside Peter Erskine for the album Blood on the Floor by Mark-Anthony Turnage. At the end of the 1990s, he was involved in scoring Jessica Yu's documentaries Breathing Lessons and The Living Museum. He toured with Bette Midler and appeared on her album Bette. He also worked with film composer Mark Mothersbaugh on The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle (2000) and The Royal Tenenbaums (2001). Marsis Jazz released his first solo album, Save the Moon, in 2001. He was a touring guitarist with Boz Scaggs in 2014 and has worked with Brandon Fields, Mitchel Forman, Scott Kinsey, Otmaro Ruíz, and Queen Latifah.", "score": "1.3577759" }, { "id": "813016", "title": "Roxanne Fontana", "text": " East Village and played on every track on the record. The album also once again featured Marty Willson-Piper. Critic Joe Viglione said of the album, \"Fontana does a fine job producing herself, and the record is a departure from the sound forged on the debut disc.\" A review by Joseph Tortelli of Goldmine Magazine revealed Fontana to possess an \"innocent-yet-world-weary voice.\" Contrasting the two releases' styles, Tortelli stated, \"Title these CDs 'a tale of two pop sounds': one electronic and percussive; the other haunting folk-rock.\" Fontana put her music career on hold in 2001 when she married and moved to Los ", "score": "1.3520143" }, { "id": "10926169", "title": "Joey Calderazzo", "text": " At a music clinic he met saxophonist Michael Brecker and became part of his quintet beginning in 1987. In 1990, he signed with Blue Note Records. Brecker produced Calderazzo's first album, In the Door, which featured Jerry Bergonzi and Branford Marsalis, his brother's roommate in Boston. They played on his second album, To Know One, which included Dave Holland and Jack DeJohnette. Calderazzo appeared on Brecker's albums Tales from the Hudson and Two Blocks from the Edge as pianist and composer. He played keyboard in Marsalis's Buckshot LeFonque and contributed to his album Music Evolution. When pianist Kenny Kirkland died in 1998, Calderazzo assumed his place in the Branford Marsalis Quartet. In 1999 he recorded Joey Calderazzo with ", "score": "1.3493814" }, { "id": "6288094", "title": "Joe Marsala", "text": " Bobby Gordon Quartet Featuring Adele Girard Marsala, Don't Let It End, which featured Adele's last session for Arbors in 1992. According to his wife, Marsala suffered from an allergy to nickel and had a rash on his hands from the nickel-plated keys on the clarinet. He was also bothered by colitis and was unable to drink alcohol for a time. Although his younger brother Marty was drafted, Marsala was an unacceptable candidate because of cartilage and ligament tears in his knee. He and his wife entertained stateside for the USO during the war years. Marsala died of cancer in Santa Barbara, California at the age of 71.", "score": "1.3490939" }, { "id": "6374523", "title": "Marty Rhone", "text": " is based on the text of Angelo Beolco's Il Parlamento de Ruzante, originally written in Italy during the mid-16th century. As a double bill at the same venue, Rhone performed the music he had composed for La Mandragola, a satirical play by another 16th-century Italian, Niccolò Machiavelli. It had roles by Reg Gillam, Pamela Stephenson and Ingrid Mason. Rhone followed with appearances on TV soap operas, Number 96 (1974) and Class of '75 (1975). By mid-1975 Rhone had signed with M7 Records and issued his next single, \"Denim and Lace\", which peaked at No. 8 on the Australian Kent Music Report Singles Chart. It was promoted on the Class of '75 soundtrack album. It was co-written by L Lister (aka Jack Aranda) and F Lyons (aka Shad Lyons). ", "score": "1.348763" }, { "id": "7697553", "title": "Marty Ross", "text": " Marty Ross is a Scottish writer, best known for his audio dramas for the British Broadcasting Corporation, Big Finish Productions and for the Wireless Theatre Company and 3Dhorrorfi. He is author of the 'Tartan Noir' thriller novel Aztec Love Song. He has had several plays performed on stage, mostly with an emphasis on Gothic horror and the surreal. He has dramatized stories by other Scottish writers such as James Hogg, Robert Louis Stevenson, and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle in his radio series The Darker Side of the Border. Among his influences are the work of Hammer Films and British science fiction dramatist Nigel Kneale.", "score": "1.344112" }, { "id": "5589756", "title": "Maria Mazziotti Gillan", "text": " Arts, and featured speakers including Allan Ginsberg, Amiri Baraka, and Stanley Kunitz. She has published 22 books. One of her most recent is The Girls in the Chartreuse Jackets (Redux Consortium, 2014), a collection of her poetry and watercolor artwork. Her craft book, Writing Poetry to Save Your Life: How to Find the Courage to Tell Your Stories (MiroLand, Guernica) was published in 2013. She is co-editor with her daughter Jennifer of four anthologies: Unsettling America, Identity Lessons, and Growing Up Ethnic in America (Penguin/Putnam) and Italian-American Writers on New Jersey (Rutgers). Since 2012 she has been in the Honour Committee of Immagine & Poesia, the artistic literary movement founded in Turin, Italy, with the patronage of Aeronwy Thomas (Dylan Thomas's daughter). She lives in Hawthorne, New Jersey, and is a professor emeritus at SUNY-Binghamton.", "score": "1.3433226" }, { "id": "28335359", "title": "Jeremy Pinnell", "text": " Pinnell released his first full-length album in 2014 titled OH/KY on SofaBurn Records. Pinnell released his second full-length album in 2017 titled Ties of Blood and Affection. He released the single Joey on January 15, 2021. This cover of the Concrete Blonde classic written by Johnette Napolitano is a stand alone single leading up to his 3rd full-length release, Goodbye L.A. which will be released on SofaBurn Records on October 1, 2021.", "score": "1.3391279" }, { "id": "16133988", "title": "Giovanni Amighetti", "text": " Yue, Amighetti, Wu Fei, Ponzini, Norbakken - (Ozella Music) ; 2010: Plugin Contemporary Music - Guido Ponzini, Angela Benelli, Gambini, Amighetti - (Porter Records) ; 2011: La Musica di Secondo Casadei - Conficconi, Tassinari, Benelli, Vallicelli - (Arv-Casadei Sonora) producer ; 2012: Dardasha - Adel Salameh, Naziha Azzouz, Amighetti, Ponzini, Fulvio Maras - (Arv) ; 2012: Windy Valley - Claudio Ferrarini, Amighetti, Andreoli, Benelli, Ponzini, Meola - (Arte Sonora) ; 2015: Mississippi to Sahara - Faris Amine, Leo Welch - (Wrasse) producer ; 2017: Re-Birth - Pier Bernardi, Ace, Amighetti, Michael Urbano - (Irma Records) ; 2018: A classical improvisation - Giovanni Amighetti, Tiziana Ghiglioni, Angela Benelli, Pier Bernardi (Muki) ", "score": "1.3356254" }, { "id": "7744829", "title": "Roman Miroshnichenko", "text": " Piazzolla, and the ex-bass guitarist for John McLaughlin Trio - Dominique Di Piazza. In 2013, Roman Miroshnichenko has released his next one album, titled \"Surreal\", produced together with Daniel Figueiredo and featuring Larry Coryell, Dominique Di Piazza, Mario Olivares, Josquin des Pres and Argentinian pianist Mario Parmisano. The album's single \"Desperation\" recorded in duo with Parmisano won 1st prize at the 18th Annual USA Songwriting Competition. In April 2013, Hal Leonard Books (one of the biggest US publishing houses) released “The Great Jazz Guitarists” encyclopedia by Scott Yanow, the most comprehensive guide to jazz guitarists ever published (from Django Reinhardt to Les ", "score": "1.3355591" } ]
[ "Marty Marsala\n Marty Marsala (2 April 1909 – 27 April 1975) was an American jazz trumpeter born in Chicago, perhaps best known for working from 1926-1946 with his brother Joe Marsala in a big band in New York City and Chicago. He had also toured with various artists, such as Chico Marx and Miff Mole, to name a few. During the 1940s Marsala was a celebrated West Coast jazz trumpeter, commuting back and forth from Chicago to San Francisco frequently. In various club settings Marsala shared stages with Earl Hines and Sidney Bechet.", "Joe Marsala\n Joseph Francis Marsala (January 4, 1907 – March 4, 1978) was an Italian-American jazz clarinetist and songwriter. His younger brother was trumpeter Marty Marsala and he was married to jazz harpist Adele Girard.", "Marty Marsala\n Marty Marsala began his professional career playing drums for bands led by Joe Bananas and Red Feilen in Chicago. During the 1920s he switched to the trumpet and soon joined his brother Joe Marsala's band in New York City following years as a freelance musician in Chicago, trumpeting for them from 1936 to 1941. In 1937 and 1938 he also worked with Bob Howard and Tempo King. He worked with the Will Hudson Orchestra and then led a local band for a while, joining Chico Marx's band and playing for them from 1942 to 1943; the band was technically led by Ben Pollack, but performed under Marx's name. He served briefly in the United States Army from 1944–1945. After service he toured between San Francisco and Chicago, playing much dixieland with his brother again as well as Miff Mole and Tony Parenti. He became especially popular in California during these years. In 1955 he moved permanently to San Francisco and began leading his own groups and recording with Kid Ory and Earl Hines. During the 1960s his health deteriorated and he retired from performing in 1965, never recording under his own name.", "Joe Marsala\n He was born in Chicago, Illinois, United States. In the 1920s, Marsala played guitar in clubs in his hometown of Chicago with Ben Pollack and Wingy Manone. After moving to New York City, he recorded and performed with Manone in the 1930s. As a leader, he worked with drummers Buddy Rich, Shelly Manne, and Dave Tough; guitarist Eddie Condon, pianist Joe Bushkin, trumpeter Max Kaminsky, his brother Marty Marsala, and his wife, jazz harpist Adele Girard. In 1948, he left professional performing and entered music publishing. By 1949, he was writing traditional pop songs, including \"Don't Cry, Joe (Let Her Go, Let Her Go, Let Her Go)\", which ", "Marty Chan\n Graffiti Ghoul, which is about Marty, a Chinese boy, trying to solve a mystery with his friend Remi. It has been nominated for a MYRCA (Manitoba Young Readers Choice Award), and has won the Diamond Willow Award. His third children's book The Mystery of the Mad Science Teacher is coming out soon. In March 2009 his new book, True Story, drew a book prize. He has visited many schools, and attended many events in Edmonton. He graduated the University of Alberta with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1989. He has received an Arts Achievement Award and a Performance Award from the City of Edmonton, for his contributions, such as serving as the Chair of the Edmonton Arts Council.", "Marty (rapper)\n Martin Lorenzo Santiago (born June 8, 1987), who goes by the stage name Marty and sometimes Marty Mar, is an American rapper in the Christian hip hop genre. He is part of the duo, Social Club Misfits, with his partner, Fern. His first extended play, Marty for President, was released in 2015. This was his breakthrough release upon the Billboard magazine charts.", "Tony Marsico\n bassist for indie pop singer Matthew Sweet for over 10 years. Marsico recorded the soundtrack to the Oscar winning film Session Man. He has written four books “ I’m Just Here for the Gig”,'Late Nights with Bob Dylan ,'”Wild Thingsand “King of Andalusia”. Marsico has produced two motion pictures Satan's Angel and Camp Burlesque. Marsico leads his own band The Martini Kings and has released 25 albums, with music appearing in HBO'S Entourage and Six Feet Under. Marsico also acted in motion pictures including Roadhouse, Georgia, Somebody to Love, LA Story, Static and She's So Lovely. In 2021 Marsico reformed his band “Cruzados” and is slated to release a new album titled “She’s Automatic”. Marsico lives in Los Angeles California.", "Friendly Rich\n Friendly Rich, born Richard Marsella, is a Canadian music composer and musician from Brampton, Ontario. He has independently released a number of albums of satirical and melodramatic songs. His music has been featured on CBC and The Tom Green Show.", "Friendly Rich\n Marsella earned a Master's degree in music at the University of Toronto under the supervision of Lee Bartel and composer R. Murray Schafer, studying mainly musical instrument construction and parade pedagogy.", "Before the Music Dies\n The film looks at the evolution of American popular music and discusses the marketing of contemporary pop stars. \"The reality is that superficiality is in,\" says Marsalis. \"And depth and quality is kind of out.\"", "Mike Miller (guitarist)\n Philharmonic New Music Group he was a soloist alongside Peter Erskine for the album Blood on the Floor by Mark-Anthony Turnage. At the end of the 1990s, he was involved in scoring Jessica Yu's documentaries Breathing Lessons and The Living Museum. He toured with Bette Midler and appeared on her album Bette. He also worked with film composer Mark Mothersbaugh on The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle (2000) and The Royal Tenenbaums (2001). Marsis Jazz released his first solo album, Save the Moon, in 2001. He was a touring guitarist with Boz Scaggs in 2014 and has worked with Brandon Fields, Mitchel Forman, Scott Kinsey, Otmaro Ruíz, and Queen Latifah.", "Roxanne Fontana\n East Village and played on every track on the record. The album also once again featured Marty Willson-Piper. Critic Joe Viglione said of the album, \"Fontana does a fine job producing herself, and the record is a departure from the sound forged on the debut disc.\" A review by Joseph Tortelli of Goldmine Magazine revealed Fontana to possess an \"innocent-yet-world-weary voice.\" Contrasting the two releases' styles, Tortelli stated, \"Title these CDs 'a tale of two pop sounds': one electronic and percussive; the other haunting folk-rock.\" Fontana put her music career on hold in 2001 when she married and moved to Los ", "Joey Calderazzo\n At a music clinic he met saxophonist Michael Brecker and became part of his quintet beginning in 1987. In 1990, he signed with Blue Note Records. Brecker produced Calderazzo's first album, In the Door, which featured Jerry Bergonzi and Branford Marsalis, his brother's roommate in Boston. They played on his second album, To Know One, which included Dave Holland and Jack DeJohnette. Calderazzo appeared on Brecker's albums Tales from the Hudson and Two Blocks from the Edge as pianist and composer. He played keyboard in Marsalis's Buckshot LeFonque and contributed to his album Music Evolution. When pianist Kenny Kirkland died in 1998, Calderazzo assumed his place in the Branford Marsalis Quartet. In 1999 he recorded Joey Calderazzo with ", "Joe Marsala\n Bobby Gordon Quartet Featuring Adele Girard Marsala, Don't Let It End, which featured Adele's last session for Arbors in 1992. According to his wife, Marsala suffered from an allergy to nickel and had a rash on his hands from the nickel-plated keys on the clarinet. He was also bothered by colitis and was unable to drink alcohol for a time. Although his younger brother Marty was drafted, Marsala was an unacceptable candidate because of cartilage and ligament tears in his knee. He and his wife entertained stateside for the USO during the war years. Marsala died of cancer in Santa Barbara, California at the age of 71.", "Marty Rhone\n is based on the text of Angelo Beolco's Il Parlamento de Ruzante, originally written in Italy during the mid-16th century. As a double bill at the same venue, Rhone performed the music he had composed for La Mandragola, a satirical play by another 16th-century Italian, Niccolò Machiavelli. It had roles by Reg Gillam, Pamela Stephenson and Ingrid Mason. Rhone followed with appearances on TV soap operas, Number 96 (1974) and Class of '75 (1975). By mid-1975 Rhone had signed with M7 Records and issued his next single, \"Denim and Lace\", which peaked at No. 8 on the Australian Kent Music Report Singles Chart. It was promoted on the Class of '75 soundtrack album. It was co-written by L Lister (aka Jack Aranda) and F Lyons (aka Shad Lyons). ", "Marty Ross\n Marty Ross is a Scottish writer, best known for his audio dramas for the British Broadcasting Corporation, Big Finish Productions and for the Wireless Theatre Company and 3Dhorrorfi. He is author of the 'Tartan Noir' thriller novel Aztec Love Song. He has had several plays performed on stage, mostly with an emphasis on Gothic horror and the surreal. He has dramatized stories by other Scottish writers such as James Hogg, Robert Louis Stevenson, and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle in his radio series The Darker Side of the Border. Among his influences are the work of Hammer Films and British science fiction dramatist Nigel Kneale.", "Maria Mazziotti Gillan\n Arts, and featured speakers including Allan Ginsberg, Amiri Baraka, and Stanley Kunitz. She has published 22 books. One of her most recent is The Girls in the Chartreuse Jackets (Redux Consortium, 2014), a collection of her poetry and watercolor artwork. Her craft book, Writing Poetry to Save Your Life: How to Find the Courage to Tell Your Stories (MiroLand, Guernica) was published in 2013. She is co-editor with her daughter Jennifer of four anthologies: Unsettling America, Identity Lessons, and Growing Up Ethnic in America (Penguin/Putnam) and Italian-American Writers on New Jersey (Rutgers). Since 2012 she has been in the Honour Committee of Immagine & Poesia, the artistic literary movement founded in Turin, Italy, with the patronage of Aeronwy Thomas (Dylan Thomas's daughter). She lives in Hawthorne, New Jersey, and is a professor emeritus at SUNY-Binghamton.", "Jeremy Pinnell\n Pinnell released his first full-length album in 2014 titled OH/KY on SofaBurn Records. Pinnell released his second full-length album in 2017 titled Ties of Blood and Affection. He released the single Joey on January 15, 2021. This cover of the Concrete Blonde classic written by Johnette Napolitano is a stand alone single leading up to his 3rd full-length release, Goodbye L.A. which will be released on SofaBurn Records on October 1, 2021.", "Giovanni Amighetti\n Yue, Amighetti, Wu Fei, Ponzini, Norbakken - (Ozella Music) ; 2010: Plugin Contemporary Music - Guido Ponzini, Angela Benelli, Gambini, Amighetti - (Porter Records) ; 2011: La Musica di Secondo Casadei - Conficconi, Tassinari, Benelli, Vallicelli - (Arv-Casadei Sonora) producer ; 2012: Dardasha - Adel Salameh, Naziha Azzouz, Amighetti, Ponzini, Fulvio Maras - (Arv) ; 2012: Windy Valley - Claudio Ferrarini, Amighetti, Andreoli, Benelli, Ponzini, Meola - (Arte Sonora) ; 2015: Mississippi to Sahara - Faris Amine, Leo Welch - (Wrasse) producer ; 2017: Re-Birth - Pier Bernardi, Ace, Amighetti, Michael Urbano - (Irma Records) ; 2018: A classical improvisation - Giovanni Amighetti, Tiziana Ghiglioni, Angela Benelli, Pier Bernardi (Muki) ", "Roman Miroshnichenko\n Piazzolla, and the ex-bass guitarist for John McLaughlin Trio - Dominique Di Piazza. In 2013, Roman Miroshnichenko has released his next one album, titled \"Surreal\", produced together with Daniel Figueiredo and featuring Larry Coryell, Dominique Di Piazza, Mario Olivares, Josquin des Pres and Argentinian pianist Mario Parmisano. The album's single \"Desperation\" recorded in duo with Parmisano won 1st prize at the 18th Annual USA Songwriting Competition. In April 2013, Hal Leonard Books (one of the biggest US publishing houses) released “The Great Jazz Guitarists” encyclopedia by Scott Yanow, the most comprehensive guide to jazz guitarists ever published (from Django Reinhardt to Les " ]
What genre is Most of Me?
[ "non-fiction", "nonfiction", "non fiction" ]
genre
Most of Me
5,215,349
44
[ { "id": "5796317", "title": "Most of Me", "text": " Most of Me was a nominee for the Stephen Leacock Memorial Medal for Humour in June 2012, for \"the best in Canadian humour writing\". The book also received shortlist recognition for the 2012 Edna Staebler Award for Creative Non-Fiction.", "score": "1.6980944" }, { "id": "4633203", "title": "The Best of Me (novel)", "text": " The Best of Me is an American romance novel, written by Nicholas Sparks.", "score": "1.6319802" }, { "id": "5796316", "title": "Most of Me", "text": " Most of Me: Surviving My Medical Meltdown is a non-fiction memoir, written by Canadian writer Robyn Michele Levy, first published in September 2011 by Greystone Books. In the book, the author chronicles her plight from symptoms, to medical diagnosis, and coping with simultaneous illnesses.", "score": "1.615444" }, { "id": "4633216", "title": "The Best of Me (novel)", "text": " The Best of Me was ranked #2 in the Top 10 overall from Publishers Weekly.", "score": "1.5753903" }, { "id": "3059272", "title": "The Best of Me (film)", "text": " On June 27, 2014, it was announced that composer Aaron Zigman would be scoring the music for the film.", "score": "1.5092775" }, { "id": "4633215", "title": "The Best of Me (novel)", "text": " According to Little Brown book group, the book has been translated into \"more than 40 languages.\" It was published on 11 October 2011 by Grand Central Publishing.", "score": "1.492445" }, { "id": "25069092", "title": "All of Me (1984 film)", "text": " All of Me is a 1984 American fantasy comedy film directed by Carl Reiner and starring Steve Martin and Lily Tomlin. This film is based on the unpublished novel Me Two by Edwin Davis. The title song and theme of the movie is the 1931 jazz standard \"All of Me\".", "score": "1.434747" }, { "id": "3059277", "title": "The Best of Me (film)", "text": " The Best of Me was released on DVD and Blu-ray on February 3, 2015. At the same time, a \"Tears of Joy\" edition of the film with a running time of 115 minutes and an alternated ending was released on DVD and Blu-ray.", "score": "1.4346999" }, { "id": "3059274", "title": "The Best of Me (film)", "text": " The album debuted at number 54 on the Billboard 200, selling 6,200 copies in its first week.", "score": "1.433188" }, { "id": "27982115", "title": "Virtue (musical group)", "text": "\"Greatest Part of Me\" ; \"Follow Me\" ", "score": "1.4249604" }, { "id": "5872215", "title": "Dirty Dishes", "text": "All of Me (2016) ", "score": "1.4209507" }, { "id": "4633217", "title": "The Best of Me (novel)", "text": " According to Denise Garofalo, 'it transforms into a predictable yet depressing tale that is rushed and transparent and that suffers from cliche and a somewhat anticlimactic ending'. Laura Santana stated, \"It fulfills every desire they have to swoon and be shocked.\"", "score": "1.4108652" }, { "id": "15999947", "title": "Me (Empress Of album)", "text": " Pitchfork reviewed the album positively, awarding it Best New Music.", "score": "1.409614" }, { "id": "3059260", "title": "The Best of Me (film)", "text": " The Best of Me is a 2014 American romantic drama film directed by Michael Hoffman and written by Will Fetters and J. Mills Goodloe, based on Nicholas Sparks' 2011 novel of the same name. The film stars James Marsden and Michelle Monaghan with Luke Bracey and Liana Liberato.", "score": "1.4065242" }, { "id": "11249643", "title": "All of Me (Anne Murray album)", "text": " All of Me is a compilation album by Canadian artist Anne Murray. It was released by Straightway Records on January 25, 2005. The first disc had been released as I'll Be Seeing You in 2004. All of Me peaked at number 13 on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart.", "score": "1.4050636" }, { "id": "3059273", "title": "The Best of Me (film)", "text": " The soundtrack album for the film, released on October 7, 2014, features original music primarily from the genre of country music, recorded by artists such as Lady Antebellum, Hunter Hayes, David Nail, Colbie Caillat, Kip Moore, Eli Young Band, Eric Paslay, Thompson Square, and Thomas Rhett. \"I Did with You\" by Lady Antebellum was released on September 8, 2014 as the first promotional single from the soundtrack. The band's other contribution, \"Falling for You\" is also available on the deluxe edition of their fifth studio album, 747. The titles and performing artists were published by Taste of Country.", "score": "1.3951235" }, { "id": "1193139", "title": "Most of the Time", "text": " Lyrically, the song is a ballad that features the rhetorical device of a narrator repeatedly insisting that he has gotten over the heartbreak of a past relationship by describing how content he feels \"most of the time\" – thus implying that some of the time he is still affected. The song starts with the narrator stating that most of the time he is focused and can stay on track, before mentioning after seven lines that \"I don't even notice she's gone / Most of the time\". Christopher Ricks notes that it is not the case that \"Most of the time, 'Most of the Time' consists of repeating the words 'Most of the time'\" because only 14 of the 44 lines of the ", "score": "1.3819195" }, { "id": "28256275", "title": "Most of All (song)", "text": " \"Most of All\" is a B. J. Thomas single from the 1970 album, Most of All, on Scepter Records. The song, composed by Buddy Buie and J.R. Cobb (Classics IV, Atlanta Rhythm Section), reached #2 on the Billboard Adult Contemporary singles chart, and #38 on the Billboard Hot 100, in the same year. The song was also a hit in Canada, reaching the Top 20 on both corresponding charts.", "score": "1.381619" }, { "id": "32606599", "title": "The Most of Animals", "text": " The Most of the Animals is the title of a number of different compilation albums by Newcastle upon Tyne blues rock group The Animals. Although track listing varies, all feature only songs from 1964 and 1965. The title is derived from the name of their then producer Mickie Most (see also The Most of Herman's Hermits). The first album was released in April 1966 by Columbia (SX 6035). Most of the material had not featured on either of their previous two UK LPs. The album charted at #4 - their highest position so far on the UK album chart (both ", "score": "1.3762536" }, { "id": "28669541", "title": "The Best of Me (Yolanda Adams album)", "text": " The Best Of Me is a 2007 compilation album by Yolanda Adams.", "score": "1.3758197" } ]
[ "Most of Me\n Most of Me was a nominee for the Stephen Leacock Memorial Medal for Humour in June 2012, for \"the best in Canadian humour writing\". The book also received shortlist recognition for the 2012 Edna Staebler Award for Creative Non-Fiction.", "The Best of Me (novel)\n The Best of Me is an American romance novel, written by Nicholas Sparks.", "Most of Me\n Most of Me: Surviving My Medical Meltdown is a non-fiction memoir, written by Canadian writer Robyn Michele Levy, first published in September 2011 by Greystone Books. In the book, the author chronicles her plight from symptoms, to medical diagnosis, and coping with simultaneous illnesses.", "The Best of Me (novel)\n The Best of Me was ranked #2 in the Top 10 overall from Publishers Weekly.", "The Best of Me (film)\n On June 27, 2014, it was announced that composer Aaron Zigman would be scoring the music for the film.", "The Best of Me (novel)\n According to Little Brown book group, the book has been translated into \"more than 40 languages.\" It was published on 11 October 2011 by Grand Central Publishing.", "All of Me (1984 film)\n All of Me is a 1984 American fantasy comedy film directed by Carl Reiner and starring Steve Martin and Lily Tomlin. This film is based on the unpublished novel Me Two by Edwin Davis. The title song and theme of the movie is the 1931 jazz standard \"All of Me\".", "The Best of Me (film)\n The Best of Me was released on DVD and Blu-ray on February 3, 2015. At the same time, a \"Tears of Joy\" edition of the film with a running time of 115 minutes and an alternated ending was released on DVD and Blu-ray.", "The Best of Me (film)\n The album debuted at number 54 on the Billboard 200, selling 6,200 copies in its first week.", "Virtue (musical group)\n\"Greatest Part of Me\" ; \"Follow Me\" ", "Dirty Dishes\nAll of Me (2016) ", "The Best of Me (novel)\n According to Denise Garofalo, 'it transforms into a predictable yet depressing tale that is rushed and transparent and that suffers from cliche and a somewhat anticlimactic ending'. Laura Santana stated, \"It fulfills every desire they have to swoon and be shocked.\"", "Me (Empress Of album)\n Pitchfork reviewed the album positively, awarding it Best New Music.", "The Best of Me (film)\n The Best of Me is a 2014 American romantic drama film directed by Michael Hoffman and written by Will Fetters and J. Mills Goodloe, based on Nicholas Sparks' 2011 novel of the same name. The film stars James Marsden and Michelle Monaghan with Luke Bracey and Liana Liberato.", "All of Me (Anne Murray album)\n All of Me is a compilation album by Canadian artist Anne Murray. It was released by Straightway Records on January 25, 2005. The first disc had been released as I'll Be Seeing You in 2004. All of Me peaked at number 13 on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart.", "The Best of Me (film)\n The soundtrack album for the film, released on October 7, 2014, features original music primarily from the genre of country music, recorded by artists such as Lady Antebellum, Hunter Hayes, David Nail, Colbie Caillat, Kip Moore, Eli Young Band, Eric Paslay, Thompson Square, and Thomas Rhett. \"I Did with You\" by Lady Antebellum was released on September 8, 2014 as the first promotional single from the soundtrack. The band's other contribution, \"Falling for You\" is also available on the deluxe edition of their fifth studio album, 747. The titles and performing artists were published by Taste of Country.", "Most of the Time\n Lyrically, the song is a ballad that features the rhetorical device of a narrator repeatedly insisting that he has gotten over the heartbreak of a past relationship by describing how content he feels \"most of the time\" – thus implying that some of the time he is still affected. The song starts with the narrator stating that most of the time he is focused and can stay on track, before mentioning after seven lines that \"I don't even notice she's gone / Most of the time\". Christopher Ricks notes that it is not the case that \"Most of the time, 'Most of the Time' consists of repeating the words 'Most of the time'\" because only 14 of the 44 lines of the ", "Most of All (song)\n \"Most of All\" is a B. J. Thomas single from the 1970 album, Most of All, on Scepter Records. The song, composed by Buddy Buie and J.R. Cobb (Classics IV, Atlanta Rhythm Section), reached #2 on the Billboard Adult Contemporary singles chart, and #38 on the Billboard Hot 100, in the same year. The song was also a hit in Canada, reaching the Top 20 on both corresponding charts.", "The Most of Animals\n The Most of the Animals is the title of a number of different compilation albums by Newcastle upon Tyne blues rock group The Animals. Although track listing varies, all feature only songs from 1964 and 1965. The title is derived from the name of their then producer Mickie Most (see also The Most of Herman's Hermits). The first album was released in April 1966 by Columbia (SX 6035). Most of the material had not featured on either of their previous two UK LPs. The album charted at #4 - their highest position so far on the UK album chart (both ", "The Best of Me (Yolanda Adams album)\n The Best Of Me is a 2007 compilation album by Yolanda Adams." ]
What is the capital of canton of Gordes?
[ "Gordes" ]
capital
Canton of Gordes
5,702,088
61
[ { "id": "345728", "title": "Canton of Gordes", "text": " The canton of Gordes is a French former administrative division in the department of Vaucluse and region Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur. It was disbanded following the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. It consisted of 8 communes, which joined the canton of Apt in 2015.", "score": "1.719907" }, { "id": "345729", "title": "Canton of Gordes", "text": "Beaumettes : 194 inhabitants ; Gordes : 2,092 inhabitants ; Goult : 1,285 inhabitants ; Joucas : 317 inhabitants ; Lioux : 248 inhabitants ; Murs : 415 inhabitants ; Roussillon : 1,161 inhabitants ; Saint-Pantaléon : 177 inhabitants The communes in the canton of Gordes:", "score": "1.691339" }, { "id": "27598016", "title": "Gordes", "text": " The commune of Gordes has numerous infrastructures of public utility like the \"gendarmerie\", the fire brigade, the post office, a tax office, a library, etc.", "score": "1.5314454" }, { "id": "30321513", "title": "Goicoechea (canton)", "text": " Goicoechea was created on 6 August 1891 by decree 66.", "score": "1.5257423" }, { "id": "30321516", "title": "Goicoechea (canton)", "text": " For the 2011 census, Goicoechea had a population of 115,084 inhabitants.", "score": "1.5019963" }, { "id": "27598002", "title": "Gordes", "text": " Gordes (Gòrda) is a commune in the Vaucluse département in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur region in southeastern France. The residents are known as Gordiens. The nearest big city is Avignon; smaller cities nearby include Cavaillon, L'Isle-sur-la-Sorgue and Apt.", "score": "1.5009718" }, { "id": "27598018", "title": "Gordes", "text": " Located in the middle of the village, the castle, which was partially rebuilt in Renaissance style in 1525, is a major tourist attraction. In the immediate vicinity of Gordes is the Romanesque Sénanque Abbey (Cistercian) and the Village des Bories, a village of dry stone huts that is now a museum.", "score": "1.4950645" }, { "id": "27598027", "title": "Gordes", "text": " The commune is equipped with various sporting facilities including two football/soccer fields, walking and cycling trails, pétanque and other recreational spaces.", "score": "1.4914942" }, { "id": "27598006", "title": "Gordes", "text": " Located between two geographic area, Gordes is one of the biggest communes of the area with 4,804 hectares. The north is defined by the southern edge of the Vaucluse Mountains. The highest point of the commune (635 meters) is in this area, next to la Pouraque and les Trois Termes. The south of the commune is made by the Calavon valley, also called the Luberon Valley, and a few hills in the area. The lowest height of the commune, at 111 meters, is in the south in the area called plan de l'Alba. The village itself is located in the center of the commune, on a giant calcareous rock from the Vaucluse Mountains, dominating the valley.", "score": "1.4854351" }, { "id": "27598005", "title": "Gordes", "text": " Neighboring villages are Venasque and Murs to the north, Joucas and Roussillon to the east, Goult, Saint-Pantaléon, Beaumettes and Oppède to the south and Cabrières-d'Avignon and Saumane-de-Vaucluse to the west.", "score": "1.4685044" }, { "id": "27598017", "title": "Gordes", "text": "🇫🇷 Annet-sur-Marne, France, since 1985. ", "score": "1.4554814" }, { "id": "30321518", "title": "Goicoechea (canton)", "text": " The Interurbano Line operated by Incofer goes through this canton.", "score": "1.4404662" }, { "id": "30321514", "title": "Goicoechea (canton)", "text": " Goicoechea has an area of 31.5 km² and a mean elevation of 1,364 metres. The elongated canton curves its way through the suburban areas just north of San José, climbing steadily into the Cordillera Central (Central Mountain Range) until it reaches it eastern limit between the Durazno River (on its northern boundary) and the Tiribí River (on the south).", "score": "1.434329" }, { "id": "15303312", "title": "Canton of Le Gosier", "text": "1) Le Gosier (partly) The canton of Le Gosier is an administrative division of Guadeloupe, an overseas department and region of France. It was created at the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. Its seat is in Le Gosier. It consists of the following communes:", "score": "1.4168451" }, { "id": "27598026", "title": "Gordes", "text": " The village is home to several doctors, a pharmacy, a dentist and even an hospital but exclusively used for older people.", "score": "1.4157878" }, { "id": "8480", "title": "Asprières", "text": " In 1790 Asprières was the capital of a canton. In 1922 it lost its status as capital which was transferred to Capdenac-Gare.", "score": "1.4124582" }, { "id": "15106353", "title": "Canton of Fribourg", "text": "Broye capital Estavayer-le-Lac ; Glâne capital Romont ; Gruyère (German Greyerz) capital Bulle ; Sarine (German Saane) capital Fribourg ; Lake (French Lac, German See) capital Morat ; Sense (French Singine) capital Tafers ; Veveyse (German Vivisbach) capital Châtel-Saint-Denis The Canton is divided into seven districts:", "score": "1.3960433" }, { "id": "29927837", "title": "Le Gosier 1st Canton", "text": " The canton included part of the commune of Le Gosier.", "score": "1.3959832" }, { "id": "16524568", "title": "Aigues-Mortes", "text": " The town is the capital of the canton of the same name whose general councillor is Leopold Rosso, deputy mayor of Le Grau-du-Roi and president of the Community of Communes Terre de Camargue (UMP). The canton is part of the arrondissement of Nîmes and the second electoral district of Gard where the member is Gilbert Collard (FN ).", "score": "1.3954201" }, { "id": "27598010", "title": "Gordes", "text": " Occupation by the Roman empire. The area is full of evidence of their occupation especially the Roman road passing through Apt and Carpentras and crossing the valley. Gallo-Roman remains were found in \"Bouisses\" district (skeletons, amphorae, columns) or Gallo-Roman substructures in the hamlet of \"les Gros\". ", "score": "1.3941015" } ]
[ "Canton of Gordes\n The canton of Gordes is a French former administrative division in the department of Vaucluse and region Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur. It was disbanded following the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. It consisted of 8 communes, which joined the canton of Apt in 2015.", "Canton of Gordes\nBeaumettes : 194 inhabitants ; Gordes : 2,092 inhabitants ; Goult : 1,285 inhabitants ; Joucas : 317 inhabitants ; Lioux : 248 inhabitants ; Murs : 415 inhabitants ; Roussillon : 1,161 inhabitants ; Saint-Pantaléon : 177 inhabitants The communes in the canton of Gordes:", "Gordes\n The commune of Gordes has numerous infrastructures of public utility like the \"gendarmerie\", the fire brigade, the post office, a tax office, a library, etc.", "Goicoechea (canton)\n Goicoechea was created on 6 August 1891 by decree 66.", "Goicoechea (canton)\n For the 2011 census, Goicoechea had a population of 115,084 inhabitants.", "Gordes\n Gordes (Gòrda) is a commune in the Vaucluse département in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur region in southeastern France. The residents are known as Gordiens. The nearest big city is Avignon; smaller cities nearby include Cavaillon, L'Isle-sur-la-Sorgue and Apt.", "Gordes\n Located in the middle of the village, the castle, which was partially rebuilt in Renaissance style in 1525, is a major tourist attraction. In the immediate vicinity of Gordes is the Romanesque Sénanque Abbey (Cistercian) and the Village des Bories, a village of dry stone huts that is now a museum.", "Gordes\n The commune is equipped with various sporting facilities including two football/soccer fields, walking and cycling trails, pétanque and other recreational spaces.", "Gordes\n Located between two geographic area, Gordes is one of the biggest communes of the area with 4,804 hectares. The north is defined by the southern edge of the Vaucluse Mountains. The highest point of the commune (635 meters) is in this area, next to la Pouraque and les Trois Termes. The south of the commune is made by the Calavon valley, also called the Luberon Valley, and a few hills in the area. The lowest height of the commune, at 111 meters, is in the south in the area called plan de l'Alba. The village itself is located in the center of the commune, on a giant calcareous rock from the Vaucluse Mountains, dominating the valley.", "Gordes\n Neighboring villages are Venasque and Murs to the north, Joucas and Roussillon to the east, Goult, Saint-Pantaléon, Beaumettes and Oppède to the south and Cabrières-d'Avignon and Saumane-de-Vaucluse to the west.", "Gordes\n🇫🇷 Annet-sur-Marne, France, since 1985. ", "Goicoechea (canton)\n The Interurbano Line operated by Incofer goes through this canton.", "Goicoechea (canton)\n Goicoechea has an area of 31.5 km² and a mean elevation of 1,364 metres. The elongated canton curves its way through the suburban areas just north of San José, climbing steadily into the Cordillera Central (Central Mountain Range) until it reaches it eastern limit between the Durazno River (on its northern boundary) and the Tiribí River (on the south).", "Canton of Le Gosier\n1) Le Gosier (partly) The canton of Le Gosier is an administrative division of Guadeloupe, an overseas department and region of France. It was created at the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. Its seat is in Le Gosier. It consists of the following communes:", "Gordes\n The village is home to several doctors, a pharmacy, a dentist and even an hospital but exclusively used for older people.", "Asprières\n In 1790 Asprières was the capital of a canton. In 1922 it lost its status as capital which was transferred to Capdenac-Gare.", "Canton of Fribourg\nBroye capital Estavayer-le-Lac ; Glâne capital Romont ; Gruyère (German Greyerz) capital Bulle ; Sarine (German Saane) capital Fribourg ; Lake (French Lac, German See) capital Morat ; Sense (French Singine) capital Tafers ; Veveyse (German Vivisbach) capital Châtel-Saint-Denis The Canton is divided into seven districts:", "Le Gosier 1st Canton\n The canton included part of the commune of Le Gosier.", "Aigues-Mortes\n The town is the capital of the canton of the same name whose general councillor is Leopold Rosso, deputy mayor of Le Grau-du-Roi and president of the Community of Communes Terre de Camargue (UMP). The canton is part of the arrondissement of Nîmes and the second electoral district of Gard where the member is Gilbert Collard (FN ).", "Gordes\n Occupation by the Roman empire. The area is full of evidence of their occupation especially the Roman road passing through Apt and Carpentras and crossing the valley. Gallo-Roman remains were found in \"Bouisses\" district (skeletons, amphorae, columns) or Gallo-Roman substructures in the hamlet of \"les Gros\". " ]
Who is the author of School for Coquettes?
[ "Paul Armont", "Dimitri Petrococchino" ]
author
School for Coquettes (play)
5,703,910
52
[ { "id": "7918027", "title": "The Coquette", "text": " The Coquette or, The History of Eliza Wharton is an epistolary novel by Hannah Webster Foster. It was published anonymously in 1797, and did not appear under the author's real name until 1856, 16 years after Foster's death. It was one of the best-selling novels of its time and was reprinted eight times between 1824 and 1828. A fictionalized account of the much-publicized death of a socially elite Connecticut woman after giving birth to a stillborn, illegitimate child at a roadside tavern, Foster's novel highlights the social conditions that lead to the downfall of an otherwise well-educated and socially adept woman.", "score": "1.4988279" }, { "id": "3907428", "title": "School for Heroes", "text": " School for Heroes is a children's fantasy duology written by Jackie French.", "score": "1.4982347" }, { "id": "29702523", "title": "Odyssey School", "text": " School, Stephen K. Smuin, has been a teacher and school administrator for many years. He had been head of the middle school at the Nueva School, a private elementary and middle school in Hillsborough, California, but was ousted by the school board following allegations of abusive behavior towards a former student. He is the author of three books on writing technique, including \"More than Metaphors: Strategies for Teaching Process Writing.\". He retired in June 2010. In July 2010, Daniel Popplewell joined Odyssey as its new Head of School. He had been dean of teaching and learning at Bentley School in Lafayette, California. He was succeeded in July 2013 by Stephen P. Lane, who had been head of Santa Barbara Middle School.", "score": "1.4885242" }, { "id": "5162145", "title": "Alexander Russo (writer)", "text": " Russo is the editor of the 2004 volume School Reform In Chicago (Harvard Education Press) and the author of Stray Dogs, Saints, and Saviors (Jossey-Bass), a nonfiction account of the effort by Steve Barr and Green Dot Public Schools to revamp Locke High School, featured in the May 2009 New Yorker article \"The Instigator\".", "score": "1.4629866" }, { "id": "7918038", "title": "The Coquette", "text": " The Coquette received a revival of critical attention during the late twentieth century. It is often praised for its intelligent portrayal of the contrast between individualism vs. social conformity and passion vs. reason. It has also been studied for its relationship to political ideologies of the early American republic and its portrayal of the emerging middle class. Foster's tale has been read on the one hand as a \"novel for providing a subversive message about the ways in which the lives of women even of the elite are subject to narrow cultural constraints\" and, on the other hand, as an instructive novel that \"comes down on ", "score": "1.4307802" }, { "id": "29977639", "title": "The School for Good and Evil", "text": " The School for Good and Evil is a fantasy fairytale hexalogy of books by Soman Chainani. The first novel in the series was published on May 14, 2013. The series is set in a fictional widespread location known as the Endless Woods. The original trilogy (known as The School Years) follows the adventures of best friends Sophie and Agatha at the School for Good and Evil, an enchanted institution where children are trained to become fairytale heroes or villains, respectively. The second trilogy (The Camelot Years) follows Agatha and her true love King Tedros ascending to the role of Queen and King of the legendary kingdom, Camelot, and Sophie re-forming Evil into a new image. The final book in the series was released on June 2, 2020.", "score": "1.4274627" }, { "id": "28929653", "title": "School for Love", "text": " School for Love (Futures vedettes) is a French drama film from 1955 directed by Marc Allégret, written by Marc Allégret and starring Brigitte Bardot and Jean Marais. The screenplay was based on a novel by Vicki Baum. The film was known under the titles Joy of Living or School for Love in the U.S., Sweet Sixteen in the U.K. and Reif auf jungen Blüten in West Germany.", "score": "1.426045" }, { "id": "13098402", "title": "Julie Doucet", "text": " . I wish my work would be recognized by a larger crowd of people as more art than be stuck with the cartoonist label for the rest of my life. That's what's killing me about a lot of those comics guys. Dan Clowes is mostly a writer, a great artist, and has tried different things, But a lot of those guys, their drawing style never changes—the content neither—and it seems it never will. I just don't understand that, how you can spend fifty years of your artist life doing the same thing over and over again. She had a book of poetry published by L’Oie de Cravan in 2006, À l’école de l’amour. Her current artwork consists of linocuts, collage and papier-mache sculptures. In 2007, Doucet designed the cover for the Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition of Louisa May Alcott's Little Women.", "score": "1.4228584" }, { "id": "3533879", "title": "Christine Morton-Shaw", "text": " Christine Morton-Shaw is an author of books for children and young adults (teenagers). These include picturebooks and educational and novelty titles (most notably the popular 'Stringalongs' series). She is perhaps best known for her more recent work as a Young Adult and Middle-Grade novelist. Her novels to date are The Riddles of Epsilon (which received, among other praise, the VOYA (Voice of Youth Advocates) 'perfect ten' rating in June 2006 ) and The Hunt for the Seventh. Her works are notable for their spooky atmosphere, an emphasis on mystery and the solving of clues (often in the form of puzzles) and surprising plot twists (or 'paradigm shifts')", "score": "1.4173061" }, { "id": "2088649", "title": "Bernard J. Taylor", "text": " Completed at the beginning of 2013 in tandem with Rock n Roll Cafe, this is an updated version of Tom Brown's Schooldays, the classic 19th Century novel by Thomas Hughes (which created the blueprint for all school stories that followed, including Harry Potter). It features all the main characters from the original novel, but in this version it is set in a modern co-ed school. It was written especially for school productions.", "score": "1.4098612" }, { "id": "32271830", "title": "Godfrey Morgan", "text": " Godfrey Morgan: A Californian Mystery (L'École des Robinsons, literally The School for Robinsons), also published as School for Crusoes, is an 1882 adventure novel by French writer Jules Verne. The novel tells of a wealthy young man, Godfrey Morgan who, with his deportment instructor, Professor T. Artelett, embark from San Francisco, California on a round-the-world ocean voyage. They are cast away on an uninhabited Pacific island where they must endure a series of adversities. Later they encounter an African slave, Carefinotu, brought to the island by cannibals. In the end, the trio manage to work together and survive on the island. The novel is a robinsonade—a play on Daniel Defoe's 1719 novel Robinson Crusoe.", "score": "1.407428" }, { "id": "29413403", "title": "The Times Square Two", "text": " Choquette went on to work for The National Lampoon and on editing a vast and ambitious comic book project with material from numerous internationally-known cartoonists and media figures. The book was entitled \"Someday Funnies\" and was completed and published through Abrams ComicArts in 2011. Choquette teaches screen-writing and comedy writing at McGill University and Concordia University in Montreal. Elbling was later a member of The Committee, acted on many televisions shows (including Taxi and WKRP) and films (including Phantom of the Paradise) during the 1970s and 80s, created the 1979 satirical NY Times Best Seller The 80s: A Look Back at the Tumultuous Decade 1980–1989, has written children's books as well as the international best selling novel The Food Taster. He is now creating films for Harold A. Vinegar.", "score": "1.4058449" }, { "id": "30122089", "title": "Soman Chainani", "text": " Soman Chainani is an American author and filmmaker, best known for writing the children's book series The School for Good and Evil. Soman's first novel, The School for Good and Evil, debuted on the New York Times Bestseller List, has sold more than 3 million copies, been translated into 30 languages across 6 continents, and will soon be a film from Netflix directed by Paul Feig. His other five books in the School for Good and Evil series – A World Without Princes, The Last Ever After, Quests for Glory, A Crystal of Time and One True King – have all debuted on the New York Times Bestseller List as well. To date, these six books in the series have been on the print and extended New York Times Bestseller List for more than 35 weeks. His most recent book, Beasts and Beauty, was released on September 21, 2021, to wide acclaim, with Kirkus Reviews calling the collection \"expertly crafted... evoking the wonder, terror, and magic of the fantasy realms.\"", "score": "1.3997324" }, { "id": "4586668", "title": "We All Fall Down (Cormier novel)", "text": " the parents' objections. In March 2000, We All Fall Down was removed from the Carver Middle School in Leesburg, Florida, because parents of a sixth-grader who was studying the book were unhappy with the language used in the novel. The father of the student, said, “It’s not a book for school. It’s everything negative about society, like rape, vulgarity, alcohol abuse, murder and how to cover it up.” The principal of the middle school agreed, and the book was removed from the school library. The principal also held a faculty meeting to advise staff to look carefully at the ", "score": "1.3970339" }, { "id": "26180189", "title": "Robert Arthur Alexie", "text": " His first novel, Porcupines and China Dolls (published in 2002 and reissued by Theytus Books in paperback in 2009 ) examines the lives of students forced into the Canadian Indian residential school system and the ensuing intergenerational or Historical trauma for them and their families. As reviewer Jim Bartley wrote in The Globe and Mail, \"On a September day in 1962, we enter the school (now \"hostel\") with two boys, James and Jake. For the first time in their lives, they will live without family around them, captive to strange, cold adults, a militarized sense of time and no appeal for the wrongs done them.\" Bartley adds, \"[Alexie's] evocation of chronic mental anguish has a cumulative power that ", "score": "1.3955729" }, { "id": "7918045", "title": "The Coquette", "text": " \"Eliza's struggle to control her life begins with the struggle to control language, the language of society that dictates her identity and conscribes her life.\" Additionally, C. Leiren Mower makes the case that Eliza \"reworks Lockean theories of labor and ownership as a means of authorizing proprietary control over her body's commerce in the social marketplace. Instead of accepting her social and legal status as another's personal property, Eliza publicly performs her dissent as visible evidence of the legitimacy of her proprietary claims.\" In 1798, Foster published her second novel, The Boarding School, which was never reprinted and not nearly as popular as The Coquette.", "score": "1.3952568" }, { "id": "1007016", "title": "Larry Loyie", "text": " Loyie and Brissenden wrote eight children's books together that were drawn from Loyie's traditional Cree childhood and his six years in residential school. Loyie explored his residential school experience in a variety of genres: his play Ora Pro Nobis (Pray for Us) (published in 1998 with one by Vera Manuel), When the Spirits Dance (2006), and Residential Schools: With the Words and Images of Survivors (2014).", "score": "1.3952034" }, { "id": "6648121", "title": "The School Story", "text": " The School Story is a children's novel by Andrew Clements, published in 2001. It is about two twelve-year-old girls who try to get a school story published.", "score": "1.393524" }, { "id": "7918046", "title": "The Coquette", "text": "Bontatibus, Donna R. The Seduction Novel of the Early Nation: A Call for Socio-Political Reform. East Lansing: Michigan State University Press, 1999. ; Dill, Elizabeth. \"A Mob of Lusty Villagers: Operations of Domestic Desires in Hannah Webster Foster's The Coquette.\" Eighteenth-Century Fiction 15.3 (2003): 255–279. ; Finseth, Ian. \"'A Melancholy tale:' Rhetoric, Fiction, and Passion in The Coquette.\" Studies in the Novel 33.2 (2001): 125-159. ; Hamilton, Kristie. \"'An Assault on the Will:' Republican Virtue and the City in Hannah Webster Foster's The Coquette. Early American Literature 24 (1989): 135–51. ; Korobkin, Laura H. \"Can Your Volatile Daughter Ever Acquire Your Wisdom?' Luxury and False Ideas in The Coquette.\" Early American Literature 41.1 (2006): 79-107. ; Martin, Terence. \"Social Institutions in the Early American Novel.\" American Quarterly 9.1 (1957): 72–84. ; Wenska, Walter P., Jr. \"The Coquette and the American Dream of Freedom.\" Early American Literature 12 (1978): 243–55. ", "score": "1.3912692" }, { "id": "25737632", "title": "The Class of COVID-19", "text": " The Class of COVID-19: Insights from the Inside is a collection of writing about the COVID-19 pandemic by students from Cliffside Park High School, in Cliffside Park, New Jersey, published on 2 June 2020. It contains pieces by forty-six students and was edited by Cliffside Park High School English teacher Shawn Adler. The collection was brought together, according to Adler, so that \"people have this as a primary document for as long as they are learning about what we're going through in history.\" The book has attracted national press coverage in the United States from CNN, the Wall Street Journal, NBC Nightly News, People, Yahoo, Al Día, and other outlets. It has also garnered praise from a range of New Jersey politicians, including Governor Phil Murphy, U.S. Senator Cory Booker, and Representative Bill Pascrell. A second volume, with twenty-four new pieces of writing by different student authors, appeared in January 2021.", "score": "1.3912411" } ]
[ "The Coquette\n The Coquette or, The History of Eliza Wharton is an epistolary novel by Hannah Webster Foster. It was published anonymously in 1797, and did not appear under the author's real name until 1856, 16 years after Foster's death. It was one of the best-selling novels of its time and was reprinted eight times between 1824 and 1828. A fictionalized account of the much-publicized death of a socially elite Connecticut woman after giving birth to a stillborn, illegitimate child at a roadside tavern, Foster's novel highlights the social conditions that lead to the downfall of an otherwise well-educated and socially adept woman.", "School for Heroes\n School for Heroes is a children's fantasy duology written by Jackie French.", "Odyssey School\n School, Stephen K. Smuin, has been a teacher and school administrator for many years. He had been head of the middle school at the Nueva School, a private elementary and middle school in Hillsborough, California, but was ousted by the school board following allegations of abusive behavior towards a former student. He is the author of three books on writing technique, including \"More than Metaphors: Strategies for Teaching Process Writing.\". He retired in June 2010. In July 2010, Daniel Popplewell joined Odyssey as its new Head of School. He had been dean of teaching and learning at Bentley School in Lafayette, California. He was succeeded in July 2013 by Stephen P. Lane, who had been head of Santa Barbara Middle School.", "Alexander Russo (writer)\n Russo is the editor of the 2004 volume School Reform In Chicago (Harvard Education Press) and the author of Stray Dogs, Saints, and Saviors (Jossey-Bass), a nonfiction account of the effort by Steve Barr and Green Dot Public Schools to revamp Locke High School, featured in the May 2009 New Yorker article \"The Instigator\".", "The Coquette\n The Coquette received a revival of critical attention during the late twentieth century. It is often praised for its intelligent portrayal of the contrast between individualism vs. social conformity and passion vs. reason. It has also been studied for its relationship to political ideologies of the early American republic and its portrayal of the emerging middle class. Foster's tale has been read on the one hand as a \"novel for providing a subversive message about the ways in which the lives of women even of the elite are subject to narrow cultural constraints\" and, on the other hand, as an instructive novel that \"comes down on ", "The School for Good and Evil\n The School for Good and Evil is a fantasy fairytale hexalogy of books by Soman Chainani. The first novel in the series was published on May 14, 2013. The series is set in a fictional widespread location known as the Endless Woods. The original trilogy (known as The School Years) follows the adventures of best friends Sophie and Agatha at the School for Good and Evil, an enchanted institution where children are trained to become fairytale heroes or villains, respectively. The second trilogy (The Camelot Years) follows Agatha and her true love King Tedros ascending to the role of Queen and King of the legendary kingdom, Camelot, and Sophie re-forming Evil into a new image. The final book in the series was released on June 2, 2020.", "School for Love\n School for Love (Futures vedettes) is a French drama film from 1955 directed by Marc Allégret, written by Marc Allégret and starring Brigitte Bardot and Jean Marais. The screenplay was based on a novel by Vicki Baum. The film was known under the titles Joy of Living or School for Love in the U.S., Sweet Sixteen in the U.K. and Reif auf jungen Blüten in West Germany.", "Julie Doucet\n . I wish my work would be recognized by a larger crowd of people as more art than be stuck with the cartoonist label for the rest of my life. That's what's killing me about a lot of those comics guys. Dan Clowes is mostly a writer, a great artist, and has tried different things, But a lot of those guys, their drawing style never changes—the content neither—and it seems it never will. I just don't understand that, how you can spend fifty years of your artist life doing the same thing over and over again. She had a book of poetry published by L’Oie de Cravan in 2006, À l’école de l’amour. Her current artwork consists of linocuts, collage and papier-mache sculptures. In 2007, Doucet designed the cover for the Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition of Louisa May Alcott's Little Women.", "Christine Morton-Shaw\n Christine Morton-Shaw is an author of books for children and young adults (teenagers). These include picturebooks and educational and novelty titles (most notably the popular 'Stringalongs' series). She is perhaps best known for her more recent work as a Young Adult and Middle-Grade novelist. Her novels to date are The Riddles of Epsilon (which received, among other praise, the VOYA (Voice of Youth Advocates) 'perfect ten' rating in June 2006 ) and The Hunt for the Seventh. Her works are notable for their spooky atmosphere, an emphasis on mystery and the solving of clues (often in the form of puzzles) and surprising plot twists (or 'paradigm shifts')", "Bernard J. Taylor\n Completed at the beginning of 2013 in tandem with Rock n Roll Cafe, this is an updated version of Tom Brown's Schooldays, the classic 19th Century novel by Thomas Hughes (which created the blueprint for all school stories that followed, including Harry Potter). It features all the main characters from the original novel, but in this version it is set in a modern co-ed school. It was written especially for school productions.", "Godfrey Morgan\n Godfrey Morgan: A Californian Mystery (L'École des Robinsons, literally The School for Robinsons), also published as School for Crusoes, is an 1882 adventure novel by French writer Jules Verne. The novel tells of a wealthy young man, Godfrey Morgan who, with his deportment instructor, Professor T. Artelett, embark from San Francisco, California on a round-the-world ocean voyage. They are cast away on an uninhabited Pacific island where they must endure a series of adversities. Later they encounter an African slave, Carefinotu, brought to the island by cannibals. In the end, the trio manage to work together and survive on the island. The novel is a robinsonade—a play on Daniel Defoe's 1719 novel Robinson Crusoe.", "The Times Square Two\n Choquette went on to work for The National Lampoon and on editing a vast and ambitious comic book project with material from numerous internationally-known cartoonists and media figures. The book was entitled \"Someday Funnies\" and was completed and published through Abrams ComicArts in 2011. Choquette teaches screen-writing and comedy writing at McGill University and Concordia University in Montreal. Elbling was later a member of The Committee, acted on many televisions shows (including Taxi and WKRP) and films (including Phantom of the Paradise) during the 1970s and 80s, created the 1979 satirical NY Times Best Seller The 80s: A Look Back at the Tumultuous Decade 1980–1989, has written children's books as well as the international best selling novel The Food Taster. He is now creating films for Harold A. Vinegar.", "Soman Chainani\n Soman Chainani is an American author and filmmaker, best known for writing the children's book series The School for Good and Evil. Soman's first novel, The School for Good and Evil, debuted on the New York Times Bestseller List, has sold more than 3 million copies, been translated into 30 languages across 6 continents, and will soon be a film from Netflix directed by Paul Feig. His other five books in the School for Good and Evil series – A World Without Princes, The Last Ever After, Quests for Glory, A Crystal of Time and One True King – have all debuted on the New York Times Bestseller List as well. To date, these six books in the series have been on the print and extended New York Times Bestseller List for more than 35 weeks. His most recent book, Beasts and Beauty, was released on September 21, 2021, to wide acclaim, with Kirkus Reviews calling the collection \"expertly crafted... evoking the wonder, terror, and magic of the fantasy realms.\"", "We All Fall Down (Cormier novel)\n the parents' objections. In March 2000, We All Fall Down was removed from the Carver Middle School in Leesburg, Florida, because parents of a sixth-grader who was studying the book were unhappy with the language used in the novel. The father of the student, said, “It’s not a book for school. It’s everything negative about society, like rape, vulgarity, alcohol abuse, murder and how to cover it up.” The principal of the middle school agreed, and the book was removed from the school library. The principal also held a faculty meeting to advise staff to look carefully at the ", "Robert Arthur Alexie\n His first novel, Porcupines and China Dolls (published in 2002 and reissued by Theytus Books in paperback in 2009 ) examines the lives of students forced into the Canadian Indian residential school system and the ensuing intergenerational or Historical trauma for them and their families. As reviewer Jim Bartley wrote in The Globe and Mail, \"On a September day in 1962, we enter the school (now \"hostel\") with two boys, James and Jake. For the first time in their lives, they will live without family around them, captive to strange, cold adults, a militarized sense of time and no appeal for the wrongs done them.\" Bartley adds, \"[Alexie's] evocation of chronic mental anguish has a cumulative power that ", "The Coquette\n \"Eliza's struggle to control her life begins with the struggle to control language, the language of society that dictates her identity and conscribes her life.\" Additionally, C. Leiren Mower makes the case that Eliza \"reworks Lockean theories of labor and ownership as a means of authorizing proprietary control over her body's commerce in the social marketplace. Instead of accepting her social and legal status as another's personal property, Eliza publicly performs her dissent as visible evidence of the legitimacy of her proprietary claims.\" In 1798, Foster published her second novel, The Boarding School, which was never reprinted and not nearly as popular as The Coquette.", "Larry Loyie\n Loyie and Brissenden wrote eight children's books together that were drawn from Loyie's traditional Cree childhood and his six years in residential school. Loyie explored his residential school experience in a variety of genres: his play Ora Pro Nobis (Pray for Us) (published in 1998 with one by Vera Manuel), When the Spirits Dance (2006), and Residential Schools: With the Words and Images of Survivors (2014).", "The School Story\n The School Story is a children's novel by Andrew Clements, published in 2001. It is about two twelve-year-old girls who try to get a school story published.", "The Coquette\nBontatibus, Donna R. The Seduction Novel of the Early Nation: A Call for Socio-Political Reform. East Lansing: Michigan State University Press, 1999. ; Dill, Elizabeth. \"A Mob of Lusty Villagers: Operations of Domestic Desires in Hannah Webster Foster's The Coquette.\" Eighteenth-Century Fiction 15.3 (2003): 255–279. ; Finseth, Ian. \"'A Melancholy tale:' Rhetoric, Fiction, and Passion in The Coquette.\" Studies in the Novel 33.2 (2001): 125-159. ; Hamilton, Kristie. \"'An Assault on the Will:' Republican Virtue and the City in Hannah Webster Foster's The Coquette. Early American Literature 24 (1989): 135–51. ; Korobkin, Laura H. \"Can Your Volatile Daughter Ever Acquire Your Wisdom?' Luxury and False Ideas in The Coquette.\" Early American Literature 41.1 (2006): 79-107. ; Martin, Terence. \"Social Institutions in the Early American Novel.\" American Quarterly 9.1 (1957): 72–84. ; Wenska, Walter P., Jr. \"The Coquette and the American Dream of Freedom.\" Early American Literature 12 (1978): 243–55. ", "The Class of COVID-19\n The Class of COVID-19: Insights from the Inside is a collection of writing about the COVID-19 pandemic by students from Cliffside Park High School, in Cliffside Park, New Jersey, published on 2 June 2020. It contains pieces by forty-six students and was edited by Cliffside Park High School English teacher Shawn Adler. The collection was brought together, according to Adler, so that \"people have this as a primary document for as long as they are learning about what we're going through in history.\" The book has attracted national press coverage in the United States from CNN, the Wall Street Journal, NBC Nightly News, People, Yahoo, Al Día, and other outlets. It has also garnered praise from a range of New Jersey politicians, including Governor Phil Murphy, U.S. Senator Cory Booker, and Representative Bill Pascrell. A second volume, with twenty-four new pieces of writing by different student authors, appeared in January 2021." ]
In what city was Andrian Mardiansyah born?
[ "Indonesia", "Republic of Indonesia", "id", "ID", "INA", "IDN" ]
place of birth
Andrian Mardiansyah
3,332,240
69
[ { "id": "9471356", "title": "Andrian Mardiansyah", "text": "} ", "score": "2.3881483" }, { "id": "9471354", "title": "Andrian Mardiansyah", "text": " Andrian Mardiansyah (born November 14, 1978) is an Indonesian football player and manager who previously plays as midfielder for Persikota Tangerang, Persija Jakarta, Persib Bandung, Deltras Sidoarjo, PSIS Semarang, Persikabo Bogor, Persiba Balikpapan, Persidafon Dafonsoro and the Indonesia national team.", "score": "2.0184033" }, { "id": "9471355", "title": "Andrian Mardiansyah", "text": " He received his first international cap on 31 July 1999 and retired from the Indonesia national football team in 1999, appearing in 5 matches. Andrian scored the first goal for Indonesia in the 1999 Southeast Asian Games football tournament against Cambodia.", "score": "1.8085334" }, { "id": "8582948", "title": "Andjar Asmara", "text": " Andjar was born Abisin Abbas in Alahan Panjang, West Sumatra, on 26 February 1902. He gravitated toward traditional theatre at a young age after visits from the wandering Wayang Kassim and Juliana Opera stambul troupes; he pretended to act with his friends in stage plays which they had seen. After completing his formal education up to the Meer Uitgebreid Lager Onderwijs (junior high school) level – first in Malay-language schools then Dutch ones – he moved to Batavia (modern-day Jakarta). He worked as a reporter for two daily newspapers, Bintang Timoer and Bintang Hindia; he may have also worked on a farm. Around 1925, having had little success in Batavia, Andjar moved to Padang, where he was a reporter for the ", "score": "1.7403662" }, { "id": "9471357", "title": "Andrian Mardiansyah", "text": "Persija Jakarta : ; Liga Indonesia Premier Division champions : 1 (2001) ", "score": "1.7265236" }, { "id": "4233169", "title": "Erry Yulian Triblas Adesta", "text": " Erry was born in Palembang, South Sumatra, Indonesia on July 13, 1962. He is the first son, with seven siblings, from Edward Jarjis bin Sutan Malihan and Roslaini binti Anwar Hamzah. His father was a teacher at the vocational school of Sekolah Teknik Menengah Negeri 2 Palembang, and his mother was a nurse at the hospital of PT Stanvac Indonesia at Sungai Gerong, South Sumatra. He completed his high-school education at Sekolah Menengah Atas Xaverius I at Palembang by 1981. He later enrolled to Mechanical Engineering Department at the Faculty of Engineering, Sriwijaya University, before he later left the program after the first year of the enrollment itself. Erry married Tritayana binti M. Yasin on 1987 while he was pursuing his study at Huddersfield, UK. He has three sons, all of whom were born in UK: Dr. Fajar Englando Alan Adesta (born in Huddersfield in 1988), a Postgraduate Student in internal medicine at University of Indonesia; Fadhli Zil Ikram Adesta, BSc (Pharm) (Hons) (born in Birmingham in 1991), a pharmacist at Specialist Compounding Pharmacy Singapore; and Fayez Ghazi Mutasim Adesta (born in Huddersfield in 1999), a law undergraduate student at International Islamic University Malaysia.", "score": "1.7211661" }, { "id": "33104705", "title": "Ravished Armenia", "text": " The author Arshaluys (Aurora) Mardiganian was born in the city of Çemişgezek, near Harput (Kharpert), (present-day Turkish province of Elâzığ), Ottoman Empire. She was the daughter of a wealthy Armenian financier in the city. The story starts in 1915 when Arshaluys was 14 years old. She personally witnessed the murder of her father, mother, brothers and sisters. She was taken to the harem of a number of Turkish pashas, but had remained attached to her Christian Armenian faith despite being tortured repeatedly at the hands of her captors. She found refuge with Frederick W. MacCallum, a Canadian doctor and missionary stationed with the American Board of Commissioners ", "score": "1.7108977" }, { "id": "28166311", "title": "Andrian Raturandang", "text": " Andrian Raturandang (born 29 July 1976) is an Indonesian former professional tennis player. He was a gold medalist for Indonesia at the 1997 Southeast Asian Games. Raturandang reached a career high singles ranking of 484 while competing on the professional tour, mostly in satellite and Futures events. He made one ATP Tour singles main draw, as a wildcard at the 1996 Indonesia Open, where he was beaten in the first round by Chris Wilkinson. He also featured twice in the doubles main draw of the Indonesia Open. A five-time Southeast Asian Games medalist, Raturandang represented Indonesia in 10 Davis Cup ties, between 1996 and 1998 and then in 2001. From his 19 singles rubbers he won only two of them, against Tsai Chia-yen of Chinese Taipei and Sean Karam of Lebanon.", "score": "1.6883429" }, { "id": "8582946", "title": "Andjar Asmara", "text": " Abisin Abbas (26 February 1902 – 20 October 1961), better known by his pseudonym Andjar Asmara, was a dramatist and filmmaker active in the cinema of the Dutch East Indies. Born in Alahan Panjang, West Sumatra, he first worked as a reporter in Batavia (modern-day Jakarta). He became a writer for the Padangsche Opera in Padang, where he developed a new, dialogue-centric style, which later spread throughout the region. After returning to Batavia in 1929, he spent over a year as a theatre and film critic. In 1930 he joined the Dardanella touring troupe as a writer. He went to India in an unsuccessful bid to film his stage play Dr Samsi. After leaving Dardanella in 1936, Andjar established his own troupe. He also worked ", "score": "1.6822771" }, { "id": "27077739", "title": "Rober Haddeciyan", "text": " Rober Haddeciyan was born in 1926 in the district of Bakırköy in Istanbul, Turkey, to Avedis Haddeciyan and Siranush. He graduated from the Pangaltı Armenian Mkhitarist High School in 1944 and is an Istanbul University Faculty of Letters Department of Philosophy graduate. Haddeciyan, who was already working for Marmara as a journalist, became the editor-in-chief of the newspaper in 1967. His columns in Nor Marmara are translated into Turkish by his daughter-in-law Karolin Haddeler and published in the weekly Turkish supplement. He has published 50 to 60 books so far. One of his most famous books is his novel Arasdagh (Առաստաղ, Ceiling), which has also been published in Turkish under the title Tavan.", "score": "1.6764252" }, { "id": "29275148", "title": "Rupen Zartarian", "text": " Zartarian was born in 1874 in the city of Diyarbekir, but moved to Harput (or Kharpert) (Armenian: Խարբերդ) when he was two. He received his education from the educational institutions of that city. Zartarian became a student of Tlgadintsi (Hovhannes Harutiunian, 1910–1912), who was a leading figure in rural Armenian literature. Tlgandintsi was also killed by Ottoman authorities during the Armenian Genocide. Zartarian was greatly influenced by his mentor, and his writing career stemmed from the encouragement he obtained. At the age of 18, he started teaching, and for the following decade, he continued in the field of education. At first, he taught at Tlgandinsti's institution, he then spent three years in French religious institutes. In 1903, Zartarian was arrested by the Ottoman government and subsequently forced to leave ", "score": "1.6690269" }, { "id": "25411251", "title": "Nahapet Rusinian", "text": " Nahabed Rusinian was born in the village of Efkere near Kayseri in 1819 to Armenian parents. His family moved to Constantinople in 1828. He completed his secondary education in Constantinople and in 1840, he was awarded a scholarship to continue his studies in medicine in Paris. While in Paris, Rusinian audited courses on literature and philosophy at the Sorbonne, and was influenced by the ideas of Lamartine, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Montesquieu, Victor Hugo, and other political philosophers. It was at the Sorbonne where Rusinian was confronted, for the very first time, with the principle of popular vote and other constitutionalist ideas. Rusinian returned to Constantinople in 1851 and upon recommendation of Servitchen, he became the family physician of Fuad Pasha. He died in 1879 in Istanbul.", "score": "1.6667051" }, { "id": "8275707", "title": "Wiranto", "text": " Dariyanto, who was at the location. Wiranto's men were also injured in the attack. The suspect is Syahril Alamsyah alias Abu Rara, born in Medan, 24 August 1968, and a woman who is suspected to be with the perpetrator, on behalf of Fitri Andriana, born in Brebes, May 5, 1998, was arrested. The head of the Public Information Bureau of the National Police Headquarters Brigadier General Dedi Prasetyo said the two perpetrators of the attack on Wiranto were suspected of being exposed to radicalism Islamic State of Iraq and Syria and after the incident, he had to be rushed to the nearest hospital for first aid and referred to Gatot Soebroto Army Hospital, Jakarta.", "score": "1.6651613" }, { "id": "3509610", "title": "Ananda Omesh", "text": " Rusdiana was born on August 21, 1986, in Sukabumi, West Java. He is an alumnus of the Faculty of Communication of Padjadjaran University. He married actress and news anchor Dian Ayu Lestari on July 8, 2012. They have one daughter and one son.", "score": "1.663688" }, { "id": "6862604", "title": "Vartan Matiossian", "text": " Matiossian was born in Montevideo, Uruguay on March 6, 1964. He moved to Buenos Aires in 1973. In 1991 he graduated from the School of Economic Sciences of the University of Buenos Aires. From 1992 to 2000, he was associate professor of Armenian History and Religion at the School of Eastern Studies, Universidad del Salvador (Buenos Aires). He has lived in New Jersey, USA since 2000. In 2006 he earned his Ph.D. in history from the National Academy of Sciences of Armenia. He was director of the Armenian National Education Committee (New York) from 2010-2019. His fields of interest cover Armenian history and literature, both ancient and modern. Besides his scholarly work, he is an active contributor to the periodical press in Armenian, English, and Spanish.", "score": "1.6629784" }, { "id": "27910559", "title": "Eka Budianta", "text": " Christophorus Apolinaris Eka Budianta Martoredjo, also known as C. A. Eka Budianta, more commonly known as Eka Budianta (born 1956 in Ngimbang, East Java) is an Indonesian poet. He was born into a Catholic family and was the second child of nine. His grandparents were farmers. His parents were public elementary school teachers. His father later worked at the local office for the Ministry Education and his mother became a school principal. After graduating from St. Albertus high school in Malang (Dempo), he attended the Lembaga Pendidikan Kesenian Jakarta, now known as Institut Kesenian Jakarta but did not complete his studies. From 1975 to 1979, Eka Budianta studied Japanese literature at the Department of East Asian Studies Literature then changed to the Department of History, Faculty of Letters, University of Indonesia. He then studied journalism at Los Angeles Trade-Technical College in the United States from 1980–81. After working ", "score": "1.6533918" }, { "id": "8597602", "title": "Isaac Larian", "text": " Born to a Jewish family in Kashan, Iran, Larians family relocated to Tehran at the age of four where they lived in the Tehran slum known as Narmak. His father had a small textile shop where Larian began working at the age of 9. In search of opportunity, Larian arrived to the United States alone in 1971 at the age of 17, without a place to stay, unable to speak English, and with $750 to his name. He managed to find work as a dishwasher making $1.65 an hour, eventually being promoted to bus-boy and then waiter within the year. After ", "score": "1.6529055" }, { "id": "14022251", "title": "Aram Andonian", "text": " Andonian was born in Constantinople. There he edited the Armenian journals Luys (Light) and Dzaghik (Flower) and the newspaper Surhandak (Herald). Andonian then went on to serve in the department of military censorship of the Ottoman Empire. He was arrested by order of interior minister Talat Pasha of the Ottoman Empire on the eve of April 24, 1915, and joined the large number of Armenian notables who were deported from the Ottoman capital. Andonian was deported to Chankiri, then, halfway there, returned to Ankara and was deported again to the camps in the Ra's al-'Ayn and Meskene. However, Andonian survived in Aleppo in the underground. When British forces occupied Aleppo, a lower-level Turkish official, Naim Bey collaborated with Aram Andonian in publishing his memoirs, an account of the deportation of the Armenians. ", "score": "1.6517494" }, { "id": "3656519", "title": "Erzaldi Rosman Djohan", "text": " Djohan was born on 31 October 1969 in Pangkal Pinang (then part of South Sumatra province) from Rosman Djohan and Melati. He completed his high school education in Pangkal Pinang, before moving to Jakarta, earning a diploma in 1994 from Tarumanegara University. Later, he also obtained a bachelors and masters from an economics institute.", "score": "1.6512698" }, { "id": "7290895", "title": "Vincent Rivaldi Kosasih", "text": " Born in Madiun, Kosasih grew up in Surabaya. He moved to Jakarta while he attended high school. Afterwards, he continued his studies abroad at the Zhejiang University of Science and Technology located in Hangzhou, Zhejiang, China. He finished his studies there in 2017.", "score": "1.6505536" } ]
[ "Andrian Mardiansyah\n} ", "Andrian Mardiansyah\n Andrian Mardiansyah (born November 14, 1978) is an Indonesian football player and manager who previously plays as midfielder for Persikota Tangerang, Persija Jakarta, Persib Bandung, Deltras Sidoarjo, PSIS Semarang, Persikabo Bogor, Persiba Balikpapan, Persidafon Dafonsoro and the Indonesia national team.", "Andrian Mardiansyah\n He received his first international cap on 31 July 1999 and retired from the Indonesia national football team in 1999, appearing in 5 matches. Andrian scored the first goal for Indonesia in the 1999 Southeast Asian Games football tournament against Cambodia.", "Andjar Asmara\n Andjar was born Abisin Abbas in Alahan Panjang, West Sumatra, on 26 February 1902. He gravitated toward traditional theatre at a young age after visits from the wandering Wayang Kassim and Juliana Opera stambul troupes; he pretended to act with his friends in stage plays which they had seen. After completing his formal education up to the Meer Uitgebreid Lager Onderwijs (junior high school) level – first in Malay-language schools then Dutch ones – he moved to Batavia (modern-day Jakarta). He worked as a reporter for two daily newspapers, Bintang Timoer and Bintang Hindia; he may have also worked on a farm. Around 1925, having had little success in Batavia, Andjar moved to Padang, where he was a reporter for the ", "Andrian Mardiansyah\nPersija Jakarta : ; Liga Indonesia Premier Division champions : 1 (2001) ", "Erry Yulian Triblas Adesta\n Erry was born in Palembang, South Sumatra, Indonesia on July 13, 1962. He is the first son, with seven siblings, from Edward Jarjis bin Sutan Malihan and Roslaini binti Anwar Hamzah. His father was a teacher at the vocational school of Sekolah Teknik Menengah Negeri 2 Palembang, and his mother was a nurse at the hospital of PT Stanvac Indonesia at Sungai Gerong, South Sumatra. He completed his high-school education at Sekolah Menengah Atas Xaverius I at Palembang by 1981. He later enrolled to Mechanical Engineering Department at the Faculty of Engineering, Sriwijaya University, before he later left the program after the first year of the enrollment itself. Erry married Tritayana binti M. Yasin on 1987 while he was pursuing his study at Huddersfield, UK. He has three sons, all of whom were born in UK: Dr. Fajar Englando Alan Adesta (born in Huddersfield in 1988), a Postgraduate Student in internal medicine at University of Indonesia; Fadhli Zil Ikram Adesta, BSc (Pharm) (Hons) (born in Birmingham in 1991), a pharmacist at Specialist Compounding Pharmacy Singapore; and Fayez Ghazi Mutasim Adesta (born in Huddersfield in 1999), a law undergraduate student at International Islamic University Malaysia.", "Ravished Armenia\n The author Arshaluys (Aurora) Mardiganian was born in the city of Çemişgezek, near Harput (Kharpert), (present-day Turkish province of Elâzığ), Ottoman Empire. She was the daughter of a wealthy Armenian financier in the city. The story starts in 1915 when Arshaluys was 14 years old. She personally witnessed the murder of her father, mother, brothers and sisters. She was taken to the harem of a number of Turkish pashas, but had remained attached to her Christian Armenian faith despite being tortured repeatedly at the hands of her captors. She found refuge with Frederick W. MacCallum, a Canadian doctor and missionary stationed with the American Board of Commissioners ", "Andrian Raturandang\n Andrian Raturandang (born 29 July 1976) is an Indonesian former professional tennis player. He was a gold medalist for Indonesia at the 1997 Southeast Asian Games. Raturandang reached a career high singles ranking of 484 while competing on the professional tour, mostly in satellite and Futures events. He made one ATP Tour singles main draw, as a wildcard at the 1996 Indonesia Open, where he was beaten in the first round by Chris Wilkinson. He also featured twice in the doubles main draw of the Indonesia Open. A five-time Southeast Asian Games medalist, Raturandang represented Indonesia in 10 Davis Cup ties, between 1996 and 1998 and then in 2001. From his 19 singles rubbers he won only two of them, against Tsai Chia-yen of Chinese Taipei and Sean Karam of Lebanon.", "Andjar Asmara\n Abisin Abbas (26 February 1902 – 20 October 1961), better known by his pseudonym Andjar Asmara, was a dramatist and filmmaker active in the cinema of the Dutch East Indies. Born in Alahan Panjang, West Sumatra, he first worked as a reporter in Batavia (modern-day Jakarta). He became a writer for the Padangsche Opera in Padang, where he developed a new, dialogue-centric style, which later spread throughout the region. After returning to Batavia in 1929, he spent over a year as a theatre and film critic. In 1930 he joined the Dardanella touring troupe as a writer. He went to India in an unsuccessful bid to film his stage play Dr Samsi. After leaving Dardanella in 1936, Andjar established his own troupe. He also worked ", "Rober Haddeciyan\n Rober Haddeciyan was born in 1926 in the district of Bakırköy in Istanbul, Turkey, to Avedis Haddeciyan and Siranush. He graduated from the Pangaltı Armenian Mkhitarist High School in 1944 and is an Istanbul University Faculty of Letters Department of Philosophy graduate. Haddeciyan, who was already working for Marmara as a journalist, became the editor-in-chief of the newspaper in 1967. His columns in Nor Marmara are translated into Turkish by his daughter-in-law Karolin Haddeler and published in the weekly Turkish supplement. He has published 50 to 60 books so far. One of his most famous books is his novel Arasdagh (Առաստաղ, Ceiling), which has also been published in Turkish under the title Tavan.", "Rupen Zartarian\n Zartarian was born in 1874 in the city of Diyarbekir, but moved to Harput (or Kharpert) (Armenian: Խարբերդ) when he was two. He received his education from the educational institutions of that city. Zartarian became a student of Tlgadintsi (Hovhannes Harutiunian, 1910–1912), who was a leading figure in rural Armenian literature. Tlgandintsi was also killed by Ottoman authorities during the Armenian Genocide. Zartarian was greatly influenced by his mentor, and his writing career stemmed from the encouragement he obtained. At the age of 18, he started teaching, and for the following decade, he continued in the field of education. At first, he taught at Tlgandinsti's institution, he then spent three years in French religious institutes. In 1903, Zartarian was arrested by the Ottoman government and subsequently forced to leave ", "Nahapet Rusinian\n Nahabed Rusinian was born in the village of Efkere near Kayseri in 1819 to Armenian parents. His family moved to Constantinople in 1828. He completed his secondary education in Constantinople and in 1840, he was awarded a scholarship to continue his studies in medicine in Paris. While in Paris, Rusinian audited courses on literature and philosophy at the Sorbonne, and was influenced by the ideas of Lamartine, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Montesquieu, Victor Hugo, and other political philosophers. It was at the Sorbonne where Rusinian was confronted, for the very first time, with the principle of popular vote and other constitutionalist ideas. Rusinian returned to Constantinople in 1851 and upon recommendation of Servitchen, he became the family physician of Fuad Pasha. He died in 1879 in Istanbul.", "Wiranto\n Dariyanto, who was at the location. Wiranto's men were also injured in the attack. The suspect is Syahril Alamsyah alias Abu Rara, born in Medan, 24 August 1968, and a woman who is suspected to be with the perpetrator, on behalf of Fitri Andriana, born in Brebes, May 5, 1998, was arrested. The head of the Public Information Bureau of the National Police Headquarters Brigadier General Dedi Prasetyo said the two perpetrators of the attack on Wiranto were suspected of being exposed to radicalism Islamic State of Iraq and Syria and after the incident, he had to be rushed to the nearest hospital for first aid and referred to Gatot Soebroto Army Hospital, Jakarta.", "Ananda Omesh\n Rusdiana was born on August 21, 1986, in Sukabumi, West Java. He is an alumnus of the Faculty of Communication of Padjadjaran University. He married actress and news anchor Dian Ayu Lestari on July 8, 2012. They have one daughter and one son.", "Vartan Matiossian\n Matiossian was born in Montevideo, Uruguay on March 6, 1964. He moved to Buenos Aires in 1973. In 1991 he graduated from the School of Economic Sciences of the University of Buenos Aires. From 1992 to 2000, he was associate professor of Armenian History and Religion at the School of Eastern Studies, Universidad del Salvador (Buenos Aires). He has lived in New Jersey, USA since 2000. In 2006 he earned his Ph.D. in history from the National Academy of Sciences of Armenia. He was director of the Armenian National Education Committee (New York) from 2010-2019. His fields of interest cover Armenian history and literature, both ancient and modern. Besides his scholarly work, he is an active contributor to the periodical press in Armenian, English, and Spanish.", "Eka Budianta\n Christophorus Apolinaris Eka Budianta Martoredjo, also known as C. A. Eka Budianta, more commonly known as Eka Budianta (born 1956 in Ngimbang, East Java) is an Indonesian poet. He was born into a Catholic family and was the second child of nine. His grandparents were farmers. His parents were public elementary school teachers. His father later worked at the local office for the Ministry Education and his mother became a school principal. After graduating from St. Albertus high school in Malang (Dempo), he attended the Lembaga Pendidikan Kesenian Jakarta, now known as Institut Kesenian Jakarta but did not complete his studies. From 1975 to 1979, Eka Budianta studied Japanese literature at the Department of East Asian Studies Literature then changed to the Department of History, Faculty of Letters, University of Indonesia. He then studied journalism at Los Angeles Trade-Technical College in the United States from 1980–81. After working ", "Isaac Larian\n Born to a Jewish family in Kashan, Iran, Larians family relocated to Tehran at the age of four where they lived in the Tehran slum known as Narmak. His father had a small textile shop where Larian began working at the age of 9. In search of opportunity, Larian arrived to the United States alone in 1971 at the age of 17, without a place to stay, unable to speak English, and with $750 to his name. He managed to find work as a dishwasher making $1.65 an hour, eventually being promoted to bus-boy and then waiter within the year. After ", "Aram Andonian\n Andonian was born in Constantinople. There he edited the Armenian journals Luys (Light) and Dzaghik (Flower) and the newspaper Surhandak (Herald). Andonian then went on to serve in the department of military censorship of the Ottoman Empire. He was arrested by order of interior minister Talat Pasha of the Ottoman Empire on the eve of April 24, 1915, and joined the large number of Armenian notables who were deported from the Ottoman capital. Andonian was deported to Chankiri, then, halfway there, returned to Ankara and was deported again to the camps in the Ra's al-'Ayn and Meskene. However, Andonian survived in Aleppo in the underground. When British forces occupied Aleppo, a lower-level Turkish official, Naim Bey collaborated with Aram Andonian in publishing his memoirs, an account of the deportation of the Armenians. ", "Erzaldi Rosman Djohan\n Djohan was born on 31 October 1969 in Pangkal Pinang (then part of South Sumatra province) from Rosman Djohan and Melati. He completed his high school education in Pangkal Pinang, before moving to Jakarta, earning a diploma in 1994 from Tarumanegara University. Later, he also obtained a bachelors and masters from an economics institute.", "Vincent Rivaldi Kosasih\n Born in Madiun, Kosasih grew up in Surabaya. He moved to Jakarta while he attended high school. Afterwards, he continued his studies abroad at the Zhejiang University of Science and Technology located in Hangzhou, Zhejiang, China. He finished his studies there in 2017." ]
Who was the director of Det var paa Rundetaarn?
[ "Poul Bang" ]
director
Det var paa Rundetaarn
3,904,602
50
[ { "id": "28457202", "title": "Det var paa Rundetaarn", "text": " Det var paa Rundetaarn is a 1955 Danish comedy film directed by Poul Bang and starring Dirch Passer.", "score": "2.0095272" }, { "id": "10187647", "title": "Gaute Storaas", "text": " Mal (director Hilde Rognskog) 1993 ; Nils Klipper seg (director Bjørn Rørvik) 1996 ; Hammerhaien (director Eva Dahr, part of the movie Pust på meg) Norsk Film 1997 ; Millers bod (director Bjørn Rørvik) 2000 ; Himmelstormeren (director Sara Johnsen) 2000 ; Hormoner og andre demoner (director Sara Johnsen) 2001 ; Hotellrommet (director Torstein Bieler Østtvedt) Filmkameratene 2002 ; Elevkonsert (director Jan Otto Ertesvåg) 2008 Composer of Program Profiles for TV ; Musikkprofil TV2 Music for all the TV2's own vignettes. 1992-2004 (the film vignettes and Document 2 are still on the air) ; Brennpunkt (Vignette musikk) magazine program, NRK 1995 ; Sentrum (Vignette ", "score": "1.7443337" }, { "id": "25030135", "title": "Kjell-Åke Andersson", "text": "1980 - Vi hade i alla fall tur med vädret (screenwriter and cinematographer) ; 1988 - Friends ; 1992 - Night of the Orangutan ; 1996 - Juloratoriet (director and screenwriter) ; 2001 - Familjehemligheter (director and screenwriter) ; 2002 - Stackars Tom (TV) (director) ; 2003 - Mamma pappa barn (director) ; 2005 - Wallander – Innan frosten (director) ; 2008 - Vi hade i alla fall tur med vädret – igen ", "score": "1.6436213" }, { "id": "466300", "title": "Varg Veum", "text": " får (Black Sheep) was directed by the television director Stephan Apelgren, best known for directing many of the Swedish detective Kurt Wallander crime films. Apelgren continued directing duties on the next film in the series, Dødens drabanter (Consorts of Death). The tenth film, I mørket er alle ulver grå (At Night All Wolves Are Grey), saw the return of director Alexander Eik. The eleventh film, De døde har det godt (The Dead Have It Easy), is the only one not directly based on a Varg Veum novel but rather combined elements from several short stories from the compilation of the same title. The last film, Kalde hjerter (Cold Hearts), was co-written and directed by lead actor Seim.", "score": "1.6294754" }, { "id": "2398751", "title": "Oslo Kino", "text": " The early directors were Jens Christian Gundersen (1926-1933) and Kristoffer Aamot (1934-1940). During the German occupation of Norway the company had three Nazi collaborators as directors: Gustav Berg-Jæger (1940-1942), Einar Schibbye (1942-1944) and Birger Ilseng (1944-1945). Kristoffer Aamot then recovered his job, and sat until 1955. Theodor Rosenquist followed (1955-1958), then Arnljot Engh (1958-1975), Eivind Hjelmtveit (1975-1993), Ingeborg Moræus Hanssen (1993-2005), Cecilie Trøan (acting, 2005-2006) and Geir Bergkastet (2006-present). Pre-war chairs of the board of directors were Arthur Skjeldrup (1926-1928), Kristoffer Aamot (1929-1931), Eyvind Getz (1932-1934) and Rachel Grepp (1935-1940). The chairpersons during the German occupation of Norway are not known. After the war, Rolf Hofmo sat from 1946 to 1955, then Rolf Stranger (1956-1967), Albert Nordengen (1968-1971), Adele Lerche (1972-1975), Turid Dankertsen (1976-1979), Albert Nordengen again (1980-1983), Bjørn Bjørnseth (1984-1987), Jon Lyng (1988-1991), Christian Hambro (1992), Theo Koritzinsky (1993-1995), Jon Lyng again (1996-2003) and Heidi Larssen (2003-present). Several directors and chairs were also politicians for the Conservative Party, the party which initially opposed a municipal cinema company.", "score": "1.6230623" }, { "id": "6661359", "title": "Eva Isaksen", "text": " Eva Isaksen (born 22 May 1956) is a Norwegian film director. She directed her first feature film Burning Flowers (Brennende blomster 1985) with Eva Dahr, and has worked as an assistant on a number of films, including Sweetwater (1988) by Lasse Glomm, Wayfarers (Landstrykere 1989) by Ola Solum, and The Dive (Dykket 1989) by Tristan de Vere Cole. In 1990 she directed Death at Oslo Central (Døden på Oslo S), about the two boys Pelle and Proffen, based on the novels for young people by Ingvar Ambjørnsen, a Norwegian author living in Hamburg. Two years later she presented her third feature film Homo Falsus (Det perfekte mord 1992).", "score": "1.6216474" }, { "id": "6369388", "title": "Det Norske Teatret", "text": " Actor and singer Rasmus Rasmussen was the theatre's first director, from 1912 to 1915. Edvard Drabløs was one of the founders, and served as a director from 1915 to 1916, and later also from 1950 to 1951. Amund Rydland, who had been with the theatre from the start, was the director from 1916 to 1922 (shared with Anton Heiberg and Sigurd Eldegard in periods). After him Ingjald Haaland served as theatre director for eleven years, from 1922 to 1933. Hans Jacob Nilsen was theatre director from 1933 to 1934, and from 1946 to 1950. The writer Oskar Braaten had earlier worked as a consultant for the theatre, and served as its director from 1934 to 1936. The actor Knut Hergel was director from ", "score": "1.6104279" }, { "id": "26470679", "title": "Hans Jacob Nilsen", "text": " First trained as a mechanical engineer, Nilsen started his theatrical career as an actor. He worked as a stage actor in Bergen, Trondheim and Oslo. He was appointed theatre director at Det Norske Teatret from 1933 to 1934, and was theatre director at Den Nationale Scene from 1934 to 1939. His film debut was in Syndere i sommersol from 1934, and he also played in To levende og en død from 1937. In 1935, Nilsen had directed the premier of the play of Vår ære og vår makt (\"Our Honor and Our Power\") by Marxist writer Nordahl Grieg. The performance created considerable interest and controversy due to its socially critical content. It proved to be a financial success partly because of Nilsen's advanced directing and set design. During the Occupation of Norway by Nazi Germany, Nilsson had to flee to Sweden. While in Sweden, he was a co-founder of Fri norsk scene. From 1946 to 1950 he was again appointed theatre director at Det Norske Teatret. He directed the film Dei svarte hestane from 1951, based on Tarjei Vesaas' novel with the same title. From 1952 he was theatre director of Folketeatret.", "score": "1.6061643" }, { "id": "13952201", "title": "List of Danes", "text": "Bille August (1948–), director ; Erik Balling (1924–2005), director ; Susanne Bier (1960–), director, writer ; August Blom (1869–1947), director, producer ; Ole Bornedal, director ; Carl Theodor Dreyer (1889–1968), film director (The Passion of Joan of Arc, Ordet) ; Peter Elfelt (1866–1931), photographer, silent film director ; Per Fly ; Bodil Ipsen (1889–1964), director, actress ; Anders Thomas Jensen ; Lau Lauritzen Jr. (1910–1977), director, actor, producer ; Jørgen Leth, filmmaker and poet ; Nils Malmros, filmmaker ; Nicolas Winding Refn, director ; Mikael Salomon, director, writer ; Lone Scherfig (1959–), director ; Lars von Trier (1956–), director ; Thomas Vinterberg (1969–), director ", "score": "1.6005168" }, { "id": "16475197", "title": "Arts Council Norway", "text": " Halvdan Skard was the director from 1983 to 1992, but was then granted an absence of leave to become chairman of the Norwegian Association of Local and Regional Authorities. On 18 December 1992 it was announced that Lidvin Osland would serve as acting director until 1 July 1996. Osland stepped down as planned, but his successor was not appointed immediately, as the council rejected all applicants and asked for other candidates. On 20 September 1996 it was announced that Halvard Kausland had been appointed as acting director from 1 November 1996 to 31 March 2000. However, Kausland withdrew three days before actually assuming the post. The deputy director briefly advanced to become acting director during this vacancy. On 20 December Ole Jacob Bull was appointed. In early 2004 Skard finally quit as director. Bull applied to become the new director, and got the position on a permanent basis in July 2004. Since October 2010, director of Arts Council Norway was Anne Aasheim, previously editor-in-chief of Dagbladet,. After her death in 2016, Kristin Danielsen was appointed as director.", "score": "1.5935652" }, { "id": "15496363", "title": "Per Inge Torkelsen", "text": "Zapp på ein måde ; Pengane eller livet In 2006, he was the master of ceremonies for the theatre festival in Sandnes where there were 13 different theatres. From the fall of 2006 until the spring of 2008 he was a director for Teaterverkstedet Ganddal in cooperation with Rogaland amateur theatre. As a director for the theater company Teaterverkstedet Ganddal, he directed two pieces: These two performances were a huge success for both Torkelsen and Teaterverkstedet Ganddal.", "score": "1.587389" }, { "id": "9667236", "title": "Björn Runge", "text": "Festen, co-directed Lena Koppel 1984 ; Skymningsjägare 1985 ; Steward Gustafssons julafton 1985 ; Brasiliens röda kaffebär 1986 ; Intill den nya världens kust 1987 ; Maskinen 1988 ; Mördaren 1989 ; Vinden 1989 ; Vart skall jag fly för ditt ansikte, co-director Jimmy Karlsson 1989 ; Morgonen 1990 ; Greger Olsson köper en bil 1990 ; Ögonblickets barn 1991 ; En dag på stranden 1994 ; Sverige in Memorian, co-director Lena Dahlberg 1994 ; Harry & Sonja 1996 ; Vulkanmannen 1997 ; Raymond 1999 ; Anderssons älskarinna (TV series) 2001 ; Om jag vänder mig om (Daybreak) 2003 ; Mun mot mun 2005 ; Happy End 2011 ; The Wife 2017 ", "score": "1.5808027" }, { "id": "31201066", "title": "Per Blom (director)", "text": " Per Blom (5 May 1946 – 2013 ) was a Norwegian film director. He was born in Søndre Land. Among his films are Anton from 1973, and Mors hus from 1974, based on a novel by Knut Faldbakken. Further Kvinner from 1979, Sølvmunn from 1981, and The Ice Palace from 1987, based upon a novel by Tarjei Vesaas.", "score": "1.5788207" }, { "id": "27319299", "title": "Øystein Runde", "text": " For Sleggja, co-director Lars-Petter Iversen and Runde created a live-action trailer. Sleggja was praised for its intense and touching story. In 2015, Øystein Runde and Ida Neverdahl published a travelogue comic, MOSCOW, in English. Also the book FUTEN, about a mythological tax collector, was finally published after 8 years of work by artist Knut André Solberg. Futen was well received. Together with co-director and producer Torstein Jacobsen and co-director Johanna Raita, Runde released a horror comedy, Last Christmas.", "score": "1.5770252" }, { "id": "15844171", "title": "Norwegian Maritime Authority", "text": " Rune Teisland left the director post in 2008. In August the same year, Olav Akselsen, a parliament member at the time, was appointed new Director General. Akselsen did not take up the post until January 2010, and in the meantime Sigurd Gude served as acting director.", "score": "1.5754769" }, { "id": "6566500", "title": "Director-General of the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation", "text": "Olav Midttun (1934–1940 and 1945–1947), he held the title of riksprogramsjef, \"national chief of programmes\" ; Thorstein Diesen, Jr. (1947–1948) (acting riksprogramsjef) ; Egil Sundt (1939–1940 and 1945–1946), he held the title of administerende direktør ; Knut Tvedt (acting) (1946–1948), he held the title of administerende direktør ; Kaare Fostervoll (1948–1962) ; Hans Jacob Ustvedt (1962–1972) ; Torolf Elster (1972–1981) ; Bjartmar Gjerde (1981–1989) ; Olav Ilssen (acting) (1989) ; Einar Førde (1989–2001) ; John G. Bernander (2001–2007) ; Hans Tore Bjerkaas (2007–2013) ; Thor Gjermund Eriksen (2013–) The Director-General is chief executive and editor-in-chief of the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation (NRK). The position is appointed by the NRK board, which in turn is appointed by the government. The title of the Director-General in Norwegian is (since 1948) kringkastingssjef, which literally means \"chief of broadcasting\".", "score": "1.5753989" }, { "id": "26722717", "title": "Einar Sissener", "text": " In 1934 and 1935 he produced the two films Syndere i sommersol and Du har lovet mig en kone!. Sissener chaired the Norwegian Actors' Equity Association from 1928 to 1932. He was theatre director for Søilen Teater in 1932. From 1933 to 1937 he was theatre director for Det Nye Teater. From 1937 to 1946 he worked for the revue theatre Chat Noir, both as an actor, stage producer and songwriter. In 1947 he returned to the National Theatre. His last appearance was in Friedrich Dürrenmatt's comedy Meteor in 1967. He played a total of 127 roles at the National Theatre. Sissener was decorated Knight, First Class of the Royal Norwegian Order of St. Olav in 1960, and was a knight of the Danish Order of the Dannebrog.", "score": "1.5751528" }, { "id": "30915531", "title": "Måns Herngren", "text": "1990: S*M*A*S*H (Director) ; 1995: One in a Million (En på miljonen) (Director) ; 1997: Adam & Eva (Director) ; 1998: Snow (Director) ; 2000: Det blir aldrig som man tänkt sig (Things Never End Up The Way You've Planned) (Director) ; 2001: En fot i graven (TV mini-series director) ; 2002: Klassfesten (The Class Reunion) (Director) ; 2006: Varannan vecka (Every Other Week) (Actor and director) ; 2008: Allt flyter (The Swimsuit Issue) (Director) ; 2016: The 101-Year-Old Man Who Skipped Out on the Bill and Disappeared (Co-director) ", "score": "1.5716672" }, { "id": "9702229", "title": "Lars Westman", "text": "1966: Habla Fidel (director) ; 1968: Sanningen om Båstad (director) ; 1970: Kamrater, motståndaren är välorganiserad (director, cinematographer & editor) ; 1994: Maria och kärleken (cinematographer) ; 2000: Gå på vatten (director & cinematographer) ", "score": "1.5660843" }, { "id": "6392863", "title": "Det Nye Teater", "text": " The company A/S Det Nye Teater was founded in 1918, by Johan Bojer and Peter Egge. Among the largest financial supporters were ship owner Ivar An Christensen, and also the Norwegian State bought a significant number of shares. The theatre building was designed by the architects Blakstad and Dunker. The theatre's first artistic director was Ingolf Schanche, from 1928 to 1931. The theatre opened on 26 to 28 February 1929, with Knut Hamsun's trilogy, Ved rigets port, Livets spil and Aftenrøde, followed by Peter Egge's play Kjærlighet og venskap. From 1931 to 1932 Thomas Thomassen managed the theatre, and from 1932 to 1933 Gyda Christensen. Einar Sissener was theatre director from 1933 to 1934, and Hjalmar Friis and Gyda ", "score": "1.5635738" } ]
[ "Det var paa Rundetaarn\n Det var paa Rundetaarn is a 1955 Danish comedy film directed by Poul Bang and starring Dirch Passer.", "Gaute Storaas\n Mal (director Hilde Rognskog) 1993 ; Nils Klipper seg (director Bjørn Rørvik) 1996 ; Hammerhaien (director Eva Dahr, part of the movie Pust på meg) Norsk Film 1997 ; Millers bod (director Bjørn Rørvik) 2000 ; Himmelstormeren (director Sara Johnsen) 2000 ; Hormoner og andre demoner (director Sara Johnsen) 2001 ; Hotellrommet (director Torstein Bieler Østtvedt) Filmkameratene 2002 ; Elevkonsert (director Jan Otto Ertesvåg) 2008 Composer of Program Profiles for TV ; Musikkprofil TV2 Music for all the TV2's own vignettes. 1992-2004 (the film vignettes and Document 2 are still on the air) ; Brennpunkt (Vignette musikk) magazine program, NRK 1995 ; Sentrum (Vignette ", "Kjell-Åke Andersson\n1980 - Vi hade i alla fall tur med vädret (screenwriter and cinematographer) ; 1988 - Friends ; 1992 - Night of the Orangutan ; 1996 - Juloratoriet (director and screenwriter) ; 2001 - Familjehemligheter (director and screenwriter) ; 2002 - Stackars Tom (TV) (director) ; 2003 - Mamma pappa barn (director) ; 2005 - Wallander – Innan frosten (director) ; 2008 - Vi hade i alla fall tur med vädret – igen ", "Varg Veum\n får (Black Sheep) was directed by the television director Stephan Apelgren, best known for directing many of the Swedish detective Kurt Wallander crime films. Apelgren continued directing duties on the next film in the series, Dødens drabanter (Consorts of Death). The tenth film, I mørket er alle ulver grå (At Night All Wolves Are Grey), saw the return of director Alexander Eik. The eleventh film, De døde har det godt (The Dead Have It Easy), is the only one not directly based on a Varg Veum novel but rather combined elements from several short stories from the compilation of the same title. The last film, Kalde hjerter (Cold Hearts), was co-written and directed by lead actor Seim.", "Oslo Kino\n The early directors were Jens Christian Gundersen (1926-1933) and Kristoffer Aamot (1934-1940). During the German occupation of Norway the company had three Nazi collaborators as directors: Gustav Berg-Jæger (1940-1942), Einar Schibbye (1942-1944) and Birger Ilseng (1944-1945). Kristoffer Aamot then recovered his job, and sat until 1955. Theodor Rosenquist followed (1955-1958), then Arnljot Engh (1958-1975), Eivind Hjelmtveit (1975-1993), Ingeborg Moræus Hanssen (1993-2005), Cecilie Trøan (acting, 2005-2006) and Geir Bergkastet (2006-present). Pre-war chairs of the board of directors were Arthur Skjeldrup (1926-1928), Kristoffer Aamot (1929-1931), Eyvind Getz (1932-1934) and Rachel Grepp (1935-1940). The chairpersons during the German occupation of Norway are not known. After the war, Rolf Hofmo sat from 1946 to 1955, then Rolf Stranger (1956-1967), Albert Nordengen (1968-1971), Adele Lerche (1972-1975), Turid Dankertsen (1976-1979), Albert Nordengen again (1980-1983), Bjørn Bjørnseth (1984-1987), Jon Lyng (1988-1991), Christian Hambro (1992), Theo Koritzinsky (1993-1995), Jon Lyng again (1996-2003) and Heidi Larssen (2003-present). Several directors and chairs were also politicians for the Conservative Party, the party which initially opposed a municipal cinema company.", "Eva Isaksen\n Eva Isaksen (born 22 May 1956) is a Norwegian film director. She directed her first feature film Burning Flowers (Brennende blomster 1985) with Eva Dahr, and has worked as an assistant on a number of films, including Sweetwater (1988) by Lasse Glomm, Wayfarers (Landstrykere 1989) by Ola Solum, and The Dive (Dykket 1989) by Tristan de Vere Cole. In 1990 she directed Death at Oslo Central (Døden på Oslo S), about the two boys Pelle and Proffen, based on the novels for young people by Ingvar Ambjørnsen, a Norwegian author living in Hamburg. Two years later she presented her third feature film Homo Falsus (Det perfekte mord 1992).", "Det Norske Teatret\n Actor and singer Rasmus Rasmussen was the theatre's first director, from 1912 to 1915. Edvard Drabløs was one of the founders, and served as a director from 1915 to 1916, and later also from 1950 to 1951. Amund Rydland, who had been with the theatre from the start, was the director from 1916 to 1922 (shared with Anton Heiberg and Sigurd Eldegard in periods). After him Ingjald Haaland served as theatre director for eleven years, from 1922 to 1933. Hans Jacob Nilsen was theatre director from 1933 to 1934, and from 1946 to 1950. The writer Oskar Braaten had earlier worked as a consultant for the theatre, and served as its director from 1934 to 1936. The actor Knut Hergel was director from ", "Hans Jacob Nilsen\n First trained as a mechanical engineer, Nilsen started his theatrical career as an actor. He worked as a stage actor in Bergen, Trondheim and Oslo. He was appointed theatre director at Det Norske Teatret from 1933 to 1934, and was theatre director at Den Nationale Scene from 1934 to 1939. His film debut was in Syndere i sommersol from 1934, and he also played in To levende og en død from 1937. In 1935, Nilsen had directed the premier of the play of Vår ære og vår makt (\"Our Honor and Our Power\") by Marxist writer Nordahl Grieg. The performance created considerable interest and controversy due to its socially critical content. It proved to be a financial success partly because of Nilsen's advanced directing and set design. During the Occupation of Norway by Nazi Germany, Nilsson had to flee to Sweden. While in Sweden, he was a co-founder of Fri norsk scene. From 1946 to 1950 he was again appointed theatre director at Det Norske Teatret. He directed the film Dei svarte hestane from 1951, based on Tarjei Vesaas' novel with the same title. From 1952 he was theatre director of Folketeatret.", "List of Danes\nBille August (1948–), director ; Erik Balling (1924–2005), director ; Susanne Bier (1960–), director, writer ; August Blom (1869–1947), director, producer ; Ole Bornedal, director ; Carl Theodor Dreyer (1889–1968), film director (The Passion of Joan of Arc, Ordet) ; Peter Elfelt (1866–1931), photographer, silent film director ; Per Fly ; Bodil Ipsen (1889–1964), director, actress ; Anders Thomas Jensen ; Lau Lauritzen Jr. (1910–1977), director, actor, producer ; Jørgen Leth, filmmaker and poet ; Nils Malmros, filmmaker ; Nicolas Winding Refn, director ; Mikael Salomon, director, writer ; Lone Scherfig (1959–), director ; Lars von Trier (1956–), director ; Thomas Vinterberg (1969–), director ", "Arts Council Norway\n Halvdan Skard was the director from 1983 to 1992, but was then granted an absence of leave to become chairman of the Norwegian Association of Local and Regional Authorities. On 18 December 1992 it was announced that Lidvin Osland would serve as acting director until 1 July 1996. Osland stepped down as planned, but his successor was not appointed immediately, as the council rejected all applicants and asked for other candidates. On 20 September 1996 it was announced that Halvard Kausland had been appointed as acting director from 1 November 1996 to 31 March 2000. However, Kausland withdrew three days before actually assuming the post. The deputy director briefly advanced to become acting director during this vacancy. On 20 December Ole Jacob Bull was appointed. In early 2004 Skard finally quit as director. Bull applied to become the new director, and got the position on a permanent basis in July 2004. Since October 2010, director of Arts Council Norway was Anne Aasheim, previously editor-in-chief of Dagbladet,. After her death in 2016, Kristin Danielsen was appointed as director.", "Per Inge Torkelsen\nZapp på ein måde ; Pengane eller livet In 2006, he was the master of ceremonies for the theatre festival in Sandnes where there were 13 different theatres. From the fall of 2006 until the spring of 2008 he was a director for Teaterverkstedet Ganddal in cooperation with Rogaland amateur theatre. As a director for the theater company Teaterverkstedet Ganddal, he directed two pieces: These two performances were a huge success for both Torkelsen and Teaterverkstedet Ganddal.", "Björn Runge\nFesten, co-directed Lena Koppel 1984 ; Skymningsjägare 1985 ; Steward Gustafssons julafton 1985 ; Brasiliens röda kaffebär 1986 ; Intill den nya världens kust 1987 ; Maskinen 1988 ; Mördaren 1989 ; Vinden 1989 ; Vart skall jag fly för ditt ansikte, co-director Jimmy Karlsson 1989 ; Morgonen 1990 ; Greger Olsson köper en bil 1990 ; Ögonblickets barn 1991 ; En dag på stranden 1994 ; Sverige in Memorian, co-director Lena Dahlberg 1994 ; Harry & Sonja 1996 ; Vulkanmannen 1997 ; Raymond 1999 ; Anderssons älskarinna (TV series) 2001 ; Om jag vänder mig om (Daybreak) 2003 ; Mun mot mun 2005 ; Happy End 2011 ; The Wife 2017 ", "Per Blom (director)\n Per Blom (5 May 1946 – 2013 ) was a Norwegian film director. He was born in Søndre Land. Among his films are Anton from 1973, and Mors hus from 1974, based on a novel by Knut Faldbakken. Further Kvinner from 1979, Sølvmunn from 1981, and The Ice Palace from 1987, based upon a novel by Tarjei Vesaas.", "Øystein Runde\n For Sleggja, co-director Lars-Petter Iversen and Runde created a live-action trailer. Sleggja was praised for its intense and touching story. In 2015, Øystein Runde and Ida Neverdahl published a travelogue comic, MOSCOW, in English. Also the book FUTEN, about a mythological tax collector, was finally published after 8 years of work by artist Knut André Solberg. Futen was well received. Together with co-director and producer Torstein Jacobsen and co-director Johanna Raita, Runde released a horror comedy, Last Christmas.", "Norwegian Maritime Authority\n Rune Teisland left the director post in 2008. In August the same year, Olav Akselsen, a parliament member at the time, was appointed new Director General. Akselsen did not take up the post until January 2010, and in the meantime Sigurd Gude served as acting director.", "Director-General of the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation\nOlav Midttun (1934–1940 and 1945–1947), he held the title of riksprogramsjef, \"national chief of programmes\" ; Thorstein Diesen, Jr. (1947–1948) (acting riksprogramsjef) ; Egil Sundt (1939–1940 and 1945–1946), he held the title of administerende direktør ; Knut Tvedt (acting) (1946–1948), he held the title of administerende direktør ; Kaare Fostervoll (1948–1962) ; Hans Jacob Ustvedt (1962–1972) ; Torolf Elster (1972–1981) ; Bjartmar Gjerde (1981–1989) ; Olav Ilssen (acting) (1989) ; Einar Førde (1989–2001) ; John G. Bernander (2001–2007) ; Hans Tore Bjerkaas (2007–2013) ; Thor Gjermund Eriksen (2013–) The Director-General is chief executive and editor-in-chief of the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation (NRK). The position is appointed by the NRK board, which in turn is appointed by the government. The title of the Director-General in Norwegian is (since 1948) kringkastingssjef, which literally means \"chief of broadcasting\".", "Einar Sissener\n In 1934 and 1935 he produced the two films Syndere i sommersol and Du har lovet mig en kone!. Sissener chaired the Norwegian Actors' Equity Association from 1928 to 1932. He was theatre director for Søilen Teater in 1932. From 1933 to 1937 he was theatre director for Det Nye Teater. From 1937 to 1946 he worked for the revue theatre Chat Noir, both as an actor, stage producer and songwriter. In 1947 he returned to the National Theatre. His last appearance was in Friedrich Dürrenmatt's comedy Meteor in 1967. He played a total of 127 roles at the National Theatre. Sissener was decorated Knight, First Class of the Royal Norwegian Order of St. Olav in 1960, and was a knight of the Danish Order of the Dannebrog.", "Måns Herngren\n1990: S*M*A*S*H (Director) ; 1995: One in a Million (En på miljonen) (Director) ; 1997: Adam & Eva (Director) ; 1998: Snow (Director) ; 2000: Det blir aldrig som man tänkt sig (Things Never End Up The Way You've Planned) (Director) ; 2001: En fot i graven (TV mini-series director) ; 2002: Klassfesten (The Class Reunion) (Director) ; 2006: Varannan vecka (Every Other Week) (Actor and director) ; 2008: Allt flyter (The Swimsuit Issue) (Director) ; 2016: The 101-Year-Old Man Who Skipped Out on the Bill and Disappeared (Co-director) ", "Lars Westman\n1966: Habla Fidel (director) ; 1968: Sanningen om Båstad (director) ; 1970: Kamrater, motståndaren är välorganiserad (director, cinematographer & editor) ; 1994: Maria och kärleken (cinematographer) ; 2000: Gå på vatten (director & cinematographer) ", "Det Nye Teater\n The company A/S Det Nye Teater was founded in 1918, by Johan Bojer and Peter Egge. Among the largest financial supporters were ship owner Ivar An Christensen, and also the Norwegian State bought a significant number of shares. The theatre building was designed by the architects Blakstad and Dunker. The theatre's first artistic director was Ingolf Schanche, from 1928 to 1931. The theatre opened on 26 to 28 February 1929, with Knut Hamsun's trilogy, Ved rigets port, Livets spil and Aftenrøde, followed by Peter Egge's play Kjærlighet og venskap. From 1931 to 1932 Thomas Thomassen managed the theatre, and from 1932 to 1933 Gyda Christensen. Einar Sissener was theatre director from 1933 to 1934, and Hjalmar Friis and Gyda " ]
Who was the director of The Physician?
[ "Georg Jacoby" ]
director
The Physician (1928 film)
2,934,585
73
[ { "id": "7488524", "title": "Marlboro Psychiatric Hospital", "text": "The first medical director of the hospital was Dr. J. Berkely Gorden. He started at the inception of the hospital and retired in 1962. ; Dr. D. W. McCreight was acting director and appointed to fill the seat till a permanent medical director could be located following the retirement of Dr. Gorden. His tenure was from 1962 to 1963. ; He was replaced by Dr. Robert P, Nenno. Dr Nenno started as medical director in 1963 and was there till 1968. Prior to his appointment at Marlboro Hospital, he was a chairman of Medicine at Seton Hall College. ; Dr. Michael R. Simon was medical director from 1968 to 1973. ; Dr. Harold J. Knobb, took over as acting medical director at the resignation of Dr. Simon. He served from 1973 to 1974. ; Dr Herbert Saexinger became medical director in 1974 ", "score": "1.5495696" }, { "id": "25477893", "title": "Medical director", "text": " A medical director is a physician who provides guidance and leadership on the use of medicine in a healthcare organization. These include the emergency medical services, hospital departments, blood banks, clinical teaching services and others. A medical director devises the protocols and guidelines for the clinical staff and evaluates them while they are in use.", "score": "1.4531991" }, { "id": "29479537", "title": "Bruce Keogh", "text": " of NHS England is to \"turn taxpayers money into good clinical outcomes\". Following the Lansley reforms of the NHS, he was appointed National Medical Director in NHS England from 2013, where he is responsible for promoting a focus on quality, clinical leadership and innovation. To facilitate these aims he was responsible for overseeing the establishment of Academic Health Science Networks, Strategic Clinical Networks and Clinical Senates. He put clinicians at the heart of NHS England through the Chief Pharmaceutical, Dental, Scientific and Allied Health Professions officers, a primary care deputy, a medical director for specialised commissioning, regional medical directors and pharmacists, area medical directors, over 20 expert national clinical ", "score": "1.4416003" }, { "id": "29479530", "title": "Bruce Keogh", "text": " As medical director of the NHS (2007–13) he was a director general in the Department of Health where he led the Medical Directorate, which had oversight for clinical policy and strategy in the NHS. This included the work of the National Clinical Directors and their associated strategies such as those for coronary heart disease, stroke, cancer, respiratory disease, renal disease, liver disease, trauma, and transplantation. He established the Healthcare Quality Improvement Partnership (HQIP)a joint venture between the Academy of Medical Royal Colleges and the Royal College of Nursing to develop and run the national clinical audits. Keogh's role also included oversight of ", "score": "1.4330254" }, { "id": "7488525", "title": "Marlboro Psychiatric Hospital", "text": " 1976. ; Dr. Charles Webber, became acting medical director in 1976 when Dr. Saexinger resigned and was in office till 1977 when a replacement was found. ; Roy S. Ettlinger - chief executive officer from 1977 to 1983. He left the job to become director of a hospital in Boston. ; Dr. David Sorensen was chief executive officer from 1984 to 1987, when he was removed from office following allegations of patient abuse, staff neglect and sexual assaults while he was in charge. ; Dr. Michael Ross was the acting chief executive officer at the hospital starting in 1987. Dr. Ross was the chief executive officer at Graystone Park Hospital prior to this post. ; Dr. Norbert Binkowski was the Clinical Director from 1978 to 1990. Given the length of the hospital's operation; the hospital saw a number of medical directors:", "score": "1.4104404" }, { "id": "9764644", "title": "North General Hospital", "text": "Michael Palese, MD, chief of urology at the North General Hospital from 2004 to 2008 ; Myron Ross Gershberg, MD (1934–2014), MD, head of psychiatry. Among other things, Gershberg designed and managed addiction and child abuse programs ; Gregory A. Miller, MD, served first as the residency program director, then as chair of psychiatry, and finally as the medical director and chief medical officer of NGH ; Stanley Reichman, MD (1926–2009), was named acting director of medicine at NGH in 1980 ", "score": "1.4084802" }, { "id": "26952709", "title": "Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality", "text": " Gopal Khanna, MBA was appointed as Agency director on May 9, 2017, and resigned on January 11, 2021 in response to the January 6 Capitol riot. Prior to that, Dr. Andrew Bindman was the director of AHRQ from April 2016 until January 2017. Prior to joining AHRQ, Dr. Bindman served as faculty of UCSF School of Medicine. Sharon Arnold Ph.D. was acting director from February - April 2016, replacing Richard Kronick in February 2016. Richard Kronick, Ph.D. was director from 2013 to March 2016. Carolyn Clancy M.D. was the director from 2002-2014. Following Khanna's resignation, deputy director Dr. David Meyers, M.D. has served as acting director.", "score": "1.3901961" }, { "id": "14136522", "title": "Stephen Powis", "text": " Professor Stephen H. Powis is national medical director for England, in the National Health Service (NHS), appointed at the start of 2018 to succeed Sir Bruce Keogh. He is also a professor of renal medicine at University College London.", "score": "1.3816552" }, { "id": "543139", "title": "The Physician", "text": " The Physician is a novel by Noah Gordon. It is about the life of a Christian English boy in the 11th century who journeys across Europe in order to study medicine among the Persians. The book was initially published by Simon & Schuster on August 7, 1986. The book did not sell well in America, but in Europe it was many times a bestseller, particularly in Spain and Germany, selling millions of copies in translation. Its European success caused its subsequent sequelization. The film rights to the book were purchased.", "score": "1.3802257" }, { "id": "12867018", "title": "Faculty of Medical Leadership and Management", "text": " The chief executive and medical director is Peter Lees. It is governed by a Board of Trustees and Council of members. While the organisation was becoming established, the faculty's governing body was the Founding Council, with representatives drawn from all of the member Colleges and Faculties. This arrangement was in place from May 2011 until March 2013, at which point the new Council took over. In January 2014, a Board of Trustees was established.", "score": "1.3773918" }, { "id": "33078656", "title": "Steven K. Galson", "text": " Steven Kenneth Galson (born 1956) is an American public health physician. He is currently Senior Vice President for Global Regulatory Affairs & Strategy at Amgen, the California-based biopharmaceutical company. He is also Professor-at-Large at the Keck Graduate Institute for Applied Life Sciences in Claremont, California. He is a retired rear admiral in the United States Public Health Service Commissioned Corps and public health administrator who served as the acting Surgeon General of the United States from October 1, 2007 – October 1, 2009. He served concurrently as acting Assistant Secretary for Health from January 22, 2009 to June 25, 2009, and as the Deputy Director and Director of the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER) at the Food and Drug Administration from 2001 to 2007. As the Acting Surgeon General, he was the commander of the United States Public Health Service Commissioned Corps and, while serving as the Assistant Secretary for Health, was the operational head of the Public Health Service.", "score": "1.3760966" }, { "id": "15949581", "title": "Orlando Henderson Petty", "text": " from a complaint the nature of which was unrevealed. Last September Dr Petty was appointed Director of the Department of Public Health to fill the vacancy created by the Dr A A Cairns. He also was person physician to Mayor Mackey and accompanied the latter on his European trip. GRADUATE OF JEFFERSON Dr Petty was graduated from Franklin College, New Athens, Ohio in 1900, and from Jefferson Medical College in 1904 and served as an intern in St Timothy's Hospital. He was an associate surgeon with Dr John B Lowman, of Johnstown, for one year and then returned here and was connected with the teaching staff of Jefferson ", "score": "1.3757874" }, { "id": "27614791", "title": "Flash Gordon (physician)", "text": " Flash Gordon was director of the medical section of Haight Ashbury Free Clinics in the late 1980s. He directed the emergency medicine residency at San Francisco General Hospital from 1978 until 1980. He currently is a primary care physician seeing patients in Greenbrae, California.", "score": "1.3682632" }, { "id": "927597", "title": "Donald A. B. Lindberg", "text": " Donald Allen Bror Lindberg (September 21, 1933 – August 17, 2019) was the Director of the United States National Library of Medicine from 1984 until his retirement in 2015. He was known for his work in medical computing, especially the development of PubMed. He won the 1997 Morris F. Collen Award from the American College of Medical Informatics.", "score": "1.3674322" }, { "id": "16051831", "title": "Halfdan T. Mahler", "text": " Halfdan Theodor Mahler (21 April 1923 – 14 December 2016) was a Danish physician. He served three terms as director-general of the World Health Organization (WHO) from 1973 to 1988, and is widely known for his effort to combat tuberculosis and his role in having shaped the landmark Alma Ata Declaration that defined the Health for All by the Year 2000 strategy.", "score": "1.3672361" }, { "id": "9483676", "title": "Robert Stone (scientist)", "text": " Robert S. Stone (February 10, 1922 – October 20, 2016) was an American physician. He served as the Director of The National Institutes of Health from May 29, 1973 to January 31, 1975. Stone also served as the vice president for health services and dean of the school of medicine at the University of New Mexico, dean of the School of Medicine of the University of Oregon Health Sciences Center and vice president of the Health Sciences Center, and dean of the Texas A&M Health Science Center College of Medicine.", "score": "1.3669596" }, { "id": "10835670", "title": "Tony Jewell (doctor)", "text": "1996–1999 – Director of Public Health for North West Anglia ; 1999–2002 – Director of Public Health for Cambridgeshire. ; 2002–2006 – Clinical Director and Director of Public Health in Norfolk, Suffolk and Cambridgeshire Strategic Health Authority. ; 2002–2006 – President of the UK Association of Directors of Public Health Jewell trained in medicine at Christ's College, Cambridge and The London Hospital Medical College. After qualifying he undertook vocational training in general practice in East London going on to become a GP in inner London for 10 years. During this time he helped develop a teaching and research focussed group practice by merging single-handed practices and designed a new ", "score": "1.3651693" }, { "id": "10917954", "title": "Thomas C. Chalmers", "text": " Shattuck Hospital in Boston. He also held academic positions at Tufts University School of Medicine and Harvard Medical School. From 1968 to 1973 he held a number of appointments in Washington, DC: assistant director at the United States Department of Veterans Affairs, followed by concurrent positions as associate director of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and Director of the NIH Clinical Center. From 1973 to 1983 he was President and Dean of the Mount Sinai School of Medicine (MSSM). While at MSSM, he established the Department of Geriatrics (the first in the United States), and, following his commitment to the application of the scientific method and biostatistics to medical practice he established the Department of Biostatistics. After leaving Mount Sinai, he became Chairman of the Board of Directors of ", "score": "1.3560867" }, { "id": "10560884", "title": "Ronald Davis (physician)", "text": " director of health promotion and disease prevention for the Henry Ford Health System in Detroit. In 1992, he was the founding editor-in-chief of the medical journal Tobacco Control, published by the British Medical Association. He became the first resident ever named to board of the American Medical Association, serving from 1984 to 1987. He was elected to the AMA's board again in 2001 and re-elected in 2005. He served as AMA's 162nd president from June 2007 to June 2008. He was the first physician specializing in Preventive Medicine to be named president of the AMA. After being diagnosed with the disease ", "score": "1.355864" }, { "id": "33078663", "title": "Steven K. Galson", "text": " this profession. Prior to his appointment as Acting Surgeon General, he served as the Director of the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER) at the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). In this role, RADM Galson oversaw CDER's broad national and international programs in pharmaceutical regulation during a period of unprecedented scrutiny by Congress and outside groups. To that end, he initiated a landmark Institute of Medicine assessment of the US drug safety system and launched a broad action plan to address work culture challenges at CDER. He provided leadership for 2300 physicians, statisticians, chemists, pharmacologists other scientists, and administrators whose work promotes and protects public ", "score": "1.3489451" } ]
[ "Marlboro Psychiatric Hospital\nThe first medical director of the hospital was Dr. J. Berkely Gorden. He started at the inception of the hospital and retired in 1962. ; Dr. D. W. McCreight was acting director and appointed to fill the seat till a permanent medical director could be located following the retirement of Dr. Gorden. His tenure was from 1962 to 1963. ; He was replaced by Dr. Robert P, Nenno. Dr Nenno started as medical director in 1963 and was there till 1968. Prior to his appointment at Marlboro Hospital, he was a chairman of Medicine at Seton Hall College. ; Dr. Michael R. Simon was medical director from 1968 to 1973. ; Dr. Harold J. Knobb, took over as acting medical director at the resignation of Dr. Simon. He served from 1973 to 1974. ; Dr Herbert Saexinger became medical director in 1974 ", "Medical director\n A medical director is a physician who provides guidance and leadership on the use of medicine in a healthcare organization. These include the emergency medical services, hospital departments, blood banks, clinical teaching services and others. A medical director devises the protocols and guidelines for the clinical staff and evaluates them while they are in use.", "Bruce Keogh\n of NHS England is to \"turn taxpayers money into good clinical outcomes\". Following the Lansley reforms of the NHS, he was appointed National Medical Director in NHS England from 2013, where he is responsible for promoting a focus on quality, clinical leadership and innovation. To facilitate these aims he was responsible for overseeing the establishment of Academic Health Science Networks, Strategic Clinical Networks and Clinical Senates. He put clinicians at the heart of NHS England through the Chief Pharmaceutical, Dental, Scientific and Allied Health Professions officers, a primary care deputy, a medical director for specialised commissioning, regional medical directors and pharmacists, area medical directors, over 20 expert national clinical ", "Bruce Keogh\n As medical director of the NHS (2007–13) he was a director general in the Department of Health where he led the Medical Directorate, which had oversight for clinical policy and strategy in the NHS. This included the work of the National Clinical Directors and their associated strategies such as those for coronary heart disease, stroke, cancer, respiratory disease, renal disease, liver disease, trauma, and transplantation. He established the Healthcare Quality Improvement Partnership (HQIP)a joint venture between the Academy of Medical Royal Colleges and the Royal College of Nursing to develop and run the national clinical audits. Keogh's role also included oversight of ", "Marlboro Psychiatric Hospital\n 1976. ; Dr. Charles Webber, became acting medical director in 1976 when Dr. Saexinger resigned and was in office till 1977 when a replacement was found. ; Roy S. Ettlinger - chief executive officer from 1977 to 1983. He left the job to become director of a hospital in Boston. ; Dr. David Sorensen was chief executive officer from 1984 to 1987, when he was removed from office following allegations of patient abuse, staff neglect and sexual assaults while he was in charge. ; Dr. Michael Ross was the acting chief executive officer at the hospital starting in 1987. Dr. Ross was the chief executive officer at Graystone Park Hospital prior to this post. ; Dr. Norbert Binkowski was the Clinical Director from 1978 to 1990. Given the length of the hospital's operation; the hospital saw a number of medical directors:", "North General Hospital\nMichael Palese, MD, chief of urology at the North General Hospital from 2004 to 2008 ; Myron Ross Gershberg, MD (1934–2014), MD, head of psychiatry. Among other things, Gershberg designed and managed addiction and child abuse programs ; Gregory A. Miller, MD, served first as the residency program director, then as chair of psychiatry, and finally as the medical director and chief medical officer of NGH ; Stanley Reichman, MD (1926–2009), was named acting director of medicine at NGH in 1980 ", "Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality\n Gopal Khanna, MBA was appointed as Agency director on May 9, 2017, and resigned on January 11, 2021 in response to the January 6 Capitol riot. Prior to that, Dr. Andrew Bindman was the director of AHRQ from April 2016 until January 2017. Prior to joining AHRQ, Dr. Bindman served as faculty of UCSF School of Medicine. Sharon Arnold Ph.D. was acting director from February - April 2016, replacing Richard Kronick in February 2016. Richard Kronick, Ph.D. was director from 2013 to March 2016. Carolyn Clancy M.D. was the director from 2002-2014. Following Khanna's resignation, deputy director Dr. David Meyers, M.D. has served as acting director.", "Stephen Powis\n Professor Stephen H. Powis is national medical director for England, in the National Health Service (NHS), appointed at the start of 2018 to succeed Sir Bruce Keogh. He is also a professor of renal medicine at University College London.", "The Physician\n The Physician is a novel by Noah Gordon. It is about the life of a Christian English boy in the 11th century who journeys across Europe in order to study medicine among the Persians. The book was initially published by Simon & Schuster on August 7, 1986. The book did not sell well in America, but in Europe it was many times a bestseller, particularly in Spain and Germany, selling millions of copies in translation. Its European success caused its subsequent sequelization. The film rights to the book were purchased.", "Faculty of Medical Leadership and Management\n The chief executive and medical director is Peter Lees. It is governed by a Board of Trustees and Council of members. While the organisation was becoming established, the faculty's governing body was the Founding Council, with representatives drawn from all of the member Colleges and Faculties. This arrangement was in place from May 2011 until March 2013, at which point the new Council took over. In January 2014, a Board of Trustees was established.", "Steven K. Galson\n Steven Kenneth Galson (born 1956) is an American public health physician. He is currently Senior Vice President for Global Regulatory Affairs & Strategy at Amgen, the California-based biopharmaceutical company. He is also Professor-at-Large at the Keck Graduate Institute for Applied Life Sciences in Claremont, California. He is a retired rear admiral in the United States Public Health Service Commissioned Corps and public health administrator who served as the acting Surgeon General of the United States from October 1, 2007 – October 1, 2009. He served concurrently as acting Assistant Secretary for Health from January 22, 2009 to June 25, 2009, and as the Deputy Director and Director of the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER) at the Food and Drug Administration from 2001 to 2007. As the Acting Surgeon General, he was the commander of the United States Public Health Service Commissioned Corps and, while serving as the Assistant Secretary for Health, was the operational head of the Public Health Service.", "Orlando Henderson Petty\n from a complaint the nature of which was unrevealed. Last September Dr Petty was appointed Director of the Department of Public Health to fill the vacancy created by the Dr A A Cairns. He also was person physician to Mayor Mackey and accompanied the latter on his European trip. GRADUATE OF JEFFERSON Dr Petty was graduated from Franklin College, New Athens, Ohio in 1900, and from Jefferson Medical College in 1904 and served as an intern in St Timothy's Hospital. He was an associate surgeon with Dr John B Lowman, of Johnstown, for one year and then returned here and was connected with the teaching staff of Jefferson ", "Flash Gordon (physician)\n Flash Gordon was director of the medical section of Haight Ashbury Free Clinics in the late 1980s. He directed the emergency medicine residency at San Francisco General Hospital from 1978 until 1980. He currently is a primary care physician seeing patients in Greenbrae, California.", "Donald A. B. Lindberg\n Donald Allen Bror Lindberg (September 21, 1933 – August 17, 2019) was the Director of the United States National Library of Medicine from 1984 until his retirement in 2015. He was known for his work in medical computing, especially the development of PubMed. He won the 1997 Morris F. Collen Award from the American College of Medical Informatics.", "Halfdan T. Mahler\n Halfdan Theodor Mahler (21 April 1923 – 14 December 2016) was a Danish physician. He served three terms as director-general of the World Health Organization (WHO) from 1973 to 1988, and is widely known for his effort to combat tuberculosis and his role in having shaped the landmark Alma Ata Declaration that defined the Health for All by the Year 2000 strategy.", "Robert Stone (scientist)\n Robert S. Stone (February 10, 1922 – October 20, 2016) was an American physician. He served as the Director of The National Institutes of Health from May 29, 1973 to January 31, 1975. Stone also served as the vice president for health services and dean of the school of medicine at the University of New Mexico, dean of the School of Medicine of the University of Oregon Health Sciences Center and vice president of the Health Sciences Center, and dean of the Texas A&M Health Science Center College of Medicine.", "Tony Jewell (doctor)\n1996–1999 – Director of Public Health for North West Anglia ; 1999–2002 – Director of Public Health for Cambridgeshire. ; 2002–2006 – Clinical Director and Director of Public Health in Norfolk, Suffolk and Cambridgeshire Strategic Health Authority. ; 2002–2006 – President of the UK Association of Directors of Public Health Jewell trained in medicine at Christ's College, Cambridge and The London Hospital Medical College. After qualifying he undertook vocational training in general practice in East London going on to become a GP in inner London for 10 years. During this time he helped develop a teaching and research focussed group practice by merging single-handed practices and designed a new ", "Thomas C. Chalmers\n Shattuck Hospital in Boston. He also held academic positions at Tufts University School of Medicine and Harvard Medical School. From 1968 to 1973 he held a number of appointments in Washington, DC: assistant director at the United States Department of Veterans Affairs, followed by concurrent positions as associate director of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and Director of the NIH Clinical Center. From 1973 to 1983 he was President and Dean of the Mount Sinai School of Medicine (MSSM). While at MSSM, he established the Department of Geriatrics (the first in the United States), and, following his commitment to the application of the scientific method and biostatistics to medical practice he established the Department of Biostatistics. After leaving Mount Sinai, he became Chairman of the Board of Directors of ", "Ronald Davis (physician)\n director of health promotion and disease prevention for the Henry Ford Health System in Detroit. In 1992, he was the founding editor-in-chief of the medical journal Tobacco Control, published by the British Medical Association. He became the first resident ever named to board of the American Medical Association, serving from 1984 to 1987. He was elected to the AMA's board again in 2001 and re-elected in 2005. He served as AMA's 162nd president from June 2007 to June 2008. He was the first physician specializing in Preventive Medicine to be named president of the AMA. After being diagnosed with the disease ", "Steven K. Galson\n this profession. Prior to his appointment as Acting Surgeon General, he served as the Director of the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER) at the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). In this role, RADM Galson oversaw CDER's broad national and international programs in pharmaceutical regulation during a period of unprecedented scrutiny by Congress and outside groups. To that end, he initiated a landmark Institute of Medicine assessment of the US drug safety system and launched a broad action plan to address work culture challenges at CDER. He provided leadership for 2300 physicians, statisticians, chemists, pharmacologists other scientists, and administrators whose work promotes and protects public " ]
Who is the author of Stations?
[ "Seamus Heaney", "Seamus Justin Heaney", "Seamus Heaney" ]
author
Stations (poetry collection)
5,818,151
85
[ { "id": "15384032", "title": "Days Between Stations (novel)", "text": " Days Between Stations is the first novel by Steve Erickson. Upon publication in 1985 it received notable praise from Thomas Pynchon and has been cited as an influence by novelists such as Jonathan Lethem and Mark Z. Danielewski. It has been translated into French, Spanish, Italian, Russian and Japanese. Several stories intersect in this novel: Lauren and Jason's unhappy marriage, Lauren's love affair with Adrien-Michel, and a lost silent film titled The Death of Marat.", "score": "1.6217788" }, { "id": "14560672", "title": "Alice Koller", "text": " jobs. In 1990, she published The Stations of Solitude, which drew upon the model of the Stations of the Cross and outlined thirteen stations with themes such as \"Unbinding,\" \"Working,\" and \"Standing Open.\" She saw the book as \"a line of travel,\" through \"the process of shaping a human being, and the stations are stopping places in the process.\" Like An Unknown Woman, however, the book was heavily autobiographical and went over many of the same experiences discussed in the earlier book. The resulting reviews were less enthusiastic: \"Koller seems to be writing for herself, failing to invite readers into her exclusive domain of solitude,\" wrote Francisca Goldsmith ", "score": "1.6181958" }, { "id": "28969412", "title": "Stations of the Tide", "text": " Stations of the Tide is a science fiction novel by American author Michael Swanwick. Prior to being published in book form in 1991, it was serialized in Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine in two parts, starting in mid-December 1990. It won the Nebula Award for Best Novel in 1991, was nominated for both the Hugo and Campbell Awards in 1992, and was nominated for the Arthur C. Clarke Award in 1993.", "score": "1.6046207" }, { "id": "16416989", "title": "Ed Friedman", "text": " Telephone Book consists of transcripts of Friedman's phone calls over the course of a number of weeks, and Space Stations – which has not been published in its entirety, follows up on William S. Burroughs by dividing a journal's pages into three columns and recording Firedman's attention shifts while he is writing. Space Stations provided the material for much of Friedman's published poetry from 1982 to 2001. Jerome Rothenberg has said of Friedman that he is \"a powerful & never disappointing poet/chronicler, at the top of his form & ready to take his place among the makers & movers of our time,\" and Ed Sanders has said \"You can count on Ed Friedman ... to take you on a fine ride.\"", "score": "1.562701" }, { "id": "26398551", "title": "Dra'k'ne Station", "text": " Dra'k'ne Station was written by Bill Paley, with art by Kevin Siembieda and was published in 1979 by Judges Guild as a 64-page book.", "score": "1.5597942" }, { "id": "13430046", "title": "Three Stations", "text": " Three Stations is a crime novel by Martin Cruz Smith set in Russia circa 2010. It is the seventh novel to feature Detective-Investigator Arkady Renko, published 29 years after the initial novel of the Renko series, Gorky Park.", "score": "1.5376306" }, { "id": "26098159", "title": "Way Station (novel)", "text": " Way Station is a 1963 science fiction novel by American writer Clifford D. Simak, originally published as Here Gather the Stars in two parts in Galaxy Magazine in June and August 1963. Way Station won the 1964 Hugo Award for Best Novel.", "score": "1.5354271" }, { "id": "6027647", "title": "The Station (song)", "text": " \"The Station\" is a song by American electronic producer and singer-songwriter Oneohtrix Point Never from his eighth studio album, Age Of.", "score": "1.5306807" }, { "id": "6810392", "title": "The Station Agent", "text": " The Station Agent is a 2003 American independent psychological comedy-drama film written and directed by Tom McCarthy in his directorial debut. It stars Peter Dinklage as a man who seeks solitude in an abandoned train station in the Newfoundland section of Jefferson Township, New Jersey. It also stars Patricia Clarkson, Michelle Williams, Bobby Cannavale and John Slattery. For his writing achievement, McCarthy won the BAFTA Award for Best Original Screenplay and the Independent Spirit Award for Best First Screenplay.", "score": "1.5262599" }, { "id": "2267177", "title": "Barrett Tillman", "text": " Henry Barrett Tillman (born December 24, 1948) is an American author who specializes in naval and aviation topics in addition to fiction and technical writing. Tillman's most influential book to date is On Yankee Station (1987), written with John B. Nichols. It is a critical appraisal of naval aviation in the Vietnam War. According to Tillman, it was added to the US Air Force and Marine Corps professional reading lists, and at least one squadron took copies of the book with them to Operation Desert Storm as \"a reality check on tactics\".", "score": "1.5178872" }, { "id": "10399025", "title": "Hospital Station", "text": " Hospital Station is a 1962 science fiction book by author James White and is the first volume in the Sector General series. The book collects together a series of five short stories previously published in New Worlds magazine between 1957 and 1960.", "score": "1.5126653" }, { "id": "25226747", "title": "Downbelow Station", "text": " Downbelow Station is a science fiction novel by American writer C. J. Cherryh, published in 1981 by DAW Books. It won the Hugo Award in 1982, was shortlisted for a Locus Award that same year, and was named by Locus magazine as one of the top 50 science fiction novels of all time in 1987. The book is set in Cherryh's Alliance–Union universe during the Company Wars period, specifically late 2352 and early 2353. The book details events centering on a space station in orbit around Pell's World (also known as \"Downbelow\") in the Tau Ceti star system. The station serves as the transit point for ships moving between the Earth and Union sectors of the galaxy. The working title of the book was The Company War, but Cherryh's editor at DAW, Donald A. Wollheim, believed that the moniker lacked commercial appeal, so Downbelow Station was selected as the title for publication. It was the first novel edited by current DAW president Elizabeth Wollheim, who worked alongside her father.", "score": "1.5063043" }, { "id": "26417202", "title": "Station at the Horizon", "text": " Station at the Horizon (Station am Horizont) is a novel by Erich Maria Remarque, a German veteran of World War I. The book describes the search for love of an ex-soldier and an ex-race car driver, Kai, who is torn between Barbara, a girl from the village, Maud, an American middle-class woman, and Lilian Dunquerke, a countess. The novel was first published in 1927/28, in a German sports magazine Sport im Bild. However, it was not published as a book until 1998.", "score": "1.5052345" }, { "id": "26611783", "title": "Michael Swanwick", "text": " Moon Dogs. He has collaborated with other authors on several short works, including Gardner Dozois (\"Ancestral Voices\", \"City of God\", \"Snow Job\") and William Gibson (\"Dogfight\"). Stations of the Tide won the Nebula for best novel in 1991, and several of his shorter works have won awards as well: the Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award for \"The Edge of the World\" in 1989, the World Fantasy Award for \"Radio Waves\" in 1996, and Hugos for \"The Very Pulse of the Machine\" in 1999, \"Scherzo with Tyrannosaur\" in 2000, \"The Dog Said Bow-Wow\" in 2002, \"Slow Life\" in 2003, and \"Legions in Time\" in 2004.", "score": "1.494367" }, { "id": "30116878", "title": "To the Finland Station", "text": " Harcourt, Brace & Co. first published this book in September 1940. Doubleday's Anchor Books imprint published a paperback edition in 1953. Farrar, Straus and Giroux published a paperback edition in 1972. The New York Review of Books published a new edition in 2003, with an introduction by Louis Menand. Upon publication, TIME said: \"Because it makes Marxist theory, aims and tactics intelligible to any literate non-Marxist mind, To the Finland Station is an invaluable book. It is an advantage that, like Milton with the character of Satan, Author Wilson is half in love with the human side of the curious specimens he describes.\" To the Finland Station was one of the first four books ever published by major Brazilian publisher Companhia das Letras. The book's translation proved to be a successful seller.", "score": "1.4933912" }, { "id": "31050098", "title": "Emily St. John Mandel", "text": " Mandel's fourth novel, Station Eleven, is a post-apocalyptic novel set in the near future in a world ravaged by the effects of a virus and follows a troupe of Shakespearian actors who travel from town to town around the Great Lakes region. It was nominated for the National Book Award, the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction and the Baileys Women's Prize for Fiction, and won the Arthur C. Clarke Award and the Toronto Book Award. A film adaptation of the novel was developed by producer Scott Steindorff. The resulting ten episode limited mini-series on HBO Max, Station Eleven, premiered on December 16, 2021,", "score": "1.4792043" }, { "id": "31861391", "title": "William Boyd (writer)", "text": "On the Yankee Station; Hamish Hamilton, 1981 ; The Destiny of Nathalie 'X'; Sinclair-Stevenson, 1995 ; Fascination; Hamish Hamilton, 2004 ; The Dream Lover; Bloomsbury, 2008. This combines the short story collections in On the Yankee Station (1981) and The Destiny of Nathalie 'X' (1995) ; The Dreams of Bethany Mellmoth; Viking Press, 2017. This includes \"The Dreams of Bethany Mellmoth\" (short story), first published in Notes from the Underground, 2007 ", "score": "1.4751948" }, { "id": "15373377", "title": "Station Eleven", "text": " Although many publications classified the novel as science fiction, Mandel does not believe that the work belongs to that genre, as the novel does not include any instances of fictional technology. She said the issue of labeling her work science fiction (as opposed to literary fiction) has followed her through all her novels. Her early work was classified as crime fiction, and she has stated she consciously chose to avoid overtones of mystery and crime in this work in order to avoid being \"pigeonholed\" as a mystery novelist. Station Eleven might also be classified as \"theatre-fiction\", which Graham Wolfe defines as \"novels and stories that engage in concrete and sustained ways with theatre as artistic practice and industry\".", "score": "1.46928" }, { "id": "14343631", "title": "The Way Station", "text": " \"The Way Station\" is a novella by American writer Stephen King, originally published in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction in April 1980. In 1982, \"The Way Station\" was collected with several other stories King published in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction as The Dark Tower: The Gunslinger. \"The Way Station\" formed the second chapter of the book, and was slightly revised for the inclusion.", "score": "1.467197" }, { "id": "271546", "title": "Jay Parini", "text": " Parini has written eight novels, many of which are about the lives of literary icons, and narratives from his own personal life. His 1990 international best-selling novel The Last Station is about the final months of Leo Tolstoy. It was translated into over thirty languages, and adapted into an Academy Award-nominated film (The Last Station) starring Helen Mirren, Christopher Plummer, James McAvoy, and Paul Giamatti. The film was released in December 2009. Parini's historical novel Benjamin's Crossing was a New York Times Notable Book of the year in 1997. It is about the Jewish critic and philosopher Walter Benjamin, and his escape over the Pyrenees from Nazi occupied France into Spain. Michael Lackey notes, \"Parini brilliantly dramatizes one of Benjamin’s most important contributions to intellectual history, and it is this contribution that would pave the way for the biographical novel.\" The Passages of H.M. (2010) explores the literary great Herman Melville. His most recent novel is The Damascus Road: A Novel of Saint Paul (2019).", "score": "1.465493" } ]
[ "Days Between Stations (novel)\n Days Between Stations is the first novel by Steve Erickson. Upon publication in 1985 it received notable praise from Thomas Pynchon and has been cited as an influence by novelists such as Jonathan Lethem and Mark Z. Danielewski. It has been translated into French, Spanish, Italian, Russian and Japanese. Several stories intersect in this novel: Lauren and Jason's unhappy marriage, Lauren's love affair with Adrien-Michel, and a lost silent film titled The Death of Marat.", "Alice Koller\n jobs. In 1990, she published The Stations of Solitude, which drew upon the model of the Stations of the Cross and outlined thirteen stations with themes such as \"Unbinding,\" \"Working,\" and \"Standing Open.\" She saw the book as \"a line of travel,\" through \"the process of shaping a human being, and the stations are stopping places in the process.\" Like An Unknown Woman, however, the book was heavily autobiographical and went over many of the same experiences discussed in the earlier book. The resulting reviews were less enthusiastic: \"Koller seems to be writing for herself, failing to invite readers into her exclusive domain of solitude,\" wrote Francisca Goldsmith ", "Stations of the Tide\n Stations of the Tide is a science fiction novel by American author Michael Swanwick. Prior to being published in book form in 1991, it was serialized in Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine in two parts, starting in mid-December 1990. It won the Nebula Award for Best Novel in 1991, was nominated for both the Hugo and Campbell Awards in 1992, and was nominated for the Arthur C. Clarke Award in 1993.", "Ed Friedman\n Telephone Book consists of transcripts of Friedman's phone calls over the course of a number of weeks, and Space Stations – which has not been published in its entirety, follows up on William S. Burroughs by dividing a journal's pages into three columns and recording Firedman's attention shifts while he is writing. Space Stations provided the material for much of Friedman's published poetry from 1982 to 2001. Jerome Rothenberg has said of Friedman that he is \"a powerful & never disappointing poet/chronicler, at the top of his form & ready to take his place among the makers & movers of our time,\" and Ed Sanders has said \"You can count on Ed Friedman ... to take you on a fine ride.\"", "Dra'k'ne Station\n Dra'k'ne Station was written by Bill Paley, with art by Kevin Siembieda and was published in 1979 by Judges Guild as a 64-page book.", "Three Stations\n Three Stations is a crime novel by Martin Cruz Smith set in Russia circa 2010. It is the seventh novel to feature Detective-Investigator Arkady Renko, published 29 years after the initial novel of the Renko series, Gorky Park.", "Way Station (novel)\n Way Station is a 1963 science fiction novel by American writer Clifford D. Simak, originally published as Here Gather the Stars in two parts in Galaxy Magazine in June and August 1963. Way Station won the 1964 Hugo Award for Best Novel.", "The Station (song)\n \"The Station\" is a song by American electronic producer and singer-songwriter Oneohtrix Point Never from his eighth studio album, Age Of.", "The Station Agent\n The Station Agent is a 2003 American independent psychological comedy-drama film written and directed by Tom McCarthy in his directorial debut. It stars Peter Dinklage as a man who seeks solitude in an abandoned train station in the Newfoundland section of Jefferson Township, New Jersey. It also stars Patricia Clarkson, Michelle Williams, Bobby Cannavale and John Slattery. For his writing achievement, McCarthy won the BAFTA Award for Best Original Screenplay and the Independent Spirit Award for Best First Screenplay.", "Barrett Tillman\n Henry Barrett Tillman (born December 24, 1948) is an American author who specializes in naval and aviation topics in addition to fiction and technical writing. Tillman's most influential book to date is On Yankee Station (1987), written with John B. Nichols. It is a critical appraisal of naval aviation in the Vietnam War. According to Tillman, it was added to the US Air Force and Marine Corps professional reading lists, and at least one squadron took copies of the book with them to Operation Desert Storm as \"a reality check on tactics\".", "Hospital Station\n Hospital Station is a 1962 science fiction book by author James White and is the first volume in the Sector General series. The book collects together a series of five short stories previously published in New Worlds magazine between 1957 and 1960.", "Downbelow Station\n Downbelow Station is a science fiction novel by American writer C. J. Cherryh, published in 1981 by DAW Books. It won the Hugo Award in 1982, was shortlisted for a Locus Award that same year, and was named by Locus magazine as one of the top 50 science fiction novels of all time in 1987. The book is set in Cherryh's Alliance–Union universe during the Company Wars period, specifically late 2352 and early 2353. The book details events centering on a space station in orbit around Pell's World (also known as \"Downbelow\") in the Tau Ceti star system. The station serves as the transit point for ships moving between the Earth and Union sectors of the galaxy. The working title of the book was The Company War, but Cherryh's editor at DAW, Donald A. Wollheim, believed that the moniker lacked commercial appeal, so Downbelow Station was selected as the title for publication. It was the first novel edited by current DAW president Elizabeth Wollheim, who worked alongside her father.", "Station at the Horizon\n Station at the Horizon (Station am Horizont) is a novel by Erich Maria Remarque, a German veteran of World War I. The book describes the search for love of an ex-soldier and an ex-race car driver, Kai, who is torn between Barbara, a girl from the village, Maud, an American middle-class woman, and Lilian Dunquerke, a countess. The novel was first published in 1927/28, in a German sports magazine Sport im Bild. However, it was not published as a book until 1998.", "Michael Swanwick\n Moon Dogs. He has collaborated with other authors on several short works, including Gardner Dozois (\"Ancestral Voices\", \"City of God\", \"Snow Job\") and William Gibson (\"Dogfight\"). Stations of the Tide won the Nebula for best novel in 1991, and several of his shorter works have won awards as well: the Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award for \"The Edge of the World\" in 1989, the World Fantasy Award for \"Radio Waves\" in 1996, and Hugos for \"The Very Pulse of the Machine\" in 1999, \"Scherzo with Tyrannosaur\" in 2000, \"The Dog Said Bow-Wow\" in 2002, \"Slow Life\" in 2003, and \"Legions in Time\" in 2004.", "To the Finland Station\n Harcourt, Brace & Co. first published this book in September 1940. Doubleday's Anchor Books imprint published a paperback edition in 1953. Farrar, Straus and Giroux published a paperback edition in 1972. The New York Review of Books published a new edition in 2003, with an introduction by Louis Menand. Upon publication, TIME said: \"Because it makes Marxist theory, aims and tactics intelligible to any literate non-Marxist mind, To the Finland Station is an invaluable book. It is an advantage that, like Milton with the character of Satan, Author Wilson is half in love with the human side of the curious specimens he describes.\" To the Finland Station was one of the first four books ever published by major Brazilian publisher Companhia das Letras. The book's translation proved to be a successful seller.", "Emily St. John Mandel\n Mandel's fourth novel, Station Eleven, is a post-apocalyptic novel set in the near future in a world ravaged by the effects of a virus and follows a troupe of Shakespearian actors who travel from town to town around the Great Lakes region. It was nominated for the National Book Award, the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction and the Baileys Women's Prize for Fiction, and won the Arthur C. Clarke Award and the Toronto Book Award. A film adaptation of the novel was developed by producer Scott Steindorff. The resulting ten episode limited mini-series on HBO Max, Station Eleven, premiered on December 16, 2021,", "William Boyd (writer)\nOn the Yankee Station; Hamish Hamilton, 1981 ; The Destiny of Nathalie 'X'; Sinclair-Stevenson, 1995 ; Fascination; Hamish Hamilton, 2004 ; The Dream Lover; Bloomsbury, 2008. This combines the short story collections in On the Yankee Station (1981) and The Destiny of Nathalie 'X' (1995) ; The Dreams of Bethany Mellmoth; Viking Press, 2017. This includes \"The Dreams of Bethany Mellmoth\" (short story), first published in Notes from the Underground, 2007 ", "Station Eleven\n Although many publications classified the novel as science fiction, Mandel does not believe that the work belongs to that genre, as the novel does not include any instances of fictional technology. She said the issue of labeling her work science fiction (as opposed to literary fiction) has followed her through all her novels. Her early work was classified as crime fiction, and she has stated she consciously chose to avoid overtones of mystery and crime in this work in order to avoid being \"pigeonholed\" as a mystery novelist. Station Eleven might also be classified as \"theatre-fiction\", which Graham Wolfe defines as \"novels and stories that engage in concrete and sustained ways with theatre as artistic practice and industry\".", "The Way Station\n \"The Way Station\" is a novella by American writer Stephen King, originally published in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction in April 1980. In 1982, \"The Way Station\" was collected with several other stories King published in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction as The Dark Tower: The Gunslinger. \"The Way Station\" formed the second chapter of the book, and was slightly revised for the inclusion.", "Jay Parini\n Parini has written eight novels, many of which are about the lives of literary icons, and narratives from his own personal life. His 1990 international best-selling novel The Last Station is about the final months of Leo Tolstoy. It was translated into over thirty languages, and adapted into an Academy Award-nominated film (The Last Station) starring Helen Mirren, Christopher Plummer, James McAvoy, and Paul Giamatti. The film was released in December 2009. Parini's historical novel Benjamin's Crossing was a New York Times Notable Book of the year in 1997. It is about the Jewish critic and philosopher Walter Benjamin, and his escape over the Pyrenees from Nazi occupied France into Spain. Michael Lackey notes, \"Parini brilliantly dramatizes one of Benjamin’s most important contributions to intellectual history, and it is this contribution that would pave the way for the biographical novel.\" The Passages of H.M. (2010) explores the literary great Herman Melville. His most recent novel is The Damascus Road: A Novel of Saint Paul (2019)." ]
What is the religion of Cosmo Francesco Ruppi?
[ "Catholic Church", "Roman Catholic Church", "Church", "Roman Apostolic Catholic Church" ]
religion
Cosmo Francesco Ruppi
196,395
45
[ { "id": "12618366", "title": "Cosmo Francesco Ruppi", "text": " Cosmo Francesco Ruppi (6 June 1932 – 29 May 2011) was the Roman Catholic archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Lecce, Italy. Ordained in 1954, Ruppi was named a bishop and was appointed to the Lecce Archdiocese in 1988. Archbishop Ruppi retired in 2009.", "score": "1.9731014" }, { "id": "5222323", "title": "Christian Kabbalah", "text": " Francesco Giorgi, (1467–1540) was a Venetian Franciscan friar and \"has been considered a central figure in sixteenth-century Christian Kabbalah both by his contemporaries and by modern scholars\". According to Giulio Busi, he was the most important Christian Kabbalist second to its founder Giovanni Pico della Mirandola. His, De harmonia mundi, was \"a massive and curious book, all Hermetic, Platonic, Cabalistic, and Pinchian\".", "score": "1.515187" }, { "id": "5028512", "title": "Francesco Follo", "text": " Society of Jesus in Milan. He was also from 1976 to 1983 a spiritual advisor to students of the Polytechnic Institute, the Academy of Fine Arts Brera and the Conservatory of Music \"Giuseppe Verdi\" in Milan. He became a member of the Order of Journalists in 1978. In 1982 he held the post of deputy director of the weekly La Vita Cattolica. From 1978 to 1983, he was Professor of Cultural Anthropology and Philosophy at the Catholic University of Milan and at the Higher Institute of Education Assistants in Milan. He joined the staff of the Section for General Affairs of ", "score": "1.4313767" }, { "id": "16252940", "title": "Flying Spaghetti Monster", "text": " Pastafarianism, and the government has no right to decide which beliefs should be taken seriously and which should not, and that it is only up to the individual believers themselves to decide which elements of their religion to take seriously, and to what degree. On August 9, 2011 the chairman of the church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster Germany, Rüdiger Weida, obtained a driver's license with a picture of him wearing a pirate bandana. In contrast with the reasons given by the Austrian officials in the case of Niko Alm, the German officials allowed the headgear as a religious ", "score": "1.4230781" }, { "id": "12317372", "title": "Matteo Zuppi", "text": " Zuppi was born on 11 October 1955 in Rome. He studied at the seminary in Palestrina and earned his degree in theology at the Pontifical Lateran University in Rome. He earned a doctorate at the Sapienza University of Rome, writing his thesis on the history of Christianity. He was ordained a priest on 9 May 1981. He worked with the Community of Sant'Egidio, a Catholic lay association devoted to ecumenism and conflict resolution. He participated with several colleagues in negotiations that helped end the civil war in Mozambique in 1992 and was made an honorary citizen of that country. On 31 January 2012, Pope Benedict XVI named him an Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese of Rome and titular bishop of Villa Nova. ", "score": "1.4183588" }, { "id": "10870933", "title": "Francesco Falconi", "text": " Evelyn Starr, entitled The Queen of No Stars has been published by Piemme Edizioni. In the same period, Francesco Falconi enters the stable of Mondadori Editore with a new series for young adults entitled Muses. He currently works in Rome as a consultant for engineering and writer of children's novels, which have sold tens of thousands of copies. In November 2012, he comes back to publish a new story, kind of weird, titled Halo in the journal Effemme of FantasyMagazine. Since 2008 the jury of the Literary Award Trophy The Centuria and The Dead Zone, dedicated to the stories of the fantasy genre and whose ceremony is held every year in Savona. ", "score": "1.4177947" }, { "id": "13535470", "title": "Francesco Giorgi", "text": " Francesco Giorgi Veneto (1466–1540) was an Italian Franciscan friar, and author of the work De harmonia mundi totius from 1525. In it Giorgio proposed an idea of the Universe created according to the universal system of proportion, which may be studied as laws of mathematics used by architects. The Cambridge History of Renaissance Philosophy describes him as 'idiosyncratic'. He wrote also In Scripturam Sacram Problemata (1536). Giorgi is extensively discussed in Frances Yates, The Occult Philosophy in the Elizabethan Age That Giorgi was a Christian Cabalist is a statement that means, not merely that he was influenced vaguely by the Cabalist literature, but that he believed that Cabala could prove, or already had proved, the truth of Christianity. She also discusses Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice in the light of the theory of Daniel Banes that Shakespeare was familiar with Giorgi's and related writings on the Cabala. A copy of De harmonia mundi is listed as once in the Library of Sir Thomas Browne. It is possible that Browne's copy was bequeathed to him from Arthur Dee. John Dee is also known to have possessed a copy of Giorgi's work.", "score": "1.4170544" }, { "id": "1014282", "title": "Cosmo Cosmolino", "text": " Cosmo Cosmolino is a 1992 book by Australian writer Helen Garner. The book consists of three linked works: two short stories and a novella, though the author and critics have described it as a novel. It was first published in Australia by McPhee Gribble and was shortlisted for the 1993 Miles Franklin Award. It has been reported that the novel's title is Garner's favourite, and came to her in a dream.", "score": "1.4126961" }, { "id": "4436546", "title": "Cosmotheism", "text": "Norman Lowell, Maltese founder of Imperium Europa ; Mordechai Nessyahu, Jewish-Israeli and Labor Party theorist ; William Luther Pierce, American founder of the white supremacist organization National Alliance \"Cosmotheism\" is an older term for pantheism and is associated with the beliefs adhered to by many including:", "score": "1.4114914" }, { "id": "29898750", "title": "Taoist Church of Italy", "text": " The Taoist Church of Italy (TCI for short; in Italian: Chiesa Taoista d'Italia, \"CTI\" for short) is a religious body of Taoism established in 2013 by Vincenzo di Ieso, a fourteenth-generation Taoist master of the Xuanwu school of the Wudang Mountains (武当玄武派 Wǔdāng Xuánwǔ pài), into which he was initiated in 1993 with the ecclesiastical name of Li Xuanzong. Despite the founder's particular affiliation, the church intends to incorporate all forms of Taoism in Italy. The establishment of the church has been defined by a scholar of religious rights as a \"crucial event for both Taoism and religious freedom in Italy\".", "score": "1.4050696" }, { "id": "25545927", "title": "Mario Luigi Ciappi", "text": " After studying at the convent of San Domenico in Pistoia, he attended the Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas, Angelicum in Rome, where he obtained his doctorate in theology in 1933 with a thesis entitled De divina misericordia ut prima causa operum Dei. Ciappi was ordained a priest by Cardinal Francesco Marchetti-Selvaggiani on 26 March 1932. He continued his studies at the University of Louvain and University of Fribourg until 1935.", "score": "1.3934116" }, { "id": "170458", "title": "Fabrizio De André", "text": " and the Church hierarchy is often sarcastic and highly critical about their contradictory behaviour, such as, for example, in the songs Un blasfemo, Il testamento di Tito, La ballata del Miché and the last verses of Bocca di rosa. \"I feel myself religious, and my religion is to feel part of a whole, in a chain that includes all creation and so to respect all elements, including plants and minerals, because, in my opinion, the balance is exactly given from the well-being in our surroundings. My religion does not seek the principle, you want to call it creator, regulator or chaos makes no difference. But I think that everything around us ", "score": "1.3928003" }, { "id": "14897186", "title": "UFO religion", "text": " The Theosophical-influenced guru Benjamin Creme of Share International claimed that the Messiah figure he referred to as Maitreya is in telepathic contact with Nordic aliens. Creme believed that Nordic aliens live on the etheric plane of Venus and visited earth in flying saucers. Creme accepted George Adamski's UFO sightings as valid. According to Creme, the Venusians have mother ships up to four miles long. It is also believed by the Theosophists in general as well as Creme in particular that the governing deity of Earth, Sanat Kumara (who is believed to live in a city called Shamballa located above the Gobi desert on the etheric plane of Earth), is a Nordic alien who originally came from Venus 18,500,000 years ago. The followers of Benjamin Creme believe there is regular flying saucer traffic between Venus and Shamballah and that crop circles are mostly caused by flying saucers.", "score": "1.3879488" }, { "id": "9355096", "title": "Mario Borrelli", "text": " of God could be incarnated in public life as a clan of groups of human interest that would use God as flag and tablecloth for their daily meal. In what way an elected boss, through his patronal-Mafia network, could bring God to the Neapolitans and make them more honest and good examples of Christianity. When I realized that this Church felt the message too metaphorically and remained distant and absent from the poor, I felt cheated in my vocation. I felt as a prisoner, a wheel of a mechanism that tended to save and perpetuate itself instead of saving and helping others.» Mario Borrelli, Tanquam Peripsema, Naples, 1970.", "score": "1.3842608" }, { "id": "16252902", "title": "Flying Spaghetti Monster", "text": " The Flying Spaghetti Monster (FSM) is the deity of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, or Pastafarianism, a social movement that promotes a light-hearted view of religion and originated in opposition to the teaching of intelligent design in public schools. According to adherents, Pastafarianism (a portmanteau of pasta and Rastafarianism) is a \"real, legitimate religion, as much as any other\". It has received some limited recognition as such. The \"Flying Spaghetti Monster\" was first described in a satirical open letter written by Bobby Henderson in 2005 to protest the Kansas State Board of Education decision to permit teaching intelligent design as an alternative to evolution in public school science classes. In the letter, Henderson demanded ", "score": "1.3840233" }, { "id": "7074680", "title": "Bonaventura Cavalieri", "text": " Towards the end of his life, Cavalieri published two books on astronomy. While they use the language of astrology, he states in the text that he did not believe in or practice astrology. Those books were the Nuova pratica astromlogica (1639) and the Trattato della ruota planetaria perpetua (1646).", "score": "1.3837274" }, { "id": "11401598", "title": "Stregheria", "text": " of Herodias) was the object of a \"witch-cult\" in medieval Tuscany. Since 1998, Grimassi has been advocating what he calls the Arician tradition, described as an \"initiate level\" variant of the religion, involving an initiation ceremony. Author Paul Theroux has quoted Norman Lewis and Danilo Dolci by stating that the Sicilian strega is a useful, probably indispensable witch who \"arranges marriages, concocts potions, dabbles a little in black magic, clears up skin conditions, and casts out devils.\" Stregheria, proves to be at the root of witchcraft. Scholarly documents place Stregheria before witchcraft practiced in Celtic areas. Most of the old religion is passed on through family lines (in this case the folk religion of ancient and medieval Italy). Stregheria honors a pantheon centered on a Moon Goddess and a Horned God regarded as central, lending itself to Wiccan views of divinity.", "score": "1.3836647" }, { "id": "24979603", "title": "1616", "text": " Paris. For his opinion that the world is eternal and governed by immanent laws, as expressed in this book, he is executed in 1619. ; Francesco Albani paints the ceiling frescoes of Apollo and the Seasons, at the Palazzo Verospi in Via del Corso, for Cardinal Fabrizio Verospi. ; Elizabethan polymath and alchemist Robert Fludd publishes Apologia Compendiaria, Fraternitatem de Rosea Cruce suspicionis … maculis aspersam, veritatis quasi Fluctibus abluens at Leiden, countering the arguments of Andreas Libavius. Fludd later becomes a cult figure, being linked with Rosicrucians and the Family of Love, without any historical evidence. ; Johannes Valentinus Andreae ", "score": "1.3816855" }, { "id": "28497281", "title": "Peter Kolosimo", "text": " Peter Kolosimo, pseudonym of Pier Domenico Colosimo (15 December 1922 – 23 March 1984), was an Italian journalist and writer. He is ranked amongst the founders of pseudoarchaeology (in Italian: fantarcheologia), a controversial topic where interpretations of the past are made that are not accepted by the archaeological science community, which rejects the accepted data-gathering and analytical methods of the discipline. He also popularised ancient astronaut theories of contact between extraterrestrial beings and ancient human civilizations.", "score": "1.3805285" }, { "id": "32533284", "title": "Lucilio Vanini", "text": " that the creators of the three monotheistic religions, Moses, Jesus and Muhammad, were nothing but impostors. In De Admirandis are found themes from Amphitheatrum, with refinements and developments that make it his masterpiece and the summary of his philosophy. Denying creation from nothing and the immortality of the soul, he saw God in Nature as its driving force and vital force, both eternal. The stars of heaven he considered a kind of intermediary between God and Nature. The true religion is therefore a \"religion of Nature\" that does not deny God but considers Him a spirit-force. The thought of Vanini is quite fragmented ", "score": "1.3778391" } ]
[ "Cosmo Francesco Ruppi\n Cosmo Francesco Ruppi (6 June 1932 – 29 May 2011) was the Roman Catholic archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Lecce, Italy. Ordained in 1954, Ruppi was named a bishop and was appointed to the Lecce Archdiocese in 1988. Archbishop Ruppi retired in 2009.", "Christian Kabbalah\n Francesco Giorgi, (1467–1540) was a Venetian Franciscan friar and \"has been considered a central figure in sixteenth-century Christian Kabbalah both by his contemporaries and by modern scholars\". According to Giulio Busi, he was the most important Christian Kabbalist second to its founder Giovanni Pico della Mirandola. His, De harmonia mundi, was \"a massive and curious book, all Hermetic, Platonic, Cabalistic, and Pinchian\".", "Francesco Follo\n Society of Jesus in Milan. He was also from 1976 to 1983 a spiritual advisor to students of the Polytechnic Institute, the Academy of Fine Arts Brera and the Conservatory of Music \"Giuseppe Verdi\" in Milan. He became a member of the Order of Journalists in 1978. In 1982 he held the post of deputy director of the weekly La Vita Cattolica. From 1978 to 1983, he was Professor of Cultural Anthropology and Philosophy at the Catholic University of Milan and at the Higher Institute of Education Assistants in Milan. He joined the staff of the Section for General Affairs of ", "Flying Spaghetti Monster\n Pastafarianism, and the government has no right to decide which beliefs should be taken seriously and which should not, and that it is only up to the individual believers themselves to decide which elements of their religion to take seriously, and to what degree. On August 9, 2011 the chairman of the church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster Germany, Rüdiger Weida, obtained a driver's license with a picture of him wearing a pirate bandana. In contrast with the reasons given by the Austrian officials in the case of Niko Alm, the German officials allowed the headgear as a religious ", "Matteo Zuppi\n Zuppi was born on 11 October 1955 in Rome. He studied at the seminary in Palestrina and earned his degree in theology at the Pontifical Lateran University in Rome. He earned a doctorate at the Sapienza University of Rome, writing his thesis on the history of Christianity. He was ordained a priest on 9 May 1981. He worked with the Community of Sant'Egidio, a Catholic lay association devoted to ecumenism and conflict resolution. He participated with several colleagues in negotiations that helped end the civil war in Mozambique in 1992 and was made an honorary citizen of that country. On 31 January 2012, Pope Benedict XVI named him an Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese of Rome and titular bishop of Villa Nova. ", "Francesco Falconi\n Evelyn Starr, entitled The Queen of No Stars has been published by Piemme Edizioni. In the same period, Francesco Falconi enters the stable of Mondadori Editore with a new series for young adults entitled Muses. He currently works in Rome as a consultant for engineering and writer of children's novels, which have sold tens of thousands of copies. In November 2012, he comes back to publish a new story, kind of weird, titled Halo in the journal Effemme of FantasyMagazine. Since 2008 the jury of the Literary Award Trophy The Centuria and The Dead Zone, dedicated to the stories of the fantasy genre and whose ceremony is held every year in Savona. ", "Francesco Giorgi\n Francesco Giorgi Veneto (1466–1540) was an Italian Franciscan friar, and author of the work De harmonia mundi totius from 1525. In it Giorgio proposed an idea of the Universe created according to the universal system of proportion, which may be studied as laws of mathematics used by architects. The Cambridge History of Renaissance Philosophy describes him as 'idiosyncratic'. He wrote also In Scripturam Sacram Problemata (1536). Giorgi is extensively discussed in Frances Yates, The Occult Philosophy in the Elizabethan Age That Giorgi was a Christian Cabalist is a statement that means, not merely that he was influenced vaguely by the Cabalist literature, but that he believed that Cabala could prove, or already had proved, the truth of Christianity. She also discusses Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice in the light of the theory of Daniel Banes that Shakespeare was familiar with Giorgi's and related writings on the Cabala. A copy of De harmonia mundi is listed as once in the Library of Sir Thomas Browne. It is possible that Browne's copy was bequeathed to him from Arthur Dee. John Dee is also known to have possessed a copy of Giorgi's work.", "Cosmo Cosmolino\n Cosmo Cosmolino is a 1992 book by Australian writer Helen Garner. The book consists of three linked works: two short stories and a novella, though the author and critics have described it as a novel. It was first published in Australia by McPhee Gribble and was shortlisted for the 1993 Miles Franklin Award. It has been reported that the novel's title is Garner's favourite, and came to her in a dream.", "Cosmotheism\nNorman Lowell, Maltese founder of Imperium Europa ; Mordechai Nessyahu, Jewish-Israeli and Labor Party theorist ; William Luther Pierce, American founder of the white supremacist organization National Alliance \"Cosmotheism\" is an older term for pantheism and is associated with the beliefs adhered to by many including:", "Taoist Church of Italy\n The Taoist Church of Italy (TCI for short; in Italian: Chiesa Taoista d'Italia, \"CTI\" for short) is a religious body of Taoism established in 2013 by Vincenzo di Ieso, a fourteenth-generation Taoist master of the Xuanwu school of the Wudang Mountains (武当玄武派 Wǔdāng Xuánwǔ pài), into which he was initiated in 1993 with the ecclesiastical name of Li Xuanzong. Despite the founder's particular affiliation, the church intends to incorporate all forms of Taoism in Italy. The establishment of the church has been defined by a scholar of religious rights as a \"crucial event for both Taoism and religious freedom in Italy\".", "Mario Luigi Ciappi\n After studying at the convent of San Domenico in Pistoia, he attended the Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas, Angelicum in Rome, where he obtained his doctorate in theology in 1933 with a thesis entitled De divina misericordia ut prima causa operum Dei. Ciappi was ordained a priest by Cardinal Francesco Marchetti-Selvaggiani on 26 March 1932. He continued his studies at the University of Louvain and University of Fribourg until 1935.", "Fabrizio De André\n and the Church hierarchy is often sarcastic and highly critical about their contradictory behaviour, such as, for example, in the songs Un blasfemo, Il testamento di Tito, La ballata del Miché and the last verses of Bocca di rosa. \"I feel myself religious, and my religion is to feel part of a whole, in a chain that includes all creation and so to respect all elements, including plants and minerals, because, in my opinion, the balance is exactly given from the well-being in our surroundings. My religion does not seek the principle, you want to call it creator, regulator or chaos makes no difference. But I think that everything around us ", "UFO religion\n The Theosophical-influenced guru Benjamin Creme of Share International claimed that the Messiah figure he referred to as Maitreya is in telepathic contact with Nordic aliens. Creme believed that Nordic aliens live on the etheric plane of Venus and visited earth in flying saucers. Creme accepted George Adamski's UFO sightings as valid. According to Creme, the Venusians have mother ships up to four miles long. It is also believed by the Theosophists in general as well as Creme in particular that the governing deity of Earth, Sanat Kumara (who is believed to live in a city called Shamballa located above the Gobi desert on the etheric plane of Earth), is a Nordic alien who originally came from Venus 18,500,000 years ago. The followers of Benjamin Creme believe there is regular flying saucer traffic between Venus and Shamballah and that crop circles are mostly caused by flying saucers.", "Mario Borrelli\n of God could be incarnated in public life as a clan of groups of human interest that would use God as flag and tablecloth for their daily meal. In what way an elected boss, through his patronal-Mafia network, could bring God to the Neapolitans and make them more honest and good examples of Christianity. When I realized that this Church felt the message too metaphorically and remained distant and absent from the poor, I felt cheated in my vocation. I felt as a prisoner, a wheel of a mechanism that tended to save and perpetuate itself instead of saving and helping others.» Mario Borrelli, Tanquam Peripsema, Naples, 1970.", "Flying Spaghetti Monster\n The Flying Spaghetti Monster (FSM) is the deity of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, or Pastafarianism, a social movement that promotes a light-hearted view of religion and originated in opposition to the teaching of intelligent design in public schools. According to adherents, Pastafarianism (a portmanteau of pasta and Rastafarianism) is a \"real, legitimate religion, as much as any other\". It has received some limited recognition as such. The \"Flying Spaghetti Monster\" was first described in a satirical open letter written by Bobby Henderson in 2005 to protest the Kansas State Board of Education decision to permit teaching intelligent design as an alternative to evolution in public school science classes. In the letter, Henderson demanded ", "Bonaventura Cavalieri\n Towards the end of his life, Cavalieri published two books on astronomy. While they use the language of astrology, he states in the text that he did not believe in or practice astrology. Those books were the Nuova pratica astromlogica (1639) and the Trattato della ruota planetaria perpetua (1646).", "Stregheria\n of Herodias) was the object of a \"witch-cult\" in medieval Tuscany. Since 1998, Grimassi has been advocating what he calls the Arician tradition, described as an \"initiate level\" variant of the religion, involving an initiation ceremony. Author Paul Theroux has quoted Norman Lewis and Danilo Dolci by stating that the Sicilian strega is a useful, probably indispensable witch who \"arranges marriages, concocts potions, dabbles a little in black magic, clears up skin conditions, and casts out devils.\" Stregheria, proves to be at the root of witchcraft. Scholarly documents place Stregheria before witchcraft practiced in Celtic areas. Most of the old religion is passed on through family lines (in this case the folk religion of ancient and medieval Italy). Stregheria honors a pantheon centered on a Moon Goddess and a Horned God regarded as central, lending itself to Wiccan views of divinity.", "1616\n Paris. For his opinion that the world is eternal and governed by immanent laws, as expressed in this book, he is executed in 1619. ; Francesco Albani paints the ceiling frescoes of Apollo and the Seasons, at the Palazzo Verospi in Via del Corso, for Cardinal Fabrizio Verospi. ; Elizabethan polymath and alchemist Robert Fludd publishes Apologia Compendiaria, Fraternitatem de Rosea Cruce suspicionis … maculis aspersam, veritatis quasi Fluctibus abluens at Leiden, countering the arguments of Andreas Libavius. Fludd later becomes a cult figure, being linked with Rosicrucians and the Family of Love, without any historical evidence. ; Johannes Valentinus Andreae ", "Peter Kolosimo\n Peter Kolosimo, pseudonym of Pier Domenico Colosimo (15 December 1922 – 23 March 1984), was an Italian journalist and writer. He is ranked amongst the founders of pseudoarchaeology (in Italian: fantarcheologia), a controversial topic where interpretations of the past are made that are not accepted by the archaeological science community, which rejects the accepted data-gathering and analytical methods of the discipline. He also popularised ancient astronaut theories of contact between extraterrestrial beings and ancient human civilizations.", "Lucilio Vanini\n that the creators of the three monotheistic religions, Moses, Jesus and Muhammad, were nothing but impostors. In De Admirandis are found themes from Amphitheatrum, with refinements and developments that make it his masterpiece and the summary of his philosophy. Denying creation from nothing and the immortality of the soul, he saw God in Nature as its driving force and vital force, both eternal. The stars of heaven he considered a kind of intermediary between God and Nature. The true religion is therefore a \"religion of Nature\" that does not deny God but considers Him a spirit-force. The thought of Vanini is quite fragmented " ]
What sport does Sava Paunović play?
[ "association football", "football", "soccer" ]
sport
Sava Paunović
5,699,583
92
[ { "id": "28125896", "title": "Sava Paunović", "text": " Sava Paunović (born 1947) is a former football forward who played in Yugoslavia and Turkey.", "score": "1.8528862" }, { "id": "28125897", "title": "Sava Paunović", "text": " Born in Yugoslavia, Paunović started playing football for local side KFK Radnički, helping them achieve promotion to the Yugoslav First League in 1969. He would join fellow First League side FK Partizan for the 1976–77 season. In 1977, Paunović moved to Turkey, joining Süper Lig side Beşiktaş J.K. for two seasons. He made 55 appearances and scored 22 goals in the league for the club. The Turkish Football Federation imposed a ban on foreign players in the league beginning in 1979, so Paunović returned to Yugoslavia to finish his career with KFK Radnički.", "score": "1.6951269" }, { "id": "25007649", "title": "Zoran Paunović", "text": " Paunović started to play basketball in his hometown Niš, for the OKK Konstantin youth selections. In Summer 2014, he joined the Crvena zvezda youth. He won the second place at the 2017–18 Junior ABA League season with the Zvezda. Over six season games, he averaged 14.2 points, 5.7 rebounds and 3.2 assists per game. In August 2017, he participated at the Basketball Without Borders Europe Camp 16 in Netanya, Israel.", "score": "1.6716464" }, { "id": "32253317", "title": "Duško Savanović", "text": " Savanović has been a member of the Serbian national team at the 2010 FIBA World Championship where Serbia was defeated 99-88 by Lithuania in the game for the bronze medal. He was capped for the national team of Serbia at the EuroBasket 2011 in Lithuania where Serbia finished 8th. He averaged 13.4 points and 3.6 rebounds per game.", "score": "1.6449075" }, { "id": "6151441", "title": "Sava Ranđelović", "text": " Sava Ranđelović (born 17 July 1993) is a Serbian water polo player for VasasPlaket and the Serbia men's national water polo team. Representing Serbia, he won European Championship gold medals in 2014, 2016, and 2018. He also won a gold medal at the World Championships in 2015, and Olympic gold medals in 2016 and 2020.", "score": "1.638001" }, { "id": "32253310", "title": "Duško Savanović", "text": " In his first three years of the professional career, Savanović played for domestic clubs, two seasons with the FMP and one season with the Borac Čačak, both participants of the YUBA League. He helped FMP to win the Adriatic League title in 2006, the second in the club's history.", "score": "1.6218226" }, { "id": "25007648", "title": "Zoran Paunović", "text": " Zoran Paunović (, born 19 July 2000) is a Serbian professional basketball player for Podgorica of the Prva A Liga and the ABA League Second Division.", "score": "1.616754" }, { "id": "15259560", "title": "Veljko Paunović", "text": " Paunović experienced hardships while training for football, such as walking for hours to practice and sometimes going without food. His father, Blagoje, was a legendary footballer at FK Partizan Belgrade, the club Veljko Paunovic grew up at. A defender who inspired him, he too played for Partizan and represented Yugoslavia at UEFA Euro 1968, later embarking in a managerial career. Paunović is married and has four children. He is fluent in six languages: English, Spanish, Serbian, Macedonian, Russian and German.", "score": "1.610822" }, { "id": "25007650", "title": "Zoran Paunović", "text": " In January 2018, Paunović was added to the Crvena zvezda ABA League roster for the rest of the 2017–18 season. He missed to play a single game during that season. On 25 July 2018, Paunović signed a four-year professional contract with Crvena zvezda. Prior to the 2018–19 season he was loaned out to FMP. On 28 August 2019, Crveza zvezda parted ways with him. On 11 September 2019, Paunović signed for Dynamic Belgrade. In May 2020, after the COVID-19 pandemic ban, he joined a training camp of Partizan. On 22 June 2021, Paunović signed for Podgorica.", "score": "1.6045728" }, { "id": "32253309", "title": "Duško Savanović", "text": " Duško Savanović (, born September 5, 1983) is a Serbian former professional basketball player. A 2.04m power forward, he represented the Serbian national basketball team internationally and was an All-Euroleague Second Team selection in 2011.", "score": "1.5969489" }, { "id": "11507880", "title": "Nemanja Nikolić (footballer, born 1987)", "text": " the Fire Paunović praised Nikolić's skillset: \"'His quality is scoring goals and assisting, but then he's a man that can participate in both phases of team play,' Paunovic said. 'He's very good in all phases of the game. Defensively, he helps the team to recover the ball as soon as possible in order that we can control the game and create opportunities for our team to win. Sometimes he will benefit from team play and he will be just the executor, but sometimes he's capable of creating his own situations in the game, the opportunities 1v1, and scoring his own goals. '\"", "score": "1.5904572" }, { "id": "16329324", "title": "Goran Savanović", "text": " A small forward, Savanović played for Novi Sad, Beobanka, Prokom Trefl Sopot, Crvena zvezda, Maccabi Ness, Anwil Włocławek, NIS Vojvodina, Partizan, Oostende, ĆEZ Nymburk, and Prostějov. He retired as a player with Prostějov in 2009.", "score": "1.5898056" }, { "id": "32253311", "title": "Duško Savanović", "text": " In October 2006, after almost ten years of playing with the FMP (including his youth career), he signed a two-year contract with the Russian basketball team UNICS Kazan. UNICS also participated in the ULEB Cup. In his second season in the club, he played 15 games in the ULEB Cup and averaged 11.2 points and 3.9 rebounds per game helping his team to reach the Final Eight, while in the Russian League he averaged 11 points and 4.7 rebounds over 22 games.", "score": "1.5844691" }, { "id": "2121121", "title": "Nikola Šaranović (basketball)", "text": " Šaranović grew up with the Crvena zvezda youth system. In December 2020, he recorded a triple-double in a 101–60 win over the Smederevo 1953 Junior team making 21 points, 10 rebounds, 14 steals, and 7 assists.", "score": "1.5836037" }, { "id": "32253312", "title": "Duško Savanović", "text": " On 27 June 2008, Savanović signed with the Spanish basketball team Cajasol. In the 2008-09 season, he averaged 14.7 points on 41% three-point shooting and 4.8 rebounds in 36 games in the ACB League. He led Cajasol to its best season of the decade, reaching the Spanish King's Cup final eight and the ACB League playoffs for the first time since 2000.", "score": "1.5787423" }, { "id": "8034728", "title": "Marko Podraščanin", "text": " Marko Podraščanin (Марко Подрашчанин) (born 29 August 1987) is a Serbian volleyball player, member of the Serbia men's national volleyball team and Italian club Itas Trentino, participant of the Olympic Games (Beijing 2008 and London 2012), bronze medallist at the 2010 World Championship, 2011 European Champion, 2019 European Champion, gold medallist at the 2016 World League.", "score": "1.5731626" }, { "id": "2769014", "title": "List of Serbs", "text": " Blagoje Paunović (1947–2014) ; Jovan Aćimović (born 1948) ; Dušan Bajević (born 1948) ; Radomir Antić (1948–2020) ; Dušan Bajević (born 1948) ; Dragoslav Stepanović (born 1948) ; Vladislav Bogićević (born 1950) ; Milovan Rajevac (born 1954) ; Vladimir Petrović (born 1955) ; Dušan Savić (born 1955) ; Steve Ogrizovic (born 1957), football ; Jovica Nikolić (born 1959), Olympic medalist ; Ivan Jovanović (born 1962) ; Borislav Cvetković (born 1962), Olympic medalist, 1986–87 UEFA Champions League Top Scorer ; Preki (born 1963), American player, named Major League Soccer MVP twice. ; Miodrag Belodedici (born 1964) ; Stevan Stojanović (born 1964) ; Dragan ", "score": "1.5647583" }, { "id": "32253313", "title": "Duško Savanović", "text": " After two seasons of playing for Cajasol, on 14 June 2010, Savanović signed with another Spanish team Valencia Power Electronics. Power Electronics was Savanović's first Euroleague club. In his first season in the Euroleague he averaged 11.9 points and 4.6 rebounds in 21 games at the European elite competition. He was named All-Euroleague Second Team at the end of the season.", "score": "1.5597845" }, { "id": "27539722", "title": "Ivan Paunić", "text": " Paunić was a member of the Serbian national team that competed at the EuroBasket 2009 in Poland and won the silver medal. He played at the 2010 FIBA World Championship in Turkey where Serbia was fourth, and at the EuroBasket 2011 in Lithuania where Serbia finished eight of 24 teams.", "score": "1.5578203" }, { "id": "12319224", "title": "Goran Đukanović", "text": " Over the course of his career, Đukanović played for his hometown club Lovćen on several occasions, helping them win back-to-back Yugoslav championships in 2000 and 2001. He also played abroad for Al Ahli Doha (Qatar), Trieste (Italy), Zagreb (Croatia) and Gold Club (Slovenia). At international level, Đukanović represented Serbia and Montenegro (known as FR Yugoslavia until 2003) in five major tournaments, winning the bronze medal at the 2001 World Championship. He also participated in the 2000 Summer Olympics. After the split of Serbia and Montenegro, Đukanović captained Montenegro at the 2008 European Championship.", "score": "1.5526876" } ]
[ "Sava Paunović\n Sava Paunović (born 1947) is a former football forward who played in Yugoslavia and Turkey.", "Sava Paunović\n Born in Yugoslavia, Paunović started playing football for local side KFK Radnički, helping them achieve promotion to the Yugoslav First League in 1969. He would join fellow First League side FK Partizan for the 1976–77 season. In 1977, Paunović moved to Turkey, joining Süper Lig side Beşiktaş J.K. for two seasons. He made 55 appearances and scored 22 goals in the league for the club. The Turkish Football Federation imposed a ban on foreign players in the league beginning in 1979, so Paunović returned to Yugoslavia to finish his career with KFK Radnički.", "Zoran Paunović\n Paunović started to play basketball in his hometown Niš, for the OKK Konstantin youth selections. In Summer 2014, he joined the Crvena zvezda youth. He won the second place at the 2017–18 Junior ABA League season with the Zvezda. Over six season games, he averaged 14.2 points, 5.7 rebounds and 3.2 assists per game. In August 2017, he participated at the Basketball Without Borders Europe Camp 16 in Netanya, Israel.", "Duško Savanović\n Savanović has been a member of the Serbian national team at the 2010 FIBA World Championship where Serbia was defeated 99-88 by Lithuania in the game for the bronze medal. He was capped for the national team of Serbia at the EuroBasket 2011 in Lithuania where Serbia finished 8th. He averaged 13.4 points and 3.6 rebounds per game.", "Sava Ranđelović\n Sava Ranđelović (born 17 July 1993) is a Serbian water polo player for VasasPlaket and the Serbia men's national water polo team. Representing Serbia, he won European Championship gold medals in 2014, 2016, and 2018. He also won a gold medal at the World Championships in 2015, and Olympic gold medals in 2016 and 2020.", "Duško Savanović\n In his first three years of the professional career, Savanović played for domestic clubs, two seasons with the FMP and one season with the Borac Čačak, both participants of the YUBA League. He helped FMP to win the Adriatic League title in 2006, the second in the club's history.", "Zoran Paunović\n Zoran Paunović (, born 19 July 2000) is a Serbian professional basketball player for Podgorica of the Prva A Liga and the ABA League Second Division.", "Veljko Paunović\n Paunović experienced hardships while training for football, such as walking for hours to practice and sometimes going without food. His father, Blagoje, was a legendary footballer at FK Partizan Belgrade, the club Veljko Paunovic grew up at. A defender who inspired him, he too played for Partizan and represented Yugoslavia at UEFA Euro 1968, later embarking in a managerial career. Paunović is married and has four children. He is fluent in six languages: English, Spanish, Serbian, Macedonian, Russian and German.", "Zoran Paunović\n In January 2018, Paunović was added to the Crvena zvezda ABA League roster for the rest of the 2017–18 season. He missed to play a single game during that season. On 25 July 2018, Paunović signed a four-year professional contract with Crvena zvezda. Prior to the 2018–19 season he was loaned out to FMP. On 28 August 2019, Crveza zvezda parted ways with him. On 11 September 2019, Paunović signed for Dynamic Belgrade. In May 2020, after the COVID-19 pandemic ban, he joined a training camp of Partizan. On 22 June 2021, Paunović signed for Podgorica.", "Duško Savanović\n Duško Savanović (, born September 5, 1983) is a Serbian former professional basketball player. A 2.04m power forward, he represented the Serbian national basketball team internationally and was an All-Euroleague Second Team selection in 2011.", "Nemanja Nikolić (footballer, born 1987)\n the Fire Paunović praised Nikolić's skillset: \"'His quality is scoring goals and assisting, but then he's a man that can participate in both phases of team play,' Paunovic said. 'He's very good in all phases of the game. Defensively, he helps the team to recover the ball as soon as possible in order that we can control the game and create opportunities for our team to win. Sometimes he will benefit from team play and he will be just the executor, but sometimes he's capable of creating his own situations in the game, the opportunities 1v1, and scoring his own goals. '\"", "Goran Savanović\n A small forward, Savanović played for Novi Sad, Beobanka, Prokom Trefl Sopot, Crvena zvezda, Maccabi Ness, Anwil Włocławek, NIS Vojvodina, Partizan, Oostende, ĆEZ Nymburk, and Prostějov. He retired as a player with Prostějov in 2009.", "Duško Savanović\n In October 2006, after almost ten years of playing with the FMP (including his youth career), he signed a two-year contract with the Russian basketball team UNICS Kazan. UNICS also participated in the ULEB Cup. In his second season in the club, he played 15 games in the ULEB Cup and averaged 11.2 points and 3.9 rebounds per game helping his team to reach the Final Eight, while in the Russian League he averaged 11 points and 4.7 rebounds over 22 games.", "Nikola Šaranović (basketball)\n Šaranović grew up with the Crvena zvezda youth system. In December 2020, he recorded a triple-double in a 101–60 win over the Smederevo 1953 Junior team making 21 points, 10 rebounds, 14 steals, and 7 assists.", "Duško Savanović\n On 27 June 2008, Savanović signed with the Spanish basketball team Cajasol. In the 2008-09 season, he averaged 14.7 points on 41% three-point shooting and 4.8 rebounds in 36 games in the ACB League. He led Cajasol to its best season of the decade, reaching the Spanish King's Cup final eight and the ACB League playoffs for the first time since 2000.", "Marko Podraščanin\n Marko Podraščanin (Марко Подрашчанин) (born 29 August 1987) is a Serbian volleyball player, member of the Serbia men's national volleyball team and Italian club Itas Trentino, participant of the Olympic Games (Beijing 2008 and London 2012), bronze medallist at the 2010 World Championship, 2011 European Champion, 2019 European Champion, gold medallist at the 2016 World League.", "List of Serbs\n Blagoje Paunović (1947–2014) ; Jovan Aćimović (born 1948) ; Dušan Bajević (born 1948) ; Radomir Antić (1948–2020) ; Dušan Bajević (born 1948) ; Dragoslav Stepanović (born 1948) ; Vladislav Bogićević (born 1950) ; Milovan Rajevac (born 1954) ; Vladimir Petrović (born 1955) ; Dušan Savić (born 1955) ; Steve Ogrizovic (born 1957), football ; Jovica Nikolić (born 1959), Olympic medalist ; Ivan Jovanović (born 1962) ; Borislav Cvetković (born 1962), Olympic medalist, 1986–87 UEFA Champions League Top Scorer ; Preki (born 1963), American player, named Major League Soccer MVP twice. ; Miodrag Belodedici (born 1964) ; Stevan Stojanović (born 1964) ; Dragan ", "Duško Savanović\n After two seasons of playing for Cajasol, on 14 June 2010, Savanović signed with another Spanish team Valencia Power Electronics. Power Electronics was Savanović's first Euroleague club. In his first season in the Euroleague he averaged 11.9 points and 4.6 rebounds in 21 games at the European elite competition. He was named All-Euroleague Second Team at the end of the season.", "Ivan Paunić\n Paunić was a member of the Serbian national team that competed at the EuroBasket 2009 in Poland and won the silver medal. He played at the 2010 FIBA World Championship in Turkey where Serbia was fourth, and at the EuroBasket 2011 in Lithuania where Serbia finished eight of 24 teams.", "Goran Đukanović\n Over the course of his career, Đukanović played for his hometown club Lovćen on several occasions, helping them win back-to-back Yugoslav championships in 2000 and 2001. He also played abroad for Al Ahli Doha (Qatar), Trieste (Italy), Zagreb (Croatia) and Gold Club (Slovenia). At international level, Đukanović represented Serbia and Montenegro (known as FR Yugoslavia until 2003) in five major tournaments, winning the bronze medal at the 2001 World Championship. He also participated in the 2000 Summer Olympics. After the split of Serbia and Montenegro, Đukanović captained Montenegro at the 2008 European Championship." ]
In what country is Cham Karim?
[ "Iran", "Islamic Republic of Iran", "Persia", "ir", "Islamic Rep. Iran", "🇮🇷" ]
country
Cham Karim
3,677,224
36
[ { "id": "32278196", "title": "Cham Karim", "text": " Cham Karim (, also Romanized as Cham Karīm and Cham-e Karīm; also known as Chamkārī) is a village in Itivand-e Jonubi Rural District, Kakavand District, Delfan County, Lorestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 139, in 29 families.", "score": "1.6378553" }, { "id": "9563603", "title": "Chams", "text": " Cham people represent the core of the Muslim communities in both Cambodia and Vietnam. Their contemporary population is concentrated between the Kampong Cham Province in Cambodia and Phan Rang–Tháp Chàm, Phan Thiết, Ho Chi Minh City and An Giang Province in Southern Vietnam. Including the diaspora, their total is about 400,000. An additional 4,000 Chams live in Bangkok, Thailand, whose ancestors migrated there during Rama I's reign. Recent immigrants to Thailand are mainly students and workers, who preferably seek work and education in the southern Islamic Pattani, Narathiwat, Yala and Songkhla provinces. After the fall of Saigon in Vietnam and Phnom Penh in Cambodia in 1975, 9,704 Cham refugees made their way to Malaysia and were ", "score": "1.5852405" }, { "id": "28979905", "title": "Indigenous peoples", "text": " from observing their religious beliefs. Hindu temples were turned into tourist sites against the wishes of the Cham Hindus. In 2010 and 2013 several incidents occurred in Thành Tín and Phươc Nhơn villages where Cham were murdered by Vietnamese. In 2012, Vietnamese police in Chau Giang village stormed into a Cham Mosque, stole the electric generator, and also raped Cham girls. Cham in the Mekong Delta have also been economically marginalised, with ethnic Vietnamese settling on land previously owned by Cham people with state support. The Indonesian government has outright denied the existence of indigenous peoples within the countries' borders. In 2012, Indonesia stated that ", "score": "1.545764" }, { "id": "9956532", "title": "Islam in Cambodia", "text": " and in contacts with other Islamic communities. Each Muslim community has a hakem who leads the community and the mosque, an imam who leads the prayers, and a bilal who calls the faithful to the daily prayers. The peninsula of Chrouy Changvar near Phnom Penh is considered the spiritual center of the Cham, and several high Muslim officials reside there. Each year some of the Cham go to study the Qur'an at Kelantan in Malaysia, and some go on to study in, or make a pilgrimage to, Mecca. According to figures from the late 1950s, about 7 percent of the Cham had completed the pilgrimage and could wear the fez or ", "score": "1.5349578" }, { "id": "9563599", "title": "Chams", "text": " The Cham in Vietnam are officially recognized by the Vietnamese government as one of 54 ethnic groups. However, according to the Cham advocacy group International Office of Champa (IOC-Champa) and Cham Muslim activist Khaleelah Porome, both Hindu and Muslim Chams have experienced religious and ethnic persecution and restrictions on their faith under the current Vietnamese government, with the Vietnamese state confisticating Cham property and forbidding Cham from observing their religious beliefs. Hindu temples were turned into tourist sites against the wishes of the Cham Hindus. In 2010 and 2013 several incidents occurred in Thành Tín and Phươc Nhơn villages where Cham were murdered by Vietnamese. In 2012, Vietnamese police in Chau Giang village stormed into a Cham ", "score": "1.5349041" }, { "id": "31312491", "title": "Kampong Cham Municipality", "text": " Kampong Cham Municipality (ស្រុកកំពង់ចាម) is a municipality (krong) of Kampong Cham Province, Cambodia. Kampong Cham is considered an urban district. The provincial capital Kampong Cham City is located in this district. The city is located on National Highway 7 124 kilometres by road from the capital Phnom Penh. The district is split by the Mekong and the capital is located on the western bank of the river., since 2001, the Kizuna bridge provides a good junction for the region.", "score": "1.5071588" }, { "id": "11817721", "title": "Islam in Vietnam", "text": " Cham Muslim activist Khaleelah Porome, both Hindu and Muslim Chams have experienced religious and ethnic persecution and restrictions on their faith under the current Vietnamese government, with the Vietnamese state confisticating Cham property and forbidding Cham from observing their religious beliefs. In 2010 and 2013 several incidents occurred in Thành Tín and Phươc Nhơn villages where Cham were murdered by Vietnamese. In 2012, Vietnamese police in Chau Giang village stormed into a Cham Mosque, stole the electric generator. Cham Muslims in the Mekong Delta have also been economically marginalised, with ethnic Vietnamese settling on land previously owned by Cham people with state support. Cham activist Suleiman Idres Bin called for independence of Champa from Vietnam and went as far as comparing its situation to East Timor.", "score": "1.5056136" }, { "id": "9563606", "title": "Chams", "text": " Vietnam's growing relations with Muslim states like Indonesia, Malaysia, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Turkey and Egypt, the regime discourages growth of Islam because the Vietnamese government distrusts the Cham Muslims. \"'Relations between the Hanoi government and ethnic minorities are sensitive. In 2001 and 2004 massive human rights protests by hill tribes resulted in deaths and mass imprisonments. For some time after that, the Central Highlands were sealed off to foreigners.'\" The Vietnamese Muslim Association is the official association representing Muslim interests, including the Chams, in the country. The Cambodian Islamic Association is the official representation of Cambodian Muslims of Cham ethnicity. The Hindus are also represented from various Cham and Indian organizations across both countries.", "score": "1.5027208" }, { "id": "2874973", "title": "Cham (district)", "text": " Cham is a Landkreis (district) in Bavaria, Germany. It is bounded by (from the south and clockwise) the districts of Regen, Straubing-Bogen, Regensburg and Schwandorf and by the Czech Plzeň Region.", "score": "1.4979427" }, { "id": "12746965", "title": "Cham Prasidh", "text": " Cham Prasidh (ចម ប្រសិទ្ធ; born 15 May 1951) is the Cambodian Minister of Industry, Science, Technology and Innovation. His Chinese name is 黃裕德虎. Mr Prasidh previously served as a Senior Minister and Minister of Commerce for 15 years. He is a member of the Cambodian People's Party and was elected to represent Siem Reap Province in the National Assembly of Cambodia in 2003. Cham was born Ung You Teckhor to an ethnic Chinese family who were engaged in Entrepot trade. His father, Ung You Y, served as the member of parliament for Stung Treng province during Lon Nol's regime before the Khmer Rouge took over Cambodia. After the 2013 general elections, the Ministry of Industry, Mines, and Energy was split into two separate ministries: the Ministry of Industry and the Handicrafts and Ministry of Mines and Energy with the reasoning that the scale of work was too big for one ministry to handle.", "score": "1.4978423" }, { "id": "13353851", "title": "Cham Qalʽeh", "text": " Cham Qaleh is a village in Baghlan Province in north eastern Afghanistan.", "score": "1.4851252" }, { "id": "9563621", "title": "Chams", "text": " ; Chế Linh : Vietnamese-Cham singer ; Dang Nang Tho : Vietnamese-Cham sculptor and director of Cham Cultural Center, Phan Rang, Ninh Thuan Province ; Inrasara (Mr Phu Tram) : poet & author ; H.E. Othsman Hassan (អូស្មាន ហាស្សាន់៖) : Cambodian-Cham politician ; secretary of state at the Ministry of Labor and Vocational Training of Cambodia, Advisor and Special Envoy to Prime Minister Hun Sen, President of Cambodian Muslim Development Foundation (CMDF), Secretary General of the Foundation for Cambodian People’s Poverty Alleviation (PAL), Vice-Director of Cambodian Islamic Center (CIC), Patron of Islamic Medical Association of Cambodia (IMAC) ; Cambodian People's Party ; H.E. Nos Sles (ណុះ ស្លេះ) : Cambodian-Cham politician ; ", "score": "1.4849916" }, { "id": "9563605", "title": "Chams", "text": " While historically complicated, the modern Chams of Cambodia and Vietnam have had friendly relationships with the Khmer and Vietnamese majority. Despite ethnic and religious differences, the majority people of Cambodia and Vietnam have accepted the Cham as closer to them than other minorities. Some Muslim Cham report a friendly attitude of both Cambodians and Vietnamese toward the Chams and little harassment against them from locals. However, between government and people, it is difficult to categorize. According to Cham human rights activists, the Vietnamese regime, the fears of historical influence has evolved into suppression of Islam among Muslims Chams. For example, there is an unofficial ban on distributing the Quran and other Islamic scripture. Meanwhile, due ", "score": "1.4834824" }, { "id": "6721262", "title": "Cham festival", "text": "Katê ", "score": "1.4821032" }, { "id": "28316400", "title": "Persecution of Muslims", "text": " The Cham Muslims in Vietnam are only recognized as a minority, and not as an indigenous people by the Vietnamese government despite being indigenous to the region. Muslim Chams have experienced violent religious and ethnic persecution and restrictions on practising their faith under the current Vietnamese government, with the Vietnamese state confisticating Cham property and forbidding Cham from observing their religious beliefs. In 2010 and 2013 several incidents occurred in Thành Tín and Phươc Nhơn villages where Cham were murdered by Vietnamese. In 2012, Vietnamese police in Chau Giang village stormed into a Cham Mosque, stole the electric generator, and also raped Cham girls. Cham Muslims in the Mekong Delta have also been economically marginalized and pushed into poverty by Vietnamese policies, with ethnic Vietnamese Kinh settling on majority Cham land with state support, and religious practices of minorities have been targeted for elimination by the Vietnamese government.", "score": "1.4781175" }, { "id": "9563600", "title": "Chams", "text": " stealing the electric generator. Cham Muslims in the Mekong Delta have also been economically marginalized, with ethnic Vietnamese settling (with state support) on land previously owned by Cham people. A Cambodian Cham Muslim dissident, Hassan A Kasem, a former military helicopter pilot who was both persecuted and imprisoned by the Khmer Rouge and was against Vietnamese occupation of Cambodia, denounced Vietnam as trying to position itself as the savior of Cambodia from Khmer Rouge rule and wrote that Vietnam has deceived the west into thinking of it as a \"magnanimous liberator\" when it invaded Cambodia and ousted the Khmer Rouge when in fact Vietnam used the war to benefit its own interests such subjecting Cambodian financial assets ", "score": "1.4777284" }, { "id": "4147121", "title": "Cham Bank", "text": " Cham Bank (بنك الشام) is the first Islamic bank to be established in Syria. It started operations in 2007. The Bank's operations and activities are supervised by the Central Bank of Syria.", "score": "1.4762373" }, { "id": "13990620", "title": "Cham Palaces and Hotels", "text": " Cham Palaces and Hotels (سلسلة فنادق الشام) is a five star Syrian-based hotel chain. The chain has hotels in major Syrian cities and touristic spots, and has already expanded into neighboring Jordan.", "score": "1.4743618" }, { "id": "9956531", "title": "Islam in Cambodia", "text": " The Cham have their own mosques. In 1962 there were about 100 mosques in the country. At the end of the nineteenth century, the Muslims in Cambodia formed a unified community under the authority of four religious dignitaries—mupti, tuk kalih, raja kalik, and tvan pake. A council of notables in Cham villages consisted of one hakem and several katip, bilal, and labi. The four high dignitaries and the hakem were exempt from personal taxes, and they were invited to take part in major national ceremonies at the royal court. When Cambodia became independent, the Islamic community was placed under the control of a five-member council that represented the community in official ", "score": "1.4695748" }, { "id": "9563601", "title": "Chams", "text": " national treasures to pillaging and theft, settling border disputes to its own advantage, trying to destroy Cambodian nationalist feeling against Vietnam, benefiting from the mostly Khmer on Khmer violence by the Khmer Rouge and setting up its own Communist puppet government to rule Cambodia, the Cambodia People's Party (CPP) with Vietnamese soldiers secretly remaining behind in Cambodia to prop up the puppet government and Vietnamese officials pretending to be Khmer continuing to direct the government as their puppet. The Cham activist organisation \"International Office of Champa\" republished Hassan's article on their website Cham Today. However, Hassan A Kasem has several contradictory statements. It is widely accepted that Pol Pot was responsible for instigating the Cambodian Famine ", "score": "1.4680631" } ]
[ "Cham Karim\n Cham Karim (, also Romanized as Cham Karīm and Cham-e Karīm; also known as Chamkārī) is a village in Itivand-e Jonubi Rural District, Kakavand District, Delfan County, Lorestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 139, in 29 families.", "Chams\n Cham people represent the core of the Muslim communities in both Cambodia and Vietnam. Their contemporary population is concentrated between the Kampong Cham Province in Cambodia and Phan Rang–Tháp Chàm, Phan Thiết, Ho Chi Minh City and An Giang Province in Southern Vietnam. Including the diaspora, their total is about 400,000. An additional 4,000 Chams live in Bangkok, Thailand, whose ancestors migrated there during Rama I's reign. Recent immigrants to Thailand are mainly students and workers, who preferably seek work and education in the southern Islamic Pattani, Narathiwat, Yala and Songkhla provinces. After the fall of Saigon in Vietnam and Phnom Penh in Cambodia in 1975, 9,704 Cham refugees made their way to Malaysia and were ", "Indigenous peoples\n from observing their religious beliefs. Hindu temples were turned into tourist sites against the wishes of the Cham Hindus. In 2010 and 2013 several incidents occurred in Thành Tín and Phươc Nhơn villages where Cham were murdered by Vietnamese. In 2012, Vietnamese police in Chau Giang village stormed into a Cham Mosque, stole the electric generator, and also raped Cham girls. Cham in the Mekong Delta have also been economically marginalised, with ethnic Vietnamese settling on land previously owned by Cham people with state support. The Indonesian government has outright denied the existence of indigenous peoples within the countries' borders. In 2012, Indonesia stated that ", "Islam in Cambodia\n and in contacts with other Islamic communities. Each Muslim community has a hakem who leads the community and the mosque, an imam who leads the prayers, and a bilal who calls the faithful to the daily prayers. The peninsula of Chrouy Changvar near Phnom Penh is considered the spiritual center of the Cham, and several high Muslim officials reside there. Each year some of the Cham go to study the Qur'an at Kelantan in Malaysia, and some go on to study in, or make a pilgrimage to, Mecca. According to figures from the late 1950s, about 7 percent of the Cham had completed the pilgrimage and could wear the fez or ", "Chams\n The Cham in Vietnam are officially recognized by the Vietnamese government as one of 54 ethnic groups. However, according to the Cham advocacy group International Office of Champa (IOC-Champa) and Cham Muslim activist Khaleelah Porome, both Hindu and Muslim Chams have experienced religious and ethnic persecution and restrictions on their faith under the current Vietnamese government, with the Vietnamese state confisticating Cham property and forbidding Cham from observing their religious beliefs. Hindu temples were turned into tourist sites against the wishes of the Cham Hindus. In 2010 and 2013 several incidents occurred in Thành Tín and Phươc Nhơn villages where Cham were murdered by Vietnamese. In 2012, Vietnamese police in Chau Giang village stormed into a Cham ", "Kampong Cham Municipality\n Kampong Cham Municipality (ស្រុកកំពង់ចាម) is a municipality (krong) of Kampong Cham Province, Cambodia. Kampong Cham is considered an urban district. The provincial capital Kampong Cham City is located in this district. The city is located on National Highway 7 124 kilometres by road from the capital Phnom Penh. The district is split by the Mekong and the capital is located on the western bank of the river., since 2001, the Kizuna bridge provides a good junction for the region.", "Islam in Vietnam\n Cham Muslim activist Khaleelah Porome, both Hindu and Muslim Chams have experienced religious and ethnic persecution and restrictions on their faith under the current Vietnamese government, with the Vietnamese state confisticating Cham property and forbidding Cham from observing their religious beliefs. In 2010 and 2013 several incidents occurred in Thành Tín and Phươc Nhơn villages where Cham were murdered by Vietnamese. In 2012, Vietnamese police in Chau Giang village stormed into a Cham Mosque, stole the electric generator. Cham Muslims in the Mekong Delta have also been economically marginalised, with ethnic Vietnamese settling on land previously owned by Cham people with state support. Cham activist Suleiman Idres Bin called for independence of Champa from Vietnam and went as far as comparing its situation to East Timor.", "Chams\n Vietnam's growing relations with Muslim states like Indonesia, Malaysia, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Turkey and Egypt, the regime discourages growth of Islam because the Vietnamese government distrusts the Cham Muslims. \"'Relations between the Hanoi government and ethnic minorities are sensitive. In 2001 and 2004 massive human rights protests by hill tribes resulted in deaths and mass imprisonments. For some time after that, the Central Highlands were sealed off to foreigners.'\" The Vietnamese Muslim Association is the official association representing Muslim interests, including the Chams, in the country. The Cambodian Islamic Association is the official representation of Cambodian Muslims of Cham ethnicity. The Hindus are also represented from various Cham and Indian organizations across both countries.", "Cham (district)\n Cham is a Landkreis (district) in Bavaria, Germany. It is bounded by (from the south and clockwise) the districts of Regen, Straubing-Bogen, Regensburg and Schwandorf and by the Czech Plzeň Region.", "Cham Prasidh\n Cham Prasidh (ចម ប្រសិទ្ធ; born 15 May 1951) is the Cambodian Minister of Industry, Science, Technology and Innovation. His Chinese name is 黃裕德虎. Mr Prasidh previously served as a Senior Minister and Minister of Commerce for 15 years. He is a member of the Cambodian People's Party and was elected to represent Siem Reap Province in the National Assembly of Cambodia in 2003. Cham was born Ung You Teckhor to an ethnic Chinese family who were engaged in Entrepot trade. His father, Ung You Y, served as the member of parliament for Stung Treng province during Lon Nol's regime before the Khmer Rouge took over Cambodia. After the 2013 general elections, the Ministry of Industry, Mines, and Energy was split into two separate ministries: the Ministry of Industry and the Handicrafts and Ministry of Mines and Energy with the reasoning that the scale of work was too big for one ministry to handle.", "Cham Qalʽeh\n Cham Qaleh is a village in Baghlan Province in north eastern Afghanistan.", "Chams\n ; Chế Linh : Vietnamese-Cham singer ; Dang Nang Tho : Vietnamese-Cham sculptor and director of Cham Cultural Center, Phan Rang, Ninh Thuan Province ; Inrasara (Mr Phu Tram) : poet & author ; H.E. Othsman Hassan (អូស្មាន ហាស្សាន់៖) : Cambodian-Cham politician ; secretary of state at the Ministry of Labor and Vocational Training of Cambodia, Advisor and Special Envoy to Prime Minister Hun Sen, President of Cambodian Muslim Development Foundation (CMDF), Secretary General of the Foundation for Cambodian People’s Poverty Alleviation (PAL), Vice-Director of Cambodian Islamic Center (CIC), Patron of Islamic Medical Association of Cambodia (IMAC) ; Cambodian People's Party ; H.E. Nos Sles (ណុះ ស្លេះ) : Cambodian-Cham politician ; ", "Chams\n While historically complicated, the modern Chams of Cambodia and Vietnam have had friendly relationships with the Khmer and Vietnamese majority. Despite ethnic and religious differences, the majority people of Cambodia and Vietnam have accepted the Cham as closer to them than other minorities. Some Muslim Cham report a friendly attitude of both Cambodians and Vietnamese toward the Chams and little harassment against them from locals. However, between government and people, it is difficult to categorize. According to Cham human rights activists, the Vietnamese regime, the fears of historical influence has evolved into suppression of Islam among Muslims Chams. For example, there is an unofficial ban on distributing the Quran and other Islamic scripture. Meanwhile, due ", "Cham festival\nKatê ", "Persecution of Muslims\n The Cham Muslims in Vietnam are only recognized as a minority, and not as an indigenous people by the Vietnamese government despite being indigenous to the region. Muslim Chams have experienced violent religious and ethnic persecution and restrictions on practising their faith under the current Vietnamese government, with the Vietnamese state confisticating Cham property and forbidding Cham from observing their religious beliefs. In 2010 and 2013 several incidents occurred in Thành Tín and Phươc Nhơn villages where Cham were murdered by Vietnamese. In 2012, Vietnamese police in Chau Giang village stormed into a Cham Mosque, stole the electric generator, and also raped Cham girls. Cham Muslims in the Mekong Delta have also been economically marginalized and pushed into poverty by Vietnamese policies, with ethnic Vietnamese Kinh settling on majority Cham land with state support, and religious practices of minorities have been targeted for elimination by the Vietnamese government.", "Chams\n stealing the electric generator. Cham Muslims in the Mekong Delta have also been economically marginalized, with ethnic Vietnamese settling (with state support) on land previously owned by Cham people. A Cambodian Cham Muslim dissident, Hassan A Kasem, a former military helicopter pilot who was both persecuted and imprisoned by the Khmer Rouge and was against Vietnamese occupation of Cambodia, denounced Vietnam as trying to position itself as the savior of Cambodia from Khmer Rouge rule and wrote that Vietnam has deceived the west into thinking of it as a \"magnanimous liberator\" when it invaded Cambodia and ousted the Khmer Rouge when in fact Vietnam used the war to benefit its own interests such subjecting Cambodian financial assets ", "Cham Bank\n Cham Bank (بنك الشام) is the first Islamic bank to be established in Syria. It started operations in 2007. The Bank's operations and activities are supervised by the Central Bank of Syria.", "Cham Palaces and Hotels\n Cham Palaces and Hotels (سلسلة فنادق الشام) is a five star Syrian-based hotel chain. The chain has hotels in major Syrian cities and touristic spots, and has already expanded into neighboring Jordan.", "Islam in Cambodia\n The Cham have their own mosques. In 1962 there were about 100 mosques in the country. At the end of the nineteenth century, the Muslims in Cambodia formed a unified community under the authority of four religious dignitaries—mupti, tuk kalih, raja kalik, and tvan pake. A council of notables in Cham villages consisted of one hakem and several katip, bilal, and labi. The four high dignitaries and the hakem were exempt from personal taxes, and they were invited to take part in major national ceremonies at the royal court. When Cambodia became independent, the Islamic community was placed under the control of a five-member council that represented the community in official ", "Chams\n national treasures to pillaging and theft, settling border disputes to its own advantage, trying to destroy Cambodian nationalist feeling against Vietnam, benefiting from the mostly Khmer on Khmer violence by the Khmer Rouge and setting up its own Communist puppet government to rule Cambodia, the Cambodia People's Party (CPP) with Vietnamese soldiers secretly remaining behind in Cambodia to prop up the puppet government and Vietnamese officials pretending to be Khmer continuing to direct the government as their puppet. The Cham activist organisation \"International Office of Champa\" republished Hassan's article on their website Cham Today. However, Hassan A Kasem has several contradictory statements. It is widely accepted that Pol Pot was responsible for instigating the Cambodian Famine " ]
What sport does Yuri Koroviansky play?
[ "volleyball" ]
sport
Yuri Koroviansky
2,714,297
44
[ { "id": "15463576", "title": "Yuri Koroviansky", "text": " Yuri Koroviansky (Юрий Коровянский, Yuriy Korovyanskyy, 30 September 1967 – 8 March 2017) was a Ukrainian volleyball player who competed for the Unified Team in the 1992 Summer Olympics. He was 194 cm tall. He was French citizen from 2011 until his death.", "score": "1.8091004" }, { "id": "15463577", "title": "Yuri Koroviansky", "text": " Koroviansky was born at Horlivka and debuted in 1984 for VC Shakhtar Donetsk. He finished seventh with the Unified Team in the 1992 Olympic tournament. With the Soviet (or Unified Team) national team he won a World Cup in 1991, the European Championships of 1991 and a bronze medal in the 1991 World League. Koroviansky played in Greece from 1993 with AO Orestiada (Runner-up of the Greek championship and finished 4th in the CEV Cup final four). After one year in Greece, he signed in Cyprus for Paphiakos Paphos. He subsequently played in France with Tourcoing, Tours, Paris (won the French championship in 1997 ), Strasbourg, Halluin and he concluded his playing career in 2006 with Cambrai (in French 2nd league). He was the head coach of youth team in Cambrai.", "score": "1.8027925" }, { "id": "15463579", "title": "Yuri Koroviansky", "text": "1 World Cup (1991) ; 1 European Championship (1991) ", "score": "1.7027414" }, { "id": "15463578", "title": "Yuri Koroviansky", "text": "1 Soviet Championship (1992) ; 1 Ukrainian Championship (1993) ; 1 French Championship (1998) ", "score": "1.6479119" }, { "id": "10533738", "title": "Yuriy Ovcharov", "text": " A pupil of Luhansk football. From 1984 to 1988 he played for Desna Chernihiv in the Ukrainian Second League. In 1989 he moved to Kosonsoy, where he became a silver medalist of the second league in 1990 (zone 9). In 1991 he returned to Desna Chernihiv. The first match in the championship of Ukraine was played on May 3, 1992 in the 13th round of the Ukrainian First League against Sumy \"Motorist\" (1: 2). In the fall of 1993 he played for Polissya Zhytomyr. In 1994 he became a player of Stal Alchevsk. For two seasons as a member of the Kirovograd team he won a ", "score": "1.5085816" }, { "id": "9620176", "title": "Yuri Cherednik", "text": " Cherednik was born at Chişinău and debuted in 1983 for Motorist Leningrad. In 1988 he was part of the Soviet team which won the silver medal in the Olympic tournament. He played four matches. Four years later he finished seventh with the Unified Team in the 1992 Olympic tournament. With the Soviet (or Unified Team) national team he won also a World Cup in 1991, the European Championships of 1991 and a bronze medal in the 1990 Championship. Cherednik played in Italy from 1992 with Centromatic Prato (winning the title of MVP of Italy's A1 League that year). He subsequently played for Macerata, Bologna, Ferrara and others, before returning to Russia in 2006, where he concluded his playing career in 2007 with the Spartak St. Petersburg.", "score": "1.5069338" }, { "id": "14531852", "title": "Andrei Kovalenko (water polo)", "text": " Andrei Kovalenko (Андрій Коваленко; born 6 November 1970 in Kiev) is an Australian water polo player and current coach of the UWA Torpedoes Men's Water Polo team and coach of the u18 and u16 UWA City Beach Bears. He competed for Australia at the 2000 Sydney Olympic Games, as well as for CIS at Barcelona 1992 in which he won a bronze medal and Ukraine at Atlanta 1996. In 2007 he helped Australia attain a bronze medal in the FINA Water Polo World League. In recent years, Andrei has starting playing Men's Softball for the Woodlands Wolves Ball Club. Andrei has started to refine his pitching (underarm), and shown his skills in the outfield with his \"Rocket for an Arm\". In the off season, Andrei has also started playing Baseball for the Wembley Magpies Baseball Club. Andrei is a reliable pitcher, picking up different variations with ease.", "score": "1.4981534" }, { "id": "6047867", "title": "Yuri Vanyat", "text": " Played in the youth team goalkeeper Pishevik (Moscow). Graduated from high school coaches at the Institute of Physical Education. Covers all the Soviet Top League and hockey finals of the USSR Cup. Worked at 8 Olympic hockey tournament and 7 of the World Cup, 28 ice hockey world championships. Almost 40 years was a member of various committees of the Football Federation of the USSR, was a member of the National Olympic Committee of the USSR. In 1933–1949 he worked in the newspaper Red Sports (since 1946 — Soviet Sport). In 1950–1986 — in the newspaper Trud. In 1987–1992 — the newspaper Moskovskaya Pravda.", "score": "1.4942336" }, { "id": "27562225", "title": "Yuri Shundrov", "text": " Shundrov began his career with Sokil Kyiv in the Soviet Championship League during the 1978–79 season. He played for Sokil exclusively until the 1990–91 season, which he split between them and KHK Crvena Zvezda of the Yugoslav Ice Hockey League. He then joined Khimik Voskresensk for the 1991–92 season and played for them until 1994, when he re-joined Sokil Kyiv. After three seasons spent with Sokil, he re-joined Khimik Voskresensk, who he played two more seasons with. Shundrov retired following the 1999–2000 season spent with Kryzhynka Kyiv and Rapid Bucuresti. Internationally, Shundrov played two exhibition games for the USSR against Czechoslovakia in 1985 and played for the Ukraine men's national ice hockey team at the World Championships in 1995 (Pool C), 1997 (Pool C), 1998 (Pool B), and 1999 (Top Division). Shundrov became the goaltending coach for HC CSKA Moscow of the Kontinental Hockey League in 2011. He had previously been goaltending coach for Metallurg Magnitogorsk from 2008 to 2010. From 2014 to 2017, he was goalkeeping coach at HC Sochi.", "score": "1.4927585" }, { "id": "828095", "title": "Yuri Kovshov", "text": " Yuri Aleksandrovich Kovshov (Юрий Александрович Ковшов; born 5 September 1951) is a former Ukrainian Soviet equestrian and Olympic champion. He was born in Kushka, Turkmen SSR, and was affiliated with VDFSO Kiev. He won a gold medal in team dressage at the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow, and received a silver medal in individual dressage. His grandson Maksim took part at several dressage championships in the early 2010s.", "score": "1.4726517" }, { "id": "3092391", "title": "Yuri Korotkikh", "text": " Yuri Pavlovich Korotkikh (Юрий Павлович Коротких; born 23 November 1939 – 29 February 2016) was a Soviet footballer who played as a goalkeeper in the 1950s and 1960s.", "score": "1.4721766" }, { "id": "32582264", "title": "Ukrainians in Russia", "text": " Soviet volleyball player, who won a silver medal at the 1976 Summer Olympics ; Andrei Karyaka - Russian football coach and a former player who played as a midfielder ; Sergei Mamchur - football defender. ; Viktor Miroshnichenko - boxer, represented the USSR at the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow, Soviet Union. ; Oleg Goncharenko - Distinguished Master of Sports of the USSR, was the first male Soviet speed skater to become World Allround Champion. ; Konstantin Yeryomenko - Russian futsal player who was named the greatest futsal player of the 20th century ; Dmitri Shkidchenko - figure skating ", "score": "1.470516" }, { "id": "10116925", "title": "Michael Kozlowski", "text": " Michael was born in Kostanaiskaya Oblast, Kazakhstan, USSR. He was raised by mother Raisa Yakovleva, who was teacher of Russian Language and Literature, with two brothers. At a very young age Michael became involved and interested in hockey. He wanted to be a goalkeeper like Vladislav Tretiak and was sure that he will take his place in the future. Michael Kozlowski was always an excellent student in school, but with bad behavior. He was fair minded and always was fighting in unequal battles. He was small and it was hard to win. By suggestion of his cousin, at age 15 he started to learn boxing under guidance of V.E. Shairer (his student 2012 Olympic Bronze medalist Ivan Dychko) and Kenes Omarov with now desire to represent USSR flag on Olympic in Boxing and not in hockey.", "score": "1.4594331" }, { "id": "5822366", "title": "Eduard Koksharov", "text": " Eduard Aleksandrovich Koksharov (Эдуард Александрович Кокшаров, born 4 November 1975) is a Russian handball player and coach of the Russian national team. He played as a left winger. He retired from his national team in 2012. He came to Celje from SKIF Krasnodar in the 1999–2000 season, at the age of 23. His biggest achievements include winning the gold medal at the 1997 World Championships and winning the handball tournament at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, both with Russia. He was also the winner of the Champions League with Celje Pivovarna Laško in the 2003/04 season.", "score": "1.4567887" }, { "id": "15371312", "title": "Aleksey Rastvortsev", "text": " Aleksey Petrovich Rastvortsev (Алексей Петрович Растворцев; born August 8, 1978) is a Russian handball player who competed in the 2004 Summer Olympics (bronze winner) and in the 2008 Summer Olympics. He played for the Russian National Handball Team 251 match and scored over 900 goals. In his career he played for HC Neva (St. Peterburg), HC Energija (Voronez), HC Chekhovskie Medvedi (Chekhov, Moskovskaja oblast), RK Vardar (Skopje) and RK Vojvodina (Novi Sad). He finished his active sports career in 2016 and since then he is deputy sport director in RK Vardar; they won the EHF Champions League in 2017.", "score": "1.4554195" }, { "id": "10648428", "title": "Yuri Korolev (ice hockey)", "text": " Yuri Vasilyevich Korolev (Юрий Васильевич Королёв; born 6 June 1934) is a Russian ice hockey administrator, and retired coach and civil servant. His career of educating athletes and coaches included the State Committee for Sports and Physical Education and the All-Union Council on Physical Culture and Sports. He was head of the research group for the Soviet Union national ice hockey team for 28 years, when the Soviets won seventeen Ice Hockey World Championships and seven Winter Olympic Games gold medals. He later served an executive with the Ice Hockey Federation of Russia and the International Ice Hockey Federation. Korolev has been recognized with the Order of Friendship, induction into the Russian Hockey Hall of Fame, and the Paul Loicq Award.", "score": "1.4525499" }, { "id": "10648430", "title": "Yuri Korolev (ice hockey)", "text": " Korolev joined the State Committee for Sports and Physical Education in 1954, and began a career of educating athletes and coaches. From 1962 to 1974, he lectured at the State Committee for Sports and Physical Education and became its senior lecturer. He served as the head of the hockey department at the State Committee for Sports and Physical Education from 1974 to 1983, and was the head teacher of its school of hockey coaches. From 1983 to 1989, he was the head coach of the football and ice hockey committee of the All-Union Council on Physical Culture and Sports, and was the deputy of the council from 1987 to 1988. Korolev was also connected to both the Soviet Union national ice hockey team and the Soviet Union national junior ice hockey team. ", "score": "1.4517571" }, { "id": "5659025", "title": "Yuri Korneev", "text": " Yuri Korneev (March 26, 1937 in Moscow, Soviet Union – June 17, 2002), was a Russian basketball player. At a height of 1.98 m (6'6\") tall, he played at the small forward position. He was among the 105 player nominees for the 50 Greatest EuroLeague Contributors list.", "score": "1.4491335" }, { "id": "28490126", "title": "Vsevolod Bobrov", "text": " Vsevolod Mikhailovich Bobrov (1 December 1922 – 1 July 1979) was a Soviet athlete, who excelled in football, bandy and ice hockey. He is considered one of the best Russians ever in each of those sports. Originally a football player, he played for CDKA Moscow, VVS Moscow, and Spartak Moscow, and represented the Soviet Union internationally at the 1952 Summer Olympics. After he quit football in 1953 he turned to ice hockey, which he had taken up when it was started in the Soviet Union in 1946. He was one of the first ice hockey players in the Soviet Union, and joined CDKA Moscow, playing for them and VVS Moscow before retiring in 1957. A leading scorer in the Soviet League, Bobrov was one ", "score": "1.4488959" }, { "id": "15372307", "title": "Yuri Petrov", "text": " Yuri Anatolyevich Petrov (Юрий Анатольевич Петров; born July 18, 1974 in Kryvyi Rih) is a former footballer who spent most of his professional career in the Netherlands.", "score": "1.4479449" } ]
[ "Yuri Koroviansky\n Yuri Koroviansky (Юрий Коровянский, Yuriy Korovyanskyy, 30 September 1967 – 8 March 2017) was a Ukrainian volleyball player who competed for the Unified Team in the 1992 Summer Olympics. He was 194 cm tall. He was French citizen from 2011 until his death.", "Yuri Koroviansky\n Koroviansky was born at Horlivka and debuted in 1984 for VC Shakhtar Donetsk. He finished seventh with the Unified Team in the 1992 Olympic tournament. With the Soviet (or Unified Team) national team he won a World Cup in 1991, the European Championships of 1991 and a bronze medal in the 1991 World League. Koroviansky played in Greece from 1993 with AO Orestiada (Runner-up of the Greek championship and finished 4th in the CEV Cup final four). After one year in Greece, he signed in Cyprus for Paphiakos Paphos. He subsequently played in France with Tourcoing, Tours, Paris (won the French championship in 1997 ), Strasbourg, Halluin and he concluded his playing career in 2006 with Cambrai (in French 2nd league). He was the head coach of youth team in Cambrai.", "Yuri Koroviansky\n1 World Cup (1991) ; 1 European Championship (1991) ", "Yuri Koroviansky\n1 Soviet Championship (1992) ; 1 Ukrainian Championship (1993) ; 1 French Championship (1998) ", "Yuriy Ovcharov\n A pupil of Luhansk football. From 1984 to 1988 he played for Desna Chernihiv in the Ukrainian Second League. In 1989 he moved to Kosonsoy, where he became a silver medalist of the second league in 1990 (zone 9). In 1991 he returned to Desna Chernihiv. The first match in the championship of Ukraine was played on May 3, 1992 in the 13th round of the Ukrainian First League against Sumy \"Motorist\" (1: 2). In the fall of 1993 he played for Polissya Zhytomyr. In 1994 he became a player of Stal Alchevsk. For two seasons as a member of the Kirovograd team he won a ", "Yuri Cherednik\n Cherednik was born at Chişinău and debuted in 1983 for Motorist Leningrad. In 1988 he was part of the Soviet team which won the silver medal in the Olympic tournament. He played four matches. Four years later he finished seventh with the Unified Team in the 1992 Olympic tournament. With the Soviet (or Unified Team) national team he won also a World Cup in 1991, the European Championships of 1991 and a bronze medal in the 1990 Championship. Cherednik played in Italy from 1992 with Centromatic Prato (winning the title of MVP of Italy's A1 League that year). He subsequently played for Macerata, Bologna, Ferrara and others, before returning to Russia in 2006, where he concluded his playing career in 2007 with the Spartak St. Petersburg.", "Andrei Kovalenko (water polo)\n Andrei Kovalenko (Андрій Коваленко; born 6 November 1970 in Kiev) is an Australian water polo player and current coach of the UWA Torpedoes Men's Water Polo team and coach of the u18 and u16 UWA City Beach Bears. He competed for Australia at the 2000 Sydney Olympic Games, as well as for CIS at Barcelona 1992 in which he won a bronze medal and Ukraine at Atlanta 1996. In 2007 he helped Australia attain a bronze medal in the FINA Water Polo World League. In recent years, Andrei has starting playing Men's Softball for the Woodlands Wolves Ball Club. Andrei has started to refine his pitching (underarm), and shown his skills in the outfield with his \"Rocket for an Arm\". In the off season, Andrei has also started playing Baseball for the Wembley Magpies Baseball Club. Andrei is a reliable pitcher, picking up different variations with ease.", "Yuri Vanyat\n Played in the youth team goalkeeper Pishevik (Moscow). Graduated from high school coaches at the Institute of Physical Education. Covers all the Soviet Top League and hockey finals of the USSR Cup. Worked at 8 Olympic hockey tournament and 7 of the World Cup, 28 ice hockey world championships. Almost 40 years was a member of various committees of the Football Federation of the USSR, was a member of the National Olympic Committee of the USSR. In 1933–1949 he worked in the newspaper Red Sports (since 1946 — Soviet Sport). In 1950–1986 — in the newspaper Trud. In 1987–1992 — the newspaper Moskovskaya Pravda.", "Yuri Shundrov\n Shundrov began his career with Sokil Kyiv in the Soviet Championship League during the 1978–79 season. He played for Sokil exclusively until the 1990–91 season, which he split between them and KHK Crvena Zvezda of the Yugoslav Ice Hockey League. He then joined Khimik Voskresensk for the 1991–92 season and played for them until 1994, when he re-joined Sokil Kyiv. After three seasons spent with Sokil, he re-joined Khimik Voskresensk, who he played two more seasons with. Shundrov retired following the 1999–2000 season spent with Kryzhynka Kyiv and Rapid Bucuresti. Internationally, Shundrov played two exhibition games for the USSR against Czechoslovakia in 1985 and played for the Ukraine men's national ice hockey team at the World Championships in 1995 (Pool C), 1997 (Pool C), 1998 (Pool B), and 1999 (Top Division). Shundrov became the goaltending coach for HC CSKA Moscow of the Kontinental Hockey League in 2011. He had previously been goaltending coach for Metallurg Magnitogorsk from 2008 to 2010. From 2014 to 2017, he was goalkeeping coach at HC Sochi.", "Yuri Kovshov\n Yuri Aleksandrovich Kovshov (Юрий Александрович Ковшов; born 5 September 1951) is a former Ukrainian Soviet equestrian and Olympic champion. He was born in Kushka, Turkmen SSR, and was affiliated with VDFSO Kiev. He won a gold medal in team dressage at the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow, and received a silver medal in individual dressage. His grandson Maksim took part at several dressage championships in the early 2010s.", "Yuri Korotkikh\n Yuri Pavlovich Korotkikh (Юрий Павлович Коротких; born 23 November 1939 – 29 February 2016) was a Soviet footballer who played as a goalkeeper in the 1950s and 1960s.", "Ukrainians in Russia\n Soviet volleyball player, who won a silver medal at the 1976 Summer Olympics ; Andrei Karyaka - Russian football coach and a former player who played as a midfielder ; Sergei Mamchur - football defender. ; Viktor Miroshnichenko - boxer, represented the USSR at the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow, Soviet Union. ; Oleg Goncharenko - Distinguished Master of Sports of the USSR, was the first male Soviet speed skater to become World Allround Champion. ; Konstantin Yeryomenko - Russian futsal player who was named the greatest futsal player of the 20th century ; Dmitri Shkidchenko - figure skating ", "Michael Kozlowski\n Michael was born in Kostanaiskaya Oblast, Kazakhstan, USSR. He was raised by mother Raisa Yakovleva, who was teacher of Russian Language and Literature, with two brothers. At a very young age Michael became involved and interested in hockey. He wanted to be a goalkeeper like Vladislav Tretiak and was sure that he will take his place in the future. Michael Kozlowski was always an excellent student in school, but with bad behavior. He was fair minded and always was fighting in unequal battles. He was small and it was hard to win. By suggestion of his cousin, at age 15 he started to learn boxing under guidance of V.E. Shairer (his student 2012 Olympic Bronze medalist Ivan Dychko) and Kenes Omarov with now desire to represent USSR flag on Olympic in Boxing and not in hockey.", "Eduard Koksharov\n Eduard Aleksandrovich Koksharov (Эдуард Александрович Кокшаров, born 4 November 1975) is a Russian handball player and coach of the Russian national team. He played as a left winger. He retired from his national team in 2012. He came to Celje from SKIF Krasnodar in the 1999–2000 season, at the age of 23. His biggest achievements include winning the gold medal at the 1997 World Championships and winning the handball tournament at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, both with Russia. He was also the winner of the Champions League with Celje Pivovarna Laško in the 2003/04 season.", "Aleksey Rastvortsev\n Aleksey Petrovich Rastvortsev (Алексей Петрович Растворцев; born August 8, 1978) is a Russian handball player who competed in the 2004 Summer Olympics (bronze winner) and in the 2008 Summer Olympics. He played for the Russian National Handball Team 251 match and scored over 900 goals. In his career he played for HC Neva (St. Peterburg), HC Energija (Voronez), HC Chekhovskie Medvedi (Chekhov, Moskovskaja oblast), RK Vardar (Skopje) and RK Vojvodina (Novi Sad). He finished his active sports career in 2016 and since then he is deputy sport director in RK Vardar; they won the EHF Champions League in 2017.", "Yuri Korolev (ice hockey)\n Yuri Vasilyevich Korolev (Юрий Васильевич Королёв; born 6 June 1934) is a Russian ice hockey administrator, and retired coach and civil servant. His career of educating athletes and coaches included the State Committee for Sports and Physical Education and the All-Union Council on Physical Culture and Sports. He was head of the research group for the Soviet Union national ice hockey team for 28 years, when the Soviets won seventeen Ice Hockey World Championships and seven Winter Olympic Games gold medals. He later served an executive with the Ice Hockey Federation of Russia and the International Ice Hockey Federation. Korolev has been recognized with the Order of Friendship, induction into the Russian Hockey Hall of Fame, and the Paul Loicq Award.", "Yuri Korolev (ice hockey)\n Korolev joined the State Committee for Sports and Physical Education in 1954, and began a career of educating athletes and coaches. From 1962 to 1974, he lectured at the State Committee for Sports and Physical Education and became its senior lecturer. He served as the head of the hockey department at the State Committee for Sports and Physical Education from 1974 to 1983, and was the head teacher of its school of hockey coaches. From 1983 to 1989, he was the head coach of the football and ice hockey committee of the All-Union Council on Physical Culture and Sports, and was the deputy of the council from 1987 to 1988. Korolev was also connected to both the Soviet Union national ice hockey team and the Soviet Union national junior ice hockey team. ", "Yuri Korneev\n Yuri Korneev (March 26, 1937 in Moscow, Soviet Union – June 17, 2002), was a Russian basketball player. At a height of 1.98 m (6'6\") tall, he played at the small forward position. He was among the 105 player nominees for the 50 Greatest EuroLeague Contributors list.", "Vsevolod Bobrov\n Vsevolod Mikhailovich Bobrov (1 December 1922 – 1 July 1979) was a Soviet athlete, who excelled in football, bandy and ice hockey. He is considered one of the best Russians ever in each of those sports. Originally a football player, he played for CDKA Moscow, VVS Moscow, and Spartak Moscow, and represented the Soviet Union internationally at the 1952 Summer Olympics. After he quit football in 1953 he turned to ice hockey, which he had taken up when it was started in the Soviet Union in 1946. He was one of the first ice hockey players in the Soviet Union, and joined CDKA Moscow, playing for them and VVS Moscow before retiring in 1957. A leading scorer in the Soviet League, Bobrov was one ", "Yuri Petrov\n Yuri Anatolyevich Petrov (Юрий Анатольевич Петров; born July 18, 1974 in Kryvyi Rih) is a former footballer who spent most of his professional career in the Netherlands." ]
What is Annie Beustes's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Annie Beustes
2,171,332
33
[ { "id": "12580425", "title": "Annie Beustes", "text": " Annie Beustes (born 15 June 1945 in Arget) is a New Caledonian politician. She has served in the Congress of New Caledonia as a member of The Rally–UMP, and is anti-independence; she also served in the government of Jean Lèques. She served a short term as Vice President of the Government of New Caledonia in August 2007, and was succeeded by Déwé Gorodey of the Kanak and Socialist National Liberation Front (FLNKS: Front de Libération Nationale Kanak et Socialiste).", "score": "1.8504024" }, { "id": "15918238", "title": "Arget", "text": "Annie Beustes, born Annie Campagne, is a New Caledonian politician, born on 15 August 1945 in Arget. ", "score": "1.6878337" }, { "id": "32543589", "title": "Annie Abrahams", "text": " Annie Abrahams (born 1954) is a Dutch performance artist specialising in video installations and internet based performances, often deriving from collective writings and collective interaction. Born and raised in Hilvarenbeek in the Netherlands, she migrated to and settled in France in 1987. Her performance work challenges and questions the limitations and possibilities of online communication and collaboration. Abrahams describes her body of work as \"an aesthetics of trust and attention.\" Studying biology became an inspiration for her future line of work. \"When studying biology I had to observe a colony of monkeys in a zoo. I found this very interesting because I learned something about human communities by watching the apes. In a certain way I watch the internet with the same appetite and interest. I consider it to be a universe where I can observe some aspects of human attitudes and behaviour without interfering.\"", "score": "1.4898129" }, { "id": "9968409", "title": "Annie Cuyt", "text": " Cuyt was born on 27 May 1956 in Elizabethstad (now Lubumbashi), in the Belgian Congo. She earned her Ph.D. at the University of Antwerp in 1982. Her dissertation, Padé approximants for operators: theory and applications, was promoted by Luc Wuytack. She was a postdoctoral researcher with support from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, and completed a habilitation in 1986. She is a professor in the Department of Mathematics and Computer Science at the University of Antwerp, where she leads the computational mathematics group.", "score": "1.426354" }, { "id": "9968408", "title": "Annie Cuyt", "text": " Annie A. M. Cuyt (born 1956) is a Belgian computational mathematician known for her work on continued fractions, numerical analysis, Padé approximants, and related topics. She is a professor at the University of Antwerp, and a member of the Royal Flemish Academy of Belgium for Science and the Arts.", "score": "1.4017057" }, { "id": "31989785", "title": "Annie Famose", "text": "} ", "score": "1.3888428" }, { "id": "15578597", "title": "Annie Preece", "text": " Preece's career started with showings at downtown art walks and group shows, painted shoes for Project Canvas with other artists, and volunteering many hours telling her story of addiction, recovery and passion for art with at-risk youth. In 2012 she again picked up the spray can and created a humorous piece on a Melrose and Fairfax wall, and again with a mural drew complaints from the L.A. City Council for its depiction of sex organs. Her first solo show was in 2013 at Space 1520 in Hollywood. She was asked to be the first female artist to paint a mural on the Roxy Theater in West Hollywood. Notable collaboration include ", "score": "1.3695648" }, { "id": "10378132", "title": "Annie Lobert", "text": " Annie Lobert (born September 26, 1967) is an American former call girl and sex industry worker, who founded the international Christian ministry Hookers for Jesus. In 2010, she produced and starred in a three-part documentary on the organization, Hookers: Saved on the Strip, which was broadcast nationwide on cable television's Investigation Discovery. Lobert worked as a prostitute in Las Vegas, Minneapolis, and Hawaii for 16 years. She left the sex industry with the support of Al Nakata, one of her regular customers, who had fallen in love with her. After leaving prostitution, Nakata trained her in estimates and service reviews in order to work with him in his Super GT Series auto body and design firm.", "score": "1.3679761" }, { "id": "32839214", "title": "Annie Brisset", "text": " Annie Brisset, a member of the Royal Society of Canada, is a Professor of Translation Studies and Discourse Theory at the School of Translation and Interpretation of the University of Ottawa, Canada.", "score": "1.3648531" }, { "id": "32839217", "title": "Annie Brisset", "text": " a UNESCO consultant for the development of multilingual communication for Central and Eastern Europe, and former President and founding member of IATIS (International Association for Translation and Intercultural Studies. In 2007, she served as a member of jury for the Governor General of Canada's Literary Awards. In 2009 she was elected fellow of the Royal Society of Canada for her exceptional achievements in the areas of sciences and arts & humanities in 1991, she received the Ann Saddlemyer Award(Canadian Association for the History of Theatre), while in 1987, she received the Jean-Béraud Theatre Critic of the Year Award (Canadian and Quebec associations of theatre critics.", "score": "1.3612111" }, { "id": "32068457", "title": "Annie Bersagel", "text": " Anne Golden Bersagel (born March 30, 1983) is an American long-distance runner and lawyer.", "score": "1.3607464" }, { "id": "13304070", "title": "Annie Lafleur", "text": " Annie Lafleur (born 1980 in Montreal) is a Canadian poet from Quebec. She is most noted for her poetry collection Bec-de-lièvre, which was a shortlisted finalist for the Governor General's Award for French-language poetry at the 2017 Governor General's Awards. Her other poetry collections have included Prolégomènes à mon géant (2007), Handkerchief (2009), Rosebud (2013) and Nouvelles vagues (2014).", "score": "1.3576386" }, { "id": "32543590", "title": "Annie Abrahams", "text": " Abrahams was born in a small farmer's village in the Netherlands with four younger sisters. She gained a Doctorate in Biology from the University of Utrecht (1978) and a Diploma from the Academy of Fine Arts Arnhem (1985). Brought into a world of agriculture, her academic pathway led her to becoming internationally known for her pioneering networked performance art and collective writing experiments. After completing her doctorate, she was assigned as an assistant researcher at the University. At the same time she studied painting, and after gaining her diploma, Abrahams received arts funding from the Dutch government to practice in ", "score": "1.356658" }, { "id": "32469698", "title": "Annie Segarra", "text": " Annie Segarra (born August 22, 1990), also known as Annie Elainey, is an American YouTuber, artist, and activist for LGBT and disability rights. Segarra, who is queer, Latinx, and disabled, advocates for accessibility, body positivity, and media representation of marginalized communities.", "score": "1.347139" }, { "id": "32839215", "title": "Annie Brisset", "text": " Brisset received a Licence d'anglais from the Université de Nantes (France), an MA in Applied Linguistics (Translation) from the University of Ottawa, and a PhD in Semiotics & Literary Studies from the Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM). Her areas of research include Translation theories, Discourse theories, Sociology and Sociocritique of translation, and Interpretation. She is a member of the Advisory board of The Translator a refereed international journal that publishes articles on a variety of issues on translation and interpreting as acts of intercultural communication, and a member of the international advisory board of TTR (Translation, Terminology and Writing), a scholarly biannual journal of the ", "score": "1.3443266" }, { "id": "32543595", "title": "Annie Abrahams", "text": " how people react and form relationships in distributed online groups, for example in Huis Clos / No Exit and Angry Women. She has collaborated with a number of artists including Mark River, MTAA, Nicolas Frespech, Igor Stomajer, and Antye Greie. Her interactive performances often follow a desired 'footprint left in the sand' imprinted and left by the duration of the piece as well as formulating and creating a collective language from many different ethnicities and identities of individuals. The key factor of investigation revolves around the notion of human behavior when presented with a new interactive archive of networked based performance; she explores how participants 'click' and 'choose' opportunities to create new behaviors and perhaps a new way of thinking, for example a personal interaction without any interference from peers in ViolenceS, a 2009 collaboration with Nicolas Frespech.", "score": "1.342501" }, { "id": "28739360", "title": "Annie M. Aggens", "text": " Annie M. Aggens (also known as Annie Aggens) is a polar expedition leader for Polar Explorers. She is one of only a few women who have led treks to both the North and South Poles. In May 2008, she led an international team on a 25-day trek across the Greenland Ice Cap. She is also the co-author, with Chris Townsend, of the Encyclopedia of Outdoor & Wilderness Skills: The Ultimate A-Z Guide for The Adventurous. 2003. Ragged Mountain Press. ISBN: 0-07-138406-5. In 2006, she founded ICECAAP, an international consortium of polar explorers dedicated to preserving the polar environment.", "score": "1.3422358" }, { "id": "15313312", "title": "Annie Rockfellow", "text": " clubs besides the Historical and Pioneer Society, among then The Archeological society, The Natural History society, The Fine Arts, The Daughters of the American Revolution, The business and Professional Women's Club, The Tucson branch of the National League of American Pen women, and a long time board member of the Y.W.C.A. and at present sponsor for their business girls group, the Otonka Circle. When business permits I spend some time each year with my brother and sister-in-law in cochise Stronghold, riding their horses, and climbing the mountains, and a part of the summers \"doing something different\" each year, but always ", "score": "1.3285964" }, { "id": "15578595", "title": "Annie Preece", "text": " Annie Preece (born February 23, 1981), also known as \"Love Annie\", is an American visual artist, public speaker and comedian who lives and works in Los Angeles, California.", "score": "1.3202612" }, { "id": "2292418", "title": "List of people from Philadelphia", "text": " known as Annie or Anna or Drinkwater, or her pen name, Edith May ; Brian McDonough (b. ), Medical Editor, author, physician ; Jim McKay (1921–2008), ABC sports journalist ; Chris McKendry (b. 1968), ESPN SportsCenter anchor ; Larry Mendte (b. 1957), KYW-TV news anchor ; James A. Michener (1907–1997), author ; Aubertine Woodward Moore (1841–1929), musician, writer, musical critic, translator, lecturer ; Christopher Morley (1890–1957), novelist, short-story writer, poet ; Wesley Morris (b. 1975), film critic, podcast host ; Thom Nickels (b. ), author, journalist ; Joe Queenan (b. 1950), author, humorist ; Matthew Quick (b. 1973), author of The Silver Linings Playbook ; Edgar Allan Poe ", "score": "1.3194592" } ]
[ "Annie Beustes\n Annie Beustes (born 15 June 1945 in Arget) is a New Caledonian politician. She has served in the Congress of New Caledonia as a member of The Rally–UMP, and is anti-independence; she also served in the government of Jean Lèques. She served a short term as Vice President of the Government of New Caledonia in August 2007, and was succeeded by Déwé Gorodey of the Kanak and Socialist National Liberation Front (FLNKS: Front de Libération Nationale Kanak et Socialiste).", "Arget\nAnnie Beustes, born Annie Campagne, is a New Caledonian politician, born on 15 August 1945 in Arget. ", "Annie Abrahams\n Annie Abrahams (born 1954) is a Dutch performance artist specialising in video installations and internet based performances, often deriving from collective writings and collective interaction. Born and raised in Hilvarenbeek in the Netherlands, she migrated to and settled in France in 1987. Her performance work challenges and questions the limitations and possibilities of online communication and collaboration. Abrahams describes her body of work as \"an aesthetics of trust and attention.\" Studying biology became an inspiration for her future line of work. \"When studying biology I had to observe a colony of monkeys in a zoo. I found this very interesting because I learned something about human communities by watching the apes. In a certain way I watch the internet with the same appetite and interest. I consider it to be a universe where I can observe some aspects of human attitudes and behaviour without interfering.\"", "Annie Cuyt\n Cuyt was born on 27 May 1956 in Elizabethstad (now Lubumbashi), in the Belgian Congo. She earned her Ph.D. at the University of Antwerp in 1982. Her dissertation, Padé approximants for operators: theory and applications, was promoted by Luc Wuytack. She was a postdoctoral researcher with support from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, and completed a habilitation in 1986. She is a professor in the Department of Mathematics and Computer Science at the University of Antwerp, where she leads the computational mathematics group.", "Annie Cuyt\n Annie A. M. Cuyt (born 1956) is a Belgian computational mathematician known for her work on continued fractions, numerical analysis, Padé approximants, and related topics. She is a professor at the University of Antwerp, and a member of the Royal Flemish Academy of Belgium for Science and the Arts.", "Annie Famose\n} ", "Annie Preece\n Preece's career started with showings at downtown art walks and group shows, painted shoes for Project Canvas with other artists, and volunteering many hours telling her story of addiction, recovery and passion for art with at-risk youth. In 2012 she again picked up the spray can and created a humorous piece on a Melrose and Fairfax wall, and again with a mural drew complaints from the L.A. City Council for its depiction of sex organs. Her first solo show was in 2013 at Space 1520 in Hollywood. She was asked to be the first female artist to paint a mural on the Roxy Theater in West Hollywood. Notable collaboration include ", "Annie Lobert\n Annie Lobert (born September 26, 1967) is an American former call girl and sex industry worker, who founded the international Christian ministry Hookers for Jesus. In 2010, she produced and starred in a three-part documentary on the organization, Hookers: Saved on the Strip, which was broadcast nationwide on cable television's Investigation Discovery. Lobert worked as a prostitute in Las Vegas, Minneapolis, and Hawaii for 16 years. She left the sex industry with the support of Al Nakata, one of her regular customers, who had fallen in love with her. After leaving prostitution, Nakata trained her in estimates and service reviews in order to work with him in his Super GT Series auto body and design firm.", "Annie Brisset\n Annie Brisset, a member of the Royal Society of Canada, is a Professor of Translation Studies and Discourse Theory at the School of Translation and Interpretation of the University of Ottawa, Canada.", "Annie Brisset\n a UNESCO consultant for the development of multilingual communication for Central and Eastern Europe, and former President and founding member of IATIS (International Association for Translation and Intercultural Studies. In 2007, she served as a member of jury for the Governor General of Canada's Literary Awards. In 2009 she was elected fellow of the Royal Society of Canada for her exceptional achievements in the areas of sciences and arts & humanities in 1991, she received the Ann Saddlemyer Award(Canadian Association for the History of Theatre), while in 1987, she received the Jean-Béraud Theatre Critic of the Year Award (Canadian and Quebec associations of theatre critics.", "Annie Bersagel\n Anne Golden Bersagel (born March 30, 1983) is an American long-distance runner and lawyer.", "Annie Lafleur\n Annie Lafleur (born 1980 in Montreal) is a Canadian poet from Quebec. She is most noted for her poetry collection Bec-de-lièvre, which was a shortlisted finalist for the Governor General's Award for French-language poetry at the 2017 Governor General's Awards. Her other poetry collections have included Prolégomènes à mon géant (2007), Handkerchief (2009), Rosebud (2013) and Nouvelles vagues (2014).", "Annie Abrahams\n Abrahams was born in a small farmer's village in the Netherlands with four younger sisters. She gained a Doctorate in Biology from the University of Utrecht (1978) and a Diploma from the Academy of Fine Arts Arnhem (1985). Brought into a world of agriculture, her academic pathway led her to becoming internationally known for her pioneering networked performance art and collective writing experiments. After completing her doctorate, she was assigned as an assistant researcher at the University. At the same time she studied painting, and after gaining her diploma, Abrahams received arts funding from the Dutch government to practice in ", "Annie Segarra\n Annie Segarra (born August 22, 1990), also known as Annie Elainey, is an American YouTuber, artist, and activist for LGBT and disability rights. Segarra, who is queer, Latinx, and disabled, advocates for accessibility, body positivity, and media representation of marginalized communities.", "Annie Brisset\n Brisset received a Licence d'anglais from the Université de Nantes (France), an MA in Applied Linguistics (Translation) from the University of Ottawa, and a PhD in Semiotics & Literary Studies from the Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM). Her areas of research include Translation theories, Discourse theories, Sociology and Sociocritique of translation, and Interpretation. She is a member of the Advisory board of The Translator a refereed international journal that publishes articles on a variety of issues on translation and interpreting as acts of intercultural communication, and a member of the international advisory board of TTR (Translation, Terminology and Writing), a scholarly biannual journal of the ", "Annie Abrahams\n how people react and form relationships in distributed online groups, for example in Huis Clos / No Exit and Angry Women. She has collaborated with a number of artists including Mark River, MTAA, Nicolas Frespech, Igor Stomajer, and Antye Greie. Her interactive performances often follow a desired 'footprint left in the sand' imprinted and left by the duration of the piece as well as formulating and creating a collective language from many different ethnicities and identities of individuals. The key factor of investigation revolves around the notion of human behavior when presented with a new interactive archive of networked based performance; she explores how participants 'click' and 'choose' opportunities to create new behaviors and perhaps a new way of thinking, for example a personal interaction without any interference from peers in ViolenceS, a 2009 collaboration with Nicolas Frespech.", "Annie M. Aggens\n Annie M. Aggens (also known as Annie Aggens) is a polar expedition leader for Polar Explorers. She is one of only a few women who have led treks to both the North and South Poles. In May 2008, she led an international team on a 25-day trek across the Greenland Ice Cap. She is also the co-author, with Chris Townsend, of the Encyclopedia of Outdoor & Wilderness Skills: The Ultimate A-Z Guide for The Adventurous. 2003. Ragged Mountain Press. ISBN: 0-07-138406-5. In 2006, she founded ICECAAP, an international consortium of polar explorers dedicated to preserving the polar environment.", "Annie Rockfellow\n clubs besides the Historical and Pioneer Society, among then The Archeological society, The Natural History society, The Fine Arts, The Daughters of the American Revolution, The business and Professional Women's Club, The Tucson branch of the National League of American Pen women, and a long time board member of the Y.W.C.A. and at present sponsor for their business girls group, the Otonka Circle. When business permits I spend some time each year with my brother and sister-in-law in cochise Stronghold, riding their horses, and climbing the mountains, and a part of the summers \"doing something different\" each year, but always ", "Annie Preece\n Annie Preece (born February 23, 1981), also known as \"Love Annie\", is an American visual artist, public speaker and comedian who lives and works in Los Angeles, California.", "List of people from Philadelphia\n known as Annie or Anna or Drinkwater, or her pen name, Edith May ; Brian McDonough (b. ), Medical Editor, author, physician ; Jim McKay (1921–2008), ABC sports journalist ; Chris McKendry (b. 1968), ESPN SportsCenter anchor ; Larry Mendte (b. 1957), KYW-TV news anchor ; James A. Michener (1907–1997), author ; Aubertine Woodward Moore (1841–1929), musician, writer, musical critic, translator, lecturer ; Christopher Morley (1890–1957), novelist, short-story writer, poet ; Wesley Morris (b. 1975), film critic, podcast host ; Thom Nickels (b. ), author, journalist ; Joe Queenan (b. 1950), author, humorist ; Matthew Quick (b. 1973), author of The Silver Linings Playbook ; Edgar Allan Poe " ]
In what city was Scott Patterson born?
[ "Vancouver", "City of Vancouver", "Vancouver, BC", "Vancouver, British Columbia" ]
place of birth
Scott Patterson (Paralympian)
5,708,121
42
[ { "id": "1503637", "title": "Chuck Patterson", "text": " Born in Memphis, Tennessee.", "score": "1.74913" }, { "id": "8037548", "title": "Scott Patterson (skier, born 1992)", "text": " All results are sourced from the International Ski Federation (FIS).", "score": "1.7154776" }, { "id": "29902743", "title": "Scott Patterson (Paralympian)", "text": " Scott Patterson (born December 23, 1961) is a Canadian athlete who has appeared in four Paralympic Games in three different sports. Patterson is a double leg amputee injured in a work accident in 1982. He competed in four events in track athletics in the 1988 Summer Paralympics in Seoul, South Korea, his best result being fifth. His next appearance was not until the 2002 Winter Paralympics in Salt Lake City, where he entered 3 alpine skiing events, winning a bronze medal in the Men's giant slalom LW12. He skied again in 2006 in Torino, but his best result was a 20th place. In the 2012 Summer Paralympics in London he appeared for the first time as a swimmer, taking 8th place in the final of the 100 metre breaststroke SB5.", "score": "1.6995523" }, { "id": "8037547", "title": "Scott Patterson (skier, born 1992)", "text": " Scott Patterson (born January 28, 1992) is an American cross-country skier. He competed in the 2018 Winter Olympics. He skied for South Anchorage High School, where he was a three-time Alaska State skimeister. He then skied for University of Vermont, along with his sister, Caitlin. Currently, he represents Alaska Pacific University professionally and the US Ski Team. Most recently, he placed 10th at the World Championships 50k Classic race in Obersdorf, Germany.", "score": "1.6751201" }, { "id": "6009891", "title": "Saladin K. Patterson", "text": " Patterson grew up in Montgomery, Alabama, near South Boulevard, and attended Loveless Academic Magnet Program. He then studied engineering at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and entered a graduate psychology program at Vanderbilt University.", "score": "1.6740005" }, { "id": "9610967", "title": "Nathan Patterson (baseball)", "text": " Patterson was born in 1996 in Kansas City, Missouri. His mother is a long-time nurse and real estate agent and his father a former high school baseball coach in Overland Park, Kansas. He played baseball as a middle infielder on the junior varsity team at Overland Park, but suffered a fracture in the elbow of his throwing arm during his junior year and never recovered sufficiently from the injury to resume his high school career. He enrolled in a local community college before leaving to start his own landscaping business. Patterson moved to Austin, Texas, in the summer of 2015 and met his girlfriend, with whom he relocated to Nashville, Tennessee, in January 2018. There he worked as a salesman of computer software.", "score": "1.6720234" }, { "id": "686631", "title": "Kevin Patterson (writer)", "text": " Kevin Patterson was born on December 27, 1964 in Kapuskasing, Ontario and raised in Selkirk, Manitoba. He put himself through medical school at the University of Manitoba in Winnipeg by enlisting in the Canadian army. When his service was up, he worked as a doctor in the Arctic and on the coast of British Columbia while pursuing his MFA in creative writing at the University of British Columbia.", "score": "1.6719027" }, { "id": "27135228", "title": "Eugene Patterson", "text": " Patterson was born in Valdosta, Georgia, the son of Annabel Corbett, a schoolteacher, and William C. Patterson, a bank cashier. After the bank at which his father worked was closed in the course of the Great Depression, the family moved to a small farm near Adel, Georgia. The house had no running water or electricity, and was heated only by the fireplace. With his father able to get only occasional employment at local banks, the family was primarily supported by his mother's work as a teacher and her running the farm. As a teenager, Patterson began to work on weekends at the local journal, the Adel News. He edited a campus newspaper at North Georgia College at Dahlonega, Georgia where he ", "score": "1.665259" }, { "id": "1743568", "title": "Eric Patterson (baseball)", "text": " Eric Scott Patterson (born April 8, 1983) is an American former professional baseball left fielder and second baseman. Patterson made his MLB debut with the Chicago Cubs on August 6, 2007. He was the head coach of the Gwinnett Tides in the Sunbelt Baseball League. Patterson is currently the assistant hitting coach for the South Bend Cubs.", "score": "1.6415617" }, { "id": "12336128", "title": "Gary Patterson (artist)", "text": " Patterson was born in Los Angeles, California on November 16, 1941. His father, Robert Patterson, was a Fire Captain for the Los Angeles Fire Department who was also known for his comical illustrations in the Firemen's Grapevine, a widely distributed periodical popular among firefighters. His mother, Nadine Patterson, was a homemaker. In the beginning of his childhood, Patterson submerged himself into the world of art. Encouraged by his family and friends, he attended Los Angeles Valley College, the Art Center College of Design and UCLA where he studied a diversity of art areas and media before deciding to specialize in humor.", "score": "1.6342541" }, { "id": "29634348", "title": "Gary Patterson", "text": " Patterson grew up in Rozel, Kansas and played football at Dodge City Community College and at Kansas State University. Patterson is married to Kelsey Patterson (née Hayes). He has three sons: Josh, Cade, and Blake. He received his bachelor's degree in physical education in 1983 from Kansas State University, where he became a member of the Acacia fraternity. While coaching at Tennessee Tech, he earned a master's degree in educational administration in 1984. Outside of coaching, Patterson plays guitar and performs at charity events around the Dallas-Fort Worth area during the off season.", "score": "1.6324584" }, { "id": "32937399", "title": "Lee Patterson", "text": " Patterson was born in Vancouver, British Columbia, as Beverley Frank Atherly Patterson. He attended the Ontario College of Art and Design.", "score": "1.6313821" }, { "id": "27792997", "title": "James Patterson", "text": " Patterson was born on March 22, 1947, in Newburgh, New York, the son of Isabelle (Morris), a homemaker and teacher, and Charles Patterson, an insurance broker. The family were working-class and of Irish descent. He graduated summa cum laude with both a B.A. in English from Manhattan College and an M.A. in English from Vanderbilt University.", "score": "1.6110823" }, { "id": "905998", "title": "Ed Patterson", "text": " Patterson was born in Delta, British Columbia. As a youth, he played in the 1986 Quebec International Pee-Wee Hockey Tournament with a minor ice hockey team from North Delta, British Columbia. He played three seasons of junior hockey in the Western Hockey League and was drafted by the Pittsburgh Penguins. He turned professional in 1992 with the Cleveland Lumberjacks. Patterson would play in the minor leagues, with a few stints with the Penguins, until 2000, when he moved to Europe. He played six seasons in Europe before ending his career in 2007.", "score": "1.6110227" }, { "id": "10792358", "title": "Kyle Patterson", "text": " Kyle James N. Patterson (born 6 January 1986) is an English footballer who plays for Midland League Division One side Lichfield City, where he plays as a midfielder.", "score": "1.6041553" }, { "id": "25584951", "title": "David Allen Patterson", "text": " David Allen Patterson was born in Kentucky to Betty (née Allen) and Coleman Sidwell Patterson, the youngest of their three sons. He is of Cherokee and Irish heritage. After dropping out of high school in 1982, David struggled with alcoholism, drug addiction, depression and a suicide attempt at age 18. He entered a psychiatric hospital in 1989, where he stayed for five weeks. David earned his GED and began working as a garbage man for Waste Management in his mid-twenties. In 1990, he considered taking college classes and sought assistance through Vocational Rehabilitation in Kentucky. He was evaluated as having dyslexia, ADHD and learning disabilities, labeled mildly mentally retarded and was told he was not \"college material.\" Ironically, this became the starting point of a new life for Patterson, one devoted to education, addiction treatment and rehabilitation, and advocacy.", "score": "1.6010637" }, { "id": "2633876", "title": "Gavin Patterson", "text": " He was born in Altrincham in Greater Manchester in 1967, and attended schools in Warrington and Yeovil. He graduated from Emmanuel College, Cambridge with a bachelor's degree in chemical engineering.", "score": "1.5961757" }, { "id": "25979509", "title": "MC Ren", "text": " Lorenzo Jerald Patterson was born in Compton, California, on June 16, 1969, and raised in Pannes Ave., around Kelly Park. He grew up with his parents, two brothers and a sister. His father used to work for \"the government\", until he later opened up his own barber shop. Patterson joined the Kelly Park Compton Crips (of which Eazy-E would also become a member) in attempt to make money, but soon departed and turned to drug dealing as he felt it was more lucrative. Following a raid on his childhood friend MC Chip's house, Patterson quit dealing and focused thereafter on making music. Patterson attended Dominguez High School, where he met his future collaborator, DJ Train. At this time, he developed an interest in hip hop music, and began writing songs with MC Chip, with whom he formed the group Awesome Crew, and performed at parties and nightclubs. Patterson officially began his rap career upon joining forces with another childhood friend, Eric \"Eazy-E\" Wright, in 1985. Patterson graduated from high school in 1987 and he planned to join the United States Army after graduation, but changed his mind after watching the 1987 film Full Metal Jacket.", "score": "1.5953133" }, { "id": "12829794", "title": "Richard Patterson (artist)", "text": " Richard Patterson (born 1963 in Leatherhead, Surrey) is an English artist and one of the Young British Artists (YBAs). He is currently based in Dallas, Texas. Patterson's work is primarily painterly, but occasionally morphs into three-dimensional works as well.", "score": "1.5891953" }, { "id": "7190205", "title": "Davie Patterson", "text": " He was born to David Patterson and Maggie Scott. They had 3 daughters and 5 sons, including Davie.", "score": "1.5844247" } ]
[ "Chuck Patterson\n Born in Memphis, Tennessee.", "Scott Patterson (skier, born 1992)\n All results are sourced from the International Ski Federation (FIS).", "Scott Patterson (Paralympian)\n Scott Patterson (born December 23, 1961) is a Canadian athlete who has appeared in four Paralympic Games in three different sports. Patterson is a double leg amputee injured in a work accident in 1982. He competed in four events in track athletics in the 1988 Summer Paralympics in Seoul, South Korea, his best result being fifth. His next appearance was not until the 2002 Winter Paralympics in Salt Lake City, where he entered 3 alpine skiing events, winning a bronze medal in the Men's giant slalom LW12. He skied again in 2006 in Torino, but his best result was a 20th place. In the 2012 Summer Paralympics in London he appeared for the first time as a swimmer, taking 8th place in the final of the 100 metre breaststroke SB5.", "Scott Patterson (skier, born 1992)\n Scott Patterson (born January 28, 1992) is an American cross-country skier. He competed in the 2018 Winter Olympics. He skied for South Anchorage High School, where he was a three-time Alaska State skimeister. He then skied for University of Vermont, along with his sister, Caitlin. Currently, he represents Alaska Pacific University professionally and the US Ski Team. Most recently, he placed 10th at the World Championships 50k Classic race in Obersdorf, Germany.", "Saladin K. Patterson\n Patterson grew up in Montgomery, Alabama, near South Boulevard, and attended Loveless Academic Magnet Program. He then studied engineering at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and entered a graduate psychology program at Vanderbilt University.", "Nathan Patterson (baseball)\n Patterson was born in 1996 in Kansas City, Missouri. His mother is a long-time nurse and real estate agent and his father a former high school baseball coach in Overland Park, Kansas. He played baseball as a middle infielder on the junior varsity team at Overland Park, but suffered a fracture in the elbow of his throwing arm during his junior year and never recovered sufficiently from the injury to resume his high school career. He enrolled in a local community college before leaving to start his own landscaping business. Patterson moved to Austin, Texas, in the summer of 2015 and met his girlfriend, with whom he relocated to Nashville, Tennessee, in January 2018. There he worked as a salesman of computer software.", "Kevin Patterson (writer)\n Kevin Patterson was born on December 27, 1964 in Kapuskasing, Ontario and raised in Selkirk, Manitoba. He put himself through medical school at the University of Manitoba in Winnipeg by enlisting in the Canadian army. When his service was up, he worked as a doctor in the Arctic and on the coast of British Columbia while pursuing his MFA in creative writing at the University of British Columbia.", "Eugene Patterson\n Patterson was born in Valdosta, Georgia, the son of Annabel Corbett, a schoolteacher, and William C. Patterson, a bank cashier. After the bank at which his father worked was closed in the course of the Great Depression, the family moved to a small farm near Adel, Georgia. The house had no running water or electricity, and was heated only by the fireplace. With his father able to get only occasional employment at local banks, the family was primarily supported by his mother's work as a teacher and her running the farm. As a teenager, Patterson began to work on weekends at the local journal, the Adel News. He edited a campus newspaper at North Georgia College at Dahlonega, Georgia where he ", "Eric Patterson (baseball)\n Eric Scott Patterson (born April 8, 1983) is an American former professional baseball left fielder and second baseman. Patterson made his MLB debut with the Chicago Cubs on August 6, 2007. He was the head coach of the Gwinnett Tides in the Sunbelt Baseball League. Patterson is currently the assistant hitting coach for the South Bend Cubs.", "Gary Patterson (artist)\n Patterson was born in Los Angeles, California on November 16, 1941. His father, Robert Patterson, was a Fire Captain for the Los Angeles Fire Department who was also known for his comical illustrations in the Firemen's Grapevine, a widely distributed periodical popular among firefighters. His mother, Nadine Patterson, was a homemaker. In the beginning of his childhood, Patterson submerged himself into the world of art. Encouraged by his family and friends, he attended Los Angeles Valley College, the Art Center College of Design and UCLA where he studied a diversity of art areas and media before deciding to specialize in humor.", "Gary Patterson\n Patterson grew up in Rozel, Kansas and played football at Dodge City Community College and at Kansas State University. Patterson is married to Kelsey Patterson (née Hayes). He has three sons: Josh, Cade, and Blake. He received his bachelor's degree in physical education in 1983 from Kansas State University, where he became a member of the Acacia fraternity. While coaching at Tennessee Tech, he earned a master's degree in educational administration in 1984. Outside of coaching, Patterson plays guitar and performs at charity events around the Dallas-Fort Worth area during the off season.", "Lee Patterson\n Patterson was born in Vancouver, British Columbia, as Beverley Frank Atherly Patterson. He attended the Ontario College of Art and Design.", "James Patterson\n Patterson was born on March 22, 1947, in Newburgh, New York, the son of Isabelle (Morris), a homemaker and teacher, and Charles Patterson, an insurance broker. The family were working-class and of Irish descent. He graduated summa cum laude with both a B.A. in English from Manhattan College and an M.A. in English from Vanderbilt University.", "Ed Patterson\n Patterson was born in Delta, British Columbia. As a youth, he played in the 1986 Quebec International Pee-Wee Hockey Tournament with a minor ice hockey team from North Delta, British Columbia. He played three seasons of junior hockey in the Western Hockey League and was drafted by the Pittsburgh Penguins. He turned professional in 1992 with the Cleveland Lumberjacks. Patterson would play in the minor leagues, with a few stints with the Penguins, until 2000, when he moved to Europe. He played six seasons in Europe before ending his career in 2007.", "Kyle Patterson\n Kyle James N. Patterson (born 6 January 1986) is an English footballer who plays for Midland League Division One side Lichfield City, where he plays as a midfielder.", "David Allen Patterson\n David Allen Patterson was born in Kentucky to Betty (née Allen) and Coleman Sidwell Patterson, the youngest of their three sons. He is of Cherokee and Irish heritage. After dropping out of high school in 1982, David struggled with alcoholism, drug addiction, depression and a suicide attempt at age 18. He entered a psychiatric hospital in 1989, where he stayed for five weeks. David earned his GED and began working as a garbage man for Waste Management in his mid-twenties. In 1990, he considered taking college classes and sought assistance through Vocational Rehabilitation in Kentucky. He was evaluated as having dyslexia, ADHD and learning disabilities, labeled mildly mentally retarded and was told he was not \"college material.\" Ironically, this became the starting point of a new life for Patterson, one devoted to education, addiction treatment and rehabilitation, and advocacy.", "Gavin Patterson\n He was born in Altrincham in Greater Manchester in 1967, and attended schools in Warrington and Yeovil. He graduated from Emmanuel College, Cambridge with a bachelor's degree in chemical engineering.", "MC Ren\n Lorenzo Jerald Patterson was born in Compton, California, on June 16, 1969, and raised in Pannes Ave., around Kelly Park. He grew up with his parents, two brothers and a sister. His father used to work for \"the government\", until he later opened up his own barber shop. Patterson joined the Kelly Park Compton Crips (of which Eazy-E would also become a member) in attempt to make money, but soon departed and turned to drug dealing as he felt it was more lucrative. Following a raid on his childhood friend MC Chip's house, Patterson quit dealing and focused thereafter on making music. Patterson attended Dominguez High School, where he met his future collaborator, DJ Train. At this time, he developed an interest in hip hop music, and began writing songs with MC Chip, with whom he formed the group Awesome Crew, and performed at parties and nightclubs. Patterson officially began his rap career upon joining forces with another childhood friend, Eric \"Eazy-E\" Wright, in 1985. Patterson graduated from high school in 1987 and he planned to join the United States Army after graduation, but changed his mind after watching the 1987 film Full Metal Jacket.", "Richard Patterson (artist)\n Richard Patterson (born 1963 in Leatherhead, Surrey) is an English artist and one of the Young British Artists (YBAs). He is currently based in Dallas, Texas. Patterson's work is primarily painterly, but occasionally morphs into three-dimensional works as well.", "Davie Patterson\n He was born to David Patterson and Maggie Scott. They had 3 daughters and 5 sons, including Davie." ]
What sport does Hans Pieren play?
[ "alpine skiing" ]
sport
Hans Pieren
5,183,899
57
[ { "id": "1865291", "title": "Hans Pieren", "text": " Hans Pieren (born 23 January 1962) is a Swiss former alpine skier who competed in the 1988 Winter Olympics and 1992 Winter Olympics.", "score": "1.7231843" }, { "id": "12692661", "title": "Eric Pierik", "text": " Johannes Maria Henricus (\"Eric\" or \"Erik\") Pierik (born March 21, 1959 in Zwolle) is a former field hockey player from the Netherlands, who was a member of the Dutch National Team that finished sixth in the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles. Pierik earned a total number of 73 caps, scoring one goal, in the years 1980-1984. After the Los Angeles Games he retired from international competition.", "score": "1.6344376" }, { "id": "27722648", "title": "Hellerup", "text": "Hans Bjerrum (1899 in Hellerup – 1979) a Danish field hockey player, team silver medallist at the 1920 Summer Olympics later founded Bierrum which makes concrete cooling towers ; Jørgen Ulrich (1935 in Hellerup – 2010) a Danish tennis player ; Torben Piechnik (born 1963 in Hellerup) a Danish former professional footballer with over 400 caps ; Paul Elvstrom (born 1928 in Hellerup) a Danish sailor who won four Olympic gold medals and twenty world titles in a range of classes including Snipe, Soling, Star, Flying Dutchman, Finn, 505, and 5.5 Metre. For his achievements, Elvstrøm was chosen as \"Danish Sportsman of the Century. ", "score": "1.6087658" }, { "id": "16082454", "title": "Hans Brase", "text": " Brase plays internationally for Germany. In 2013, he attended the under-20 European Championships in Estonia. During the summer of 2014, he played in friendly tournaments across Europe ultimately culminating in a six team tournament in China. He won silver at the 2015 World University Games in South Korea after losing to the Kansas Jayhawks, who were representing the United States, in the gold medal game. Brase led the team in scoring and rebounding as their only defeat in the tournament was to Kansas in double overtime.", "score": "1.6083126" }, { "id": "15268017", "title": "Bjorn", "text": " van der Doelen, Dutch soccer player ; Björn Dunkerbeck, Dutch windsurfer ; Björn Einarsson, Swedish bandy player ; Björn Emmerling, German field hockey player ; Björn Ferry, Swedish skier ; Björn Forslund, Swedish sailor ; Björn Forslund (Speed skater), Swedish speed skater ; Bjorn Fratangelo, American tennis player ; Bjørn Grimnes, Norwegian athlete ; Bjørn Gundersen, Norwegian athlete ; Bjorn Haneveer, Belgian snooker player ; Bjørn Johansen (footballer), Norwegian footballer ; Bjørn Johansen (ice hockey), Norwegian ice hockey player ; Björn Joppien, German badminton player ; Björn Kircheisen, also known as Bjoern Kircheisen, German Olympic athlete ; Björn Knutsson, Swedish motorcycle racer ; Bjørn \"Benny\" Kristensen, Danish soccer ", "score": "1.6081145" }, { "id": "15843557", "title": "Pier Morten", "text": " Pier Morten (born 15 February 1959) is a Canadian judoka and wrestler, and is the world's first deaf-blind black belt in Judo. Morten competed in seven Paralympic Games, four in Judo and three in Wrestling, and served as Canada's flag-bearer for the closing ceremony at the 2000 Paralympics. He won bronze in Judo in the -65 kg category in 1988, 71 kg category in 1992, and -73 kg category in 2000, and silver in Wrestling in the -64 kg category in 1984. Morten has won many awards for his achievements. He was named British Columbia's Disabled Athlete of the Year in 1987 for both ", "score": "1.5930457" }, { "id": "30590992", "title": "Hans Tetzner", "text": " Johannes Cornelis \"Hans\" Tetzner (9 June 1898 – 17 February 1987) was a Dutch association football defender and medical doctor. He was part of the Dutch team that finished fourth at the 1924 Summer Olympics. Between 1915 and 1926 he played for Be Quick 1887, winning nine Northern Dutch titles and one national title in 1920. Hans Tetzner had an elder brother Max; they competed alongside both in football and speed skating. Hans also played tennis, once reaching the semifinals of the Dutch national doubles championships. He later became a prominent surgeon and served as a doctor for the football club AFC Ajax and for the 1936 Dutch Olympic cycling team. In the 1960s he was a regular guest at the television show Wie van de Drie?", "score": "1.5745895" }, { "id": "16082451", "title": "Hans Brase", "text": " Hans-George Brase (Hans) (born September 15, 1993) is an American-German basketball player for Hamburg Towers of the Basketball Bundesliga. He stands 6’9’’ (205 cm) tall and plays the forward position.", "score": "1.5660481" }, { "id": "12692616", "title": "Hans Kruize", "text": " Hans Tjebbe Kruize (born 23 May 1954) is a former field hockey player from the Netherlands. He participated in the 1976 and 1984 Olympic Games and ended up in fourth and in sixth place, respectively. Just like his brothers Ties and Hidde, and his father Roepie, he played club hockey for HC Klein Zwitserland from The Hague. The midfielder earned a total number of 99 caps, scoring fourteen goals, in the years 1974–1984. He won a European title in 1974.", "score": "1.5560389" }, { "id": "3707522", "title": "Hans á Lag", "text": " Hans á Lag (born 26 September 1974) is a Faroese former sportsman. He is a former football player, former badminton player and former handball player. Hon won the Faroese championship in the men's badminton two times in 1993 and 1994 and the Faroese championship in the Faroe Islands Premier League six times. He has also won the Faroese championship in handball with Kyndil as a goal keeper in 1994 and 1996. Hans á Lag used to have another lastname, which was Jacobsen.", "score": "1.5523264" }, { "id": "2007905", "title": "Hans Moser (handballer)", "text": " Hans Moser (in Romania known sometimes as Ioan Moser; born 24 January 1937 in Timișoara, Romania) is a former Romanian-born German handball player and coach. He won two world championships as a player for the Romanian national team. During his active player career, Moser, who is 1.92m tall, played as a center fielder. In 2000, the official bulletin of the International Handball Federation, World Handball Magazine, chose Moser as a member of the \"Team of the Century\", together with teammates Cornel Penu and Gheorghe Gruia. Before beginning to play handball competitionally, he used to play water polo and volleyball (in the latter, he ", "score": "1.5469118" }, { "id": "15391484", "title": "Roger Hansson (ice hockey)", "text": " Roger Kent Hansson (born July 13, 1967 in Helsingborg, Sweden) is a Swedish ice hockey player. He won a gold medal at the 1994 Winter Olympics, won the Swedish championships twice and became runner-up in the German championships with the Kassel Huskies in 1997.", "score": "1.5347853" }, { "id": "31016333", "title": "Ronny Johnsen", "text": " a trial at Southampton and played against Chievo Verona in a friendly, ultimately he could not agree terms with the club. Johnsen then signed for Newcastle United but only played a handful of games before being released with concerns over his fitness levels. In February 2005, Johnsen announced his retirement from professional football. Shortly afterwards he changed his mind, signing a one-year contract with the Norwegian club Vålerenga. Subsequently, he renewed this contract three times for the following 2006, 2007 and 2008 seasons. Johnsen retired as an active football player on 3 November 2008, with Vålerenga losing their final game of the 2008 season 1–0 to SK Brann.", "score": "1.5335772" }, { "id": "31053520", "title": "Kik Pierie", "text": " His father is former Dutch field hockey player Jean-Pierre Pierie, currently professor of Endoscopic Surgery at University Medical Center Groningen. When Kik was born, Jean-Pierre worked at the Harvard Medical School. His younger brothers Take (by SC Heerenveen) and Stijn Pierie (LAC Frisia), are footballers too.", "score": "1.5303807" }, { "id": "27632348", "title": "Hans Vinjarengen", "text": " Hans Vinjarengen (20 August 1905 – 1 February 1984) was a Nordic combined skier from Norway. He won a silver medal at the 1928 Winter Olympics in St. Moritz and a bronze at the 1932 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid, New York. In addition, he won gold medals at the 1929 and 1930 FIS Nordic World Ski Championships and bronzes in 1934 and 1938. Vinjarengen won the Holmenkollen ski festival's Nordic combined event twice (1930 and 1932). In 1931, he shared the Holmenkollen medal with fellow Norwegian Ole Stensen, a cross-country skier. Vinjarengen lived most of his life in Oslo, where he worked as a lorry driver, but he represented his childhood club from Nordre Land.", "score": "1.5246863" }, { "id": "29011277", "title": "Hans-Peter Briegel", "text": " Hans-Peter Briegel (born 11 October 1955) is a German former professional football player and manager who played as a defender or midfielder. One of the most popular German players in his days, Briegel's original sport was athletics, being successful in various events such as long jump (personal best: 7 metres 44 cm, aged 16), triple jump and specifically in heptathlon-forerunner pentathlon. Briegel also ran 100 metres in 10.81 seconds, aged 16. At the age of 17, he left athletics behind him, playing club football with hometown side SV Rodenbach near Kaiserslautern. During his playing days, Briegel usually played as a left back and defensive midfielder. He was known primarily for his physical abilities as well as his technical abilities and goal scoring abilities for a defensive player.", "score": "1.5174818" }, { "id": "25304780", "title": "Hans Fróði Hansen", "text": " Hans Fróði á Toftanesi (born Hans Fróði Hansen; 25 August 1975) is a retired football player who played 26 games for Faroe Islands. In 2018 he was sentenced to three years and nine months in prison for having instigated woman to commit 41 sexual assaults against her four-year-old son.", "score": "1.5170674" }, { "id": "29479360", "title": "Marten Eikelboom", "text": " Marten Eikelboom (born 12 October 1973 in Zwolle) is a field hockey striker from the Netherlands, who was a member of the Dutch team that won the gold medal at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney. After the World Hockey Cup in Kuala Lumpur (2002) he retired from the national squad, but in 2004 he made a comeback, just because of the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, where he finished second. Eikelboom played 177 international matches for the Dutch, in which he scored a total number of 58 goals. He made his debut on 5 June 1994 in a friendly against New Zealand. In the Dutch League he played for Hattem and Amsterdam, with whom he won the title four times.", "score": "1.5100584" }, { "id": "5329452", "title": "Hans Hansson (ice hockey)", "text": " Hans Nils Erik Hansson (born November 26, 1949) is a Swedish former professional ice hockey player. He competed as a member of the Sweden men's national ice hockey team at the 1972 Winter Olympics held in Japan.", "score": "1.5091649" }, { "id": "1223948", "title": "Hans Smits", "text": " Hans Karel Daniël Smits (born January 24, 1956 in Den Helder, North Holland) is a former water polo player from The Netherlands, who won the bronze medal with the Dutch Men's Team at the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.", "score": "1.5077026" } ]
[ "Hans Pieren\n Hans Pieren (born 23 January 1962) is a Swiss former alpine skier who competed in the 1988 Winter Olympics and 1992 Winter Olympics.", "Eric Pierik\n Johannes Maria Henricus (\"Eric\" or \"Erik\") Pierik (born March 21, 1959 in Zwolle) is a former field hockey player from the Netherlands, who was a member of the Dutch National Team that finished sixth in the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles. Pierik earned a total number of 73 caps, scoring one goal, in the years 1980-1984. After the Los Angeles Games he retired from international competition.", "Hellerup\nHans Bjerrum (1899 in Hellerup – 1979) a Danish field hockey player, team silver medallist at the 1920 Summer Olympics later founded Bierrum which makes concrete cooling towers ; Jørgen Ulrich (1935 in Hellerup – 2010) a Danish tennis player ; Torben Piechnik (born 1963 in Hellerup) a Danish former professional footballer with over 400 caps ; Paul Elvstrom (born 1928 in Hellerup) a Danish sailor who won four Olympic gold medals and twenty world titles in a range of classes including Snipe, Soling, Star, Flying Dutchman, Finn, 505, and 5.5 Metre. For his achievements, Elvstrøm was chosen as \"Danish Sportsman of the Century. ", "Hans Brase\n Brase plays internationally for Germany. In 2013, he attended the under-20 European Championships in Estonia. During the summer of 2014, he played in friendly tournaments across Europe ultimately culminating in a six team tournament in China. He won silver at the 2015 World University Games in South Korea after losing to the Kansas Jayhawks, who were representing the United States, in the gold medal game. Brase led the team in scoring and rebounding as their only defeat in the tournament was to Kansas in double overtime.", "Bjorn\n van der Doelen, Dutch soccer player ; Björn Dunkerbeck, Dutch windsurfer ; Björn Einarsson, Swedish bandy player ; Björn Emmerling, German field hockey player ; Björn Ferry, Swedish skier ; Björn Forslund, Swedish sailor ; Björn Forslund (Speed skater), Swedish speed skater ; Bjorn Fratangelo, American tennis player ; Bjørn Grimnes, Norwegian athlete ; Bjørn Gundersen, Norwegian athlete ; Bjorn Haneveer, Belgian snooker player ; Bjørn Johansen (footballer), Norwegian footballer ; Bjørn Johansen (ice hockey), Norwegian ice hockey player ; Björn Joppien, German badminton player ; Björn Kircheisen, also known as Bjoern Kircheisen, German Olympic athlete ; Björn Knutsson, Swedish motorcycle racer ; Bjørn \"Benny\" Kristensen, Danish soccer ", "Pier Morten\n Pier Morten (born 15 February 1959) is a Canadian judoka and wrestler, and is the world's first deaf-blind black belt in Judo. Morten competed in seven Paralympic Games, four in Judo and three in Wrestling, and served as Canada's flag-bearer for the closing ceremony at the 2000 Paralympics. He won bronze in Judo in the -65 kg category in 1988, 71 kg category in 1992, and -73 kg category in 2000, and silver in Wrestling in the -64 kg category in 1984. Morten has won many awards for his achievements. He was named British Columbia's Disabled Athlete of the Year in 1987 for both ", "Hans Tetzner\n Johannes Cornelis \"Hans\" Tetzner (9 June 1898 – 17 February 1987) was a Dutch association football defender and medical doctor. He was part of the Dutch team that finished fourth at the 1924 Summer Olympics. Between 1915 and 1926 he played for Be Quick 1887, winning nine Northern Dutch titles and one national title in 1920. Hans Tetzner had an elder brother Max; they competed alongside both in football and speed skating. Hans also played tennis, once reaching the semifinals of the Dutch national doubles championships. He later became a prominent surgeon and served as a doctor for the football club AFC Ajax and for the 1936 Dutch Olympic cycling team. In the 1960s he was a regular guest at the television show Wie van de Drie?", "Hans Brase\n Hans-George Brase (Hans) (born September 15, 1993) is an American-German basketball player for Hamburg Towers of the Basketball Bundesliga. He stands 6’9’’ (205 cm) tall and plays the forward position.", "Hans Kruize\n Hans Tjebbe Kruize (born 23 May 1954) is a former field hockey player from the Netherlands. He participated in the 1976 and 1984 Olympic Games and ended up in fourth and in sixth place, respectively. Just like his brothers Ties and Hidde, and his father Roepie, he played club hockey for HC Klein Zwitserland from The Hague. The midfielder earned a total number of 99 caps, scoring fourteen goals, in the years 1974–1984. He won a European title in 1974.", "Hans á Lag\n Hans á Lag (born 26 September 1974) is a Faroese former sportsman. He is a former football player, former badminton player and former handball player. Hon won the Faroese championship in the men's badminton two times in 1993 and 1994 and the Faroese championship in the Faroe Islands Premier League six times. He has also won the Faroese championship in handball with Kyndil as a goal keeper in 1994 and 1996. Hans á Lag used to have another lastname, which was Jacobsen.", "Hans Moser (handballer)\n Hans Moser (in Romania known sometimes as Ioan Moser; born 24 January 1937 in Timișoara, Romania) is a former Romanian-born German handball player and coach. He won two world championships as a player for the Romanian national team. During his active player career, Moser, who is 1.92m tall, played as a center fielder. In 2000, the official bulletin of the International Handball Federation, World Handball Magazine, chose Moser as a member of the \"Team of the Century\", together with teammates Cornel Penu and Gheorghe Gruia. Before beginning to play handball competitionally, he used to play water polo and volleyball (in the latter, he ", "Roger Hansson (ice hockey)\n Roger Kent Hansson (born July 13, 1967 in Helsingborg, Sweden) is a Swedish ice hockey player. He won a gold medal at the 1994 Winter Olympics, won the Swedish championships twice and became runner-up in the German championships with the Kassel Huskies in 1997.", "Ronny Johnsen\n a trial at Southampton and played against Chievo Verona in a friendly, ultimately he could not agree terms with the club. Johnsen then signed for Newcastle United but only played a handful of games before being released with concerns over his fitness levels. In February 2005, Johnsen announced his retirement from professional football. Shortly afterwards he changed his mind, signing a one-year contract with the Norwegian club Vålerenga. Subsequently, he renewed this contract three times for the following 2006, 2007 and 2008 seasons. Johnsen retired as an active football player on 3 November 2008, with Vålerenga losing their final game of the 2008 season 1–0 to SK Brann.", "Kik Pierie\n His father is former Dutch field hockey player Jean-Pierre Pierie, currently professor of Endoscopic Surgery at University Medical Center Groningen. When Kik was born, Jean-Pierre worked at the Harvard Medical School. His younger brothers Take (by SC Heerenveen) and Stijn Pierie (LAC Frisia), are footballers too.", "Hans Vinjarengen\n Hans Vinjarengen (20 August 1905 – 1 February 1984) was a Nordic combined skier from Norway. He won a silver medal at the 1928 Winter Olympics in St. Moritz and a bronze at the 1932 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid, New York. In addition, he won gold medals at the 1929 and 1930 FIS Nordic World Ski Championships and bronzes in 1934 and 1938. Vinjarengen won the Holmenkollen ski festival's Nordic combined event twice (1930 and 1932). In 1931, he shared the Holmenkollen medal with fellow Norwegian Ole Stensen, a cross-country skier. Vinjarengen lived most of his life in Oslo, where he worked as a lorry driver, but he represented his childhood club from Nordre Land.", "Hans-Peter Briegel\n Hans-Peter Briegel (born 11 October 1955) is a German former professional football player and manager who played as a defender or midfielder. One of the most popular German players in his days, Briegel's original sport was athletics, being successful in various events such as long jump (personal best: 7 metres 44 cm, aged 16), triple jump and specifically in heptathlon-forerunner pentathlon. Briegel also ran 100 metres in 10.81 seconds, aged 16. At the age of 17, he left athletics behind him, playing club football with hometown side SV Rodenbach near Kaiserslautern. During his playing days, Briegel usually played as a left back and defensive midfielder. He was known primarily for his physical abilities as well as his technical abilities and goal scoring abilities for a defensive player.", "Hans Fróði Hansen\n Hans Fróði á Toftanesi (born Hans Fróði Hansen; 25 August 1975) is a retired football player who played 26 games for Faroe Islands. In 2018 he was sentenced to three years and nine months in prison for having instigated woman to commit 41 sexual assaults against her four-year-old son.", "Marten Eikelboom\n Marten Eikelboom (born 12 October 1973 in Zwolle) is a field hockey striker from the Netherlands, who was a member of the Dutch team that won the gold medal at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney. After the World Hockey Cup in Kuala Lumpur (2002) he retired from the national squad, but in 2004 he made a comeback, just because of the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, where he finished second. Eikelboom played 177 international matches for the Dutch, in which he scored a total number of 58 goals. He made his debut on 5 June 1994 in a friendly against New Zealand. In the Dutch League he played for Hattem and Amsterdam, with whom he won the title four times.", "Hans Hansson (ice hockey)\n Hans Nils Erik Hansson (born November 26, 1949) is a Swedish former professional ice hockey player. He competed as a member of the Sweden men's national ice hockey team at the 1972 Winter Olympics held in Japan.", "Hans Smits\n Hans Karel Daniël Smits (born January 24, 1956 in Den Helder, North Holland) is a former water polo player from The Netherlands, who won the bronze medal with the Dutch Men's Team at the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal, Quebec, Canada." ]
Who is the author of Nice People?
[ "Rachel Crothers" ]
author
Nice People (play)
1,130,291
92
[ { "id": "3623303", "title": "Mr. Nice (book)", "text": " Mr. Nice is the autobiography of former drug dealer Howard Marks. Published in 1996 it became an international bestseller due in large part to the humour and unabashed bravado the author uses to describe his life and the sheer scale of his drug deals involving, amongst others, the CIA, MI6, the IRA and the Mafia. The book received mostly positive reviews, though some critics were initially sceptical of some of the more outlandish details portrayed. It was adapted for film in 2010 as Mr. Nice.", "score": "1.5582278" }, { "id": "32846218", "title": "Nice People (play)", "text": " Nice People was a 1921 Broadway four-act comedy written and staged by Rachel Crothers, produced by Samuel H. Harris and starring Tallulah Bankhead and Francine Larrimore. After working with Bankhead in 39 East, Crothers wrote Nice People expressly for her. The general manager was William G. Norton, the scenic was designed by Navon Bergman, and John Kirkpatrick was the stage manager. It ran for 120 performances from March 2, 1921 to June, 1921, at the Klaw Theatre. It was included in Burns Mantle's The Best Plays of 1920-1921. It was also Katharine Cornell's Broadway debut. It was adapted into the 1922 silent film Nice People, now believed to be lost.", "score": "1.5454948" }, { "id": "4158661", "title": "Nice Racism", "text": " Nice Racism: How Progressive White People Perpetuate Racial Harm is a 2021 book by Robin DiAngelo on the subject of race relations in the United States. Following on from White Fragility (2018), DiAngelo criticizes behavior by white progressives as racist and discusses situations from her diversity training workshops and personal life. The book became a The New York Times Best Seller, and received mixed critical reception.", "score": "1.5058993" }, { "id": "13711490", "title": "James Hayward (writer)", "text": " James Hayward is the pen name of James Nice (born 6 January 1966 in Essex), an English writer on military, modern art and post-punk musical history.", "score": "1.4889872" }, { "id": "26357449", "title": "Studio Limited Editions", "text": " his views on the drugs trade being one of the world's biggest drugs barons during the 1970s and for his DVD Mr Nice, his books, Mr. Nice, Howard Marks' Book of Dope Stories, and Señor Nice: Straight Life from Wales to South America and for his media appearances. He died in 2016. ; Eric Mason known for being a member of the infamous Krays firm and for being the last person in Britain to be birched. he also wrote a book called the brutal truth. He died in 2012. ; Dave Courtney known for being a gangster in his previous life but now an advocate of straight living and a successful author, with his books stop the ride I ", "score": "1.4841075" }, { "id": "26232705", "title": "The Nice and the Good", "text": " The Nice and the Good is a novel by Iris Murdoch. Published in 1968, it was her eleventh novel. The Nice and the Good was shortlisted for the 1969 Booker Prize. The novel combines elements of the thriller and romantic comedy genres. It begins with the suicide of Joseph Radeechy, a civil servant, in his London office. His department head, Octavian Gray, asks John Ducane, the department's legal advisor, to investigate. Ducane soon discovers that Radeechy was a practitioner of black magic and that he was being blackmailed. His investigations threaten to implicate Richard Biranne, another senior member of the department. A parallel plot details the complex romantic relationships among the residents and guests at Octavian Gray's seaside country house. These include Octavian's wife Kate, with whom Ducane is carrying on an intense platonic relationship, and Paula Biranne, Richard Biranne's ex-wife, who ", "score": "1.4803919" }, { "id": "5609834", "title": "Celia Imrie", "text": "The Happy Hoofer (2011), Hodder & Stoughton, ISBN: 978-1444709278 ; Not Quite Nice (2015), Bloomsbury Publishing, ISBN: 978-1632860323 ; Nice Work (If You Can Get It) (2016), Bloomsbury Publishing, ISBN: 978-1408876909 ; Sail Away (2018), Bloomsbury Publishing, ISBN: 978-1408883235 ; A Nice Cup of Tea (2019), Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN: 978-1408883266 ; Orphans of the Storm (2021), Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN: 978-1526614896 Her debut novel Not Quite Nice was published by Bloomsbury in 2015, had six weeks in the Sunday Times Top Ten, was cited by The Times as a 'delicious piece of entertainment', and also reached number 5 in the Apple ibook chart and 8 in Amazon's book chart. Her second novel, Nice Work (If You Can Get It), was published in 2016; and her third, Sail Away, was published in February 2018. Her next work, A Nice Cup of Tea, was published in 2019. ", "score": "1.4773009" }, { "id": "26450897", "title": "Alexandra Sellers", "text": " In 1997, her novel A Nice Girl Like You was nominated by Romantic Times for a Reviewers' Choice Award for Best Silhouette Yours Truly. Three years later she received the Romantic Times Career Achievement Award for Series Romantic Fantasy, and in 2009 she received the Romantic Times Career Achievement Best Author Award for Series.", "score": "1.466008" }, { "id": "4158662", "title": "Nice Racism", "text": " Author Robin DiAngelo is a white American academic. She worked for 20 years in providing diversity training for businesses. After five years in the job, she began studying for a PhD in multicultural education at the University of Washington. DiAngelo became a tenured professor at Westfield State University, working in the areas of critical discourse analysis and whiteness studies. At the time of Nice Racisms publishing, DiAngelo was an affiliate associate professor of education at the University of Washington. Nice Racism followed on from DiAngelo's most well-known work: her third book, White Fragility (2018). It takes its name from the term \"white fragility\", which DiAngelo coined in 2011 to describe defensive behavior by a white ", "score": "1.4659367" }, { "id": "263532", "title": "Brad Riddell (screenwriter)", "text": " Ridell's company Wry Mash Media has optioned Katrina Kittle‘s third novel, The Kindness of Strangers, which he will produce with Forever Safe Productions. The script will be written by Anna Maria Hozian, and Domenica Cameron-Scorsese is attached to direct.", "score": "1.4641196" }, { "id": "25376934", "title": "Josh Chetwynd", "text": " Field Guide to Sports Metaphors: A Compendium of Competitive Words and Idioms came out in May 2016. It looks at how sports have changed the English language through words and idioms. The author Bill Bryson endorsed the book saying, it is \"fascinating, informative and hugely entertaining. This is a book I will return to again and again.\" When the volume was released, Mental Floss named it one of \"25 Amazing New Books for Spring.\" The Book of Nice: A Nice Book About Nice Things For Nice People was released in April 2013. It delves into the origins and history of all things nice from gestures, sayings and songs to icons, offerings and characters. ", "score": "1.461315" }, { "id": "9179417", "title": "John Kessel", "text": " John Joseph Vincent Kessel (born September 24, 1950) is an American author of science fiction and fantasy. He is a prolific short story writer, and the author of four solo novels, Good News From Outer Space (1989), Corrupting Dr. Nice (1997), The Moon and the Other (2017), and Pride and Prometheus (2018), and one novel, Freedom Beach (1985) in collaboration with his friend James Patrick Kelly. Kessel is married to author Therese Anne Fowler.", "score": "1.4497001" }, { "id": "30059728", "title": "Drugs Are Nice", "text": " Drugs Are Nice: A Post-Punk Memoir is the memoir of Lisa Crystal Carver published by Soft Skull Press in the US in 2005 and by Snowbooks in the UK in 2006, detailing her early childhood and later romantic relationships with Costes, Boyd Rice and Smog's Bill Callahan. he:קטגוריה:ספרות יהודית", "score": "1.4481633" }, { "id": "10259528", "title": "Bleak Expectations", "text": " of a family curse (he is descended from the accountant to Judas Iscariot) and a traumatic childhood at the hands of a mother secretly plotting to make him evil and a series of sadistic step-fathers. His full name is Gently Lovely Kissy Nice-Nice Benevolent. Though Benevolent has been killed and resurrected multiple times, and even briefly de-eviled by marriage to his childhood sweetheart, he has always returned to ruin Pip's life, in an obsession that occasionally verges on a love affair. ; Jeremy Sourquill, a bumbling journalist transcribing Sir Philip's story for serial publication. He meets, falls in love with ", "score": "1.4436574" }, { "id": "1816211", "title": "David Lodge (author)", "text": "Small World – 1988 ; Nice Work – 1989 ; Martin Chuzzlewit – 1994 ; The Writing Game – 1995 ", "score": "1.4422059" }, { "id": "3623306", "title": "Mr. Nice (book)", "text": " The book was adapted into a film Mr. Nice in 2010, directed by Bernard Rose and starring Rhys Ifans and Chloë Sevigny.", "score": "1.4405539" }, { "id": "10831320", "title": "Amisha Sethi", "text": " Sethi is the author of the book It Doesn't Hurt To Be Nice, released in September 2015. and talks about rediscovering life, with comedy, drama, and spirituality. It is a story of a young girl and her hilarious, dramatic and enthralling experiences to understand the ultimate purpose of her life, which is – to be a better human with each passing day. The book has received appreciation and commendation across the country. The book has been released by Srishti Publishers and was a platform to share the cause of kindness and generosity she believes in.", "score": "1.4369543" }, { "id": "9570124", "title": "Nice Work", "text": " Nice Work is a 1988 novel by British author David Lodge. It is the final volume of Lodge's \"Campus Trilogy\", after Changing Places (1975) and Small World: An Academic Romance (1984). Nice Work won the Sunday Express Book of the Year award in 1988 and was also shortlisted for the Booker Prize. The larger socioeconomic background to the novel was the economic policies and educational budget reductions during the term of Margaret Thatcher. Part of the direct inspiration for the novel derived from Lodge's own real-life experiences of shadowing a friend who supervised an engineering firm.", "score": "1.4361572" }, { "id": "11367881", "title": "David Debin", "text": " In 1992, Random House published his first novel, the Albie Marx mystery, Nice Guys Finish Dead. Two subsequent Albie Marx novels, The Big O and Murder Live At Five, were published by Carroll & Graf. Writing under the pseudonym \"Smith and Doe\" with co-author Philip Mittleman, he published three books of nonfiction with St. Martin's Press, among them the bestseller What Men Don't Want Women To Know. He is a member of the Writers Guild of America, the Mystery Writers of America and the Author's Guild.", "score": "1.428998" }, { "id": "25831908", "title": "Sara Benincasa", "text": "Great, New York:: HarperTeen, 2014, ISBN: 9780062222695 ; DC Trip, Culver City, California: Adaptive Books, 2015, ISBN: 9780996066631 ; Tim Kaine Is Your Nice Dad: A Work of Dad Fiction, 2016 ", "score": "1.4245305" } ]
[ "Mr. Nice (book)\n Mr. Nice is the autobiography of former drug dealer Howard Marks. Published in 1996 it became an international bestseller due in large part to the humour and unabashed bravado the author uses to describe his life and the sheer scale of his drug deals involving, amongst others, the CIA, MI6, the IRA and the Mafia. The book received mostly positive reviews, though some critics were initially sceptical of some of the more outlandish details portrayed. It was adapted for film in 2010 as Mr. Nice.", "Nice People (play)\n Nice People was a 1921 Broadway four-act comedy written and staged by Rachel Crothers, produced by Samuel H. Harris and starring Tallulah Bankhead and Francine Larrimore. After working with Bankhead in 39 East, Crothers wrote Nice People expressly for her. The general manager was William G. Norton, the scenic was designed by Navon Bergman, and John Kirkpatrick was the stage manager. It ran for 120 performances from March 2, 1921 to June, 1921, at the Klaw Theatre. It was included in Burns Mantle's The Best Plays of 1920-1921. It was also Katharine Cornell's Broadway debut. It was adapted into the 1922 silent film Nice People, now believed to be lost.", "Nice Racism\n Nice Racism: How Progressive White People Perpetuate Racial Harm is a 2021 book by Robin DiAngelo on the subject of race relations in the United States. Following on from White Fragility (2018), DiAngelo criticizes behavior by white progressives as racist and discusses situations from her diversity training workshops and personal life. The book became a The New York Times Best Seller, and received mixed critical reception.", "James Hayward (writer)\n James Hayward is the pen name of James Nice (born 6 January 1966 in Essex), an English writer on military, modern art and post-punk musical history.", "Studio Limited Editions\n his views on the drugs trade being one of the world's biggest drugs barons during the 1970s and for his DVD Mr Nice, his books, Mr. Nice, Howard Marks' Book of Dope Stories, and Señor Nice: Straight Life from Wales to South America and for his media appearances. He died in 2016. ; Eric Mason known for being a member of the infamous Krays firm and for being the last person in Britain to be birched. he also wrote a book called the brutal truth. He died in 2012. ; Dave Courtney known for being a gangster in his previous life but now an advocate of straight living and a successful author, with his books stop the ride I ", "The Nice and the Good\n The Nice and the Good is a novel by Iris Murdoch. Published in 1968, it was her eleventh novel. The Nice and the Good was shortlisted for the 1969 Booker Prize. The novel combines elements of the thriller and romantic comedy genres. It begins with the suicide of Joseph Radeechy, a civil servant, in his London office. His department head, Octavian Gray, asks John Ducane, the department's legal advisor, to investigate. Ducane soon discovers that Radeechy was a practitioner of black magic and that he was being blackmailed. His investigations threaten to implicate Richard Biranne, another senior member of the department. A parallel plot details the complex romantic relationships among the residents and guests at Octavian Gray's seaside country house. These include Octavian's wife Kate, with whom Ducane is carrying on an intense platonic relationship, and Paula Biranne, Richard Biranne's ex-wife, who ", "Celia Imrie\nThe Happy Hoofer (2011), Hodder & Stoughton, ISBN: 978-1444709278 ; Not Quite Nice (2015), Bloomsbury Publishing, ISBN: 978-1632860323 ; Nice Work (If You Can Get It) (2016), Bloomsbury Publishing, ISBN: 978-1408876909 ; Sail Away (2018), Bloomsbury Publishing, ISBN: 978-1408883235 ; A Nice Cup of Tea (2019), Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN: 978-1408883266 ; Orphans of the Storm (2021), Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN: 978-1526614896 Her debut novel Not Quite Nice was published by Bloomsbury in 2015, had six weeks in the Sunday Times Top Ten, was cited by The Times as a 'delicious piece of entertainment', and also reached number 5 in the Apple ibook chart and 8 in Amazon's book chart. Her second novel, Nice Work (If You Can Get It), was published in 2016; and her third, Sail Away, was published in February 2018. Her next work, A Nice Cup of Tea, was published in 2019. ", "Alexandra Sellers\n In 1997, her novel A Nice Girl Like You was nominated by Romantic Times for a Reviewers' Choice Award for Best Silhouette Yours Truly. Three years later she received the Romantic Times Career Achievement Award for Series Romantic Fantasy, and in 2009 she received the Romantic Times Career Achievement Best Author Award for Series.", "Nice Racism\n Author Robin DiAngelo is a white American academic. She worked for 20 years in providing diversity training for businesses. After five years in the job, she began studying for a PhD in multicultural education at the University of Washington. DiAngelo became a tenured professor at Westfield State University, working in the areas of critical discourse analysis and whiteness studies. At the time of Nice Racisms publishing, DiAngelo was an affiliate associate professor of education at the University of Washington. Nice Racism followed on from DiAngelo's most well-known work: her third book, White Fragility (2018). It takes its name from the term \"white fragility\", which DiAngelo coined in 2011 to describe defensive behavior by a white ", "Brad Riddell (screenwriter)\n Ridell's company Wry Mash Media has optioned Katrina Kittle‘s third novel, The Kindness of Strangers, which he will produce with Forever Safe Productions. The script will be written by Anna Maria Hozian, and Domenica Cameron-Scorsese is attached to direct.", "Josh Chetwynd\n Field Guide to Sports Metaphors: A Compendium of Competitive Words and Idioms came out in May 2016. It looks at how sports have changed the English language through words and idioms. The author Bill Bryson endorsed the book saying, it is \"fascinating, informative and hugely entertaining. This is a book I will return to again and again.\" When the volume was released, Mental Floss named it one of \"25 Amazing New Books for Spring.\" The Book of Nice: A Nice Book About Nice Things For Nice People was released in April 2013. It delves into the origins and history of all things nice from gestures, sayings and songs to icons, offerings and characters. ", "John Kessel\n John Joseph Vincent Kessel (born September 24, 1950) is an American author of science fiction and fantasy. He is a prolific short story writer, and the author of four solo novels, Good News From Outer Space (1989), Corrupting Dr. Nice (1997), The Moon and the Other (2017), and Pride and Prometheus (2018), and one novel, Freedom Beach (1985) in collaboration with his friend James Patrick Kelly. Kessel is married to author Therese Anne Fowler.", "Drugs Are Nice\n Drugs Are Nice: A Post-Punk Memoir is the memoir of Lisa Crystal Carver published by Soft Skull Press in the US in 2005 and by Snowbooks in the UK in 2006, detailing her early childhood and later romantic relationships with Costes, Boyd Rice and Smog's Bill Callahan. he:קטגוריה:ספרות יהודית", "Bleak Expectations\n of a family curse (he is descended from the accountant to Judas Iscariot) and a traumatic childhood at the hands of a mother secretly plotting to make him evil and a series of sadistic step-fathers. His full name is Gently Lovely Kissy Nice-Nice Benevolent. Though Benevolent has been killed and resurrected multiple times, and even briefly de-eviled by marriage to his childhood sweetheart, he has always returned to ruin Pip's life, in an obsession that occasionally verges on a love affair. ; Jeremy Sourquill, a bumbling journalist transcribing Sir Philip's story for serial publication. He meets, falls in love with ", "David Lodge (author)\nSmall World – 1988 ; Nice Work – 1989 ; Martin Chuzzlewit – 1994 ; The Writing Game – 1995 ", "Mr. Nice (book)\n The book was adapted into a film Mr. Nice in 2010, directed by Bernard Rose and starring Rhys Ifans and Chloë Sevigny.", "Amisha Sethi\n Sethi is the author of the book It Doesn't Hurt To Be Nice, released in September 2015. and talks about rediscovering life, with comedy, drama, and spirituality. It is a story of a young girl and her hilarious, dramatic and enthralling experiences to understand the ultimate purpose of her life, which is – to be a better human with each passing day. The book has received appreciation and commendation across the country. The book has been released by Srishti Publishers and was a platform to share the cause of kindness and generosity she believes in.", "Nice Work\n Nice Work is a 1988 novel by British author David Lodge. It is the final volume of Lodge's \"Campus Trilogy\", after Changing Places (1975) and Small World: An Academic Romance (1984). Nice Work won the Sunday Express Book of the Year award in 1988 and was also shortlisted for the Booker Prize. The larger socioeconomic background to the novel was the economic policies and educational budget reductions during the term of Margaret Thatcher. Part of the direct inspiration for the novel derived from Lodge's own real-life experiences of shadowing a friend who supervised an engineering firm.", "David Debin\n In 1992, Random House published his first novel, the Albie Marx mystery, Nice Guys Finish Dead. Two subsequent Albie Marx novels, The Big O and Murder Live At Five, were published by Carroll & Graf. Writing under the pseudonym \"Smith and Doe\" with co-author Philip Mittleman, he published three books of nonfiction with St. Martin's Press, among them the bestseller What Men Don't Want Women To Know. He is a member of the Writers Guild of America, the Mystery Writers of America and the Author's Guild.", "Sara Benincasa\nGreat, New York:: HarperTeen, 2014, ISBN: 9780062222695 ; DC Trip, Culver City, California: Adaptive Books, 2015, ISBN: 9780996066631 ; Tim Kaine Is Your Nice Dad: A Work of Dad Fiction, 2016 " ]
Who is the author of Suicide?
[ "Viktor Suvorov" ]
author
Suicide (Suvorov book)
5,847,596
45
[ { "id": "27189520", "title": "On Suicide", "text": " On Suicide: With Particular Reference to Suicide Among Young Students is a 1967 English translation and editing by the psychanalyst and suicidologist Paul Friedman of the original \"Über den Selbstmord insbesondere den Schüler-Selbstmord\" by the Vienna Psychoanalytic Society. The original piece was published in 1910 in German and includes psychoanalytic discussions from eight members of the society about the causes and explanations for the suicide of students. The eight members are Sigmund Freud, Alfred Adler, Josef Karl Friedjung, Carl Furtmüller (pseudonym: Karl Monitor), David Ernst Oppenheim, Rudolf Reitler, J. Isidor Sadger and Wilhelm Stekel. The translation by Friedman was a project of the Library Committee of the New York Psychoanalytic Institute to give non-German speakers access to the historical document.", "score": "1.5955417" }, { "id": "28289919", "title": "Suicide note", "text": " due to its unconventional format; at 1,905 pages, spanning topics concerning (and not limited to) human nature, society, religion, technology, and science, the suicide \"note\" was more akin to a grand philosophical tome. Heisman published his book, Suicide Note, online for free download within a day of finally shooting himself on the Harvard University campus. ; Rudolf Hess—Nazi war criminal who committed suicide in Spandau Prison. \"Thanks to the directors for addressing this message to my home. Written several minutes before my death.\" ; Abbie Hoffman—American political activist (de facto leader of the 1960s counter-culture) and author of Steal This Book, who ", "score": "1.5901608" }, { "id": "31639556", "title": "Suicide (novel)", "text": " Suicide is a short novel by Édouard Levé noted for its precise language and seemingly random structure meant to imitate human memory. An excerpt of Suicide titled Life in Three Houses appeared in the April 2011 issue of Harper's.", "score": "1.5644255" }, { "id": "2454714", "title": "Anat Brunstein Klomek", "text": " Brunstrin Klomek is assistant editor of the Archives of Suicide Research, as well as on the editorial boards of the Journal of Youth and Adolescence and Lancet Psychiatry.", "score": "1.5522897" }, { "id": "27189521", "title": "On Suicide", "text": " In the foreword written by Paul Friedman, the author stresses the historical significance of the document as it was one of the last meetings of the society. Giving an illustration of the Zeitgeist of 1910 he describes an \"epidemic\" of suicides among young students, partly due to the book The Sorrows of Young Werther written by Goethe. Furthermore, the author displays the time before 1900 as a deterministic philosophy where human behavior was attributed to outer abiding causes and was rationalized. According to Friedman, in the realm of psychiatry suicide was associated with mental disorders, caused by predisposing factors such as heredity. The ", "score": "1.5322638" }, { "id": "3304915", "title": "Suicide (Durkheim book)", "text": "1951. Suicide: A Study in Sociology, translated by John A. Spaulding and George Simpson, edited with an introduction by George Simpson. New York: The Free Press. ISBN: 0-684-83632-7. ; 1967. Le suicide. Étude de sociologie (2nd ed.). Paris: Les Presses universitaires de France. ; 2005. Suicide: A Study in Sociology, translated by J. A. Spaulding and G. Simpson. London: Routledge. ISBN: 0-203-99432-9. ", "score": "1.5308386" }, { "id": "10366665", "title": "The Suiciders", "text": " The Suiciders is a 2013 novel by Travis Jeppesen. Jeppesen's experimental, non-linear narrative novel is about a group of queer squatters who declare war against their own minds and embark upon a road trip to the end of the world. The work was described by the publisher as a \"post-punk nouveau roman.\" In his review of the book, the novelist Blake Butler described the novel as such: \"There are 10,000 plots per page. It is in the accumulation of the plots, and the fantastic charging of Jeppesen's total mish-mash of syntax, physics, framing, voice, and possibility, that keeps you reading.\" Another critic assessed the novel as \"shocking, funny, and thought-provoking...a piece of abstract visual art, but constructed with words.\" Shortly after the novel was published, Jeppesen twice performed \"marathon readings\" of the entire book without pause for over eight hours. The first reading took place in London at the Institute of Contemporary Arts, while the second was held in New York at the Whitney Museum of Art. The cover art of the novel's first edition was created by the Norwegian artist Bjarne Melgaard.", "score": "1.5289135" }, { "id": "31618507", "title": "Suicides (short story)", "text": " \"Suicides\" is a short story by French writer Guy de Maupassant. It was originally published on 29 August 1880 in the French newspaper Le Gaulois. On 17 April 1883, it was published in Gil Blas under the pseudonym Maufrigneuse, and by other three periodicals, before being republished in the short story collection Les Sœurs Rondoli in 1884.", "score": "1.5271046" }, { "id": "9711339", "title": "David Lester (psychologist)", "text": " Lester is known for researching suicide, and has been called \"the world's pre-eminent suicide researcher.\" As of 2018, he has published over 100 books and 2,650 papers on this subject. His research has been published in at least 158 American journals and 47 foreign journals, with 74 colleagues in 34 countries. His work on suicide has focused on (1) crisis intervention by telephone, (2) preventing suicide by restricting access to the means for suicide, (3) studies of the diaries left by suicides, (4) suicide in the oppressed, including African slaves, Native Americans, Holocaust victims, the Roma, and prisoners, (5) reviews of research on and theory concerning suicide from 1897 to 1997, and (6) innovative ideas including suicide as a dramatic act, suicide and culture, and suicide and the creative arts. Lester has also published books and articles on comparative psychology in his early years, a subself theory of personality in recent years, the fear of death, mass and serial murder, life-after-death, and the death penalty.", "score": "1.5264393" }, { "id": "12692059", "title": "Mark Shepherd (novelist)", "text": " He committed suicide by shooting himself on May 24, 2011. He had been suffering from extreme depression due to Bipolar Disorder, a long history of multiple substance abuse, and the effects of post-concussive syndrome and ICU psychosis due to a motorcycle accident a year prior to his death.", "score": "1.5220999" }, { "id": "6097466", "title": "List of suicides", "text": " (398 AD), Roman Berber general and rebel leader, hanging. ; Rex Gildo (1999), German singer and actor, jumping from his third-floor apartment window. ; Sam Gillespie (2003), philosopher whose writings and translations were crucial to the initial reception of Alain Badiou's work in the English-speaking world. ; Claude Gillingwater (1939), American actor, gunshot. ; Charlotte Perkins Gilman (1935), American writer, chloroform overdose. ; Kurt Gloor (1997), Swiss film director, screenwriter and producer. ; John Wayne Glover (2005), Australian serial killer, hanging. ; Holly Glynn (1987), a formerly unidentified young woman found in Dana Point, California, who had jumped off a cliff. Her body was not identified until 2015. ; Joseph Goebbels (1945), Nazi politician and Propaganda Minister, gunshot or cyanide poisoning. ; Magda ", "score": "1.5195421" }, { "id": "6097511", "title": "List of suicides", "text": "Qiao Renliang (2016), Chinese singer and actor, slit wrist ; Qu Yuan (278 BC), Chinese poet and minister, drowning ; Henry Quastler (1963), Austrian physician and radiologist, overdosed on pills ; Antero de Quental, (1891) Portuguese writer and poet, gunshot. ; Quintillus (270 AD), Roman emperor, opening his veins ; Horacio Quiroga (1937), Uruguayan playwright, poet, and short story writer, drank a glass of cyanide ", "score": "1.5175216" }, { "id": "6097508", "title": "List of suicides", "text": " Luigi Pistilli (1996), Italian actor, hanging ; Alejandra Pizarnik (1972), Argentine poet, secobarbital overdose ; Sylvia Plath (1963), American poet, novelist, children's author, gassing herself in her kitchen ; Dana Plato (1999), American child actress, notable for the TV series Diff'rent Strokes, overdose of carisoprodol and hydrocodone Plato's son, Tyler Lambert, killed himself on May 6, 2010, almost 11 years to the day after her death, via gunshot wound to the head ; Edward Platt (1974), American actor, notable for his role on the TV series Get Smart ; E. O. Plauen (1944), German cartoonist, hanging with a towel ; Michael Player (1986), ", "score": "1.5069625" }, { "id": "13049718", "title": "Andrée Yanacopoulo", "text": " She studied medicine at the University of Lyon, France, and also holds a master's degree in sociology. She settled in Quebec in 1960. From 1961 to 1964, she was a professor of sociology at the Université de Montréal. She then taught at Collège Sainte-Marie and the Université du Québec à Montréal until 1973, then at the Cégep de Saint-Laurent until 1989. In parallel, she co-directs with Nicole Brossard for six years the Délire collection at Parti Pris editions and holds several other positions with different publishers. She wrote a book titled Signé Hubert Aquin: Surcule sur suicide d'écrivain (Signed Hubert Aquin: investigation on the suicide of a writer), after the death of his spouse. She is editor for her publishing house Vanishing Point.", "score": "1.5067395" }, { "id": "6097446", "title": "List of suicides", "text": " American screenwriter, director, producer, and composer, asphyxiation. ; May Brookyn (1894), British stage actress, overdose of carbolic acid. ; John Munro Bruce (1901), Australian businessman, father of Prime Minister S. M. Bruce. ; Jürgen Brümmer (2014), German Olympic gymnast, jumped from the Koersch Viaduct after suffocating his son. ; Marcus Junius Brutus the Younger (42 BC), Roman politician and conspirator to assassinate Julius Caesar, ran into his sword. ; Roy Buchanan (1988), American guitarist and blues musician, hanging. ; David Buckel (2018), American LGBT rights lawyer and environmental activist, self-immolation in Prospect Park, Brooklyn. ; Randy Budd (2016), American businessman whose wife, Sharon, was ", "score": "1.5055361" }, { "id": "6097498", "title": "List of suicides", "text": " not disclosed ; Maningning Miclat (2000), Filipino poet and painter, jumped from the seventh floor of a building ; Flávio Migliaccio (2020), Brazilian actor, film director and screenwriter, hanging ; Walter M. Miller, Jr. (1996), American writer, gunshot ; Mary Millington (1979), English model and softcore pornographic actress, overdose of clomipramine, paracetamol and alcohol ; Minamoto no Yorimasa (1180), Japanese poet, general and politician, ritual seppuku disembowelment ; Mingsioi (1866), Chinese general, explosion ; Miroslava (1955), Czech-born Mexican actress, overdose of sleeping pills ; Dave Mirra (2016), American BMX rider who later competed in rallycross racing, gunshot ; Yukio Mishima (1970), Japanese author, poet, playwright, film director and activist, ritual ", "score": "1.5032825" }, { "id": "15467875", "title": "Jeffrey Eugenides", "text": "The Virgin Suicides New York : Hachette Book Group, 1993. ISBN: 9780446670258, ; Middlesex New York, New York : Random House, 2002. ISBN: 9780374199692, Pulitzer Prize for Fiction ; The Marriage Plot London : Fourth Estate, 2011. ISBN: 9780007441297, ", "score": "1.5026896" }, { "id": "9444104", "title": "Suicide in literature", "text": " According to Lorna Ruth Wiedmann, novelistic suicide patterns first emerged in the nineteenth century. She categorized nineteenth-century works based on five themes: ‘murder-followed-by-suicide; the survivor of suicide; age and the suicide; the suicide’s choice of method; and gender and suicide.’ Kevin Grauke stated that suicide serves an \"ambivalent rhetorical function\" in the works of the nineteenth-century. Authors such as Kate Chopin, Ernest Hemingway, and Virginia Woolf include themes of suicide in their writing.", "score": "1.5001498" }, { "id": "6097445", "title": "List of suicides", "text": " Charlie Brandt (2004), American serial killer, hanging. ; Mike Brant (1975), Israeli pop star, jumped from his Paris apartment building. ; Robert Eugene Brashers (1999), American serial killer, gunshot. ; Eva Braun (1945), German wife of Adolf Hitler, cyanide poisoning. ; Richard Brautigan (1984), American writer, gunshot. ; Brennus (279 BC), Gallic tribal leader and general, stabbed himself. ; James E. Brewton (1967), American painter and printmaker, gunshot. ; Lilya Brik (1978), Russian author and socialite, overdose of sleeping pills. ; Molly Brodak (2020), American poet, writer, and baker. ; Herman Brood (2001), Dutch rock musician and painter, jumped from hotel roof. ; Joseph Brooks ", "score": "1.4980352" }, { "id": "11903659", "title": "Kay Warren (author)", "text": " Matthew Warren lived with mental illness and suicidal ideation from a young age. His diagnoses included depression, obsessive compulsive disorder, bipolar disorder and near the end of his life, borderline personality disorder. Matthew, took his life on April 5, 2013.", "score": "1.494247" } ]
[ "On Suicide\n On Suicide: With Particular Reference to Suicide Among Young Students is a 1967 English translation and editing by the psychanalyst and suicidologist Paul Friedman of the original \"Über den Selbstmord insbesondere den Schüler-Selbstmord\" by the Vienna Psychoanalytic Society. The original piece was published in 1910 in German and includes psychoanalytic discussions from eight members of the society about the causes and explanations for the suicide of students. The eight members are Sigmund Freud, Alfred Adler, Josef Karl Friedjung, Carl Furtmüller (pseudonym: Karl Monitor), David Ernst Oppenheim, Rudolf Reitler, J. Isidor Sadger and Wilhelm Stekel. The translation by Friedman was a project of the Library Committee of the New York Psychoanalytic Institute to give non-German speakers access to the historical document.", "Suicide note\n due to its unconventional format; at 1,905 pages, spanning topics concerning (and not limited to) human nature, society, religion, technology, and science, the suicide \"note\" was more akin to a grand philosophical tome. Heisman published his book, Suicide Note, online for free download within a day of finally shooting himself on the Harvard University campus. ; Rudolf Hess—Nazi war criminal who committed suicide in Spandau Prison. \"Thanks to the directors for addressing this message to my home. Written several minutes before my death.\" ; Abbie Hoffman—American political activist (de facto leader of the 1960s counter-culture) and author of Steal This Book, who ", "Suicide (novel)\n Suicide is a short novel by Édouard Levé noted for its precise language and seemingly random structure meant to imitate human memory. An excerpt of Suicide titled Life in Three Houses appeared in the April 2011 issue of Harper's.", "Anat Brunstein Klomek\n Brunstrin Klomek is assistant editor of the Archives of Suicide Research, as well as on the editorial boards of the Journal of Youth and Adolescence and Lancet Psychiatry.", "On Suicide\n In the foreword written by Paul Friedman, the author stresses the historical significance of the document as it was one of the last meetings of the society. Giving an illustration of the Zeitgeist of 1910 he describes an \"epidemic\" of suicides among young students, partly due to the book The Sorrows of Young Werther written by Goethe. Furthermore, the author displays the time before 1900 as a deterministic philosophy where human behavior was attributed to outer abiding causes and was rationalized. According to Friedman, in the realm of psychiatry suicide was associated with mental disorders, caused by predisposing factors such as heredity. The ", "Suicide (Durkheim book)\n1951. Suicide: A Study in Sociology, translated by John A. Spaulding and George Simpson, edited with an introduction by George Simpson. New York: The Free Press. ISBN: 0-684-83632-7. ; 1967. Le suicide. Étude de sociologie (2nd ed.). Paris: Les Presses universitaires de France. ; 2005. Suicide: A Study in Sociology, translated by J. A. Spaulding and G. Simpson. London: Routledge. ISBN: 0-203-99432-9. ", "The Suiciders\n The Suiciders is a 2013 novel by Travis Jeppesen. Jeppesen's experimental, non-linear narrative novel is about a group of queer squatters who declare war against their own minds and embark upon a road trip to the end of the world. The work was described by the publisher as a \"post-punk nouveau roman.\" In his review of the book, the novelist Blake Butler described the novel as such: \"There are 10,000 plots per page. It is in the accumulation of the plots, and the fantastic charging of Jeppesen's total mish-mash of syntax, physics, framing, voice, and possibility, that keeps you reading.\" Another critic assessed the novel as \"shocking, funny, and thought-provoking...a piece of abstract visual art, but constructed with words.\" Shortly after the novel was published, Jeppesen twice performed \"marathon readings\" of the entire book without pause for over eight hours. The first reading took place in London at the Institute of Contemporary Arts, while the second was held in New York at the Whitney Museum of Art. The cover art of the novel's first edition was created by the Norwegian artist Bjarne Melgaard.", "Suicides (short story)\n \"Suicides\" is a short story by French writer Guy de Maupassant. It was originally published on 29 August 1880 in the French newspaper Le Gaulois. On 17 April 1883, it was published in Gil Blas under the pseudonym Maufrigneuse, and by other three periodicals, before being republished in the short story collection Les Sœurs Rondoli in 1884.", "David Lester (psychologist)\n Lester is known for researching suicide, and has been called \"the world's pre-eminent suicide researcher.\" As of 2018, he has published over 100 books and 2,650 papers on this subject. His research has been published in at least 158 American journals and 47 foreign journals, with 74 colleagues in 34 countries. His work on suicide has focused on (1) crisis intervention by telephone, (2) preventing suicide by restricting access to the means for suicide, (3) studies of the diaries left by suicides, (4) suicide in the oppressed, including African slaves, Native Americans, Holocaust victims, the Roma, and prisoners, (5) reviews of research on and theory concerning suicide from 1897 to 1997, and (6) innovative ideas including suicide as a dramatic act, suicide and culture, and suicide and the creative arts. Lester has also published books and articles on comparative psychology in his early years, a subself theory of personality in recent years, the fear of death, mass and serial murder, life-after-death, and the death penalty.", "Mark Shepherd (novelist)\n He committed suicide by shooting himself on May 24, 2011. He had been suffering from extreme depression due to Bipolar Disorder, a long history of multiple substance abuse, and the effects of post-concussive syndrome and ICU psychosis due to a motorcycle accident a year prior to his death.", "List of suicides\n (398 AD), Roman Berber general and rebel leader, hanging. ; Rex Gildo (1999), German singer and actor, jumping from his third-floor apartment window. ; Sam Gillespie (2003), philosopher whose writings and translations were crucial to the initial reception of Alain Badiou's work in the English-speaking world. ; Claude Gillingwater (1939), American actor, gunshot. ; Charlotte Perkins Gilman (1935), American writer, chloroform overdose. ; Kurt Gloor (1997), Swiss film director, screenwriter and producer. ; John Wayne Glover (2005), Australian serial killer, hanging. ; Holly Glynn (1987), a formerly unidentified young woman found in Dana Point, California, who had jumped off a cliff. Her body was not identified until 2015. ; Joseph Goebbels (1945), Nazi politician and Propaganda Minister, gunshot or cyanide poisoning. ; Magda ", "List of suicides\nQiao Renliang (2016), Chinese singer and actor, slit wrist ; Qu Yuan (278 BC), Chinese poet and minister, drowning ; Henry Quastler (1963), Austrian physician and radiologist, overdosed on pills ; Antero de Quental, (1891) Portuguese writer and poet, gunshot. ; Quintillus (270 AD), Roman emperor, opening his veins ; Horacio Quiroga (1937), Uruguayan playwright, poet, and short story writer, drank a glass of cyanide ", "List of suicides\n Luigi Pistilli (1996), Italian actor, hanging ; Alejandra Pizarnik (1972), Argentine poet, secobarbital overdose ; Sylvia Plath (1963), American poet, novelist, children's author, gassing herself in her kitchen ; Dana Plato (1999), American child actress, notable for the TV series Diff'rent Strokes, overdose of carisoprodol and hydrocodone Plato's son, Tyler Lambert, killed himself on May 6, 2010, almost 11 years to the day after her death, via gunshot wound to the head ; Edward Platt (1974), American actor, notable for his role on the TV series Get Smart ; E. O. Plauen (1944), German cartoonist, hanging with a towel ; Michael Player (1986), ", "Andrée Yanacopoulo\n She studied medicine at the University of Lyon, France, and also holds a master's degree in sociology. She settled in Quebec in 1960. From 1961 to 1964, she was a professor of sociology at the Université de Montréal. She then taught at Collège Sainte-Marie and the Université du Québec à Montréal until 1973, then at the Cégep de Saint-Laurent until 1989. In parallel, she co-directs with Nicole Brossard for six years the Délire collection at Parti Pris editions and holds several other positions with different publishers. She wrote a book titled Signé Hubert Aquin: Surcule sur suicide d'écrivain (Signed Hubert Aquin: investigation on the suicide of a writer), after the death of his spouse. She is editor for her publishing house Vanishing Point.", "List of suicides\n American screenwriter, director, producer, and composer, asphyxiation. ; May Brookyn (1894), British stage actress, overdose of carbolic acid. ; John Munro Bruce (1901), Australian businessman, father of Prime Minister S. M. Bruce. ; Jürgen Brümmer (2014), German Olympic gymnast, jumped from the Koersch Viaduct after suffocating his son. ; Marcus Junius Brutus the Younger (42 BC), Roman politician and conspirator to assassinate Julius Caesar, ran into his sword. ; Roy Buchanan (1988), American guitarist and blues musician, hanging. ; David Buckel (2018), American LGBT rights lawyer and environmental activist, self-immolation in Prospect Park, Brooklyn. ; Randy Budd (2016), American businessman whose wife, Sharon, was ", "List of suicides\n not disclosed ; Maningning Miclat (2000), Filipino poet and painter, jumped from the seventh floor of a building ; Flávio Migliaccio (2020), Brazilian actor, film director and screenwriter, hanging ; Walter M. Miller, Jr. (1996), American writer, gunshot ; Mary Millington (1979), English model and softcore pornographic actress, overdose of clomipramine, paracetamol and alcohol ; Minamoto no Yorimasa (1180), Japanese poet, general and politician, ritual seppuku disembowelment ; Mingsioi (1866), Chinese general, explosion ; Miroslava (1955), Czech-born Mexican actress, overdose of sleeping pills ; Dave Mirra (2016), American BMX rider who later competed in rallycross racing, gunshot ; Yukio Mishima (1970), Japanese author, poet, playwright, film director and activist, ritual ", "Jeffrey Eugenides\nThe Virgin Suicides New York : Hachette Book Group, 1993. ISBN: 9780446670258, ; Middlesex New York, New York : Random House, 2002. ISBN: 9780374199692, Pulitzer Prize for Fiction ; The Marriage Plot London : Fourth Estate, 2011. ISBN: 9780007441297, ", "Suicide in literature\n According to Lorna Ruth Wiedmann, novelistic suicide patterns first emerged in the nineteenth century. She categorized nineteenth-century works based on five themes: ‘murder-followed-by-suicide; the survivor of suicide; age and the suicide; the suicide’s choice of method; and gender and suicide.’ Kevin Grauke stated that suicide serves an \"ambivalent rhetorical function\" in the works of the nineteenth-century. Authors such as Kate Chopin, Ernest Hemingway, and Virginia Woolf include themes of suicide in their writing.", "List of suicides\n Charlie Brandt (2004), American serial killer, hanging. ; Mike Brant (1975), Israeli pop star, jumped from his Paris apartment building. ; Robert Eugene Brashers (1999), American serial killer, gunshot. ; Eva Braun (1945), German wife of Adolf Hitler, cyanide poisoning. ; Richard Brautigan (1984), American writer, gunshot. ; Brennus (279 BC), Gallic tribal leader and general, stabbed himself. ; James E. Brewton (1967), American painter and printmaker, gunshot. ; Lilya Brik (1978), Russian author and socialite, overdose of sleeping pills. ; Molly Brodak (2020), American poet, writer, and baker. ; Herman Brood (2001), Dutch rock musician and painter, jumped from hotel roof. ; Joseph Brooks ", "Kay Warren (author)\n Matthew Warren lived with mental illness and suicidal ideation from a young age. His diagnoses included depression, obsessive compulsive disorder, bipolar disorder and near the end of his life, borderline personality disorder. Matthew, took his life on April 5, 2013." ]
What is the capital of Gmina Radomsko?
[ "Radomsko" ]
capital
Gmina Radomsko
1,854,999
39
[ { "id": "706994", "title": "Radomsko", "text": " Radomsko is a town in southern Poland with 45,353 inhabitants (2020). It is situated on the Radomka river in the Łódź Voivodeship (since 1999), having previously been in Piotrków Trybunalski Voivodeship (1975–1998). It is the county seat of Radomsko county.", "score": "1.869309" }, { "id": "2052098", "title": "Radomsko County", "text": " Radomsko County (powiat radomszczański) is a unit of territorial administration and local government (powiat) in Łódź Voivodeship, central Poland. It came into being on 1 January 1999 as a result of the Polish local government reforms passed in 1998. Its administrative seat and largest town is Radomsko, which lies 80 km south of the regional capital Łódź. The county also contains the towns of Przedbórz, lying 31 km east of Radomsko, and Kamieńsk, 16 km north of Radomsko. The county covers an area of 1442.78 km2. As of 2006, it had a total population of 118,856, out of which the population of Radomsko was 49,152, that of Przedbórz was 3,758, that of Kamieńsk was 2,858, and the rural population was 63,088.", "score": "1.7973663" }, { "id": "2052100", "title": "Radomsko County", "text": " The county is subdivided into 14 gminas (one urban, two urban-rural and 11 rural). These are listed in the following table, in descending order of population.", "score": "1.7228719" }, { "id": "707007", "title": "Radomsko", "text": "RKS Radomsko, football club, founded in 1979. It competes in the lower leagues, although in the past it played in the Ekstraklasa (Poland's top division). ", "score": "1.6422398" }, { "id": "10833747", "title": "Rudka, Radomsko County", "text": " Rudka is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Wielgomłyny, within Radomsko County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately 5 km east of Wielgomłyny, 28 km east of Radomsko, and 90 km south of the regional capital Łódź. The village has a population of 400.", "score": "1.631629" }, { "id": "706995", "title": "Radomsko", "text": " Radomsko dates back to the 11th century. The oldest known mention of Radomsko comes from a document of Konrad I of Masovia from 1243. It received town privileges from Duke Leszek II the Black of Sieradz in 1266. During the times of fragmentation of Piast-ruled Poland, it was part of the Seniorate Province and Duchy of Sieradz, and afterwards it was a royal town of the Polish Crown, administratively located in the Sieradz Voivodeship in the Greater Poland Province of the Polish Crown. In 1288, Duke Leszek II the Black brought Franciscans to the town, and in 1328, King Ladislaus the Short funded the construction of the Gothic Franciscan church. In 1382 and 1384, congresses of Polish ", "score": "1.6272352" }, { "id": "2052099", "title": "Radomsko County", "text": " Radomsko County is bordered by Bełchatów County and Piotrków County to the north, Końskie County and Włoszczowa County to the east, Częstochowa County to the south-west, and Pajęczno County to the west.", "score": "1.6248521" }, { "id": "10833641", "title": "Masłowice, Radomsko County", "text": " Masłowice is a village in Radomsko County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) called Gmina Masłowice. It lies approximately 24 km east of Radomsko and 79 km south of the regional capital Łódź.", "score": "1.6226943" }, { "id": "13426201", "title": "Radom", "text": " Radom is a city in east-central Poland, located approximately 100 km south of the capital, Warsaw. It is situated on the Mleczna River in the Masovian Voivodeship (since 1999), having previously been the seat of a separate Radom Voivodeship (1975–1998). Radom is the fourteenth-largest city in Poland and the second-largest in its province with a population of 209,296 as of 2020. For centuries, Radom was part of the Sandomierz Province of the Kingdom of Poland and the later Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. Despite being part of the Masovian Voivodeship, the city historically belongs to Lesser Poland. It was a significant center of administration, having served as seat of the Crown Council which ratified the Pact of ", "score": "1.619241" }, { "id": "2449704", "title": "Radomka, Masovian Voivodeship", "text": " Radomka is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Regimin, within Ciechanów County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 11 km north-east of Regimin, 14 km north of Ciechanów, and 88 km north of Warsaw.", "score": "1.618551" }, { "id": "707005", "title": "Radomsko", "text": " The Polish Railway line 1, which connects Warsaw and Katowice, the country's two largest metropolitan areas, runs through the town. Polish State Railways (PKP) provide Radomsko with connections with various cities throughout Poland, including Łódź, Częstochowa, Sosnowiec, Gliwice, Wrocław, Toruń, Bydgoszcz, Gdańsk, Gdynia, Białystok, Olsztyn and Lublin. The town can also be reached by the Polish National road 1, the future A1 autostrada (highway), which connects the largest Polish port city of Gdańsk in the north with the Upper Silesian metropolitan area and the Czech Republic–Poland border at Gorzyczki in the south. The town is also located on the Polish National roads 42 and 91, and the European route E75, which connects northern Norway and Finland with Greece.", "score": "1.6100347" }, { "id": "10833721", "title": "Szczepocice Rządowe", "text": " Szczepocice Rządowe is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Radomsko, within Radomsko County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately 9 km south-west of Radomsko and 85 km south of the regional capital Łódź.", "score": "1.6079948" }, { "id": "10833719", "title": "Strzałków, Łódź Voivodeship", "text": " Strzałków is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Radomsko, within Radomsko County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately 4 km south-east of Radomsko and 82 km south of the regional capital Łódź. The village has a population of 1,100.", "score": "1.6066905" }, { "id": "10833717", "title": "Płoszów", "text": " Płoszów is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Radomsko, within Radomsko County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland.", "score": "1.6051798" }, { "id": "26214933", "title": "Radom Department", "text": " Radom Department (Polish: Departament radomski) was a unit of administrative division and local government in Polish Duchy of Warsaw in years 1809–1815. Its capital city was Radom, and it was further divided onto 10 powiats. In 1815 it was transformed into Sandomierz Voivodeship.", "score": "1.5994952" }, { "id": "10833714", "title": "Klekowiec", "text": " Klekowiec is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Radomsko, within Radomsko County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately 6 km south of Radomsko and 86 km south of the regional capital Łódź.", "score": "1.5945888" }, { "id": "13426211", "title": "Radom", "text": " Radom remained within the Sandomierz Voivodeship of the Lesser Poland Province of the Polish Crown of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth until the Third Partition of Poland (1795). For a few years (1795–1809) it was part of the Austrian province of West Galicia, and then (1809–1815) part of the Polish Duchy of Warsaw, which named it capital of the Radom Department. From 1815 the city belonged to Russian-controlled Congress Poland, remaining a regional administrative center. In 1816–1837 it was the capital of the Sandomierz Voivodeship, whose capital, despite the name, was at Radom. In 1837–1844 it was the capital of the Sandomierz Governorate, and from 1844 until the outbreak of World War I, the capital of the Radom Governorate. ", "score": "1.5922704" }, { "id": "10833765", "title": "Wielgomłyny", "text": " Wielgomłyny is a village in Radomsko County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) called Gmina Wielgomłyny. It lies approximately 23 km east of Radomsko and 88 km south of the regional capital Łódź. The village has a population of 870.", "score": "1.5916829" }, { "id": "10833705", "title": "Amelin, Łódź Voivodeship", "text": " Amelin is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Radomsko, within Radomsko County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately 5 km east of Radomsko and 81 km south of the regional capital Łódź. The village has a population of 240.", "score": "1.5872836" }, { "id": "10833743", "title": "Odrowąż, Radomsko County", "text": " Odrowąż is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Wielgomłyny, within Radomsko County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately 4 km west of Wielgomłyny, 20 km east of Radomsko, and 88 km south of the regional capital Łódź. The village has a population of 110.", "score": "1.5847218" } ]
[ "Radomsko\n Radomsko is a town in southern Poland with 45,353 inhabitants (2020). It is situated on the Radomka river in the Łódź Voivodeship (since 1999), having previously been in Piotrków Trybunalski Voivodeship (1975–1998). It is the county seat of Radomsko county.", "Radomsko County\n Radomsko County (powiat radomszczański) is a unit of territorial administration and local government (powiat) in Łódź Voivodeship, central Poland. It came into being on 1 January 1999 as a result of the Polish local government reforms passed in 1998. Its administrative seat and largest town is Radomsko, which lies 80 km south of the regional capital Łódź. The county also contains the towns of Przedbórz, lying 31 km east of Radomsko, and Kamieńsk, 16 km north of Radomsko. The county covers an area of 1442.78 km2. As of 2006, it had a total population of 118,856, out of which the population of Radomsko was 49,152, that of Przedbórz was 3,758, that of Kamieńsk was 2,858, and the rural population was 63,088.", "Radomsko County\n The county is subdivided into 14 gminas (one urban, two urban-rural and 11 rural). These are listed in the following table, in descending order of population.", "Radomsko\nRKS Radomsko, football club, founded in 1979. It competes in the lower leagues, although in the past it played in the Ekstraklasa (Poland's top division). ", "Rudka, Radomsko County\n Rudka is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Wielgomłyny, within Radomsko County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately 5 km east of Wielgomłyny, 28 km east of Radomsko, and 90 km south of the regional capital Łódź. The village has a population of 400.", "Radomsko\n Radomsko dates back to the 11th century. The oldest known mention of Radomsko comes from a document of Konrad I of Masovia from 1243. It received town privileges from Duke Leszek II the Black of Sieradz in 1266. During the times of fragmentation of Piast-ruled Poland, it was part of the Seniorate Province and Duchy of Sieradz, and afterwards it was a royal town of the Polish Crown, administratively located in the Sieradz Voivodeship in the Greater Poland Province of the Polish Crown. In 1288, Duke Leszek II the Black brought Franciscans to the town, and in 1328, King Ladislaus the Short funded the construction of the Gothic Franciscan church. In 1382 and 1384, congresses of Polish ", "Radomsko County\n Radomsko County is bordered by Bełchatów County and Piotrków County to the north, Końskie County and Włoszczowa County to the east, Częstochowa County to the south-west, and Pajęczno County to the west.", "Masłowice, Radomsko County\n Masłowice is a village in Radomsko County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) called Gmina Masłowice. It lies approximately 24 km east of Radomsko and 79 km south of the regional capital Łódź.", "Radom\n Radom is a city in east-central Poland, located approximately 100 km south of the capital, Warsaw. It is situated on the Mleczna River in the Masovian Voivodeship (since 1999), having previously been the seat of a separate Radom Voivodeship (1975–1998). Radom is the fourteenth-largest city in Poland and the second-largest in its province with a population of 209,296 as of 2020. For centuries, Radom was part of the Sandomierz Province of the Kingdom of Poland and the later Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. Despite being part of the Masovian Voivodeship, the city historically belongs to Lesser Poland. It was a significant center of administration, having served as seat of the Crown Council which ratified the Pact of ", "Radomka, Masovian Voivodeship\n Radomka is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Regimin, within Ciechanów County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 11 km north-east of Regimin, 14 km north of Ciechanów, and 88 km north of Warsaw.", "Radomsko\n The Polish Railway line 1, which connects Warsaw and Katowice, the country's two largest metropolitan areas, runs through the town. Polish State Railways (PKP) provide Radomsko with connections with various cities throughout Poland, including Łódź, Częstochowa, Sosnowiec, Gliwice, Wrocław, Toruń, Bydgoszcz, Gdańsk, Gdynia, Białystok, Olsztyn and Lublin. The town can also be reached by the Polish National road 1, the future A1 autostrada (highway), which connects the largest Polish port city of Gdańsk in the north with the Upper Silesian metropolitan area and the Czech Republic–Poland border at Gorzyczki in the south. The town is also located on the Polish National roads 42 and 91, and the European route E75, which connects northern Norway and Finland with Greece.", "Szczepocice Rządowe\n Szczepocice Rządowe is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Radomsko, within Radomsko County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately 9 km south-west of Radomsko and 85 km south of the regional capital Łódź.", "Strzałków, Łódź Voivodeship\n Strzałków is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Radomsko, within Radomsko County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately 4 km south-east of Radomsko and 82 km south of the regional capital Łódź. The village has a population of 1,100.", "Płoszów\n Płoszów is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Radomsko, within Radomsko County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland.", "Radom Department\n Radom Department (Polish: Departament radomski) was a unit of administrative division and local government in Polish Duchy of Warsaw in years 1809–1815. Its capital city was Radom, and it was further divided onto 10 powiats. In 1815 it was transformed into Sandomierz Voivodeship.", "Klekowiec\n Klekowiec is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Radomsko, within Radomsko County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately 6 km south of Radomsko and 86 km south of the regional capital Łódź.", "Radom\n Radom remained within the Sandomierz Voivodeship of the Lesser Poland Province of the Polish Crown of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth until the Third Partition of Poland (1795). For a few years (1795–1809) it was part of the Austrian province of West Galicia, and then (1809–1815) part of the Polish Duchy of Warsaw, which named it capital of the Radom Department. From 1815 the city belonged to Russian-controlled Congress Poland, remaining a regional administrative center. In 1816–1837 it was the capital of the Sandomierz Voivodeship, whose capital, despite the name, was at Radom. In 1837–1844 it was the capital of the Sandomierz Governorate, and from 1844 until the outbreak of World War I, the capital of the Radom Governorate. ", "Wielgomłyny\n Wielgomłyny is a village in Radomsko County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) called Gmina Wielgomłyny. It lies approximately 23 km east of Radomsko and 88 km south of the regional capital Łódź. The village has a population of 870.", "Amelin, Łódź Voivodeship\n Amelin is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Radomsko, within Radomsko County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately 5 km east of Radomsko and 81 km south of the regional capital Łódź. The village has a population of 240.", "Odrowąż, Radomsko County\n Odrowąż is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Wielgomłyny, within Radomsko County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately 4 km west of Wielgomłyny, 20 km east of Radomsko, and 88 km south of the regional capital Łódź. The village has a population of 110." ]
In what country is Tervola Radio and TV-Mast?
[ "Finland", "Republic of Finland", "Finnia", "Land of Thousand Lakes", "fi", "Suomi", "Suomen tasavalta", "Republiken Finland", "🇫🇮", "FIN" ]
country
Tervola Radio and TV-Mast
5,901,293
28
[ { "id": "28555208", "title": "Tervola Radio and TV-Mast", "text": " Tervola Radio and TV-Mast is a mast in Tervola, Finland. It has a height of 302 metres (991 feet).", "score": "2.1108398" }, { "id": "28555171", "title": "Anjalankoski Radio and TV-Mast", "text": " Anjalankoski Radio and TV-Mast is a mast in Kouvola, Finland. It has a height of 318 m.", "score": "1.6430173" }, { "id": "13683490", "title": "Tervola railway station", "text": " The Tervola railway station is located in the municipality of Tervola in Lapland, Finland. The distance to the Helsinki Central railway station is 900.5 kilometres, measured via the Haapamäki and Seinäjoki railway station. The station was taken into use when the track between Kemi and Rovaniemi was completed in 1909. All passenger trains between Kemi and Rovaniemi stop at Tervola. The station does not serve cargo traffic. The traffic control is handled remotely from the Oulu railway station. The trackyard has one drive-through side track and one loading track.", "score": "1.5883783" }, { "id": "9265227", "title": "Csávoly", "text": "165 metres tall guyed mast used for FM-/TV-broadcasting ", "score": "1.5672085" }, { "id": "8238865", "title": "Radio and TV Museum (Lahti, Finland)", "text": " Radio and TV Museum, also known as Mastola, is a museum located in Lahti, Finland. The museum is near the city centre on the Radiomäki hill (literally translated to Radio Hill). Next to the museum building are two 150-meter-high radio masts built in 1927. The masts are a well-known landmark and a symbol of the city. The museum operates in a radio station building designed by a Finnish architect Kaarlo Könönen and built in 1935. The Radio and TV Museum was opened in 1993. The museum went through an extensive renovation between the years 2014–2016 and reopened in 2017. The museum operates under the Lahti City Museum. The Radio and TV Museum collects, researches and exhibits objects related to radio and television especially in Finland. It is a national specialist museum in its field. Visitors can experience old radio and television programmes and see equipment of different eras. The museum also hosts temporary exhibitions, seminars and events.", "score": "1.5381482" }, { "id": "30743704", "title": "Portofino transmitter", "text": " Portofino transmitter is a facility for FM-/AM-/TV-broadcasting near Portofino in Italy. Portofino transmitter uses for the mediumwave transmitter, which works on 1575 kHz with 50 kWa very unusual antenna, which consists of a wire which is fixed on a rope that is spun over a distance of 590 metres between a rock anchor and a 130 metres tall lattice tower, which carries the FM-/TV-broadcasting antennas. This may be the only broadcasting transmitter in Europe, which uses a wire span over a valley as part of the antenna system. Close to the main tower, there is a second lattice tower with triangular cross section.", "score": "1.5208738" }, { "id": "318135", "title": "Kojál radio transmitter", "text": " The Transmitter Kojál (also known as Morava transmitter) is a facility for FM- and TV-transmission at Kojál Hill near Brno in the Czech Republic. Its aerial mast is a 340-metre-high guyed mast. Mast is third tallest structure in the Czech Republic. Mast was built as replacement of 324 metre tall guyed mast, built of lattice steel in 1959/60. This mast, which had a triangular cross section, was anchored in 4 levels, which were situated 63.75 metres, 135 metres, 213.75 metres and 292.5 metres above ground. In a height of 300 metres, it had a cabin with rooms for measurements. On this there was the antenna mast with antennas for FM (lower part) and TV (upper part) broadcasting.", "score": "1.515364" }, { "id": "15883693", "title": "FM- and TV-mast Kosztowy", "text": " The FM and TV mast Katowice / Kosztowy (RTCN Katowice / Kosztowy) is a 358,7 metre tall guyed mast for FM and TV situated at Mysłowice - near Kosztowy, Poland. It replaced the TVP Katowice Mast which was dismantled in the 1970s. The TVP Katowice Mast which it replaced was a 225-metre-high guyed steel framework mast with a triangular cross-section near Katowice, Poland. It was not the transmission site for the medium-wave frequency 1080 kHz. This frequency is transmitted by the transmitter Koszęcin. The FM and TV mast Katowice / Kosztowy is since the collapse of the Warsaw radio mast the tallest structure in Poland. It was inaugurated on June 23, 1976. Originally its height was 269 metres. In 1987 it was converted to its actual value.", "score": "1.5108368" }, { "id": "3995630", "title": "Dobrochov", "text": " There is a mediumwave broadcasting site in the east at the Předina hill (313 m) of a rich history. Established in the thirties for Český rozhlas Brno (Czech state broadcasting comp.) and covering most of the Moravia, seized by Nazis in 1939 and rebuilt to 100 kW for their propaganda station Donausender (due to good coverage towards south and south-east) and extended to 2x 200 kW by the communist regime in the seventies. It was mainly used for the second programme on 954 kHz (and jamming of R.F.E. mediumwave Munich transmitter),the tower is still used for Český rozhlas Dvojka (954 kHz at 200KW) and a private radio station Rádio Dechovka (1233 kHz at 5KW).", "score": "1.502897" }, { "id": "11978858", "title": "FM- and TV-mast Olsztyn-Pieczewo", "text": " The FM- and TV-mast Olsztyn-Pieczewo (also known as Maszt RTCN Olsztyn-Pieczewo) is a 365 m tall guyed mast for FM and TV situated at Olsztyn-Pieczewo in Poland (Geographical Coordinates: 53.75332°N, 20.51815°W) The FM- and TV-mast Olsztyn-Pieczewo, which was built in 1969, is since the collapse of the Warsaw radio mast, the second tallest structure in Poland. It is called in honor of Stefan Kamiński, the initiator of TV in Olsztyn \"Stefan\".", "score": "1.4938262" }, { "id": "32894101", "title": "Tervola", "text": " Tervola is a municipality of Finland. It is located in the province of Lapland, Finland. The municipality has a population of 0 and covers an area of undefined km2 ofwhich undefined km2 is water. The population density isundefined PD/km2. Neighbour municipalities are Keminmaa, Ranua, Rovaniemi, Simo, Tornio and Ylitornio. The municipality is unilingually Finnish.", "score": "1.4938165" }, { "id": "30141842", "title": "RTL 102.5", "text": " RTL 102.5 originated in Bergamo in 1975 as Radio Trasmissioni Lombarde (\"Lombardy Radio Broadcasting\"). Lorenzo Suraci, the current president, took it over in 1988 to advertise his Capriccio discothèque in Arcene, near Bergamo. Rapidly RTL's signal was extended in the whole North of Italy. Then, Suraci tested the national isofrequency to make RTL receivable in the whole of Italy on the same frequency, 102.5 MHz. In 1990 it became one of the 14 Italian national networks. It has been the first private Italian radio station creating its own editorial structure, now directed by Luigi Tornari. The headquarters are in Cologno Monzese, in the first building in Europe created especially for radio. RTL 102.5 also has an office in Rome, in via Virginio Orsini, near the Piazza del Popolo, which houses part of the editorial staff, recording rooms and the studio from which programs like Onorevole DJ and Chi c'è c'è, chi non c'è non parla are broadcast.", "score": "1.4834466" }, { "id": "4622310", "title": "Pietrărie Transmitter", "text": " Pietrăria transmitter (Releul Pietrărie) is a 180-metre guyed mast for FM and TV broadcasting at Pietrăria, a village near Iaşi, Romania. It has a square cross section and is much thicker than most guyed masts of similar height. The dendrological park of Repedea is in the transmitter's vicinity.", "score": "1.4833953" }, { "id": "5737894", "title": "Siziano", "text": " At Siziano, there is a large mediumwave transmitter, which broadcasts Rai Radio 1 on 900 kHz with 600 kW. It is one of the most powerful transmitters in Italy and can be received in whole Europe at night time. As antenna two guyed mast radiators insulated against ground are used. They are 148 and 145 metres tall and situated at 45°19'54\"N 9°11'59\"E respectively 45°19'41\"N 9°11'50\"E.", "score": "1.4808197" }, { "id": "27897524", "title": "Veselovka TV Mast", "text": " Veselovka TV Mast ( Russian: РТПЦ Веселовка) is a 151 m tall guyed tubular steel mast for FM- and TV-transmission near Veselovka in Kaliningrad Oblast at Russia. Veselovka TV Mast was built in 1965 and is from the somewhat unusual structural type 30107 KM. It is equipped with six crossbars equipped with gangways, which run in two levels from the mast structure to the guys.", "score": "1.4765888" }, { "id": "3937717", "title": "Fm and TV Mast Chwaszczyno", "text": " The FM and TV Mast Gdańsk/Chwaszczyno (RTCN Gdańsk/Chwaszczyno) is a 317 metre tall guyed mast for FM and TV situated at Chwaszczyno, Kartuzy County, Pomeranian Voivodeship, Poland.", "score": "1.4750693" }, { "id": "4491803", "title": "Jemiołów Transmitter", "text": " Radio and Television Broadcasting Centre Jemiołów (RTCN Jemiołów) - is a 314 metre tall guyed mast for FM and TV, and concrete tower about height 99 meters, situated at Jemiołów, Lubusz Voivodeship in Poland. This FM and TV centre which was built in years 1960-1962 from funds assembled socially. There is main broadcast station of Lubusz Voivodeship.", "score": "1.4711869" }, { "id": "28555104", "title": "Hollola TV Mast", "text": " Hollola TV Mast is a television mast in Hollola, Finland built in 1967. It has a height of 327 metres (1073 feet). It is also the tallest structure in Finland.", "score": "1.4700785" }, { "id": "347956", "title": "Antenna RAI of Caltanissetta", "text": " The radio transmitter system of Caltanissetta or Antenna RAI of Caltanissetta is a plant, now idle, for broadcast on long wave, medium and short; tipe guyed mast. The transmitter is insulated against ground. Its main element is an omnidirectional antenna 286 meters high, which holds the record for the tallest structure in Italy; it stands on a hill 689 meters above sea level; The top antenna is placed at 975 meters above sea level.", "score": "1.4682167" }, { "id": "4293982", "title": "Rai Radio 3", "text": " Rai Radio 3 (radio tre) is an Italian radio channel operated by the state-owned public-broadcasting organization RAI and specializing in culture and classical music. It is currently directed by Andrea Montanari.. Founded on 1 October 1950 as the Terzo programma, it was loosely based on its British namesake, the BBC Third Programme, which had been established in 1946. It adopted its current name in 1976.", "score": "1.4631891" } ]
[ "Tervola Radio and TV-Mast\n Tervola Radio and TV-Mast is a mast in Tervola, Finland. It has a height of 302 metres (991 feet).", "Anjalankoski Radio and TV-Mast\n Anjalankoski Radio and TV-Mast is a mast in Kouvola, Finland. It has a height of 318 m.", "Tervola railway station\n The Tervola railway station is located in the municipality of Tervola in Lapland, Finland. The distance to the Helsinki Central railway station is 900.5 kilometres, measured via the Haapamäki and Seinäjoki railway station. The station was taken into use when the track between Kemi and Rovaniemi was completed in 1909. All passenger trains between Kemi and Rovaniemi stop at Tervola. The station does not serve cargo traffic. The traffic control is handled remotely from the Oulu railway station. The trackyard has one drive-through side track and one loading track.", "Csávoly\n165 metres tall guyed mast used for FM-/TV-broadcasting ", "Radio and TV Museum (Lahti, Finland)\n Radio and TV Museum, also known as Mastola, is a museum located in Lahti, Finland. The museum is near the city centre on the Radiomäki hill (literally translated to Radio Hill). Next to the museum building are two 150-meter-high radio masts built in 1927. The masts are a well-known landmark and a symbol of the city. The museum operates in a radio station building designed by a Finnish architect Kaarlo Könönen and built in 1935. The Radio and TV Museum was opened in 1993. The museum went through an extensive renovation between the years 2014–2016 and reopened in 2017. The museum operates under the Lahti City Museum. The Radio and TV Museum collects, researches and exhibits objects related to radio and television especially in Finland. It is a national specialist museum in its field. Visitors can experience old radio and television programmes and see equipment of different eras. The museum also hosts temporary exhibitions, seminars and events.", "Portofino transmitter\n Portofino transmitter is a facility for FM-/AM-/TV-broadcasting near Portofino in Italy. Portofino transmitter uses for the mediumwave transmitter, which works on 1575 kHz with 50 kWa very unusual antenna, which consists of a wire which is fixed on a rope that is spun over a distance of 590 metres between a rock anchor and a 130 metres tall lattice tower, which carries the FM-/TV-broadcasting antennas. This may be the only broadcasting transmitter in Europe, which uses a wire span over a valley as part of the antenna system. Close to the main tower, there is a second lattice tower with triangular cross section.", "Kojál radio transmitter\n The Transmitter Kojál (also known as Morava transmitter) is a facility for FM- and TV-transmission at Kojál Hill near Brno in the Czech Republic. Its aerial mast is a 340-metre-high guyed mast. Mast is third tallest structure in the Czech Republic. Mast was built as replacement of 324 metre tall guyed mast, built of lattice steel in 1959/60. This mast, which had a triangular cross section, was anchored in 4 levels, which were situated 63.75 metres, 135 metres, 213.75 metres and 292.5 metres above ground. In a height of 300 metres, it had a cabin with rooms for measurements. On this there was the antenna mast with antennas for FM (lower part) and TV (upper part) broadcasting.", "FM- and TV-mast Kosztowy\n The FM and TV mast Katowice / Kosztowy (RTCN Katowice / Kosztowy) is a 358,7 metre tall guyed mast for FM and TV situated at Mysłowice - near Kosztowy, Poland. It replaced the TVP Katowice Mast which was dismantled in the 1970s. The TVP Katowice Mast which it replaced was a 225-metre-high guyed steel framework mast with a triangular cross-section near Katowice, Poland. It was not the transmission site for the medium-wave frequency 1080 kHz. This frequency is transmitted by the transmitter Koszęcin. The FM and TV mast Katowice / Kosztowy is since the collapse of the Warsaw radio mast the tallest structure in Poland. It was inaugurated on June 23, 1976. Originally its height was 269 metres. In 1987 it was converted to its actual value.", "Dobrochov\n There is a mediumwave broadcasting site in the east at the Předina hill (313 m) of a rich history. Established in the thirties for Český rozhlas Brno (Czech state broadcasting comp.) and covering most of the Moravia, seized by Nazis in 1939 and rebuilt to 100 kW for their propaganda station Donausender (due to good coverage towards south and south-east) and extended to 2x 200 kW by the communist regime in the seventies. It was mainly used for the second programme on 954 kHz (and jamming of R.F.E. mediumwave Munich transmitter),the tower is still used for Český rozhlas Dvojka (954 kHz at 200KW) and a private radio station Rádio Dechovka (1233 kHz at 5KW).", "FM- and TV-mast Olsztyn-Pieczewo\n The FM- and TV-mast Olsztyn-Pieczewo (also known as Maszt RTCN Olsztyn-Pieczewo) is a 365 m tall guyed mast for FM and TV situated at Olsztyn-Pieczewo in Poland (Geographical Coordinates: 53.75332°N, 20.51815°W) The FM- and TV-mast Olsztyn-Pieczewo, which was built in 1969, is since the collapse of the Warsaw radio mast, the second tallest structure in Poland. It is called in honor of Stefan Kamiński, the initiator of TV in Olsztyn \"Stefan\".", "Tervola\n Tervola is a municipality of Finland. It is located in the province of Lapland, Finland. The municipality has a population of 0 and covers an area of undefined km2 ofwhich undefined km2 is water. The population density isundefined PD/km2. Neighbour municipalities are Keminmaa, Ranua, Rovaniemi, Simo, Tornio and Ylitornio. The municipality is unilingually Finnish.", "RTL 102.5\n RTL 102.5 originated in Bergamo in 1975 as Radio Trasmissioni Lombarde (\"Lombardy Radio Broadcasting\"). Lorenzo Suraci, the current president, took it over in 1988 to advertise his Capriccio discothèque in Arcene, near Bergamo. Rapidly RTL's signal was extended in the whole North of Italy. Then, Suraci tested the national isofrequency to make RTL receivable in the whole of Italy on the same frequency, 102.5 MHz. In 1990 it became one of the 14 Italian national networks. It has been the first private Italian radio station creating its own editorial structure, now directed by Luigi Tornari. The headquarters are in Cologno Monzese, in the first building in Europe created especially for radio. RTL 102.5 also has an office in Rome, in via Virginio Orsini, near the Piazza del Popolo, which houses part of the editorial staff, recording rooms and the studio from which programs like Onorevole DJ and Chi c'è c'è, chi non c'è non parla are broadcast.", "Pietrărie Transmitter\n Pietrăria transmitter (Releul Pietrărie) is a 180-metre guyed mast for FM and TV broadcasting at Pietrăria, a village near Iaşi, Romania. It has a square cross section and is much thicker than most guyed masts of similar height. The dendrological park of Repedea is in the transmitter's vicinity.", "Siziano\n At Siziano, there is a large mediumwave transmitter, which broadcasts Rai Radio 1 on 900 kHz with 600 kW. It is one of the most powerful transmitters in Italy and can be received in whole Europe at night time. As antenna two guyed mast radiators insulated against ground are used. They are 148 and 145 metres tall and situated at 45°19'54\"N 9°11'59\"E respectively 45°19'41\"N 9°11'50\"E.", "Veselovka TV Mast\n Veselovka TV Mast ( Russian: РТПЦ Веселовка) is a 151 m tall guyed tubular steel mast for FM- and TV-transmission near Veselovka in Kaliningrad Oblast at Russia. Veselovka TV Mast was built in 1965 and is from the somewhat unusual structural type 30107 KM. It is equipped with six crossbars equipped with gangways, which run in two levels from the mast structure to the guys.", "Fm and TV Mast Chwaszczyno\n The FM and TV Mast Gdańsk/Chwaszczyno (RTCN Gdańsk/Chwaszczyno) is a 317 metre tall guyed mast for FM and TV situated at Chwaszczyno, Kartuzy County, Pomeranian Voivodeship, Poland.", "Jemiołów Transmitter\n Radio and Television Broadcasting Centre Jemiołów (RTCN Jemiołów) - is a 314 metre tall guyed mast for FM and TV, and concrete tower about height 99 meters, situated at Jemiołów, Lubusz Voivodeship in Poland. This FM and TV centre which was built in years 1960-1962 from funds assembled socially. There is main broadcast station of Lubusz Voivodeship.", "Hollola TV Mast\n Hollola TV Mast is a television mast in Hollola, Finland built in 1967. It has a height of 327 metres (1073 feet). It is also the tallest structure in Finland.", "Antenna RAI of Caltanissetta\n The radio transmitter system of Caltanissetta or Antenna RAI of Caltanissetta is a plant, now idle, for broadcast on long wave, medium and short; tipe guyed mast. The transmitter is insulated against ground. Its main element is an omnidirectional antenna 286 meters high, which holds the record for the tallest structure in Italy; it stands on a hill 689 meters above sea level; The top antenna is placed at 975 meters above sea level.", "Rai Radio 3\n Rai Radio 3 (radio tre) is an Italian radio channel operated by the state-owned public-broadcasting organization RAI and specializing in culture and classical music. It is currently directed by Andrea Montanari.. Founded on 1 October 1950 as the Terzo programma, it was loosely based on its British namesake, the BBC Third Programme, which had been established in 1946. It adopted its current name in 1976." ]
Who was the composer of Solo?
[ "Karlheinz Stockhausen", "Karl-Heinz Stockhausen", "Karlheinz Stockhausen" ]
composer
Solo (Stockhausen)
5,785,289
96
[ { "id": "32049154", "title": "Solo (music)", "text": " Solo", "score": "1.5433006" }, { "id": "4634059", "title": "Solo II", "text": " Solo II is the twelfth album by the Portuguese music composer António Pinho Vargas. It was released in 2009. It was later presented with the José Afonso 2010 award.", "score": "1.4921229" }, { "id": "4634052", "title": "Solo (António Pinho Vargas album)", "text": " Solo is the eleventh album by the Portuguese music composer António Pinho Vargas. It was released in 2008.", "score": "1.461764" }, { "id": "7744623", "title": "Solo Avital", "text": " In 2011 Solo was responsible for all the visual design and also composed the complete 240 minutes soundtrack for the German mini series CRIME. Stories taken from Ferdinand von Schirach bestseller VERBRECHEN. The soundtrack was released on iTunes Germany under the titles VERBRECHEN SOUNDTRACK by Solo Avital.", "score": "1.4384924" }, { "id": "31695178", "title": "Solo (Mulgrew Miller album)", "text": " Solo is a solo piano album by Mulgrew Miller. It was recorded in 2000 and released by Space Time Records a decade later.", "score": "1.4366245" }, { "id": "10179170", "title": "Peter Bardens", "text": "\"Solo\" (1985) ", "score": "1.4342906" }, { "id": "8945970", "title": "Solo (Egberto Gismonti album)", "text": " Solo is a solo album by Brazilian composer, guitarist and pianist Egberto Gismonti recorded in 1978 and released on the ECM label.", "score": "1.4232261" }, { "id": "27478393", "title": "Krsna Solo", "text": " Krsna Solo (born Amitav Sarkar) is a music composer, singer-songwriter and a music producer from India, who debuted with the popular Hindi film \"Tanu Weds Manu\" in 2011. Among his awards are a Filmfare R.D. Burman Award, Stardust Award for Best New Music Director. His work also includes Jolly LLB, Tanu Weds Manu Returns, Tamanchey, Oonga and more. One of his mentionable international score is for the documentary called India's Daughter by Leslee Udwin.", "score": "1.4223531" }, { "id": "26105142", "title": "Morison/opit", "text": " Benjamin Morison and Simon Opit and were composers who worked exclusively in collaboration for a period of some years, roughly 1992-1994. As one commentator wrote, \"Much of their work consists of two set of parts written independently, which adds a new radical sense of indeterminacy one might have thought lost in recent works of the experimentalist genre.\" In a text published in 1992, they wrote: \"The score of double arrangement has two names on it, implying that two composers were involved. [...] Suppose it were the true that one composer was responsible for the composition of the music of one duo, the other for that ", "score": "1.4105337" }, { "id": "13075419", "title": "Solo (Dutch band)", "text": " Solo is the musical outfit of Dutch musicians Michiel Flamman and Simon Gitsels. The duo released two albums, of which the latest Solopeople was the biggest success. The album released on label Excelsior Recordings spawned a Dutch top 20 hit with Come Back To Me.", "score": "1.4096453" }, { "id": "6828114", "title": "Double bass", "text": " (born 1933) has performed and recorded more than 300 pieces written by and for him. He writes chamber music, baroque music, classical, jazz, renaissance music, improvisational music and world music US minimalist composer Philip Glass wrote a prelude focused on the lower register that he scored for timpani and double bass. Italian composer Sylvano Bussotti, whose composing career spans from the 1930s to the first decade of the 21st century, wrote a solo work for bass in 1983 entitled Naked Angel Face per contrabbasso. Fellow Italian composer Franco Donatoni wrote a piece called Lem for contrabbasso in the same year. In 1989, French composer ", "score": "1.4058037" }, { "id": "27944906", "title": "Instrumental solo piece", "text": " In music, an instrumental solo piece (from the Italian: solo, meaning alone) is a composition, like an étude, solo sonata, partita, solo suite or impromptus, or an arrangement, written to be played by a single performer. The performer is a soloist. The instrumental solo pieces can be monophonic or polyphonic. There are monophonic instruments like those of the brass and wind sections, that can only produce single notes at one time, and polyphonic instruments, like the guitar and piano, that have the option of also playing with polyphony, which is when notes are played simultaneously.", "score": "1.3927063" }, { "id": "787249", "title": "Solo (Lynne Arriale album)", "text": " Solo is a solo piano album by Lynne Arriale. It was recorded in 2011 and released by Motéma Music.", "score": "1.3815691" }, { "id": "3236804", "title": "Piano Solo", "text": " Piano Solo was an envisaged plot for an Italian coup in 1964 requested by then President of the Italian Republic, Antonio Segni. It was prepared by the commander of the Carabinieri Giovanni de Lorenzo in the beginning of 1964 in close collaboration with the Italian secret service SIFAR, CIA secret warfare expert Vernon Walters, then chief of the CIA station in Rome William King Harvey, and Renzo Rocca, director of the Gladio units within the military secret service SID.", "score": "1.3786845" }, { "id": "31695180", "title": "Solo (Mulgrew Miller album)", "text": " Solo was released by Space Time Records in 2010. The Financial Times described it as \"a masterclass in the traditional jazz virtues of harmonic development and unflagging tempo.\" The New York Amsterdam News suggested that \"it will be the album that fledgling musicians copy and practice by.\"", "score": "1.3759117" }, { "id": "26975199", "title": "List of compositions by Lukas Foss", "text": " that stands apart from this largely neoclassical repertoire is Solo (1981), a hybrid minimalist and twelve-tone work employing as a guiding technical principle the gradual transformation of several pitch collections. At the conclusion of Solo, these pitch collections change from serial to tonal, effecting a remarkable surprise. Of For Lenny, the opera composer Daniel Felsenfeld has written that Foss \"is loving and careful with his treatment, avoiding vulgarity or navel gazing and offering instead a calm (yet not un-bouncy) treatment of this famous tune\". The world-premiere recording of Foss's complete extant piano works was released in 2002 by the Sonatabop.com recording label based in Milwaukee. This recording was completed ", "score": "1.3753341" }, { "id": "8767842", "title": "Solo concerto", "text": "The New Harvard Dictionary of Music. ", "score": "1.3740851" }, { "id": "30918185", "title": "List of songs written by Glenn Miller", "text": " \"Solo Hop\" was a Top Ten hit from the summer of 1935, according to the official Glenn Miller Orchestra web site. Miller composed this for a pick-up band when he started recording for Columbia Records. \"Solo Hop\" included Bunny Berigan on trumpet, Claude Thornhill on piano, and Charlie Spivak on trumpet. It was released by Columbia as a single backed with \"In a Little Spanish Town\", label number CO-3058-D. According to the tsort.info, a website that accesses Billboard chart statistics, based on the research of Billboard chart analyst Joel Whitburn, \"Solo Hop\" reached number seven on the Billboard chart in 1935, staying on the chart for five weeks. George Simon, a friend of Miller, contradicts sources that say it was a top ten hit and says it was barely noticed by record buyers.", "score": "1.3630164" }, { "id": "26341209", "title": "Solo (American band)", "text": " Solo is an American R&B musical group from New York, New York. The original members were Robert Anderson, Darnell Chavis, Eunique Mack and Dan Stokes. The group recorded their eponymous debut album in Minneapolis and released it in 1995. Released on Perspective Records, the album featured production primarily by Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis. The album produced four singles (\"Heaven\", \"Where Do U Want Me to Put It\", \"He's Not Good Enough\" and \"Blowin' My Mind\") and was eventually certified gold. Solo released their second album, 4 Bruthas & a Bass, in 1998. The album produced only one single, \"Touch Me\", which peaked at #59 on the Billboard Hot 100.", "score": "1.3607249" }, { "id": "5786115", "title": "Solo (Michel Camilo album)", "text": " Solo is a piano album by Michel Camilo. It was recorded in 2004 and released by Telarc.", "score": "1.3592726" } ]
[ "Solo (music)\n Solo", "Solo II\n Solo II is the twelfth album by the Portuguese music composer António Pinho Vargas. It was released in 2009. It was later presented with the José Afonso 2010 award.", "Solo (António Pinho Vargas album)\n Solo is the eleventh album by the Portuguese music composer António Pinho Vargas. It was released in 2008.", "Solo Avital\n In 2011 Solo was responsible for all the visual design and also composed the complete 240 minutes soundtrack for the German mini series CRIME. Stories taken from Ferdinand von Schirach bestseller VERBRECHEN. The soundtrack was released on iTunes Germany under the titles VERBRECHEN SOUNDTRACK by Solo Avital.", "Solo (Mulgrew Miller album)\n Solo is a solo piano album by Mulgrew Miller. It was recorded in 2000 and released by Space Time Records a decade later.", "Peter Bardens\n\"Solo\" (1985) ", "Solo (Egberto Gismonti album)\n Solo is a solo album by Brazilian composer, guitarist and pianist Egberto Gismonti recorded in 1978 and released on the ECM label.", "Krsna Solo\n Krsna Solo (born Amitav Sarkar) is a music composer, singer-songwriter and a music producer from India, who debuted with the popular Hindi film \"Tanu Weds Manu\" in 2011. Among his awards are a Filmfare R.D. Burman Award, Stardust Award for Best New Music Director. His work also includes Jolly LLB, Tanu Weds Manu Returns, Tamanchey, Oonga and more. One of his mentionable international score is for the documentary called India's Daughter by Leslee Udwin.", "Morison/opit\n Benjamin Morison and Simon Opit and were composers who worked exclusively in collaboration for a period of some years, roughly 1992-1994. As one commentator wrote, \"Much of their work consists of two set of parts written independently, which adds a new radical sense of indeterminacy one might have thought lost in recent works of the experimentalist genre.\" In a text published in 1992, they wrote: \"The score of double arrangement has two names on it, implying that two composers were involved. [...] Suppose it were the true that one composer was responsible for the composition of the music of one duo, the other for that ", "Solo (Dutch band)\n Solo is the musical outfit of Dutch musicians Michiel Flamman and Simon Gitsels. The duo released two albums, of which the latest Solopeople was the biggest success. The album released on label Excelsior Recordings spawned a Dutch top 20 hit with Come Back To Me.", "Double bass\n (born 1933) has performed and recorded more than 300 pieces written by and for him. He writes chamber music, baroque music, classical, jazz, renaissance music, improvisational music and world music US minimalist composer Philip Glass wrote a prelude focused on the lower register that he scored for timpani and double bass. Italian composer Sylvano Bussotti, whose composing career spans from the 1930s to the first decade of the 21st century, wrote a solo work for bass in 1983 entitled Naked Angel Face per contrabbasso. Fellow Italian composer Franco Donatoni wrote a piece called Lem for contrabbasso in the same year. In 1989, French composer ", "Instrumental solo piece\n In music, an instrumental solo piece (from the Italian: solo, meaning alone) is a composition, like an étude, solo sonata, partita, solo suite or impromptus, or an arrangement, written to be played by a single performer. The performer is a soloist. The instrumental solo pieces can be monophonic or polyphonic. There are monophonic instruments like those of the brass and wind sections, that can only produce single notes at one time, and polyphonic instruments, like the guitar and piano, that have the option of also playing with polyphony, which is when notes are played simultaneously.", "Solo (Lynne Arriale album)\n Solo is a solo piano album by Lynne Arriale. It was recorded in 2011 and released by Motéma Music.", "Piano Solo\n Piano Solo was an envisaged plot for an Italian coup in 1964 requested by then President of the Italian Republic, Antonio Segni. It was prepared by the commander of the Carabinieri Giovanni de Lorenzo in the beginning of 1964 in close collaboration with the Italian secret service SIFAR, CIA secret warfare expert Vernon Walters, then chief of the CIA station in Rome William King Harvey, and Renzo Rocca, director of the Gladio units within the military secret service SID.", "Solo (Mulgrew Miller album)\n Solo was released by Space Time Records in 2010. The Financial Times described it as \"a masterclass in the traditional jazz virtues of harmonic development and unflagging tempo.\" The New York Amsterdam News suggested that \"it will be the album that fledgling musicians copy and practice by.\"", "List of compositions by Lukas Foss\n that stands apart from this largely neoclassical repertoire is Solo (1981), a hybrid minimalist and twelve-tone work employing as a guiding technical principle the gradual transformation of several pitch collections. At the conclusion of Solo, these pitch collections change from serial to tonal, effecting a remarkable surprise. Of For Lenny, the opera composer Daniel Felsenfeld has written that Foss \"is loving and careful with his treatment, avoiding vulgarity or navel gazing and offering instead a calm (yet not un-bouncy) treatment of this famous tune\". The world-premiere recording of Foss's complete extant piano works was released in 2002 by the Sonatabop.com recording label based in Milwaukee. This recording was completed ", "Solo concerto\nThe New Harvard Dictionary of Music. ", "List of songs written by Glenn Miller\n \"Solo Hop\" was a Top Ten hit from the summer of 1935, according to the official Glenn Miller Orchestra web site. Miller composed this for a pick-up band when he started recording for Columbia Records. \"Solo Hop\" included Bunny Berigan on trumpet, Claude Thornhill on piano, and Charlie Spivak on trumpet. It was released by Columbia as a single backed with \"In a Little Spanish Town\", label number CO-3058-D. According to the tsort.info, a website that accesses Billboard chart statistics, based on the research of Billboard chart analyst Joel Whitburn, \"Solo Hop\" reached number seven on the Billboard chart in 1935, staying on the chart for five weeks. George Simon, a friend of Miller, contradicts sources that say it was a top ten hit and says it was barely noticed by record buyers.", "Solo (American band)\n Solo is an American R&B musical group from New York, New York. The original members were Robert Anderson, Darnell Chavis, Eunique Mack and Dan Stokes. The group recorded their eponymous debut album in Minneapolis and released it in 1995. Released on Perspective Records, the album featured production primarily by Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis. The album produced four singles (\"Heaven\", \"Where Do U Want Me to Put It\", \"He's Not Good Enough\" and \"Blowin' My Mind\") and was eventually certified gold. Solo released their second album, 4 Bruthas & a Bass, in 1998. The album produced only one single, \"Touch Me\", which peaked at #59 on the Billboard Hot 100.", "Solo (Michel Camilo album)\n Solo is a piano album by Michel Camilo. It was recorded in 2004 and released by Telarc." ]
What genre is Eddie & the Gang with No Name?
[ "young adult literature", "juvenile fiction", "YA", "youth literature", "juvenile literature", "young adult fiction", "YA literature", "YA fiction" ]
genre
Eddie & the Gang with No Name
3,983,793
66
[ { "id": "10080684", "title": "Reservoir Pups", "text": " Reservoir Pups (also known as Running with the Reservoir Pups) is the first novel of the Eddie & the Gang with No Name trilogy by Northern Irish author, Colin Bateman, published on 13 November 2003 through Hodder Children's Books. It is Bateman's first young adult novel.", "score": "1.4896363" }, { "id": "8208240", "title": "Room 25", "text": "\"No Name\" is stylized in lowercase as \"no name\" ; \"Blaxploitation\" contains a sample from the 1973 film The Spook Who Sat By the Door Track list adapted from Noname's Twitter. Notes", "score": "1.4299835" }, { "id": "7010114", "title": "The Friends of Eddie Coyle", "text": " The Friends of Eddie Coyle is a 1973 American neo-noir crime film starring Robert Mitchum and Peter Boyle and directed by Peter Yates. The screenplay by Paul Monash was adapted from the 1970 novel The Friends of Eddie Coyle by George V. Higgins. The film tells the story of Eddie Coyle (Mitchum), a small-time career hoodlum in the Irish Mob in Boston, Massachusetts. The title is purely ironic: Eddie has no friends. While critical reception was positive, with particular praise for Mitchum's performance, the movie was not popular with filmgoers and failed to rank in the top 30 either in 1973 (when it was released mid-year) or 1974, and failed to recoup its budget in combined box office.", "score": "1.423132" }, { "id": "15508506", "title": "The Gang's All Here (1943 film)", "text": " and Charles Saggau ; \"No Love, No Nothin\" ; Music by Harry Warren ; Lyrics by Leo Robin ; Arranged by Benny Carter ; Sung by Alice Faye ; Danced by Tony De Marco and Sheila Ryan ; \"(I've Got a Gal in) Kalamazoo\" ; Music by Harry Warren ; Lyrics by Mack Gordon ; Played by Benny Goodman and his band ; \"Paducah\" ; Music by Harry Warren ; Lyrics by Leo Robin ; Played by Benny Goodman and His Orchestra ; Sung by Benny Goodman and Carmen Miranda ; Danced by Carmen Miranda and Tony De Marco ; \"The Polka Dot Polka\" ; ", "score": "1.4205577" }, { "id": "15508492", "title": "The Gang's All Here (1943 film)", "text": " shown in Brazil on its initial release. In the US, the censors dictated that the chorus girls must hold the bananas at the waist and not at the hip. Alice Faye sings \"A Journey to a Star,\" \"No Love, No Nothin',\" and the surreal finale \"The Polka-Dot Polka.\" The film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Art Direction-Interior Decoration, Color (James Basevi, Joseph C. Wright, Thomas Little). It was the last musical Faye made as a Hollywood superstar. She was pregnant with her second daughter during filming. In 2014, The Gang's All Here was deemed \"culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant\" by the Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the National Film Registry.", "score": "1.4161906" }, { "id": "1233446", "title": "Eddie Noack", "text": " he would work for the bulk of his professional career. Noack was drafted in 1954 and spent two years in the Army. When Noack came home, he adopted a female sausage dog, named Biscuit. Back in the music business, he flourished as a songwriter at Starday, with Hank Snow's cover of his song \"These Hands\" reaching No. 5 on the country chart in 1956. When Pappy Daily founded D Records in 1958, he signed Noack, and his recording of his own composition \"Have Blues Will Travel\" reached No. 14 on the country chart. Under the name Tommy Wood, Noack recorded rockabilly music.", "score": "1.4146731" }, { "id": "16005922", "title": "Delta 4", "text": " The Town with No Name (sometimes published as Town with No Name) is a Western action-adventure point-and-click game released by On-Line Entertainment in 1992 for the Commodore CDTV. A version for MS-DOS was released in 1993. The game stars \"The Man with No Name\" (no relation to the film character of the same name portrayed by Clint Eastwood), who gets off a train at the station in the eponymous town. Upon entering the town, he is quickly confronted by a gunman. Once No Name kills the gunman, an unnamed man with a cigarette who more closely resembles Eastwood's character reveals that the gunman was the littlest brother of Evil Eb, the leader of the Hole-in-the-Head Gang, and foreshadows that Eb will send his bandits ", "score": "1.4071238" }, { "id": "27238740", "title": "Crazy Gang (comedy group)", "text": " often turned up in their films. Eddie Gray, their associate and equally crazy comic, appeared in the later Life Is a Circus only. In Life Is a Circus (1958), starring Shirley Eaton, Flanagan and Allen again performed their biggest hit, \"Underneath the Arches\". Chesney Allen withdrew from live performances in later years due to ill health, though he outlived all the others. The Gang made a television series, The Gang Show, in 1956. The Gang was understudied by Peter Glaze. Among the other acts who worked with The Crazy Gang was the tall and rotund American percussionist Teddy Brown. His speciality was to perform on the xylophone. He also served as the butt of practical jokes by the Gang; at one performance Flanagan and Allen took to the stage ", "score": "1.4035783" }, { "id": "1097689", "title": "No Noise", "text": " No Noise is the 17th Our Gang short subject comedy released. The Our Gang series (later known as \"The Little Rascals\") was created by Hal Roach in 1922, and continued production until 1944.", "score": "1.4029105" }, { "id": "1233464", "title": "Eddie Noack", "text": "1001 One Light In Your Neighborhood/East Texas (1972) ; 1002 Ain't Reaping Ever Done/Before You Use That Gun (1972) ; 1005 These Memories Are Restless Tonight/Born Yesterday (1973) (also on Wide World WW 802) ", "score": "1.4026573" }, { "id": "1233443", "title": "Eddie Noack", "text": " De Armand Alexander \"Eddie\" Noack, Jr. (April 29, 1930 – February 5, 1978), was an American country and western singer, songwriter and music industry executive. He is best known for his 1968 recording of the controversial murder ballad, \"Psycho\", written by Leon Payne, produced by John Capps and issued on the K-ark Records label.", "score": "1.4021279" }, { "id": "8427681", "title": "Eddie Barefield", "text": "1971: L' Aventure Du Jazz - Musique Du Film (Jazz Odyssey) ; 1975: Swing Today Volume Three (RCA) ", "score": "1.3967177" }, { "id": "11200565", "title": "Cult with No Name", "text": " The Stranglers' classic \"Golden Brown\". The album was met with positive reviews, with supporters that include the filmmaker Don Letts. Former Suede frontman, Brett Anderson, also invited Cult With No Name to open for him at the launch of his solo album Slow Attack. The band's next project was to record a new score for the classic German expressionist silent film, The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, which was released simultaneously as a DVD and digital download in 2009 and coincided with the 90th anniversary of the making of the film. The score was notable for the inclusion of songs alongside instrumental soundscapes. ", "score": "1.3940642" }, { "id": "14119224", "title": "Kool & the Gang", "text": " Their next album, Music Is the Message, was the first time the group self-produced one of their records. It was released in July 1972, and peaked at No. 25 on the R&B chart. It was followed with Good Times in November, which features the band backed by a string section. The elements of jazz, rock, and instrumental styles on the record made it difficult for reviewers to label them as one specific genre. The album failed to generate the amount of radio exposure the band had expected to gain a new audience, so they looked at ways to breakthrough without relying on the radio.", "score": "1.3930404" }, { "id": "1233447", "title": "Eddie Noack", "text": " Eddie Noack quit performing after 1959 to concentrate on songwriting and to become involved in music publishing. Noack was employed by Pappy Daily and Lefty Frizzell in publishing while he continued to write songs. His compositions were covered by many country singers, including Johnny Cash (\"These Hands\"), George Jones and Ernest Tubb. He made several comebacks as a performer but never reached a wide audience. In 1968, Noack recorded his cover of \"Psycho\" for K-Ark Records, which sold little and received negligible air play. He also continued recording into the 1970s, including an album of Jimmie Rodgers covers. Among the labels he ", "score": "1.3914406" }, { "id": "7772161", "title": "The Purple Gang (American band)", "text": " from North Hollywood High School. The band chose their name based on the infamous Chicago gang of the same name. According to former member Marty Tryon, \"I am pretty sure the name The Purple Gang came from Rosemary Richland. She told us about the gangsters in Detroit that were called the Purple Gang during the 1930s. They got us purple shirts with puffy sleeves and away we went.\" Their original lineup consisted of Bob Corff (vocals), Alan Wisdom (guitar), Mark Landon (guitar), Marty Tryon (bass), Harry Garfield (keyboards), and Tom Atwater (drums) and their sound was influenced by bands such as the Beatles, ", "score": "1.3893503" }, { "id": "8671601", "title": "Eddie (album)", "text": " Eddie is the band's first release on Arts & Crafts, the Canadian record label home to notable acts such as Broken Social Scene, Japandroids, and BADBADNOTGOOD. It was announced on July 22, 2020. Like their previous full-length Uncommon Good, Eddie was produced by Neal Pogue, who was also heavily involved in the recording process. The album also features contributions from Verdine White of Earth, Wind & Fire, who served as an executive producer. According to the band, Eddie is intended to explore the question: “What advice would you impart on that younger self? And if you could pass your younger self a mixtape, what would it sound like?”.", "score": "1.3759415" }, { "id": "14119228", "title": "Kool & the Gang", "text": " Gang sound [...] and the public didn't like it\". The change in style affected their ability to secure as many dates than before, working \"just off and on\" during this time. The latter album received negative responses; one review for Everybody's Dancin had the headline: \"Kool and the Gang have gone bland.\" Writer Mike Duffy wrote: \"They've joined the disco lemmings [...] The edge has gone. Say so long to the raw and raunchy.\" During their low period, the band gained some mainstream attention with their contribution of \"Open Sesame\" to the soundtrack of Saturday Night Fever (1977). \"Summer Madness\" was also used in Rocky (1976), but not released on its soundtrack album.", "score": "1.3749069" }, { "id": "26897926", "title": "Eddie Money", "text": "Eddie Money (1977) ; Life for the Taking (1978) ; Playing for Keeps (1980) ; No Control (1982) ; Where's the Party? (1983) ; Can't Hold Back (1986) ; Nothing to Lose (1988) ; Right Here (1991) ; Love and Money (1995) ; Ready Eddie (1999) ; Wanna Go Back (2007) Studio albums", "score": "1.3738983" }, { "id": "11502717", "title": "Bring Me the Head of Oliver Plunkett", "text": " Bring Me the Head of Oliver Plunkett is the second novel of the Eddie & the Gang with No Name trilogy by Northern Irish author, Colin Bateman, published on 13 May 2004 through Hodder Children's Books.", "score": "1.3736296" } ]
[ "Reservoir Pups\n Reservoir Pups (also known as Running with the Reservoir Pups) is the first novel of the Eddie & the Gang with No Name trilogy by Northern Irish author, Colin Bateman, published on 13 November 2003 through Hodder Children's Books. It is Bateman's first young adult novel.", "Room 25\n\"No Name\" is stylized in lowercase as \"no name\" ; \"Blaxploitation\" contains a sample from the 1973 film The Spook Who Sat By the Door Track list adapted from Noname's Twitter. Notes", "The Friends of Eddie Coyle\n The Friends of Eddie Coyle is a 1973 American neo-noir crime film starring Robert Mitchum and Peter Boyle and directed by Peter Yates. The screenplay by Paul Monash was adapted from the 1970 novel The Friends of Eddie Coyle by George V. Higgins. The film tells the story of Eddie Coyle (Mitchum), a small-time career hoodlum in the Irish Mob in Boston, Massachusetts. The title is purely ironic: Eddie has no friends. While critical reception was positive, with particular praise for Mitchum's performance, the movie was not popular with filmgoers and failed to rank in the top 30 either in 1973 (when it was released mid-year) or 1974, and failed to recoup its budget in combined box office.", "The Gang's All Here (1943 film)\n and Charles Saggau ; \"No Love, No Nothin\" ; Music by Harry Warren ; Lyrics by Leo Robin ; Arranged by Benny Carter ; Sung by Alice Faye ; Danced by Tony De Marco and Sheila Ryan ; \"(I've Got a Gal in) Kalamazoo\" ; Music by Harry Warren ; Lyrics by Mack Gordon ; Played by Benny Goodman and his band ; \"Paducah\" ; Music by Harry Warren ; Lyrics by Leo Robin ; Played by Benny Goodman and His Orchestra ; Sung by Benny Goodman and Carmen Miranda ; Danced by Carmen Miranda and Tony De Marco ; \"The Polka Dot Polka\" ; ", "The Gang's All Here (1943 film)\n shown in Brazil on its initial release. In the US, the censors dictated that the chorus girls must hold the bananas at the waist and not at the hip. Alice Faye sings \"A Journey to a Star,\" \"No Love, No Nothin',\" and the surreal finale \"The Polka-Dot Polka.\" The film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Art Direction-Interior Decoration, Color (James Basevi, Joseph C. Wright, Thomas Little). It was the last musical Faye made as a Hollywood superstar. She was pregnant with her second daughter during filming. In 2014, The Gang's All Here was deemed \"culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant\" by the Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the National Film Registry.", "Eddie Noack\n he would work for the bulk of his professional career. Noack was drafted in 1954 and spent two years in the Army. When Noack came home, he adopted a female sausage dog, named Biscuit. Back in the music business, he flourished as a songwriter at Starday, with Hank Snow's cover of his song \"These Hands\" reaching No. 5 on the country chart in 1956. When Pappy Daily founded D Records in 1958, he signed Noack, and his recording of his own composition \"Have Blues Will Travel\" reached No. 14 on the country chart. Under the name Tommy Wood, Noack recorded rockabilly music.", "Delta 4\n The Town with No Name (sometimes published as Town with No Name) is a Western action-adventure point-and-click game released by On-Line Entertainment in 1992 for the Commodore CDTV. A version for MS-DOS was released in 1993. The game stars \"The Man with No Name\" (no relation to the film character of the same name portrayed by Clint Eastwood), who gets off a train at the station in the eponymous town. Upon entering the town, he is quickly confronted by a gunman. Once No Name kills the gunman, an unnamed man with a cigarette who more closely resembles Eastwood's character reveals that the gunman was the littlest brother of Evil Eb, the leader of the Hole-in-the-Head Gang, and foreshadows that Eb will send his bandits ", "Crazy Gang (comedy group)\n often turned up in their films. Eddie Gray, their associate and equally crazy comic, appeared in the later Life Is a Circus only. In Life Is a Circus (1958), starring Shirley Eaton, Flanagan and Allen again performed their biggest hit, \"Underneath the Arches\". Chesney Allen withdrew from live performances in later years due to ill health, though he outlived all the others. The Gang made a television series, The Gang Show, in 1956. The Gang was understudied by Peter Glaze. Among the other acts who worked with The Crazy Gang was the tall and rotund American percussionist Teddy Brown. His speciality was to perform on the xylophone. He also served as the butt of practical jokes by the Gang; at one performance Flanagan and Allen took to the stage ", "No Noise\n No Noise is the 17th Our Gang short subject comedy released. The Our Gang series (later known as \"The Little Rascals\") was created by Hal Roach in 1922, and continued production until 1944.", "Eddie Noack\n1001 One Light In Your Neighborhood/East Texas (1972) ; 1002 Ain't Reaping Ever Done/Before You Use That Gun (1972) ; 1005 These Memories Are Restless Tonight/Born Yesterday (1973) (also on Wide World WW 802) ", "Eddie Noack\n De Armand Alexander \"Eddie\" Noack, Jr. (April 29, 1930 – February 5, 1978), was an American country and western singer, songwriter and music industry executive. He is best known for his 1968 recording of the controversial murder ballad, \"Psycho\", written by Leon Payne, produced by John Capps and issued on the K-ark Records label.", "Eddie Barefield\n1971: L' Aventure Du Jazz - Musique Du Film (Jazz Odyssey) ; 1975: Swing Today Volume Three (RCA) ", "Cult with No Name\n The Stranglers' classic \"Golden Brown\". The album was met with positive reviews, with supporters that include the filmmaker Don Letts. Former Suede frontman, Brett Anderson, also invited Cult With No Name to open for him at the launch of his solo album Slow Attack. The band's next project was to record a new score for the classic German expressionist silent film, The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, which was released simultaneously as a DVD and digital download in 2009 and coincided with the 90th anniversary of the making of the film. The score was notable for the inclusion of songs alongside instrumental soundscapes. ", "Kool & the Gang\n Their next album, Music Is the Message, was the first time the group self-produced one of their records. It was released in July 1972, and peaked at No. 25 on the R&B chart. It was followed with Good Times in November, which features the band backed by a string section. The elements of jazz, rock, and instrumental styles on the record made it difficult for reviewers to label them as one specific genre. The album failed to generate the amount of radio exposure the band had expected to gain a new audience, so they looked at ways to breakthrough without relying on the radio.", "Eddie Noack\n Eddie Noack quit performing after 1959 to concentrate on songwriting and to become involved in music publishing. Noack was employed by Pappy Daily and Lefty Frizzell in publishing while he continued to write songs. His compositions were covered by many country singers, including Johnny Cash (\"These Hands\"), George Jones and Ernest Tubb. He made several comebacks as a performer but never reached a wide audience. In 1968, Noack recorded his cover of \"Psycho\" for K-Ark Records, which sold little and received negligible air play. He also continued recording into the 1970s, including an album of Jimmie Rodgers covers. Among the labels he ", "The Purple Gang (American band)\n from North Hollywood High School. The band chose their name based on the infamous Chicago gang of the same name. According to former member Marty Tryon, \"I am pretty sure the name The Purple Gang came from Rosemary Richland. She told us about the gangsters in Detroit that were called the Purple Gang during the 1930s. They got us purple shirts with puffy sleeves and away we went.\" Their original lineup consisted of Bob Corff (vocals), Alan Wisdom (guitar), Mark Landon (guitar), Marty Tryon (bass), Harry Garfield (keyboards), and Tom Atwater (drums) and their sound was influenced by bands such as the Beatles, ", "Eddie (album)\n Eddie is the band's first release on Arts & Crafts, the Canadian record label home to notable acts such as Broken Social Scene, Japandroids, and BADBADNOTGOOD. It was announced on July 22, 2020. Like their previous full-length Uncommon Good, Eddie was produced by Neal Pogue, who was also heavily involved in the recording process. The album also features contributions from Verdine White of Earth, Wind & Fire, who served as an executive producer. According to the band, Eddie is intended to explore the question: “What advice would you impart on that younger self? And if you could pass your younger self a mixtape, what would it sound like?”.", "Kool & the Gang\n Gang sound [...] and the public didn't like it\". The change in style affected their ability to secure as many dates than before, working \"just off and on\" during this time. The latter album received negative responses; one review for Everybody's Dancin had the headline: \"Kool and the Gang have gone bland.\" Writer Mike Duffy wrote: \"They've joined the disco lemmings [...] The edge has gone. Say so long to the raw and raunchy.\" During their low period, the band gained some mainstream attention with their contribution of \"Open Sesame\" to the soundtrack of Saturday Night Fever (1977). \"Summer Madness\" was also used in Rocky (1976), but not released on its soundtrack album.", "Eddie Money\nEddie Money (1977) ; Life for the Taking (1978) ; Playing for Keeps (1980) ; No Control (1982) ; Where's the Party? (1983) ; Can't Hold Back (1986) ; Nothing to Lose (1988) ; Right Here (1991) ; Love and Money (1995) ; Ready Eddie (1999) ; Wanna Go Back (2007) Studio albums", "Bring Me the Head of Oliver Plunkett\n Bring Me the Head of Oliver Plunkett is the second novel of the Eddie & the Gang with No Name trilogy by Northern Irish author, Colin Bateman, published on 13 May 2004 through Hodder Children's Books." ]
Who was the composer of Big Foot?
[ "Charlie Parker", "Yardbird", "Bird", "Charles Parker Jr.", "Charlie Parker Jr.", "Charles Christopher Parker, Jr." ]
composer
Drifting on a Reed
1,121,628
73
[ { "id": "16380423", "title": "Big Foot (Charlie Parker composition)", "text": " \"Big Foot\" or \"Drifting on a Reed\" is a 1948 jazz standard. It was written by Charlie Parker.", "score": "1.6401227" }, { "id": "33067661", "title": "Mark Goffeney", "text": " Mark Goffeney (May 22, 1969 – March 2, 2021) was an American musician from San Diego, California, known as \"Big Toe\" because, being born without arms, he played guitar with his feet. He was bassist and vocalist for the 'Big Toe' band and played the principal role on Fox Television's Emmy-nominated commercial 'Feet'.", "score": "1.5151544" }, { "id": "13237056", "title": "The Big Foot", "text": " Big Foot is a 1927 crime novel by Edgar Wallace. This is one of the most significant of his works because of the character Sooper, a detective from Metropolitan Guard. A woman is found dead in a locked room, Big Foot's threats all about... but - apparently - Sooper is more concerned about a singing tramp. The brutal murder of a woman in a lonely beach cottage, huge footprints found nearby, a meandering tramp singing snatches of opera in the night! Superintendent Minter - \"Sooper\", rattles around the countryside on his noisy motorbike and tries to find a connection. Hampered by amateur detective Gordon Cardew, aided and admired by lawyer Jim Ferraby and the beautiful Elfa Leigh, Sooper finds the case further complicated by another murder. The mysterious `Big Foot' anticipates Minter's every move and only by delving into the past does he solve the case and bring the villain to justice.", "score": "1.4955475" }, { "id": "14425224", "title": "Big Foot (The Goodies)", "text": " \"Big Foot\" is an episode of the British comedy television series The Goodies. The episode is also known as \"Bigfoot\", \"In Search of Bigfoot\", \"Arthur C. Clarke\" and \"In Search of Arthur C. Clarke\". This episode was made by LWT for ITV, and was written by The Goodies, with songs and music by Bill Oddie.", "score": "1.4922006" }, { "id": "11242015", "title": "Your Feet's Too Big", "text": " \"Your Feet's Too Big\" is a song composed in 1936 by Fred Fisher with lyrics by Ada Benson. It has been recorded by many artists, notably the Ink Spots and by Fats Waller in 1939. The song became associated with Waller who ad-libbed his own lyrics such as \"Your pedal extremities are colossal, to me you look just like a fossil\" and his catchphrase, \"You know, your pedal extremities really are obnoxious. One never knows, do one?\" It was performed in the 1978 revue of Waller tunes, Ain't Misbehavin'. The TV comedy series Harry and the Hendersons used Leon Redbone's version of the song as its theme tune. The film Be Kind Rewind used Fats Waller’s version of the song, although Mos Def recorded his own rendition of the song as recorded by Waller for the film.", "score": "1.4631355" }, { "id": "2004165", "title": "Operation Big", "text": " Footnotes", "score": "1.4406565" }, { "id": "3586013", "title": "Fats Waller", "text": " to Bed, his original idea was for Waller to perform in it as a comic character, not to write the music. Waller was, after all, as much a comedian as a musician. Comedy rarely dates well, but almost 80 years later, his comments and timing during \"Your Feet's Too Big\" are as funny as anything on Comedy Central, and he nearly walks away with the movie Stormy Weather with just one musical scene and a bit of mugging later on, despite the competition of Bill \"Bojangles\" Robinson, Lena Horne, and the Nicholas Brothers. Kollmar's original choice for composer [of Early to ", "score": "1.4379959" }, { "id": "29652341", "title": "Howard Biggs", "text": " Born in Seattle, Washington, the son of naval machinist Antonio Biggs and Thelma Buchanan, he learned piano as a child and gave his first concert at the First African Methodist Episcopal Church in the city at the age of ten. He studied at the University of Washington before becoming resident composer with the Negro Repertory Company in Seattle. In 1937 he composed the score for the company's production An Evening with Dunbar, based on the life and poems of Paul Laurence Dunbar, and wrote several songs incorporating Dunbar's words as well as directing the theatre chorus. In 1939 he wrote the score for ", "score": "1.4340059" }, { "id": "4715769", "title": "Sir Lucious Left Foot: The Son of Chico Dusty", "text": " for new music. After being approached by artistic director John McFall in 2007, Big Boi collaborated with the Atlanta Ballet company on a production entitled big. As creative director, Big Boi recruited bandmembers, developed a story line, and worked with choreographer Lauri Stallings to put the project together. The production received good buzz and ran for six performances in April 2010 at the Fox Theatre in Atlanta. It featured him in a starring role as himself, a live band of musicians from the Purple Ribbon label, performances by Sleepy Brown and Janelle Monáe, and syncopated dance sequences set to OutKast hits and tracks intended for Big Boi's solo album.", "score": "1.4220538" }, { "id": "30166933", "title": "Feet of Flames", "text": " Feet of Flames is an Irish dance show directed by Michael Flatley and scored by Ronan Hardiman. Flatley was known for the shows Riverdance and Lord of the Dance.", "score": "1.4202011" }, { "id": "14533893", "title": "Morton's Foot", "text": " Morton's Foot is an album by the Lebanese oud player and composer Rabih Abou-Khalil which was recorded in Germany in 2003 and released on the Enja label.", "score": "1.4178404" }, { "id": "4715765", "title": "Sir Lucious Left Foot: The Son of Chico Dusty", "text": " Sir Lucious Left Foot: The Son of Chico Dusty is the debut studio album by American rapper Big Boi, released on July 5, 2010, by Purple Ribbon Records and Def Jam Recordings. It is his first solo album, following his work as a member of the hip hop duo OutKast. Production for the album took place primarily at Stankonia Recording Studio in Atlanta during 2007 to 2010 and was handled by several record producers, including Organized Noize, Scott Storch, Salaam Remi, Mr. DJ, and André 3000, among others. Rooted in Southern hip hop and funk music, Sir Lucious Left Foot features a bounce and bass-heavy sound, layered production, and assorted musical elements. Its lyrics deal with boasting, sex, social commentary, and club themes, featuring Big Boi's clever wordplay and versatile flow. ", "score": "1.4165848" }, { "id": "5128743", "title": "Big Foot Museum", "text": " Its name come from what has been narrated as The Legend of the Big Foot.", "score": "1.4099715" }, { "id": "26170676", "title": "Innovaders", "text": "Metropolis Magazine Article: Scores for Stores Their first major hit was \"Feetlegshead,\" which features a young ballet student explaining the importance of every movement while dancing. This track was used in The March 2003 issue of Metropolis Magazine's online article about the Guggenheim Museum.", "score": "1.4056698" }, { "id": "15149518", "title": "Norman Foote", "text": " Norman Mervyn Barrington-Foote is a Canadian musician, songwriter, and comedian. Foote is originally from Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. He has been nominated for four Juno Awards for Best Children's Album in 1990, 1993, 2001, and won in 2010. He has written for Walt Disney Records, Shari Lewis, CBC's syndicated TV show Scoop and Doozie, and Koba Entertainment, with productions including Nelvana's Little Bear Live, Max and Ruby live on stage shows, Toopy and Binoo in The Marshmallow Moon and Backyardigans Live.", "score": "1.4038112" }, { "id": "30887002", "title": "Dave Cavanaugh", "text": " David Cavanaugh, also known as Dave Cavanaugh or occasionally Big Dave Cavanaugh, (March 13, 1919 – December 31, 1981) was an American composer, arranger, musician and producer.", "score": "1.3976461" }, { "id": "5128739", "title": "Big Foot Museum", "text": " Big Foot Museum is a museum and a theme park based in the South Goa, India, village of Loutolim in the sub-district (or taluka) of Salcete. It is a museum dedicated to rural Goan life. It was founded and is run by the artist Maendra Alvares. Loutolim is close to Margao.", "score": "1.394534" }, { "id": "6863520", "title": "The Legend of Bigfoot", "text": " Don Peake composed the music for the film.", "score": "1.3913059" }, { "id": "1790527", "title": "Jack Elliott (composer)", "text": " mater, the University of Hartford's Hartt School of Music. Elliott was co-founder and music director of the American Jazz Philharmonic (formerly the New American Orchestra) and creator of the Henry Mancini Institute. The original name of the Orchestra was \"The Big O\" and was the largest jazz orchestra of its kind featuring over 92 musicians. Elliott blended the classical European style orchestra with modern American jazz style. His professional repertoire was diverse, highlighted by stints as music director for the Academy Awards, Emmy Awards, Kennedy Center Honors and the 1984 Summer Olympics. In addition, he holds the distinction of serving as music director of the Grammy Awards for 30 consecutive years. He had an accomplished career in film, scoring numerous hit movies, including Sibling Rivalry, The Jerk, Oh God!, and Where's Poppa?. He also produced the Blade Runner soundtrack album with the New American Orchestra.", "score": "1.3861909" }, { "id": "5425249", "title": "Ronan Hardiman", "text": " Ronan Hardiman (born 19 May 1961 in Dublin, Ireland) is an Irish composer, famous for his soundtracks to Michael Flatley's dance shows Lord of the Dance, Feet of Flames and Celtic Tiger Live.", "score": "1.3842816" } ]
[ "Big Foot (Charlie Parker composition)\n \"Big Foot\" or \"Drifting on a Reed\" is a 1948 jazz standard. It was written by Charlie Parker.", "Mark Goffeney\n Mark Goffeney (May 22, 1969 – March 2, 2021) was an American musician from San Diego, California, known as \"Big Toe\" because, being born without arms, he played guitar with his feet. He was bassist and vocalist for the 'Big Toe' band and played the principal role on Fox Television's Emmy-nominated commercial 'Feet'.", "The Big Foot\n Big Foot is a 1927 crime novel by Edgar Wallace. This is one of the most significant of his works because of the character Sooper, a detective from Metropolitan Guard. A woman is found dead in a locked room, Big Foot's threats all about... but - apparently - Sooper is more concerned about a singing tramp. The brutal murder of a woman in a lonely beach cottage, huge footprints found nearby, a meandering tramp singing snatches of opera in the night! Superintendent Minter - \"Sooper\", rattles around the countryside on his noisy motorbike and tries to find a connection. Hampered by amateur detective Gordon Cardew, aided and admired by lawyer Jim Ferraby and the beautiful Elfa Leigh, Sooper finds the case further complicated by another murder. The mysterious `Big Foot' anticipates Minter's every move and only by delving into the past does he solve the case and bring the villain to justice.", "Big Foot (The Goodies)\n \"Big Foot\" is an episode of the British comedy television series The Goodies. The episode is also known as \"Bigfoot\", \"In Search of Bigfoot\", \"Arthur C. Clarke\" and \"In Search of Arthur C. Clarke\". This episode was made by LWT for ITV, and was written by The Goodies, with songs and music by Bill Oddie.", "Your Feet's Too Big\n \"Your Feet's Too Big\" is a song composed in 1936 by Fred Fisher with lyrics by Ada Benson. It has been recorded by many artists, notably the Ink Spots and by Fats Waller in 1939. The song became associated with Waller who ad-libbed his own lyrics such as \"Your pedal extremities are colossal, to me you look just like a fossil\" and his catchphrase, \"You know, your pedal extremities really are obnoxious. One never knows, do one?\" It was performed in the 1978 revue of Waller tunes, Ain't Misbehavin'. The TV comedy series Harry and the Hendersons used Leon Redbone's version of the song as its theme tune. The film Be Kind Rewind used Fats Waller’s version of the song, although Mos Def recorded his own rendition of the song as recorded by Waller for the film.", "Operation Big\n Footnotes", "Fats Waller\n to Bed, his original idea was for Waller to perform in it as a comic character, not to write the music. Waller was, after all, as much a comedian as a musician. Comedy rarely dates well, but almost 80 years later, his comments and timing during \"Your Feet's Too Big\" are as funny as anything on Comedy Central, and he nearly walks away with the movie Stormy Weather with just one musical scene and a bit of mugging later on, despite the competition of Bill \"Bojangles\" Robinson, Lena Horne, and the Nicholas Brothers. Kollmar's original choice for composer [of Early to ", "Howard Biggs\n Born in Seattle, Washington, the son of naval machinist Antonio Biggs and Thelma Buchanan, he learned piano as a child and gave his first concert at the First African Methodist Episcopal Church in the city at the age of ten. He studied at the University of Washington before becoming resident composer with the Negro Repertory Company in Seattle. In 1937 he composed the score for the company's production An Evening with Dunbar, based on the life and poems of Paul Laurence Dunbar, and wrote several songs incorporating Dunbar's words as well as directing the theatre chorus. In 1939 he wrote the score for ", "Sir Lucious Left Foot: The Son of Chico Dusty\n for new music. After being approached by artistic director John McFall in 2007, Big Boi collaborated with the Atlanta Ballet company on a production entitled big. As creative director, Big Boi recruited bandmembers, developed a story line, and worked with choreographer Lauri Stallings to put the project together. The production received good buzz and ran for six performances in April 2010 at the Fox Theatre in Atlanta. It featured him in a starring role as himself, a live band of musicians from the Purple Ribbon label, performances by Sleepy Brown and Janelle Monáe, and syncopated dance sequences set to OutKast hits and tracks intended for Big Boi's solo album.", "Feet of Flames\n Feet of Flames is an Irish dance show directed by Michael Flatley and scored by Ronan Hardiman. Flatley was known for the shows Riverdance and Lord of the Dance.", "Morton's Foot\n Morton's Foot is an album by the Lebanese oud player and composer Rabih Abou-Khalil which was recorded in Germany in 2003 and released on the Enja label.", "Sir Lucious Left Foot: The Son of Chico Dusty\n Sir Lucious Left Foot: The Son of Chico Dusty is the debut studio album by American rapper Big Boi, released on July 5, 2010, by Purple Ribbon Records and Def Jam Recordings. It is his first solo album, following his work as a member of the hip hop duo OutKast. Production for the album took place primarily at Stankonia Recording Studio in Atlanta during 2007 to 2010 and was handled by several record producers, including Organized Noize, Scott Storch, Salaam Remi, Mr. DJ, and André 3000, among others. Rooted in Southern hip hop and funk music, Sir Lucious Left Foot features a bounce and bass-heavy sound, layered production, and assorted musical elements. Its lyrics deal with boasting, sex, social commentary, and club themes, featuring Big Boi's clever wordplay and versatile flow. ", "Big Foot Museum\n Its name come from what has been narrated as The Legend of the Big Foot.", "Innovaders\nMetropolis Magazine Article: Scores for Stores Their first major hit was \"Feetlegshead,\" which features a young ballet student explaining the importance of every movement while dancing. This track was used in The March 2003 issue of Metropolis Magazine's online article about the Guggenheim Museum.", "Norman Foote\n Norman Mervyn Barrington-Foote is a Canadian musician, songwriter, and comedian. Foote is originally from Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. He has been nominated for four Juno Awards for Best Children's Album in 1990, 1993, 2001, and won in 2010. He has written for Walt Disney Records, Shari Lewis, CBC's syndicated TV show Scoop and Doozie, and Koba Entertainment, with productions including Nelvana's Little Bear Live, Max and Ruby live on stage shows, Toopy and Binoo in The Marshmallow Moon and Backyardigans Live.", "Dave Cavanaugh\n David Cavanaugh, also known as Dave Cavanaugh or occasionally Big Dave Cavanaugh, (March 13, 1919 – December 31, 1981) was an American composer, arranger, musician and producer.", "Big Foot Museum\n Big Foot Museum is a museum and a theme park based in the South Goa, India, village of Loutolim in the sub-district (or taluka) of Salcete. It is a museum dedicated to rural Goan life. It was founded and is run by the artist Maendra Alvares. Loutolim is close to Margao.", "The Legend of Bigfoot\n Don Peake composed the music for the film.", "Jack Elliott (composer)\n mater, the University of Hartford's Hartt School of Music. Elliott was co-founder and music director of the American Jazz Philharmonic (formerly the New American Orchestra) and creator of the Henry Mancini Institute. The original name of the Orchestra was \"The Big O\" and was the largest jazz orchestra of its kind featuring over 92 musicians. Elliott blended the classical European style orchestra with modern American jazz style. His professional repertoire was diverse, highlighted by stints as music director for the Academy Awards, Emmy Awards, Kennedy Center Honors and the 1984 Summer Olympics. In addition, he holds the distinction of serving as music director of the Grammy Awards for 30 consecutive years. He had an accomplished career in film, scoring numerous hit movies, including Sibling Rivalry, The Jerk, Oh God!, and Where's Poppa?. He also produced the Blade Runner soundtrack album with the New American Orchestra.", "Ronan Hardiman\n Ronan Hardiman (born 19 May 1961 in Dublin, Ireland) is an Irish composer, famous for his soundtracks to Michael Flatley's dance shows Lord of the Dance, Feet of Flames and Celtic Tiger Live." ]
What is Matthew McKay's occupation?
[ "dentist", "dentists", "dental surgeon" ]
occupation
Matthew McKay (politician)
5,120,341
63
[ { "id": "15072933", "title": "Matthew McKay (politician)", "text": " Matthew McKay (6 October 1858 – 14 February 1937) was a Liberal party member of the House of Commons of Canada. He was born in West Gwillimbury Township, Ontario and became a dentist, dental surgeon and schoolteacher. McKay attended high school at Bradford, Whitby Collegiate Institute, Normal School in Toronto and Queen's University in Kingston (Bachelor of Arts) and the Royal College of Dental Surgeons in Toronto. McKay was a councillor of Pembroke, Ontario for five years and once served as the community's mayor. He was first elected to Parliament at the Renfrew North riding in the 1921 general election. After serving one term, he was defeated by Ira Delbert Cotnam of the Conservative party in the 1925 election. After unsuccessful attempts to unseat Cotnam in 1926 and 1930, McKay returned to the House of Commons by defeating Cotnam in the 1935 election. McKay died at an Ottawa hospital on 14 February 1937 from influenza and pneumonia before completing his term in the 18th Canadian Parliament. He was survived by a wife, two daughters and a son.", "score": "1.6476088" }, { "id": "2979521", "title": "Matt McKay (English footballer)", "text": " Matt McKay (born 21 January 1981) is an English footballer who played as a midfielder in the Football League for Chester City. McKay joined Everton from Chester on transfer deadline day on 26 March 1998. He did not make any appearances for the Everton first team and was forced to retire at the early age of 21 due to injury.", "score": "1.6228268" }, { "id": "9751469", "title": "Adam McKay", "text": "Acting roles ", "score": "1.572121" }, { "id": "9211131", "title": "Ben McKay (footballer)", "text": " Ben McKay (born 24 December 1997) is a professional Australian rules footballer playing for the North Melbourne Football Club in the Australian Football League (AFL).", "score": "1.526839" }, { "id": "1191712", "title": "Christian McKay", "text": " McKay was born in Bury, Lancashire. He has a sister, Karen. His mother, Lynn, worked as a hairdresser, and his father, Stuart, was a railway worker. He studied piano as a youth, and performed the Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto No. 3 at age 21. McKay subsequently halted his concert career and enrolled at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art to study acting.", "score": "1.5221274" }, { "id": "15908158", "title": "Ian G. McKay", "text": " McKay was born in Kamloops, British Columbia, and was raised in Penticton, British Columbia. He is the youngest of five boys. In July 1980, he was sent by his hometown to live in the city of Ikeda, on Japan’s island of Hokkaido. At the age of 16, he developed a lifelong appreciation for the country and for its language. Upon graduating from Penticton Secondary School in 1981, he returned to Japan as a Rotary Youth Exchange student. Following his studies, McKay worked and lived in Japan over the course of 14 years. McKay studied Political Science and Asian Studies at the University of Victoria and the University of British Columbia; he received an MBA from Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario, in 2005.", "score": "1.4855819" }, { "id": "8184804", "title": "Tim McKay", "text": " McKay graduated from Humboldt State University and was a long-term resident of Trinidad, California.", "score": "1.4839413" }, { "id": "9165023", "title": "Alexander Gordon McKay", "text": " Alexander Gordon \"Sandy\" McKay, (December 24, 1924 – August 31, 2007) was a Canadian academic who specialized in Vergilian studies. Born in Toronto, Ontario, McKay graduated from Upper Canada College in 1942. He received a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1946 from the University of Toronto, a Master of Arts degree in 1947 from Yale University, a A.M. degree in 1948 from Princeton University and a Ph.D in 1950 from Princeton. He started his academic career as an instructor at Princeton University from 1947 to 1949. He then taught at Wells College (1949-1950), the University of Pennsylvania (1950-1951), the University of Manitoba (1951-1952), Mount ", "score": "1.4837801" }, { "id": "27173559", "title": "John McKay (pianist)", "text": " John McKay (born November 11, 1938) is an American pianist and music educator of Canadian birth. He has performed in concerts, recitals, and on radio and television broadcasts throughout North America and Europe. His programs often include works by contemporary American and Canadian composers, and he has performed the world premieres of works by Mortimer Barron, Clermont Pépin and Harry Somers among other composers. He has also performed extensively as a chamber musician and accompanist, including in performances with his wife, contralto Sara Hayden. In 1989 he co-founded the Minnesota Valley Sommarfest.", "score": "1.4716108" }, { "id": "4810636", "title": "John McKay (politician)", "text": " John Norman McKay (born March 21, 1948) is a Canadian lawyer and politician. He is the Liberal Member of Parliament for the riding of Scarborough—Guildwood. McKay was Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Finance from 2003 to 2006 during the government of Paul Martin, then served as an opposition MP and critic until November 2015 during the government of Stephen Harper. As of April, 2019, he serves as Chair of the Standing Committee on Public Safety and National Security; Chair of the Canadian Section of the Canada-United States Permanent Joint Board on Defence; Chair of the Canada-United Kingdom Inter-Parliamentary Association, Vice-Chair of the Canada-United States Inter-Parliamentary Group, and Counsellor Canadian NATO Parliamentary Association. McKay was sworn in as a ", "score": "1.4711405" }, { "id": "15153147", "title": "John McKay (mathematician)", "text": " McKay earned his Bachelor and Diploma in 1961 and 1962 at the University of Manchester, and his Ph.D. in 1971 from the University of Edinburgh. Since 1974 he works at Concordia University, since 1979 as a professor in Computer Science. He was elected a fellow of the Royal Society of Canada in 2000, and won the 2003 CRM-Fields-PIMS prize. In April 2007 a Joint Conference was organised by the Université de Montréal and Concordia University honouring four decades of the work of John McKay.", "score": "1.4687953" }, { "id": "4810641", "title": "John McKay (politician)", "text": " Between 2015 and 2019 McKay served as the Parliamentary Secretary to then Minister of National Defence Harjit Sajjan.", "score": "1.4630879" }, { "id": "1491120", "title": "Christopher McKay", "text": " Dr Christopher P. McKay (born 1954) is an American planetary scientist at NASA Ames Research Center, studying planetary atmospheres, astrobiology, and terraforming. McKay majored in physics at Florida Atlantic University, where he also studied mechanical engineering, graduating in 1975, and received his PhD in astrogeophysics from the University of Colorado in 1982.", "score": "1.4554855" }, { "id": "1191711", "title": "Christian McKay", "text": " Christian Stuart McKay (born 30 December 1973 ) is an English stage and screen actor. He is perhaps best known for his portrayal of Orson Welles in the 2008 film Me and Orson Welles, for which he was nominated for over two dozen awards including the BAFTA Award for Best Supporting Actor. He also appeared in movies such as Florence Foster Jenkins, The Theory of Everything, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy and Rush.", "score": "1.4535503" }, { "id": "31138824", "title": "Joel McKay", "text": " Joel McKay (born 16 July 1979) is a former Australian rules footballer who played with Geelong in the Australian Football League (AFL). Geelong secured McKay with the 15th selection of the 1997 National Draft. He was drafted from the Murray Bushrangers, but came from Wodonga originally. During his time at Geelong he struggled with back injuries and played just four senior AFL games, two in 1998 and two in 2000.", "score": "1.4513147" }, { "id": "4810642", "title": "John McKay (politician)", "text": "Liberal Party of Canada Critic for Environment – 2013–2015 ; Liberal Party of Canada Critic for Defence – 2011-2013 ; Official Opposition Critic for Small Business and Tourism – 2008 ; Official Opposition Critic for Crown Corporations – 2006 McKay served as the Critic for the Environment for the Liberal Party of Canada during the government of Steven Harper He was appointed to the role by Liberal Party Leader Justin Trudeau on August 21, 2013. His positions include: ", "score": "1.4486526" }, { "id": "27173560", "title": "John McKay (pianist)", "text": " Born in Montreal, McKay studied the piano with Lubka Kolessa in his native city as a boy. He graduated from the Schulich School of Music at McGill University with a Bachelor of Music in 1961. In 1962 he won the Prix d'Europe which enabled him to pursue studies in Vienna and Cologne with Bruno Seidlhofer and in Brussels with Stefan Askenase. In 1969 he joined the music faculties of both the University of Toronto and The Royal Conservatory of Music. He taught concurrently at those institutions until 1972 when was appointed head of the piano department at Dalhousie University. In ", "score": "1.4472618" }, { "id": "9073096", "title": "Matthew Good", "text": " Matthew Frederick Robert Good (born June 29, 1971) is a Canadian musician. He was the lead singer and songwriter for the Matthew Good Band, one of the most successful alternative rock bands in Canada during the 1990s and early 2000s. Since the band disbanded in 2002, Good has pursued a solo career and established himself as a political commentator and mental health activist. Between 1996 and 2016, with sales by Matthew Good Band included, Good was the 25th best-selling Canadian artist in Canada. Good has been nominated for 21 Juno Awards during his career, winning four.", "score": "1.4449303" }, { "id": "7094373", "title": "Nicholas McKay (actor)", "text": " Nicholas \"Nick\" McKay is an Australian actor who has appeared in a recurring role on the television series Farscape. In addition, he voiced Nev, a bull elephant seal in the acclaimed 2006 animated film, Happy Feet. He is the voice actor for The X Factor (Australia) and he was the original narrator of MasterChef Australia from 2009 until 2012. He was educated at The King's School, Parramatta. He was the voice-over for Network 10 multi-channel One HD, between 2009 & 2012. He is currently voice-over for the Seven News division of the Seven Network and associated promos.", "score": "1.4443958" }, { "id": "15153146", "title": "John McKay (mathematician)", "text": " John K. S. McKay (born 18 November 1939, Kent) is a dual British/Canadian citizen, a mathematician at Concordia University, known for his discovery of monstrous moonshine, his joint construction of some sporadic simple groups, for the McKay conjecture in representation theory, and for the McKay correspondence relating certain finite groups to Lie groups.", "score": "1.4426943" } ]
[ "Matthew McKay (politician)\n Matthew McKay (6 October 1858 – 14 February 1937) was a Liberal party member of the House of Commons of Canada. He was born in West Gwillimbury Township, Ontario and became a dentist, dental surgeon and schoolteacher. McKay attended high school at Bradford, Whitby Collegiate Institute, Normal School in Toronto and Queen's University in Kingston (Bachelor of Arts) and the Royal College of Dental Surgeons in Toronto. McKay was a councillor of Pembroke, Ontario for five years and once served as the community's mayor. He was first elected to Parliament at the Renfrew North riding in the 1921 general election. After serving one term, he was defeated by Ira Delbert Cotnam of the Conservative party in the 1925 election. After unsuccessful attempts to unseat Cotnam in 1926 and 1930, McKay returned to the House of Commons by defeating Cotnam in the 1935 election. McKay died at an Ottawa hospital on 14 February 1937 from influenza and pneumonia before completing his term in the 18th Canadian Parliament. He was survived by a wife, two daughters and a son.", "Matt McKay (English footballer)\n Matt McKay (born 21 January 1981) is an English footballer who played as a midfielder in the Football League for Chester City. McKay joined Everton from Chester on transfer deadline day on 26 March 1998. He did not make any appearances for the Everton first team and was forced to retire at the early age of 21 due to injury.", "Adam McKay\nActing roles ", "Ben McKay (footballer)\n Ben McKay (born 24 December 1997) is a professional Australian rules footballer playing for the North Melbourne Football Club in the Australian Football League (AFL).", "Christian McKay\n McKay was born in Bury, Lancashire. He has a sister, Karen. His mother, Lynn, worked as a hairdresser, and his father, Stuart, was a railway worker. He studied piano as a youth, and performed the Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto No. 3 at age 21. McKay subsequently halted his concert career and enrolled at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art to study acting.", "Ian G. McKay\n McKay was born in Kamloops, British Columbia, and was raised in Penticton, British Columbia. He is the youngest of five boys. In July 1980, he was sent by his hometown to live in the city of Ikeda, on Japan’s island of Hokkaido. At the age of 16, he developed a lifelong appreciation for the country and for its language. Upon graduating from Penticton Secondary School in 1981, he returned to Japan as a Rotary Youth Exchange student. Following his studies, McKay worked and lived in Japan over the course of 14 years. McKay studied Political Science and Asian Studies at the University of Victoria and the University of British Columbia; he received an MBA from Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario, in 2005.", "Tim McKay\n McKay graduated from Humboldt State University and was a long-term resident of Trinidad, California.", "Alexander Gordon McKay\n Alexander Gordon \"Sandy\" McKay, (December 24, 1924 – August 31, 2007) was a Canadian academic who specialized in Vergilian studies. Born in Toronto, Ontario, McKay graduated from Upper Canada College in 1942. He received a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1946 from the University of Toronto, a Master of Arts degree in 1947 from Yale University, a A.M. degree in 1948 from Princeton University and a Ph.D in 1950 from Princeton. He started his academic career as an instructor at Princeton University from 1947 to 1949. He then taught at Wells College (1949-1950), the University of Pennsylvania (1950-1951), the University of Manitoba (1951-1952), Mount ", "John McKay (pianist)\n John McKay (born November 11, 1938) is an American pianist and music educator of Canadian birth. He has performed in concerts, recitals, and on radio and television broadcasts throughout North America and Europe. His programs often include works by contemporary American and Canadian composers, and he has performed the world premieres of works by Mortimer Barron, Clermont Pépin and Harry Somers among other composers. He has also performed extensively as a chamber musician and accompanist, including in performances with his wife, contralto Sara Hayden. In 1989 he co-founded the Minnesota Valley Sommarfest.", "John McKay (politician)\n John Norman McKay (born March 21, 1948) is a Canadian lawyer and politician. He is the Liberal Member of Parliament for the riding of Scarborough—Guildwood. McKay was Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Finance from 2003 to 2006 during the government of Paul Martin, then served as an opposition MP and critic until November 2015 during the government of Stephen Harper. As of April, 2019, he serves as Chair of the Standing Committee on Public Safety and National Security; Chair of the Canadian Section of the Canada-United States Permanent Joint Board on Defence; Chair of the Canada-United Kingdom Inter-Parliamentary Association, Vice-Chair of the Canada-United States Inter-Parliamentary Group, and Counsellor Canadian NATO Parliamentary Association. McKay was sworn in as a ", "John McKay (mathematician)\n McKay earned his Bachelor and Diploma in 1961 and 1962 at the University of Manchester, and his Ph.D. in 1971 from the University of Edinburgh. Since 1974 he works at Concordia University, since 1979 as a professor in Computer Science. He was elected a fellow of the Royal Society of Canada in 2000, and won the 2003 CRM-Fields-PIMS prize. In April 2007 a Joint Conference was organised by the Université de Montréal and Concordia University honouring four decades of the work of John McKay.", "John McKay (politician)\n Between 2015 and 2019 McKay served as the Parliamentary Secretary to then Minister of National Defence Harjit Sajjan.", "Christopher McKay\n Dr Christopher P. McKay (born 1954) is an American planetary scientist at NASA Ames Research Center, studying planetary atmospheres, astrobiology, and terraforming. McKay majored in physics at Florida Atlantic University, where he also studied mechanical engineering, graduating in 1975, and received his PhD in astrogeophysics from the University of Colorado in 1982.", "Christian McKay\n Christian Stuart McKay (born 30 December 1973 ) is an English stage and screen actor. He is perhaps best known for his portrayal of Orson Welles in the 2008 film Me and Orson Welles, for which he was nominated for over two dozen awards including the BAFTA Award for Best Supporting Actor. He also appeared in movies such as Florence Foster Jenkins, The Theory of Everything, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy and Rush.", "Joel McKay\n Joel McKay (born 16 July 1979) is a former Australian rules footballer who played with Geelong in the Australian Football League (AFL). Geelong secured McKay with the 15th selection of the 1997 National Draft. He was drafted from the Murray Bushrangers, but came from Wodonga originally. During his time at Geelong he struggled with back injuries and played just four senior AFL games, two in 1998 and two in 2000.", "John McKay (politician)\nLiberal Party of Canada Critic for Environment – 2013–2015 ; Liberal Party of Canada Critic for Defence – 2011-2013 ; Official Opposition Critic for Small Business and Tourism – 2008 ; Official Opposition Critic for Crown Corporations – 2006 McKay served as the Critic for the Environment for the Liberal Party of Canada during the government of Steven Harper He was appointed to the role by Liberal Party Leader Justin Trudeau on August 21, 2013. His positions include: ", "John McKay (pianist)\n Born in Montreal, McKay studied the piano with Lubka Kolessa in his native city as a boy. He graduated from the Schulich School of Music at McGill University with a Bachelor of Music in 1961. In 1962 he won the Prix d'Europe which enabled him to pursue studies in Vienna and Cologne with Bruno Seidlhofer and in Brussels with Stefan Askenase. In 1969 he joined the music faculties of both the University of Toronto and The Royal Conservatory of Music. He taught concurrently at those institutions until 1972 when was appointed head of the piano department at Dalhousie University. In ", "Matthew Good\n Matthew Frederick Robert Good (born June 29, 1971) is a Canadian musician. He was the lead singer and songwriter for the Matthew Good Band, one of the most successful alternative rock bands in Canada during the 1990s and early 2000s. Since the band disbanded in 2002, Good has pursued a solo career and established himself as a political commentator and mental health activist. Between 1996 and 2016, with sales by Matthew Good Band included, Good was the 25th best-selling Canadian artist in Canada. Good has been nominated for 21 Juno Awards during his career, winning four.", "Nicholas McKay (actor)\n Nicholas \"Nick\" McKay is an Australian actor who has appeared in a recurring role on the television series Farscape. In addition, he voiced Nev, a bull elephant seal in the acclaimed 2006 animated film, Happy Feet. He is the voice actor for The X Factor (Australia) and he was the original narrator of MasterChef Australia from 2009 until 2012. He was educated at The King's School, Parramatta. He was the voice-over for Network 10 multi-channel One HD, between 2009 & 2012. He is currently voice-over for the Seven News division of the Seven Network and associated promos.", "John McKay (mathematician)\n John K. S. McKay (born 18 November 1939, Kent) is a dual British/Canadian citizen, a mathematician at Concordia University, known for his discovery of monstrous moonshine, his joint construction of some sporadic simple groups, for the McKay conjecture in representation theory, and for the McKay correspondence relating certain finite groups to Lie groups." ]
In what country is Durrenentzen?
[ "France", "fr", "FR", "République française", "La France", "Republic of France", "French Republic", "FRA", "the Hexagon" ]
country
Durrenentzen
3,131,138
61
[ { "id": "12945267", "title": "Durrenentzen", "text": " Durrenentzen (Dürrenentzen) is a commune in the Haut-Rhin department in Grand Est in north-eastern France.", "score": "1.870137" }, { "id": "14009017", "title": "Dürnten", "text": "🇭🇺 Szentbékkálla, Hungary – since 2001 Dürnten is twinned with:", "score": "1.4622962" }, { "id": "15360275", "title": "Dürrenberg", "text": " Dürrenberg (656.4 m above sea level) is a mountain of Bavaria. It is the highest point of the Weißenburg-Gunzenhausen district and of the Hahnenkamm and is situated between Heidenheim and Meinheim 60 km south west of Nuremberg, Germany.", "score": "1.4512608" }, { "id": "27784769", "title": "Dürrenäsch", "text": " village, from the Austrians. Until 1614 the village was part of the Kulm parish and since then it has belonged to the Leutwil parish. Particularly tragic events were the big fire in the village in 1782 and in 1963, the crash of Swissair Flight 306 on the outskirts of Dürrenäsch (killing all 80 on board). In addition to the still common agriculture industry, several other industries developed in the 18th-19th Centuries. Initially, cotton weaving and straw plaiting developed in the village. Then, between 1852-1935 the silk industry developed and between 1863 and 1950 the cigar industry was in the village. The Korkwarenfabrik (cork products factory) opened in 1878. Between 1952-54 it was rebuilt and went into production of new types of insulation and plastics as the Sagex factory.", "score": "1.4229898" }, { "id": "6309009", "title": "Dürrenroth", "text": " The farmhouse im Feld at Feld 93, the Gärbihof, the Gasthof Bären and the Gasthof Kreuz are listed as Swiss heritage site of national significance. The entire village of Dürrenroth is part of the Inventory of Swiss Heritage Sites.", "score": "1.4220691" }, { "id": "27784770", "title": "Dürrenäsch", "text": " Dürrenäsch is located in the Kulm district, in a saddle between the Seetal and Wynental valleys. The municipality has an area,, of 5.91 km2. Of this area, 2.93 km2 or 49.6% is used for agricultural purposes, while 2.2 km2 or 37.2% is forested. Of the rest of the land, 0.76 km2 or 12.9% is settled (buildings or roads) and 0.01 km2 or 0.2% is unproductive land. Of the built up area, industrial buildings made up 1.5% of the total area while housing and buildings made up 7.4% and transportation infrastructure made up 3.4%. 36.4% of the total land area is heavily forested. Of the agricultural land, 26.2% is used for growing crops and 17.4% is pastures, while 5.9% is used for orchards or vine crops.", "score": "1.4172434" }, { "id": "32470788", "title": "Bad Dürrenberg", "text": "🇩🇪 Melle, Germany ; 🇫🇷 Caudebec-lès-Elbeuf, France ; 🇵🇱 Ciechocinek, Poland ; 🇭🇺 Encs, Hungary ", "score": "1.4074671" }, { "id": "32140478", "title": "Düzenli, Borçka", "text": " Düzenli, Borçka is a village in the District of Borçka, Artvin Province, Turkey. As of 2010 it had a population of 219 people.", "score": "1.4014508" }, { "id": "32470779", "title": "Bad Dürrenberg", "text": " Bad Dürrenberg is a spa town in the Saalekreis district, in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. It is situated on the river Saale, approx. 8 km southeast of Merseburg. It is known for its graduation tower, the largest one in Germany.", "score": "1.3883519" }, { "id": "14327903", "title": "Popstars: Du & Ich", "text": " Germany", "score": "1.383743" }, { "id": "10486130", "title": "Auer Dult", "text": " The Auer Dult is considered to be the largest crockery market in Europe. Pots, porcelain and other ceramic wares are available at numerous Standl (stands). In addition, other household accessories, natural healing remedies and clothes are available. Many stands also offer antique books and commodities. The assortment of items ranges from chamber pots to rustic furniture.", "score": "1.382237" }, { "id": "14659261", "title": "Dürr AG", "text": " March 16, 2015", "score": "1.3795991" }, { "id": "2341420", "title": "Dürrröhrsdorf-Dittersbach", "text": "The Belvedere on the Schöne Höhe hill, a tower decorated with frescoes by painter Carl Gottlieb Peschel after works of Johann Wolfgang Goethe. Founded by Johann Gottlob von Quandt (1787–1859), it includes a local history exhibition. ; Dittersbacher Jahrmarkt ", "score": "1.3722289" }, { "id": "32224609", "title": "Düzenli, Şavşat", "text": " Düzenli is a village in the Artvin Province, Turkey. As of 2011 it had a population of 155 people.", "score": "1.3674505" }, { "id": "6495336", "title": "Cífer", "text": "🇦🇹 Prellenkirchen (Austria) ", "score": "1.3644725" }, { "id": "30966691", "title": "Dürr Dental", "text": "DÜRR DENTAL AG, Bietigheim-Bissingen (Germany) ; DÜRR DENTAL Global GmbH, Bietigheim-Bissingen (Germany) ; Dürr NDT GmbH & Co. KG, Bietigheim-Bissingen (Germany) ; Dürr Optronik GmbH & Co. KG, Gechingen/Calw (Germany) ; Orochemie GmbH & Co. KG, Kornwestheim (Germany) ; Air Techniques Inc., Melville/New York (USA) ", "score": "1.3636909" }, { "id": "12789499", "title": "Dürrenstein (Austria)", "text": " Dürrenstein (1,878 m) is a mountain of the Ybbstal Alps in Lower Austria. It is located in the municipality of Lunz am See and is one of the highest peak in the area.", "score": "1.3621452" }, { "id": "12620681", "title": "Düppenweiler", "text": "🇫🇷 Étain (France) ", "score": "1.3546584" }, { "id": "14685439", "title": "Szentbékkálla", "text": "Dürnten, Switzerland – since 2001 Szentbékkálla is twinned with:", "score": "1.3538682" }, { "id": "10625799", "title": "Dürnstein", "text": "🇩🇪 Tegernsee, Germany Dürnstein is twinned with:", "score": "1.3535335" } ]
[ "Durrenentzen\n Durrenentzen (Dürrenentzen) is a commune in the Haut-Rhin department in Grand Est in north-eastern France.", "Dürnten\n🇭🇺 Szentbékkálla, Hungary – since 2001 Dürnten is twinned with:", "Dürrenberg\n Dürrenberg (656.4 m above sea level) is a mountain of Bavaria. It is the highest point of the Weißenburg-Gunzenhausen district and of the Hahnenkamm and is situated between Heidenheim and Meinheim 60 km south west of Nuremberg, Germany.", "Dürrenäsch\n village, from the Austrians. Until 1614 the village was part of the Kulm parish and since then it has belonged to the Leutwil parish. Particularly tragic events were the big fire in the village in 1782 and in 1963, the crash of Swissair Flight 306 on the outskirts of Dürrenäsch (killing all 80 on board). In addition to the still common agriculture industry, several other industries developed in the 18th-19th Centuries. Initially, cotton weaving and straw plaiting developed in the village. Then, between 1852-1935 the silk industry developed and between 1863 and 1950 the cigar industry was in the village. The Korkwarenfabrik (cork products factory) opened in 1878. Between 1952-54 it was rebuilt and went into production of new types of insulation and plastics as the Sagex factory.", "Dürrenroth\n The farmhouse im Feld at Feld 93, the Gärbihof, the Gasthof Bären and the Gasthof Kreuz are listed as Swiss heritage site of national significance. The entire village of Dürrenroth is part of the Inventory of Swiss Heritage Sites.", "Dürrenäsch\n Dürrenäsch is located in the Kulm district, in a saddle between the Seetal and Wynental valleys. The municipality has an area,, of 5.91 km2. Of this area, 2.93 km2 or 49.6% is used for agricultural purposes, while 2.2 km2 or 37.2% is forested. Of the rest of the land, 0.76 km2 or 12.9% is settled (buildings or roads) and 0.01 km2 or 0.2% is unproductive land. Of the built up area, industrial buildings made up 1.5% of the total area while housing and buildings made up 7.4% and transportation infrastructure made up 3.4%. 36.4% of the total land area is heavily forested. Of the agricultural land, 26.2% is used for growing crops and 17.4% is pastures, while 5.9% is used for orchards or vine crops.", "Bad Dürrenberg\n🇩🇪 Melle, Germany ; 🇫🇷 Caudebec-lès-Elbeuf, France ; 🇵🇱 Ciechocinek, Poland ; 🇭🇺 Encs, Hungary ", "Düzenli, Borçka\n Düzenli, Borçka is a village in the District of Borçka, Artvin Province, Turkey. As of 2010 it had a population of 219 people.", "Bad Dürrenberg\n Bad Dürrenberg is a spa town in the Saalekreis district, in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. It is situated on the river Saale, approx. 8 km southeast of Merseburg. It is known for its graduation tower, the largest one in Germany.", "Popstars: Du & Ich\n Germany", "Auer Dult\n The Auer Dult is considered to be the largest crockery market in Europe. Pots, porcelain and other ceramic wares are available at numerous Standl (stands). In addition, other household accessories, natural healing remedies and clothes are available. Many stands also offer antique books and commodities. The assortment of items ranges from chamber pots to rustic furniture.", "Dürr AG\n March 16, 2015", "Dürrröhrsdorf-Dittersbach\nThe Belvedere on the Schöne Höhe hill, a tower decorated with frescoes by painter Carl Gottlieb Peschel after works of Johann Wolfgang Goethe. Founded by Johann Gottlob von Quandt (1787–1859), it includes a local history exhibition. ; Dittersbacher Jahrmarkt ", "Düzenli, Şavşat\n Düzenli is a village in the Artvin Province, Turkey. As of 2011 it had a population of 155 people.", "Cífer\n🇦🇹 Prellenkirchen (Austria) ", "Dürr Dental\nDÜRR DENTAL AG, Bietigheim-Bissingen (Germany) ; DÜRR DENTAL Global GmbH, Bietigheim-Bissingen (Germany) ; Dürr NDT GmbH & Co. KG, Bietigheim-Bissingen (Germany) ; Dürr Optronik GmbH & Co. KG, Gechingen/Calw (Germany) ; Orochemie GmbH & Co. KG, Kornwestheim (Germany) ; Air Techniques Inc., Melville/New York (USA) ", "Dürrenstein (Austria)\n Dürrenstein (1,878 m) is a mountain of the Ybbstal Alps in Lower Austria. It is located in the municipality of Lunz am See and is one of the highest peak in the area.", "Düppenweiler\n🇫🇷 Étain (France) ", "Szentbékkálla\nDürnten, Switzerland – since 2001 Szentbékkálla is twinned with:", "Dürnstein\n🇩🇪 Tegernsee, Germany Dürnstein is twinned with:" ]
What sport does 1990–91 British Basketball League season play?
[ "basketball", "hoops", "b-ball", "basket ball", "BB", "Basketball" ]
sport
1990–91 British Basketball League season
1,319,519
87
[ { "id": "26355723", "title": "2010–11 British Basketball League season", "text": " The 2010–2011 season was the 24th campaign of the British Basketball League since the league's establishment in 1987. This season saw the league reduced to 12 teams with the withdrawal of London Capital during the summer and was the first campaign ever to not feature a club from the capital city London. Unlike previous seasons the Trophy schedule usually played in January/February was brought forward, with the reintroduced group stage being played before the start of the regular season. The campaign tipped-off on 17 September 2010 with Plymouth Raiders beating Worthing Thunder 79–77 in the opening game of the Trophy. The regular league season commenced on 10 October, whilst the season closed with the showpiece Play-off Final on 30 April 2011 at the National Indoor Arena in Birmingham. Newly rebranded Mersey Tigers won three out of the four domestic titles on offer, finishing victorious in the Franklin & Marshall Trophy, Championship and post-season Play-offs, whilst missing out on the BBL Cup following a 93–66 loss to Sheffield Sharks in the Final. Mersey's Tony Garbelotto was named as BBL Coach of the Year, whilst Cheshire Jets' Jeremy Bell was awarded the BBL's MVP award.", "score": "1.761761" }, { "id": "15347962", "title": "1995–96 British Basketball League season", "text": " The 1995–1996 BBL season was known as the Budweiser League for sponsorship reasons. The league featured a total of 13 teams, playing 36 games each. The division retained the same thirteen teams as the previous year after the BBL rejected an application from Crystal Palace who had sealed the National League Division One (the second tier) title. The main change saw the Sunderland Scorpions renamed the Newcastle Comets due to a change of franchise and venue, their new home would be in Gateshead until the newly built Newcastle Arena opened on 18 November. The Manchester Giants also had a new home at the Nynex Arena and the sport was boosted by the return of TV coverage by Sky Sports. London Towers clinched a treble, winning the National Cup, 7 Up Trophy and finishing top of the regular season standings. They were defeated in the Championship Play-off final by Birmingham Bullets.", "score": "1.7254152" }, { "id": "3620184", "title": "1990–91 England Hockey League season", "text": " The 1990–91 English Hockey League season took place from October 1990 until May 1991. The Men's National League was sponsored by Poundstretcher and was won by Havant. The top four teams qualified to take part in the Poundstretcher League Cup tournament which was won by Hounslow. The Women's National League was sponsored by Typhoo and was won by Slough. The Men's Hockey Association Cup was won by Hounslow and the Women's Cup (National Club Championship finals) was won by Sutton Coldfield.", "score": "1.7189769" }, { "id": "26987247", "title": "1991 British League Division Two season", "text": " The title sponsored by Sunbrite was won by the Arena Essex Hammers. Hackney withdrew in July, ten matches into the season.", "score": "1.7185537" }, { "id": "26355714", "title": "2009–10 British Basketball League season", "text": " The 2009–2010 season of the British Basketball League (BBL) was the 23rd season since the league's establishment in 1987. The regular season commenced on 25 September 2009, when Milton Keynes Lions claimed the first win of the season with a 94–81 victory in the opening game against Worcester Wolves. A total of 13 teams took to the court including new start-up franchise Essex Pirates, which was founded by Great Britain Under 20s coach Tim Lewis, and a newly rebranded Rocks team carrying the name of the city of Glasgow instead of their previous Scottish Rocks title. The League Championship came down to the final game of the season and was only claimed by Newcastle Eagles after Sheffield Sharks lost their last game, 97–95, to Worthing Thunder. Thunder's Evaldas Zabas' basket four seconds from the end meant that Newcastle had won the League even before taking to the court the following day. Everton Tigers concluded the season with victory in the Play-offs despite being the lowest seed in all of their Play-off encounters. An 80–72 win against Glasgow in the final gave Tigers their first ever Play-off title, only two years after its foundation in 2007.", "score": "1.7100608" }, { "id": "9827096", "title": "1990–91 BHL season", "text": " The 1990–91 BHL season was the ninth season of the British Hockey League, the top level of ice hockey in Great Britain. 10 teams participated in the league, and the Durham Wasps won the league title by finishing first in the regular season. They also won the playoff championship", "score": "1.7097943" }, { "id": "15916070", "title": "1993–94 British Basketball League season", "text": " (1) Thames Valley Tigers vs. (8) Derby Bucks (2) Worthing Bears vs. (7) Leicester City Riders (3) Manchester Giants vs. (6) Birmingham Bullets (4) Guildford Kings vs. (5) London Towers", "score": "1.7081624" }, { "id": "15916069", "title": "1993–94 British Basketball League season", "text": " The 1993–1994 BBL season was known as the Budweiser League for sponsorship reasons. The season featured a total of 13 teams, playing 36 games each. The BBL secured a three year £1 million sponsorship deal with Budweiser and the divisions were re-organised once again. The Budweiser League would be tier one with the National League Division's below. The Budweiser League increased in number with the addition of the Division One champions Doncaster Panthers. The Cheshire Jets became the Chester Jets. Thames Valley Tigers claimed the League Trophy and stormed to the regular season title, however the Bracknell-based side suffered a shock defeat to Derby Bucks and saw them eliminated in the Quarter-final of the Budweiser Championship Play-offs. Nevertheless, Tigers' Nigel Lloyd and Mick Bett were both awarded accolades as Most Valuable Player and Coach of the Year respectively. Worthing Bears also secured a double success by winning the Play-offs and securing the National Cup.", "score": "1.7030938" }, { "id": "1914", "title": "1990–91 British Collegiate American Football League", "text": " The 1990–91 BCAFL was the sixth full season of the British Collegiate American Football League, organised by the British Students American Football Association.", "score": "1.6995242" }, { "id": "15347965", "title": "1995–96 British Basketball League season", "text": " Northern Group Southern Group Chester finished ahead of Doncaster by having the best head-to-head record between the teams. London, Manchester, Sheffield and Thames Valley all received a bye into Quarter-finals.", "score": "1.6948738" }, { "id": "15529652", "title": "1994–95 British Basketball League season", "text": " The 1994–1995 BBL season was known as the Budweiser League for sponsorship reasons. The season featured a total of 13 teams, playing 36 games each. A major change saw the Guildford Kings franchise fold due to the club being unable to negotiate a viable contract with the owners of the Guildford Spectrum. The league sold Kings' licence to a group headed by Robert Earl, Ed Simons and Harvey Goldsmith, who established the Leopards. Oldham Celtics dropped down a division to National League Division One. Newcomers Sheffield Sharks formerly Sheffield Forgers won the regular season and claimed the title in their rookie season in addition to becoming National Cup champions. Seventh-seed Worthing Bears caused a huge upset in the post-season Play-off to take the Championship crown with a memorable victory over Manchester Giants in the Final. The Thames Valley Tigers secured the BBL Trophy.", "score": "1.6925187" }, { "id": "3619887", "title": "1991–92 England Hockey League season", "text": " The 1991–92 English Hockey League season took place from October 1991 until March 1992. The Men's National League was sponsored by PizzaExpress and won by Havant. The Women's National League was sponsored by Typhoo and was won by Slough. The Men's Hockey Association Cup was won by Hounslow and the AEWHA Cup was won by Hightown.", "score": "1.6915799" }, { "id": "3620187", "title": "1990–91 England Hockey League season", "text": " (Held at Ashford on 21 April)", "score": "1.6910498" }, { "id": "15529653", "title": "1994–95 British Basketball League season", "text": " (1) Sheffield Sharks vs. (8) Birmingham Bullets (2) Thames Valley Tigers vs. (7) Worthing Bears (3) London Towers vs. (6) Leopards (4) Manchester Giants vs. (5) Doncaster Panthers", "score": "1.6904263" }, { "id": "15529654", "title": "1994–95 British Basketball League season", "text": " North Group 1 North Group 2 South Group 1 South Group 2 Sheffield finished ahead of Manchester by having the best head-to-head record between the teams. Thames Valley finished ahead of Birmingham by having the best head-to-head record between the teams.", "score": "1.6882972" }, { "id": "15916071", "title": "1993–94 British Basketball League season", "text": " Manchester Giants vs. Leicester City Riders Thames Valley Tigers vs. Worthing Bears", "score": "1.6851577" }, { "id": "24916217", "title": "1998–99 British Basketball League season", "text": " The 1998–1999 BBL season was the 12th season of the British Basketball League, known as the Budweiser Basketball League for sponsorship reasons, since its establishment in 1987. The regular season commenced on September 12, 1998, and ended on April 4, 1999, with a total of 13 teams competing, playing 36 games each. The post-season Play-offs began on April 9 and culminated in the end-of-season finale on May 2 at Wembley Arena. Start-up franchise Edinburgh Rocks became the League's newest member following their addition as the 14th franchise during the pre-season and the first Scottish team to appear in the top-flight since Glasgow Rangers' participation in the 1988–89 season. The League membership was reduced to 13 teams shortly after following the merger of the London Towers and Crystal Palace franchises, whilst another notable change was the uprooting of ", "score": "1.6814536" }, { "id": "31113096", "title": "2017–18 British Basketball League season", "text": " The 2017–18 British Basketball League season was the 31st campaign of the British Basketball League since the league's establishment in 1987. The season featured 12 teams from across England and Scotland. The Leicester Riders became regular season champions for the third season in succession, winning 104–75 against Plymouth Raiders at the Plymouth Pavilions on 8 April 2018. The Riders then added the playoff title with an 81–60 win over the London Lions in the Final. This victory gave Rob Paternostro's team a second consecutive treble, having won the BBL Trophy earlier in the campaign.", "score": "1.677579" }, { "id": "669039", "title": "1990–91 National Division One", "text": " The 1990–91 National Division One (known as the Courage League for sponsorship reasons) was the fourth season of top flight rugby union in England. The league was expanded to thirteen teams, with promoted teams Northampton Saints and Liverpool St Helens replacing Bedford Blues. Each team played each other once. Bath were the champions, beating Wasps by just one point. Moseley and Liverpool St Helens were relegated.", "score": "1.6773934" }, { "id": "27346882", "title": "1990 British League season", "text": "🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 Mike Lewthwaite ; 🇺🇸 Kelly Moran ; 🇺🇸 Shawn Moran ; 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 Chris Morton ; 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 Richard Musson ; 🇺🇸 Bobby Ott ; Peter Ravn ; 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 Max Schofield ; 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 Joe Screen ", "score": "1.6737309" } ]
[ "2010–11 British Basketball League season\n The 2010–2011 season was the 24th campaign of the British Basketball League since the league's establishment in 1987. This season saw the league reduced to 12 teams with the withdrawal of London Capital during the summer and was the first campaign ever to not feature a club from the capital city London. Unlike previous seasons the Trophy schedule usually played in January/February was brought forward, with the reintroduced group stage being played before the start of the regular season. The campaign tipped-off on 17 September 2010 with Plymouth Raiders beating Worthing Thunder 79–77 in the opening game of the Trophy. The regular league season commenced on 10 October, whilst the season closed with the showpiece Play-off Final on 30 April 2011 at the National Indoor Arena in Birmingham. Newly rebranded Mersey Tigers won three out of the four domestic titles on offer, finishing victorious in the Franklin & Marshall Trophy, Championship and post-season Play-offs, whilst missing out on the BBL Cup following a 93–66 loss to Sheffield Sharks in the Final. Mersey's Tony Garbelotto was named as BBL Coach of the Year, whilst Cheshire Jets' Jeremy Bell was awarded the BBL's MVP award.", "1995–96 British Basketball League season\n The 1995–1996 BBL season was known as the Budweiser League for sponsorship reasons. The league featured a total of 13 teams, playing 36 games each. The division retained the same thirteen teams as the previous year after the BBL rejected an application from Crystal Palace who had sealed the National League Division One (the second tier) title. The main change saw the Sunderland Scorpions renamed the Newcastle Comets due to a change of franchise and venue, their new home would be in Gateshead until the newly built Newcastle Arena opened on 18 November. The Manchester Giants also had a new home at the Nynex Arena and the sport was boosted by the return of TV coverage by Sky Sports. London Towers clinched a treble, winning the National Cup, 7 Up Trophy and finishing top of the regular season standings. They were defeated in the Championship Play-off final by Birmingham Bullets.", "1990–91 England Hockey League season\n The 1990–91 English Hockey League season took place from October 1990 until May 1991. The Men's National League was sponsored by Poundstretcher and was won by Havant. The top four teams qualified to take part in the Poundstretcher League Cup tournament which was won by Hounslow. The Women's National League was sponsored by Typhoo and was won by Slough. The Men's Hockey Association Cup was won by Hounslow and the Women's Cup (National Club Championship finals) was won by Sutton Coldfield.", "1991 British League Division Two season\n The title sponsored by Sunbrite was won by the Arena Essex Hammers. Hackney withdrew in July, ten matches into the season.", "2009–10 British Basketball League season\n The 2009–2010 season of the British Basketball League (BBL) was the 23rd season since the league's establishment in 1987. The regular season commenced on 25 September 2009, when Milton Keynes Lions claimed the first win of the season with a 94–81 victory in the opening game against Worcester Wolves. A total of 13 teams took to the court including new start-up franchise Essex Pirates, which was founded by Great Britain Under 20s coach Tim Lewis, and a newly rebranded Rocks team carrying the name of the city of Glasgow instead of their previous Scottish Rocks title. The League Championship came down to the final game of the season and was only claimed by Newcastle Eagles after Sheffield Sharks lost their last game, 97–95, to Worthing Thunder. Thunder's Evaldas Zabas' basket four seconds from the end meant that Newcastle had won the League even before taking to the court the following day. Everton Tigers concluded the season with victory in the Play-offs despite being the lowest seed in all of their Play-off encounters. An 80–72 win against Glasgow in the final gave Tigers their first ever Play-off title, only two years after its foundation in 2007.", "1990–91 BHL season\n The 1990–91 BHL season was the ninth season of the British Hockey League, the top level of ice hockey in Great Britain. 10 teams participated in the league, and the Durham Wasps won the league title by finishing first in the regular season. They also won the playoff championship", "1993–94 British Basketball League season\n (1) Thames Valley Tigers vs. (8) Derby Bucks (2) Worthing Bears vs. (7) Leicester City Riders (3) Manchester Giants vs. (6) Birmingham Bullets (4) Guildford Kings vs. (5) London Towers", "1993–94 British Basketball League season\n The 1993–1994 BBL season was known as the Budweiser League for sponsorship reasons. The season featured a total of 13 teams, playing 36 games each. The BBL secured a three year £1 million sponsorship deal with Budweiser and the divisions were re-organised once again. The Budweiser League would be tier one with the National League Division's below. The Budweiser League increased in number with the addition of the Division One champions Doncaster Panthers. The Cheshire Jets became the Chester Jets. Thames Valley Tigers claimed the League Trophy and stormed to the regular season title, however the Bracknell-based side suffered a shock defeat to Derby Bucks and saw them eliminated in the Quarter-final of the Budweiser Championship Play-offs. Nevertheless, Tigers' Nigel Lloyd and Mick Bett were both awarded accolades as Most Valuable Player and Coach of the Year respectively. Worthing Bears also secured a double success by winning the Play-offs and securing the National Cup.", "1990–91 British Collegiate American Football League\n The 1990–91 BCAFL was the sixth full season of the British Collegiate American Football League, organised by the British Students American Football Association.", "1995–96 British Basketball League season\n Northern Group Southern Group Chester finished ahead of Doncaster by having the best head-to-head record between the teams. London, Manchester, Sheffield and Thames Valley all received a bye into Quarter-finals.", "1994–95 British Basketball League season\n The 1994–1995 BBL season was known as the Budweiser League for sponsorship reasons. The season featured a total of 13 teams, playing 36 games each. A major change saw the Guildford Kings franchise fold due to the club being unable to negotiate a viable contract with the owners of the Guildford Spectrum. The league sold Kings' licence to a group headed by Robert Earl, Ed Simons and Harvey Goldsmith, who established the Leopards. Oldham Celtics dropped down a division to National League Division One. Newcomers Sheffield Sharks formerly Sheffield Forgers won the regular season and claimed the title in their rookie season in addition to becoming National Cup champions. Seventh-seed Worthing Bears caused a huge upset in the post-season Play-off to take the Championship crown with a memorable victory over Manchester Giants in the Final. The Thames Valley Tigers secured the BBL Trophy.", "1991–92 England Hockey League season\n The 1991–92 English Hockey League season took place from October 1991 until March 1992. The Men's National League was sponsored by PizzaExpress and won by Havant. The Women's National League was sponsored by Typhoo and was won by Slough. The Men's Hockey Association Cup was won by Hounslow and the AEWHA Cup was won by Hightown.", "1990–91 England Hockey League season\n (Held at Ashford on 21 April)", "1994–95 British Basketball League season\n (1) Sheffield Sharks vs. (8) Birmingham Bullets (2) Thames Valley Tigers vs. (7) Worthing Bears (3) London Towers vs. (6) Leopards (4) Manchester Giants vs. (5) Doncaster Panthers", "1994–95 British Basketball League season\n North Group 1 North Group 2 South Group 1 South Group 2 Sheffield finished ahead of Manchester by having the best head-to-head record between the teams. Thames Valley finished ahead of Birmingham by having the best head-to-head record between the teams.", "1993–94 British Basketball League season\n Manchester Giants vs. Leicester City Riders Thames Valley Tigers vs. Worthing Bears", "1998–99 British Basketball League season\n The 1998–1999 BBL season was the 12th season of the British Basketball League, known as the Budweiser Basketball League for sponsorship reasons, since its establishment in 1987. The regular season commenced on September 12, 1998, and ended on April 4, 1999, with a total of 13 teams competing, playing 36 games each. The post-season Play-offs began on April 9 and culminated in the end-of-season finale on May 2 at Wembley Arena. Start-up franchise Edinburgh Rocks became the League's newest member following their addition as the 14th franchise during the pre-season and the first Scottish team to appear in the top-flight since Glasgow Rangers' participation in the 1988–89 season. The League membership was reduced to 13 teams shortly after following the merger of the London Towers and Crystal Palace franchises, whilst another notable change was the uprooting of ", "2017–18 British Basketball League season\n The 2017–18 British Basketball League season was the 31st campaign of the British Basketball League since the league's establishment in 1987. The season featured 12 teams from across England and Scotland. The Leicester Riders became regular season champions for the third season in succession, winning 104–75 against Plymouth Raiders at the Plymouth Pavilions on 8 April 2018. The Riders then added the playoff title with an 81–60 win over the London Lions in the Final. This victory gave Rob Paternostro's team a second consecutive treble, having won the BBL Trophy earlier in the campaign.", "1990–91 National Division One\n The 1990–91 National Division One (known as the Courage League for sponsorship reasons) was the fourth season of top flight rugby union in England. The league was expanded to thirteen teams, with promoted teams Northampton Saints and Liverpool St Helens replacing Bedford Blues. Each team played each other once. Bath were the champions, beating Wasps by just one point. Moseley and Liverpool St Helens were relegated.", "1990 British League season\n🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 Mike Lewthwaite ; 🇺🇸 Kelly Moran ; 🇺🇸 Shawn Moran ; 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 Chris Morton ; 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 Richard Musson ; 🇺🇸 Bobby Ott ; Peter Ravn ; 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 Max Schofield ; 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 Joe Screen " ]
What genre is The Gift?
[ "country music", "country and western", "country & western", "country", "Nashville sound" ]
genre
The Gift (The McCarters song)
5,928,360
50
[ { "id": "2790063", "title": "The Gift (Andre Nickatina album)", "text": " The Gift is the 13th album and a DVD movie by rapper, Andre Nickatina and directed by Shane Mario Ruggieri. It was released on January 25, 2005, for Fillmoe Coleman Records and featured production from Andre Nickatina, Smoov-E, Tone Capone, Dion Peete, Krushadelic, DJ Pause and the A-T.E.A.M.", "score": "1.7393842" }, { "id": "10120863", "title": "The Gift (Croggon novel)", "text": " The Gift was first published in Australia on 1 October 2002 by Penguin Books in trade paperback format. In 2004 it was released in the United Kingdom by Walker Books and in 2005 it was released under the title of The Naming in hardback format by Candlewick Press in the United States. The Gift was a short-list nominee in both the 2002 Aurealis Award for best fantasy novel and the best horror novel but lost to Sean Williams' The Storm Weaver and the Sand and A. L. McCann's The White Body of Evening respectively.", "score": "1.7188358" }, { "id": "13223793", "title": "The Gift (band)", "text": " The Gift is a Portuguese alternative rock band, formed in 1994. They have released eight albums to date. In 2005 they won the MTV Europe award for best Portuguese act.", "score": "1.6927016" }, { "id": "13202754", "title": "The Gift (2015 American film)", "text": " The Gift is a 2015 psychological thriller film written, co-produced, and directed by Joel Edgerton in his feature directorial debut, and co-produced by Jason Blum and Rebecca Yeldham. The film stars Jason Bateman and Rebecca Hall as a couple intimidated by a figure from Bateman's past played by Edgerton. It was released in the United States on August 7, 2015, as the first film released by STX Entertainment. The film grossed $59 million worldwide on a budget of $5 million and received positive reviews from critics, who praised Edgerton's direction and screenplay, as well as Bateman's performance.", "score": "1.664217" }, { "id": "10120862", "title": "The Gift (Croggon novel)", "text": " The Gift (aka The Naming) is 2002 fantasy novel by Alison Croggon. It is the first in her Pellinor quartet.", "score": "1.6519198" }, { "id": "13202763", "title": "The Gift (2015 American film)", "text": " The project was announced in August 2012, when it was reported that Joel Edgerton had written a psychological thriller script titled Weirdo, with which Edgerton would also be making his directing debut. His inspirations for the screenplay included Alfred Hitchcock, Fatal Attraction and Michael Haneke's 2005 French film Caché, as well as Park Chan-wook's Vengeance Trilogy.", "score": "1.6411982" }, { "id": "13989309", "title": "The Gift (Susan Boyle album)", "text": " The Gift is the second album and first Christmas album by Scottish singer Susan Boyle, which was released on 8 November 2010. Boyle hinted that the album has a 1960s feel \"because that was [her] era\". Despite having a mixed critical reception, the album debuted at number one on both the British and American album charts and received a nomination at the 54th Grammy Awards for Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album.", "score": "1.6392596" }, { "id": "10527773", "title": "A Gift Upon the Shore", "text": " A Gift Upon the Shore is a post-apocalyptic fiction novel by American author M. K. Wren and published by Ballantine Books in 1990. The story follows two women, an artist and a writer, who survive pandemic, the collapse of civilization, and a deadly nuclear winter.", "score": "1.6379402" }, { "id": "28235356", "title": "The Gift of Speed", "text": " The Gift of Speed is a 2004 novel by Australian author Steven Carroll. It is the second in a sequence of novels, following The Art of the Engine Driver and followed by The Time We Have Taken.", "score": "1.6357409" }, { "id": "32571102", "title": "The Gift (INXS song)", "text": " The music video for \"The Gift\" dramatises issues ranging from war and terrorism to famine and pollution with the band appearing to crash through the TV screen in anger. The video was banned by MTV owing to its use of Holocaust and Gulf War footage. In an interview with the director and long-term collaborator, Richard Lowenstein: \"The video uses harrowing visuals in order to portray man's ability to create havoc and destruction. The message behind the video is to show how as viewers, we have become accepting of, and increasingly apathetic to images of gross human suffering and violence.\"", "score": "1.6354073" }, { "id": "85878", "title": "The Gift (2015 Scottish film)", "text": " The Gift is a 2015 Scottish short film by 27 Ten Productions based on Elvis Presley's 11th birthday. It was directed and written by Gabriel Robertson and stars Brady Permenter, Amye Gousset, and Xander Berkeley. It was produced in Presley's hometown of Tupelo, Mississippi.", "score": "1.6344739" }, { "id": "8430670", "title": "Gift (2005 video game)", "text": " Gift (ギフト) is a Japanese adult visual novel developed by Moonstone and released on May 27, 2005, for Windows. The original game was a collaboration project where the company Circus helped to produce it, though Moonstone did the majority of the work involved. Gift is Moonstone's fourth title, and was followed up with an adult fan disc called Gift Rainbow-colored Stories released on January 27, 2006, for Windows. It was later ported to the PlayStation 2 and PlayStation Portable. The gameplay in Gift follows a plot line which offers pre-determined scenarios with courses of interaction, and focuses on the appeal of the five female main characters. The story revolves around Haruhiko Amami, a male high school student living in ", "score": "1.6332409" }, { "id": "12907623", "title": "The Gift (Turkish TV series)", "text": " The Gift (Atiye) is a Turkish drama fantasy Netflix series starring Beren Saat. It was written by Jason George and Nuran Evren Şit. The first season consists of 8 episodes and became available for streaming on Netflix on December 27, 2019. The series is an adaptation of the novel Dünyanın Uyanışı (The World's Awakening) by Şengül Boybaş. The second season was released on September 10, 2020. The series was renewed for a third, and final season, which premiered on June 17, 2021.", "score": "1.6312525" }, { "id": "13408652", "title": "The Gift (The Jam album)", "text": " The Gift is the sixth and final studio album by English new wave/mod revival band the Jam. It was originally released on 12 March 1982 by Polydor as the follow-up to the Jam's critically and commercially successful 1980 album Sound Affects. The songs were largely recorded during 1981 to 1982, assisted by Peter Wilson, and is generally regarded as the culmination of the smoother sound of the band's later work. It was one of the band's most successful studio albums, reaching No. 1 in the UK Albums Chart. The song \"Carnation\" was later covered by Liam Gallagher of Oasis and Steve Cradock of Ocean Colour Scene. A 2-disc deluxe edition of The Gift was released in 2012 to mark the 30th anniversary of the album's release.", "score": "1.6289493" }, { "id": "2496513", "title": "The Girl with All the Gifts", "text": " The Girl with All the Gifts is a science-fiction novel by M. R. Carey, published in June 2014 by Orbit Books. It is based on his 2013 Edgar Award-nominated short story Iphigenia In Aulis and was written concurrently with the screenplay for the 2016 film. It deals with a dystopian future in which most of humanity is wiped out by a fungal infection.", "score": "1.625041" }, { "id": "85882", "title": "The Gift (2015 Scottish film)", "text": " The film has received mostly positive reviews.", "score": "1.6245815" }, { "id": "10211233", "title": "The Last Gift", "text": " The Last Gift is a novel by Abdulrazak Gurnah. It is Gurnah's eighth novel and was first published by Bloomsbury Publishing in 2011. The plot centres on Abbas, an immigrant from east Africa living in England, who reflects on his past after he has a stroke. The novel received mixed reviews. Aminatta Forna, writing for the Financial Times, described it as \"majestic in scale\" and praised Gurnah's storytelling and examination of familial relationships. Giles Foden of The Guardian applauded Gurnah's prose. On the other hand, a reviewer for Kirkus Reviews criticized the transitions between the past and the present and felt that the book's central dilemma was not compelling enough. Publishers Weekly wrote that the narrative's pace was occasionally too slow, but praised the plot and the themes of mortality and memory.", "score": "1.6211398" }, { "id": "1252737", "title": "A Gift", "text": " A Gift is the second Christmas album by Canadian country music singer Paul Brandt. It won the 2007 Gospel Music Association of Canada Covenant Award for Seasonal Album of the Year, while the title song \"A Gift\" won the Seasonal Song of the Year award. The track \"Christmas Convoy\" is a reworked version of Brandt's cover of C. W. McCall's \"Convoy\".", "score": "1.6207447" }, { "id": "24988569", "title": "Christmas: The Gift", "text": " Christmas: The Gift is an album released in 1996 by country music artist Collin Raye. It was Raye's first Christmas album. It is composed largely of cover songs, except for \"It Could Happen Again\", which was newly written and recorded for this album.", "score": "1.6119964" }, { "id": "16241802", "title": "The Gift (The Velvet Underground song)", "text": " \"The Gift\" is the second track that appears on White Light/White Heat, the 1968 second album by the Velvet Underground. The song is over eight minutes long and, in the stereo version, mixed in such a way that a short story can be heard in the left speaker, while a rock instrumental is heard on the right.", "score": "1.6110182" } ]
[ "The Gift (Andre Nickatina album)\n The Gift is the 13th album and a DVD movie by rapper, Andre Nickatina and directed by Shane Mario Ruggieri. It was released on January 25, 2005, for Fillmoe Coleman Records and featured production from Andre Nickatina, Smoov-E, Tone Capone, Dion Peete, Krushadelic, DJ Pause and the A-T.E.A.M.", "The Gift (Croggon novel)\n The Gift was first published in Australia on 1 October 2002 by Penguin Books in trade paperback format. In 2004 it was released in the United Kingdom by Walker Books and in 2005 it was released under the title of The Naming in hardback format by Candlewick Press in the United States. The Gift was a short-list nominee in both the 2002 Aurealis Award for best fantasy novel and the best horror novel but lost to Sean Williams' The Storm Weaver and the Sand and A. L. McCann's The White Body of Evening respectively.", "The Gift (band)\n The Gift is a Portuguese alternative rock band, formed in 1994. They have released eight albums to date. In 2005 they won the MTV Europe award for best Portuguese act.", "The Gift (2015 American film)\n The Gift is a 2015 psychological thriller film written, co-produced, and directed by Joel Edgerton in his feature directorial debut, and co-produced by Jason Blum and Rebecca Yeldham. The film stars Jason Bateman and Rebecca Hall as a couple intimidated by a figure from Bateman's past played by Edgerton. It was released in the United States on August 7, 2015, as the first film released by STX Entertainment. The film grossed $59 million worldwide on a budget of $5 million and received positive reviews from critics, who praised Edgerton's direction and screenplay, as well as Bateman's performance.", "The Gift (Croggon novel)\n The Gift (aka The Naming) is 2002 fantasy novel by Alison Croggon. It is the first in her Pellinor quartet.", "The Gift (2015 American film)\n The project was announced in August 2012, when it was reported that Joel Edgerton had written a psychological thriller script titled Weirdo, with which Edgerton would also be making his directing debut. His inspirations for the screenplay included Alfred Hitchcock, Fatal Attraction and Michael Haneke's 2005 French film Caché, as well as Park Chan-wook's Vengeance Trilogy.", "The Gift (Susan Boyle album)\n The Gift is the second album and first Christmas album by Scottish singer Susan Boyle, which was released on 8 November 2010. Boyle hinted that the album has a 1960s feel \"because that was [her] era\". Despite having a mixed critical reception, the album debuted at number one on both the British and American album charts and received a nomination at the 54th Grammy Awards for Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album.", "A Gift Upon the Shore\n A Gift Upon the Shore is a post-apocalyptic fiction novel by American author M. K. Wren and published by Ballantine Books in 1990. The story follows two women, an artist and a writer, who survive pandemic, the collapse of civilization, and a deadly nuclear winter.", "The Gift of Speed\n The Gift of Speed is a 2004 novel by Australian author Steven Carroll. It is the second in a sequence of novels, following The Art of the Engine Driver and followed by The Time We Have Taken.", "The Gift (INXS song)\n The music video for \"The Gift\" dramatises issues ranging from war and terrorism to famine and pollution with the band appearing to crash through the TV screen in anger. The video was banned by MTV owing to its use of Holocaust and Gulf War footage. In an interview with the director and long-term collaborator, Richard Lowenstein: \"The video uses harrowing visuals in order to portray man's ability to create havoc and destruction. The message behind the video is to show how as viewers, we have become accepting of, and increasingly apathetic to images of gross human suffering and violence.\"", "The Gift (2015 Scottish film)\n The Gift is a 2015 Scottish short film by 27 Ten Productions based on Elvis Presley's 11th birthday. It was directed and written by Gabriel Robertson and stars Brady Permenter, Amye Gousset, and Xander Berkeley. It was produced in Presley's hometown of Tupelo, Mississippi.", "Gift (2005 video game)\n Gift (ギフト) is a Japanese adult visual novel developed by Moonstone and released on May 27, 2005, for Windows. The original game was a collaboration project where the company Circus helped to produce it, though Moonstone did the majority of the work involved. Gift is Moonstone's fourth title, and was followed up with an adult fan disc called Gift Rainbow-colored Stories released on January 27, 2006, for Windows. It was later ported to the PlayStation 2 and PlayStation Portable. The gameplay in Gift follows a plot line which offers pre-determined scenarios with courses of interaction, and focuses on the appeal of the five female main characters. The story revolves around Haruhiko Amami, a male high school student living in ", "The Gift (Turkish TV series)\n The Gift (Atiye) is a Turkish drama fantasy Netflix series starring Beren Saat. It was written by Jason George and Nuran Evren Şit. The first season consists of 8 episodes and became available for streaming on Netflix on December 27, 2019. The series is an adaptation of the novel Dünyanın Uyanışı (The World's Awakening) by Şengül Boybaş. The second season was released on September 10, 2020. The series was renewed for a third, and final season, which premiered on June 17, 2021.", "The Gift (The Jam album)\n The Gift is the sixth and final studio album by English new wave/mod revival band the Jam. It was originally released on 12 March 1982 by Polydor as the follow-up to the Jam's critically and commercially successful 1980 album Sound Affects. The songs were largely recorded during 1981 to 1982, assisted by Peter Wilson, and is generally regarded as the culmination of the smoother sound of the band's later work. It was one of the band's most successful studio albums, reaching No. 1 in the UK Albums Chart. The song \"Carnation\" was later covered by Liam Gallagher of Oasis and Steve Cradock of Ocean Colour Scene. A 2-disc deluxe edition of The Gift was released in 2012 to mark the 30th anniversary of the album's release.", "The Girl with All the Gifts\n The Girl with All the Gifts is a science-fiction novel by M. R. Carey, published in June 2014 by Orbit Books. It is based on his 2013 Edgar Award-nominated short story Iphigenia In Aulis and was written concurrently with the screenplay for the 2016 film. It deals with a dystopian future in which most of humanity is wiped out by a fungal infection.", "The Gift (2015 Scottish film)\n The film has received mostly positive reviews.", "The Last Gift\n The Last Gift is a novel by Abdulrazak Gurnah. It is Gurnah's eighth novel and was first published by Bloomsbury Publishing in 2011. The plot centres on Abbas, an immigrant from east Africa living in England, who reflects on his past after he has a stroke. The novel received mixed reviews. Aminatta Forna, writing for the Financial Times, described it as \"majestic in scale\" and praised Gurnah's storytelling and examination of familial relationships. Giles Foden of The Guardian applauded Gurnah's prose. On the other hand, a reviewer for Kirkus Reviews criticized the transitions between the past and the present and felt that the book's central dilemma was not compelling enough. Publishers Weekly wrote that the narrative's pace was occasionally too slow, but praised the plot and the themes of mortality and memory.", "A Gift\n A Gift is the second Christmas album by Canadian country music singer Paul Brandt. It won the 2007 Gospel Music Association of Canada Covenant Award for Seasonal Album of the Year, while the title song \"A Gift\" won the Seasonal Song of the Year award. The track \"Christmas Convoy\" is a reworked version of Brandt's cover of C. W. McCall's \"Convoy\".", "Christmas: The Gift\n Christmas: The Gift is an album released in 1996 by country music artist Collin Raye. It was Raye's first Christmas album. It is composed largely of cover songs, except for \"It Could Happen Again\", which was newly written and recorded for this album.", "The Gift (The Velvet Underground song)\n \"The Gift\" is the second track that appears on White Light/White Heat, the 1968 second album by the Velvet Underground. The song is over eight minutes long and, in the stereo version, mixed in such a way that a short story can be heard in the left speaker, while a rock instrumental is heard on the right." ]
What sport does Ramón Rodríguez play?
[ "association football", "football", "soccer" ]
sport
Ramón Rodríguez (footballer)
5,534,053
58
[ { "id": "15494424", "title": "Ramón Rodríguez (footballer)", "text": " Ramón Rodríguez del Solar (born 8 September 1977 in Pilcopata, Cuzco) is a Peruvian footballer who plays as a striker for Santa Rosa in the Torneo Descentralizado. In his long career, Rodríguez has played for the likes of Cienciano, FBC Melgar, Total Clean, Deportivo Municipal, Sport Boys, Alianza Atlético, Inti Gas Deportes, and Cobresol and Real Garcilaso. His nicknamed is El Ratón (The Mouse)", "score": "1.7695668" }, { "id": "26208714", "title": "Martín Rodríguez (field hockey)", "text": " Rodríguez made his senior international debut in 2008, at the South American Championship in Montevideo. Since his debut, Rodríguez has been a constant fixture in the Los Diablos team. During his career, Rodríguez has medalled twice at the Pan American Games, winning bronze at both the 2011 and 2015 games, in Guadalajara and Toronto respectively. He also won silver at the 2014 and 2018 South American Games, in Santiago and Cochabamba respectively. In 2019, he represented Chile at the Pan American Games in Lima and the 2018–19 FIH Series Finals in Le Touquet.", "score": "1.7383604" }, { "id": "30497878", "title": "Ralph Rodríguez", "text": " Ralph Rodríguez (born 29 July 1941) is a Puerto Rican former sport shooter who competed in the Summer Olympics of 1968, 1976, 1992, 1996 and 2000. He was one of the torch lighters of the 2010 Central American and Caribbean Games.", "score": "1.7287116" }, { "id": "6908035", "title": "José Manuel Rodríguez (baseball)", "text": " Rodriguez has played for the Mexico national baseball team at the 2008 Summer Olympics and the 2017 World Baseball Classic.", "score": "1.7100706" }, { "id": "3096219", "title": "Ronny Rodríguez", "text": " Ronny Rodríguez Martinez (born April 17, 1992) is a Dominican professional baseball infielder for the Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters of Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB). He has played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the Detroit Tigers. Rodríguez has also played for the Dominican Republic national baseball team.", "score": "1.7047923" }, { "id": "15494425", "title": "Ramón Rodríguez (footballer)", "text": " Rodríguez started his professional career in Torneo Descentralizado with Cienciano, where he played from 1995 to 2003. He managed to score for the Cuzco based club in the 2nd leg of the 2001 Championship Playoffs against Alianza Lima in the 83rd minute, which then forced the match to a penalty shoot-out. His club lost the Championship 2–4 on penalties. He made his league debut for Real Garcilaso in the second round (the first round was played by reserve players due to the Player's strike) of the 2012 season against Alianza Lima. Playing at the Inca Garcilaso de la Vega stadium, Rodríguez made history in that match with Real Garcilaso by scoring the club's first goal at home in the top-flight, the Torneo Descentralizado. His goal came in the 9th minute of the match by heading in a cross from Eduardo Uribe, and later in the second half Rodríguez provided an assist for Andy Pando's winning goal, which resulted in a 2–1 over the runners-up of the previous season. This match was Real Garcilaso's first home win ever in the Descentralizado.", "score": "1.6978679" }, { "id": "31385820", "title": "Emmanuel Rodríguez", "text": " Rodríguez is originally from Urbanización Villa Real near Ojo de Agua, a middle class urban sector of Vega Baja, Puerto Rico. His parents are Awilda Vázquez Soler and Luis Rodríguez. Throughout his childhood he practiced other sports before choosing boxing, including one of Puerto Rico's most widespread team sports, baseball. Rodríguez also served as forward of the local association football team, Invasores de Vega Baja. He studied at a local school named Escuela Lino Padrón Rivera until tenth grade. Due to his skill, he was subsequently enrolled at the Escuela Especializada en Deportes del Albergue Olímpico (ECEDAO), a specialized school run by the Comité Olímpico de Puerto Rico (COPUR) that provides education, residence, training and facilities to practice specific Olympic sports. On May 27, 2011, Rodríguez graduated as part of the program.", "score": "1.6957169" }, { "id": "26208713", "title": "Martín Rodríguez (field hockey)", "text": " In 2008, Rodríguez debuted for the Chile U–21 team at the Pan American Junior Championship in Port of Spain, winning a silver medal. After qualifying for the 2009 FIH Junior World Cup, Rodríguez again represented the junior national team at the tournament.", "score": "1.6881356" }, { "id": "5311586", "title": "Ramon R. Martinez Gion", "text": " Ramon has played for VC Omniworld, VVH, VC Allvo, Landstede Volleyball, Prefaxis Menen and Chemie Volley Mitteldeutschland volleyball clubs. He started playing volleyball at age 12 after a lesson at school. Ramon worked his way up to the highest leagues through athletic and dynamic volleyball practice. During his time at the professional level with the Landstede Volleyball Club Ramon has won 2 national titles, 2 super cup titles, and 2 national cup titles. He was also voted as best player in season 2013/2014. Ramon is selected on the national long list of Holland existing out of 22 players.", "score": "1.6842535" }, { "id": "7838834", "title": "Ramón Fumadó", "text": " Ramón Antonio Fumadó Rodríguez (born December 28, 1981 in Caracas, Distrito Capital) is a male diver from Venezuela, who competed in three consecutive Summer Olympics for his native country, starting in 2000. He claimed two gold medals at the 2008 South American Swimming Championships in São Paulo.", "score": "1.6784012" }, { "id": "30957935", "title": "Diego Rodríguez (footballer, born 1989)", "text": " He was called up by Óscar Tabárez to the Uruguayan Olympic football team that finished ninth at the 2012 Summer Olympics, held in London, Great Britain.", "score": "1.66717" }, { "id": "15494427", "title": "Ramón Rodríguez (footballer)", "text": "Second Division Top Scorer: 2010 ", "score": "1.666743" }, { "id": "8715613", "title": "Manuel Rodríguez (first baseman)", "text": " Manuel O. Rodríguez (born January 6, 1985) is a former professional baseball player who is most notable for being on Panama's roster for the 2006 World Baseball Classic. He played in the Atlanta Braves and Toronto Blue Jays farm systems from 2004 to 2009. Rodríguez began his professional career in 2002, playing in the Dominican Republic until 2003. In 2004, he played for the GCL Braves, hitting .251 in 179 at-bats. For the Danville Braves in 2005, he hit .300 in 250 at-bats and for the Rome Braves in 2006, he hit .258 in 264 at-bats. Rodríguez wound up in the Blue Jays farm system in 2007, playing for the Auburn Doubledays. He hit .291 with 10 home runs in 282 at-bats. In 2008, he hit .268 in 395 at-bats with the Lansing Lugnuts. In 2009, he played for the Dunedin Blue Jays and hit .263 with nine home runs in 105 games. In the 2008 Americas Baseball Cup, Rodríguez hit .286.", "score": "1.6453395" }, { "id": "15394311", "title": "Ignacio Rodríguez (basketball)", "text": " Born in Málaga, Rodríguez played most of his career with the teams Spanish professional Liga ACB teams Unicaja Málaga and FC Barcelona Bàsquet. During his time with FC Barcelona, he won the EuroLeague's 2002-03 season championship. In the Liga ACB (the top-tier level Spanish League), he played 16,605 minutes (5th most) in 737 games (2nd most).", "score": "1.6442744" }, { "id": "14917494", "title": "Ramón Santiago", "text": " Ramón David Santiago Sanchez (born August 31, 1979) is a Dominican-American former professional baseball player, and the current third base coach for the Detroit Tigers. Santiago played in Major League Baseball (MLB) as an infielder for the Detroit Tigers from 2002 to 2003, the Seattle Mariners from 2004 to 2005, again with the Tigers from 2006–2013 and with the Cincinnati Reds in 2014. He spent most of his major league career at shortstop, but also played a significant amount of time at second base, and occasionally third base. He is the only MLB player in history to hit a grand slam in his last at bat with a walk off home run. He accomplished this feat playing with the Cincinnati Reds with two outs in the bottom of the 10th inning on September 27, 2014 on a 1-0 pitch from the Pittsburgh Pirates' Bobby LaFromboise.", "score": "1.64298" }, { "id": "5311589", "title": "Ramon R. Martinez Gion", "text": " At the beginning of Ramon’s professional career he already stated his sexuality and did various interviews for dutch media representing the LGBTQ community giving it a voice in the world of professional sports. On national coming out day (11 October 2012) Ramon helped by raising the rainbow flag over the city hall of Zwolle. While being the first openly homosexual volleyball player in The Netherlands he continued representing LGBTQ in his international career. Resulting in being the first openly gay professional athlete in Belgium France and Greece. Ramon was nominated for the OUT d’or in 2019 and to be ambassador of the 15th Paris International Sports Tournament hosted by FSGL.", "score": "1.6374706" }, { "id": "28731676", "title": "Liu Rodríguez", "text": " In 2004, Rodríguez played for the Toros de Tijuana of the Mexican League and the Telemarket Ramini of the Italian Baseball League. He became a free agent after the season.", "score": "1.6361134" }, { "id": "8770411", "title": "Jonathan Rodriguez (basketball)", "text": " Jonathan John Rodríguez (born November 3, 1987) is a Puerto Rican basketball player who played for Campbell University in the A-Sun division of the National Collegiate Athletic Association.", "score": "1.6349347" }, { "id": "9754884", "title": "Clemente Rodríguez", "text": " Rodríguez was part of the gold medal winning Argentine Olympic football team at the 2004 Summer Olympics and has played for the full Argentina national team on an infrequent basis since 2003. He was called by coach Diego Maradona to play in the 2010 FIFA World Cup.", "score": "1.6348588" }, { "id": "31223510", "title": "Iván Rodríguez", "text": " Rodríguez represented Puerto Rico in the 2006 World Baseball Classic. Rodríguez was one of several Major League Baseball players that committed to represent their birthplaces before the organization of the tournament. He also played for Puerto Rico in the 2009 World Baseball Classic and was named to the classic's All-World Baseball Classic team.", "score": "1.6335664" } ]
[ "Ramón Rodríguez (footballer)\n Ramón Rodríguez del Solar (born 8 September 1977 in Pilcopata, Cuzco) is a Peruvian footballer who plays as a striker for Santa Rosa in the Torneo Descentralizado. In his long career, Rodríguez has played for the likes of Cienciano, FBC Melgar, Total Clean, Deportivo Municipal, Sport Boys, Alianza Atlético, Inti Gas Deportes, and Cobresol and Real Garcilaso. His nicknamed is El Ratón (The Mouse)", "Martín Rodríguez (field hockey)\n Rodríguez made his senior international debut in 2008, at the South American Championship in Montevideo. Since his debut, Rodríguez has been a constant fixture in the Los Diablos team. During his career, Rodríguez has medalled twice at the Pan American Games, winning bronze at both the 2011 and 2015 games, in Guadalajara and Toronto respectively. He also won silver at the 2014 and 2018 South American Games, in Santiago and Cochabamba respectively. In 2019, he represented Chile at the Pan American Games in Lima and the 2018–19 FIH Series Finals in Le Touquet.", "Ralph Rodríguez\n Ralph Rodríguez (born 29 July 1941) is a Puerto Rican former sport shooter who competed in the Summer Olympics of 1968, 1976, 1992, 1996 and 2000. He was one of the torch lighters of the 2010 Central American and Caribbean Games.", "José Manuel Rodríguez (baseball)\n Rodriguez has played for the Mexico national baseball team at the 2008 Summer Olympics and the 2017 World Baseball Classic.", "Ronny Rodríguez\n Ronny Rodríguez Martinez (born April 17, 1992) is a Dominican professional baseball infielder for the Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters of Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB). He has played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the Detroit Tigers. Rodríguez has also played for the Dominican Republic national baseball team.", "Ramón Rodríguez (footballer)\n Rodríguez started his professional career in Torneo Descentralizado with Cienciano, where he played from 1995 to 2003. He managed to score for the Cuzco based club in the 2nd leg of the 2001 Championship Playoffs against Alianza Lima in the 83rd minute, which then forced the match to a penalty shoot-out. His club lost the Championship 2–4 on penalties. He made his league debut for Real Garcilaso in the second round (the first round was played by reserve players due to the Player's strike) of the 2012 season against Alianza Lima. Playing at the Inca Garcilaso de la Vega stadium, Rodríguez made history in that match with Real Garcilaso by scoring the club's first goal at home in the top-flight, the Torneo Descentralizado. His goal came in the 9th minute of the match by heading in a cross from Eduardo Uribe, and later in the second half Rodríguez provided an assist for Andy Pando's winning goal, which resulted in a 2–1 over the runners-up of the previous season. This match was Real Garcilaso's first home win ever in the Descentralizado.", "Emmanuel Rodríguez\n Rodríguez is originally from Urbanización Villa Real near Ojo de Agua, a middle class urban sector of Vega Baja, Puerto Rico. His parents are Awilda Vázquez Soler and Luis Rodríguez. Throughout his childhood he practiced other sports before choosing boxing, including one of Puerto Rico's most widespread team sports, baseball. Rodríguez also served as forward of the local association football team, Invasores de Vega Baja. He studied at a local school named Escuela Lino Padrón Rivera until tenth grade. Due to his skill, he was subsequently enrolled at the Escuela Especializada en Deportes del Albergue Olímpico (ECEDAO), a specialized school run by the Comité Olímpico de Puerto Rico (COPUR) that provides education, residence, training and facilities to practice specific Olympic sports. On May 27, 2011, Rodríguez graduated as part of the program.", "Martín Rodríguez (field hockey)\n In 2008, Rodríguez debuted for the Chile U–21 team at the Pan American Junior Championship in Port of Spain, winning a silver medal. After qualifying for the 2009 FIH Junior World Cup, Rodríguez again represented the junior national team at the tournament.", "Ramon R. Martinez Gion\n Ramon has played for VC Omniworld, VVH, VC Allvo, Landstede Volleyball, Prefaxis Menen and Chemie Volley Mitteldeutschland volleyball clubs. He started playing volleyball at age 12 after a lesson at school. Ramon worked his way up to the highest leagues through athletic and dynamic volleyball practice. During his time at the professional level with the Landstede Volleyball Club Ramon has won 2 national titles, 2 super cup titles, and 2 national cup titles. He was also voted as best player in season 2013/2014. Ramon is selected on the national long list of Holland existing out of 22 players.", "Ramón Fumadó\n Ramón Antonio Fumadó Rodríguez (born December 28, 1981 in Caracas, Distrito Capital) is a male diver from Venezuela, who competed in three consecutive Summer Olympics for his native country, starting in 2000. He claimed two gold medals at the 2008 South American Swimming Championships in São Paulo.", "Diego Rodríguez (footballer, born 1989)\n He was called up by Óscar Tabárez to the Uruguayan Olympic football team that finished ninth at the 2012 Summer Olympics, held in London, Great Britain.", "Ramón Rodríguez (footballer)\nSecond Division Top Scorer: 2010 ", "Manuel Rodríguez (first baseman)\n Manuel O. Rodríguez (born January 6, 1985) is a former professional baseball player who is most notable for being on Panama's roster for the 2006 World Baseball Classic. He played in the Atlanta Braves and Toronto Blue Jays farm systems from 2004 to 2009. Rodríguez began his professional career in 2002, playing in the Dominican Republic until 2003. In 2004, he played for the GCL Braves, hitting .251 in 179 at-bats. For the Danville Braves in 2005, he hit .300 in 250 at-bats and for the Rome Braves in 2006, he hit .258 in 264 at-bats. Rodríguez wound up in the Blue Jays farm system in 2007, playing for the Auburn Doubledays. He hit .291 with 10 home runs in 282 at-bats. In 2008, he hit .268 in 395 at-bats with the Lansing Lugnuts. In 2009, he played for the Dunedin Blue Jays and hit .263 with nine home runs in 105 games. In the 2008 Americas Baseball Cup, Rodríguez hit .286.", "Ignacio Rodríguez (basketball)\n Born in Málaga, Rodríguez played most of his career with the teams Spanish professional Liga ACB teams Unicaja Málaga and FC Barcelona Bàsquet. During his time with FC Barcelona, he won the EuroLeague's 2002-03 season championship. In the Liga ACB (the top-tier level Spanish League), he played 16,605 minutes (5th most) in 737 games (2nd most).", "Ramón Santiago\n Ramón David Santiago Sanchez (born August 31, 1979) is a Dominican-American former professional baseball player, and the current third base coach for the Detroit Tigers. Santiago played in Major League Baseball (MLB) as an infielder for the Detroit Tigers from 2002 to 2003, the Seattle Mariners from 2004 to 2005, again with the Tigers from 2006–2013 and with the Cincinnati Reds in 2014. He spent most of his major league career at shortstop, but also played a significant amount of time at second base, and occasionally third base. He is the only MLB player in history to hit a grand slam in his last at bat with a walk off home run. He accomplished this feat playing with the Cincinnati Reds with two outs in the bottom of the 10th inning on September 27, 2014 on a 1-0 pitch from the Pittsburgh Pirates' Bobby LaFromboise.", "Ramon R. Martinez Gion\n At the beginning of Ramon’s professional career he already stated his sexuality and did various interviews for dutch media representing the LGBTQ community giving it a voice in the world of professional sports. On national coming out day (11 October 2012) Ramon helped by raising the rainbow flag over the city hall of Zwolle. While being the first openly homosexual volleyball player in The Netherlands he continued representing LGBTQ in his international career. Resulting in being the first openly gay professional athlete in Belgium France and Greece. Ramon was nominated for the OUT d’or in 2019 and to be ambassador of the 15th Paris International Sports Tournament hosted by FSGL.", "Liu Rodríguez\n In 2004, Rodríguez played for the Toros de Tijuana of the Mexican League and the Telemarket Ramini of the Italian Baseball League. He became a free agent after the season.", "Jonathan Rodriguez (basketball)\n Jonathan John Rodríguez (born November 3, 1987) is a Puerto Rican basketball player who played for Campbell University in the A-Sun division of the National Collegiate Athletic Association.", "Clemente Rodríguez\n Rodríguez was part of the gold medal winning Argentine Olympic football team at the 2004 Summer Olympics and has played for the full Argentina national team on an infrequent basis since 2003. He was called by coach Diego Maradona to play in the 2010 FIFA World Cup.", "Iván Rodríguez\n Rodríguez represented Puerto Rico in the 2006 World Baseball Classic. Rodríguez was one of several Major League Baseball players that committed to represent their birthplaces before the organization of the tournament. He also played for Puerto Rico in the 2009 World Baseball Classic and was named to the classic's All-World Baseball Classic team." ]
In what city was Masaru Inada born?
[ "Sapporo" ]
place of birth
Masaru Inada
748,060
40
[ { "id": "6562729", "title": "Masazumi Inada", "text": " Inada was born in Tottori Prefecture in August 1896. He graduated from the 29th class of the Imperial Japanese Army Academy in 1917, where he specialized in artillery. He went on to graduate from the 37th class of the Army Staff College with honors in 1925.", "score": "1.8028997" }, { "id": "12738807", "title": "Ryukichi Inada", "text": " Inada was born in Nagoya and he graduated from Tokyo Imperial University in medicine before travelling abroad for medical studies in Germany.", "score": "1.7654217" }, { "id": "5085109", "title": "Masaru Inada", "text": " Masaru Inada (稲田 勝) is a Japanese skeleton racer who has competed since 1997. He finished 18th in the men's skeleton event at both the 2002 and 2006 Winter Olympics. Inada's best finish at the FIBT World Championships was 11th in Nagano in 2003. He is a graduate of Sendai University.", "score": "1.7640803" }, { "id": "11925436", "title": "Yutaka Inagawa", "text": " Born in Tokyo, Japan, he grew up in the Ikebukuro district. In 1997, he graduated first in his class at the Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music, then went on to gain a master's degree in fine arts in 2004 from Chelsea College of Art and Design in London, England. Since then he has lived and worked in London. His art blends the delicate and the grotesque, juxtaposing photographic fragments, line art and painting to produce complex abstract works. His work is inspired by the uneasy lack of harmony between tradition and modernity in the fast-paced, constantly changing urban ", "score": "1.6791" }, { "id": "13792538", "title": "Inada Syūichi", "text": " Inada Syūichi (稲田 周一) (February 26, 1902 – February 5, 1973) was a Japanese Home Ministry government official and politician. He was born in Niigata Prefecture. He was a graduate of the University of Tokyo. He was governor of Shiga Prefecture (1945–1946). He was Grand Chamberlain of Japan (1965–1969).", "score": "1.6713507" }, { "id": "15117834", "title": "Masasue Suho", "text": " He was born in Shiga Prefecture on October 8, 1885. After attending the Aichi Prefectural Medical College (Now Nagoya University) and becoming a physician, he worked at various institutions. He studied the art of architecture at a night school.", "score": "1.6586192" }, { "id": "29806259", "title": "Masaru Ibuka", "text": " Masaru Ibuka was born on April 11, 1908 as the first son of Tasuku Ibuka, an architectural technologist and a student of Inazo Nitobe. His ancestral family were chief retainers of the Aizu Domain, and his relatives include Yae Ibuka and Ibuka Kajinosuke. Masaru lost his father at the age of two and was taken over by his grandfather. He later moved to Kobe after his mother remarried. He passed the entrance exam to Hyogo Prefectural 1st Kobe Boys’ School (now, Hyogo Prefectural Kobe High School) and was very happy about this success.", "score": "1.653142" }, { "id": "27485134", "title": "Saho Sasazawa", "text": " Saho Sasazwa was born Masaru Sasazawa (笹沢勝), the third son of poet. Born in Yokohama according to many sources, but it has also been said he was actually born in Yodobashi, Tokyo and later moved to Yokohama. There he attended what is now Kanto Gakuin University's high school division, but failed to graduate, frequently running away from home during this period. By 1952 he was in Tokyo, working at the Bureau run by the Postal Ministry. Around this time he dabbled in writing plays. In 1958, he was struck by a DUI car, suffering injuries expecting to take 8 months to fully heal. But his short stories ", "score": "1.6173388" }, { "id": "6562728", "title": "Masazumi Inada", "text": " Masazumi Inada (稲田 正純) was a lieutenant general in the Japanese Imperial Army during World War II.", "score": "1.6048762" }, { "id": "6593503", "title": "Masaru Hayami", "text": " Hayami was born in Hyōgo Prefecture. He graduated from The Tokyo College of Commerce (now Hitotsubashi University) in 1947.", "score": "1.5922344" }, { "id": "32722986", "title": "Junichi Inagaki", "text": " Inagaki was born and raised in Sendai, the capital of Miyagi Prefecture, and graduated from Miyagi Prefectural Technical High School. One of his earliest musical influences was Stevie Wonder. While a student in middle school, he joined a local band called Faces as a vocalist and drummer. Later, he also performed in bands that entertained United States military personnel stationed in Yokosuka and Tachikawa. Beginning with his commercial debut single \"Rainy Regret\" (雨のリグレット Ame no riguretto) in 1982, Inagaki released a series of popular hits. Inagaki's music became especially well known throughout the 1980s and 1990s. His songs have appeared on several drama programs and numerous commercial advertisements on Japanese television. His 1992 ballad \"When ", "score": "1.5887043" }, { "id": "29174087", "title": "Vola and the Oriental Machine", "text": "Ahito Inazawa (アヒト・イナザワ) Born on June 6, 1973 in Fukuoka, Japan. ; Arie Yoshinori (有江嘉典) Born on December 25, 1969 in Fukuoka, Japan. ; Daiki Nakahata (中畑大樹) Born on July 25, 1974 in Aomori, Japan. ; Eisuke Narahara (楢原英介) Born on August 6, 1981 Chiba, Japan. Previously performing as a support member after Aoki Yutaka's departure, Narahara, joined the band as a full-time member on December 1, 2008. ", "score": "1.5810816" }, { "id": "27218914", "title": "Hyōgo Prefecture", "text": " born in Konohana-ku, Osaka grew up in Kawanishi ; Minako Nishiyama, contemporary artist ; Masamune Shirow, manga artist was born in Kobe ; So Taguchi, outfielder for the Chicago Cubs ; Masahiro Tanaka, pitcher for the New York Yankees ; Nagaru Tanigawa, creator of the Haruhi Suzumiya series was born in Kinki ; Tsuneko Taniuchi, contemporary performance artist ; Fumito Ueda, video game creator of Ico, Shadow of the Colossus, and The Last Guardian ; Juri Ueno, Japanese Academy Award-winning actress best known for her performances in Swing Girls and the live-action adaptation of Nodame Cantabile, is from Kakogawa ; Shota Yasuda, guitarist of Kanjani Eight is from Amagasaki ; Piko, musician, Vocaloid singer born in Kobe, Hyōgo ", "score": "1.5762873" }, { "id": "8207133", "title": "Masao Akashi", "text": "Re:Born ", "score": "1.5754867" }, { "id": "8831009", "title": "Masashi Yamamoto", "text": " Born in Ōita Prefecture, Yamamoto attended Meiji University but left early to concentrate on making independent 8mm films. His Carnival in the Night screened at the 1983 Berlin Film Festival and Robinson's Garden was given the Zitty Award at 1987 edition of the Berlinale. The latter film also earned him the Directors Guild of Japan New Directors Award. In 1998 he was given a research fellowship from Japan's Agency for Cultural Affairs to study in New York, during which time he set up screenings of his film Junk Food in America. Often filming those living on the margins of Japanese society, his film Limousine Drive was actually filmed in the United States. He has also acted in some films.", "score": "1.5629257" }, { "id": "32537753", "title": "Inagawa, Hyōgo", "text": "Tatsuya Ikeda (池田達也), professional football player ; Maiko Nakaoka (中岡麻衣子), professional football player ; Eriko Hirose (廣瀬栄理子) ; Nobuyuki Mori (森信行), musician ; Ayumu Yamamoto (山本歩), professional football player ", "score": "1.5628399" }, { "id": "27424670", "title": "1986 in Japan", "text": "January 24: Masazumi Inada, lieutenant general in the Japanese Imperial Army (b. 1896) ; February 21: Shigechiyo Izumi, supercentenarian (b. 1865? or 1880?) ; February 24: Iwaichi Fujiwara, officer in the Imperial Japanese Navy (b. 1908) ; April 8: Yukiko Okada, idol singer (b. 1967) ; April 21: Matsunobori Shigeo, sumo wrestler (b. 1924) ; May 13: Katsuji Matsumoto, illustrator and shōjo manga artist (b. 1904) ; May 17: Masaji Kitano, medical doctor, microbiologist lieutenant general (b. 1894) ; June 26: Kunio Maekawa, architect (b. 1905) ; June 30: Soichi Ichida, philatelist (b. 1910) ; July 31: Chiune Sugihara, diplomat and 'Japanese Schindler' (b. 1900) ; September 10: Koji Shima, film director and screenwriter (b. 1901) ; September 26: Noboru Terada, freestyle swimmer (b. 1917) ; October 14: Takahiko Yamanouchi, theoretical physicist (b. 1902) ; October 25: Tadao Tannaka, mathematician (b. 1908) ; November 12: Fumiko Enchi, author (b. 1905) ; November 26: Kaku Takagawa, Go player (b. 1915) ; December 25: Hamao Umezawa, scientist (b. 1914) ", "score": "1.5540559" }, { "id": "30514950", "title": "Inagaki Toshijiro", "text": " Inagaki was born in Kyoto to Takejiro Inagaki, a painter. He was the second child, and his older brother was Chusei Inagaki. He studied at the Kyoto City University of Arts, and graduated in 1922.", "score": "1.5500007" }, { "id": "15752322", "title": "Granada War Relocation Center", "text": "Kaneji Domoto (1913–2002), an architect and landscape architect ; (1902–2001), nurseryman, noted horticulturist (camellias) ; Robert S. Hamada (born 1937), the Edward Eagle Brown Distinguished Service Professor of Finance and former Dean of the University of Chicago Graduate School of Business ; Mike Honda (born 1941), an American politician ; Lawson Fusao Inada (born 1938), an American poet. Also interned at Jerome ; (1919–2017), an art museum director at Michigan State University, and community activist ; Yasuhiro Ishimoto (1921–2012), an influential photographer ; Kiyoshi K. Muranaga (1922–1944), a United States Army soldier and a recipient of the Medal of Honor ; Yuriko Nakai (born 1932), watercolor artist and author ; Emiko Nakano (1925–1990), abstract expressionist painter, printmaker ; Walter Oi (1929–2013), the Elmer ", "score": "1.5447749" }, { "id": "26342433", "title": "1920 in Japan", "text": "January 23 – Nejiko Suwa, violinist (d. 2012) ; January 30 – Machiko Hasegawa, Illustrator (d. 1992) ; March 17 – Takeo Doi, academic, psychoanalyst and author (d. 2009) ; March 22 – Katsuko Saruhashi, geochemist (d. 2007) ; April 1 – Toshiro Mifune, actor (d. 1997) ; May 9 – Mitsuko Mori, actress (d. 2012) ; May 30 – Shōtarō Yasuoka, writer (d. 2013) ; June 17 – Setsuko Hara, actress (d. 2015) ; July 15 – Yoshio Inaba, actor (d. 1998) ; October 20 – Masao Sugiuchi, go player (d. 2017) ; December 24 – Hiroyuki Agawa, writer (d. 2015) ", "score": "1.543462" } ]
[ "Masazumi Inada\n Inada was born in Tottori Prefecture in August 1896. He graduated from the 29th class of the Imperial Japanese Army Academy in 1917, where he specialized in artillery. He went on to graduate from the 37th class of the Army Staff College with honors in 1925.", "Ryukichi Inada\n Inada was born in Nagoya and he graduated from Tokyo Imperial University in medicine before travelling abroad for medical studies in Germany.", "Masaru Inada\n Masaru Inada (稲田 勝) is a Japanese skeleton racer who has competed since 1997. He finished 18th in the men's skeleton event at both the 2002 and 2006 Winter Olympics. Inada's best finish at the FIBT World Championships was 11th in Nagano in 2003. He is a graduate of Sendai University.", "Yutaka Inagawa\n Born in Tokyo, Japan, he grew up in the Ikebukuro district. In 1997, he graduated first in his class at the Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music, then went on to gain a master's degree in fine arts in 2004 from Chelsea College of Art and Design in London, England. Since then he has lived and worked in London. His art blends the delicate and the grotesque, juxtaposing photographic fragments, line art and painting to produce complex abstract works. His work is inspired by the uneasy lack of harmony between tradition and modernity in the fast-paced, constantly changing urban ", "Inada Syūichi\n Inada Syūichi (稲田 周一) (February 26, 1902 – February 5, 1973) was a Japanese Home Ministry government official and politician. He was born in Niigata Prefecture. He was a graduate of the University of Tokyo. He was governor of Shiga Prefecture (1945–1946). He was Grand Chamberlain of Japan (1965–1969).", "Masasue Suho\n He was born in Shiga Prefecture on October 8, 1885. After attending the Aichi Prefectural Medical College (Now Nagoya University) and becoming a physician, he worked at various institutions. He studied the art of architecture at a night school.", "Masaru Ibuka\n Masaru Ibuka was born on April 11, 1908 as the first son of Tasuku Ibuka, an architectural technologist and a student of Inazo Nitobe. His ancestral family were chief retainers of the Aizu Domain, and his relatives include Yae Ibuka and Ibuka Kajinosuke. Masaru lost his father at the age of two and was taken over by his grandfather. He later moved to Kobe after his mother remarried. He passed the entrance exam to Hyogo Prefectural 1st Kobe Boys’ School (now, Hyogo Prefectural Kobe High School) and was very happy about this success.", "Saho Sasazawa\n Saho Sasazwa was born Masaru Sasazawa (笹沢勝), the third son of poet. Born in Yokohama according to many sources, but it has also been said he was actually born in Yodobashi, Tokyo and later moved to Yokohama. There he attended what is now Kanto Gakuin University's high school division, but failed to graduate, frequently running away from home during this period. By 1952 he was in Tokyo, working at the Bureau run by the Postal Ministry. Around this time he dabbled in writing plays. In 1958, he was struck by a DUI car, suffering injuries expecting to take 8 months to fully heal. But his short stories ", "Masazumi Inada\n Masazumi Inada (稲田 正純) was a lieutenant general in the Japanese Imperial Army during World War II.", "Masaru Hayami\n Hayami was born in Hyōgo Prefecture. He graduated from The Tokyo College of Commerce (now Hitotsubashi University) in 1947.", "Junichi Inagaki\n Inagaki was born and raised in Sendai, the capital of Miyagi Prefecture, and graduated from Miyagi Prefectural Technical High School. One of his earliest musical influences was Stevie Wonder. While a student in middle school, he joined a local band called Faces as a vocalist and drummer. Later, he also performed in bands that entertained United States military personnel stationed in Yokosuka and Tachikawa. Beginning with his commercial debut single \"Rainy Regret\" (雨のリグレット Ame no riguretto) in 1982, Inagaki released a series of popular hits. Inagaki's music became especially well known throughout the 1980s and 1990s. His songs have appeared on several drama programs and numerous commercial advertisements on Japanese television. His 1992 ballad \"When ", "Vola and the Oriental Machine\nAhito Inazawa (アヒト・イナザワ) Born on June 6, 1973 in Fukuoka, Japan. ; Arie Yoshinori (有江嘉典) Born on December 25, 1969 in Fukuoka, Japan. ; Daiki Nakahata (中畑大樹) Born on July 25, 1974 in Aomori, Japan. ; Eisuke Narahara (楢原英介) Born on August 6, 1981 Chiba, Japan. Previously performing as a support member after Aoki Yutaka's departure, Narahara, joined the band as a full-time member on December 1, 2008. ", "Hyōgo Prefecture\n born in Konohana-ku, Osaka grew up in Kawanishi ; Minako Nishiyama, contemporary artist ; Masamune Shirow, manga artist was born in Kobe ; So Taguchi, outfielder for the Chicago Cubs ; Masahiro Tanaka, pitcher for the New York Yankees ; Nagaru Tanigawa, creator of the Haruhi Suzumiya series was born in Kinki ; Tsuneko Taniuchi, contemporary performance artist ; Fumito Ueda, video game creator of Ico, Shadow of the Colossus, and The Last Guardian ; Juri Ueno, Japanese Academy Award-winning actress best known for her performances in Swing Girls and the live-action adaptation of Nodame Cantabile, is from Kakogawa ; Shota Yasuda, guitarist of Kanjani Eight is from Amagasaki ; Piko, musician, Vocaloid singer born in Kobe, Hyōgo ", "Masao Akashi\nRe:Born ", "Masashi Yamamoto\n Born in Ōita Prefecture, Yamamoto attended Meiji University but left early to concentrate on making independent 8mm films. His Carnival in the Night screened at the 1983 Berlin Film Festival and Robinson's Garden was given the Zitty Award at 1987 edition of the Berlinale. The latter film also earned him the Directors Guild of Japan New Directors Award. In 1998 he was given a research fellowship from Japan's Agency for Cultural Affairs to study in New York, during which time he set up screenings of his film Junk Food in America. Often filming those living on the margins of Japanese society, his film Limousine Drive was actually filmed in the United States. He has also acted in some films.", "Inagawa, Hyōgo\nTatsuya Ikeda (池田達也), professional football player ; Maiko Nakaoka (中岡麻衣子), professional football player ; Eriko Hirose (廣瀬栄理子) ; Nobuyuki Mori (森信行), musician ; Ayumu Yamamoto (山本歩), professional football player ", "1986 in Japan\nJanuary 24: Masazumi Inada, lieutenant general in the Japanese Imperial Army (b. 1896) ; February 21: Shigechiyo Izumi, supercentenarian (b. 1865? or 1880?) ; February 24: Iwaichi Fujiwara, officer in the Imperial Japanese Navy (b. 1908) ; April 8: Yukiko Okada, idol singer (b. 1967) ; April 21: Matsunobori Shigeo, sumo wrestler (b. 1924) ; May 13: Katsuji Matsumoto, illustrator and shōjo manga artist (b. 1904) ; May 17: Masaji Kitano, medical doctor, microbiologist lieutenant general (b. 1894) ; June 26: Kunio Maekawa, architect (b. 1905) ; June 30: Soichi Ichida, philatelist (b. 1910) ; July 31: Chiune Sugihara, diplomat and 'Japanese Schindler' (b. 1900) ; September 10: Koji Shima, film director and screenwriter (b. 1901) ; September 26: Noboru Terada, freestyle swimmer (b. 1917) ; October 14: Takahiko Yamanouchi, theoretical physicist (b. 1902) ; October 25: Tadao Tannaka, mathematician (b. 1908) ; November 12: Fumiko Enchi, author (b. 1905) ; November 26: Kaku Takagawa, Go player (b. 1915) ; December 25: Hamao Umezawa, scientist (b. 1914) ", "Inagaki Toshijiro\n Inagaki was born in Kyoto to Takejiro Inagaki, a painter. He was the second child, and his older brother was Chusei Inagaki. He studied at the Kyoto City University of Arts, and graduated in 1922.", "Granada War Relocation Center\nKaneji Domoto (1913–2002), an architect and landscape architect ; (1902–2001), nurseryman, noted horticulturist (camellias) ; Robert S. Hamada (born 1937), the Edward Eagle Brown Distinguished Service Professor of Finance and former Dean of the University of Chicago Graduate School of Business ; Mike Honda (born 1941), an American politician ; Lawson Fusao Inada (born 1938), an American poet. Also interned at Jerome ; (1919–2017), an art museum director at Michigan State University, and community activist ; Yasuhiro Ishimoto (1921–2012), an influential photographer ; Kiyoshi K. Muranaga (1922–1944), a United States Army soldier and a recipient of the Medal of Honor ; Yuriko Nakai (born 1932), watercolor artist and author ; Emiko Nakano (1925–1990), abstract expressionist painter, printmaker ; Walter Oi (1929–2013), the Elmer ", "1920 in Japan\nJanuary 23 – Nejiko Suwa, violinist (d. 2012) ; January 30 – Machiko Hasegawa, Illustrator (d. 1992) ; March 17 – Takeo Doi, academic, psychoanalyst and author (d. 2009) ; March 22 – Katsuko Saruhashi, geochemist (d. 2007) ; April 1 – Toshiro Mifune, actor (d. 1997) ; May 9 – Mitsuko Mori, actress (d. 2012) ; May 30 – Shōtarō Yasuoka, writer (d. 2013) ; June 17 – Setsuko Hara, actress (d. 2015) ; July 15 – Yoshio Inaba, actor (d. 1998) ; October 20 – Masao Sugiuchi, go player (d. 2017) ; December 24 – Hiroyuki Agawa, writer (d. 2015) " ]
In what country is Rubim do Norte River?
[ "Brazil", "Federative Republic of Brazil", "BR", "BRA", "br", "🇧🇷" ]
country
Rubim do Norte River
5,643,924
40
[ { "id": "3568735", "title": "Rubim do Norte River", "text": " The Rubim do Norte River is a river of Minas Gerais state in southeastern Brazil.", "score": "1.7553697" }, { "id": "8849978", "title": "Capim River", "text": " The Capim River (Rio Capim) is a river in the state of Pará, Brazil. It is a tributary of the Guamá River. The Gurupí, Capim and Guamá rivers flow into the mouth of the Amazon and are affected by the daily tides, which force water from the Amazon upstream. They are in the Tocantins-Araguaia-Maranhão moist forests ecoregion.", "score": "1.53537" }, { "id": "308249", "title": "Pitimbu River", "text": " The Pitimbu River is a river of Rio Grande do Norte state in northeastern Brazil. In 2007 the river was tested for potential cytotoxic and genotoxic surface water.", "score": "1.5197505" }, { "id": "29997142", "title": "Rio Grande do Norte", "text": " Rio Grande do Norte (,, ; \"Great Northern River\", in reference to the mouth of the Potengi River) is one of the states of Brazil, located in the northeastern region of the country, occupying the northeasternmost tip of the South American continent. Because of its geographic position, Rio Grande do Norte has a strategic importance. The capital and largest city is Natal. It is the land of the folklorist Luís da Câmara Cascudo. Its 410 km (254 mi) of sand, much sun, coconut palms and lagoons are responsible for the fame of beaches. Rocas Atoll, the only such feature in the Atlantic Ocean, is part of the state. The main economic activity is tourism, followed by the extraction of petroleum (the second largest producer in the country), agriculture, fruit growing and extraction of minerals, including considerable production ", "score": "1.5187573" }, { "id": "3568736", "title": "Rubim do Sul River", "text": " The Rubim do Sul River is a river of Minas Gerais state in southeastern Brazil.", "score": "1.5097456" }, { "id": "3955907", "title": "Peruípe River (Braço Norte)", "text": " The Peruípe River (Braço Norte) is a river in Bahia state in eastern Brazil. It is one of two branches which form parts of the boundaries of Ibirapuã municipality before merging to form the Peruípe River.", "score": "1.5074763" }, { "id": "26982204", "title": "Ceará-Mirim River", "text": " The Ceará-Mirim River is a river of Rio Grande do Norte state in northeastern Brazil.", "score": "1.4920702" }, { "id": "3328391", "title": "Braço Norte Direito River", "text": " The Braço Norte Direito River, or Santa Clara River, is a river of Espírito Santo state in eastern Brazil. It is a tributary of the Itapemirim River. The Itapemirim River is formed by the Castelo River and the Braço Norte Direito and Braço Norte Esquerdo rivers, whose sources are in the Caparaó National Park. The 140 m Cachoeira da Fumaça waterfall on the Braço Norte Direito River attracts thousands of visitors annually due to its great scenic beauty.", "score": "1.4841795" }, { "id": "3805963", "title": "List of municipalities in Rio Grande do Norte", "text": " Rio Grande do Norte (Great River of the North) is a state located in the Northeast Region of Brazil. According to the 2010 Census conducted by the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE), Rio Grande do Norte has a population of 3,168,133 inhabitants over 52797 km2, which makes it the 16th largest state by population and the 22nd largest by area, out of 26 states. It is home to cities such as Natal, Mossoró, and São Gonçalo do Amarante. The land that became Rio Grande do Norte was a donatário to João de Barros, the factor of the House of India and Mina, from John III of Portugal in 1535; prior to that, the Portuguese Crown owned the land. The French, who trafficked Brazil wood in the area, had a foothold on the ", "score": "1.4614245" }, { "id": "27455462", "title": "Paraíba do Norte River", "text": " The Paraíba do Norte River, mostly known as Paraíba River, is the most important watercourse of the state of Paraíba in northeastern Brazil. The river originates in the Borborema Plateau, and flows northeast to empty into the Atlantic Ocean, north of João Pessoa, the state capital. Its constantly menaced estuary has a handful of little islands—among them Restinga and Stuart—and is the habitat of a range of animal species, as well as a number of ecosystems such as mangroves, the Atlantic Forest and salt marshes.", "score": "1.4614235" }, { "id": "14558438", "title": "Madeira River", "text": " to north-eastward direction, inland of Rondônia state of Brazil. The section of the river from the border to Porto Velho has notable drop of bed and was not navigable. Before 2012 the falls of Teotônio and of San Antonio existed here, they had higher flow rate and bigger level drop than more famous Boyoma Falls in Africa. Currently these rapids are submerged by the reservoir of Santo Antônio Dam. Below Porto Velho the Madeira meanders north-eastward through the Rondônia and Amazonas states of north west Brazil to its junction with the Amazon. The 283117 ha Rio Madeira Sustainable Development Reserve, created in 2006, extends along the north bank of the river opposite the town of Novo Aripuanã. At its mouth is Ilha Tupinambaranas, an extensive marshy region formed by the Madeira's distributaries.", "score": "1.45961" }, { "id": "3328399", "title": "Do Norte River (Espírito Santo)", "text": " The Do Norte River is a river of Espírito Santo state in eastern Brazil.", "score": "1.4581835" }, { "id": "29997055", "title": "Pernambuco", "text": " The rivers of the state include a number of small plateau streams flowing southward to the São Francisco River, and several large streams in the eastern part flowing eastward to the Atlantic. The former are the Moxotó, Ema, Pajeú, Terra Nova, Brigida, Boa Vista and Pontai, and are dry channels the greater part of the year. The largest of the coastal rivers are the Goiana River, which is formed by the confluence of the Tracunhaem and Capibaribe-mirim, and drains a rich agricultural region in the north-east part of the state; the Capibaribe, which has its source in the Serra de Jacarara and flows eastward to the Atlantic at Recife with a course of nearly 300 mi; the Ipojuca, which rises in the Serra de Aldeia Velha and reaches the coast south of Recife; the Serinhaen; and the Uná. A large tributary of the Uná, the Rio Jacuhipe, forms part of the boundary line with Alagoas.", "score": "1.4580013" }, { "id": "308245", "title": "Trairi River (Rio Grande do Norte)", "text": " The Trairi River is a river of Rio Grande do Norte state in northeastern Brazil. The river basin contains the Nísia Floresta National Forest, a 169 ha sustainable use conservation unit created in 2001.", "score": "1.4560986" }, { "id": "9051030", "title": "Braço do Norte River", "text": " The Braço do Norte River is a river of Santa Catarina state in southeastern Brazil.", "score": "1.4557374" }, { "id": "26815632", "title": "Jamanxim River", "text": " The river flows through the Tapajós-Xingu moist forests ecoregion. It flows through the Itaituba I National Forest, a 220639 ha sustainable use conservation area established in 1998. The river basin also contains part of the 538151 ha Rio Novo National Park, a conservation unit created in 2006.", "score": "1.45566" }, { "id": "26982208", "title": "Doce River (Rio Grande do Norte)", "text": " The Doce River is a river of Rio Grande do Norte state in northeastern Brazil.", "score": "1.4461226" }, { "id": "1905574", "title": "Guajará-Mirim State Park", "text": " section of BR-421 were built from castanheira wood, and a report from the Brazilian Institute of Environment and Renewable Natural Resources showed that wood had been stolen along the route. The two cities of Guajará-Mirim and Nova Mamoré were isolated in February 2014 because the BR-425 highway had been flooded by the Igarapé das Araras, a tributary of the Madeira River. President Dilma Rousseff visited the state and supported work to open the road through the park. The road was opened in April 2014 after receiving authorisation from the federal court. The road connecting the municipalities of Buritis and Campo Novo ", "score": "1.4393752" }, { "id": "26780480", "title": "Piraí do Norte", "text": " The term \"Piraí\" comes from the Tupi language, meaning \"fish river\", through the junction of pirá (fish) and 'y (river)  . The expression \"from the North\" was added to differentiate the municipality of the municipality of Piraí, in the state of Rio de Janeiro.", "score": "1.43806" }, { "id": "27788730", "title": "Buranhém River", "text": " The Buranhém River - also known as Rio do Peixe - is a watercourse flowing through the states of Minas Gerais (20km) and Bahia (128km), in Brazil. It ends its course at the Atlantic Ocean just by the city of Porto Seguro. The city holds a distinctive place in Brazilian history as in 1500 it was the first landing point of Portuguese navigators commanded by Pedro Álvares Cabral, who discovered Brazil.", "score": "1.4367692" } ]
[ "Rubim do Norte River\n The Rubim do Norte River is a river of Minas Gerais state in southeastern Brazil.", "Capim River\n The Capim River (Rio Capim) is a river in the state of Pará, Brazil. It is a tributary of the Guamá River. The Gurupí, Capim and Guamá rivers flow into the mouth of the Amazon and are affected by the daily tides, which force water from the Amazon upstream. They are in the Tocantins-Araguaia-Maranhão moist forests ecoregion.", "Pitimbu River\n The Pitimbu River is a river of Rio Grande do Norte state in northeastern Brazil. In 2007 the river was tested for potential cytotoxic and genotoxic surface water.", "Rio Grande do Norte\n Rio Grande do Norte (,, ; \"Great Northern River\", in reference to the mouth of the Potengi River) is one of the states of Brazil, located in the northeastern region of the country, occupying the northeasternmost tip of the South American continent. Because of its geographic position, Rio Grande do Norte has a strategic importance. The capital and largest city is Natal. It is the land of the folklorist Luís da Câmara Cascudo. Its 410 km (254 mi) of sand, much sun, coconut palms and lagoons are responsible for the fame of beaches. Rocas Atoll, the only such feature in the Atlantic Ocean, is part of the state. The main economic activity is tourism, followed by the extraction of petroleum (the second largest producer in the country), agriculture, fruit growing and extraction of minerals, including considerable production ", "Rubim do Sul River\n The Rubim do Sul River is a river of Minas Gerais state in southeastern Brazil.", "Peruípe River (Braço Norte)\n The Peruípe River (Braço Norte) is a river in Bahia state in eastern Brazil. It is one of two branches which form parts of the boundaries of Ibirapuã municipality before merging to form the Peruípe River.", "Ceará-Mirim River\n The Ceará-Mirim River is a river of Rio Grande do Norte state in northeastern Brazil.", "Braço Norte Direito River\n The Braço Norte Direito River, or Santa Clara River, is a river of Espírito Santo state in eastern Brazil. It is a tributary of the Itapemirim River. The Itapemirim River is formed by the Castelo River and the Braço Norte Direito and Braço Norte Esquerdo rivers, whose sources are in the Caparaó National Park. The 140 m Cachoeira da Fumaça waterfall on the Braço Norte Direito River attracts thousands of visitors annually due to its great scenic beauty.", "List of municipalities in Rio Grande do Norte\n Rio Grande do Norte (Great River of the North) is a state located in the Northeast Region of Brazil. According to the 2010 Census conducted by the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE), Rio Grande do Norte has a population of 3,168,133 inhabitants over 52797 km2, which makes it the 16th largest state by population and the 22nd largest by area, out of 26 states. It is home to cities such as Natal, Mossoró, and São Gonçalo do Amarante. The land that became Rio Grande do Norte was a donatário to João de Barros, the factor of the House of India and Mina, from John III of Portugal in 1535; prior to that, the Portuguese Crown owned the land. The French, who trafficked Brazil wood in the area, had a foothold on the ", "Paraíba do Norte River\n The Paraíba do Norte River, mostly known as Paraíba River, is the most important watercourse of the state of Paraíba in northeastern Brazil. The river originates in the Borborema Plateau, and flows northeast to empty into the Atlantic Ocean, north of João Pessoa, the state capital. Its constantly menaced estuary has a handful of little islands—among them Restinga and Stuart—and is the habitat of a range of animal species, as well as a number of ecosystems such as mangroves, the Atlantic Forest and salt marshes.", "Madeira River\n to north-eastward direction, inland of Rondônia state of Brazil. The section of the river from the border to Porto Velho has notable drop of bed and was not navigable. Before 2012 the falls of Teotônio and of San Antonio existed here, they had higher flow rate and bigger level drop than more famous Boyoma Falls in Africa. Currently these rapids are submerged by the reservoir of Santo Antônio Dam. Below Porto Velho the Madeira meanders north-eastward through the Rondônia and Amazonas states of north west Brazil to its junction with the Amazon. The 283117 ha Rio Madeira Sustainable Development Reserve, created in 2006, extends along the north bank of the river opposite the town of Novo Aripuanã. At its mouth is Ilha Tupinambaranas, an extensive marshy region formed by the Madeira's distributaries.", "Do Norte River (Espírito Santo)\n The Do Norte River is a river of Espírito Santo state in eastern Brazil.", "Pernambuco\n The rivers of the state include a number of small plateau streams flowing southward to the São Francisco River, and several large streams in the eastern part flowing eastward to the Atlantic. The former are the Moxotó, Ema, Pajeú, Terra Nova, Brigida, Boa Vista and Pontai, and are dry channels the greater part of the year. The largest of the coastal rivers are the Goiana River, which is formed by the confluence of the Tracunhaem and Capibaribe-mirim, and drains a rich agricultural region in the north-east part of the state; the Capibaribe, which has its source in the Serra de Jacarara and flows eastward to the Atlantic at Recife with a course of nearly 300 mi; the Ipojuca, which rises in the Serra de Aldeia Velha and reaches the coast south of Recife; the Serinhaen; and the Uná. A large tributary of the Uná, the Rio Jacuhipe, forms part of the boundary line with Alagoas.", "Trairi River (Rio Grande do Norte)\n The Trairi River is a river of Rio Grande do Norte state in northeastern Brazil. The river basin contains the Nísia Floresta National Forest, a 169 ha sustainable use conservation unit created in 2001.", "Braço do Norte River\n The Braço do Norte River is a river of Santa Catarina state in southeastern Brazil.", "Jamanxim River\n The river flows through the Tapajós-Xingu moist forests ecoregion. It flows through the Itaituba I National Forest, a 220639 ha sustainable use conservation area established in 1998. The river basin also contains part of the 538151 ha Rio Novo National Park, a conservation unit created in 2006.", "Doce River (Rio Grande do Norte)\n The Doce River is a river of Rio Grande do Norte state in northeastern Brazil.", "Guajará-Mirim State Park\n section of BR-421 were built from castanheira wood, and a report from the Brazilian Institute of Environment and Renewable Natural Resources showed that wood had been stolen along the route. The two cities of Guajará-Mirim and Nova Mamoré were isolated in February 2014 because the BR-425 highway had been flooded by the Igarapé das Araras, a tributary of the Madeira River. President Dilma Rousseff visited the state and supported work to open the road through the park. The road was opened in April 2014 after receiving authorisation from the federal court. The road connecting the municipalities of Buritis and Campo Novo ", "Piraí do Norte\n The term \"Piraí\" comes from the Tupi language, meaning \"fish river\", through the junction of pirá (fish) and 'y (river)  . The expression \"from the North\" was added to differentiate the municipality of the municipality of Piraí, in the state of Rio de Janeiro.", "Buranhém River\n The Buranhém River - also known as Rio do Peixe - is a watercourse flowing through the states of Minas Gerais (20km) and Bahia (128km), in Brazil. It ends its course at the Atlantic Ocean just by the city of Porto Seguro. The city holds a distinctive place in Brazilian history as in 1500 it was the first landing point of Portuguese navigators commanded by Pedro Álvares Cabral, who discovered Brazil." ]
Who is the author of Warrior?
[ "Jennifer Fallon" ]
author
Warrior (Fallon novel)
6,146,167
5
[ { "id": "13336341", "title": "Complete Warrior", "text": " Complete Warrior was written by Andy Collins, David Noonan, and Ed Stark, and was published in November 2003. Cover art is by Wayne Reynolds, with interior art by Brent Chumley, Ed Cox, Wayne England, Rebecca Guay-Mitchell, Jeremy Jarvis, Doug Kovacs, Ginger Kubic, John and Laura Lakey, David Martin, Dennis Crabapple McClain, Matt Mitchell, Steve Prescott, Wayne Reynolds, David Roach, Mark Smylie, Brian Snoddy, Ron Spencer, and Joel Thomas. As this book is not intended only for fighters, David Noonan clarified that Complete Warrior would be useful for: \"In short, anybody who makes attack rolls. That's often the fighter, of course, but there's something in Complete Warrior for the polymorphed wizard, the wild-shaped druid, and any number of archetypes who don't trundle around in heavy armor heaving a big battleaxe.\"", "score": "1.5201206" }, { "id": "3288900", "title": "Doppelganger (Brennan novel)", "text": " Doppelganger, also published under the title Warrior, is a high fantasy novel written by Marie Brennan that chronicle the adventures of Miryo, a witch, and Mirage, her doppelgänger.", "score": "1.5086824" }, { "id": "1534780", "title": "List of works by Robert Jordan", "text": " Warrior of the Altaii is Jordan's first novel, which remained unpublished for more than 40 years; it is 98,000 words in length, and he finished it in 13 days. Donald A. Wolheim at DAW Books made an offer for it, but revoked the offer when Jordan requested a small change in his contract. When Harriet McDougal was Editorial Director for Ace Books, Tom Doherty hired Jim Baen to work under her. When Doherty left Ace Books to start Tor Books in 1980, Baen followed, working at Tor for a few years before starting his own imprint, Baen Books. Baen did not have a very high opinion of fantasy, and so he bought Warriors for Ace Books as a science fiction novel. When he left Ace for Tor, Susan Allison took his place and reverted the rights for the novel to Jordan. When McDougal returned to Charleston to start her own imprint, Popham Press, she met Jordan and published his first novel, The Fallon Blood. Twelve years after his death, Warrior of the Altaii published on October 8, 2019.", "score": "1.4965208" }, { "id": "7567060", "title": "Warriors (novel series)", "text": " write the third book, Forest of Secrets. Later, after she wrote the first Warriors field guide, Tui Sutherland became the fourth author to use the pseudonym Erin Hunter. The authors have named several other authors as sources of inspiration when writing the novels. In an online author chat, Cherith Baldry listed the authors that inspire her as including Tolkien, Ursula K. Le Guin, and Shakespeare. In the same chat, Victoria Holmes stated that Jacqueline Wilson, Kathy Reichs, and J. K. Rowling are some of the authors that inspire her. According to the official website, other authors who have inspired the writers include Enid Blyton, Lucy Daniels, Ellis Peters, Tess Gerritsen, Kate Ellis, Lisa Gardiner, and Meg ", "score": "1.4952575" }, { "id": "3758066", "title": "The Warrior Who Carried Life", "text": " The Warrior Who Carried Life is a novel by Geoff Ryman published in 1985.", "score": "1.4892585" }, { "id": "28694805", "title": "The Warrior Prophet", "text": " The Warrior Prophet is the second book in the Prince of Nothing series by R. Scott Bakker. It was first published in hardback on January 13, 2005 through The Overlook Press and was released in paperback in 2008. It was preceded by the 2003 book The Darkness That Comes Before and the trilogy concluded in 2006 with The Thousandfold Thought.", "score": "1.4881423" }, { "id": "7567054", "title": "Warriors (novel series)", "text": " Warriors is a series of novels based on the adventures and drama of multiple clans of feral cats. The series is primarily set in the fictional location of White Hart Woods, and later, Sanctuary Lake. Published by HarperCollins, the series is written by authors Kate Cary, Cherith Baldry, and Tui T. Sutherland under the collective pseudonym Erin Hunter. The concept and plot of the pilot series (The Prophecies Begin) was developed by now-series editor Victoria Holmes. There are currently seven sub-series, each containing six books. The first, Warriors (later re-titled Warriors: The Prophecies Begin), was published from 2003 to 2004, and details the adventures of a \"kittypet\" (housecat) named Rusty who joins ThunderClan, ", "score": "1.4858242" }, { "id": "9804062", "title": "Noble Warriors", "text": " The Noble Warriors trilogy is a fantasy series, written by British novelist William Nicholson. The first book, Seeker, was published in 2006, as was the second in the trilogy, Jango. The third book, Noman, was published in September 2007.", "score": "1.4792743" }, { "id": "7456883", "title": "Holy Warrior", "text": " Holy Warrior is the second novel of the eight-part Outlaw Chronicles series by British writer of historical fiction, Angus Donald, released on 22 July 2010 through Little, Brown and Company. The novel was well received.", "score": "1.4752269" }, { "id": "12596595", "title": "John Jude Palencar bibliography", "text": " Warrior by Lynn Flewelling (2003) ; Dreams Underfoot by Charles de Lint ; Eragon by Christopher Paolini (2003) ; Spirits in the Wires by Charles de Lint (2003) ; Confidence Game by Michelle M. Welch ; Shadows Over Baker Street anthology by John Pelan and Michael Reaves (2003) ; Eye of Flame by Pamela Sargent (2003) Angel-Seeker by Sharon Shinn (2004) ; Smoke and Shadows by Tanya Huff (2004) ; The New Lovecraft Circle anthology by Robert M. Price (2004) ; The Child Goddess by Louise Marley (2004) ; The Wild Reel by Paul Brandon (2004) ; The Bright ", "score": "1.4747816" }, { "id": "31049225", "title": "The Warrior of World's End", "text": " The Warrior of World's End is a fantasy novel by American writer Lin Carter, set on a decadent far-future Earth in which all the world's land masses have supposedly drifted back together to form a last supercontinent called Gondwane. The book is chronologically the first in Carter's Gondwane Epic (the culminating novel Giant of World's End having been issued earlier). It was first published in paperback by DAW Books in November 1974, and reprinted twice through November 1978. A trade paperback edition was published by Wildside Press in January 2001. The book includes a map by the author of the portion of Gondwane in which its story is set.", "score": "1.4687462" }, { "id": "29385162", "title": "Pen name", "text": " author of the Warriors novel series, is actually a collective pen name used by authors Kate Cary, Cherith Baldry, Tui T. Sutherland, and the editor Victoria Holmes. Collaborative authors may also have their works published under a single pen name. Frederic Dannay and Manfred B. Lee published their mystery novels and stories under the pen name Ellery Queen, as well as publishing the work of ghost-writers under the same name. The writers of Atlanta Nights, a deliberately bad book intended to embarrass the publishing firm PublishAmerica, used the pen name Travis Tea. Additionally, the credited author of The Expanse, James S.A. Corey, is an amalgam of the middle names of collaborating writers Daniel Abraham and Ty Franck respectively, while S.A. are the initials of ", "score": "1.4670837" }, { "id": "444958", "title": "Curtis Jobling", "text": "A New Hero (World of Warriors book 1) (Puffin, 2015) ISBN: 978-0141360027 ", "score": "1.4635875" }, { "id": "2459156", "title": "Dan Millman", "text": " Daniel Jay Millman (born February 22, 1946) is an American author and lecturer in the personal development field. He is best-known for the movie Peaceful Warrior, which is based on his own life and taken from one of his books.", "score": "1.4629631" }, { "id": "9216722", "title": "Jamie Thomson (author)", "text": "The Cyber Warriors (1994) ; The Citadel of Chaos (1994) ", "score": "1.4613683" }, { "id": "4114098", "title": "The Way of the Warrior (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine)", "text": " A novelization of the episode was written by Diane Carey, and published by Simon and Schuster.", "score": "1.4471838" }, { "id": "8803587", "title": "Sharon Green", "text": "1) The Warrior Within, DAW Books, 1982 ; 2) The Warrior Enchained, DAW Books, 1983 ; 3) The Warrior Rearmed, DAW Books, 1984 ; 4) The Warrior Challenged, DAW Books, 1986 ; 5) The Warrior Victorious, DAW Books, 1987 ", "score": "1.4452899" }, { "id": "29790457", "title": "Sahle Sellassie Berhane Mariam", "text": " The manuscript for Warrior King was once again submitted to Heinemann. In responding to criticisms from early readers, Sahle Sellassie wrote on 21 July 1973:\"'As yourself and the other readers have clearly pointed out it is a story told in a simple, straightforward manner, the story of a man who starts life from the dust and raises himself to the status of emperor. My intention was to show that a man is what he makes of himself. It is not true that men are made rulers over others by God. They make themselves so. And then I had some other intentions in writing ", "score": "1.4437954" }, { "id": "28694807", "title": "The Warrior Prophet", "text": " Critical reception has been mostly positive and the novel has received praise from Publishers Weekly and the Edmonton Journal. In her review for the SF Site, Victoria Strauss rated The Warrior Prophet favorably, praising Bakker for his \"meticulous world building\" and \"delving unflinchingly into the exalted heights and seamy depths of human nature\". The Bookseller favorably compared Bakker to Anne Rice and George R. R. Martin, also stating that \"Dense and demanding are not terms you would use to describe most commercial fantasy, but I feel they are the very reasons why this should sell well.\" The Guardian was slightly mixed in their review, writing that the book suffered from Bakker having only one year to write the novel and that \"The Warrior Prophet is a good book; with more stringent editing, it could have brilliant. That said, it still leaves most of the competition trailing.\"", "score": "1.4435586" }, { "id": "31089419", "title": "Doomsday Warrior", "text": " Doomsday Warrior is a series of science fiction short novels set in 2089 and later, depicting the struggle to reclaim America from the USSR, after a nuclear strike and invasion in 1989 (the first book was written in 1984). The author, Ryder Stacy, is a pseudonym shared by Jan Stacy and Ryder Syvertsen. The series was published as part of the Zebra Books Men's Adventure series.", "score": "1.4416854" } ]
[ "Complete Warrior\n Complete Warrior was written by Andy Collins, David Noonan, and Ed Stark, and was published in November 2003. Cover art is by Wayne Reynolds, with interior art by Brent Chumley, Ed Cox, Wayne England, Rebecca Guay-Mitchell, Jeremy Jarvis, Doug Kovacs, Ginger Kubic, John and Laura Lakey, David Martin, Dennis Crabapple McClain, Matt Mitchell, Steve Prescott, Wayne Reynolds, David Roach, Mark Smylie, Brian Snoddy, Ron Spencer, and Joel Thomas. As this book is not intended only for fighters, David Noonan clarified that Complete Warrior would be useful for: \"In short, anybody who makes attack rolls. That's often the fighter, of course, but there's something in Complete Warrior for the polymorphed wizard, the wild-shaped druid, and any number of archetypes who don't trundle around in heavy armor heaving a big battleaxe.\"", "Doppelganger (Brennan novel)\n Doppelganger, also published under the title Warrior, is a high fantasy novel written by Marie Brennan that chronicle the adventures of Miryo, a witch, and Mirage, her doppelgänger.", "List of works by Robert Jordan\n Warrior of the Altaii is Jordan's first novel, which remained unpublished for more than 40 years; it is 98,000 words in length, and he finished it in 13 days. Donald A. Wolheim at DAW Books made an offer for it, but revoked the offer when Jordan requested a small change in his contract. When Harriet McDougal was Editorial Director for Ace Books, Tom Doherty hired Jim Baen to work under her. When Doherty left Ace Books to start Tor Books in 1980, Baen followed, working at Tor for a few years before starting his own imprint, Baen Books. Baen did not have a very high opinion of fantasy, and so he bought Warriors for Ace Books as a science fiction novel. When he left Ace for Tor, Susan Allison took his place and reverted the rights for the novel to Jordan. When McDougal returned to Charleston to start her own imprint, Popham Press, she met Jordan and published his first novel, The Fallon Blood. Twelve years after his death, Warrior of the Altaii published on October 8, 2019.", "Warriors (novel series)\n write the third book, Forest of Secrets. Later, after she wrote the first Warriors field guide, Tui Sutherland became the fourth author to use the pseudonym Erin Hunter. The authors have named several other authors as sources of inspiration when writing the novels. In an online author chat, Cherith Baldry listed the authors that inspire her as including Tolkien, Ursula K. Le Guin, and Shakespeare. In the same chat, Victoria Holmes stated that Jacqueline Wilson, Kathy Reichs, and J. K. Rowling are some of the authors that inspire her. According to the official website, other authors who have inspired the writers include Enid Blyton, Lucy Daniels, Ellis Peters, Tess Gerritsen, Kate Ellis, Lisa Gardiner, and Meg ", "The Warrior Who Carried Life\n The Warrior Who Carried Life is a novel by Geoff Ryman published in 1985.", "The Warrior Prophet\n The Warrior Prophet is the second book in the Prince of Nothing series by R. Scott Bakker. It was first published in hardback on January 13, 2005 through The Overlook Press and was released in paperback in 2008. It was preceded by the 2003 book The Darkness That Comes Before and the trilogy concluded in 2006 with The Thousandfold Thought.", "Warriors (novel series)\n Warriors is a series of novels based on the adventures and drama of multiple clans of feral cats. The series is primarily set in the fictional location of White Hart Woods, and later, Sanctuary Lake. Published by HarperCollins, the series is written by authors Kate Cary, Cherith Baldry, and Tui T. Sutherland under the collective pseudonym Erin Hunter. The concept and plot of the pilot series (The Prophecies Begin) was developed by now-series editor Victoria Holmes. There are currently seven sub-series, each containing six books. The first, Warriors (later re-titled Warriors: The Prophecies Begin), was published from 2003 to 2004, and details the adventures of a \"kittypet\" (housecat) named Rusty who joins ThunderClan, ", "Noble Warriors\n The Noble Warriors trilogy is a fantasy series, written by British novelist William Nicholson. The first book, Seeker, was published in 2006, as was the second in the trilogy, Jango. The third book, Noman, was published in September 2007.", "Holy Warrior\n Holy Warrior is the second novel of the eight-part Outlaw Chronicles series by British writer of historical fiction, Angus Donald, released on 22 July 2010 through Little, Brown and Company. The novel was well received.", "John Jude Palencar bibliography\n Warrior by Lynn Flewelling (2003) ; Dreams Underfoot by Charles de Lint ; Eragon by Christopher Paolini (2003) ; Spirits in the Wires by Charles de Lint (2003) ; Confidence Game by Michelle M. Welch ; Shadows Over Baker Street anthology by John Pelan and Michael Reaves (2003) ; Eye of Flame by Pamela Sargent (2003) Angel-Seeker by Sharon Shinn (2004) ; Smoke and Shadows by Tanya Huff (2004) ; The New Lovecraft Circle anthology by Robert M. Price (2004) ; The Child Goddess by Louise Marley (2004) ; The Wild Reel by Paul Brandon (2004) ; The Bright ", "The Warrior of World's End\n The Warrior of World's End is a fantasy novel by American writer Lin Carter, set on a decadent far-future Earth in which all the world's land masses have supposedly drifted back together to form a last supercontinent called Gondwane. The book is chronologically the first in Carter's Gondwane Epic (the culminating novel Giant of World's End having been issued earlier). It was first published in paperback by DAW Books in November 1974, and reprinted twice through November 1978. A trade paperback edition was published by Wildside Press in January 2001. The book includes a map by the author of the portion of Gondwane in which its story is set.", "Pen name\n author of the Warriors novel series, is actually a collective pen name used by authors Kate Cary, Cherith Baldry, Tui T. Sutherland, and the editor Victoria Holmes. Collaborative authors may also have their works published under a single pen name. Frederic Dannay and Manfred B. Lee published their mystery novels and stories under the pen name Ellery Queen, as well as publishing the work of ghost-writers under the same name. The writers of Atlanta Nights, a deliberately bad book intended to embarrass the publishing firm PublishAmerica, used the pen name Travis Tea. Additionally, the credited author of The Expanse, James S.A. Corey, is an amalgam of the middle names of collaborating writers Daniel Abraham and Ty Franck respectively, while S.A. are the initials of ", "Curtis Jobling\nA New Hero (World of Warriors book 1) (Puffin, 2015) ISBN: 978-0141360027 ", "Dan Millman\n Daniel Jay Millman (born February 22, 1946) is an American author and lecturer in the personal development field. He is best-known for the movie Peaceful Warrior, which is based on his own life and taken from one of his books.", "Jamie Thomson (author)\nThe Cyber Warriors (1994) ; The Citadel of Chaos (1994) ", "The Way of the Warrior (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine)\n A novelization of the episode was written by Diane Carey, and published by Simon and Schuster.", "Sharon Green\n1) The Warrior Within, DAW Books, 1982 ; 2) The Warrior Enchained, DAW Books, 1983 ; 3) The Warrior Rearmed, DAW Books, 1984 ; 4) The Warrior Challenged, DAW Books, 1986 ; 5) The Warrior Victorious, DAW Books, 1987 ", "Sahle Sellassie Berhane Mariam\n The manuscript for Warrior King was once again submitted to Heinemann. In responding to criticisms from early readers, Sahle Sellassie wrote on 21 July 1973:\"'As yourself and the other readers have clearly pointed out it is a story told in a simple, straightforward manner, the story of a man who starts life from the dust and raises himself to the status of emperor. My intention was to show that a man is what he makes of himself. It is not true that men are made rulers over others by God. They make themselves so. And then I had some other intentions in writing ", "The Warrior Prophet\n Critical reception has been mostly positive and the novel has received praise from Publishers Weekly and the Edmonton Journal. In her review for the SF Site, Victoria Strauss rated The Warrior Prophet favorably, praising Bakker for his \"meticulous world building\" and \"delving unflinchingly into the exalted heights and seamy depths of human nature\". The Bookseller favorably compared Bakker to Anne Rice and George R. R. Martin, also stating that \"Dense and demanding are not terms you would use to describe most commercial fantasy, but I feel they are the very reasons why this should sell well.\" The Guardian was slightly mixed in their review, writing that the book suffered from Bakker having only one year to write the novel and that \"The Warrior Prophet is a good book; with more stringent editing, it could have brilliant. That said, it still leaves most of the competition trailing.\"", "Doomsday Warrior\n Doomsday Warrior is a series of science fiction short novels set in 2089 and later, depicting the struggle to reclaim America from the USSR, after a nuclear strike and invasion in 1989 (the first book was written in 1984). The author, Ryder Stacy, is a pseudonym shared by Jan Stacy and Ryder Syvertsen. The series was published as part of the Zebra Books Men's Adventure series." ]
What is the capital of Chiprovtsi Municipality?
[ "Chiprovtsi" ]
capital
Chiprovtsi Municipality
1,956,321
96
[ { "id": "12152216", "title": "Chiprovtsi Municipality", "text": " Chiprovtsi Municipality (Община Чипровци) is a small frontier municipality (obshtina) in Montana Province, Northwestern Bulgaria, located on the northern slopes of western Stara Planina mountain and the area of the so-called Fore-Balkan. It is named after its administrative centre - the town of Chiprovtsi. In the southwest, the municipality borders on Republic of Serbia. The area embraces a territory of 286.8 km² with a population of 3,657 inhabitants, as of February 2011.", "score": "1.9997289" }, { "id": "2444393", "title": "Chiprovtsi", "text": " Chiprovtsi (Чипровци, pronounced ) is a small town in northwestern Bulgaria, administratively part of Montana Province. It lies on the shores of the river Ogosta in the western Balkan Mountains, very close to the Bulgarian-Serbian border. A town of about 2,000 inhabitants, Chiprovtsi is the administrative centre of Chiprovtsi Municipality that also covers nine nearby villages. Chiprovtsi is thought to have been founded in the Late Middle Ages as a mining and metalsmithing centre. Attracting German ore miners who introduced Roman Catholicism to the area, the town grew in importance as a cultural, economic and religious centre of the Bulgarian Catholics and the entire Bulgarian northwest during the first ", "score": "1.9383152" }, { "id": "12152218", "title": "Chiprovtsi Municipality", "text": " Chiprovtsi Municipality is located in the western part of Montana Province. The municipality has an area of 286.9 km2, which is 7.89% of the provinces' territory and 0.26% of that of Bulgaria. To the east, Chiprovtsi municipality borders Montana and Georgi Damyanovo municipalities of the same province; its southern neighbour is also Georgi Damyanovo. To the west are the Serbian border and Chuprene municipality of Vidin Province and to the north is Ruzhintsi municipality of Vidin Province. Besides the town, the municipality includes nine villages, namely Belimel, Chelyustnitsa, Gorna Kovachitsa, Gorna Luka, Martinovo, Mitrovtsi, Prevala, Ravna and Zhelezna. The town lies 155 km from the Bulgarian capital ", "score": "1.9289347" }, { "id": "12152217", "title": "Chiprovtsi Municipality", "text": " Chiprovtsi Municipality includes the following 10 places (towns are shown in bold):", "score": "1.8990587" }, { "id": "12152219", "title": "Chiprovtsi Municipality", "text": " 35 km from the provincial capital Montana, 44 km from Berkovitsa and 18 km from the national border of Bulgaria and Serbia; the nearest Serbian municipality is Surdulica. Chiprovtsi municipality falls in the humid continental climate climate zone, with a slight mountain influence. The average year-round temperature is 9.7 °C; the average monthly temperature is -1 to 0 C in January and 20 °C in July. The average yearly precipitation is 776–816 millimetres. The spring is short and rainy, while the summer is generally hot and dry. In the winter, the area is subject to a strong northeastern wind and a temperature inversion in the valleys. Of ", "score": "1.8708112" }, { "id": "12152224", "title": "Chiprovtsi Municipality", "text": " The municipal government consists of a mayor (kmet), a deputy mayor and a secretary. Since 2007, the municipality has been governed by Zaharin Ivanov Zamfirov of Bulgarian Agrarian People's Union \"Aleksandar Stamboliyski\" who won the municipal elections with 1,615 votes or 62.67% against Antoaneta Todorova Kostova of the Bulgarian Socialist Party who amassed 962 votes or 37.33%. Two villages in the municipality are eligible to elect their own mayor, Prevala and Zhelezna. The municipal administration is divided into two branches, the common and specialized administration. The common administration is further divided into the \"Information Services\" and \"Financial-economical Activities and Handling of Property\" departments; the specialized administration includes the \"Planning and Distribution of the Budget\" and \"Territorial and Village Planning and Building\" departments. The municipality has no separate court or prosecutor's office and is instead serviced by the Montana provincial court and office. The local police station is subordinate to the one in Montana. There is a Municipal Land Commission, part of the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry, and a Municipal Social Service. The Municipal Land Commission takes care of land and forest distribution and the Municipal Social Service oversees financial aid and supports the disabled.", "score": "1.856811" }, { "id": "12152220", "title": "Chiprovtsi Municipality", "text": " 38 rivers and rivulets that flow across the municipality, the most important are the Ogosta and the Prevalska. There is a water reservoir near Martinovo and a hydroelectric plant at Zhelezna. There are no mineral springs in the municipality. Chiprovtsi municipality is home to 1,250 species of plants, including a large number of herbs and deciduous trees; some of the trees are 150–300 years old. Of the municipality's area of 286.9 km2, 50.51% or 144.9 km2 are covered by forests, 42.73% or 122.6 km2 constitute arable land and 5.71% or 16.4 km2 are urban areas. The remaining 1.05% are composed of water areas, mines and infrastructure.", "score": "1.8464603" }, { "id": "12152222", "title": "Chiprovtsi Municipality", "text": " the municipality has experienced population ageing and rural depopulation, as many people have migrated to larger cities such as Montana, Vidin, Vratsa and Sofia. The ratio of urban to rural population is 49.37% to 50.63%, indicating an almost equal distribution between the town of Chiprovtsi and the surrounding villages. As of 2005, the unemployment in the municipality is 23.5%, much higher than the Bulgarian average of 7.75% according to 2007 data. Since 2004 the population of the municipality has declined: 2005 = 4,198, 2007 = 3,955, 2009 = 3,719, 2011 = 3,657 The population declined further to 3,219 people at the end of 2017.", "score": "1.8327888" }, { "id": "2444419", "title": "Chiprovtsi", "text": " The municipal government consists of a mayor (kmet), a deputy mayor and a secretary. Since 2007, the municipality has been governed by Zaharin Ivanov Zamfirov of Bulgarian Agrarian People's Union \"Aleksandar Stamboliyski\" who won the municipal elections with 1,615 votes or 62.67% against Antoaneta Todorova Kostova of the Bulgarian Socialist Party who amassed 962 votes or 37.33%. Two villages in the municipality are eligible to elect their own mayor, Prevala and Zhelezna. The municipal administration is divided into two branches, the common and specialized administration. The common administration is further divided into the \"Information Services\" and \"Financial-economical Activities and Handling of Property\" departments; the specialized administration includes the \"Planning and Distribution of the Budget\" and ", "score": "1.8320954" }, { "id": "12152223", "title": "Chiprovtsi Municipality", "text": " According to the latest Bulgarian census of 2011, the religious composition, among those who answered the optional question on religious identification, was the following:", "score": "1.8190737" }, { "id": "2444418", "title": "Chiprovtsi", "text": " were engaged in carpet weaving. In 1920, the locals founded the Manual Labour carpet-weaving cooperative society, the first of its kind in the country. In the 1950s, ore output was renewed in the region, briefly revitalizing Chiprovtsi through the influx of young and highly educated people. On 12 September 1968, Chiprovtsi was officially proclaimed a town by the National Assembly of Bulgaria. In Socialist times, the town had a factory that produced AK-47 magazines and employed about 400 people. After the democratic changes in 1989, mining was discontinued again due to a lack of funds, the factory was closed and the carpet industry has been in decline as it had lost its firm foreign markets. As a result, the town and the municipality have been experiencing a demographic crisis.", "score": "1.8136573" }, { "id": "2444426", "title": "Chiprovtsi", "text": " works of the Chiprovtsi goldsmithing and carpet industry. The town has an Eastern Orthodox church dedicated to the Ascension of Jesus; the remains of the old Roman Catholic church of Saint Mary have also been preserved. The Chiprovtsi Monastery is situated outside the town; there are ruins of several other Orthodox churches and another monastery. The town has a community cultural centre (chitalishte) with branches in eight of the villages in the municipality. The chitalishte has a youth dancing group, a folk music group, a theatrical group, a folk ritual and customs reproduction group and other similar groups. The nine libraries of the Chiprovtsi chitalishte and its branches house 65,975 volumes of books.", "score": "1.8072695" }, { "id": "2444398", "title": "Chiprovtsi", "text": " On 31 July 2005, Chiprovtsi's population was 2,375 people — 1,167 men and 1,208 women. By June 2008, the town's population had declined to 2,122.", "score": "1.8052137" }, { "id": "12152221", "title": "Chiprovtsi Municipality", "text": " On 31 July 2005, Chiprovtsi municipality's population was 4,810; 2,375 people were from the town itself—1,167 men and 1,208 women. By June 2008, the town's population had declined to 2,122. According to 2005 data, the largest village in the municipality is Prevala with a population of 585; the smallest is Ravna with 68. The ethnic composition of the municipality is homogeneous; 4,722 people or 99.21% identify themselves as Bulgarians and 38 people or 0.79% as Roma. Of the Roma, three quarters live in the Barzan neighbourhood of Martinovo and arrived from around Asenovgrad, the rest are residents of Chelyustnitsa and descend from Berkovitsa. Since ", "score": "1.7911818" }, { "id": "2444394", "title": "Chiprovtsi", "text": " centuries of Ottoman rule. The apogee of this upsurge was the anti-Ottoman Chiprovtsi Uprising of 1688. After the suppression of the uprising, some of the town's population fled to Habsburg-ruled lands; those unable to flee were killed or enslaved by the Ottomans. Deserted for about 30 years, the town was repopulated by Eastern Orthodox Bulgarians, beginning in the 1720s. It was following this new settlement that Chiprovtsi became a major centre of the Bulgarian carpet industry. Other traditional industries have been stock breeding, agriculture and fur trade. Today, Chiprovtsi municipality experiences a declining population and above-average unemployment. However, the development of alternative tourism help to sustain the economy.", "score": "1.7823231" }, { "id": "2444420", "title": "Chiprovtsi", "text": " and Village Planning and Building\" departments. The municipality has no separate court or prosecutor's office and is instead serviced by the Montana provincial court and office. The local police station is subordinate to the one in Montana. There is a Municipal Land Commission, part of the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry, and a Municipal Social Service. The Municipal Land Commission takes care of land and forest distribution and the Municipal Social Service oversees financial aid and supports the disabled. The town has a primary school (grades 1–4) and a high school (grades 4–12); both claim to be successors of the school founded in 1624. The two schools service the entire municipality, as the six schools ", "score": "1.7752194" }, { "id": "2444397", "title": "Chiprovtsi", "text": " Chiprovtsi is situated in a small valley at the foot of the Chiprovtsi Mountain, a high northern branch of the western Balkan Mountains. The Chiprovtsi Mountain forms the border between Bulgaria and the neighbouring Serbia. It is 35 km long and features several peaks around 2000 m, including Midzhur (2168 m), Martinova Chuka (2011 m), Golyama Chuka (1967 m), Kopren (1964 m), Tri Chuki (1938 m) and Vrazha Glava (1936 m). The Ogosta River, a right tributary of the Danube, originates from the Chiprovtsi Mountain and flows northeast through the Danubian Plain to join the Danube in Vratsa Province. Just northeast of the town is another mountain, Shiroka Planina, a branch of the Fore-Balkan Mountains. The region is rich in metal and mineral deposits.", "score": "1.7683477" }, { "id": "2444424", "title": "Chiprovtsi", "text": " The local Bulgarians traditionally belong to the ethnographic group of the Torlaks and speak a transitional Bulgarian dialect, the Belogradchik dialect. Most of the population are adherents of the Bulgarian Orthodox Church. The municipality has 30 registered cultural monuments and 12 consecrated stone crosses, of which eight in Chiprovtsi. Such crosses are typical for the Bulgarian northwest and each is dedicated to a saint: they serve both demarcating and religious purposes. Most of the crosses are not dated, with the notable exceptions of Saint Demetrius—1755, Saints Peter and Paul—1781 and Holy Mother of God—1874. A notable cultural trait of Chiprovtsi shared with much of the region is the veneration of a family patron ", "score": "1.7511164" }, { "id": "2444422", "title": "Chiprovtsi", "text": " wool, coloured using plant or mineral dyes. The local carpets have been prized at exhibitions in London, Paris, Liège and Brussels. The kilim making of Chiprovtsi was inscribed on the Intangible Cultural Heritage list of UNESCO in 2014. The municipality has also invested in the development of tourism and many private houses have been turned into small family hotels or guesthouses. In 2004, 65 people were engaged in the tourism industry; in the same year, the municipality was visited by 2,350 tourists, of whom were 254 foreigners. In terms of economic indicators, the municipality ranks around the high average: it is 113th of 264 municipalities in Bulgaria by GDP per capita and 67th by ", "score": "1.6990802" }, { "id": "4236769", "title": "Montana Province", "text": "Belimel (Белимел) ; Chelyustnitsa (Челюстница) ; Chiprovtsi (Чипровци) ; Gorna Kovachitsa (Горна Ковачица) ; Gorna Luka (Горна Лука) ; Martinovo (Мартиново) ; Mitrovtsi (Митровци) ; Prevala (Превала) ; Ravna (Равна) ; Zhelezna (Железна) The Chiprovtsi municipality has one town (in bold) and nine villages: ", "score": "1.6901007" } ]
[ "Chiprovtsi Municipality\n Chiprovtsi Municipality (Община Чипровци) is a small frontier municipality (obshtina) in Montana Province, Northwestern Bulgaria, located on the northern slopes of western Stara Planina mountain and the area of the so-called Fore-Balkan. It is named after its administrative centre - the town of Chiprovtsi. In the southwest, the municipality borders on Republic of Serbia. The area embraces a territory of 286.8 km² with a population of 3,657 inhabitants, as of February 2011.", "Chiprovtsi\n Chiprovtsi (Чипровци, pronounced ) is a small town in northwestern Bulgaria, administratively part of Montana Province. It lies on the shores of the river Ogosta in the western Balkan Mountains, very close to the Bulgarian-Serbian border. A town of about 2,000 inhabitants, Chiprovtsi is the administrative centre of Chiprovtsi Municipality that also covers nine nearby villages. Chiprovtsi is thought to have been founded in the Late Middle Ages as a mining and metalsmithing centre. Attracting German ore miners who introduced Roman Catholicism to the area, the town grew in importance as a cultural, economic and religious centre of the Bulgarian Catholics and the entire Bulgarian northwest during the first ", "Chiprovtsi Municipality\n Chiprovtsi Municipality is located in the western part of Montana Province. The municipality has an area of 286.9 km2, which is 7.89% of the provinces' territory and 0.26% of that of Bulgaria. To the east, Chiprovtsi municipality borders Montana and Georgi Damyanovo municipalities of the same province; its southern neighbour is also Georgi Damyanovo. To the west are the Serbian border and Chuprene municipality of Vidin Province and to the north is Ruzhintsi municipality of Vidin Province. Besides the town, the municipality includes nine villages, namely Belimel, Chelyustnitsa, Gorna Kovachitsa, Gorna Luka, Martinovo, Mitrovtsi, Prevala, Ravna and Zhelezna. The town lies 155 km from the Bulgarian capital ", "Chiprovtsi Municipality\n Chiprovtsi Municipality includes the following 10 places (towns are shown in bold):", "Chiprovtsi Municipality\n 35 km from the provincial capital Montana, 44 km from Berkovitsa and 18 km from the national border of Bulgaria and Serbia; the nearest Serbian municipality is Surdulica. Chiprovtsi municipality falls in the humid continental climate climate zone, with a slight mountain influence. The average year-round temperature is 9.7 °C; the average monthly temperature is -1 to 0 C in January and 20 °C in July. The average yearly precipitation is 776–816 millimetres. The spring is short and rainy, while the summer is generally hot and dry. In the winter, the area is subject to a strong northeastern wind and a temperature inversion in the valleys. Of ", "Chiprovtsi Municipality\n The municipal government consists of a mayor (kmet), a deputy mayor and a secretary. Since 2007, the municipality has been governed by Zaharin Ivanov Zamfirov of Bulgarian Agrarian People's Union \"Aleksandar Stamboliyski\" who won the municipal elections with 1,615 votes or 62.67% against Antoaneta Todorova Kostova of the Bulgarian Socialist Party who amassed 962 votes or 37.33%. Two villages in the municipality are eligible to elect their own mayor, Prevala and Zhelezna. The municipal administration is divided into two branches, the common and specialized administration. The common administration is further divided into the \"Information Services\" and \"Financial-economical Activities and Handling of Property\" departments; the specialized administration includes the \"Planning and Distribution of the Budget\" and \"Territorial and Village Planning and Building\" departments. The municipality has no separate court or prosecutor's office and is instead serviced by the Montana provincial court and office. The local police station is subordinate to the one in Montana. There is a Municipal Land Commission, part of the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry, and a Municipal Social Service. The Municipal Land Commission takes care of land and forest distribution and the Municipal Social Service oversees financial aid and supports the disabled.", "Chiprovtsi Municipality\n 38 rivers and rivulets that flow across the municipality, the most important are the Ogosta and the Prevalska. There is a water reservoir near Martinovo and a hydroelectric plant at Zhelezna. There are no mineral springs in the municipality. Chiprovtsi municipality is home to 1,250 species of plants, including a large number of herbs and deciduous trees; some of the trees are 150–300 years old. Of the municipality's area of 286.9 km2, 50.51% or 144.9 km2 are covered by forests, 42.73% or 122.6 km2 constitute arable land and 5.71% or 16.4 km2 are urban areas. The remaining 1.05% are composed of water areas, mines and infrastructure.", "Chiprovtsi Municipality\n the municipality has experienced population ageing and rural depopulation, as many people have migrated to larger cities such as Montana, Vidin, Vratsa and Sofia. The ratio of urban to rural population is 49.37% to 50.63%, indicating an almost equal distribution between the town of Chiprovtsi and the surrounding villages. As of 2005, the unemployment in the municipality is 23.5%, much higher than the Bulgarian average of 7.75% according to 2007 data. Since 2004 the population of the municipality has declined: 2005 = 4,198, 2007 = 3,955, 2009 = 3,719, 2011 = 3,657 The population declined further to 3,219 people at the end of 2017.", "Chiprovtsi\n The municipal government consists of a mayor (kmet), a deputy mayor and a secretary. Since 2007, the municipality has been governed by Zaharin Ivanov Zamfirov of Bulgarian Agrarian People's Union \"Aleksandar Stamboliyski\" who won the municipal elections with 1,615 votes or 62.67% against Antoaneta Todorova Kostova of the Bulgarian Socialist Party who amassed 962 votes or 37.33%. Two villages in the municipality are eligible to elect their own mayor, Prevala and Zhelezna. The municipal administration is divided into two branches, the common and specialized administration. The common administration is further divided into the \"Information Services\" and \"Financial-economical Activities and Handling of Property\" departments; the specialized administration includes the \"Planning and Distribution of the Budget\" and ", "Chiprovtsi Municipality\n According to the latest Bulgarian census of 2011, the religious composition, among those who answered the optional question on religious identification, was the following:", "Chiprovtsi\n were engaged in carpet weaving. In 1920, the locals founded the Manual Labour carpet-weaving cooperative society, the first of its kind in the country. In the 1950s, ore output was renewed in the region, briefly revitalizing Chiprovtsi through the influx of young and highly educated people. On 12 September 1968, Chiprovtsi was officially proclaimed a town by the National Assembly of Bulgaria. In Socialist times, the town had a factory that produced AK-47 magazines and employed about 400 people. After the democratic changes in 1989, mining was discontinued again due to a lack of funds, the factory was closed and the carpet industry has been in decline as it had lost its firm foreign markets. As a result, the town and the municipality have been experiencing a demographic crisis.", "Chiprovtsi\n works of the Chiprovtsi goldsmithing and carpet industry. The town has an Eastern Orthodox church dedicated to the Ascension of Jesus; the remains of the old Roman Catholic church of Saint Mary have also been preserved. The Chiprovtsi Monastery is situated outside the town; there are ruins of several other Orthodox churches and another monastery. The town has a community cultural centre (chitalishte) with branches in eight of the villages in the municipality. The chitalishte has a youth dancing group, a folk music group, a theatrical group, a folk ritual and customs reproduction group and other similar groups. The nine libraries of the Chiprovtsi chitalishte and its branches house 65,975 volumes of books.", "Chiprovtsi\n On 31 July 2005, Chiprovtsi's population was 2,375 people — 1,167 men and 1,208 women. By June 2008, the town's population had declined to 2,122.", "Chiprovtsi Municipality\n On 31 July 2005, Chiprovtsi municipality's population was 4,810; 2,375 people were from the town itself—1,167 men and 1,208 women. By June 2008, the town's population had declined to 2,122. According to 2005 data, the largest village in the municipality is Prevala with a population of 585; the smallest is Ravna with 68. The ethnic composition of the municipality is homogeneous; 4,722 people or 99.21% identify themselves as Bulgarians and 38 people or 0.79% as Roma. Of the Roma, three quarters live in the Barzan neighbourhood of Martinovo and arrived from around Asenovgrad, the rest are residents of Chelyustnitsa and descend from Berkovitsa. Since ", "Chiprovtsi\n centuries of Ottoman rule. The apogee of this upsurge was the anti-Ottoman Chiprovtsi Uprising of 1688. After the suppression of the uprising, some of the town's population fled to Habsburg-ruled lands; those unable to flee were killed or enslaved by the Ottomans. Deserted for about 30 years, the town was repopulated by Eastern Orthodox Bulgarians, beginning in the 1720s. It was following this new settlement that Chiprovtsi became a major centre of the Bulgarian carpet industry. Other traditional industries have been stock breeding, agriculture and fur trade. Today, Chiprovtsi municipality experiences a declining population and above-average unemployment. However, the development of alternative tourism help to sustain the economy.", "Chiprovtsi\n and Village Planning and Building\" departments. The municipality has no separate court or prosecutor's office and is instead serviced by the Montana provincial court and office. The local police station is subordinate to the one in Montana. There is a Municipal Land Commission, part of the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry, and a Municipal Social Service. The Municipal Land Commission takes care of land and forest distribution and the Municipal Social Service oversees financial aid and supports the disabled. The town has a primary school (grades 1–4) and a high school (grades 4–12); both claim to be successors of the school founded in 1624. The two schools service the entire municipality, as the six schools ", "Chiprovtsi\n Chiprovtsi is situated in a small valley at the foot of the Chiprovtsi Mountain, a high northern branch of the western Balkan Mountains. The Chiprovtsi Mountain forms the border between Bulgaria and the neighbouring Serbia. It is 35 km long and features several peaks around 2000 m, including Midzhur (2168 m), Martinova Chuka (2011 m), Golyama Chuka (1967 m), Kopren (1964 m), Tri Chuki (1938 m) and Vrazha Glava (1936 m). The Ogosta River, a right tributary of the Danube, originates from the Chiprovtsi Mountain and flows northeast through the Danubian Plain to join the Danube in Vratsa Province. Just northeast of the town is another mountain, Shiroka Planina, a branch of the Fore-Balkan Mountains. The region is rich in metal and mineral deposits.", "Chiprovtsi\n The local Bulgarians traditionally belong to the ethnographic group of the Torlaks and speak a transitional Bulgarian dialect, the Belogradchik dialect. Most of the population are adherents of the Bulgarian Orthodox Church. The municipality has 30 registered cultural monuments and 12 consecrated stone crosses, of which eight in Chiprovtsi. Such crosses are typical for the Bulgarian northwest and each is dedicated to a saint: they serve both demarcating and religious purposes. Most of the crosses are not dated, with the notable exceptions of Saint Demetrius—1755, Saints Peter and Paul—1781 and Holy Mother of God—1874. A notable cultural trait of Chiprovtsi shared with much of the region is the veneration of a family patron ", "Chiprovtsi\n wool, coloured using plant or mineral dyes. The local carpets have been prized at exhibitions in London, Paris, Liège and Brussels. The kilim making of Chiprovtsi was inscribed on the Intangible Cultural Heritage list of UNESCO in 2014. The municipality has also invested in the development of tourism and many private houses have been turned into small family hotels or guesthouses. In 2004, 65 people were engaged in the tourism industry; in the same year, the municipality was visited by 2,350 tourists, of whom were 254 foreigners. In terms of economic indicators, the municipality ranks around the high average: it is 113th of 264 municipalities in Bulgaria by GDP per capita and 67th by ", "Montana Province\nBelimel (Белимел) ; Chelyustnitsa (Челюстница) ; Chiprovtsi (Чипровци) ; Gorna Kovachitsa (Горна Ковачица) ; Gorna Luka (Горна Лука) ; Martinovo (Мартиново) ; Mitrovtsi (Митровци) ; Prevala (Превала) ; Ravna (Равна) ; Zhelezna (Железна) The Chiprovtsi municipality has one town (in bold) and nine villages: " ]
Who is the author of The Burning?
[ "Stewart Conn" ]
author
The Burning (play)
5,914,872
93
[ { "id": "4665428", "title": "A Burning", "text": " A Burning is a novel by Indian-born author Megha Majumdar released in June 2020. By December 2020, the novel was on 13 lists of the best books of 2020, according to Literary Hub.", "score": "1.6205949" }, { "id": "4560883", "title": "Jay A. Parry", "text": "The Burning (1991) ISBN: 0875795218 ; The Santa Claus Book (published under the pseudonym Alden Perkes, 1982) ISBN: 978-0818403811 ", "score": "1.5933554" }, { "id": "4204127", "title": "The Book of Burning", "text": " The Book of Burning is an album by the American heavy metal band Virgin Steele. It was released in January 2002 by Noise Records to celebrate the twentieth anniversary of the band, together with the compilation Hymns to Victory. The Book of Burning caused a controversy between founding members David DeFeis and Jack Starr about the format of the recording, with the result of Starr renouncing any involvement in the production of the album and in other reunion projects. According to the CD booklet, the album was recorded from June to August 2001, except \"Conjuration of the Watcher\", which was recorded in 1999 during \"The House Of Atreus Act I\" sessions. ", "score": "1.568237" }, { "id": "28312997", "title": "List of book-burning incidents", "text": " During World War II the French writer and anti-Nazi resistance fighter André Malraux worked on a long novel, The Struggle Against the Angel, the manuscript of which was destroyed by the Gestapo upon his capture in 1944. The name was apparently inspired by the Jacob story in the Bible. A surviving opening part named The Walnut Trees of Altenburg, was published after the war.", "score": "1.5539186" }, { "id": "1660350", "title": "Burning Grass", "text": " Burning Grass is a novel by Nigerian author Cyprian Ekwensi. It was published in 1962 as the second book in Heinemann's African Writers Series.", "score": "1.553793" }, { "id": "6958085", "title": "Burning Down the House (book)", "text": " Burning Down the House: Fighting Fires and Losing Myself is a non-fiction memoir, written by Canadian writer Russell Wangersky, first published in April 2009 by Thomas Allen Publishers. In the book, the author chronicles his experiences as a volunteer firefighter in Nova Scotia and Newfoundland.", "score": "1.5486802" }, { "id": "7405185", "title": "The Burning World (novel)", "text": " The Burning World is a 1964 science fiction novel by British author J. G. Ballard. An expanded version, retitled The Drought, was first published in 1965 by Jonathan Cape.", "score": "1.5448401" }, { "id": "28313023", "title": "List of book-burning incidents", "text": " The 1988 publication of the novel The Satanic Verses, by Salman Rushdie, was followed by angry demonstrations and riots around the world by followers of political Islam who considered it blasphemous. In the United Kingdom, book burnings were staged in the cities of Bolton and Bradford. In addition, five UK bookstores selling the novel were the target of bombings, and two bookstores in Berkeley, California were firebombed. The author was condemned to death by various Islamist clerics and lives in hiding.", "score": "1.5447499" }, { "id": "7786540", "title": "The Burning Land", "text": " On 31 October 2009, the book was number 5 on the hardback best-seller list of the Evening News (Edinburgh, Scotland)", "score": "1.5419849" }, { "id": "32821722", "title": "The Boy in the Burning House", "text": " The Boy in the Burning House is a young adult mystery novel by English-Canadian author Tim Wynne-Jones. It was first published in Canada in 2000 by Groundwood Books; the first American edition was published in 2001 by Farrar, Straus and Giroux.", "score": "1.53634" }, { "id": "9559198", "title": "Book burning", "text": " been more strict in carrying out her sister's will, all but a small handful of Emily Dickinson's poetic work would have been lost. In early 1964, several months after the death of C.S. Lewis, Lewis' literary executor Walter Hooper, rescued a 64-page manuscript from a bonfire of the author's writings - the burning carried out according to Lewis' will. In 1977, Hooper published it under the name The Dark Tower. It was apparently intended as part of Lewis' Space Trilogy. Though incomplete and evidently an early draft which Lewis abandoned, its publication aroused great interest and a continued discussion among Lewis fans and scholars researching his work.", "score": "1.5264378" }, { "id": "11892198", "title": "The Burning Wire", "text": " The Burning Wire is a crime thriller novel written by Jeffery Deaver featuring the officially retired (RET), quadriplegic criminalist Lincoln Rhyme. It is the ninth novel in the Lincoln Rhyme series.", "score": "1.5221531" }, { "id": "10463910", "title": "The Burning City", "text": " The Burning City is a fantasy novel of social and political allegory by American writers Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle. It is set in an analogue of Southern California in an imaginary past shortly after the sinking of Atlantis about 14,000 years ago in the twilight of a civilization then struggling and now vanished for lack of a crucial natural, and essentially non-renewable resource upon which almost all of its economy and technology depended. The vanishing resource is not oil but mana, something vital to the technology of magic and the metabolism of the supernatural. As mana becomes scarce gods sleep and finally die, unicorns get smaller and finally turn into hornless ponies, and magic becomes less and less effective and finally vanishes. The book was published in 2000, and was followed by a sequel, Burning Tower in 2005. It is part of the same timeline as The Magic Goes Away.", "score": "1.5209283" }, { "id": "2010822", "title": "A Burning in Homeland", "text": " A Burning in Homeland is the first novel by Richard Yancey. Published in 2003 by Simon & Schuster, it uses three characters to tell a story of a murder in a small town following a parsonage fire.", "score": "1.5209141" }, { "id": "13851818", "title": "Burned (Hopkins novel)", "text": " Burned is a young adult novel written by American author Ellen Hopkins and published in April 2006. Like all of Ellen Hopkin's works, the novel is unusual for its free verse format.", "score": "1.5195276" }, { "id": "1660351", "title": "Burning Grass", "text": " Burning Grass was the first novel written for publication in the African Writers Series, which had begun by reprinting books that had appeared elsewhere. The manuscript was cut from 80,000 to 40,000 words by the publisher. Heinemann believed the main audience for the novel would be secondary school children, but orders far exceeded their expectations. The first print run of 2,500 sold out quickly and it has been reprinted by Heinemann a number of times. It was later published by East African Educational Publishers and has been translated into German as Der Wanderzauber.", "score": "1.5153785" }, { "id": "28313034", "title": "List of book-burning incidents", "text": " On June 24, 2006, a bunch of men, aged between 24 and 28, threw a United States flag and a copy of The Diary of Anne Frank into a bonfire, first the flag, then the book, during a midsummer's party in German village Pretzien. They were supposedly members of a far-right group called Heimat Bund Ostelbien (East Elbian Homeland Federation), who also organized the party.", "score": "1.5123392" }, { "id": "9559182", "title": "Book burning", "text": " In 1588, the exiled English Catholic William Cardinal Allen wrote \"An Admonition to the Nobility and People of England\", a work sharply attacking Queen Elizabeth I. It was to be published in Spanish-occupied England in the event of the Spanish Armada succeeding in its invasion. Upon the defeat of the Armada, Allen carefully consigned his publication to the fire, and it is only known of through one of Elizabeth's spies, who had stolen a copy. The Hassidic Rabbi Nachman of Breslov is reported to have written a book which he himself burned in 1808. To this day, his followers mourn \"The Burned Book\" and seek in ", "score": "1.507246" }, { "id": "26008936", "title": "Prime Minister's Literary Awards", "text": "Burning In by Mireille Juchau ; El Dorado by Dorothy Porter ; Jamaica : a novel by Malcolm Knox ; Sorry by Gail Jones ; The Complete Stories by David Malouf ; The Widow and Her Hero by Tom Keneally ; The Zookeeper's War by Steven Conte ", "score": "1.5060384" }, { "id": "13457289", "title": "Burning the Books", "text": " Burning the Books: A History of the Deliberate Destruction of Knowledge is a 2020 book by Bodleian Libraries Director Richard Ovenden on the history of intentional recorded knowledge destruction.", "score": "1.5034106" } ]
[ "A Burning\n A Burning is a novel by Indian-born author Megha Majumdar released in June 2020. By December 2020, the novel was on 13 lists of the best books of 2020, according to Literary Hub.", "Jay A. Parry\nThe Burning (1991) ISBN: 0875795218 ; The Santa Claus Book (published under the pseudonym Alden Perkes, 1982) ISBN: 978-0818403811 ", "The Book of Burning\n The Book of Burning is an album by the American heavy metal band Virgin Steele. It was released in January 2002 by Noise Records to celebrate the twentieth anniversary of the band, together with the compilation Hymns to Victory. The Book of Burning caused a controversy between founding members David DeFeis and Jack Starr about the format of the recording, with the result of Starr renouncing any involvement in the production of the album and in other reunion projects. According to the CD booklet, the album was recorded from June to August 2001, except \"Conjuration of the Watcher\", which was recorded in 1999 during \"The House Of Atreus Act I\" sessions. ", "List of book-burning incidents\n During World War II the French writer and anti-Nazi resistance fighter André Malraux worked on a long novel, The Struggle Against the Angel, the manuscript of which was destroyed by the Gestapo upon his capture in 1944. The name was apparently inspired by the Jacob story in the Bible. A surviving opening part named The Walnut Trees of Altenburg, was published after the war.", "Burning Grass\n Burning Grass is a novel by Nigerian author Cyprian Ekwensi. It was published in 1962 as the second book in Heinemann's African Writers Series.", "Burning Down the House (book)\n Burning Down the House: Fighting Fires and Losing Myself is a non-fiction memoir, written by Canadian writer Russell Wangersky, first published in April 2009 by Thomas Allen Publishers. In the book, the author chronicles his experiences as a volunteer firefighter in Nova Scotia and Newfoundland.", "The Burning World (novel)\n The Burning World is a 1964 science fiction novel by British author J. G. Ballard. An expanded version, retitled The Drought, was first published in 1965 by Jonathan Cape.", "List of book-burning incidents\n The 1988 publication of the novel The Satanic Verses, by Salman Rushdie, was followed by angry demonstrations and riots around the world by followers of political Islam who considered it blasphemous. In the United Kingdom, book burnings were staged in the cities of Bolton and Bradford. In addition, five UK bookstores selling the novel were the target of bombings, and two bookstores in Berkeley, California were firebombed. The author was condemned to death by various Islamist clerics and lives in hiding.", "The Burning Land\n On 31 October 2009, the book was number 5 on the hardback best-seller list of the Evening News (Edinburgh, Scotland)", "The Boy in the Burning House\n The Boy in the Burning House is a young adult mystery novel by English-Canadian author Tim Wynne-Jones. It was first published in Canada in 2000 by Groundwood Books; the first American edition was published in 2001 by Farrar, Straus and Giroux.", "Book burning\n been more strict in carrying out her sister's will, all but a small handful of Emily Dickinson's poetic work would have been lost. In early 1964, several months after the death of C.S. Lewis, Lewis' literary executor Walter Hooper, rescued a 64-page manuscript from a bonfire of the author's writings - the burning carried out according to Lewis' will. In 1977, Hooper published it under the name The Dark Tower. It was apparently intended as part of Lewis' Space Trilogy. Though incomplete and evidently an early draft which Lewis abandoned, its publication aroused great interest and a continued discussion among Lewis fans and scholars researching his work.", "The Burning Wire\n The Burning Wire is a crime thriller novel written by Jeffery Deaver featuring the officially retired (RET), quadriplegic criminalist Lincoln Rhyme. It is the ninth novel in the Lincoln Rhyme series.", "The Burning City\n The Burning City is a fantasy novel of social and political allegory by American writers Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle. It is set in an analogue of Southern California in an imaginary past shortly after the sinking of Atlantis about 14,000 years ago in the twilight of a civilization then struggling and now vanished for lack of a crucial natural, and essentially non-renewable resource upon which almost all of its economy and technology depended. The vanishing resource is not oil but mana, something vital to the technology of magic and the metabolism of the supernatural. As mana becomes scarce gods sleep and finally die, unicorns get smaller and finally turn into hornless ponies, and magic becomes less and less effective and finally vanishes. The book was published in 2000, and was followed by a sequel, Burning Tower in 2005. It is part of the same timeline as The Magic Goes Away.", "A Burning in Homeland\n A Burning in Homeland is the first novel by Richard Yancey. Published in 2003 by Simon & Schuster, it uses three characters to tell a story of a murder in a small town following a parsonage fire.", "Burned (Hopkins novel)\n Burned is a young adult novel written by American author Ellen Hopkins and published in April 2006. Like all of Ellen Hopkin's works, the novel is unusual for its free verse format.", "Burning Grass\n Burning Grass was the first novel written for publication in the African Writers Series, which had begun by reprinting books that had appeared elsewhere. The manuscript was cut from 80,000 to 40,000 words by the publisher. Heinemann believed the main audience for the novel would be secondary school children, but orders far exceeded their expectations. The first print run of 2,500 sold out quickly and it has been reprinted by Heinemann a number of times. It was later published by East African Educational Publishers and has been translated into German as Der Wanderzauber.", "List of book-burning incidents\n On June 24, 2006, a bunch of men, aged between 24 and 28, threw a United States flag and a copy of The Diary of Anne Frank into a bonfire, first the flag, then the book, during a midsummer's party in German village Pretzien. They were supposedly members of a far-right group called Heimat Bund Ostelbien (East Elbian Homeland Federation), who also organized the party.", "Book burning\n In 1588, the exiled English Catholic William Cardinal Allen wrote \"An Admonition to the Nobility and People of England\", a work sharply attacking Queen Elizabeth I. It was to be published in Spanish-occupied England in the event of the Spanish Armada succeeding in its invasion. Upon the defeat of the Armada, Allen carefully consigned his publication to the fire, and it is only known of through one of Elizabeth's spies, who had stolen a copy. The Hassidic Rabbi Nachman of Breslov is reported to have written a book which he himself burned in 1808. To this day, his followers mourn \"The Burned Book\" and seek in ", "Prime Minister's Literary Awards\nBurning In by Mireille Juchau ; El Dorado by Dorothy Porter ; Jamaica : a novel by Malcolm Knox ; Sorry by Gail Jones ; The Complete Stories by David Malouf ; The Widow and Her Hero by Tom Keneally ; The Zookeeper's War by Steven Conte ", "Burning the Books\n Burning the Books: A History of the Deliberate Destruction of Knowledge is a 2020 book by Bodleian Libraries Director Richard Ovenden on the history of intentional recorded knowledge destruction." ]
Who was the director of Driven?
[ "Maurice Elvey" ]
director
Driven (1916 film)
1,530,395
76
[ { "id": "8074155", "title": "Driven (2018 film)", "text": " Driven is a 2018 biographical comedy thriller film directed by Nick Hamm and written by Colin Bateman. The film stars Jason Sudeikis, Lee Pace, Judy Greer, Isabel Arraiza, Michael Cudlitz, Erin Moriarty, Iddo Goldberg, Tara Summers, Justin Bartha, and Corey Stoll. The film premiered at the 75th Venice International Film Festival on September 8, 2018, and subsequently screened at the 2018 Toronto International Film Festival. It was released in the United States on August 16, 2019, by Universal Pictures Home Entertainment Content Group and in the United Kingdom on November 8, 2019, by Vertigo Releasing.", "score": "1.7207295" }, { "id": "16167806", "title": "Drive (2011 film)", "text": " the director, a first in his career. The actor chose Danish filmmaker Nicolas Winding Refn, whose work he admired. He said, \"It had to be [him]. There was no other choice.\" When Refn read the first screenplay for Drive, he was more intrigued by the concept of a man having a split personality, being a stuntman by day and a getaway driver at night, than the plot of the story. Believing that the director might be intimidated by the script, as it was unlike anything he had done before, Gosling had concerns about whether Refn wanted to participate. Refn took on the project without hesitation.", "score": "1.6683512" }, { "id": "29825189", "title": "Driven (2008)", "text": " Driven (2008) was the second annual Driven professional wrestling pay-per-view event produced by Ring of Honor. It aired on pay-per-view on November 14, 2008 and took place at Boston University's Case Gym in Boston, Massachusetts.", "score": "1.6454096" }, { "id": "27985062", "title": "Driven (1923 film)", "text": " Driven is a 1923 American silent romance film produced and distributed by Universal Pictures. The director of the film was Charles Brabin. This film appears to be lost. The film was adapted from \"The Flower of the Flock\", a short story by Jay Gelzer.", "score": "1.6429503" }, { "id": "31969063", "title": "Jeremy Larner", "text": " In 1971, Drive, He Said, was made into a movie directed by Jack Nicholson, who collaborated with Larner on the screenplay. This film constituted Nicholson's directorial debut and is available as part of the Criterion edition \"America Lost and Found: The BBS Story.\"", "score": "1.6393533" }, { "id": "16167819", "title": "Drive (2011 film)", "text": " visual style, wide-angle lenses were used extensively by cinematographer Sigel, who avoided hand-held camera work. Preferring to keep the film more \"grounded\" and authentic, he also avoided the use of computer-generated imagery (CGI). Budget restrictions were also a factor in this decision. Although many stunt drivers are credited, Gosling did some stunts himself, after completing a stunt driving car crash course. During the production, Gosling re-built the 1973 Chevrolet Malibu used in the film, taking it apart and putting it back together. Filming concluded on November 12, 2010. Beth Mickle was hired as the film's production designer on Gosling's recommendation; they had worked together ", "score": "1.5889338" }, { "id": "7643642", "title": "Paul Tan", "text": " The concept of a Malaysian motoring television programme sparked from Paul Tan and his team in 2008. The concept materialised into Driven, which debuted on 11 April 2010 on 8TV. Driven episodes were also hosted on a dedicated website owned by Driven Communications, www.driven.com.my. The show featured new car reviews, challenges, an 'Insider Review' segment, public service announcements and various other content concerning both Malaysian and international motoring topics. Driven was presented by three hosts, namely Sharizan Borhan, Nurul Alis and Harvinder Singh. It was directed by Jon Yap and produced by Nazrudin Rahman. The programme was sponsored by BHPetrol. Season 1 of Driven aired for 12 consecutive weeks, between 11 April 2010 and 4 July 2010 respectively.", "score": "1.5875432" }, { "id": "6897378", "title": "Driven (1916 film)", "text": " Driven is a 1916 British silent drama film directed by Maurice Elvey and starring Elisabeth Risdon, Fred Groves and Guy Newall. The film is based on the play The Evolution of Katherine by E. Temple Thurston. After learning she hasn't long to live, a woman begins an affair.", "score": "1.5645511" }, { "id": "28656269", "title": "Driven (TV series)", "text": " Driven is a motoring television programme launched by Channel 4 in 1998 as a rival to the successful and long-running BBC series Top Gear.", "score": "1.5553668" }, { "id": "4950907", "title": "Driven (video game)", "text": " Driven is a racing video game released in 2001 by BAM! Entertainment. The game is based on the movie Driven with Sylvester Stallone.", "score": "1.5537319" }, { "id": "15857786", "title": "Driven (2007)", "text": " Driven (2007) was the inaugural Driven professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event promoted by Ring of Honor (ROH). It took place on June 23, 2007 at the Frontier Fieldhouse in Chicago Ridge, Illinois, and first aired on September 21.", "score": "1.549937" }, { "id": "6561450", "title": "James Sallis", "text": " Press, 2001) John Turner series ; Cypress Grove (New York: Walker & Co, 2003. Harpenden: No Exit Press, 2003) ; Cripple Creek (New York: Walker & Co, 2006) ; Salt River (New York: Walker & Co, 2007) The Driver series ; Drive (Scottsdale, AZ: Poisoned Pen Press, 2005) Set mostly in Arizona and L.A., Drive is about a man who does stunt driving for movies by day and drives for criminals at night. Nicolas Winding Refn won the Best Director award at the 2011 Cannes Film Festival for his film version of Drive with Ryan Gosling. ; Driven (2012) Seven years after the events of “Drive” Driver is now living in Phoenix under the name Paul West, engaged to be married. When two goons attack ", "score": "1.5486345" }, { "id": "15524951", "title": "Nicolas Winding Refn", "text": " In 2011, Refn directed the American action drama film Drive (2011). It premiered in competition at the 2011 Cannes Film Festival, where he received the Best Director Award. The film earned Refn a BAFTA nomination for directing. The film was also nominated in 2012 for an Academy Award for Best Sound Editing, a Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor - Motion Picture nomination for Albert Brooks, Excellence in Production Design Award from the Art Directors Guild, won Best Director, Best Screenplay (for Hossein Amini) and Best Supporting Actor (for Brooks) at the Austin Film Critics Awards, won Boston Society of Film Critics Awards for Best Supporting Actor ", "score": "1.5465266" }, { "id": "16167791", "title": "Drive (2011 film)", "text": " Drive is a 2011 American action drama film directed by Nicolas Winding Refn. The screenplay, written by Hossein Amini, is based on James Sallis's 2005 novel of the same name. The film stars Ryan Gosling as an unnamed Hollywood stunt driver who moonlights as a getaway driver. He quickly grows fond of his neighbor, Irene (Carey Mulligan), and her young son, Benicio. When her debt-ridden husband, Standard (Oscar Isaac), is released from prison, the two men take part in what turns out to be a botched million-dollar heist that endangers the lives of everyone involved. The film co-stars Bryan Cranston, Christina Hendricks, Ron Perlman, and Albert Brooks. Producers Marc Platt and ", "score": "1.5444969" }, { "id": "16167794", "title": "Drive (2011 film)", "text": " An unnamed Driver works as a mechanic, a stunt double, a stunt driver, and a criminal-for-hire getaway car driver in Los Angeles, California. His jobs are all managed by auto shop owner Shannon, who persuades Jewish mobster Bernie Rose and his half-Italian partner Nino 'Izzy' Paolozzi to purchase a car for the Driver to race. Driver meets his new neighbor, Irene, and grows close to her and her young son, Benicio. Their relationship is interrupted when Irene's husband, Standard Gabriel, arrives after his release from prison. Standard owes protection money from his time in prison and is assaulted by Albanian gangster Chris Cook, who demands that Standard rob a pawn ", "score": "1.5363196" }, { "id": "31312422", "title": "James Cunningham (director)", "text": "Drive, Strawpeople (2000): director ; It's Not Enough, Strawpeople (2000): director ; Signals, Elleven (2004): director ", "score": "1.536144" }, { "id": "27278782", "title": "List of accolades received by Drive (2011 film)", "text": " Drive is a 2011 American action drama film directed by Nicolas Winding Refn and written by Hossein Amini, based on the 2005 novel Drive by James Sallis. The film stars Ryan Gosling as an unnamed Hollywood stunt driver moonlighting as a getaway driver, whose budding relationship with his neighbor Irene (Carey Mulligan) and her young son Benicio is interrupted by the sudden release of her husband Standard (Oscar Isaac) from prison. Debt-ridden, Standard hires him to take part in what turns out to be a botched, million-dollar heist that endangers their lives. Bryan Cranston, Christina Hendricks, Ron Perlman, and Albert Brooks play supporting roles. The film premiered on May 11 ", "score": "1.5347309" }, { "id": "28656271", "title": "Driven (TV series)", "text": " their paces. These concepts resurfaced in the reborn Top Gear soon after. Originally presented by Mike Brewer, James May and Jason Barlow, subsequent series also featured the rally driver Penny Mallory and the racing driver Jason Plato. During the show's run, both May and Barlow left the show to join the old format of BBC's Top Gear. Following the creation of Fifth Gear and the revival of Top Gear, Driven was cancelled by Channel 4 in 2002. Plato went on to present Fifth Gear, May joined the newly relaunched Top Gear, Brewer presented ITV's Pulling Power and Mallory could be seen on ITV4's Used Car Roadshow.", "score": "1.534349" }, { "id": "26608576", "title": "The Driven", "text": " The Driven were an Irish rock band, possibly best known for their 1996 single Jesus Loves You More If You Can Drive. From 1995 to 1998, the band consisted of Brendan Markham (vocals, guitar), Darrin Mullins (lead guitar), Ned Kennedy (drums) and Paul Power (bass). After 1998, Ned Kennedy was replaced by Christian Best. Three of the members later went on to form a group called Citizen.", "score": "1.5323365" }, { "id": "25420410", "title": "Renny Harlin", "text": " the change in studios and since he was contracted for the production of The Tuxedo in Toronto months before the attacks. Harlin's next project after Driven was to be a movie adaptation of the Ray Bradbury short story A Sound of Thunder, but Harlin left the project after a disagreement with Bradbury. Although the director was changed, Harlin was credited as a producer when the finished film was released in 2005. In 2006, Harlin collaborated with Markus Selin to direct a biopic of the Finnish President and Marshal of Finland Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim, but budget constraints put the project on hold. Instead, Harlin made another foray into low-budget horror with The Covenant, which was another moderate commercial success. In 2007 the Mannerheim film ", "score": "1.5268399" } ]
[ "Driven (2018 film)\n Driven is a 2018 biographical comedy thriller film directed by Nick Hamm and written by Colin Bateman. The film stars Jason Sudeikis, Lee Pace, Judy Greer, Isabel Arraiza, Michael Cudlitz, Erin Moriarty, Iddo Goldberg, Tara Summers, Justin Bartha, and Corey Stoll. The film premiered at the 75th Venice International Film Festival on September 8, 2018, and subsequently screened at the 2018 Toronto International Film Festival. It was released in the United States on August 16, 2019, by Universal Pictures Home Entertainment Content Group and in the United Kingdom on November 8, 2019, by Vertigo Releasing.", "Drive (2011 film)\n the director, a first in his career. The actor chose Danish filmmaker Nicolas Winding Refn, whose work he admired. He said, \"It had to be [him]. There was no other choice.\" When Refn read the first screenplay for Drive, he was more intrigued by the concept of a man having a split personality, being a stuntman by day and a getaway driver at night, than the plot of the story. Believing that the director might be intimidated by the script, as it was unlike anything he had done before, Gosling had concerns about whether Refn wanted to participate. Refn took on the project without hesitation.", "Driven (2008)\n Driven (2008) was the second annual Driven professional wrestling pay-per-view event produced by Ring of Honor. It aired on pay-per-view on November 14, 2008 and took place at Boston University's Case Gym in Boston, Massachusetts.", "Driven (1923 film)\n Driven is a 1923 American silent romance film produced and distributed by Universal Pictures. The director of the film was Charles Brabin. This film appears to be lost. The film was adapted from \"The Flower of the Flock\", a short story by Jay Gelzer.", "Jeremy Larner\n In 1971, Drive, He Said, was made into a movie directed by Jack Nicholson, who collaborated with Larner on the screenplay. This film constituted Nicholson's directorial debut and is available as part of the Criterion edition \"America Lost and Found: The BBS Story.\"", "Drive (2011 film)\n visual style, wide-angle lenses were used extensively by cinematographer Sigel, who avoided hand-held camera work. Preferring to keep the film more \"grounded\" and authentic, he also avoided the use of computer-generated imagery (CGI). Budget restrictions were also a factor in this decision. Although many stunt drivers are credited, Gosling did some stunts himself, after completing a stunt driving car crash course. During the production, Gosling re-built the 1973 Chevrolet Malibu used in the film, taking it apart and putting it back together. Filming concluded on November 12, 2010. Beth Mickle was hired as the film's production designer on Gosling's recommendation; they had worked together ", "Paul Tan\n The concept of a Malaysian motoring television programme sparked from Paul Tan and his team in 2008. The concept materialised into Driven, which debuted on 11 April 2010 on 8TV. Driven episodes were also hosted on a dedicated website owned by Driven Communications, www.driven.com.my. The show featured new car reviews, challenges, an 'Insider Review' segment, public service announcements and various other content concerning both Malaysian and international motoring topics. Driven was presented by three hosts, namely Sharizan Borhan, Nurul Alis and Harvinder Singh. It was directed by Jon Yap and produced by Nazrudin Rahman. The programme was sponsored by BHPetrol. Season 1 of Driven aired for 12 consecutive weeks, between 11 April 2010 and 4 July 2010 respectively.", "Driven (1916 film)\n Driven is a 1916 British silent drama film directed by Maurice Elvey and starring Elisabeth Risdon, Fred Groves and Guy Newall. The film is based on the play The Evolution of Katherine by E. Temple Thurston. After learning she hasn't long to live, a woman begins an affair.", "Driven (TV series)\n Driven is a motoring television programme launched by Channel 4 in 1998 as a rival to the successful and long-running BBC series Top Gear.", "Driven (video game)\n Driven is a racing video game released in 2001 by BAM! Entertainment. The game is based on the movie Driven with Sylvester Stallone.", "Driven (2007)\n Driven (2007) was the inaugural Driven professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event promoted by Ring of Honor (ROH). It took place on June 23, 2007 at the Frontier Fieldhouse in Chicago Ridge, Illinois, and first aired on September 21.", "James Sallis\n Press, 2001) John Turner series ; Cypress Grove (New York: Walker & Co, 2003. Harpenden: No Exit Press, 2003) ; Cripple Creek (New York: Walker & Co, 2006) ; Salt River (New York: Walker & Co, 2007) The Driver series ; Drive (Scottsdale, AZ: Poisoned Pen Press, 2005) Set mostly in Arizona and L.A., Drive is about a man who does stunt driving for movies by day and drives for criminals at night. Nicolas Winding Refn won the Best Director award at the 2011 Cannes Film Festival for his film version of Drive with Ryan Gosling. ; Driven (2012) Seven years after the events of “Drive” Driver is now living in Phoenix under the name Paul West, engaged to be married. When two goons attack ", "Nicolas Winding Refn\n In 2011, Refn directed the American action drama film Drive (2011). It premiered in competition at the 2011 Cannes Film Festival, where he received the Best Director Award. The film earned Refn a BAFTA nomination for directing. The film was also nominated in 2012 for an Academy Award for Best Sound Editing, a Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor - Motion Picture nomination for Albert Brooks, Excellence in Production Design Award from the Art Directors Guild, won Best Director, Best Screenplay (for Hossein Amini) and Best Supporting Actor (for Brooks) at the Austin Film Critics Awards, won Boston Society of Film Critics Awards for Best Supporting Actor ", "Drive (2011 film)\n Drive is a 2011 American action drama film directed by Nicolas Winding Refn. The screenplay, written by Hossein Amini, is based on James Sallis's 2005 novel of the same name. The film stars Ryan Gosling as an unnamed Hollywood stunt driver who moonlights as a getaway driver. He quickly grows fond of his neighbor, Irene (Carey Mulligan), and her young son, Benicio. When her debt-ridden husband, Standard (Oscar Isaac), is released from prison, the two men take part in what turns out to be a botched million-dollar heist that endangers the lives of everyone involved. The film co-stars Bryan Cranston, Christina Hendricks, Ron Perlman, and Albert Brooks. Producers Marc Platt and ", "Drive (2011 film)\n An unnamed Driver works as a mechanic, a stunt double, a stunt driver, and a criminal-for-hire getaway car driver in Los Angeles, California. His jobs are all managed by auto shop owner Shannon, who persuades Jewish mobster Bernie Rose and his half-Italian partner Nino 'Izzy' Paolozzi to purchase a car for the Driver to race. Driver meets his new neighbor, Irene, and grows close to her and her young son, Benicio. Their relationship is interrupted when Irene's husband, Standard Gabriel, arrives after his release from prison. Standard owes protection money from his time in prison and is assaulted by Albanian gangster Chris Cook, who demands that Standard rob a pawn ", "James Cunningham (director)\nDrive, Strawpeople (2000): director ; It's Not Enough, Strawpeople (2000): director ; Signals, Elleven (2004): director ", "List of accolades received by Drive (2011 film)\n Drive is a 2011 American action drama film directed by Nicolas Winding Refn and written by Hossein Amini, based on the 2005 novel Drive by James Sallis. The film stars Ryan Gosling as an unnamed Hollywood stunt driver moonlighting as a getaway driver, whose budding relationship with his neighbor Irene (Carey Mulligan) and her young son Benicio is interrupted by the sudden release of her husband Standard (Oscar Isaac) from prison. Debt-ridden, Standard hires him to take part in what turns out to be a botched, million-dollar heist that endangers their lives. Bryan Cranston, Christina Hendricks, Ron Perlman, and Albert Brooks play supporting roles. The film premiered on May 11 ", "Driven (TV series)\n their paces. These concepts resurfaced in the reborn Top Gear soon after. Originally presented by Mike Brewer, James May and Jason Barlow, subsequent series also featured the rally driver Penny Mallory and the racing driver Jason Plato. During the show's run, both May and Barlow left the show to join the old format of BBC's Top Gear. Following the creation of Fifth Gear and the revival of Top Gear, Driven was cancelled by Channel 4 in 2002. Plato went on to present Fifth Gear, May joined the newly relaunched Top Gear, Brewer presented ITV's Pulling Power and Mallory could be seen on ITV4's Used Car Roadshow.", "The Driven\n The Driven were an Irish rock band, possibly best known for their 1996 single Jesus Loves You More If You Can Drive. From 1995 to 1998, the band consisted of Brendan Markham (vocals, guitar), Darrin Mullins (lead guitar), Ned Kennedy (drums) and Paul Power (bass). After 1998, Ned Kennedy was replaced by Christian Best. Three of the members later went on to form a group called Citizen.", "Renny Harlin\n the change in studios and since he was contracted for the production of The Tuxedo in Toronto months before the attacks. Harlin's next project after Driven was to be a movie adaptation of the Ray Bradbury short story A Sound of Thunder, but Harlin left the project after a disagreement with Bradbury. Although the director was changed, Harlin was credited as a producer when the finished film was released in 2005. In 2006, Harlin collaborated with Markus Selin to direct a biopic of the Finnish President and Marshal of Finland Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim, but budget constraints put the project on hold. Instead, Harlin made another foray into low-budget horror with The Covenant, which was another moderate commercial success. In 2007 the Mannerheim film " ]
What genre is Seven Veils?
[ "ambient music", "ambient", "Ambient" ]
genre
Seven Veils (Robert Rich album)
5,724,676
65
[ { "id": "9476953", "title": "The Seventh Veil", "text": " The Seventh Veil is a 1945 British melodrama film directed by Compton Bennett and starring James Mason and Ann Todd. It was made by Ortus Films (a company established by producer Sydney Box) and released through General Film Distributors in the UK and Universal Pictures in the United States. The screenplay concerns Francesca (Todd), a brilliant concert pianist who attempts suicide while she is being treated for a disabling phobia centred on her hands that makes it impossible for her to play. A psychiatrist uses hypnosis to uncover the source of her crippling fear and to reveal, one by one, the relationships that have enriched and troubled her life. When the last “veil” is removed, her mind is clear. She regains the ability to play and knows whom she loves best. The film's title comes from the metaphor, attributed to one of the fictional doctors, that while Salome removed all her veils willingly, human beings fiercely protect the seventh and last veil that hides their deepest secrets, and will only reveal themselves completely under narcosis.", "score": "1.7910596" }, { "id": "3331612", "title": "Sydney Box", "text": "The Seventh Veil (1951) ", "score": "1.7599686" }, { "id": "13070125", "title": "Above the Veil", "text": " Above the Veil is the fourth children's book in Garth Nix's The Seventh Tower series, published in 2001 by Scholastic.", "score": "1.6655462" }, { "id": "5475153", "title": "Indiana Jones and the Seven Veils", "text": " Indiana Jones and the Seven Veils is the third of 12 Indiana Jones novels published by Bantam Books. Rob MacGregor, the author of this book, also wrote five of the other Indiana Jones books for Bantam. Published on November 1, 1991, it is preceded by Indiana Jones and the Dance of the Giants and followed by Indiana Jones and the Genesis Deluge.", "score": "1.665379" }, { "id": "9476954", "title": "The Seventh Veil", "text": " Francesca Cunningham is a brilliant concert pianist suffering from a delusion that she has lost the use of her hands. Despairing, she slips out of the nursing home where she is staying and jumps into the river. She survives, but is unresponsive. Dr. Larsen, a psychiatrist specializing in hypnosis, leads Francesca to describe events in her life that appear as flashbacks. When she is 14, music is “everything”. A teacher canes Francesca's hands, ruining her chances of winning a piano competition. Her father's sudden death puts her in the care of his second cousin, Nicholas, a misogynistic bachelor who walks with a cane. Nicholas ignores her until a school report reveals that she ", "score": "1.6618103" }, { "id": "7865507", "title": "The Saga of Seven Suns", "text": " Veiled Alliances is a prequel graphic novel to The Saga of Seven Suns series by Kevin J. Anderson, published on February 1, 2004. Publishers Weekly commended its \"superlative art\" but noted that the plot \"feels more like the rushed synopsis of a story than the story itself.\"", "score": "1.6216666" }, { "id": "28000658", "title": "7 Angels 7 Plagues", "text": " 7 Angels 7 Plagues (abbreviated as 7A7P) was an American metalcore band from Milwaukee, Wisconsin.", "score": "1.6181413" }, { "id": "3699373", "title": "The Seventh Sin", "text": " The Seventh Sin is a 1957 American drama film directed by Ronald Neame and starring Eleanor Parker, Bill Travers and George Sanders. It is based on the 1925 novel The Painted Veil by W. Somerset Maugham.", "score": "1.6085668" }, { "id": "1908309", "title": "The Seventh Veil (play)", "text": " The Seventh Veil is a 1951 play by Muriel Box and Sydney Box, based on the hit 1945 film of the same title that they had produced. It premiered at the Theatre Royal, Brighton before transferring to the Prince's Theatre in London's West End where it ran for 68 performances between 14 March and 12 June 1951. The cast included Ann Todd, Herbert Lom, Leo Genn, Ralph Michael, Douglas Jefferies, Derek Blomfield, Dino Galvani and Daphne Anderson. It marked Lom's West End debut.", "score": "1.5897508" }, { "id": "8116018", "title": "The Seven Realms", "text": " The Seven Realms is a series of four novels written by the American author Cinda Williams Chima. The series genre is high fantasy, set in the Queendom of the Fells - a traditional fantasy world of medieval technology, swordplay, castles, and keeps. Han Alister, a thief-turned-wizard, joins forces with Princess Raisa ana'Marianna to defend her right to the Gray Wolf Throne. The action takes place in and around The Seven Realms, which are seven loosely related areas that were once ruled by the Gray Wolf Queens and their wizard consorts, or kings. The Seven Realms include the mountainous Queendom of the Fells, the Kingdom of Tamron, the Kingdom of Arden, the southern Kingdoms of Bruinswallow and We’enhaven, the Southern Islands, and the Northern Islands. The four books in the current series are: The Demon King, The Exiled Queen, The Gray Wolf Throne, and The Crimson Crown. A sequel series titled The Shattered Realms began publication in 2016. Set a generation after The Seven Realms, the books are set in the same world, following the progeny of many of the characters in the original series. The four books in this series are Flamecaster, Shadowcaster, Stormcaster, and Deathcaster.", "score": "1.5592427" }, { "id": "27981749", "title": "The Painted Veil (novel)", "text": "The Painted Veil (1934) ; The Seventh Sin (1957) ; The Painted Veil (2006) ", "score": "1.5580211" }, { "id": "9476955", "title": "The Seventh Veil", "text": " a gifted pianist. Nicholas does not play well, but he is a brilliant and inspiring teacher. They work for hours every day, but he violently rejects any demonstration of gratitude. At the Royal College of Music, Francesca is blissful until Nicholas “takes away all her happiness.” Peter, a brash American musician studying in London, charms her and opens a world to her, including a waltz that Nicholas scorns as “suburban shop girl trash”. She proposes to him. Nicholas hears the news and calmly orders her to pack a bag because they are leaving for Paris in the morning to continue her studies. She defies him until he reminds her that she is 17. ", "score": "1.5497055" }, { "id": "9476961", "title": "The Seventh Veil", "text": " Filmed on a relatively low budget of under £100,000, the film was the biggest British box-office success of its year. According to Kinematograph Weekly the \"biggest winners\" at the box office in 1945 Britain were The Seventh Veil, with Madonna of the Seven Moons, Arsenic and Old Lace and Meet Me in St Louis among the runner-ups. By February 1948, its box-office receipts were over £2 million worldwide. In 2004, the British Film Institute compiled a list of the 100 biggest UK cinematic hits of all time based on audience figures, as opposed to gross takings. The Seventh Veil placed 10th in this list with an estimated attendance of 17.9 million people. The film was entered into the 1946 Cannes Film Festival. It won an Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay (for Sydney and Muriel ", "score": "1.538688" }, { "id": "26127603", "title": "Three Veils", "text": " Three Veils is about three young Middle-Eastern women living in the U.S, each with their own personal story. Leila (Mercedes Masöhn) is engaged to be married, however as the wedding night approaches, she becomes less and less sure. Amira (Angela Zahra) is a devout Muslim, but is dealing with her deep repressed lesbian feelings. Nikki (Sheetal Sheth) is acting out her promiscuity as she battles her own demons after a tragic death in the family. As the film progresses, all three stories unfold and blend into each other as connections are revealed between the three women.", "score": "1.5343072" }, { "id": "9476962", "title": "The Seventh Veil", "text": " that same year. Looking back at the movie and its reception, Todd said, \"It was the film that had everything — a bit of Pygmalion, a bit of Trilby, a bit of Cinderella. Apart from all that it's an intriguing psychological drama and was one of the first films to have a hero who was cruel. Most male stars up to them had been honest, kind, upstanding, good-looking men that the female star was supposed to feel safe and secure with for the rest of her life when they finally got together at the end of the film. Not so with our smash hit. The men saw me as a victim and the women thrilled to Mason's power and cruelty, as women have thrilled to this since the world began, however much they deny it...\"", "score": "1.531548" }, { "id": "3758369", "title": "The Seventh Gate (1983 novel)", "text": " The Seventh Gate is a novel by Geraldine Harris published in 1983.", "score": "1.517965" }, { "id": "15076399", "title": "The Seventh Tower", "text": "1) The Fall (2000) ; 2) Castle (2000) ; 3) Aenir (2001) ; 4) Above the Veil (2001) ; 5) Into Battle (2001) ; 6) The Violet Keystone (2001) The books are as follows:", "score": "1.5152615" }, { "id": "30851913", "title": "Robert Jarman", "text": " 2019 The Protecting Veil. ‘The Protecting Veil’ takes inspiration and incorporates material from ‘The Seven Sacraments of Nicholas Poussin’ written and performed by Neil Bartlett, first produced at The London Hospital, produced by Artangel, London, July 1, 1997.", "score": "1.5140224" }, { "id": "9058225", "title": "The Seven Deadly Sins (manga)", "text": " Four light novels based on The Seven Deadly Sins have been published; The Seven Deadly Sins -Gaiden- The Seven Wishes of the Royal City from Old Times (七つの大罪 ―外伝― 昔日の王都 七つの願い) by Shuka Matsuda on December 17, 2014; The Seven Deadly Sins: Seven Days (七つの大罪 セブンデイズ) by Mamoru Iwasa on December 26, 2014; The Seven Deadly Sins: Seven Scars They Left Behind (七つの大罪 ―外伝― 彼らが残した七つの傷跡) by Shuka Matsuda on October 16, 2015; and The Seven Deadly Sins: Seven-Colored Recollections (七つの大罪 ―外伝― 七色の追憶) by Shuka Matsuda on October 17, 2016. Vertical released Seven Scars They Left Behind in North America in May 2017, with Seven-Colored Recollections set to follow in March 2018.", "score": "1.5137161" }, { "id": "13333352", "title": "Black Veil Brides (album)", "text": " Black Veil Brides, also known as Black Veil Brides IV, is the self-titled fourth studio album by American rock band Black Veil Brides. It was released through Lava Records/Republic Records on October 27, 2014. The first track on the album, \"Heart of Fire\", was aired on BBC Radio 1's Rock Show in September, then \"Faithless\" was uploaded onto YouTube on September 10. Also, as of September 16, 2014, the album was released on iTunes for pre-order. Clips of the songs \"Devil in the Mirror\" and \"Goodbye Agony\" were posted on YouTube on the 18th and 19th, as well as \"Goodbye Agony\" airing on BBC Radio 1's Rock Show on the same day of its uploading. The music video for \"Goodbye Agony\" was released on October 31, 2014.", "score": "1.5127378" } ]
[ "The Seventh Veil\n The Seventh Veil is a 1945 British melodrama film directed by Compton Bennett and starring James Mason and Ann Todd. It was made by Ortus Films (a company established by producer Sydney Box) and released through General Film Distributors in the UK and Universal Pictures in the United States. The screenplay concerns Francesca (Todd), a brilliant concert pianist who attempts suicide while she is being treated for a disabling phobia centred on her hands that makes it impossible for her to play. A psychiatrist uses hypnosis to uncover the source of her crippling fear and to reveal, one by one, the relationships that have enriched and troubled her life. When the last “veil” is removed, her mind is clear. She regains the ability to play and knows whom she loves best. The film's title comes from the metaphor, attributed to one of the fictional doctors, that while Salome removed all her veils willingly, human beings fiercely protect the seventh and last veil that hides their deepest secrets, and will only reveal themselves completely under narcosis.", "Sydney Box\nThe Seventh Veil (1951) ", "Above the Veil\n Above the Veil is the fourth children's book in Garth Nix's The Seventh Tower series, published in 2001 by Scholastic.", "Indiana Jones and the Seven Veils\n Indiana Jones and the Seven Veils is the third of 12 Indiana Jones novels published by Bantam Books. Rob MacGregor, the author of this book, also wrote five of the other Indiana Jones books for Bantam. Published on November 1, 1991, it is preceded by Indiana Jones and the Dance of the Giants and followed by Indiana Jones and the Genesis Deluge.", "The Seventh Veil\n Francesca Cunningham is a brilliant concert pianist suffering from a delusion that she has lost the use of her hands. Despairing, she slips out of the nursing home where she is staying and jumps into the river. She survives, but is unresponsive. Dr. Larsen, a psychiatrist specializing in hypnosis, leads Francesca to describe events in her life that appear as flashbacks. When she is 14, music is “everything”. A teacher canes Francesca's hands, ruining her chances of winning a piano competition. Her father's sudden death puts her in the care of his second cousin, Nicholas, a misogynistic bachelor who walks with a cane. Nicholas ignores her until a school report reveals that she ", "The Saga of Seven Suns\n Veiled Alliances is a prequel graphic novel to The Saga of Seven Suns series by Kevin J. Anderson, published on February 1, 2004. Publishers Weekly commended its \"superlative art\" but noted that the plot \"feels more like the rushed synopsis of a story than the story itself.\"", "7 Angels 7 Plagues\n 7 Angels 7 Plagues (abbreviated as 7A7P) was an American metalcore band from Milwaukee, Wisconsin.", "The Seventh Sin\n The Seventh Sin is a 1957 American drama film directed by Ronald Neame and starring Eleanor Parker, Bill Travers and George Sanders. It is based on the 1925 novel The Painted Veil by W. Somerset Maugham.", "The Seventh Veil (play)\n The Seventh Veil is a 1951 play by Muriel Box and Sydney Box, based on the hit 1945 film of the same title that they had produced. It premiered at the Theatre Royal, Brighton before transferring to the Prince's Theatre in London's West End where it ran for 68 performances between 14 March and 12 June 1951. The cast included Ann Todd, Herbert Lom, Leo Genn, Ralph Michael, Douglas Jefferies, Derek Blomfield, Dino Galvani and Daphne Anderson. It marked Lom's West End debut.", "The Seven Realms\n The Seven Realms is a series of four novels written by the American author Cinda Williams Chima. The series genre is high fantasy, set in the Queendom of the Fells - a traditional fantasy world of medieval technology, swordplay, castles, and keeps. Han Alister, a thief-turned-wizard, joins forces with Princess Raisa ana'Marianna to defend her right to the Gray Wolf Throne. The action takes place in and around The Seven Realms, which are seven loosely related areas that were once ruled by the Gray Wolf Queens and their wizard consorts, or kings. The Seven Realms include the mountainous Queendom of the Fells, the Kingdom of Tamron, the Kingdom of Arden, the southern Kingdoms of Bruinswallow and We’enhaven, the Southern Islands, and the Northern Islands. The four books in the current series are: The Demon King, The Exiled Queen, The Gray Wolf Throne, and The Crimson Crown. A sequel series titled The Shattered Realms began publication in 2016. Set a generation after The Seven Realms, the books are set in the same world, following the progeny of many of the characters in the original series. The four books in this series are Flamecaster, Shadowcaster, Stormcaster, and Deathcaster.", "The Painted Veil (novel)\nThe Painted Veil (1934) ; The Seventh Sin (1957) ; The Painted Veil (2006) ", "The Seventh Veil\n a gifted pianist. Nicholas does not play well, but he is a brilliant and inspiring teacher. They work for hours every day, but he violently rejects any demonstration of gratitude. At the Royal College of Music, Francesca is blissful until Nicholas “takes away all her happiness.” Peter, a brash American musician studying in London, charms her and opens a world to her, including a waltz that Nicholas scorns as “suburban shop girl trash”. She proposes to him. Nicholas hears the news and calmly orders her to pack a bag because they are leaving for Paris in the morning to continue her studies. She defies him until he reminds her that she is 17. ", "The Seventh Veil\n Filmed on a relatively low budget of under £100,000, the film was the biggest British box-office success of its year. According to Kinematograph Weekly the \"biggest winners\" at the box office in 1945 Britain were The Seventh Veil, with Madonna of the Seven Moons, Arsenic and Old Lace and Meet Me in St Louis among the runner-ups. By February 1948, its box-office receipts were over £2 million worldwide. In 2004, the British Film Institute compiled a list of the 100 biggest UK cinematic hits of all time based on audience figures, as opposed to gross takings. The Seventh Veil placed 10th in this list with an estimated attendance of 17.9 million people. The film was entered into the 1946 Cannes Film Festival. It won an Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay (for Sydney and Muriel ", "Three Veils\n Three Veils is about three young Middle-Eastern women living in the U.S, each with their own personal story. Leila (Mercedes Masöhn) is engaged to be married, however as the wedding night approaches, she becomes less and less sure. Amira (Angela Zahra) is a devout Muslim, but is dealing with her deep repressed lesbian feelings. Nikki (Sheetal Sheth) is acting out her promiscuity as she battles her own demons after a tragic death in the family. As the film progresses, all three stories unfold and blend into each other as connections are revealed between the three women.", "The Seventh Veil\n that same year. Looking back at the movie and its reception, Todd said, \"It was the film that had everything — a bit of Pygmalion, a bit of Trilby, a bit of Cinderella. Apart from all that it's an intriguing psychological drama and was one of the first films to have a hero who was cruel. Most male stars up to them had been honest, kind, upstanding, good-looking men that the female star was supposed to feel safe and secure with for the rest of her life when they finally got together at the end of the film. Not so with our smash hit. The men saw me as a victim and the women thrilled to Mason's power and cruelty, as women have thrilled to this since the world began, however much they deny it...\"", "The Seventh Gate (1983 novel)\n The Seventh Gate is a novel by Geraldine Harris published in 1983.", "The Seventh Tower\n1) The Fall (2000) ; 2) Castle (2000) ; 3) Aenir (2001) ; 4) Above the Veil (2001) ; 5) Into Battle (2001) ; 6) The Violet Keystone (2001) The books are as follows:", "Robert Jarman\n 2019 The Protecting Veil. ‘The Protecting Veil’ takes inspiration and incorporates material from ‘The Seven Sacraments of Nicholas Poussin’ written and performed by Neil Bartlett, first produced at The London Hospital, produced by Artangel, London, July 1, 1997.", "The Seven Deadly Sins (manga)\n Four light novels based on The Seven Deadly Sins have been published; The Seven Deadly Sins -Gaiden- The Seven Wishes of the Royal City from Old Times (七つの大罪 ―外伝― 昔日の王都 七つの願い) by Shuka Matsuda on December 17, 2014; The Seven Deadly Sins: Seven Days (七つの大罪 セブンデイズ) by Mamoru Iwasa on December 26, 2014; The Seven Deadly Sins: Seven Scars They Left Behind (七つの大罪 ―外伝― 彼らが残した七つの傷跡) by Shuka Matsuda on October 16, 2015; and The Seven Deadly Sins: Seven-Colored Recollections (七つの大罪 ―外伝― 七色の追憶) by Shuka Matsuda on October 17, 2016. Vertical released Seven Scars They Left Behind in North America in May 2017, with Seven-Colored Recollections set to follow in March 2018.", "Black Veil Brides (album)\n Black Veil Brides, also known as Black Veil Brides IV, is the self-titled fourth studio album by American rock band Black Veil Brides. It was released through Lava Records/Republic Records on October 27, 2014. The first track on the album, \"Heart of Fire\", was aired on BBC Radio 1's Rock Show in September, then \"Faithless\" was uploaded onto YouTube on September 10. Also, as of September 16, 2014, the album was released on iTunes for pre-order. Clips of the songs \"Devil in the Mirror\" and \"Goodbye Agony\" were posted on YouTube on the 18th and 19th, as well as \"Goodbye Agony\" airing on BBC Radio 1's Rock Show on the same day of its uploading. The music video for \"Goodbye Agony\" was released on October 31, 2014." ]
What sport does Samir Sarsare play?
[ "association football", "football", "soccer" ]
sport
Samir Sarsare
5,678,539
57
[ { "id": "4614585", "title": "Samir Sarsare", "text": " Samir Sarsare is a Moroccan footballer. He usually plays as forward. Sarsare is currently attached to Moghreb Tétouan.", "score": "1.946346" }, { "id": "31929616", "title": "Samir Nasri", "text": " While growing up in La Gavotte Peyret, Nasri regularly played the sport on the streets where he learned many of his skills. Upon noticing his prodigious talent, his parents signed him up to play with the local club in his hometown. Nasri spent one year playing with the club in La Gavotte Peyret before moving to Pennes Mirabeau in nearby Mirabeau at age seven. While playing with Pennes, Nasri was discovered by Marseille scout Freddy Assolen, who had been informed of the player's talent through local word of mouth. After noticing Nasri's skill in person, Assolen recruited the player to travel with a group of other young players to Italy to participate in a youth tournament where they would play against the youth academies of Milan and Juventus. Nasri impressed at the tournament and Assolen was jokingly told by a Milan scout that \"he [Nasri] stays here, you leave him\". After returning to France, Marseille officials organized a meeting with the player's father and the group agreed to allow Nasri insertion into the club's academy at the age of nine.", "score": "1.6866171" }, { "id": "5219696", "title": "Sami El Choum", "text": " Sami Ali El Choum (سامي علي الشوم; born 22 June 1982) is a Lebanese football coach and former player who is the head coach of club AC Sporting. A defensive midfielder for Lebanese Premier League side Ansar, El Choum remained at the Beirut-based club for over 10 years, winning multiple titles. He played for Homenetmen in the Lebanese Second Division for one year. El Choum represented the Lebanon national team in 2003. Between 2017 and 2018 El Choum coached Ansar, winning the 2016–17 Lebanese FA Cup, before becoming coach of Lebanese Third Division side AC Sporting in 2018, leading them to back-to-back promotions to the Lebanese Premier League.", "score": "1.6463304" }, { "id": "25072035", "title": "Olivier Sarr", "text": " Sarr started playing basketball at age three with his father, a former player, and drew inspiration from Hakeem Olajuwon. He played for club teams Bouscat and TOAC before joining INSEP, a sports institute in Paris. He competed for Centre Fédéral in the Nationale Masculine 1 and represented INSEP at the Adidas Next Generation Tournament. Sarr moved to the United States when he was 15 years old. He was considered a four-star recruit by Scout and committed to Wake Forest over offers from California, Vanderbilt and UCF.", "score": "1.6355654" }, { "id": "28900922", "title": "Samir Bouguerra", "text": " Samir Bouguerra (سمير بوقرة; born July 18, 1982) is an amateur Algerian Greco-Roman wrestler, who played for the men's heavyweight category. He won a silver medal for his division at the 2007 All-Africa Games in Algiers, losing out to Egyptian wrestler and defending Olympic champion Karam Gaber. Bouguerra represented Algeria at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, where he competed for the men's 96 kg class. He received a bye for the preliminary round of sixteen match, before losing out to China's Jiang Huachen, who was able to score eight points in two straight periods, leaving Bouguerra without a single point.", "score": "1.6338457" }, { "id": "14831664", "title": "Issa Sarr", "text": " Issa Sarr (born 9 October 1986) is a Senegalese professional footballer who currently plays for South African club Uthongathi.", "score": "1.6260684" }, { "id": "26022586", "title": "Behdad Sami", "text": " Behdad started his professional career playing point guard for the Georgia Gwizzlies in the American Basketball Association (ABA) & also professionally overseas. Standing at six feet with only a 7-foot 4 vertical arm reach, his dunking vertical leap is measured at 46\" and has a 40-yard dash time of 4.469 seconds. In SAQ (speed, agility, quickness) tests done in December 2008, he managed to touch a 10-foot 9 inch mark on a concrete surfaced facility. Sami has played in many different countries and different leagues around the world including major-league professional teams in Iran and Qatar. Behdad started the 2010 season with the San Diego Surf (ABA) but within the first month of the season was signed to play with the Guifoes Sport Club in Portugal's ProLiga. Following his season in Portugal, Sami received results indicating he had played his season in Portugal on a broken shin. Due to this injury, he has been forced to sit out the entire 2011-2013 season, and undergo rigorous physical therapy.", "score": "1.6209466" }, { "id": "27958429", "title": "Samir Barać", "text": " Samir Barać (born 2 November 1973 in Rijeka) is a Croatian water polo player who competed in the 2000, 2004, 2008, and 2012 Summer Olympics. As team captain, he was part of the Croatian team that won the gold medal in 2012. He played for VK Primorje Rijeka, POŠK Split, HAVK Mladost Zagreb and Brescia.", "score": "1.6063529" }, { "id": "9280718", "title": "Sami Meguetounif", "text": " Meguetounif is currently studying in his final year of the Lycée, the equivalent to A-Levels in France. He lives and studies together with his F4 teammate Victor Bernier.", "score": "1.6045164" }, { "id": "968884", "title": "Samir (footballer, born 1994)", "text": " Samir is a large, quick, and physically powerful left-footed defender, who is known for his confidence, solid distribution, ability to read the game, and strength in the air, which makes him a goal threat on set-pieces in the opposition's area. Although primarily a centre-back, he is also capable of playing as a left-back or as a defensive midfielder.", "score": "1.6029353" }, { "id": "26694565", "title": "Sami Tajeddine", "text": " Sami Tajeddine (born 10 June 1982) is a Moroccan football player who,, was playing for Raja Casablanca. He was part of the Moroccan 2004 Olympic football team, who exited in the first round, finishing third in group D, behind group winners Iraq and runners-up Costa Rica.", "score": "1.5993065" }, { "id": "3942858", "title": "Bastir Samir", "text": " Samir is the brother of bantamweight Issa Samir and is the team captain of Ghana's national team Black Bombers. He won the African Championships in the welterweight division in May 2007. At the All-African Games he knocked out Hosam Bakr Abdin, but lost the final bout to Rached Merdassi. He missed the world championships as he could not make the weight and had to jump two weight classes to light-heavyweight to qualify for the 2008 Summer Olympics because Ahmed Saraku was the established middleweight. He managed to achieve this in the second qualifier.", "score": "1.5939598" }, { "id": "25467581", "title": "Sami Lahssaini", "text": " Sami Lahssaini (born 18 September 1998) is a Moroccan-Belgian professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Belgian First Division A club Seraing, on loan from Ligue 1 club Metz.", "score": "1.5920053" }, { "id": "528936", "title": "Sami Khedira", "text": " Khedira was born in Stuttgart, Baden-Württemberg. His father is Tunisian and his mother is German. Sami's younger brother Rani plays for FC Augsburg and has represented the German U19 team.", "score": "1.588016" }, { "id": "1702967", "title": "Samir Šarić", "text": " Samir Šarić (born 27 May 1984 in Sarajevo) is a Bosnian-Herzegovinian retired football player.", "score": "1.5854886" }, { "id": "528919", "title": "Sami Khedira", "text": " Sami Khedira (born 4 April 1987) is a German former professional footballer who played as a central midfielder. He began his career at VfB Stuttgart, winning the Bundesliga in 2007, before moving to Real Madrid in 2010. In his five seasons in Spain, he won seven domestic and international trophies, including the UEFA Champions League in 2014. In 2015, he moved to Italian side Juventus on a free transfer, and won the Serie A title and Coppa Italia in his first three seasons with the club, followed by two more league titles and a Supercoppa Italiana. A full international for Germany since 2009, Khedira earned 77 caps for the national team. He has taken part at three FIFA World Cups and two UEFA European Championships with Germany, and was part of their squads which reached the semi-finals at the 2010 FIFA World Cup, as well as the 2012 and 2016 UEFA European Football Championships; he also won the 2014 FIFA World Cup.", "score": "1.5831726" }, { "id": "25072038", "title": "Olivier Sarr", "text": " Sarr played for France at the 2016 FIBA Under-17 World Championship in Zaragoza, Spain. He averaged 4.4 points and four rebounds per game and helped his team finish in sixth place. At the 2017 FIBA U18 European Championship in Slovakia, Sarr averaged 7.6 points and 5.4 rebounds per game for the sixth-place team.", "score": "1.5824409" }, { "id": "2651813", "title": "Sami El Gueddari", "text": " Sami El Gueddari (born 1 February 1984 in Orléans) is a French wheelchair racer and competitive swimmer who participated in the Paralympic Games of 2008 and 2012. He was a bronze medalist at the European Championships in 2009. He is a specialist of 50 meter and 100 meter freestyle.", "score": "1.5807407" }, { "id": "5395613", "title": "Samir Ayass", "text": " Samir Ayass was born in Sofia, Bulgaria to a Lebanese father and a Bulgarian mother. He started his playing career at CSKA Sofia at the age of six.", "score": "1.5806403" }, { "id": "6715686", "title": "Abderahman Samir", "text": " He plays at the Mesaimeer since 2010.", "score": "1.5743159" } ]
[ "Samir Sarsare\n Samir Sarsare is a Moroccan footballer. He usually plays as forward. Sarsare is currently attached to Moghreb Tétouan.", "Samir Nasri\n While growing up in La Gavotte Peyret, Nasri regularly played the sport on the streets where he learned many of his skills. Upon noticing his prodigious talent, his parents signed him up to play with the local club in his hometown. Nasri spent one year playing with the club in La Gavotte Peyret before moving to Pennes Mirabeau in nearby Mirabeau at age seven. While playing with Pennes, Nasri was discovered by Marseille scout Freddy Assolen, who had been informed of the player's talent through local word of mouth. After noticing Nasri's skill in person, Assolen recruited the player to travel with a group of other young players to Italy to participate in a youth tournament where they would play against the youth academies of Milan and Juventus. Nasri impressed at the tournament and Assolen was jokingly told by a Milan scout that \"he [Nasri] stays here, you leave him\". After returning to France, Marseille officials organized a meeting with the player's father and the group agreed to allow Nasri insertion into the club's academy at the age of nine.", "Sami El Choum\n Sami Ali El Choum (سامي علي الشوم; born 22 June 1982) is a Lebanese football coach and former player who is the head coach of club AC Sporting. A defensive midfielder for Lebanese Premier League side Ansar, El Choum remained at the Beirut-based club for over 10 years, winning multiple titles. He played for Homenetmen in the Lebanese Second Division for one year. El Choum represented the Lebanon national team in 2003. Between 2017 and 2018 El Choum coached Ansar, winning the 2016–17 Lebanese FA Cup, before becoming coach of Lebanese Third Division side AC Sporting in 2018, leading them to back-to-back promotions to the Lebanese Premier League.", "Olivier Sarr\n Sarr started playing basketball at age three with his father, a former player, and drew inspiration from Hakeem Olajuwon. He played for club teams Bouscat and TOAC before joining INSEP, a sports institute in Paris. He competed for Centre Fédéral in the Nationale Masculine 1 and represented INSEP at the Adidas Next Generation Tournament. Sarr moved to the United States when he was 15 years old. He was considered a four-star recruit by Scout and committed to Wake Forest over offers from California, Vanderbilt and UCF.", "Samir Bouguerra\n Samir Bouguerra (سمير بوقرة; born July 18, 1982) is an amateur Algerian Greco-Roman wrestler, who played for the men's heavyweight category. He won a silver medal for his division at the 2007 All-Africa Games in Algiers, losing out to Egyptian wrestler and defending Olympic champion Karam Gaber. Bouguerra represented Algeria at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, where he competed for the men's 96 kg class. He received a bye for the preliminary round of sixteen match, before losing out to China's Jiang Huachen, who was able to score eight points in two straight periods, leaving Bouguerra without a single point.", "Issa Sarr\n Issa Sarr (born 9 October 1986) is a Senegalese professional footballer who currently plays for South African club Uthongathi.", "Behdad Sami\n Behdad started his professional career playing point guard for the Georgia Gwizzlies in the American Basketball Association (ABA) & also professionally overseas. Standing at six feet with only a 7-foot 4 vertical arm reach, his dunking vertical leap is measured at 46\" and has a 40-yard dash time of 4.469 seconds. In SAQ (speed, agility, quickness) tests done in December 2008, he managed to touch a 10-foot 9 inch mark on a concrete surfaced facility. Sami has played in many different countries and different leagues around the world including major-league professional teams in Iran and Qatar. Behdad started the 2010 season with the San Diego Surf (ABA) but within the first month of the season was signed to play with the Guifoes Sport Club in Portugal's ProLiga. Following his season in Portugal, Sami received results indicating he had played his season in Portugal on a broken shin. Due to this injury, he has been forced to sit out the entire 2011-2013 season, and undergo rigorous physical therapy.", "Samir Barać\n Samir Barać (born 2 November 1973 in Rijeka) is a Croatian water polo player who competed in the 2000, 2004, 2008, and 2012 Summer Olympics. As team captain, he was part of the Croatian team that won the gold medal in 2012. He played for VK Primorje Rijeka, POŠK Split, HAVK Mladost Zagreb and Brescia.", "Sami Meguetounif\n Meguetounif is currently studying in his final year of the Lycée, the equivalent to A-Levels in France. He lives and studies together with his F4 teammate Victor Bernier.", "Samir (footballer, born 1994)\n Samir is a large, quick, and physically powerful left-footed defender, who is known for his confidence, solid distribution, ability to read the game, and strength in the air, which makes him a goal threat on set-pieces in the opposition's area. Although primarily a centre-back, he is also capable of playing as a left-back or as a defensive midfielder.", "Sami Tajeddine\n Sami Tajeddine (born 10 June 1982) is a Moroccan football player who,, was playing for Raja Casablanca. He was part of the Moroccan 2004 Olympic football team, who exited in the first round, finishing third in group D, behind group winners Iraq and runners-up Costa Rica.", "Bastir Samir\n Samir is the brother of bantamweight Issa Samir and is the team captain of Ghana's national team Black Bombers. He won the African Championships in the welterweight division in May 2007. At the All-African Games he knocked out Hosam Bakr Abdin, but lost the final bout to Rached Merdassi. He missed the world championships as he could not make the weight and had to jump two weight classes to light-heavyweight to qualify for the 2008 Summer Olympics because Ahmed Saraku was the established middleweight. He managed to achieve this in the second qualifier.", "Sami Lahssaini\n Sami Lahssaini (born 18 September 1998) is a Moroccan-Belgian professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Belgian First Division A club Seraing, on loan from Ligue 1 club Metz.", "Sami Khedira\n Khedira was born in Stuttgart, Baden-Württemberg. His father is Tunisian and his mother is German. Sami's younger brother Rani plays for FC Augsburg and has represented the German U19 team.", "Samir Šarić\n Samir Šarić (born 27 May 1984 in Sarajevo) is a Bosnian-Herzegovinian retired football player.", "Sami Khedira\n Sami Khedira (born 4 April 1987) is a German former professional footballer who played as a central midfielder. He began his career at VfB Stuttgart, winning the Bundesliga in 2007, before moving to Real Madrid in 2010. In his five seasons in Spain, he won seven domestic and international trophies, including the UEFA Champions League in 2014. In 2015, he moved to Italian side Juventus on a free transfer, and won the Serie A title and Coppa Italia in his first three seasons with the club, followed by two more league titles and a Supercoppa Italiana. A full international for Germany since 2009, Khedira earned 77 caps for the national team. He has taken part at three FIFA World Cups and two UEFA European Championships with Germany, and was part of their squads which reached the semi-finals at the 2010 FIFA World Cup, as well as the 2012 and 2016 UEFA European Football Championships; he also won the 2014 FIFA World Cup.", "Olivier Sarr\n Sarr played for France at the 2016 FIBA Under-17 World Championship in Zaragoza, Spain. He averaged 4.4 points and four rebounds per game and helped his team finish in sixth place. At the 2017 FIBA U18 European Championship in Slovakia, Sarr averaged 7.6 points and 5.4 rebounds per game for the sixth-place team.", "Sami El Gueddari\n Sami El Gueddari (born 1 February 1984 in Orléans) is a French wheelchair racer and competitive swimmer who participated in the Paralympic Games of 2008 and 2012. He was a bronze medalist at the European Championships in 2009. He is a specialist of 50 meter and 100 meter freestyle.", "Samir Ayass\n Samir Ayass was born in Sofia, Bulgaria to a Lebanese father and a Bulgarian mother. He started his playing career at CSKA Sofia at the age of six.", "Abderahman Samir\n He plays at the Mesaimeer since 2010." ]
What sport does Juan López Hita play?
[ "association football", "football", "soccer" ]
sport
Juan Hita
6,385,442
29
[ { "id": "16014485", "title": "Carlos Lopez-Barillas", "text": " gold medals in the Central American Games in 1985, 1989, and 1993, also gold in the Central America Mexico and Caribbean games of 1986 and 1990. After his move to Europe he continued playing waterpolo in Ireland, playing with the team Clonard in the first division of the Irish Waterpolo League. Lopez-Barillas suffered a serious accident while snowboarding in 2002, fracturing his left arm and requiring reconstructive surgery to his left wrist and hand, to date he is still active in skateboarding, snowboarding, surfing and kite surfing. He is still active playing Squash at competition level in London, UK.", "score": "1.7023175" }, { "id": "3349899", "title": "Juan Hita", "text": " Juan López Hita (5 September 1944 – 11 June 2014) was a Spanish professional footballer who played most of his career in Sevilla FC. He also appeared in three matches of the national team.", "score": "1.6785645" }, { "id": "7761915", "title": "José López (infielder)", "text": " Game in Milwaukee. López played three different infield positions (second base, shortstop and third base) in 132 games with the Double-A San Antonio Missions in 2003. He was third in the Texas League with 35 doubles. He had 41 multi-hit games, including four 4-hit games. At the all-star break he was selected to start for the Texas League. At the end of the season he was named to Texas League Postseason All-Star Team. López hit .391 with 3 runs, 2 home runs, a steal and 5 RBIs in five postseason games. He again played with Lara in the Venezuelan Winter League. He hit .295 with ", "score": "1.6686187" }, { "id": "26538715", "title": "Juan Lopez (baseball coach, born 1952)", "text": " Juan Lopez (born November 6, 1952) is a Puerto Rican former professional baseball infielder and coach. As a player, he was listed at 5 ft and 170 lb; he throws and bats right-handed. He was on the coaching staff of the New York Mets of Major League Baseball (MLB) during the 2002 and 2003 seasons.", "score": "1.660941" }, { "id": "6608281", "title": "Juan Martín López", "text": " Juan Martín López (born 27 May 1985) is an Argentine field hockey player for Banco Provincia. At the 2012 Summer Olympics, he competed for the national team in the men's tournament. Juan Martín has won the bronze medal at the 2014 Men's Hockey World Cup and three gold medals at the Pan American Games. The midfielder was also part of the Argentinian squad which won the gold medal at the 2016 Summer Olympics. He plays club hockey for Banco Provincia.", "score": "1.6395628" }, { "id": "31250439", "title": "Juan López (parathlete)", "text": " Juan Lopez is a paralympic athlete from Spain competing mainly in category T20 sprint events. Juan competed at the 2000 Summer Paralympics in Sydney, Australia. He competed in the high jump and long jump and won a silver medal in the T20 100m behind compatriot José António Exposito and won the T20 400m gold medal.", "score": "1.6358826" }, { "id": "9540866", "title": "Jack López", "text": " López played for Puerto Rico in the Caribbean Series of 2018–19, 2019–20, and 2020–21, batting over .300 in each series. On July 2, 2021, López was named to the United States national baseball team for the 2020 Summer Olympics. He was granted a transfer of sports citizenship by the Puerto Rico Baseball Federation. The team went on to win silver, falling to Japan in the gold-medal game.", "score": "1.621132" }, { "id": "26538716", "title": "Juan Lopez (baseball coach, born 1952)", "text": "1985 Roving instructor Detroit Tigers ; 1996 Hitting coach Pittsfield Mets ; 1997–1998, 2001 Hitting coach Capital City Bombers ; 1999–2000, 2006 Hitting coach Kingsport Mets ; 2002–2003 Batting practice coach, advance scout coordinator New York Mets ; 2004 Hitting coach Gulf Coast Mets ; 2005 Coach Brooklyn Cyclones ; 2008 Bullpen pitcher New York Mets ; 2009 Coach St. Lucie Mets ; 2009 Bench coach Kingsport Mets ; 2010 Coach Kingsport Mets ; 2011 Coach Lansing Lugnuts ; 2012 Coach GCL Blue Jays Lopez played in Minor League Baseball from 1971 to 1984, within the farm systems of the Milwaukee Brewers and Detroit Tigers. After his playing career, he worked in coaching and related roles for multiple teams, mostly within the New York Mets organization: ", "score": "1.5895894" }, { "id": "4140158", "title": "Juan López (baseball)", "text": " López graduated from Nicolas Sevilla High School in Toa Alta, Puerto Rico, in 1978. He played baseball at Yavapai Junior College in Prescott, Arizona. He and his wife Flor Sanchez have three children: Jack (also a professional baseball player), Aleimalee, and Johnnielee.", "score": "1.585301" }, { "id": "4140156", "title": "Juan López (baseball)", "text": "As player As coach López was signed as a non-drafted free agent by the Cleveland Indians in 1983. He played six seasons in the minor leagues, between 1983 and 1989, for the Indians, Houston Astros, and San Francisco Giants organizations. He briefly reached the Triple-A level, appearing in 21 games for the Tucson Toros of the Pacific Coast League in 1987. López started his coaching career as a minor league coach for the Giants' extended spring training in 1990. He coached for the rookie-level Arizona League Giants from 1991 to 1993. He was then a scout for the Detroit Tigers in 1994. In 1995 and 1996 ", "score": "1.577939" }, { "id": "4359220", "title": "Pedro López (baseball)", "text": " hit .264 in 109 games with 40 runs scored and 24 stolen bases. At that point, López was promoted to high-A ball with the Winston-Salem Warthogs in the Carolina League. He played only 4 games with the team, and batted 3 for 13. López stayed with the Warthogs in and showed vast improvement in his hitting. He played in 111 games, racking up 124 hits, scoring 62 runs, and stealing 12 bases. Towards the end of the season, López was promoted to Double-A with the Birmingham Barons in the Southern League. He played the remaining 7 games of the season there and went 5–23 in his first taste of Double-A ball. For the season, López started ", "score": "1.5631967" }, { "id": "12935656", "title": "Carlos Nevado", "text": " Juan Carlos Nevado González (born November 16, 1982 in Frankfurt am Main) is a German field hockey player of Uruguayan and Spanish descent. He was a member of the Men's National Teams that won the gold medal at the 2008 Summer Olympics and at the 2006 World Cup. As of 2008 Nevado played for Hamburg's Uhlenhorster Hockey Club. In July 2016, he was part of the PwC Germany team who stole a 3 - 1 victory from PwC Manchester despite being out classed for the entire game. In another game against PwC Reading, Reading went 1 - 0 up. This is considered by many critics as the most memorable game on tour.", "score": "1.5571411" }, { "id": "7761927", "title": "José López (infielder)", "text": " López, along with teammates Félix Hernández and Carlos Silva was a member of Team Venezuela in the 2009 World Baseball Classic. In Round 1 against the Netherlands, he hit a solo home run to give Venezuela a two-run lead and the victory later with a 3–1 win.", "score": "1.5438712" }, { "id": "7761916", "title": "José López (infielder)", "text": " home runs, 39 RBIs in 74 games with the triple-A Tacoma Rainiers in 2004 before being called up on July 31. López made his major league debut on July 31, 2004. At the end of the season he hit .311 with 11 doubles, 10 HR, 29 RBI in 46 games with Lara in the Venezuelan Winter League, making this the third time he played for Lara. In 2005, López battled extensive injury, going on the disabled list twice. In 44 games with Tacoma he hit .319 with five home runs and 31 RBIs. He hit .232 with five home runs and 22 RBI in 57 ", "score": "1.5426836" }, { "id": "4359221", "title": "Pedro López (baseball)", "text": " with the Barons and struggled a bit with his hitting, only batting a .238. Regardless of his performance, scouts saw his potential as he was only 21 years of age and playing in Double-A ball. He was promoted to the Charlotte Knights in the International League. He batted .202, getting 38 hits in 188 at bats. Soon after, López was promoted to the big leagues. López made his major league debut on May 1, 2005, and played in two games for the Chicago White Sox. He went 2–7 in with a run scored and 2 RBI. López began the season with the Charlotte Knights, the White Sox Triple-A affiliate, but was later released by the team.", "score": "1.5385166" }, { "id": "16014484", "title": "Carlos Lopez-Barillas", "text": " In his youth Lopez-Barillas won several Guatemalan skateboarding competitions, specialising in pool and vertical riding, he went to win the national aerial championship in 1978 with a recorded 6-foot high aerial. His interest with board based sports extended into surfing. He became active in swimming and waterpolo during his university years, first joining the national university USAC team, and later drafted into the Guatemalan National Waterpolo Squad where he played over 100 international caps, between 1980 and 1995. Among other victories, he played in the different teams that won the national waterpolo and swimming championships between 1981 and 1995, He ", "score": "1.5371433" }, { "id": "4359219", "title": "Pedro López (baseball)", "text": " As a 16-year-old in, López was signed as an undrafted free agent by the Chicago White Sox. In, López was sent to the Arizona White Sox in the Arizona League, a rookie-level professional baseball league. López batted .312, going 62 for 199 in 50 games. He also stole 12 bases and scored 26 runs. López was sent to the Appalachian League, another rookie-level professional baseball league, in, where he played for the Bristol White Sox. He upped his batting average to .319, playing in 63 games, knocking in 83 hits, and stealing 22 bases while scoring 42 runs. In, López was sent to the South Atlantic League, a Single-A league, where he played for the Kannapolis Intimidators. ", "score": "1.5365107" }, { "id": "15629307", "title": "Felipe López (basketball)", "text": " Luis Felipe López (born December 19, 1974) is a Dominican retired professional basketball player. He starred as a high school player and for the St. John's Red Storm in college basketball. López played for four seasons in the National Basketball Association (NBA). He has played for teams in a half dozen countries, as well as in the Continental Basketball Association (CBA) in the U.S. Most recently, he has been a broadcaster with Spanish-language networks.", "score": "1.5358266" }, { "id": "4232780", "title": "Juanma López (footballer)", "text": " For Spain, López won the gold medal in the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, and participated at UEFA Euro 1996, receiving 11 full caps in a five-year span. His senior debut came on 9 September 1992 in a friendly 1–0 win against England in Santander, also the first for coach Javier Clemente – both López and Solozábal played the entire match.", "score": "1.5343244" }, { "id": "25978760", "title": "Javier López (baseball)", "text": " Although he was born in Puerto Rico, López grew up in Fairfax, Virginia. He and his wife, Renee, attended Robinson Secondary School in Fairfax, Virginia. Growing up, his dream was to be an FBI agent like his father. López went to college at the University of Virginia (UVA) and played for the Virginia Cavaliers baseball team. Through August 2011, he was one of 29 former UVA players to have made it to the major leagues, along with among others Mark Reynolds and Ryan Zimmerman. While playing at UVA, he went 12–9 with a 6.30 earned run average (ERA). As a hitter, he had a batting average of .319, 15 home runs, and 71 runs batted in (RBI). However, while still at UVA, he discovered that pitching was most likely to get him to the major leagues. Despite leaving college after only three years to play professional baseball, López continued working on his degree in psychology, which he earned in 2002 to fulfill a promise to his father-in-law. He also said, \"I had done three years at a great university. I figured I should finish.\"", "score": "1.5270196" } ]
[ "Carlos Lopez-Barillas\n gold medals in the Central American Games in 1985, 1989, and 1993, also gold in the Central America Mexico and Caribbean games of 1986 and 1990. After his move to Europe he continued playing waterpolo in Ireland, playing with the team Clonard in the first division of the Irish Waterpolo League. Lopez-Barillas suffered a serious accident while snowboarding in 2002, fracturing his left arm and requiring reconstructive surgery to his left wrist and hand, to date he is still active in skateboarding, snowboarding, surfing and kite surfing. He is still active playing Squash at competition level in London, UK.", "Juan Hita\n Juan López Hita (5 September 1944 – 11 June 2014) was a Spanish professional footballer who played most of his career in Sevilla FC. He also appeared in three matches of the national team.", "José López (infielder)\n Game in Milwaukee. López played three different infield positions (second base, shortstop and third base) in 132 games with the Double-A San Antonio Missions in 2003. He was third in the Texas League with 35 doubles. He had 41 multi-hit games, including four 4-hit games. At the all-star break he was selected to start for the Texas League. At the end of the season he was named to Texas League Postseason All-Star Team. López hit .391 with 3 runs, 2 home runs, a steal and 5 RBIs in five postseason games. He again played with Lara in the Venezuelan Winter League. He hit .295 with ", "Juan Lopez (baseball coach, born 1952)\n Juan Lopez (born November 6, 1952) is a Puerto Rican former professional baseball infielder and coach. As a player, he was listed at 5 ft and 170 lb; he throws and bats right-handed. He was on the coaching staff of the New York Mets of Major League Baseball (MLB) during the 2002 and 2003 seasons.", "Juan Martín López\n Juan Martín López (born 27 May 1985) is an Argentine field hockey player for Banco Provincia. At the 2012 Summer Olympics, he competed for the national team in the men's tournament. Juan Martín has won the bronze medal at the 2014 Men's Hockey World Cup and three gold medals at the Pan American Games. The midfielder was also part of the Argentinian squad which won the gold medal at the 2016 Summer Olympics. He plays club hockey for Banco Provincia.", "Juan López (parathlete)\n Juan Lopez is a paralympic athlete from Spain competing mainly in category T20 sprint events. Juan competed at the 2000 Summer Paralympics in Sydney, Australia. He competed in the high jump and long jump and won a silver medal in the T20 100m behind compatriot José António Exposito and won the T20 400m gold medal.", "Jack López\n López played for Puerto Rico in the Caribbean Series of 2018–19, 2019–20, and 2020–21, batting over .300 in each series. On July 2, 2021, López was named to the United States national baseball team for the 2020 Summer Olympics. He was granted a transfer of sports citizenship by the Puerto Rico Baseball Federation. The team went on to win silver, falling to Japan in the gold-medal game.", "Juan Lopez (baseball coach, born 1952)\n1985 Roving instructor Detroit Tigers ; 1996 Hitting coach Pittsfield Mets ; 1997–1998, 2001 Hitting coach Capital City Bombers ; 1999–2000, 2006 Hitting coach Kingsport Mets ; 2002–2003 Batting practice coach, advance scout coordinator New York Mets ; 2004 Hitting coach Gulf Coast Mets ; 2005 Coach Brooklyn Cyclones ; 2008 Bullpen pitcher New York Mets ; 2009 Coach St. Lucie Mets ; 2009 Bench coach Kingsport Mets ; 2010 Coach Kingsport Mets ; 2011 Coach Lansing Lugnuts ; 2012 Coach GCL Blue Jays Lopez played in Minor League Baseball from 1971 to 1984, within the farm systems of the Milwaukee Brewers and Detroit Tigers. After his playing career, he worked in coaching and related roles for multiple teams, mostly within the New York Mets organization: ", "Juan López (baseball)\n López graduated from Nicolas Sevilla High School in Toa Alta, Puerto Rico, in 1978. He played baseball at Yavapai Junior College in Prescott, Arizona. He and his wife Flor Sanchez have three children: Jack (also a professional baseball player), Aleimalee, and Johnnielee.", "Juan López (baseball)\nAs player As coach López was signed as a non-drafted free agent by the Cleveland Indians in 1983. He played six seasons in the minor leagues, between 1983 and 1989, for the Indians, Houston Astros, and San Francisco Giants organizations. He briefly reached the Triple-A level, appearing in 21 games for the Tucson Toros of the Pacific Coast League in 1987. López started his coaching career as a minor league coach for the Giants' extended spring training in 1990. He coached for the rookie-level Arizona League Giants from 1991 to 1993. He was then a scout for the Detroit Tigers in 1994. In 1995 and 1996 ", "Pedro López (baseball)\n hit .264 in 109 games with 40 runs scored and 24 stolen bases. At that point, López was promoted to high-A ball with the Winston-Salem Warthogs in the Carolina League. He played only 4 games with the team, and batted 3 for 13. López stayed with the Warthogs in and showed vast improvement in his hitting. He played in 111 games, racking up 124 hits, scoring 62 runs, and stealing 12 bases. Towards the end of the season, López was promoted to Double-A with the Birmingham Barons in the Southern League. He played the remaining 7 games of the season there and went 5–23 in his first taste of Double-A ball. For the season, López started ", "Carlos Nevado\n Juan Carlos Nevado González (born November 16, 1982 in Frankfurt am Main) is a German field hockey player of Uruguayan and Spanish descent. He was a member of the Men's National Teams that won the gold medal at the 2008 Summer Olympics and at the 2006 World Cup. As of 2008 Nevado played for Hamburg's Uhlenhorster Hockey Club. In July 2016, he was part of the PwC Germany team who stole a 3 - 1 victory from PwC Manchester despite being out classed for the entire game. In another game against PwC Reading, Reading went 1 - 0 up. This is considered by many critics as the most memorable game on tour.", "José López (infielder)\n López, along with teammates Félix Hernández and Carlos Silva was a member of Team Venezuela in the 2009 World Baseball Classic. In Round 1 against the Netherlands, he hit a solo home run to give Venezuela a two-run lead and the victory later with a 3–1 win.", "José López (infielder)\n home runs, 39 RBIs in 74 games with the triple-A Tacoma Rainiers in 2004 before being called up on July 31. López made his major league debut on July 31, 2004. At the end of the season he hit .311 with 11 doubles, 10 HR, 29 RBI in 46 games with Lara in the Venezuelan Winter League, making this the third time he played for Lara. In 2005, López battled extensive injury, going on the disabled list twice. In 44 games with Tacoma he hit .319 with five home runs and 31 RBIs. He hit .232 with five home runs and 22 RBI in 57 ", "Pedro López (baseball)\n with the Barons and struggled a bit with his hitting, only batting a .238. Regardless of his performance, scouts saw his potential as he was only 21 years of age and playing in Double-A ball. He was promoted to the Charlotte Knights in the International League. He batted .202, getting 38 hits in 188 at bats. Soon after, López was promoted to the big leagues. López made his major league debut on May 1, 2005, and played in two games for the Chicago White Sox. He went 2–7 in with a run scored and 2 RBI. López began the season with the Charlotte Knights, the White Sox Triple-A affiliate, but was later released by the team.", "Carlos Lopez-Barillas\n In his youth Lopez-Barillas won several Guatemalan skateboarding competitions, specialising in pool and vertical riding, he went to win the national aerial championship in 1978 with a recorded 6-foot high aerial. His interest with board based sports extended into surfing. He became active in swimming and waterpolo during his university years, first joining the national university USAC team, and later drafted into the Guatemalan National Waterpolo Squad where he played over 100 international caps, between 1980 and 1995. Among other victories, he played in the different teams that won the national waterpolo and swimming championships between 1981 and 1995, He ", "Pedro López (baseball)\n As a 16-year-old in, López was signed as an undrafted free agent by the Chicago White Sox. In, López was sent to the Arizona White Sox in the Arizona League, a rookie-level professional baseball league. López batted .312, going 62 for 199 in 50 games. He also stole 12 bases and scored 26 runs. López was sent to the Appalachian League, another rookie-level professional baseball league, in, where he played for the Bristol White Sox. He upped his batting average to .319, playing in 63 games, knocking in 83 hits, and stealing 22 bases while scoring 42 runs. In, López was sent to the South Atlantic League, a Single-A league, where he played for the Kannapolis Intimidators. ", "Felipe López (basketball)\n Luis Felipe López (born December 19, 1974) is a Dominican retired professional basketball player. He starred as a high school player and for the St. John's Red Storm in college basketball. López played for four seasons in the National Basketball Association (NBA). He has played for teams in a half dozen countries, as well as in the Continental Basketball Association (CBA) in the U.S. Most recently, he has been a broadcaster with Spanish-language networks.", "Juanma López (footballer)\n For Spain, López won the gold medal in the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, and participated at UEFA Euro 1996, receiving 11 full caps in a five-year span. His senior debut came on 9 September 1992 in a friendly 1–0 win against England in Santander, also the first for coach Javier Clemente – both López and Solozábal played the entire match.", "Javier López (baseball)\n Although he was born in Puerto Rico, López grew up in Fairfax, Virginia. He and his wife, Renee, attended Robinson Secondary School in Fairfax, Virginia. Growing up, his dream was to be an FBI agent like his father. López went to college at the University of Virginia (UVA) and played for the Virginia Cavaliers baseball team. Through August 2011, he was one of 29 former UVA players to have made it to the major leagues, along with among others Mark Reynolds and Ryan Zimmerman. While playing at UVA, he went 12–9 with a 6.30 earned run average (ERA). As a hitter, he had a batting average of .319, 15 home runs, and 71 runs batted in (RBI). However, while still at UVA, he discovered that pitching was most likely to get him to the major leagues. Despite leaving college after only three years to play professional baseball, López continued working on his degree in psychology, which he earned in 2002 to fulfill a promise to his father-in-law. He also said, \"I had done three years at a great university. I figured I should finish.\"" ]
What is Herlyn Espinal's occupation?
[ "journalist", "journo", "journalists" ]
occupation
Herlyn Espinal
1,223,902
88
[ { "id": "5316421", "title": "Herlyn Espinal", "text": " Espinal was born and raised in the Santa Rita district of Yoro. In a 2009 interview he said that from an early age he had aspirations of becoming a journalist. In his youth, Espinal was active in the La Fragua theater company in El Progreso, Yoro.", "score": "1.8138638" }, { "id": "5316420", "title": "Herlyn Espinal", "text": " Herlyn Iván Espinal Martínez (14 September 1982 – 20 July 2014) was a Honduran journalist and television reporter who worked as chief correspondent in San Pedro Sula, the second largest city in Honduras, for Televicentro's daily newscast Hoy Mismo. Espinal was abducted in the vicinity of Santa Rita, in the department of Yoro, early on the morning of 20 July 2014. He was found dead, a victim of multiple gunshot wounds, in a nearby location on the morning of 21 July. He was the forty-third journalist killed in Honduras since 2013.", "score": "1.7767518" }, { "id": "5316424", "title": "Herlyn Espinal", "text": " Espinal was found dead on 21 July 2014. He was 31 at the time of his murder. In the aftermath of his murder, contradictory information circulated regarding the last hours of his life and the circumstances of his death. Some sources claimed he was shot two times, others that he had been shot up to five times. One report of his death stated that the city in which he worked, San Pedro Sula, is \"considered the most violent city in the most violent country on the planet\". Espinal's mother stated that he had been at her home in Santa Rita watching television around 9 ", "score": "1.6238754" }, { "id": "5316422", "title": "Herlyn Espinal", "text": " His first job as a journalist was with a local television channel in Agua Blanca Sur, Yoro, as a reporter and a presenter. He did both his own field work and presented it later on camera. He told an interviewer that journalists should always be \"objective, impartial, and honest\", and that journalists who take bribes will ultimately be exposed, adding, \"Truth is mighty and will prevail\". He also worked as a correspondent for Radio Progreso. Both the La Frague theater company and Radio Progreso were founded by the Jesuit order in El Progreso, Yoro. As chief correspondent for Hoy Mismo, which aired in San Pedro ", "score": "1.5473511" }, { "id": "5316425", "title": "Herlyn Espinal", "text": " on July 19 when an unidentified man phoned and arranged a meeting, which Espinal agree to. Later that evening, according to multiple accounts, Espinal met with friends at a restaurant in Santa Rita, and also left with friends very early on the morning of July 20, 2014. He reportedly arrived back at his mother's home around 3 a.m., parked his car in front of the house, and then voluntarily entered a white panel truck in which three other persons were seated. Some sources added further details, some of which appeared to conflict with others for timeline reasons. It was stated, for example, that ", "score": "1.5463312" }, { "id": "5316423", "title": "Herlyn Espinal", "text": " Cortés, Honduras's second largest city, he coordinated all news reports from northern Honduras. On multiple occasions he ran as a Liberal Party candidate for city council, and at the time of his death was planning to run yet again. He said in 2009 that his \"greatest personal ambition\" was to pursue investigative journalism and to become mayor of Santa Rita and create new work opportunities for the town. The two people he admired most, he stated, were his grandmother, \"a worthy example of perseverance and triumph\", and his mother. At the time of his murder, he was living in an apartment in San Pedro Sula.", "score": "1.5129324" }, { "id": "5316426", "title": "Herlyn Espinal", "text": " after leaving Las Tejas at around 2 a.m., had soon after joined up with friends with whom he proceeded to socialize at various other places in Santa Rita. Another detail that was mentioned in some reports but not others had Espinal arriving that same night at the Paradise Motel shortly after 3:00 a.m. and leaving it shortly before 4:00 a.m. At least one source stated that he had entered the Paradise Motel with \"a man of fair complexion, height about 1.93 m tall and burly\", and had left the motel with that man, Espinal being at that point \"semi-naked\". Also at around 4 ", "score": "1.499503" }, { "id": "726651", "title": "Ari Espinal", "text": " Aridia Espinal (born c. 1988) is an American politician from New York.", "score": "1.4691113" }, { "id": "5316428", "title": "Herlyn Espinal", "text": " Espinal's body was reportedly discovered along a road between the towns of El Olivar and La Danta in an area called El Batey, in the department of Yoro. He was allegedly found face down and shirtless, his body already partially decomposed and his face disfigured by gunfire. Several reports variously described his body as having been found in a vacant lot, in bushes in a pasture, and in a ditch. One report indicated that according to forensics reports, he had been shot five times, sustaining wounds to his arm, torso, neck, and a fatal shot to the back of the head, and had been killed about 24 hours before his body was found, which was inconsistent with known facts. His body was reportedly identified at the scene by his stepfather, José Santos Ramírez, and another relative, José Jiménez. On the same day that Espinal's body was found, a pool of blood and shell casings were purportedly found on a bridge over the Humuya River on the road between Santa Rita and La Barca.", "score": "1.4552312" }, { "id": "5316430", "title": "Herlyn Espinal", "text": " una Ciudadanía Participativa (ACI PARTICIPA) and El Centro de Prevención, Tratamiento y Rehabilitación de Victimas de la Tortura y sus Familiares (CPTRT), expressed deep concern over the disappearance and murder of Espinal. Juan Mairena, head of the Honduran journalists' association, called his murder \"a heavy blow for journalism\". After the Honduran Minister of Security, Arturo Corrales, suggested that the killing may have been a crime of passion or the result of an inheritance dispute, rather than an act of retribution motivated by his work as a reporter, PEN, the international organization for writers, expressed concern that investigators had ruled out Espinal's activity as a journalist as a possible motive within 24 hours of his body being found.", "score": "1.4494631" }, { "id": "5316433", "title": "Herlyn Espinal", "text": " had attended a party. It was reported that Bueso, after his arrest, had spoken with police for six hours and that he maintained that authorities had singled him out only because he owned a white vehicle similar to the one that Espinal had last been seen entering. Authorities stated with \"great fanfare\" on 29 August that Bueso was \"instrumental\" in the case, but the next day they released him, citing lack of evidence of his involvement. On 31 August, the public prosecutor claimed that Bueso had never been detained, but had simply been interviewed as a witness because he was one of ", "score": "1.447213" }, { "id": "5316436", "title": "Herlyn Espinal", "text": " considered a perpetrator, and that there was also an arrest order out for another person in connection with the murder. In mid-September 2014, Hector Hernandez, coordinator of forensic medicine in San Pedro Sula, who had already been subjected to a 15-day suspension, was removed from his position because he had made public statements about the murder of Espinal. He had said that Espinal had died of multiple gunshot wounds, even though evidence had not yet been collected at the scene. While Hernandez would continue to operate as a forensic doctor on call, he would no longer be coordinator of the city morgue.", "score": "1.4258015" }, { "id": "5316434", "title": "Herlyn Espinal", "text": " last people to see Espinal alive. A local commentator, who criticized authorities on 31 August for their supposed sloppiness in the matter of Bueso, also charged them with failing to follow up leads properly and refusing to make information about the investigation publicly available. This same commentator also made sweeping accusations of official corruption and incompetence in the handling of the case, and noted that suspicion had now fallen upon a person named Juan Carlos Acosta Manzanares, although a similarity in names and appearance had caused someone named Juan Carlos Acostas Meléndez to be dragged into the case. On 1 September, Espinal's ", "score": "1.4162192" }, { "id": "27726857", "title": "Raynel Espinal", "text": " Raynel Joseph Espinal (born October 6, 1991) is a Dominican professional baseball pitcher wjp os a free agent. He has made a single appearance in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the Boston Red Sox. Listed at 6 ft and 215 lb, he throws and bats right-handed.", "score": "1.409116" }, { "id": "8899115", "title": "Rogelio Espina", "text": " Espina was born in Manila, Philippines. From 1976 to 1980, he studied at the Far Eastern University with a bachelor's degree on zoology. From 1980 to 1984 at the same school, he studied a degree on Doctor of Medicine. He was a medical specialist in the Philippine Department of Health (Valenzuela District) from January 1, 1997 to April 1, 1998.", "score": "1.3929961" }, { "id": "2976460", "title": "Gerardo Espina Jr.", "text": " Gerardo J. Espina Jr. (born August 7, 1970), also known as Gerry Espina, is a Filipino politician. He is currently the Representative of the lone District of Biliran, having been elected in the 2010 elections. Prior to this, he was a member of the 13th Congress of the Philippines as representative of the lone legislative district of Biliran which he served for one term from 2004-2007.", "score": "1.3902413" }, { "id": "12576432", "title": "Pinoy Idol", "text": " 16 and August 17, 2008 at the SMX Convention Center. Gretchen (Stephanie) Espina is 20 from Biliran. She is the daughter of Rogelio J. Espina, the governor of the said province. She is studying in the University of the Philippines, Diliman where she is a member of the internationally acclaimed University of the Philippines Singing Ambassadors (UPSA). During the competition, she was never in the bottom group. She auditioned in Pasay accompanied by a bodyguard. Jay Ann \"Jayann\" Bautista is 21 from Pampanga. She studies in the University of the Philippines, Diliman and her parents run their own businesses. She was formerly a ", "score": "1.3902358" }, { "id": "12596238", "title": "Inday Espina-Varona", "text": " Ma. Salvacion Espina Varona, more popularly known as Inday Espina-Varona is a Filipina journalist. She is Head of Regions for Rappler.com. She was formerly became a senior contributing editor and a writer for ABS-CBN Integrated News & Current Affairs.", "score": "1.3827875" }, { "id": "8124050", "title": "Erika Casupanan", "text": " Casupanan was born in the municipality of Hermosa, located in Bataan, a province of the Philippines. When she was young, she emigrated with her parents to Canada. She grew up in Niagara Falls, Ontario, where she attended St. Paul Catholic High School. She later earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in Media, Information & Technoculture from the University of Western Ontario (Western University). Eventually, she moved to Toronto, where she worked as an agency consultant at Media Profile for five years, and a communications manager at Kijiji for four years.", "score": "1.3719412" }, { "id": "8027147", "title": "Gretchen Espina", "text": " Espina came from a musically-inclined family who is also the prominent political family in Biliran, with her father, Congressman Dr. Rogelio \"Roger\" J. Espina, Representative of the Lone District of Biliran, described as a \"good piano player and singer.\" Her mother, Cecil, works as a pediatrician; while her grandfather, Gerry, was a Mayor of Kawayan, Biliran. Her uncle, Gerry (Gerryboy) Espina Jr. is the present Governor of Biliran. Espina was born in Quezon City, Metro Manila, where she spent her early years studying in School of the Holy Spirit before transferring to Naval Central School where she finished elementary level with honors. She had her secondary education in Cathedral School of La Naval, where she graduated as a salutatorian. Espina pursued college in University of the Philippines Diliman campus in Quezon City, with a major in European Languages. She is a member of The University of the Philippines Singing Ambassadors and represented UP in the Inter-Collegiate Singing Contest held in Shantou University, Guangdong, China, where she won the first prize as a solo performer.", "score": "1.3694384" } ]
[ "Herlyn Espinal\n Espinal was born and raised in the Santa Rita district of Yoro. In a 2009 interview he said that from an early age he had aspirations of becoming a journalist. In his youth, Espinal was active in the La Fragua theater company in El Progreso, Yoro.", "Herlyn Espinal\n Herlyn Iván Espinal Martínez (14 September 1982 – 20 July 2014) was a Honduran journalist and television reporter who worked as chief correspondent in San Pedro Sula, the second largest city in Honduras, for Televicentro's daily newscast Hoy Mismo. Espinal was abducted in the vicinity of Santa Rita, in the department of Yoro, early on the morning of 20 July 2014. He was found dead, a victim of multiple gunshot wounds, in a nearby location on the morning of 21 July. He was the forty-third journalist killed in Honduras since 2013.", "Herlyn Espinal\n Espinal was found dead on 21 July 2014. He was 31 at the time of his murder. In the aftermath of his murder, contradictory information circulated regarding the last hours of his life and the circumstances of his death. Some sources claimed he was shot two times, others that he had been shot up to five times. One report of his death stated that the city in which he worked, San Pedro Sula, is \"considered the most violent city in the most violent country on the planet\". Espinal's mother stated that he had been at her home in Santa Rita watching television around 9 ", "Herlyn Espinal\n His first job as a journalist was with a local television channel in Agua Blanca Sur, Yoro, as a reporter and a presenter. He did both his own field work and presented it later on camera. He told an interviewer that journalists should always be \"objective, impartial, and honest\", and that journalists who take bribes will ultimately be exposed, adding, \"Truth is mighty and will prevail\". He also worked as a correspondent for Radio Progreso. Both the La Frague theater company and Radio Progreso were founded by the Jesuit order in El Progreso, Yoro. As chief correspondent for Hoy Mismo, which aired in San Pedro ", "Herlyn Espinal\n on July 19 when an unidentified man phoned and arranged a meeting, which Espinal agree to. Later that evening, according to multiple accounts, Espinal met with friends at a restaurant in Santa Rita, and also left with friends very early on the morning of July 20, 2014. He reportedly arrived back at his mother's home around 3 a.m., parked his car in front of the house, and then voluntarily entered a white panel truck in which three other persons were seated. Some sources added further details, some of which appeared to conflict with others for timeline reasons. It was stated, for example, that ", "Herlyn Espinal\n Cortés, Honduras's second largest city, he coordinated all news reports from northern Honduras. On multiple occasions he ran as a Liberal Party candidate for city council, and at the time of his death was planning to run yet again. He said in 2009 that his \"greatest personal ambition\" was to pursue investigative journalism and to become mayor of Santa Rita and create new work opportunities for the town. The two people he admired most, he stated, were his grandmother, \"a worthy example of perseverance and triumph\", and his mother. At the time of his murder, he was living in an apartment in San Pedro Sula.", "Herlyn Espinal\n after leaving Las Tejas at around 2 a.m., had soon after joined up with friends with whom he proceeded to socialize at various other places in Santa Rita. Another detail that was mentioned in some reports but not others had Espinal arriving that same night at the Paradise Motel shortly after 3:00 a.m. and leaving it shortly before 4:00 a.m. At least one source stated that he had entered the Paradise Motel with \"a man of fair complexion, height about 1.93 m tall and burly\", and had left the motel with that man, Espinal being at that point \"semi-naked\". Also at around 4 ", "Ari Espinal\n Aridia Espinal (born c. 1988) is an American politician from New York.", "Herlyn Espinal\n Espinal's body was reportedly discovered along a road between the towns of El Olivar and La Danta in an area called El Batey, in the department of Yoro. He was allegedly found face down and shirtless, his body already partially decomposed and his face disfigured by gunfire. Several reports variously described his body as having been found in a vacant lot, in bushes in a pasture, and in a ditch. One report indicated that according to forensics reports, he had been shot five times, sustaining wounds to his arm, torso, neck, and a fatal shot to the back of the head, and had been killed about 24 hours before his body was found, which was inconsistent with known facts. His body was reportedly identified at the scene by his stepfather, José Santos Ramírez, and another relative, José Jiménez. On the same day that Espinal's body was found, a pool of blood and shell casings were purportedly found on a bridge over the Humuya River on the road between Santa Rita and La Barca.", "Herlyn Espinal\n una Ciudadanía Participativa (ACI PARTICIPA) and El Centro de Prevención, Tratamiento y Rehabilitación de Victimas de la Tortura y sus Familiares (CPTRT), expressed deep concern over the disappearance and murder of Espinal. Juan Mairena, head of the Honduran journalists' association, called his murder \"a heavy blow for journalism\". After the Honduran Minister of Security, Arturo Corrales, suggested that the killing may have been a crime of passion or the result of an inheritance dispute, rather than an act of retribution motivated by his work as a reporter, PEN, the international organization for writers, expressed concern that investigators had ruled out Espinal's activity as a journalist as a possible motive within 24 hours of his body being found.", "Herlyn Espinal\n had attended a party. It was reported that Bueso, after his arrest, had spoken with police for six hours and that he maintained that authorities had singled him out only because he owned a white vehicle similar to the one that Espinal had last been seen entering. Authorities stated with \"great fanfare\" on 29 August that Bueso was \"instrumental\" in the case, but the next day they released him, citing lack of evidence of his involvement. On 31 August, the public prosecutor claimed that Bueso had never been detained, but had simply been interviewed as a witness because he was one of ", "Herlyn Espinal\n considered a perpetrator, and that there was also an arrest order out for another person in connection with the murder. In mid-September 2014, Hector Hernandez, coordinator of forensic medicine in San Pedro Sula, who had already been subjected to a 15-day suspension, was removed from his position because he had made public statements about the murder of Espinal. He had said that Espinal had died of multiple gunshot wounds, even though evidence had not yet been collected at the scene. While Hernandez would continue to operate as a forensic doctor on call, he would no longer be coordinator of the city morgue.", "Herlyn Espinal\n last people to see Espinal alive. A local commentator, who criticized authorities on 31 August for their supposed sloppiness in the matter of Bueso, also charged them with failing to follow up leads properly and refusing to make information about the investigation publicly available. This same commentator also made sweeping accusations of official corruption and incompetence in the handling of the case, and noted that suspicion had now fallen upon a person named Juan Carlos Acosta Manzanares, although a similarity in names and appearance had caused someone named Juan Carlos Acostas Meléndez to be dragged into the case. On 1 September, Espinal's ", "Raynel Espinal\n Raynel Joseph Espinal (born October 6, 1991) is a Dominican professional baseball pitcher wjp os a free agent. He has made a single appearance in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the Boston Red Sox. Listed at 6 ft and 215 lb, he throws and bats right-handed.", "Rogelio Espina\n Espina was born in Manila, Philippines. From 1976 to 1980, he studied at the Far Eastern University with a bachelor's degree on zoology. From 1980 to 1984 at the same school, he studied a degree on Doctor of Medicine. He was a medical specialist in the Philippine Department of Health (Valenzuela District) from January 1, 1997 to April 1, 1998.", "Gerardo Espina Jr.\n Gerardo J. Espina Jr. (born August 7, 1970), also known as Gerry Espina, is a Filipino politician. He is currently the Representative of the lone District of Biliran, having been elected in the 2010 elections. Prior to this, he was a member of the 13th Congress of the Philippines as representative of the lone legislative district of Biliran which he served for one term from 2004-2007.", "Pinoy Idol\n 16 and August 17, 2008 at the SMX Convention Center. Gretchen (Stephanie) Espina is 20 from Biliran. She is the daughter of Rogelio J. Espina, the governor of the said province. She is studying in the University of the Philippines, Diliman where she is a member of the internationally acclaimed University of the Philippines Singing Ambassadors (UPSA). During the competition, she was never in the bottom group. She auditioned in Pasay accompanied by a bodyguard. Jay Ann \"Jayann\" Bautista is 21 from Pampanga. She studies in the University of the Philippines, Diliman and her parents run their own businesses. She was formerly a ", "Inday Espina-Varona\n Ma. Salvacion Espina Varona, more popularly known as Inday Espina-Varona is a Filipina journalist. She is Head of Regions for Rappler.com. She was formerly became a senior contributing editor and a writer for ABS-CBN Integrated News & Current Affairs.", "Erika Casupanan\n Casupanan was born in the municipality of Hermosa, located in Bataan, a province of the Philippines. When she was young, she emigrated with her parents to Canada. She grew up in Niagara Falls, Ontario, where she attended St. Paul Catholic High School. She later earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in Media, Information & Technoculture from the University of Western Ontario (Western University). Eventually, she moved to Toronto, where she worked as an agency consultant at Media Profile for five years, and a communications manager at Kijiji for four years.", "Gretchen Espina\n Espina came from a musically-inclined family who is also the prominent political family in Biliran, with her father, Congressman Dr. Rogelio \"Roger\" J. Espina, Representative of the Lone District of Biliran, described as a \"good piano player and singer.\" Her mother, Cecil, works as a pediatrician; while her grandfather, Gerry, was a Mayor of Kawayan, Biliran. Her uncle, Gerry (Gerryboy) Espina Jr. is the present Governor of Biliran. Espina was born in Quezon City, Metro Manila, where she spent her early years studying in School of the Holy Spirit before transferring to Naval Central School where she finished elementary level with honors. She had her secondary education in Cathedral School of La Naval, where she graduated as a salutatorian. Espina pursued college in University of the Philippines Diliman campus in Quezon City, with a major in European Languages. She is a member of The University of the Philippines Singing Ambassadors and represented UP in the Inter-Collegiate Singing Contest held in Shantou University, Guangdong, China, where she won the first prize as a solo performer." ]
Who is the author of This Is It?
[ "Joseph Connolly" ]
author
This Is It (novel)
5,972,970
56
[ { "id": "6290510", "title": "Is This It", "text": " }", "score": "1.7481284" }, { "id": "32682110", "title": "This Is... (book series)", "text": " This is... is a series of children's travel books written and illustrated by Czech author Miroslav Sasek between 1959 and 1974. Sasek originally intended to write three books: This is Paris, This is London, and This is Rome however, as a result of those titles' popularity, Sasek ultimately extended the series to 18 books. Four of the This is books were adapted into movie shorts by Weston Woods in the early 1960s: This is New York, This is Venice, This is Israel, and This is Ireland. The This is series went out of print. In 2003, publisher Rizzoli began reissuing some of the titles, although not in the original publication order. In these books, outdated facts were updated at the back of the book but the original artwork was preserved.", "score": "1.677752" }, { "id": "26297880", "title": "This Is It (novel)", "text": "Joseph Connolly: This Is It (Faber and Faber: London, 2006) (ISBN: 0571232620). ", "score": "1.6613512" }, { "id": "32682111", "title": "This Is... (book series)", "text": "This is Paris (1959) (republished 2004) ; This is London (1959) (republished 2004) ; This is Rome (1960) (republished 2007) ; This is New York (1960) (republished 2003) ; This is Edinburgh (1961) (republished 2006) ; This is Munich (1961) (republished 2012) ; This is Venice (1961) (republished 2005) ; This is San Francisco (1962) (republished 2003) ; This is Israel (1962) (republished 2008) ; This is Cape Canaveral (1963) (later republished as This is Cape Kennedy) (republished 2009 as This is the Way to the Moon) ; This is Ireland (1964) (republished 2005) ; This is Hong Kong (1965) (republished 2007) ; This is Greece (1966) (republished 2009) ; This is Texas (1967) (republished 2006) ; This is the United Nations (1968) ; This is Washington, D.C. (1969) (republished 2011) ; This is Australia (1970) (republished 2009) ; This is Historic Britain (1974) (republished 2008 as This is Britain) This is the World: A Global Treasury (published 2014: abridged versions of 16 titles in one volume – the excluded titles are Cape Canaveral and the United Nations) Compilation", "score": "1.4944379" }, { "id": "5354890", "title": "This Is America (book)", "text": " This Is America is a 1942 book with text by First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt and photographs by Frances Cooke Macgregor published by G. P. Putnam's and Sons, New York. The title This Is America coincided with the 1942 series of wartime posters by the Sheldon-Claire company of Chicago, \"This is America... Keep it Free\".", "score": "1.4897184" }, { "id": "3872454", "title": "Is This Anything? (book)", "text": " Is This Anything? is a 2020 book written by Jerry Seinfeld. The book is a collection of Seinfeld's comedic writings over the span of his 45-year career and compiles some of his best jokes. The title is based on the main question a comedian asks when they are testing out new material. The book scored a spot on the New York Times Best Seller list.", "score": "1.4795301" }, { "id": "14265749", "title": "This Is It (Jimmy Ibbotson album)", "text": " This Is It is the 1999 album by Jimmy Ibbotson.", "score": "1.464928" }, { "id": "26297878", "title": "This Is It (novel)", "text": " This Is It is a comic novel by Joseph Connolly first published in 1996 about a womanizer who leads a double life, with workdays in London and weekends in the country. When he has an accident and is left partly immobilized for some time, he cannot keep to his sophisticated schedule any longer, and suddenly people who are never meant to meet are in danger of coming face to face with each other and blowing his cover. On top of all that, he is being blackmailed for a criminal activity which is nothing to do with his double life but, with his money having run out, his options are either to be brought to justice or to face serious bodily harm by the hands of the blackmailer. The novel ends on an optimistic note, with the blackmailer out of the way and the protagonist just a little wiser.", "score": "1.4559789" }, { "id": "10046378", "title": "Picture This (novel)", "text": " Picture This is a 1988 novel from Joseph Heller, the satiric author of the acclaimed Catch-22.", "score": "1.4463539" }, { "id": "32289546", "title": "This Is My God", "text": " This is My God is a non-fiction book by Herman Wouk, first published in 1959. The book summarizes many key aspects of Judaism and is intended for both Jewish and non-Jewish audiences. The author, who served in the United States Navy and was a Pulitzer Prize–winning novelist, writes from a Modern Orthodox perspective.", "score": "1.4074929" }, { "id": "28701931", "title": "Michael Jackson's This Is It (album)", "text": " Michael Jackson's This Is It (or simply This Is It) is a posthumous two-disc soundtrack album by American singer Michael Jackson. Released by MJJ Music on October 26, 2009, This Is It features previously released music, as well as six previously unreleased recordings by Jackson. This Is It was released to coincide with the theatrical release of Michael Jackson's This Is It, a concert film documenting Jackson's rehearsals for the This Is It concert series at the O2 Arena in London. This Is It is the sixth album to be released by Sony and Motown/Universal since Jackson's death on June 25, ", "score": "1.405256" }, { "id": "28953488", "title": "This Is It and I Am It and You Are It and So Is That and He Is It and She Is It and It Is It and That Is That", "text": " This Is It and I Am It and You Are It and So Is That and He Is It and She Is It and It Is It and That Is That is the second album by Marnie Stern, released on October 7, 2008 on Kill Rock Stars. The album's title comes from an Alan Watts quote in his work On the Taboo Against Knowing Who You Are (1966), which was in turn a quotation from James Broughton's The Bard and the Harper (1965). Broughton also used the quote in his art film This Is It (1971). Pitchfork named This Is It... the 44th greatest album of 2008.", "score": "1.3981504" }, { "id": "11176046", "title": "This Is Not a Book", "text": " This is Not a Book is a book by Keri Smith that was published in 2009. It is not a normal book, because the book does not exist without the reader. The book is almost completely blank, so the reader creates the content and the final product. The book's purpose is to teach a reader to think creatively and take risks. The main question presented is: if it is not a book, then what exactly is it? The answer is left to the reader to determine. This Is Not A Book is much like Wreck This Journal, also by Keri Smith, except that it ", "score": "1.3893199" }, { "id": "14062156", "title": "Who Am I This Time?", "text": " \"Who Am I This Time?\" is a short story written by Kurt Vonnegut, published in the Saturday Evening Post in 1961. The story was collected in Vonnegut's famous anthology Welcome to the Monkey House. It was originally titled \"My Name is Everyone\".", "score": "1.3836405" }, { "id": "11030444", "title": "It (novel)", "text": " It is a 1986 horror novel by American author Stephen King. It was his 22nd book and his 17th novel written under his own name. The story follows the experiences of seven children as they are terrorized by an evil entity that exploits the fears of its victims to disguise itself while hunting its prey. \"It\" primarily appears in the form of Pennywise the Dancing Clown to attract its preferred prey of young children. The novel is told through narratives alternating between two periods and is largely told in the third-person omniscient mode. It deals with themes that eventually became King ", "score": "1.3689868" }, { "id": "11136830", "title": "This Is It! (bar)", "text": " This Is It! is a gay bar established in 1968 by Catherine \"June\" Brehm and business partner Michael Latona. June took control of the bar, known previously as \"The Establishment\", in 1968. Extensive remodels were done in 1969, and the bar has kept the same style since. While records do not indicate the exact date June and her business partner Michael split, it is clear that she assumed full control on June 18, 1970. Joseph Brehm became a part-owner of This Is It! after his mother, June, suffered a stroke in 1981, and he operated the bar concurrently with June until her death ", "score": "1.3677361" }, { "id": "14265751", "title": "This Is It (Jimmy Ibbotson album)", "text": "Jimmy Ibbotson: guitar, mandolin, vocals ; Tracy McLain: vocals ", "score": "1.3582556" }, { "id": "25032117", "title": "This Is It (Melba Moore album)", "text": " This Is It is the fifth album by singer Melba Moore, released in 1976.", "score": "1.3557132" }, { "id": "4219160", "title": "This is My America", "text": " This is My America is a young adult novel by Kim Johnson, published July 28, 2020 by Random House Children's Books, that explores injustices in the United States' justice system.", "score": "1.3517027" }, { "id": "11591079", "title": "Sarahbeth Purcell", "text": " Sarahbeth Purcell (born 1976 or 1977) is an American author of fiction. Her first book, Love Is The Drug, was published in 2003 in hardback and in trade paperback in 2004. Her second book, This is Not a Love Song was published in trade paperback in 2005. Purcell is also a visual artist of both photography and paintings.", "score": "1.3493973" } ]
[ "Is This It\n }", "This Is... (book series)\n This is... is a series of children's travel books written and illustrated by Czech author Miroslav Sasek between 1959 and 1974. Sasek originally intended to write three books: This is Paris, This is London, and This is Rome however, as a result of those titles' popularity, Sasek ultimately extended the series to 18 books. Four of the This is books were adapted into movie shorts by Weston Woods in the early 1960s: This is New York, This is Venice, This is Israel, and This is Ireland. The This is series went out of print. In 2003, publisher Rizzoli began reissuing some of the titles, although not in the original publication order. In these books, outdated facts were updated at the back of the book but the original artwork was preserved.", "This Is It (novel)\nJoseph Connolly: This Is It (Faber and Faber: London, 2006) (ISBN: 0571232620). ", "This Is... (book series)\nThis is Paris (1959) (republished 2004) ; This is London (1959) (republished 2004) ; This is Rome (1960) (republished 2007) ; This is New York (1960) (republished 2003) ; This is Edinburgh (1961) (republished 2006) ; This is Munich (1961) (republished 2012) ; This is Venice (1961) (republished 2005) ; This is San Francisco (1962) (republished 2003) ; This is Israel (1962) (republished 2008) ; This is Cape Canaveral (1963) (later republished as This is Cape Kennedy) (republished 2009 as This is the Way to the Moon) ; This is Ireland (1964) (republished 2005) ; This is Hong Kong (1965) (republished 2007) ; This is Greece (1966) (republished 2009) ; This is Texas (1967) (republished 2006) ; This is the United Nations (1968) ; This is Washington, D.C. (1969) (republished 2011) ; This is Australia (1970) (republished 2009) ; This is Historic Britain (1974) (republished 2008 as This is Britain) This is the World: A Global Treasury (published 2014: abridged versions of 16 titles in one volume – the excluded titles are Cape Canaveral and the United Nations) Compilation", "This Is America (book)\n This Is America is a 1942 book with text by First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt and photographs by Frances Cooke Macgregor published by G. P. Putnam's and Sons, New York. The title This Is America coincided with the 1942 series of wartime posters by the Sheldon-Claire company of Chicago, \"This is America... Keep it Free\".", "Is This Anything? (book)\n Is This Anything? is a 2020 book written by Jerry Seinfeld. The book is a collection of Seinfeld's comedic writings over the span of his 45-year career and compiles some of his best jokes. The title is based on the main question a comedian asks when they are testing out new material. The book scored a spot on the New York Times Best Seller list.", "This Is It (Jimmy Ibbotson album)\n This Is It is the 1999 album by Jimmy Ibbotson.", "This Is It (novel)\n This Is It is a comic novel by Joseph Connolly first published in 1996 about a womanizer who leads a double life, with workdays in London and weekends in the country. When he has an accident and is left partly immobilized for some time, he cannot keep to his sophisticated schedule any longer, and suddenly people who are never meant to meet are in danger of coming face to face with each other and blowing his cover. On top of all that, he is being blackmailed for a criminal activity which is nothing to do with his double life but, with his money having run out, his options are either to be brought to justice or to face serious bodily harm by the hands of the blackmailer. The novel ends on an optimistic note, with the blackmailer out of the way and the protagonist just a little wiser.", "Picture This (novel)\n Picture This is a 1988 novel from Joseph Heller, the satiric author of the acclaimed Catch-22.", "This Is My God\n This is My God is a non-fiction book by Herman Wouk, first published in 1959. The book summarizes many key aspects of Judaism and is intended for both Jewish and non-Jewish audiences. The author, who served in the United States Navy and was a Pulitzer Prize–winning novelist, writes from a Modern Orthodox perspective.", "Michael Jackson's This Is It (album)\n Michael Jackson's This Is It (or simply This Is It) is a posthumous two-disc soundtrack album by American singer Michael Jackson. Released by MJJ Music on October 26, 2009, This Is It features previously released music, as well as six previously unreleased recordings by Jackson. This Is It was released to coincide with the theatrical release of Michael Jackson's This Is It, a concert film documenting Jackson's rehearsals for the This Is It concert series at the O2 Arena in London. This Is It is the sixth album to be released by Sony and Motown/Universal since Jackson's death on June 25, ", "This Is It and I Am It and You Are It and So Is That and He Is It and She Is It and It Is It and That Is That\n This Is It and I Am It and You Are It and So Is That and He Is It and She Is It and It Is It and That Is That is the second album by Marnie Stern, released on October 7, 2008 on Kill Rock Stars. The album's title comes from an Alan Watts quote in his work On the Taboo Against Knowing Who You Are (1966), which was in turn a quotation from James Broughton's The Bard and the Harper (1965). Broughton also used the quote in his art film This Is It (1971). Pitchfork named This Is It... the 44th greatest album of 2008.", "This Is Not a Book\n This is Not a Book is a book by Keri Smith that was published in 2009. It is not a normal book, because the book does not exist without the reader. The book is almost completely blank, so the reader creates the content and the final product. The book's purpose is to teach a reader to think creatively and take risks. The main question presented is: if it is not a book, then what exactly is it? The answer is left to the reader to determine. This Is Not A Book is much like Wreck This Journal, also by Keri Smith, except that it ", "Who Am I This Time?\n \"Who Am I This Time?\" is a short story written by Kurt Vonnegut, published in the Saturday Evening Post in 1961. The story was collected in Vonnegut's famous anthology Welcome to the Monkey House. It was originally titled \"My Name is Everyone\".", "It (novel)\n It is a 1986 horror novel by American author Stephen King. It was his 22nd book and his 17th novel written under his own name. The story follows the experiences of seven children as they are terrorized by an evil entity that exploits the fears of its victims to disguise itself while hunting its prey. \"It\" primarily appears in the form of Pennywise the Dancing Clown to attract its preferred prey of young children. The novel is told through narratives alternating between two periods and is largely told in the third-person omniscient mode. It deals with themes that eventually became King ", "This Is It! (bar)\n This Is It! is a gay bar established in 1968 by Catherine \"June\" Brehm and business partner Michael Latona. June took control of the bar, known previously as \"The Establishment\", in 1968. Extensive remodels were done in 1969, and the bar has kept the same style since. While records do not indicate the exact date June and her business partner Michael split, it is clear that she assumed full control on June 18, 1970. Joseph Brehm became a part-owner of This Is It! after his mother, June, suffered a stroke in 1981, and he operated the bar concurrently with June until her death ", "This Is It (Jimmy Ibbotson album)\nJimmy Ibbotson: guitar, mandolin, vocals ; Tracy McLain: vocals ", "This Is It (Melba Moore album)\n This Is It is the fifth album by singer Melba Moore, released in 1976.", "This is My America\n This is My America is a young adult novel by Kim Johnson, published July 28, 2020 by Random House Children's Books, that explores injustices in the United States' justice system.", "Sarahbeth Purcell\n Sarahbeth Purcell (born 1976 or 1977) is an American author of fiction. Her first book, Love Is The Drug, was published in 2003 in hardback and in trade paperback in 2004. Her second book, This is Not a Love Song was published in trade paperback in 2005. Purcell is also a visual artist of both photography and paintings." ]
In what country is Ackerman-Dewsnap House?
[ "United States of America", "the United States of America", "America", "U.S.A.", "USA", "U.S.", "US", "the US", "the USA", "US of A", "the United States", "U. S. A.", "U. S.", "the States", "the U.S.", "'Merica", "U.S", "United States", "'Murica" ]
country
Ackerman-Dewsnap House
3,218,697
62
[ { "id": "31638411", "title": "Ackerman-Dewsnap House", "text": " Ackerman—Dewsnap House is a historic house at 176 East Saddle River Road in Saddle River, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was built in 1837 and added to the National Register of Historic Places on August 29, 1986.", "score": "2.0419345" }, { "id": "6600431", "title": "Garret Augustus Ackerman House", "text": " The Garret Augustus Ackerman House is a historic house at 212 East Saddle River Road in Saddle River, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was built in 1832 and was added to the National Register of Historic Places on August 29, 1986. It has apparently been demolished.", "score": "1.6055686" }, { "id": "31638410", "title": "David Ackerman House", "text": " David Ackerman House is a historic house at 415 E. Saddle River in Ridgewood, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. It was built in 1750 and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1983.", "score": "1.596659" }, { "id": "30369335", "title": "Ackerman House (Saddle River, New Jersey)", "text": " Ackerman House, is located in Saddle River, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was built in 1811 and was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 10, 1983.", "score": "1.5850058" }, { "id": "16056904", "title": "Ackerman-Smith House", "text": " The Ackerman-Smith House is a historic house located in Saddle River, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States, built in 1760. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on August 29, 1986.", "score": "1.577421" }, { "id": "6600412", "title": "Ackerman House (252 Lincoln Avenue, Ridgewood, New Jersey)", "text": " Ackerman House, is located in Ridgewood, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 10, 1983.", "score": "1.5699146" }, { "id": "3481187", "title": "Wyckoff, New Jersey", "text": " to the house over the years. ; Van Houten-Ackerman House (Wyckoff, New Jersey) - 480 Sicomac Avenue (added 1983), known by the name \"Wellsweep\", the original portion of the home dates back to the 1700s. ; Van Voorhees-Quackenbush House - 421 Franklin Avenue (added 1983). Dating to an original structure built c. 1740, the house is believed to be the oldest in the township and was contributed to the township in 1973 following the death of Grace Quackenbush Zabriskie. ; Van Voorhis-Quackenbush House - 625 Wyckoff Avenue (added 1984) Wyckoff is home to the following locations on the National Register of Historic Places: ", "score": "1.5422399" }, { "id": "196619", "title": "Abram Ackerman House", "text": " The Abram Ackerman House is located in Saddle River, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 10, 1983. Town folklore states that President George Washington slept overnight in this house during the Revolutionary War.", "score": "1.5313052" }, { "id": "16056945", "title": "Ackerman-Boyd House", "text": " Ackerman-Boyd House, is located in Franklin Lakes, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was built in 1785 and was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 9, 1983.", "score": "1.5283523" }, { "id": "16056905", "title": "Ackerman-Smith House", "text": " The wood-frame building was originally constructed as a single room in 1760. A later addition doubled its size. The house is now a four-bay unit with a gabled roof. Western wings, porch and dormers were also added.", "score": "1.5238976" }, { "id": "31823513", "title": "Ridgewood, New Jersey", "text": "Ackerman House (222 Doremus Avenue) - 222 Doremus Avenue (added 1983) was constructed by Johannes and Jemima Ackerman c. 1787 on their 72 acres property and remained in the Ackerman family until the 1920s. ; Ackerman House (252 Lincoln Avenue) - 252 Lincoln Avenue (added 1983) is a stone house constructed c. 1810 and named for either David or John Ackerman. ; David Ackerman House - 415 East Saddle River Road (added 1983). ; Ackerman-Van Emburgh House - 789 East Glen Avenue (added 1983) was built c. 1785 by John Ackerman and purchased by the Van Embergh family in 1816. ; Archibald-Vroom House - 160 East Ridgewood Avenue (added 1984). ; Beech Street School - 49 Cottage Place (added 1998). ; Paramus Reformed Church Historic District - Bounded by Franklin Turnpike, Route 17, Saddle River, south ", "score": "1.5210664" }, { "id": "12567435", "title": "Francis J. Dewes House", "text": " The Francis J. Dewes House is a house located at 503 West Wrightwood Avenue in Chicago, Illinois, United States. The house was built in 1896 by Adolph Cudell and Arthur Hercz for brewer Francis J. Dewes. It was designated a Chicago Landmark on June 12, 1974. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on August 14, 1973 Wealthy German immigrants, including Wacker, Leight, Gaetner, Deever, and Schlosser, constructed luxurious mansions east of Clark Street in Chicago's Lincoln Park. Francis Dewes, a Chicago brewer and millionaire, built the most elaborate home in the Lincoln Park still standing - Dewes Mansion at 503 West Wrightwood Avenue. Architects Adolph Cudell and Arthur Hercz designed the ", "score": "1.5134666" }, { "id": "3504114", "title": "Van Houten–Ackerman House (Wyckoff, New Jersey)", "text": " Van Houten–Ackerman House, is located in Wyckoff, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 10, 1983.", "score": "1.4947435" }, { "id": "25212001", "title": "Ackerson Mead Clark House", "text": " Located at 183 Mountain Ave in Pequannock, NJ, the Ackerson Mead Clark House is a 21 room Greek Revival mansion built in the mid-1800s. With a history spanning three centuries, the mansion was only added to the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection's Register of Historic Places by a decision rendered on July 29, 1981. Despite extensive renovation in the early 2000s the front exterior Greek Revival colonnade, original staircase, 1870s fireplaces, and a wide variety of architectural details and moldings remain intact. Originally a plantation style structure located in an agrarian community, the property surrounding the private residence has been reduced to 1.37acres over decades of nearby development. Currently known as \"Willow Manor,\" the mansion was listed for sale in 2011 at a list price of $1.4 million. The property is also considered a New Jersey Highlands Region Cultural Resource.", "score": "1.4864386" }, { "id": "477040", "title": "Van Horn-Ackerman House", "text": " The Van Horn-Ackerman House, is located in Wyckoff, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 10, 1983. The house was built in 1745 by Barent Van Horn and is referred to as a telescope house because of the way it starts as a small house and larger additions were built later.", "score": "1.4781405" }, { "id": "31823671", "title": "Saddle River, New Jersey", "text": "Achenbach House – 184 Chestnut Ridge Road (added 1979, burned down in 2004) ; Ackerman House – 136 Chestnut Ridge Road (added 1983) ; Abram Ackerman House – 199 East Saddle River Road (added 1983) ; Garret and Maria Ackerman House – 150 East Saddle River Road (added 1986) ; Garret Augustus Ackerman House – 212 East Saddle River Road (added 1986) ; Ackerman-Dewsnap House – 176 East Saddle River Road (added 1986) ; Ackerman-Smith House – 171 East Allendale Road (added 1986) ; Ackerman-Dater House – 109 West Saddle River Road (added 1983) ; J. J. Carlock House – 2 Chestnut Ridge Road (added 1986) ; Evangelical ", "score": "1.4766951" }, { "id": "3792465", "title": "Westervelt–Ackerson House", "text": " The Westervelt–Ackerson House is located in Ramsey, in Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on July 20, 1977.", "score": "1.4710225" }, { "id": "27212460", "title": "Bogardus-DeWindt House", "text": " The Bogardus-DeWindt House is located on Tompkins Avenue, a short distance west of NY 9D, in Beacon, New York, United States. It typifies the houses built in the region between 1750 and 1830, and has largely remained in its original form even as newer housing has been built in the neighborhood. During that time, the Hudson Valley was experiencing a new wave of settlement by New Englanders moving west. Their houses in the region combined their English-derived building traditions with Dutch ones dating to the late 17th century to create a new vernacular architecture unique to the place and time. The Bogardus-DeWindt house, a 1 1⁄2-story, five-by-two-bay rectangular building with heavy timber framing, epitomizes this style. It was originally ", "score": "1.4663177" }, { "id": "30369375", "title": "Van Houten–Ackerman House (Franklin Lakes, New Jersey)", "text": " Van Houten–Ackerman House, is located in Franklin Lakes, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was built in 1768 and was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 9, 1983.", "score": "1.4459288" }, { "id": "32352032", "title": "Casa del Herrero", "text": " Casa del Herrero (also known as the Steedman Estate) is a home and gardens located in Montecito near Santa Barbara, California. It was designed by George Washington Smith, and is considered one of the finest examples of Spanish Colonial Revival architecture. It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and made a National Historic Landmark on January 16, 2009. Today the entire 11 acre site is owned and operated as a historic house museum and garden by the non-profit Casa del Herrero Foundation, with the goal of restoring and preserving the house and grounds.", "score": "1.4436418" } ]
[ "Ackerman-Dewsnap House\n Ackerman—Dewsnap House is a historic house at 176 East Saddle River Road in Saddle River, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was built in 1837 and added to the National Register of Historic Places on August 29, 1986.", "Garret Augustus Ackerman House\n The Garret Augustus Ackerman House is a historic house at 212 East Saddle River Road in Saddle River, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was built in 1832 and was added to the National Register of Historic Places on August 29, 1986. It has apparently been demolished.", "David Ackerman House\n David Ackerman House is a historic house at 415 E. Saddle River in Ridgewood, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. It was built in 1750 and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1983.", "Ackerman House (Saddle River, New Jersey)\n Ackerman House, is located in Saddle River, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was built in 1811 and was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 10, 1983.", "Ackerman-Smith House\n The Ackerman-Smith House is a historic house located in Saddle River, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States, built in 1760. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on August 29, 1986.", "Ackerman House (252 Lincoln Avenue, Ridgewood, New Jersey)\n Ackerman House, is located in Ridgewood, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 10, 1983.", "Wyckoff, New Jersey\n to the house over the years. ; Van Houten-Ackerman House (Wyckoff, New Jersey) - 480 Sicomac Avenue (added 1983), known by the name \"Wellsweep\", the original portion of the home dates back to the 1700s. ; Van Voorhees-Quackenbush House - 421 Franklin Avenue (added 1983). Dating to an original structure built c. 1740, the house is believed to be the oldest in the township and was contributed to the township in 1973 following the death of Grace Quackenbush Zabriskie. ; Van Voorhis-Quackenbush House - 625 Wyckoff Avenue (added 1984) Wyckoff is home to the following locations on the National Register of Historic Places: ", "Abram Ackerman House\n The Abram Ackerman House is located in Saddle River, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 10, 1983. Town folklore states that President George Washington slept overnight in this house during the Revolutionary War.", "Ackerman-Boyd House\n Ackerman-Boyd House, is located in Franklin Lakes, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was built in 1785 and was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 9, 1983.", "Ackerman-Smith House\n The wood-frame building was originally constructed as a single room in 1760. A later addition doubled its size. The house is now a four-bay unit with a gabled roof. Western wings, porch and dormers were also added.", "Ridgewood, New Jersey\nAckerman House (222 Doremus Avenue) - 222 Doremus Avenue (added 1983) was constructed by Johannes and Jemima Ackerman c. 1787 on their 72 acres property and remained in the Ackerman family until the 1920s. ; Ackerman House (252 Lincoln Avenue) - 252 Lincoln Avenue (added 1983) is a stone house constructed c. 1810 and named for either David or John Ackerman. ; David Ackerman House - 415 East Saddle River Road (added 1983). ; Ackerman-Van Emburgh House - 789 East Glen Avenue (added 1983) was built c. 1785 by John Ackerman and purchased by the Van Embergh family in 1816. ; Archibald-Vroom House - 160 East Ridgewood Avenue (added 1984). ; Beech Street School - 49 Cottage Place (added 1998). ; Paramus Reformed Church Historic District - Bounded by Franklin Turnpike, Route 17, Saddle River, south ", "Francis J. Dewes House\n The Francis J. Dewes House is a house located at 503 West Wrightwood Avenue in Chicago, Illinois, United States. The house was built in 1896 by Adolph Cudell and Arthur Hercz for brewer Francis J. Dewes. It was designated a Chicago Landmark on June 12, 1974. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on August 14, 1973 Wealthy German immigrants, including Wacker, Leight, Gaetner, Deever, and Schlosser, constructed luxurious mansions east of Clark Street in Chicago's Lincoln Park. Francis Dewes, a Chicago brewer and millionaire, built the most elaborate home in the Lincoln Park still standing - Dewes Mansion at 503 West Wrightwood Avenue. Architects Adolph Cudell and Arthur Hercz designed the ", "Van Houten–Ackerman House (Wyckoff, New Jersey)\n Van Houten–Ackerman House, is located in Wyckoff, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 10, 1983.", "Ackerson Mead Clark House\n Located at 183 Mountain Ave in Pequannock, NJ, the Ackerson Mead Clark House is a 21 room Greek Revival mansion built in the mid-1800s. With a history spanning three centuries, the mansion was only added to the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection's Register of Historic Places by a decision rendered on July 29, 1981. Despite extensive renovation in the early 2000s the front exterior Greek Revival colonnade, original staircase, 1870s fireplaces, and a wide variety of architectural details and moldings remain intact. Originally a plantation style structure located in an agrarian community, the property surrounding the private residence has been reduced to 1.37acres over decades of nearby development. Currently known as \"Willow Manor,\" the mansion was listed for sale in 2011 at a list price of $1.4 million. The property is also considered a New Jersey Highlands Region Cultural Resource.", "Van Horn-Ackerman House\n The Van Horn-Ackerman House, is located in Wyckoff, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 10, 1983. The house was built in 1745 by Barent Van Horn and is referred to as a telescope house because of the way it starts as a small house and larger additions were built later.", "Saddle River, New Jersey\nAchenbach House – 184 Chestnut Ridge Road (added 1979, burned down in 2004) ; Ackerman House – 136 Chestnut Ridge Road (added 1983) ; Abram Ackerman House – 199 East Saddle River Road (added 1983) ; Garret and Maria Ackerman House – 150 East Saddle River Road (added 1986) ; Garret Augustus Ackerman House – 212 East Saddle River Road (added 1986) ; Ackerman-Dewsnap House – 176 East Saddle River Road (added 1986) ; Ackerman-Smith House – 171 East Allendale Road (added 1986) ; Ackerman-Dater House – 109 West Saddle River Road (added 1983) ; J. J. Carlock House – 2 Chestnut Ridge Road (added 1986) ; Evangelical ", "Westervelt–Ackerson House\n The Westervelt–Ackerson House is located in Ramsey, in Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on July 20, 1977.", "Bogardus-DeWindt House\n The Bogardus-DeWindt House is located on Tompkins Avenue, a short distance west of NY 9D, in Beacon, New York, United States. It typifies the houses built in the region between 1750 and 1830, and has largely remained in its original form even as newer housing has been built in the neighborhood. During that time, the Hudson Valley was experiencing a new wave of settlement by New Englanders moving west. Their houses in the region combined their English-derived building traditions with Dutch ones dating to the late 17th century to create a new vernacular architecture unique to the place and time. The Bogardus-DeWindt house, a 1 1⁄2-story, five-by-two-bay rectangular building with heavy timber framing, epitomizes this style. It was originally ", "Van Houten–Ackerman House (Franklin Lakes, New Jersey)\n Van Houten–Ackerman House, is located in Franklin Lakes, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was built in 1768 and was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 9, 1983.", "Casa del Herrero\n Casa del Herrero (also known as the Steedman Estate) is a home and gardens located in Montecito near Santa Barbara, California. It was designed by George Washington Smith, and is considered one of the finest examples of Spanish Colonial Revival architecture. It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and made a National Historic Landmark on January 16, 2009. Today the entire 11 acre site is owned and operated as a historic house museum and garden by the non-profit Casa del Herrero Foundation, with the goal of restoring and preserving the house and grounds." ]
What sport does Vasili Penyasov play?
[ "association football", "football", "soccer" ]
sport
Vasili Penyasov
6,095,709
18
[ { "id": "26904837", "title": "Vasili Penyasov", "text": " He played in the Russian Football National League for FC Sodovik Sterlitamak in 2007.", "score": "1.8084643" }, { "id": "26904836", "title": "Vasili Penyasov", "text": " Vasili Nikolayevich Penyasov (Василий Николаевич Пенясов; born 27 July 1987) is a former Russian professional football player.", "score": "1.7501237" }, { "id": "15409289", "title": "Robert Ilyasov", "text": " While at school, he attended the basketball, hockey, football, sambo and track and field sections. Ilyasov began his career for Strela Kazan, as a student at the Kazan Aviation Institute. He played for the Strela and Lokomotiv rugby league teams, from 1995 to 2001 he became the champion of the country five times in a row. In 1996, he played at the Student World Cup for the Russian national team, where he was voted the Player of the Tournament. He was offered to go to play abroad in the English clubs London Broncos and Warrington Wolves, but he refused first due to injury, and then for personal reasons. For the Russian national side in 2000, Ilyasov played at the World Cup and was noted for an try in the match against Fiji. He is married to Oksana, and their daughters are Karina and Sofia. He refused to go to England, because he did not want to leave Oksana alone.", "score": "1.5061171" }, { "id": "7198467", "title": "Pavel Ilyashenko", "text": " Pavel Alexandrovich Iliashenko (Павел Александрович Ильяшенко; born 23 June 1990 in Ufa, Russia) is a modern pentathlete from Kazakhstan. He competed at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, where he finished twenty-ninth in the men's event, with a score of 5,432 points. At the 2016 Summer Olympics, he finished in 35th place. Iliashenko also won a silver medal at the 2011 UIPM Junior World Championships in Buenos Aires, Argentina. He competed in the men's individual event at the 2018 Asian Games held in Jakarta, Indonesia. He represented Kazakhstan at the 2020 Summer Olympics.", "score": "1.4977281" }, { "id": "29749379", "title": "Nikolay Penchev", "text": " Nikolay spent the 2012/2013 season in the Polish club Effector Kielce. In 2013, he moved to Asseco Resovia and signed two–year contract. In his first season in the new club he won the Polish SuperCup and a silver medal of the Polish Championship after losing to PGE Skra Bełchatów in the final matches. In April 2015, alongside Asseco Resovia he won the Polish Championship. In April 2015, he signed a new one–year contract with Resovia. In May 2016, Penchev signed a one–year contract with another top Polish club PGE Skra Bełchatów.", "score": "1.4871812" }, { "id": "3434420", "title": "Artem Fatakhov", "text": " Artem Faridovich Fatakhov (Артём Фаридович Фатахов) (born Penza, 8 September 1979) is a Russian rugby union player. He plays as a lock. He also had a brief stint as a rugby league player. He played for Imperia-Dynamo Penza, from 2000/01 to 2001/02, and for Yenisey-STM Krasnoyarsk, from 2002/03 to 2009/10. He has been playing for VVA Saracens, first from 2010/11 to 2012/13, and since 2014/15. He stayed a season at Strela-Agro Kazan, in 2013/14. He played rugby league briefly for Penza, in 2003. He had 68 caps for Russia, from 2005 to 2015, scoring 1 try, 5 points on aggregate. He had his debut at the 52-17 win over Czech Republic, at 12 November 2005, in Krasnodar, for the Six Nations B. He was called for the 2011 Rugby World Cup, playing in all the four games, one of them as a substitute, and without scoring. He had his last cap at the 33-0 loss to Georgia, at 14 March 2015, in Tbilisi, for the Six Nations B, aged 35 years old.", "score": "1.4860287" }, { "id": "3619991", "title": "List of people from Penza", "text": "Yan Kaminsky (born 1971), Soviet ice hockey player ; Vladislav Bulin (born 1972), Russian ice hockey defenceman ; Yuliya Pakhalina (born 1977), Russian diver; won the gold medal in the 2000 Summer Olympics ; Yuri Babenko (born 1978), Russian professional ice hockey player ; Vitaly Atyushov (born 1979), Russian ice hockey defenceman ; Yuri Dobryshkin (born 1979), Russian ice hockey player ; Alexei Kosourov (born 1979), Russian professional ice hockey player ; Igor Lukashin (born 1979), Russian diver; won the gold medal at the 2000 Summer Olympics ; Timur Rodriguez (born 1979), Russian showman, singer, TV and radio personality ; Pavel Volya (born 1979), Russian TV host, actor and singer ; Dimitri Altaryov (born 1980), Russian professional ice hockey winger ; Yevgeniya Bochkaryova (born 1980), Russian gymnast ; Natalya Sutyagina (born 1980), Russian butterfly swimmer ", "score": "1.4654448" }, { "id": "29749377", "title": "Nikolay Penchev", "text": " Nikolay Penchev (born 22 May 1992) is a Bulgarian volleyball player, member of the Bulgaria men's national volleyball team, participant of the Olympic Games (London 2012). On club level, he plays for Polish team Stal Nysa, two–time Polish Champion (2015, 2018).", "score": "1.4590734" }, { "id": "15371312", "title": "Aleksey Rastvortsev", "text": " Aleksey Petrovich Rastvortsev (Алексей Петрович Растворцев; born August 8, 1978) is a Russian handball player who competed in the 2004 Summer Olympics (bronze winner) and in the 2008 Summer Olympics. He played for the Russian National Handball Team 251 match and scored over 900 goals. In his career he played for HC Neva (St. Peterburg), HC Energija (Voronez), HC Chekhovskie Medvedi (Chekhov, Moskovskaja oblast), RK Vardar (Skopje) and RK Vojvodina (Novi Sad). He finished his active sports career in 2016 and since then he is deputy sport director in RK Vardar; they won the EHF Champions League in 2017.", "score": "1.4489124" }, { "id": "32702197", "title": "Vasil Katsadze", "text": " Vasil Katsadze (ვასილ კაცაძე; born Potsdam, 16 July 1976) is a Georgian rugby union and rugby league player. He played as a wing and as a flanker in rugby union. Katsadze moved to France, where he played in AS Béziers (1999/2000), FCS Rumilly (2000/01), FC Grenoble (2001/02) and SC Albi (2004/05-2005/06). He had 34 caps for Georgia, scoring 8 tries, 40 points on aggregate. He had his first game at the 29-23 win over Poland, at 10 May 1997, in Sopot, for the FIRA Championship. He was called for the 2003 Rugby World Cup, playing in all the four games, two of them as the captain and one of them as a substitute, but without scoring. He had his last game at the 65-0 win over Ukraine, at 26 February 2005, in Tbilisi, for the Six Nations B, scoring a try. He soon would change codes for rugby league, so this would be his last rugby union international game, aged only 28 years old. He went to play rugby league for UVC-13, in France, since 2006/07.", "score": "1.4448647" }, { "id": "28671992", "title": "Vasyl Yanitskyi", "text": " Football, skiing, history.", "score": "1.4444995" }, { "id": "79803", "title": "Sergei Pleshakov", "text": " Sergei Mikhailovich Pleshakov (Сергей Михайлович Плешаков, born 2 November 1957) is a retired Russian field hockey defender. Together with his twin brother Vladimir he competed in the 1980, 1988 and 1992 Summer Olympics and won a bronze medal in 1980. In 1975 Pleshakov started playing for the club Torpedo Syzran, but in 1977 moved to SKA Sverdlovsk, where he was serving with the Soviet Army. He retired in 1994 to become a coach of SKA Sverdlovsk. The team was disbanded in 1998, and Pleshakov became an association football administrator.", "score": "1.4387381" }, { "id": "3619990", "title": "List of people from Penza", "text": "Aleksandr Golikov (born 1952), Russian former ice hockey player ; Boris Sokolovsky (born 1953), Russian basketball coach and former player ; Vladimir Golikov (born 1954), Soviet ice hockey player ; Alexander Melentyev (1954–2015), Soviet competitive sport shooter who won the gold medal at the 1980 Summer Olympics ; Vasili Pervukhin (born 1956), Russian ice hockey player ; Alexander Kozhevnikov (born 1958), Soviet ice hockey player ; Aleksandr Geramisov (born 1959), Soviet ice hockey player ; Irina Kalinina (born 1959), Soviet diver and olympic champion ; Marat Kulakhmetov (born 1959), Major General of the Russian Army ; Sergei Svetlov (born 1961), Soviet ice hockey player ; Sergei Yashin (born 1962), Soviet ice hockey player ; Aleksey Vdovin (born 1963), Russian water polo player who competed in the 1992 Summer Olympics ; Aleksandr Samokutyayev (born 1970), Russian cosmonaut ", "score": "1.4375228" }, { "id": "28866585", "title": "Rozalin Penchev", "text": " In 2014 he started his professional career in Polish club Effector Kielce, but it was a weak season for the team and Effector took 12th place in PlusLiga. With Bulgaria national team he achieved silver medal in 2015 European Games. Then he moved to Turkish team, where he has played one season and the team took 10th place in the league. In 2016 he was loaned by PGE Skra Bełchatów to Italian club Top Volley Latina. In 2017 he moved to Personal Bolívar, in the Liga Argentina de Voleibol.", "score": "1.4356931" }, { "id": "10461438", "title": "Dimitar Penev", "text": " Dimitar Dushkov Penev (Димитър Душков Пенев, born 12 July 1945) is a Bulgarian football coach and former player and central defender of CSKA Sofia. He played 90 games for Bulgaria national football team and scored two goals. He is regarded as one of his country's best ever defenders, winning Bulgarian footballer of the year in 1967 and 1971, he also participated in three world cups for his country in 1966, 1970 and 1974. He is Honorary President of CSKA Sofia and semi-pro side Nottingham United FC.", "score": "1.435518" }, { "id": "29479654", "title": "Vladimir Pleshakov", "text": " Vladimir Mikhailovich Pleshakov (Владимир Михайлович Плешаков, born 2 November 1957) is a retired Russian field hockey goalkeeper. Together with his twin brother Sergei he competed in the 1980, 1988 and 1992 Summer Olympics and won a bronze medal in 1980. In 1975 Pleshakov started playing for the club Torpedo Syzran, but in 1977 moved to SKA Sverdlovsk, where he was serving with the Soviet Army. He retired in 1994 to become a coach of SKA Sverdlovsk. The team was disbanded in 1998, and Pleshakov became an association football administrator.", "score": "1.427655" }, { "id": "32620554", "title": "Dmitri Vanyasov", "text": " Dmitri Vanyasov (born May 9, 1972) is a Soviet and Russian former professional ice hockey forward. He is a one-time Russian Champion.", "score": "1.4242887" }, { "id": "32582263", "title": "Ukrainians in Russia", "text": " ; Oleksiy Demyanyuk - high jumper, who set the world's best year performance in 1981 with a leap of 2.33 metres at a meet in Leningrad ; Dmitry Muserskiy - volleyball player, member of the Russia men's national volleyball team, 2012 Olympic Champion, 2013 European Champion, gold medallist of the 2011 World Cup and multiple World League medallist. ; Semyon Poltavskiy - volleyball player, who was a member of the men's national team that won the silver medal in both the 2005 and 2007 European Championships, was named Most Valuable Player in the latter tournament ; Liliya Osadchaya - ", "score": "1.4176298" }, { "id": "29749381", "title": "Nikolay Penchev", "text": "2010 Silver medal europe.svg CEV U20 European Championship ", "score": "1.414151" }, { "id": "25105767", "title": "Alexander Yanyushkin", "text": " Alexander Yanyushkin (Александр Янюшкин; born 30 October 1982 in Penza) is a Russian rugby union coach and former player, he is currently the head coach of the Lokomotiv Penza and Russia 7s. He plays for VVA-Podmoskovye Monino, in the Russian Professional League, since 2009/10. Yanyshkin had 70 for Russia, from 2002 to 2015, scoring 10 tries, 9 conversions and 16 penalties scored, 116 points in aggregate. He is one of the top scorers for Russia. He was called for the 2011 Rugby World Cup, playing in three games and scoring a try. He was also part of the squad of the Russia in 2012 Hong Kong Sevens.", "score": "1.4140317" } ]
[ "Vasili Penyasov\n He played in the Russian Football National League for FC Sodovik Sterlitamak in 2007.", "Vasili Penyasov\n Vasili Nikolayevich Penyasov (Василий Николаевич Пенясов; born 27 July 1987) is a former Russian professional football player.", "Robert Ilyasov\n While at school, he attended the basketball, hockey, football, sambo and track and field sections. Ilyasov began his career for Strela Kazan, as a student at the Kazan Aviation Institute. He played for the Strela and Lokomotiv rugby league teams, from 1995 to 2001 he became the champion of the country five times in a row. In 1996, he played at the Student World Cup for the Russian national team, where he was voted the Player of the Tournament. He was offered to go to play abroad in the English clubs London Broncos and Warrington Wolves, but he refused first due to injury, and then for personal reasons. For the Russian national side in 2000, Ilyasov played at the World Cup and was noted for an try in the match against Fiji. He is married to Oksana, and their daughters are Karina and Sofia. He refused to go to England, because he did not want to leave Oksana alone.", "Pavel Ilyashenko\n Pavel Alexandrovich Iliashenko (Павел Александрович Ильяшенко; born 23 June 1990 in Ufa, Russia) is a modern pentathlete from Kazakhstan. He competed at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, where he finished twenty-ninth in the men's event, with a score of 5,432 points. At the 2016 Summer Olympics, he finished in 35th place. Iliashenko also won a silver medal at the 2011 UIPM Junior World Championships in Buenos Aires, Argentina. He competed in the men's individual event at the 2018 Asian Games held in Jakarta, Indonesia. He represented Kazakhstan at the 2020 Summer Olympics.", "Nikolay Penchev\n Nikolay spent the 2012/2013 season in the Polish club Effector Kielce. In 2013, he moved to Asseco Resovia and signed two–year contract. In his first season in the new club he won the Polish SuperCup and a silver medal of the Polish Championship after losing to PGE Skra Bełchatów in the final matches. In April 2015, alongside Asseco Resovia he won the Polish Championship. In April 2015, he signed a new one–year contract with Resovia. In May 2016, Penchev signed a one–year contract with another top Polish club PGE Skra Bełchatów.", "Artem Fatakhov\n Artem Faridovich Fatakhov (Артём Фаридович Фатахов) (born Penza, 8 September 1979) is a Russian rugby union player. He plays as a lock. He also had a brief stint as a rugby league player. He played for Imperia-Dynamo Penza, from 2000/01 to 2001/02, and for Yenisey-STM Krasnoyarsk, from 2002/03 to 2009/10. He has been playing for VVA Saracens, first from 2010/11 to 2012/13, and since 2014/15. He stayed a season at Strela-Agro Kazan, in 2013/14. He played rugby league briefly for Penza, in 2003. He had 68 caps for Russia, from 2005 to 2015, scoring 1 try, 5 points on aggregate. He had his debut at the 52-17 win over Czech Republic, at 12 November 2005, in Krasnodar, for the Six Nations B. He was called for the 2011 Rugby World Cup, playing in all the four games, one of them as a substitute, and without scoring. He had his last cap at the 33-0 loss to Georgia, at 14 March 2015, in Tbilisi, for the Six Nations B, aged 35 years old.", "List of people from Penza\nYan Kaminsky (born 1971), Soviet ice hockey player ; Vladislav Bulin (born 1972), Russian ice hockey defenceman ; Yuliya Pakhalina (born 1977), Russian diver; won the gold medal in the 2000 Summer Olympics ; Yuri Babenko (born 1978), Russian professional ice hockey player ; Vitaly Atyushov (born 1979), Russian ice hockey defenceman ; Yuri Dobryshkin (born 1979), Russian ice hockey player ; Alexei Kosourov (born 1979), Russian professional ice hockey player ; Igor Lukashin (born 1979), Russian diver; won the gold medal at the 2000 Summer Olympics ; Timur Rodriguez (born 1979), Russian showman, singer, TV and radio personality ; Pavel Volya (born 1979), Russian TV host, actor and singer ; Dimitri Altaryov (born 1980), Russian professional ice hockey winger ; Yevgeniya Bochkaryova (born 1980), Russian gymnast ; Natalya Sutyagina (born 1980), Russian butterfly swimmer ", "Nikolay Penchev\n Nikolay Penchev (born 22 May 1992) is a Bulgarian volleyball player, member of the Bulgaria men's national volleyball team, participant of the Olympic Games (London 2012). On club level, he plays for Polish team Stal Nysa, two–time Polish Champion (2015, 2018).", "Aleksey Rastvortsev\n Aleksey Petrovich Rastvortsev (Алексей Петрович Растворцев; born August 8, 1978) is a Russian handball player who competed in the 2004 Summer Olympics (bronze winner) and in the 2008 Summer Olympics. He played for the Russian National Handball Team 251 match and scored over 900 goals. In his career he played for HC Neva (St. Peterburg), HC Energija (Voronez), HC Chekhovskie Medvedi (Chekhov, Moskovskaja oblast), RK Vardar (Skopje) and RK Vojvodina (Novi Sad). He finished his active sports career in 2016 and since then he is deputy sport director in RK Vardar; they won the EHF Champions League in 2017.", "Vasil Katsadze\n Vasil Katsadze (ვასილ კაცაძე; born Potsdam, 16 July 1976) is a Georgian rugby union and rugby league player. He played as a wing and as a flanker in rugby union. Katsadze moved to France, where he played in AS Béziers (1999/2000), FCS Rumilly (2000/01), FC Grenoble (2001/02) and SC Albi (2004/05-2005/06). He had 34 caps for Georgia, scoring 8 tries, 40 points on aggregate. He had his first game at the 29-23 win over Poland, at 10 May 1997, in Sopot, for the FIRA Championship. He was called for the 2003 Rugby World Cup, playing in all the four games, two of them as the captain and one of them as a substitute, but without scoring. He had his last game at the 65-0 win over Ukraine, at 26 February 2005, in Tbilisi, for the Six Nations B, scoring a try. He soon would change codes for rugby league, so this would be his last rugby union international game, aged only 28 years old. He went to play rugby league for UVC-13, in France, since 2006/07.", "Vasyl Yanitskyi\n Football, skiing, history.", "Sergei Pleshakov\n Sergei Mikhailovich Pleshakov (Сергей Михайлович Плешаков, born 2 November 1957) is a retired Russian field hockey defender. Together with his twin brother Vladimir he competed in the 1980, 1988 and 1992 Summer Olympics and won a bronze medal in 1980. In 1975 Pleshakov started playing for the club Torpedo Syzran, but in 1977 moved to SKA Sverdlovsk, where he was serving with the Soviet Army. He retired in 1994 to become a coach of SKA Sverdlovsk. The team was disbanded in 1998, and Pleshakov became an association football administrator.", "List of people from Penza\nAleksandr Golikov (born 1952), Russian former ice hockey player ; Boris Sokolovsky (born 1953), Russian basketball coach and former player ; Vladimir Golikov (born 1954), Soviet ice hockey player ; Alexander Melentyev (1954–2015), Soviet competitive sport shooter who won the gold medal at the 1980 Summer Olympics ; Vasili Pervukhin (born 1956), Russian ice hockey player ; Alexander Kozhevnikov (born 1958), Soviet ice hockey player ; Aleksandr Geramisov (born 1959), Soviet ice hockey player ; Irina Kalinina (born 1959), Soviet diver and olympic champion ; Marat Kulakhmetov (born 1959), Major General of the Russian Army ; Sergei Svetlov (born 1961), Soviet ice hockey player ; Sergei Yashin (born 1962), Soviet ice hockey player ; Aleksey Vdovin (born 1963), Russian water polo player who competed in the 1992 Summer Olympics ; Aleksandr Samokutyayev (born 1970), Russian cosmonaut ", "Rozalin Penchev\n In 2014 he started his professional career in Polish club Effector Kielce, but it was a weak season for the team and Effector took 12th place in PlusLiga. With Bulgaria national team he achieved silver medal in 2015 European Games. Then he moved to Turkish team, where he has played one season and the team took 10th place in the league. In 2016 he was loaned by PGE Skra Bełchatów to Italian club Top Volley Latina. In 2017 he moved to Personal Bolívar, in the Liga Argentina de Voleibol.", "Dimitar Penev\n Dimitar Dushkov Penev (Димитър Душков Пенев, born 12 July 1945) is a Bulgarian football coach and former player and central defender of CSKA Sofia. He played 90 games for Bulgaria national football team and scored two goals. He is regarded as one of his country's best ever defenders, winning Bulgarian footballer of the year in 1967 and 1971, he also participated in three world cups for his country in 1966, 1970 and 1974. He is Honorary President of CSKA Sofia and semi-pro side Nottingham United FC.", "Vladimir Pleshakov\n Vladimir Mikhailovich Pleshakov (Владимир Михайлович Плешаков, born 2 November 1957) is a retired Russian field hockey goalkeeper. Together with his twin brother Sergei he competed in the 1980, 1988 and 1992 Summer Olympics and won a bronze medal in 1980. In 1975 Pleshakov started playing for the club Torpedo Syzran, but in 1977 moved to SKA Sverdlovsk, where he was serving with the Soviet Army. He retired in 1994 to become a coach of SKA Sverdlovsk. The team was disbanded in 1998, and Pleshakov became an association football administrator.", "Dmitri Vanyasov\n Dmitri Vanyasov (born May 9, 1972) is a Soviet and Russian former professional ice hockey forward. He is a one-time Russian Champion.", "Ukrainians in Russia\n ; Oleksiy Demyanyuk - high jumper, who set the world's best year performance in 1981 with a leap of 2.33 metres at a meet in Leningrad ; Dmitry Muserskiy - volleyball player, member of the Russia men's national volleyball team, 2012 Olympic Champion, 2013 European Champion, gold medallist of the 2011 World Cup and multiple World League medallist. ; Semyon Poltavskiy - volleyball player, who was a member of the men's national team that won the silver medal in both the 2005 and 2007 European Championships, was named Most Valuable Player in the latter tournament ; Liliya Osadchaya - ", "Nikolay Penchev\n2010 Silver medal europe.svg CEV U20 European Championship ", "Alexander Yanyushkin\n Alexander Yanyushkin (Александр Янюшкин; born 30 October 1982 in Penza) is a Russian rugby union coach and former player, he is currently the head coach of the Lokomotiv Penza and Russia 7s. He plays for VVA-Podmoskovye Monino, in the Russian Professional League, since 2009/10. Yanyshkin had 70 for Russia, from 2002 to 2015, scoring 10 tries, 9 conversions and 16 penalties scored, 116 points in aggregate. He is one of the top scorers for Russia. He was called for the 2011 Rugby World Cup, playing in three games and scoring a try. He was also part of the squad of the Russia in 2012 Hong Kong Sevens." ]
What is Patrick Mulvany's occupation?
[ "farmer", "agriculturist", "grower", "raiser", "cultivator", "agriculturer", "farmer (occupation)", "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Patrick Mulvany
5,394,014
42
[ { "id": "32826132", "title": "Patrick Mulvany", "text": " Patrick James Mulvany (2 July 1871 – 16 May 1951) was an Irish politician and farmer. He was first elected to Dáil Éireann at the 1923 general election as a Farmers' Party Teachta Dála (TD) for the Meath constituency. He did not contest the June 1927 general election.", "score": "1.7205085" }, { "id": "31170974", "title": "Thomas James Mulvany", "text": " Attribution", "score": "1.6661867" }, { "id": "1148621", "title": "John Mulvany", "text": " Mulvany was born in Diralagh, County Meath, Ireland c. 1839 to tenant farmers, Francis Lee and Thomas Mulvany. When he immigrated to New York City in 1851 at the age of 12, he was old enough to have witnessed and grasped the horrors of the Irish Famine. He worked as a tow boy on the Erie Canal and came to the attention of Professor Juan Wandersford at the National Academy of Design in New York City. In 1859 Mulvany enrolled in classes there. before he went to Washington, D.C. to work for Mathew Brady by 1863. Mulvany never served in the army but may have worked as a sketch artist for a Chicago newspaper. Mulvany's later Civil War paintings were praised for their realism - paintings such as Sheridan’s Ride at Winchester, 1896 McPherson and Revenge, 1889, Battle of Shiloh and The Death of General Mulligan.", "score": "1.6300989" }, { "id": "31170972", "title": "Thomas James Mulvany", "text": " Mulvany wrote for The Citizen on Irish artists. During the last years of his life Mulvany was employed in editing the Life of James Gandon. The book was published in 1846. It was based on papers of James Gandon the younger, and Maurice James Craig also edited the work.", "score": "1.6022148" }, { "id": "26365001", "title": "William Thomas Mulvany", "text": " Mulvany qualified through practical experience as an engineer. He learned technical drawing with an architect and joined the Irish Survey Office at the age of 20 years as a surveyor. In 1836 he became an employee of the Board of Public Works in Ireland. Mulvany was successively responsible for planning of waterways and the modernization of the fishing industry, but especially for the purpose of drainage of large areas of agricultural exploitation. During the Great Irish Famine 1845 - 1849 the projects of the Board of Works were simultaneously job creation schemes for the suffering rural population and in 1853, the work was stopped due to high costs, and Mulvany quit the civil service. In 1851 published his paper which introduced the rational method in Hydrology. This is one of the most important result for the hydrological planning of drainage systems even today.", "score": "1.5934241" }, { "id": "31170970", "title": "Thomas James Mulvany", "text": " Thomas James Mulvany (1779–1845) was an Irish painter and keeper of the Royal Hibernian Academy.", "score": "1.5633504" }, { "id": "31878431", "title": "Thomas Mulvany", "text": " Mulvany was born in Moynalty, County Meath on the 1 March 1864. He was ordained a priest of the Diocese of Meath on 6 March 1892.", "score": "1.5322492" }, { "id": "26365000", "title": "William Thomas Mulvany", "text": " Mulvany was one of seven children of Catholic parents in Dublin: his father was the painter Thomas James Mulvany. He converted to the Anglican Communion as Catholics were barred from all but the very lowest grades of the civil service. He joined the Ordnance Survey in 1826 and ten years later moved to the Office of Public Works. In 1832, he married Alicia Winslow, the daughter of a wealthy landowner from Fermanagh. He had five children with her. From 1855 until his death, Mulvany lived in Düsseldorf. In 1875, he built the \"Mulvany Villa\" in Herne, but it's not known whether he ever lived there. He died in 1885 and was buried in Düsseldorf. The city of Gelsenkirchen made him an honorary citizen in 1880. In Herne, a street near the former Shamrock coal mine was named after him. Also Castrop-Rauxel, Recklinghausen and Düsseldorf also named streets after the entrepreneur.", "score": "1.5300035" }, { "id": "32657207", "title": "Mulvaney", "text": "Mulvaney ; Dick Mulvaney (b. 1942), English football player ; Elle Mulvaney (b. 2002), English actress ; Jimmy Mulvaney (1921–1993), Scottish football player ; John Mulvaney (1925–2016), Australian archaeologist ; Mick Mulvaney (b. 1967), U.S. politician, Director of the Office of Management and Budget Mulvany ; Dominic Mulvany (b. 1956), Irish singer-songwriter ; Edward Joseph Mulvany (1871-1951), Australian public servant ; George Francis Mulvany (1809–1869), Irish painter ; Isabella Mulvany (1854–1934), educator ; John Mulvany (1839-1906), Irish-American artist ; John Skipton Mulvany (1813-1870), Irish architect ; Josephine and Sybil Mulvany (1899-1967 and 1901-1983), New Zealand weavers ; Josh Mulvany (b. 1988), English football player ; Kate Mulvany (b. 1978), Australian playwright and actress ; Patrick Mulvany (1871-1951), Irish politician ; William Thomas Mulvany (1806-1885), Irish entrepreneur Mulvaney or Mulvany is a surname. Notable people with the surname: ", "score": "1.5198084" }, { "id": "15148637", "title": "Patrick McCay", "text": " Patrick McCay (born 1952) is an Irish-born, Scottish/American painter currently residing in the U.S. state of New Hampshire. He is currently Chair of the Visual Arts Department at the New Hampshire Institute of Art.", "score": "1.5177121" }, { "id": "31170971", "title": "Thomas James Mulvany", "text": " Mulvany was an exhibitor with the Dublin Society of Artists, at the rooms of the Dublin Society in Hawkins Street, Dublin, in May 1809. When the Dublin Society in 1819 disposed of their premises and the artists were left without a place for exhibition, Mulvany, with his brother, John George Mulvany, also a painter, was active in advocating for a charter of incorporation to the artists of Ireland. A charter was obtained in 1823 and the Royal Hibernian Academy founded under the presidency of Francis Johnston; Mulvany and his brother were two of the 14 academicians first elected. Subsequently Mulvany became keeper of the Academy, in 1841. He died in 1845.", "score": "1.5125593" }, { "id": "4202027", "title": "George Francis Mulvany", "text": " George Francis Mulvany was the son of Thomas James Mulvany, a painter and the RHA's keeper. George Francis Mulvany studied at the Academy school and would first exhibit there in 1827. In 1835 he became a member of the RHA, and took over as keeper upon his father's death in 1845. Mulvany became the first director of the National Gallery of Ireland in 1862.", "score": "1.5031211" }, { "id": "26464893", "title": "Mick Mulvaney", "text": " Mulvaney was born in Alexandria, Virginia, to Mike, a real estate developer, and Kathy Mulvaney, a teacher. He grew up in Charlotte, North Carolina. He later moved to Indian Land, South Carolina. He has Polish and Irish ancestry, with roots in County Mayo, Ireland. He attended Charlotte Catholic High School and then Georgetown University, where he majored in international economics, commerce and finance. At Georgetown, he was an Honors Scholar of the School of Foreign Service, and ultimately graduated with honors in 1989. Mulvaney attended law school at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He earned a full scholarship to attend law school, where his focus was on antitrust law. He earned a Juris Doctor in 1992.", "score": "1.5025551" }, { "id": "4202026", "title": "George Francis Mulvany", "text": " George Francis Mulvany (1809 – 1869) was an Irish painter and the first director of the National Gallery of Ireland.", "score": "1.5018101" }, { "id": "26364999", "title": "William Thomas Mulvany", "text": " William Thomas Mulvany (11 March 1806 in Dublin, Ireland – 30 October 1885 in Düsseldorf, Germany) was an Irish entrepreneur in Germany.", "score": "1.4934678" }, { "id": "25630109", "title": "Kate Mulvany", "text": " Kate Mulvany's father, Danny, was a Vietnam Veteran. Her mother, Glenys, is a schoolteacher. She has a sister, Tegan, who is an actor and an improvisor. In 1997, Mulvany received her Bachelor of Arts degree from Curtin University, Perth. Mulvany was diagnosed with a Wilms's tumor (renal cancer) at age two and spent much of her childhood in the hospital. Her cancer has been linked to her father's exposure to Agent Orange during his service in the Vietnam War.", "score": "1.4801452" }, { "id": "26464890", "title": "Mick Mulvaney", "text": " John Michael Mulvaney (born July 21, 1967) is an American politician who served as United States special envoy for Northern Ireland from March 2020 until January 2021. He also served as director of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) from February 2017 until March 2020, and as acting White House chief of staff from January 2019 until March 2020. He previously served as the acting director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) from November 2017 to December 2018. Mulvaney, a Republican, served in the South Carolina General Assembly from 2007 to 2011, first in the House of Representatives and then the State Senate. He served as a U.S. representative from ", "score": "1.4791787" }, { "id": "1148626", "title": "John Mulvany", "text": " Mulvany was a lifelong member of the Irish secret society, Clan na Gael, whose aim was Irish independence. He narrowly escaped imprisonment by the authorities while researching uniforms for his Aughrim painting at the Tower of London just days before it was bombed in the Fenian dynamite campaign in 1885. His involvement in internecine fighting within the Chicago branch in 1886 cost him the Aughrim commission and after his friend, Dr. Patrick Henry Cronin, was murdered in 1889 over financial irregularities with this same branch, Mulvany left Chicago for the west. He married Mrs. Ellen Welch in 1890. and was divorced two years later in CO. He also had a romantic involvement with Lucy Deere, whom he met c. 1880 and contacted before his death in 1906. Mulvany painted in Oregon, San Francisco, Colorado and Kansas City before he finally headed East in 1896. Over his lifetime, he set up studios in 21 different cities, sketching, painting and moving on; often leaving finished works and at least one debt behind.", "score": "1.4777763" }, { "id": "29068914", "title": "John Skipton Mulvany", "text": " John Skipton Mulvany (1813 – 10 May 1870) was a notable Irish architect. He was the fourth son of Thomas James Mulvany, one of the founder members, with his own brother John George, of the Royal Hibernian Academy. Most of the buildings he designed are still in daily use and are well preserved.", "score": "1.4728353" }, { "id": "6613122", "title": "Dominic Mulvany", "text": " Dominic Mulvany (born 1956) is a singer-songwriter from Dublin who has released a number of singles and albums, mainly via his 'Kish' record label, since the 1980s. His career commenced with the release of \"In The City / Your Smile is on My Mind\" in 1981 (on Kish). With 'Ibiza', his follow-up single (released on Vixen records), he attained very large amounts of airplay in Ireland; this in turn led to several high-profile TV appearances (including RTÉ's Kenny Live show and Nighthawks). Further singles followed, including one produced by Arsenal and Irish International football player John Devine: \"Travelling People\". Dominic has released three albums: Stranger on My Highway (1985), Vagabond Moon (1990) and Diving for Pearls (2004). The last of these was produced by Irish singer-songwriter Chris Singleton, whom Dominic taught piano. Dominic also engineered some of Chris Singleton's early material – an album called 'Start'.", "score": "1.4657543" } ]
[ "Patrick Mulvany\n Patrick James Mulvany (2 July 1871 – 16 May 1951) was an Irish politician and farmer. He was first elected to Dáil Éireann at the 1923 general election as a Farmers' Party Teachta Dála (TD) for the Meath constituency. He did not contest the June 1927 general election.", "Thomas James Mulvany\n Attribution", "John Mulvany\n Mulvany was born in Diralagh, County Meath, Ireland c. 1839 to tenant farmers, Francis Lee and Thomas Mulvany. When he immigrated to New York City in 1851 at the age of 12, he was old enough to have witnessed and grasped the horrors of the Irish Famine. He worked as a tow boy on the Erie Canal and came to the attention of Professor Juan Wandersford at the National Academy of Design in New York City. In 1859 Mulvany enrolled in classes there. before he went to Washington, D.C. to work for Mathew Brady by 1863. Mulvany never served in the army but may have worked as a sketch artist for a Chicago newspaper. Mulvany's later Civil War paintings were praised for their realism - paintings such as Sheridan’s Ride at Winchester, 1896 McPherson and Revenge, 1889, Battle of Shiloh and The Death of General Mulligan.", "Thomas James Mulvany\n Mulvany wrote for The Citizen on Irish artists. During the last years of his life Mulvany was employed in editing the Life of James Gandon. The book was published in 1846. It was based on papers of James Gandon the younger, and Maurice James Craig also edited the work.", "William Thomas Mulvany\n Mulvany qualified through practical experience as an engineer. He learned technical drawing with an architect and joined the Irish Survey Office at the age of 20 years as a surveyor. In 1836 he became an employee of the Board of Public Works in Ireland. Mulvany was successively responsible for planning of waterways and the modernization of the fishing industry, but especially for the purpose of drainage of large areas of agricultural exploitation. During the Great Irish Famine 1845 - 1849 the projects of the Board of Works were simultaneously job creation schemes for the suffering rural population and in 1853, the work was stopped due to high costs, and Mulvany quit the civil service. In 1851 published his paper which introduced the rational method in Hydrology. This is one of the most important result for the hydrological planning of drainage systems even today.", "Thomas James Mulvany\n Thomas James Mulvany (1779–1845) was an Irish painter and keeper of the Royal Hibernian Academy.", "Thomas Mulvany\n Mulvany was born in Moynalty, County Meath on the 1 March 1864. He was ordained a priest of the Diocese of Meath on 6 March 1892.", "William Thomas Mulvany\n Mulvany was one of seven children of Catholic parents in Dublin: his father was the painter Thomas James Mulvany. He converted to the Anglican Communion as Catholics were barred from all but the very lowest grades of the civil service. He joined the Ordnance Survey in 1826 and ten years later moved to the Office of Public Works. In 1832, he married Alicia Winslow, the daughter of a wealthy landowner from Fermanagh. He had five children with her. From 1855 until his death, Mulvany lived in Düsseldorf. In 1875, he built the \"Mulvany Villa\" in Herne, but it's not known whether he ever lived there. He died in 1885 and was buried in Düsseldorf. The city of Gelsenkirchen made him an honorary citizen in 1880. In Herne, a street near the former Shamrock coal mine was named after him. Also Castrop-Rauxel, Recklinghausen and Düsseldorf also named streets after the entrepreneur.", "Mulvaney\nMulvaney ; Dick Mulvaney (b. 1942), English football player ; Elle Mulvaney (b. 2002), English actress ; Jimmy Mulvaney (1921–1993), Scottish football player ; John Mulvaney (1925–2016), Australian archaeologist ; Mick Mulvaney (b. 1967), U.S. politician, Director of the Office of Management and Budget Mulvany ; Dominic Mulvany (b. 1956), Irish singer-songwriter ; Edward Joseph Mulvany (1871-1951), Australian public servant ; George Francis Mulvany (1809–1869), Irish painter ; Isabella Mulvany (1854–1934), educator ; John Mulvany (1839-1906), Irish-American artist ; John Skipton Mulvany (1813-1870), Irish architect ; Josephine and Sybil Mulvany (1899-1967 and 1901-1983), New Zealand weavers ; Josh Mulvany (b. 1988), English football player ; Kate Mulvany (b. 1978), Australian playwright and actress ; Patrick Mulvany (1871-1951), Irish politician ; William Thomas Mulvany (1806-1885), Irish entrepreneur Mulvaney or Mulvany is a surname. Notable people with the surname: ", "Patrick McCay\n Patrick McCay (born 1952) is an Irish-born, Scottish/American painter currently residing in the U.S. state of New Hampshire. He is currently Chair of the Visual Arts Department at the New Hampshire Institute of Art.", "Thomas James Mulvany\n Mulvany was an exhibitor with the Dublin Society of Artists, at the rooms of the Dublin Society in Hawkins Street, Dublin, in May 1809. When the Dublin Society in 1819 disposed of their premises and the artists were left without a place for exhibition, Mulvany, with his brother, John George Mulvany, also a painter, was active in advocating for a charter of incorporation to the artists of Ireland. A charter was obtained in 1823 and the Royal Hibernian Academy founded under the presidency of Francis Johnston; Mulvany and his brother were two of the 14 academicians first elected. Subsequently Mulvany became keeper of the Academy, in 1841. He died in 1845.", "George Francis Mulvany\n George Francis Mulvany was the son of Thomas James Mulvany, a painter and the RHA's keeper. George Francis Mulvany studied at the Academy school and would first exhibit there in 1827. In 1835 he became a member of the RHA, and took over as keeper upon his father's death in 1845. Mulvany became the first director of the National Gallery of Ireland in 1862.", "Mick Mulvaney\n Mulvaney was born in Alexandria, Virginia, to Mike, a real estate developer, and Kathy Mulvaney, a teacher. He grew up in Charlotte, North Carolina. He later moved to Indian Land, South Carolina. He has Polish and Irish ancestry, with roots in County Mayo, Ireland. He attended Charlotte Catholic High School and then Georgetown University, where he majored in international economics, commerce and finance. At Georgetown, he was an Honors Scholar of the School of Foreign Service, and ultimately graduated with honors in 1989. Mulvaney attended law school at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He earned a full scholarship to attend law school, where his focus was on antitrust law. He earned a Juris Doctor in 1992.", "George Francis Mulvany\n George Francis Mulvany (1809 – 1869) was an Irish painter and the first director of the National Gallery of Ireland.", "William Thomas Mulvany\n William Thomas Mulvany (11 March 1806 in Dublin, Ireland – 30 October 1885 in Düsseldorf, Germany) was an Irish entrepreneur in Germany.", "Kate Mulvany\n Kate Mulvany's father, Danny, was a Vietnam Veteran. Her mother, Glenys, is a schoolteacher. She has a sister, Tegan, who is an actor and an improvisor. In 1997, Mulvany received her Bachelor of Arts degree from Curtin University, Perth. Mulvany was diagnosed with a Wilms's tumor (renal cancer) at age two and spent much of her childhood in the hospital. Her cancer has been linked to her father's exposure to Agent Orange during his service in the Vietnam War.", "Mick Mulvaney\n John Michael Mulvaney (born July 21, 1967) is an American politician who served as United States special envoy for Northern Ireland from March 2020 until January 2021. He also served as director of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) from February 2017 until March 2020, and as acting White House chief of staff from January 2019 until March 2020. He previously served as the acting director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) from November 2017 to December 2018. Mulvaney, a Republican, served in the South Carolina General Assembly from 2007 to 2011, first in the House of Representatives and then the State Senate. He served as a U.S. representative from ", "John Mulvany\n Mulvany was a lifelong member of the Irish secret society, Clan na Gael, whose aim was Irish independence. He narrowly escaped imprisonment by the authorities while researching uniforms for his Aughrim painting at the Tower of London just days before it was bombed in the Fenian dynamite campaign in 1885. His involvement in internecine fighting within the Chicago branch in 1886 cost him the Aughrim commission and after his friend, Dr. Patrick Henry Cronin, was murdered in 1889 over financial irregularities with this same branch, Mulvany left Chicago for the west. He married Mrs. Ellen Welch in 1890. and was divorced two years later in CO. He also had a romantic involvement with Lucy Deere, whom he met c. 1880 and contacted before his death in 1906. Mulvany painted in Oregon, San Francisco, Colorado and Kansas City before he finally headed East in 1896. Over his lifetime, he set up studios in 21 different cities, sketching, painting and moving on; often leaving finished works and at least one debt behind.", "John Skipton Mulvany\n John Skipton Mulvany (1813 – 10 May 1870) was a notable Irish architect. He was the fourth son of Thomas James Mulvany, one of the founder members, with his own brother John George, of the Royal Hibernian Academy. Most of the buildings he designed are still in daily use and are well preserved.", "Dominic Mulvany\n Dominic Mulvany (born 1956) is a singer-songwriter from Dublin who has released a number of singles and albums, mainly via his 'Kish' record label, since the 1980s. His career commenced with the release of \"In The City / Your Smile is on My Mind\" in 1981 (on Kish). With 'Ibiza', his follow-up single (released on Vixen records), he attained very large amounts of airplay in Ireland; this in turn led to several high-profile TV appearances (including RTÉ's Kenny Live show and Nighthawks). Further singles followed, including one produced by Arsenal and Irish International football player John Devine: \"Travelling People\". Dominic has released three albums: Stranger on My Highway (1985), Vagabond Moon (1990) and Diving for Pearls (2004). The last of these was produced by Irish singer-songwriter Chris Singleton, whom Dominic taught piano. Dominic also engineered some of Chris Singleton's early material – an album called 'Start'." ]
In what city was Jurgis Karnavičius born?
[ "Vilnius", "Vilna", "Wilno", "Vilne", "Wilna", "Viļņa", "Vilnia", "Vilno", "Vilnyus" ]
place of birth
Jurgis Karnavičius
181,481
69
[ { "id": "11204512", "title": "Jurgis Karnavičius (composer)", "text": " Karnavičius was born in Kaunas, Lithuania, which at the time was a part of the Russian Empire. After completing his basic education in his homeland, he began the study of Law in St. Petersburg, Russia. Karnavičius' son, also named Jurgis Karnavičius (1912–2001), was a pianist and the long-time rector of the Lithuanian Academy of Music. His grandson, Jurgis Karnavičius (born 1957), is a concert pianist. Music had always been his main interest, and he began to simultaneously study music theory and composition. This soon superseded his pursuit of a career in the legal profession. His primary instrument was the viola. Eventually he became a professor at the Conservatory of Music in the now renamed city of Leningrad. During this period he began experimenting with his own theories of musical composition and began writing his ", "score": "2.0967858" }, { "id": "8969167", "title": "Jurgis Karnavičius", "text": " Jurgis Karnavičius (born 1957, in Vilnius) is a Lithuanian pianist. Karnavičius comes from a renowned family of musicians: his grandfather, Jurgis Karnavičius (1884–1941), was a composer, and his father, also named Jurgis (1912–2001), was a pianist and the long-time rector of the Lithuanian Academy of Music. Karnavičius graduated from the Lithuanian Academy of Music in 1980, specializing in the piano. He then continued his studies at the Moscow Conservatory for several more years. Jurgis Karnavičius is a piano soloist who has played with different orchestras, and he often accompanies his wife, the opera singer Sigutė Stonytė. In recent years he has been actively collaborating with several chamber ensembles, preparing concert programmes with the M. K. Čiurlionis String Quartet, Lithuanian Art Museum Quartet, Sostinės String Trio, and others. He has played well over one hundred solo concerts. In 2004, Jurgis Karnavičius earned a professorship with the Lithuanian Academy of Music.", "score": "2.0739245" }, { "id": "11204511", "title": "Jurgis Karnavičius (composer)", "text": " Jurgis Karnavičius (23 April 1884 – 22 December 1941) was a Lithuanian composer of classical music and a forerunner of the development of Lithuanian operatic works.", "score": "1.9982518" }, { "id": "11204513", "title": "Jurgis Karnavičius (composer)", "text": " works. In 1927, Karnavičius returned to Lithuania, which had only regained its independence as a sovereign nation less than ten years earlier. In addition to teaching at the Conservatory of Music in Kaunas, he opted to play the viola with the orchestra of the State Opera for a number of years. Having a personal desire write a new opera himself, and under the influence of the renewed national pride released by Lithuania's regaining its independence, Karnavičius began to write his first opera, Gražina, which premiered on February 16, 1933. It had incorporated more than forty melodies borrowed from Lithuanian folk songs, and was a popular success. It is considered among the first of the \"Lithuanian National Operas\". This was followed in 1937 by the opera Radvila Perkūnas about the Lithuanian nobleman Krzysztof Mikołaj Radziwiłł.", "score": "1.8192391" }, { "id": "7953204", "title": "Jurgis Usinavičius", "text": " Jurgis Usinavičius (real name Napalys Augulis; born 27 March 1932 in Pimpičkų rural area, Skapiškis district) – Lithuanian journalist, editor, publicist and writer.", "score": "1.8002064" }, { "id": "12156237", "title": "Jurgis Savickis", "text": " Savickis was born on 4 May 1890 in the Pagausantys village near Ariogala to a family of well-off Lithuanian farmers who owned about 80 ha of land. His paternal grandmother was of Lithuanian nobility stock and the family took pride in this heritage, on occasion referring to their farm as a manor. Savickis was the oldest of twelve children, but only five of them reached adulthood. There is no information available on his childhood, but researchers believe that he received education in Ariogala and Kaunas. In 1902, his uncle took him to Moscow where he attended the 6th Gymnasium. He was not a great student and received \"satisfactory\" grades in ", "score": "1.7878993" }, { "id": "24997550", "title": "Karolis Skinkys", "text": " Karolis was born in 16 November 1989 in the Lithuvanian city Marijampolė. He completed his bachelor's as well as masters degree from the Vytautas Magnus University of Lithuania.", "score": "1.7520039" }, { "id": "6968569", "title": "Juozas Baltušis", "text": " He was born into a peasant family in 1909, the son of Karolis Juozėnas (1871–1934) from Bitėnai and Marijona Baltušytė-Juozėnienė (1883–1964) from Puponiai in Kupiškis District. His sister, Marijona Juozėnaitė (1906–1997), became a nun and his brother, Leonardas Juozėnas (born 1914) was a military pilot and author. On 19 April 1909 Juozas was baptized in the Riga Catholic Church of St. Albert. During World I, the family moved east and lived in the Russian cities of Moscow, Nizhny Novgorod, and Tsaritsky (Volgograd). In 1918, the family settled in Puponiai, Kupiškis District. Baltušis grew up in Puponiai until leaving the family home in 1929 and moving to live in Kaunas, where he found work in various printing houses as a messenger and letter collector. Baltušis began to have works published in 1932, seeking inspiration from the writer Kazys Boruta. His first work was entitled Darbas (Work), a collection of short stories. He began to write humorous plays during the 1930s, and he published short story collections such as The Week Begins Well (1940) and White Clover (1943).", "score": "1.7358124" }, { "id": "12156249", "title": "Jurgis Savickis", "text": " Savickis was a cosmopolitan person with an aristocratic disposition. He enjoyed moving around and a luxurious lifestyle, but would not become attached to property. He was known for some large impulsive and impractical purchases, including plots of land and houses in Kulautuva and Palanga. He was a poor orator and disliked ceremonies and public events, but could start a warm and sincere conversation with a poor farmer or a foreign dignitary equally well. In general, Savickis avoided joining organizations or societies and never belonged to any political party. He was not governed by stereotypes and exhibited inner freedom and intelligence. He developed his artistic taste in Western Europe among wealthy bourgeois. Such traits were also reflected in his works which made ", "score": "1.7320067" }, { "id": "9960057", "title": "Jurgis Kairys", "text": " Jurgis Kairys was born in Krasnoyarsk, on May 6, 1952, where his parents were deported by Soviet authorities. However, the family was able to return to Lithuania when Kairys was still a small boy. His interest in flying started at an early age when watching planes landing and taking off at an airstrip near his home in Lithuania. He became an airframe engineer and was able to start flying aerobatics at the Kaunas Flying Club. His talents and determination were obvious and he soon became a member of the elite national team. The style of acrobatics we see today was developed over ", "score": "1.7220099" }, { "id": "12156234", "title": "Jurgis Savickis", "text": " Jurgis Savickis (4 May 1890 – 22 December 1952) was a Lithuanian short story writer and diplomat representing interwar Lithuania mostly in the Scandinavian countries. Born to a family of well-off Lithuanian farmers, Savickis attended a gymnasium in Moscow and studied painting at the School of Fine Arts in Kraków. During World War I, he was sent as a delegate of the Lithuanian Society for the Relief of War Sufferers to Denmark to care for Lithuanian POWs in Germany. After the war, he was recognized as the official Lithuanian representative in Denmark and later in Norway and Sweden. In 1923–1927, he was posted in Finland. In 1927–1929, he worked in ", "score": "1.7153637" }, { "id": "31984617", "title": "Jurgis Razma", "text": " In 1965 he started attending primary school in Plungė district. In 1976, graduated from Plungė 4th Secondary School. In 1981 graduated from Vilnius State University Faculty of Physics and majored in physics. From 1981 to 1991 he was a senior engineer at the Faculty of Physics of Vilnius University.", "score": "1.7148752" }, { "id": "11590189", "title": "Jurgis Baltrušaitis (art historian)", "text": " Jurgis Baltrušaitis (May 7, 1903 – January 25, 1988) was a Lithuanian art historian, art critic and a founder of comparative art research. He was the son of the poet and diplomat Jurgis Baltrušaitis. Most of his works were written in French, although he always stressed his Lithuanian origin. After Lithuania was occupied by the USSR in 1945, he served as a diplomat in exile.", "score": "1.707684" }, { "id": "11590190", "title": "Jurgis Baltrušaitis (art historian)", "text": " Baltrušaitis was born in Moscow. During his childhood he was immersed in the intense cultural life of his parents. One of his first teachers was the Russian poet and writer Boris Pasternak. In 1924 he moved to Paris and began theater studies at the Sorbonne under the guidance of Professor Henri Focillon. Under his influence Baltrušaitis chose to study the history of art. He went on to do research in Armenia, Georgia, Spain, Italy, and Germany, receiving a doctorate from the Sorbonne in 1931. Later that year he became the cultural attache at the Lithuanian Legation in Paris. Between 1933 and 1939 Baltrušaitis taught art history at the University of Kaunas, as well as lecturing at the Sorbonne and at the Warburg Institute in London. After World War II he delivered lectures at New York University, Yale University, Harvard University, and at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. His diplomatic efforts included writing for the French press on Lithuanian issues, and representing Lithuania in international organizations such as the Académie Internationale des Sciences et des Lettres and the Lithuanian Legation in Paris. Baltrušaitis died in Paris.", "score": "1.703224" }, { "id": "25814039", "title": "Jānis Akuraters", "text": " Akuraters was born on 13 January 1876 in Dignāja parish Jaunzemji homestead (Modern Jēkabpils municipality). His father was a forester. Akuraters studied in a Birži primary school and later in the Jēkabpils city school. After graduation he passed teachers exam and started work in schools. 1898 in Elkšņi, 1899–1901 in Jumurda and 1902 in Riga. In 1903 Akuraters went to Moscow to study medicine however he started to attend law lectures instead. In this period he also started Russian literature studies. In 1904 he returned to Latvia and turned to poetry. Akuraters participated in the Revolution of 1905 one of his most famous poems Ar kaujas saucieniem uz lūpām (With battle cry on our lips) is dedicated to revolution. After the suppression of the revolution he was arrested briefly and after release he published art magazine Pret Sauli. In 1907 Akuraters was again arrested ", "score": "1.7008393" }, { "id": "7953205", "title": "Jurgis Usinavičius", "text": " 1959 Finished secondary agricultural school in Siauliai, Lithuania. In 1973 – studied in Lithuanian Academy of Agriculture. In1945, his parents (Alfonsas Augulis and Kazimera) with all children had been deported to Komi. In 1947 he fled back to Lithuania under other person's name – Jurgis Usinavičius. Unlike his brother, Alfonsas Vytautas Augulis, Napalys stayed under different name during Soviet Union and stays nowadays. in 1991. In Siauliai Napalys finished secondary agricultural school in 1959 and Lithuanian Academy of Agriculture in 1973. 1959–1967 Worked in Siauliai district newspaper \"Leninietis\" (i.e., Leninist) as censorship clerk and head of agricultural department. 1967–1999 Worked in magazine Our Gardens (\"Mūsų sodai\"). Been head of editorial department, ", "score": "1.698235" }, { "id": "2965250", "title": "Gintaras Januševičius", "text": " taught by Valė Kulikauskienė (1993–1998) and Jurgis Bialobžeskis (1998–2003) at the National M.K. Ciurlionis School or Arts in Vilnius. After graduating in 2003, Januševičius entered the Lithuanian Academy of Music and Drama to study with Bialobžeskis. In 2004 he moved to Hanover, Germany where his professor was Vladimir Krainev. After his death in 2011 Januševičius joined the piano class of professor Bernd Goetzke at the Hochschule für Musik, Theater und Medien Hannover. Since 2001 he also had lessons with numerous famous pianists, most notably with Lazar Berman and his wife Valentina, Naum Shtarkman, Malcolm Bilson, Jurgis Karnavičius, among others.", "score": "1.6924306" }, { "id": "5716552", "title": "Antanas Juozapavičius", "text": " Antanas Juozapavičius was born to Juozapas Juozapavičius and his wife Marijona Juozapavičienė. He was born in the small Švakštonys manor, which the parents were renting. As farming was financially unsuccessful, the family emigrated to Riga, where Juozapas Juozapavičius worked as a wagoner. In 1902, Antanas Juozapavičius started going to school in Riga, and from 1905 to, although he was thrown out of school in sixth grade for the spreading of Lithuanian ideas. In Tartu, he educated to become a pharmacist, and from 1914 onwards worked as such in the pharmacies of Riga and Tartu.", "score": "1.6784172" }, { "id": "3434492", "title": "Kipras Bielinis", "text": " Bielinis was born in Purviškiai I in Biržai District, then part of the Russian Empire, to a family of Jurgis Bielinis, one of the best known Lithuanian book smugglers during the Lithuanian press ban. From about 1890, his father was searched by the police and did not live at home. In 1892, his father took him to Garšviai where the Garšviai Book Smuggling Society was based in hopes of teaching him same basic reading and writing. He had some other private tutors in Panevėžys and Sidabravas before enrolling into a realschule in Mitau (Jelgava) in fall 1894. After taking entrance exams, he was admitted to the Gymnasium of Nicholas I in Riga in fall 1895. Bielinis helped his father ", "score": "1.674669" }, { "id": "11204515", "title": "Jurgis Karnavičius (composer)", "text": " (Theme with Variations) (1912) ; Ulalumė, Symphonic Poem, Op.8 (1917) ; Lietuviškoji fantazija (Lithuanian Fantasy), Op.15 (1925) ; Ovalus portretas (The Oval Portrait), Symphonic Poem, Op.18 (1927) Chamber music ; String Quartet in F major ; Variations on the Lithuanian Folk Song \"Siuntė mane motinėlė\" for violin and piano (1907) ; String Quartet No.1, Op.1 (1913) ; 2 Romance-Caprices for violin solo, Op.4 (1915) ; String Quartet No.2, Op.6 (1917, published 1928) ; Poema for cello and piano (1917) ; String Quartet No.3, Op.10 (1922) ; String Quartet No.4 (1925) ; Lietuviškoji fantazija (Lithuanian Fantasy) for string quartet, Op.15 ", "score": "1.6695462" } ]
[ "Jurgis Karnavičius (composer)\n Karnavičius was born in Kaunas, Lithuania, which at the time was a part of the Russian Empire. After completing his basic education in his homeland, he began the study of Law in St. Petersburg, Russia. Karnavičius' son, also named Jurgis Karnavičius (1912–2001), was a pianist and the long-time rector of the Lithuanian Academy of Music. His grandson, Jurgis Karnavičius (born 1957), is a concert pianist. Music had always been his main interest, and he began to simultaneously study music theory and composition. This soon superseded his pursuit of a career in the legal profession. His primary instrument was the viola. Eventually he became a professor at the Conservatory of Music in the now renamed city of Leningrad. During this period he began experimenting with his own theories of musical composition and began writing his ", "Jurgis Karnavičius\n Jurgis Karnavičius (born 1957, in Vilnius) is a Lithuanian pianist. Karnavičius comes from a renowned family of musicians: his grandfather, Jurgis Karnavičius (1884–1941), was a composer, and his father, also named Jurgis (1912–2001), was a pianist and the long-time rector of the Lithuanian Academy of Music. Karnavičius graduated from the Lithuanian Academy of Music in 1980, specializing in the piano. He then continued his studies at the Moscow Conservatory for several more years. Jurgis Karnavičius is a piano soloist who has played with different orchestras, and he often accompanies his wife, the opera singer Sigutė Stonytė. In recent years he has been actively collaborating with several chamber ensembles, preparing concert programmes with the M. K. Čiurlionis String Quartet, Lithuanian Art Museum Quartet, Sostinės String Trio, and others. He has played well over one hundred solo concerts. In 2004, Jurgis Karnavičius earned a professorship with the Lithuanian Academy of Music.", "Jurgis Karnavičius (composer)\n Jurgis Karnavičius (23 April 1884 – 22 December 1941) was a Lithuanian composer of classical music and a forerunner of the development of Lithuanian operatic works.", "Jurgis Karnavičius (composer)\n works. In 1927, Karnavičius returned to Lithuania, which had only regained its independence as a sovereign nation less than ten years earlier. In addition to teaching at the Conservatory of Music in Kaunas, he opted to play the viola with the orchestra of the State Opera for a number of years. Having a personal desire write a new opera himself, and under the influence of the renewed national pride released by Lithuania's regaining its independence, Karnavičius began to write his first opera, Gražina, which premiered on February 16, 1933. It had incorporated more than forty melodies borrowed from Lithuanian folk songs, and was a popular success. It is considered among the first of the \"Lithuanian National Operas\". This was followed in 1937 by the opera Radvila Perkūnas about the Lithuanian nobleman Krzysztof Mikołaj Radziwiłł.", "Jurgis Usinavičius\n Jurgis Usinavičius (real name Napalys Augulis; born 27 March 1932 in Pimpičkų rural area, Skapiškis district) – Lithuanian journalist, editor, publicist and writer.", "Jurgis Savickis\n Savickis was born on 4 May 1890 in the Pagausantys village near Ariogala to a family of well-off Lithuanian farmers who owned about 80 ha of land. His paternal grandmother was of Lithuanian nobility stock and the family took pride in this heritage, on occasion referring to their farm as a manor. Savickis was the oldest of twelve children, but only five of them reached adulthood. There is no information available on his childhood, but researchers believe that he received education in Ariogala and Kaunas. In 1902, his uncle took him to Moscow where he attended the 6th Gymnasium. He was not a great student and received \"satisfactory\" grades in ", "Karolis Skinkys\n Karolis was born in 16 November 1989 in the Lithuvanian city Marijampolė. He completed his bachelor's as well as masters degree from the Vytautas Magnus University of Lithuania.", "Juozas Baltušis\n He was born into a peasant family in 1909, the son of Karolis Juozėnas (1871–1934) from Bitėnai and Marijona Baltušytė-Juozėnienė (1883–1964) from Puponiai in Kupiškis District. His sister, Marijona Juozėnaitė (1906–1997), became a nun and his brother, Leonardas Juozėnas (born 1914) was a military pilot and author. On 19 April 1909 Juozas was baptized in the Riga Catholic Church of St. Albert. During World I, the family moved east and lived in the Russian cities of Moscow, Nizhny Novgorod, and Tsaritsky (Volgograd). In 1918, the family settled in Puponiai, Kupiškis District. Baltušis grew up in Puponiai until leaving the family home in 1929 and moving to live in Kaunas, where he found work in various printing houses as a messenger and letter collector. Baltušis began to have works published in 1932, seeking inspiration from the writer Kazys Boruta. His first work was entitled Darbas (Work), a collection of short stories. He began to write humorous plays during the 1930s, and he published short story collections such as The Week Begins Well (1940) and White Clover (1943).", "Jurgis Savickis\n Savickis was a cosmopolitan person with an aristocratic disposition. He enjoyed moving around and a luxurious lifestyle, but would not become attached to property. He was known for some large impulsive and impractical purchases, including plots of land and houses in Kulautuva and Palanga. He was a poor orator and disliked ceremonies and public events, but could start a warm and sincere conversation with a poor farmer or a foreign dignitary equally well. In general, Savickis avoided joining organizations or societies and never belonged to any political party. He was not governed by stereotypes and exhibited inner freedom and intelligence. He developed his artistic taste in Western Europe among wealthy bourgeois. Such traits were also reflected in his works which made ", "Jurgis Kairys\n Jurgis Kairys was born in Krasnoyarsk, on May 6, 1952, where his parents were deported by Soviet authorities. However, the family was able to return to Lithuania when Kairys was still a small boy. His interest in flying started at an early age when watching planes landing and taking off at an airstrip near his home in Lithuania. He became an airframe engineer and was able to start flying aerobatics at the Kaunas Flying Club. His talents and determination were obvious and he soon became a member of the elite national team. The style of acrobatics we see today was developed over ", "Jurgis Savickis\n Jurgis Savickis (4 May 1890 – 22 December 1952) was a Lithuanian short story writer and diplomat representing interwar Lithuania mostly in the Scandinavian countries. Born to a family of well-off Lithuanian farmers, Savickis attended a gymnasium in Moscow and studied painting at the School of Fine Arts in Kraków. During World War I, he was sent as a delegate of the Lithuanian Society for the Relief of War Sufferers to Denmark to care for Lithuanian POWs in Germany. After the war, he was recognized as the official Lithuanian representative in Denmark and later in Norway and Sweden. In 1923–1927, he was posted in Finland. In 1927–1929, he worked in ", "Jurgis Razma\n In 1965 he started attending primary school in Plungė district. In 1976, graduated from Plungė 4th Secondary School. In 1981 graduated from Vilnius State University Faculty of Physics and majored in physics. From 1981 to 1991 he was a senior engineer at the Faculty of Physics of Vilnius University.", "Jurgis Baltrušaitis (art historian)\n Jurgis Baltrušaitis (May 7, 1903 – January 25, 1988) was a Lithuanian art historian, art critic and a founder of comparative art research. He was the son of the poet and diplomat Jurgis Baltrušaitis. Most of his works were written in French, although he always stressed his Lithuanian origin. After Lithuania was occupied by the USSR in 1945, he served as a diplomat in exile.", "Jurgis Baltrušaitis (art historian)\n Baltrušaitis was born in Moscow. During his childhood he was immersed in the intense cultural life of his parents. One of his first teachers was the Russian poet and writer Boris Pasternak. In 1924 he moved to Paris and began theater studies at the Sorbonne under the guidance of Professor Henri Focillon. Under his influence Baltrušaitis chose to study the history of art. He went on to do research in Armenia, Georgia, Spain, Italy, and Germany, receiving a doctorate from the Sorbonne in 1931. Later that year he became the cultural attache at the Lithuanian Legation in Paris. Between 1933 and 1939 Baltrušaitis taught art history at the University of Kaunas, as well as lecturing at the Sorbonne and at the Warburg Institute in London. After World War II he delivered lectures at New York University, Yale University, Harvard University, and at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. His diplomatic efforts included writing for the French press on Lithuanian issues, and representing Lithuania in international organizations such as the Académie Internationale des Sciences et des Lettres and the Lithuanian Legation in Paris. Baltrušaitis died in Paris.", "Jānis Akuraters\n Akuraters was born on 13 January 1876 in Dignāja parish Jaunzemji homestead (Modern Jēkabpils municipality). His father was a forester. Akuraters studied in a Birži primary school and later in the Jēkabpils city school. After graduation he passed teachers exam and started work in schools. 1898 in Elkšņi, 1899–1901 in Jumurda and 1902 in Riga. In 1903 Akuraters went to Moscow to study medicine however he started to attend law lectures instead. In this period he also started Russian literature studies. In 1904 he returned to Latvia and turned to poetry. Akuraters participated in the Revolution of 1905 one of his most famous poems Ar kaujas saucieniem uz lūpām (With battle cry on our lips) is dedicated to revolution. After the suppression of the revolution he was arrested briefly and after release he published art magazine Pret Sauli. In 1907 Akuraters was again arrested ", "Jurgis Usinavičius\n 1959 Finished secondary agricultural school in Siauliai, Lithuania. In 1973 – studied in Lithuanian Academy of Agriculture. In1945, his parents (Alfonsas Augulis and Kazimera) with all children had been deported to Komi. In 1947 he fled back to Lithuania under other person's name – Jurgis Usinavičius. Unlike his brother, Alfonsas Vytautas Augulis, Napalys stayed under different name during Soviet Union and stays nowadays. in 1991. In Siauliai Napalys finished secondary agricultural school in 1959 and Lithuanian Academy of Agriculture in 1973. 1959–1967 Worked in Siauliai district newspaper \"Leninietis\" (i.e., Leninist) as censorship clerk and head of agricultural department. 1967–1999 Worked in magazine Our Gardens (\"Mūsų sodai\"). Been head of editorial department, ", "Gintaras Januševičius\n taught by Valė Kulikauskienė (1993–1998) and Jurgis Bialobžeskis (1998–2003) at the National M.K. Ciurlionis School or Arts in Vilnius. After graduating in 2003, Januševičius entered the Lithuanian Academy of Music and Drama to study with Bialobžeskis. In 2004 he moved to Hanover, Germany where his professor was Vladimir Krainev. After his death in 2011 Januševičius joined the piano class of professor Bernd Goetzke at the Hochschule für Musik, Theater und Medien Hannover. Since 2001 he also had lessons with numerous famous pianists, most notably with Lazar Berman and his wife Valentina, Naum Shtarkman, Malcolm Bilson, Jurgis Karnavičius, among others.", "Antanas Juozapavičius\n Antanas Juozapavičius was born to Juozapas Juozapavičius and his wife Marijona Juozapavičienė. He was born in the small Švakštonys manor, which the parents were renting. As farming was financially unsuccessful, the family emigrated to Riga, where Juozapas Juozapavičius worked as a wagoner. In 1902, Antanas Juozapavičius started going to school in Riga, and from 1905 to, although he was thrown out of school in sixth grade for the spreading of Lithuanian ideas. In Tartu, he educated to become a pharmacist, and from 1914 onwards worked as such in the pharmacies of Riga and Tartu.", "Kipras Bielinis\n Bielinis was born in Purviškiai I in Biržai District, then part of the Russian Empire, to a family of Jurgis Bielinis, one of the best known Lithuanian book smugglers during the Lithuanian press ban. From about 1890, his father was searched by the police and did not live at home. In 1892, his father took him to Garšviai where the Garšviai Book Smuggling Society was based in hopes of teaching him same basic reading and writing. He had some other private tutors in Panevėžys and Sidabravas before enrolling into a realschule in Mitau (Jelgava) in fall 1894. After taking entrance exams, he was admitted to the Gymnasium of Nicholas I in Riga in fall 1895. Bielinis helped his father ", "Jurgis Karnavičius (composer)\n (Theme with Variations) (1912) ; Ulalumė, Symphonic Poem, Op.8 (1917) ; Lietuviškoji fantazija (Lithuanian Fantasy), Op.15 (1925) ; Ovalus portretas (The Oval Portrait), Symphonic Poem, Op.18 (1927) Chamber music ; String Quartet in F major ; Variations on the Lithuanian Folk Song \"Siuntė mane motinėlė\" for violin and piano (1907) ; String Quartet No.1, Op.1 (1913) ; 2 Romance-Caprices for violin solo, Op.4 (1915) ; String Quartet No.2, Op.6 (1917, published 1928) ; Poema for cello and piano (1917) ; String Quartet No.3, Op.10 (1922) ; String Quartet No.4 (1925) ; Lietuviškoji fantazija (Lithuanian Fantasy) for string quartet, Op.15 " ]
Who was the producer of Shine?
[ "Luna Sea", "Lunacy" ]
producer
Shine (Luna Sea song)
5,745,770
56
[ { "id": "8756009", "title": "Shine Group", "text": " Shine Group was an international distribution group.", "score": "1.5971051" }, { "id": "11571040", "title": "The Blackhouse Foundation", "text": " Carol Ann Shine is a film producer. A few of her productions include ''Truth. Be. Told., Poses, Recover, Dirty Lies, The Comedy Underground Series, The Boy, and Blackbird.'' She has produced/co-produced 46 credits, written 1 credit, and was the production manager for 2 credits. She was also a cinematographer for 1 credit, and a second unit director or assistant director for 1 credit as well. Ryan Tarpley graduated from Lawrence University and Ohio State University. He is Chief Diversity Officer at Creative Artists Agency (CAA). He is an entertainment executive based out of New York, NY. He is on the Board of Directors at ", "score": "1.5927174" }, { "id": "28379394", "title": "Shine (compilation series)", "text": " Released 16 November 1998", "score": "1.5542297" }, { "id": "28379382", "title": "Shine (compilation series)", "text": " Released 1 April 1997", "score": "1.5513" }, { "id": "28379388", "title": "Shine (compilation series)", "text": " Released 24 November 1997", "score": "1.551229" }, { "id": "5541024", "title": "Shine On (Riot album)", "text": "Paul Orofino - producer, engineer, mixing ; Jeff Allen - executive producer ", "score": "1.5510072" }, { "id": "28379391", "title": "Shine (compilation series)", "text": " Released 17 August 1998", "score": "1.5497394" }, { "id": "4473244", "title": "Eden Gaha", "text": " Eden Gaha is an Australian producer based in Los Angeles. He is currently President of Shine America.", "score": "1.5469882" }, { "id": "28379008", "title": "Kenton Allen", "text": " In January 2001, he was approached by Elisabeth Murdoch to become the founding creative director of the independent production company Shine. Allen was a key member of the launch team that secured the initial start-up financing. He quickly established the core creative divisions and overall creative strategy for the start-up company and recruited the core business affairs, finance, and creative personnel. He also established a talent incubator for comedy film directors in partnership with the UK Film Council and Film4.", "score": "1.5465772" }, { "id": "14961492", "title": "1996 in Australia", "text": "Shine ", "score": "1.5463512" }, { "id": "28379385", "title": "Shine (compilation series)", "text": " Released 1 September 1997", "score": "1.5455422" }, { "id": "1399311", "title": "Shine: The Hits", "text": " mixing (6, 8, 12, 14) ; Jeff Frankenstein – additional producer (6), producer (8) ; Tommy Sims – producer (16) ; Kip Kubin – producer (17) ; Tony Miracle – producer (17) ; Wes Campbell – executive producer ; Lynn Nichols – executive producer ; Tom Lord-Alge – remixing (1) ; Joe Costa – recording (6, 8, 12, 14) ; Shawn McLean – recording (6, 8, 12, 14) ; Dan Rudin – recording (6, 8, 12, 14), engineer (16) ; Richie Biggs – additional engineer (6, 8, 12, 14) ; Jacquire King – additional engineer (6, 8, 12, 14) ; James Bauer – mix assistant (6, 8, 12, 14) ", "score": "1.545255" }, { "id": "28379379", "title": "Shine (compilation series)", "text": " Released 11 November 1996", "score": "1.540797" }, { "id": "28379376", "title": "Shine (compilation series)", "text": " Released 16 September 1996", "score": "1.534955" }, { "id": "12214591", "title": "Rich Ross", "text": " Rich Ross became the Chief Executive Officer for Shine America in January 2013. He was responsible for the ongoing commercial strategy of the Shine Group in the United States, overseeing production, distribution and marketing of original programming across broadcast, cable and digital platforms.", "score": "1.5341638" }, { "id": "5683320", "title": "Shine (film)", "text": " Shine is a 1996 Australian biographical psychological drama film based on the life of David Helfgott, a pianist who suffered a mental breakdown and spent years in institutions. The film stars Geoffrey Rush, Lynn Redgrave, Armin Mueller-Stahl, Noah Taylor, John Gielgud, Googie Withers, Justin Braine, Sonia Todd, Nicholas Bell, Chris Haywood, and Alex Rafalowicz. The film was directed by Scott Hicks. The screenplay was written by Jan Sardi. Shine had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival. In 1997, Geoffrey Rush was awarded the Academy Award for Best Actor at the 69th Academy Awards for his performance in the lead role.", "score": "1.5312634" }, { "id": "3342439", "title": "Johnny Capps", "text": " Capps began his career at the BBC after graduating, working as a script editor on programmes such as Dangerfield. He would transition onto producing with the first series of As If. Along with Julian Murphy, Capps founded Shine Drama to develop television series. One of them was Merlin. The BBC had been keen on a family-oriented drama, based on the character of Merlin form Arthurian legend. Capps and Murphy, alongside Julian Jones and Jake Michie, created a version that was put into development in late 2006. This series went into production in March 2008, produced by Shine in association with BBC Wales, whose Head of Drama Julie Gardner was executive producer for the BBC. CGI special effects for the ", "score": "1.5301278" }, { "id": "28379373", "title": "Shine (compilation series)", "text": " Released 15 July 1996", "score": "1.5278969" }, { "id": "8756010", "title": "Shine Group", "text": " Shine was founded in 2001 by Elisabeth Murdoch following her departure from BSkyB the previous year. In 2006, Shine Group acquired Kudos, Princess Productions and Dragonfly to create the Shine Group, although they still operate as four separate entities. Shine acquired Reveille Productions in 2008. News Corporation (later 21st Century Fox, but assets are now split between The Walt Disney Company and Fox Corporation) acquired Shine Group in April 2011 for $415 million. US pension funds who are shareholders in News Corporation are suing the company accusing Murdoch of nepotism. In May 2014, 21st Century Fox and Apollo Global Management announced the negotiation of merging their respective production companies: FOX-owned Shine Group and Apollo-controlled Endemol and CORE Media Group. The deal was finalized later in the same year. On 17 December 2014, Shine Group announced the joint venture by 21st Century Fox with funds managed by affiliates of Apollo Global Management, LLC, combining Endemol, Shine and CORE Media into Endemol Shine Group. As part of the new structure, Former Endemol UK CEO, Lucas Church, has been appointed Chairman of Endemol Shine UK, whilst former Endemol UK Chief Operating Officer, Richard Johnston, becomes CEO of Endemol Shine UK.", "score": "1.5162182" }, { "id": "9477212", "title": "Shine TV", "text": " Shine TV is a British media production company and part of the Banijay Group with offices in London and Manchester. Shine was founded in March 2001 by Elisabeth Murdoch, daughter of News Corporation CEO Rupert Murdoch. The company was 80% owned by Elisabeth Murdoch, 15% by Lord Alli, and 5% by BSkyB, which signed a deal guaranteeing to buy an agreed amount of Shine programming for two years.", "score": "1.512733" } ]
[ "Shine Group\n Shine Group was an international distribution group.", "The Blackhouse Foundation\n Carol Ann Shine is a film producer. A few of her productions include ''Truth. Be. Told., Poses, Recover, Dirty Lies, The Comedy Underground Series, The Boy, and Blackbird.'' She has produced/co-produced 46 credits, written 1 credit, and was the production manager for 2 credits. She was also a cinematographer for 1 credit, and a second unit director or assistant director for 1 credit as well. Ryan Tarpley graduated from Lawrence University and Ohio State University. He is Chief Diversity Officer at Creative Artists Agency (CAA). He is an entertainment executive based out of New York, NY. He is on the Board of Directors at ", "Shine (compilation series)\n Released 16 November 1998", "Shine (compilation series)\n Released 1 April 1997", "Shine (compilation series)\n Released 24 November 1997", "Shine On (Riot album)\nPaul Orofino - producer, engineer, mixing ; Jeff Allen - executive producer ", "Shine (compilation series)\n Released 17 August 1998", "Eden Gaha\n Eden Gaha is an Australian producer based in Los Angeles. He is currently President of Shine America.", "Kenton Allen\n In January 2001, he was approached by Elisabeth Murdoch to become the founding creative director of the independent production company Shine. Allen was a key member of the launch team that secured the initial start-up financing. He quickly established the core creative divisions and overall creative strategy for the start-up company and recruited the core business affairs, finance, and creative personnel. He also established a talent incubator for comedy film directors in partnership with the UK Film Council and Film4.", "1996 in Australia\nShine ", "Shine (compilation series)\n Released 1 September 1997", "Shine: The Hits\n mixing (6, 8, 12, 14) ; Jeff Frankenstein – additional producer (6), producer (8) ; Tommy Sims – producer (16) ; Kip Kubin – producer (17) ; Tony Miracle – producer (17) ; Wes Campbell – executive producer ; Lynn Nichols – executive producer ; Tom Lord-Alge – remixing (1) ; Joe Costa – recording (6, 8, 12, 14) ; Shawn McLean – recording (6, 8, 12, 14) ; Dan Rudin – recording (6, 8, 12, 14), engineer (16) ; Richie Biggs – additional engineer (6, 8, 12, 14) ; Jacquire King – additional engineer (6, 8, 12, 14) ; James Bauer – mix assistant (6, 8, 12, 14) ", "Shine (compilation series)\n Released 11 November 1996", "Shine (compilation series)\n Released 16 September 1996", "Rich Ross\n Rich Ross became the Chief Executive Officer for Shine America in January 2013. He was responsible for the ongoing commercial strategy of the Shine Group in the United States, overseeing production, distribution and marketing of original programming across broadcast, cable and digital platforms.", "Shine (film)\n Shine is a 1996 Australian biographical psychological drama film based on the life of David Helfgott, a pianist who suffered a mental breakdown and spent years in institutions. The film stars Geoffrey Rush, Lynn Redgrave, Armin Mueller-Stahl, Noah Taylor, John Gielgud, Googie Withers, Justin Braine, Sonia Todd, Nicholas Bell, Chris Haywood, and Alex Rafalowicz. The film was directed by Scott Hicks. The screenplay was written by Jan Sardi. Shine had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival. In 1997, Geoffrey Rush was awarded the Academy Award for Best Actor at the 69th Academy Awards for his performance in the lead role.", "Johnny Capps\n Capps began his career at the BBC after graduating, working as a script editor on programmes such as Dangerfield. He would transition onto producing with the first series of As If. Along with Julian Murphy, Capps founded Shine Drama to develop television series. One of them was Merlin. The BBC had been keen on a family-oriented drama, based on the character of Merlin form Arthurian legend. Capps and Murphy, alongside Julian Jones and Jake Michie, created a version that was put into development in late 2006. This series went into production in March 2008, produced by Shine in association with BBC Wales, whose Head of Drama Julie Gardner was executive producer for the BBC. CGI special effects for the ", "Shine (compilation series)\n Released 15 July 1996", "Shine Group\n Shine was founded in 2001 by Elisabeth Murdoch following her departure from BSkyB the previous year. In 2006, Shine Group acquired Kudos, Princess Productions and Dragonfly to create the Shine Group, although they still operate as four separate entities. Shine acquired Reveille Productions in 2008. News Corporation (later 21st Century Fox, but assets are now split between The Walt Disney Company and Fox Corporation) acquired Shine Group in April 2011 for $415 million. US pension funds who are shareholders in News Corporation are suing the company accusing Murdoch of nepotism. In May 2014, 21st Century Fox and Apollo Global Management announced the negotiation of merging their respective production companies: FOX-owned Shine Group and Apollo-controlled Endemol and CORE Media Group. The deal was finalized later in the same year. On 17 December 2014, Shine Group announced the joint venture by 21st Century Fox with funds managed by affiliates of Apollo Global Management, LLC, combining Endemol, Shine and CORE Media into Endemol Shine Group. As part of the new structure, Former Endemol UK CEO, Lucas Church, has been appointed Chairman of Endemol Shine UK, whilst former Endemol UK Chief Operating Officer, Richard Johnston, becomes CEO of Endemol Shine UK.", "Shine TV\n Shine TV is a British media production company and part of the Banijay Group with offices in London and Manchester. Shine was founded in March 2001 by Elisabeth Murdoch, daughter of News Corporation CEO Rupert Murdoch. The company was 80% owned by Elisabeth Murdoch, 15% by Lord Alli, and 5% by BSkyB, which signed a deal guaranteeing to buy an agreed amount of Shine programming for two years." ]
In what country is Kodki?
[ "India", "Bharat", "Hindustan", "Bharatvarsh", "in", "IN", "Republic of India", "🇮🇳", "IND", "Aryavratt" ]
country
Kodki
4,874,451
67
[ { "id": "9951511", "title": "Kodki", "text": " Kodki is a village, located 11 km west of Bhuj, in Kachchh District in the state of Gujarat, India. It is one of 24 gramas (villages) occupied by the Shree Kutch Leva Patel Community (SKPLC). Kodki was originally a settlement of Rebari and Maaldharis. (Nomadic tribes, whose main activity is cattle herding). The earliest arrival of Kanbis dates back to 1870s (from dabasiya and Hiranis). Halais and Hiranis were the earliest Kanbis to settle in Kodki and take up agriculture. The original name was Bhavanipur, named after the Maaldhari's family goddess Bhavani Maa. In 2007, the village had a population of approximately 4000 people, and a total of 600 houses.", "score": "1.5892837" }, { "id": "4415056", "title": "Koninki", "text": " Koninki – settlement in the Lesser Poland Voivodeship, Poland, situated at the south-east end of the so-called Poręba key. Administratively, part of village Poręba Wielka, Limanowa County. Koninki is a tourist centre on the border of the Gorczański National Park at the foot of the Tobołów mountain (957 m n.p.m.) fitted with a chairlift. The town is an excellent base for treks into the Gorce Mountains. A Koninka river flows through the town. Two tourist trails lead from Koninki toward the Turbacz mountain (blue and green). In winter the ski lift is used mainly by skiers reaching the Tobołów slopes, the longest ski run in the Gorce Mountains. The base station of the ski-lift is situated in the former leisure centre of the Sendzimir Steelworks from Kraków. In the 18th century the area, on which the centre is situated, called Hucisko, contained a glass factory. Koninki's biggest vacation centre is called Ostoja Górska with 200 accommodations, the ski station, and the popular chairlift to the top of Tobołów mountain. In the centre of Koninki there is a small chapel which, according to legend, stopped a cholera epidemic.", "score": "1.5469251" }, { "id": "28719903", "title": "Kózki, Opole Voivodeship", "text": " The village of Kozki was the fictional setting for the 2010 film, The Shrine, though it was actually filmed in multiple locations in Ontario, Canada.", "score": "1.5085219" }, { "id": "28719902", "title": "Kózki, Opole Voivodeship", "text": " Kózki in Polish and Koske in German, is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Pawłowiczki, within Kędzierzyn-Koźle County, Opole Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. It lies approximately 8 km north-west of Pawłowiczki, 20 km south-west of Kędzierzyn-Koźle, and 43 km south of the regional capital Opole. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany. (see Territorial changes of Poland after World War II).", "score": "1.5028105" }, { "id": "12360033", "title": "Kobyłki, Lublin Voivodeship", "text": " Kobyłki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Ludwin, within Łęczna County, Lublin Voivodeship, in eastern Poland. It lies approximately 8 km north-east of Ludwin, 11 km north-east of Łęczna, and 33 km north-east of the regional capital Lublin. Name of Kobyłki, the most closely can be translated as \"Mares\". In mid 1990s the area south of Kobyłki had enjoyed minor mining damage, the cause was quite close neighborhood of Bogdanka Coal Mine and its large-scale operations, and as the result the least urbanized parts of the village are planned to be sunk, seamlessly expanding an artificial lake. The area is rich in open landscapes, natural resources, including number of fish (close proximity to Nadrybie), and rare species of birds living on Pojezierze Łęczyńskie. The area has been focused on sustainable development, observing a slight decrease in the reliance on agriculture, in favor of agrotourism serving residents of near-by Łęczna, and Lublin area. The community hosts number of farmers who grow apples, strawberries, pears, currants, raspberries, gooseberries, tobacco, corn, beer hops and various other crops.", "score": "1.5025959" }, { "id": "2614605", "title": "Kozki, Voronezh Oblast", "text": " Kozki is located 28 km northeast of Kamenka (the district's administrative centre) by road. Marki is the nearest rural locality.", "score": "1.4932785" }, { "id": "26828376", "title": "Kosky", "text": "Koski Duże, a village in Poland ; Koski Tl, a municipality in Finland ", "score": "1.4877715" }, { "id": "31936763", "title": "Koziki, Podlaskie Voivodeship", "text": " Koziki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Śniadowo, within Łomża County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 11 km north-east of Śniadowo, 6 km south of Łomża, and 75 km west of the regional capital Białystok. The village has a population of 240.", "score": "1.4836802" }, { "id": "13393715", "title": "Kopki, Podkarpackie Voivodeship", "text": " Nisko, and 48 km north-east of the regional capital Rzeszów.It also hosts a fire station. The closest towns that neighbour Kopki are Gmina Rudnik nad Sanem and Krzeszów, Lower Silesian Voivodeship.Many parts of Kopki are covered by trees which contain wildlife such as deer, rabbits and different birds. Before the year of 1344 in Kopki there was a customs chamber at the ancient commercial course from Toruń intercepting Sandomierz, Krzeszów, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, to Lviv and further to Ruś. In 1657, Prince Of The Seven- Pronouns Jerzy Rakoczy burned and completely demolished the village. In 1895, the Volunteer Fire Brigade in Kopki was created.", "score": "1.4813492" }, { "id": "228419", "title": "Kociołki, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship", "text": " Kociołki (Kotziolken) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Dubeninki, within Gołdap County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland, close to the border with the Kaliningrad Oblast of Russia. Before 1945, the area was part of Germany (East Prussia).", "score": "1.4721271" }, { "id": "13206027", "title": "Kózki, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship", "text": " Kózki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Skalbmierz, within Kazimierza County, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, in south-central Poland. It lies approximately 4 km south of Skalbmierz, 7 km north-west of Kazimierza Wielka, and 67 km south of the regional capital Kielce.", "score": "1.464497" }, { "id": "2614604", "title": "Kozki, Voronezh Oblast", "text": " Kozki (Козки) is a rural locality (a khutor) in Markovskoye Rural Settlement, Kamensky District, Voronezh Oblast, Russia. The population was 106 as of 2010.", "score": "1.4609976" }, { "id": "279976", "title": "Kotki, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship", "text": " Kotki (German Krausen) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Barciany, within Kętrzyn County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland, close to the border with the Kaliningrad Oblast of Russia. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (East Prussia). The village has a population of 27.", "score": "1.4483073" }, { "id": "31642453", "title": "Koszki", "text": " Koszki (Кошкі, Podlachian: Kôški) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Orla, within Bielsk County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 9 km west of Orla, 10 km south of Bielsk Podlaski, and 49 km south of the regional capital Białystok. It is in one of five Polish/Belarusian bilingual Gmina in Podlaskie Voivodeship regulated by the Act of 6 January 2005 on National and Ethnic Minorities and on the Regional Languages, which permits certain gminas with significant linguistic minorities to introduce a second, auxiliary language to be used in official contexts alongside Polish.", "score": "1.4453048" }, { "id": "28532754", "title": "Koziki, Vladimir Oblast", "text": " Koziki (Козики) is a rural locality (a village) in Novoalexandrovskoye Rural Settlement, Suzdalsky District, Vladimir Oblast, Russia. The population was 38 as of 2010. There are 9 streets.", "score": "1.4360769" }, { "id": "28038262", "title": "Koluszki", "text": " Koluszki is a town, and a major railway junction, in central Poland, in Łódź Voivodeship, about 20 km east of Łódź with a population of 12,776 (2020). The junction in Koluszki serves trains that go from Warsaw to Łódź, Wrocław, Częstochowa and Katowice. It is also connected to Radom and Lublin by an eastbound line.", "score": "1.419081" }, { "id": "1439767", "title": "Kózki, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship", "text": " Kózki (Kosken) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Biała Piska, within Pisz County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 6 km south of Biała Piska, 19 km east of Pisz, and 107 km east of the regional capital Olsztyn. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (East Prussia). The village has a population of 90.", "score": "1.418751" }, { "id": "13464959", "title": "Koniuszki, Podkarpackie Voivodeship", "text": " Koniuszki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Fredropol, within Przemyśl County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland, close to the border with Ukraine. It lies approximately 6 km east of Fredropol, 9 km south-east of Przemyśl, and 69 km south-east of the regional capital Rzeszów.", "score": "1.4185877" }, { "id": "27703341", "title": "Korf, Russia", "text": " Korf is connected to Tilichiki by ferry and to other neighboring locations by helicopter service. Platinum and lignite are mined in the district.", "score": "1.4175241" }, { "id": "13160169", "title": "Kotki, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship", "text": " Kotki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Busko-Zdrój, within Busko County, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, in south-central Poland. It lies approximately 8 km north-east of Busko-Zdrój and 44 km south of the regional capital Kielce.", "score": "1.4167678" } ]
[ "Kodki\n Kodki is a village, located 11 km west of Bhuj, in Kachchh District in the state of Gujarat, India. It is one of 24 gramas (villages) occupied by the Shree Kutch Leva Patel Community (SKPLC). Kodki was originally a settlement of Rebari and Maaldharis. (Nomadic tribes, whose main activity is cattle herding). The earliest arrival of Kanbis dates back to 1870s (from dabasiya and Hiranis). Halais and Hiranis were the earliest Kanbis to settle in Kodki and take up agriculture. The original name was Bhavanipur, named after the Maaldhari's family goddess Bhavani Maa. In 2007, the village had a population of approximately 4000 people, and a total of 600 houses.", "Koninki\n Koninki – settlement in the Lesser Poland Voivodeship, Poland, situated at the south-east end of the so-called Poręba key. Administratively, part of village Poręba Wielka, Limanowa County. Koninki is a tourist centre on the border of the Gorczański National Park at the foot of the Tobołów mountain (957 m n.p.m.) fitted with a chairlift. The town is an excellent base for treks into the Gorce Mountains. A Koninka river flows through the town. Two tourist trails lead from Koninki toward the Turbacz mountain (blue and green). In winter the ski lift is used mainly by skiers reaching the Tobołów slopes, the longest ski run in the Gorce Mountains. The base station of the ski-lift is situated in the former leisure centre of the Sendzimir Steelworks from Kraków. In the 18th century the area, on which the centre is situated, called Hucisko, contained a glass factory. Koninki's biggest vacation centre is called Ostoja Górska with 200 accommodations, the ski station, and the popular chairlift to the top of Tobołów mountain. In the centre of Koninki there is a small chapel which, according to legend, stopped a cholera epidemic.", "Kózki, Opole Voivodeship\n The village of Kozki was the fictional setting for the 2010 film, The Shrine, though it was actually filmed in multiple locations in Ontario, Canada.", "Kózki, Opole Voivodeship\n Kózki in Polish and Koske in German, is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Pawłowiczki, within Kędzierzyn-Koźle County, Opole Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. It lies approximately 8 km north-west of Pawłowiczki, 20 km south-west of Kędzierzyn-Koźle, and 43 km south of the regional capital Opole. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany. (see Territorial changes of Poland after World War II).", "Kobyłki, Lublin Voivodeship\n Kobyłki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Ludwin, within Łęczna County, Lublin Voivodeship, in eastern Poland. It lies approximately 8 km north-east of Ludwin, 11 km north-east of Łęczna, and 33 km north-east of the regional capital Lublin. Name of Kobyłki, the most closely can be translated as \"Mares\". In mid 1990s the area south of Kobyłki had enjoyed minor mining damage, the cause was quite close neighborhood of Bogdanka Coal Mine and its large-scale operations, and as the result the least urbanized parts of the village are planned to be sunk, seamlessly expanding an artificial lake. The area is rich in open landscapes, natural resources, including number of fish (close proximity to Nadrybie), and rare species of birds living on Pojezierze Łęczyńskie. The area has been focused on sustainable development, observing a slight decrease in the reliance on agriculture, in favor of agrotourism serving residents of near-by Łęczna, and Lublin area. The community hosts number of farmers who grow apples, strawberries, pears, currants, raspberries, gooseberries, tobacco, corn, beer hops and various other crops.", "Kozki, Voronezh Oblast\n Kozki is located 28 km northeast of Kamenka (the district's administrative centre) by road. Marki is the nearest rural locality.", "Kosky\nKoski Duże, a village in Poland ; Koski Tl, a municipality in Finland ", "Koziki, Podlaskie Voivodeship\n Koziki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Śniadowo, within Łomża County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 11 km north-east of Śniadowo, 6 km south of Łomża, and 75 km west of the regional capital Białystok. The village has a population of 240.", "Kopki, Podkarpackie Voivodeship\n Nisko, and 48 km north-east of the regional capital Rzeszów.It also hosts a fire station. The closest towns that neighbour Kopki are Gmina Rudnik nad Sanem and Krzeszów, Lower Silesian Voivodeship.Many parts of Kopki are covered by trees which contain wildlife such as deer, rabbits and different birds. Before the year of 1344 in Kopki there was a customs chamber at the ancient commercial course from Toruń intercepting Sandomierz, Krzeszów, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, to Lviv and further to Ruś. In 1657, Prince Of The Seven- Pronouns Jerzy Rakoczy burned and completely demolished the village. In 1895, the Volunteer Fire Brigade in Kopki was created.", "Kociołki, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship\n Kociołki (Kotziolken) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Dubeninki, within Gołdap County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland, close to the border with the Kaliningrad Oblast of Russia. Before 1945, the area was part of Germany (East Prussia).", "Kózki, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship\n Kózki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Skalbmierz, within Kazimierza County, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, in south-central Poland. It lies approximately 4 km south of Skalbmierz, 7 km north-west of Kazimierza Wielka, and 67 km south of the regional capital Kielce.", "Kozki, Voronezh Oblast\n Kozki (Козки) is a rural locality (a khutor) in Markovskoye Rural Settlement, Kamensky District, Voronezh Oblast, Russia. The population was 106 as of 2010.", "Kotki, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship\n Kotki (German Krausen) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Barciany, within Kętrzyn County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland, close to the border with the Kaliningrad Oblast of Russia. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (East Prussia). The village has a population of 27.", "Koszki\n Koszki (Кошкі, Podlachian: Kôški) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Orla, within Bielsk County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 9 km west of Orla, 10 km south of Bielsk Podlaski, and 49 km south of the regional capital Białystok. It is in one of five Polish/Belarusian bilingual Gmina in Podlaskie Voivodeship regulated by the Act of 6 January 2005 on National and Ethnic Minorities and on the Regional Languages, which permits certain gminas with significant linguistic minorities to introduce a second, auxiliary language to be used in official contexts alongside Polish.", "Koziki, Vladimir Oblast\n Koziki (Козики) is a rural locality (a village) in Novoalexandrovskoye Rural Settlement, Suzdalsky District, Vladimir Oblast, Russia. The population was 38 as of 2010. There are 9 streets.", "Koluszki\n Koluszki is a town, and a major railway junction, in central Poland, in Łódź Voivodeship, about 20 km east of Łódź with a population of 12,776 (2020). The junction in Koluszki serves trains that go from Warsaw to Łódź, Wrocław, Częstochowa and Katowice. It is also connected to Radom and Lublin by an eastbound line.", "Kózki, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship\n Kózki (Kosken) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Biała Piska, within Pisz County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 6 km south of Biała Piska, 19 km east of Pisz, and 107 km east of the regional capital Olsztyn. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (East Prussia). The village has a population of 90.", "Koniuszki, Podkarpackie Voivodeship\n Koniuszki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Fredropol, within Przemyśl County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland, close to the border with Ukraine. It lies approximately 6 km east of Fredropol, 9 km south-east of Przemyśl, and 69 km south-east of the regional capital Rzeszów.", "Korf, Russia\n Korf is connected to Tilichiki by ferry and to other neighboring locations by helicopter service. Platinum and lignite are mined in the district.", "Kotki, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship\n Kotki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Busko-Zdrój, within Busko County, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, in south-central Poland. It lies approximately 8 km north-east of Busko-Zdrój and 44 km south of the regional capital Kielce." ]
In what country is Mavjinjava?
[ "India", "Bharat", "Hindustan", "Bharatvarsh", "in", "IN", "Republic of India", "🇮🇳", "IND", "Aryavratt" ]
country
Mavjinjava
710,729
99
[ { "id": "28514557", "title": "Mavjinjava", "text": " Many media found in this village.", "score": "2.0826912" }, { "id": "28514550", "title": "Mavjinjava", "text": " Mavjinjava (માવજીંજવા) is a small village near Bagasara in the Amreli district of the Saurashtra region in the state of Gujarat, India. There is a population of around 3,754 people in Mavjinjava. More than 3000 people live outside of Manjinjava in places like Surat, Ahmedabad & Mumbai.", "score": "2.0413394" }, { "id": "28514551", "title": "Mavjinjava", "text": " It is believed that during the year 534 AD Mavjinjava existed and was known as Mavji and then Mavjinjava. The village is named in ancient Gujrati as Mavjinjava (માવજીંજવા). Initially Mavjinjava was the part of the former Gaekwad of Baroda during the Gaekwad regime in 1886. After Indian independence in 1947, the village became the part of Bombay State and then a separate village in Gujarat State after the division of Bombay State in 1956 into Gujarat and Maharashtra.", "score": "1.8716326" }, { "id": "28514554", "title": "Mavjinjava", "text": " The people in Mavjinjava are predominantly vegetarians and are vehemently against any form of hunting.", "score": "1.8703611" }, { "id": "28514573", "title": "Mavjinjava", "text": " India census, Mavjinjava had a population of 3,754.", "score": "1.8647305" }, { "id": "28514566", "title": "Mavjinjava", "text": " Mavjinjava village is connected to major Indian cities by road.", "score": "1.8592052" }, { "id": "28514556", "title": "Mavjinjava", "text": " Cricket is a very famous sport in this village.", "score": "1.8395352" }, { "id": "28514563", "title": "Mavjinjava", "text": " Mavjinjava village economy depends on agriculture.", "score": "1.807483" }, { "id": "28514553", "title": "Mavjinjava", "text": " Mavjinjava has a semi-arid climate, with hot, dry summers from mid-March to mid-June and the wet monsoon season from mid-June to October, when the village receives 500 mm of rain on average. The months from November to February are mild, the average temperature being around 20 °C, with low humidity.", "score": "1.7989714" }, { "id": "28514552", "title": "Mavjinjava", "text": " Most part of the area is called Balapur Road stretching from the main bus stand to Mahesh Pan Center. Other areas are Khodiyar Plot, Bagasara Plot, Kalwachouk, Pati Khetar Road, Hanumanpara etc. Mavjinjava is a small village in Kāthiāwār in Gujarāt. The Kāthiāwār peninsula of western India, is in Gujarāt State. The peninsula extends southwest into the Arabian Sea and is bounded on the northwest by the Gulf of Kachchh and on the southeast by the Gulf of Khambhāt. The area of Mavjinjava is about 60,000 km² (about 23,000 sq mi).", "score": "1.7964087" }, { "id": "28514567", "title": "Mavjinjava", "text": " Mavjinjava village is very well connected with Gujarat State roads.", "score": "1.7915394" }, { "id": "28514555", "title": "Mavjinjava", "text": "The K.Lal's Home, ; Sri Nirdoshanand Saraswati Ji Maharaj Ashram, ; Ramji Mandir, ; Sri Bal Krishna Haveli, ; Shivalaya Mandir, ; Karmanpir Mandir. Mavjinjava has many historical landmarks to visit, including:", "score": "1.7094269" }, { "id": "28514569", "title": "Mavjinjava", "text": " Nearly Railway Station is Amreli, Junagadh & Rajkot.", "score": "1.7077284" }, { "id": "28514570", "title": "Mavjinjava", "text": " Nearly national airport is Rajkot and international airport is Ahmedabad and Mumbai.", "score": "1.6668884" }, { "id": "28514572", "title": "Mavjinjava", "text": " K'LAL Magician, a world-famous magician born in Mavjinjava Village. Saint Shree Karaman Peer a famous holly devine person.", "score": "1.6099095" }, { "id": "28514565", "title": "Mavjinjava", "text": "Mavjinjava had many small children Play House. ; Mavjinjava had one Primary School ; Shree Mavjinjava Primary School ; Mavjinjava had one Secondary School ; Shree K.Lal High School ", "score": "1.5928755" }, { "id": "28514558", "title": "Mavjinjava", "text": " Morning newspapers available in the Gujarati language are Gujarat Samachar, Sandesh, Divya Bhaskar, Avadh Times etc.", "score": "1.5886712" }, { "id": "28514571", "title": "Mavjinjava", "text": "Sri Swami Nirdoshanand Saraswatiji Maharaj Ashram ; Ramji Mandir ; Sri Bal Krishna Haveli ; Shivalaya Mandir ; Karmanpir Mandir ; Swaminarayan Mandir ; Balaji Hanuman Mandir ; Hanuman Deri ; Khodiyarmata Mandir ; Khodiyar Dham ; Sanatan Gaushala ; Great Magician K.Lal's Home ; Monsoon time Mavjinjava River. ", "score": "1.5219953" }, { "id": "28514564", "title": "Mavjinjava", "text": "Bank of Baroda. ; Karmanpir Street. ; Amreli Jilla Madhya Sahakari Bank. ; Bagasara Road, Near Khodal Dham temple. ", "score": "1.480221" }, { "id": "28514568", "title": "Mavjinjava", "text": "Bagasara ➤ 9.0 km. ; Amreli ➤ 41.1 km. ; Junagadh ➤ 70.9 km. ; Rajkot ➤ 102 km. ; Bhavnagar ➤ 159 km. ; Bhuj ➤ 334 km. ; Ahmedabad ➤ 281 km. ; Vadodara ➤ 321 km. ; Surat ➤ 461 km. ; Mumbai ➤ 723 km. ; Pune ➤ 855 km. ; Bangalore ➤ 1,689 km. ; Kolkata ➤ 2,329 km. ; Delhi ➤ 1,210 km. ; Jaipur ➤ 950 km. ; Chennai ➤ 2,042 km. ; Goa ➤ 1,310 km. ; Srinagar ➤ 1,931 km. Distances from Mavjinjava", "score": "1.4582722" } ]
[ "Mavjinjava\n Many media found in this village.", "Mavjinjava\n Mavjinjava (માવજીંજવા) is a small village near Bagasara in the Amreli district of the Saurashtra region in the state of Gujarat, India. There is a population of around 3,754 people in Mavjinjava. More than 3000 people live outside of Manjinjava in places like Surat, Ahmedabad & Mumbai.", "Mavjinjava\n It is believed that during the year 534 AD Mavjinjava existed and was known as Mavji and then Mavjinjava. The village is named in ancient Gujrati as Mavjinjava (માવજીંજવા). Initially Mavjinjava was the part of the former Gaekwad of Baroda during the Gaekwad regime in 1886. After Indian independence in 1947, the village became the part of Bombay State and then a separate village in Gujarat State after the division of Bombay State in 1956 into Gujarat and Maharashtra.", "Mavjinjava\n The people in Mavjinjava are predominantly vegetarians and are vehemently against any form of hunting.", "Mavjinjava\n India census, Mavjinjava had a population of 3,754.", "Mavjinjava\n Mavjinjava village is connected to major Indian cities by road.", "Mavjinjava\n Cricket is a very famous sport in this village.", "Mavjinjava\n Mavjinjava village economy depends on agriculture.", "Mavjinjava\n Mavjinjava has a semi-arid climate, with hot, dry summers from mid-March to mid-June and the wet monsoon season from mid-June to October, when the village receives 500 mm of rain on average. The months from November to February are mild, the average temperature being around 20 °C, with low humidity.", "Mavjinjava\n Most part of the area is called Balapur Road stretching from the main bus stand to Mahesh Pan Center. Other areas are Khodiyar Plot, Bagasara Plot, Kalwachouk, Pati Khetar Road, Hanumanpara etc. Mavjinjava is a small village in Kāthiāwār in Gujarāt. The Kāthiāwār peninsula of western India, is in Gujarāt State. The peninsula extends southwest into the Arabian Sea and is bounded on the northwest by the Gulf of Kachchh and on the southeast by the Gulf of Khambhāt. The area of Mavjinjava is about 60,000 km² (about 23,000 sq mi).", "Mavjinjava\n Mavjinjava village is very well connected with Gujarat State roads.", "Mavjinjava\nThe K.Lal's Home, ; Sri Nirdoshanand Saraswati Ji Maharaj Ashram, ; Ramji Mandir, ; Sri Bal Krishna Haveli, ; Shivalaya Mandir, ; Karmanpir Mandir. Mavjinjava has many historical landmarks to visit, including:", "Mavjinjava\n Nearly Railway Station is Amreli, Junagadh & Rajkot.", "Mavjinjava\n Nearly national airport is Rajkot and international airport is Ahmedabad and Mumbai.", "Mavjinjava\n K'LAL Magician, a world-famous magician born in Mavjinjava Village. Saint Shree Karaman Peer a famous holly devine person.", "Mavjinjava\nMavjinjava had many small children Play House. ; Mavjinjava had one Primary School ; Shree Mavjinjava Primary School ; Mavjinjava had one Secondary School ; Shree K.Lal High School ", "Mavjinjava\n Morning newspapers available in the Gujarati language are Gujarat Samachar, Sandesh, Divya Bhaskar, Avadh Times etc.", "Mavjinjava\nSri Swami Nirdoshanand Saraswatiji Maharaj Ashram ; Ramji Mandir ; Sri Bal Krishna Haveli ; Shivalaya Mandir ; Karmanpir Mandir ; Swaminarayan Mandir ; Balaji Hanuman Mandir ; Hanuman Deri ; Khodiyarmata Mandir ; Khodiyar Dham ; Sanatan Gaushala ; Great Magician K.Lal's Home ; Monsoon time Mavjinjava River. ", "Mavjinjava\nBank of Baroda. ; Karmanpir Street. ; Amreli Jilla Madhya Sahakari Bank. ; Bagasara Road, Near Khodal Dham temple. ", "Mavjinjava\nBagasara ➤ 9.0 km. ; Amreli ➤ 41.1 km. ; Junagadh ➤ 70.9 km. ; Rajkot ➤ 102 km. ; Bhavnagar ➤ 159 km. ; Bhuj ➤ 334 km. ; Ahmedabad ➤ 281 km. ; Vadodara ➤ 321 km. ; Surat ➤ 461 km. ; Mumbai ➤ 723 km. ; Pune ➤ 855 km. ; Bangalore ➤ 1,689 km. ; Kolkata ➤ 2,329 km. ; Delhi ➤ 1,210 km. ; Jaipur ➤ 950 km. ; Chennai ➤ 2,042 km. ; Goa ➤ 1,310 km. ; Srinagar ➤ 1,931 km. Distances from Mavjinjava" ]
What is Sir Thomas Clarges, 3rd Baronet's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Sir Thomas Clarges, 3rd Baronet
1,204,905
39
[ { "id": "15221846", "title": "Sir Thomas Clarges, 4th Baronet", "text": " Sir Thomas Clarges (c. 1780-17 February 1834) was the son of Sir Thomas Clarges, 3rd Baronet and Louisa Skrine. He was a pupil at Eton College, matriculated at Christ Church, Oxford in 1799, and graduated from Oxford University in 1802. He succeeded as the 4th Baronet Clarges, of St. Martin's in the Fields in the County of Middlesex, on 23 December 1782. From 1803 until his death, he was Constable of Durham Castle in the County Palatine. In addition to his landed estates (including Bitchfield and Norton Disney in Lincolnshire, and Sutton-on-Derwent, near York), he also owned a half-share in the Theatre Royal, Brighton, which he had purchased in 1807. He died on 17 February 1834 at Brighton, unmarried. On his death, his baronetcy became extinct. His will was proven (by probate) in March 1834.", "score": "1.9116852" }, { "id": "3452409", "title": "Sir Thomas Clarges, 3rd Baronet", "text": " Sir Thomas Clarges, 3rd Baronet (1751–1782) was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1780 to 1782. Clarges was the son of Thomas Clarges of Aston, Hertfordshire and his wife Anne Shute of John Shute, 1st Viscount Barrington and was born on 4 October 1751. He succeeded his grandfather Sir Thomas Clarges, 2nd Baronet in the baronetcy on 19 February 1759. He was educated Eton College in 1765 and matriculated at Christ Church, Oxford in 1770. He married Louisa Skrine, daughter of William Skrine on 20 October 1777. Clarges was elected Member of Parliament for Lincoln at the 1780 general election and held the seat until his death on 23 December 1782.", "score": "1.8479159" }, { "id": "3452292", "title": "Sir Thomas Clarges, 2nd Baronet", "text": " Sir Thomas Clarges, 2nd Baronet (25 July 1688 – 19 February 1759), of Aston, near Stevenage, Hertfordshire, was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1713 to 1715. Clarges was the eldest surviving son of Sir Walter Clarges, 1st Baronet, whom he succeeded circa 31 March 1706 and was educated at St Paul's School. Clarges was a Member of Parliament for Lostwithiel from 1713 to 1715. Clarges was appointed a Gentleman of the privy chamber by 1734 until his death. He married twice; firstly Katherine, the daughter and coheiress of John Berkeley, 4th Viscount Fitzhardinge and secondly Frances, with whom he had a son Thomas, who predeased him. He was succeeded by his grandson Thomas.", "score": "1.761747" }, { "id": "15131874", "title": "Thomas Clarges", "text": " Sir Thomas Clarges (c 1618 – 4 October 1695) was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons at various times between 1656 and 1695. He played an important part in bringing about the Restoration of the Monarchy in 1660.", "score": "1.6939355" }, { "id": "5502753", "title": "Robert Clarges", "text": " Robert Clarges (c. 1693 - before 1727) was an English Tory MP. Clarges was the third son of Sir Walter Clarges, 1st Baronet, the first son of his marriage to Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Thomas Gould, Sheriff of London, widow of Sir Robert Wymondsell. He was educated at St Paul's School, London and Trinity College, Cambridge. His father died in 1706 whilst Clarges was still a minor and his inheritance of Stoke Poges Rectory Manor was held in trust for him until he became of age. He was elected MP for Reading from 1713 to 30 May 1716. Clarges was described as a Tory who might often vote Whig. He voted against the Septennial Act 1716. His election was declared void on 30 May 1716. He died unmarried apparently before April 1727 (he was not mentioned in his mother's will of that date). His estate was admininistered by his mother and elder brother. The Rectory Manor passed to his brother George.", "score": "1.6917968" }, { "id": "15131879", "title": "Thomas Clarges", "text": " Clarges married Mary Proctor, daughter of George Proctor of Norwell Woodhouse in Nottinghamshire. They had a son Sir Walter Clarges, 1st Baronet.", "score": "1.6804371" }, { "id": "14938188", "title": "Sir Thomas Clavering, 7th Baronet", "text": " Sir Thomas Clavering, 7th Baronet (19 June 1719 – 14 October 1794) was a British landowner and Member of Parliament. He was the son of Sir James Clavering, 6th Baronet and succeeded to the Baronetcy of Axwell and to the family estates on the death of his father in 1748. He was Member of Parliament for St Mawes 1753–1754, and for Shaftesbury 1754–60 (where he paid £2000 to secure the seat). He resigned his seat at Shaftesbury in December 1760 to fight a by-election for County Durham; he lost that election and the general election of 1761, but was elected for the constituency at the third attempt in 1768 and continued to ", "score": "1.5153637" }, { "id": "13536829", "title": "Sir Thomas Burnett, 3rd Baronet", "text": " Sir Thomas Burnett of Leys, 3rd Baronet, (ca. 1658 – January 1714), Lord Clerk Register, PC, MP. He was, at Stonehaven, 21 April 1664, retoured as heir to his father, Sir Alexander Burnett, 2nd Baronet who had died the previous year. The 3rd Baronet is the grandson of Sir Thomas Burnett, 1st Baronet, who completed the reconstruction of Muchalls Castle and the great-grandson of Alexander Burnett of Leys (died 1619), who completed the construction of Crathes Castle.", "score": "1.5130252" }, { "id": "15131876", "title": "Thomas Clarges", "text": " In 1656 Clarges was elected Member of Parliament for the Sheriffdoms of Ross, Sutherland, and Cromarty in the Second Protectorate Parliament. In 1659 he was MP for the Boroughs of Banff and Cullen, and Aberdeen and for the Boroughs of Peebles, Selkirk, Jedburgh, Lauder, North Berwick, Dunbar and Haddington in the Third Protectorate Parliament. When Richard Cromwell became Lord Protector he ordered Clarges to go immediately to Scotland with his letters to George Monck, Clarge's brother-in-law, to obtain Monck's view of his protectorate. Clarges became Monck's main agent as he set about planning the Restoration of the Monarchy. In April 1660 Clarges was elected Member of Parliament for Westminster in the Convention Parliament. On 5 May Monck sent Clarges as an envoy to King Charles II at Breda carrying a letter from the ", "score": "1.5062945" }, { "id": "6982417", "title": "List of extinct baronetcies", "text": "Clarges of St Martin's in the Fields (cr. 20 October 1674), extinct with the death of the fourth baronet. ; Lawrence of Brough Hall (cr. 6 July 1665), extinct with the death of the sixth baronet. ; May of Mayfield (cr. 30 June 1763), extinct with the death of the fourth baronet. ", "score": "1.4955378" }, { "id": "15131878", "title": "Thomas Clarges", "text": " Clarges died at his house in Piccadilly, Mayfair, in London. His properties in Mayfair are commemorated in the name of Clarges Street, which is near Albemarle Street named after the site of the residence of his nephew Christopher Monck, 2nd Duke of Albemarle.", "score": "1.4783025" }, { "id": "15131875", "title": "Thomas Clarges", "text": " Clarges was the son of John Clarges and his wife Anne Leaver. He was an apothecary in London. His sister Anne Clarges was the wife of the royalist General George Monck, later 1st Duke of Albemarle.", "score": "1.4768214" }, { "id": "11373749", "title": "Sir Thomas Hesilrige, 4th Baronet", "text": " Sir Thomas Hesilrige, 4th Baronet (1664 - 11 July 1700) was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1690 to 1695. Hesilrige was the son of Sir Thomas Hesilrige, 3rd Baronet and his wife Elizabeth Fenwick, daughter of George Fenwick, of Bruntonhall, Northumberland. He succeeded to the baronetcy on the death of his father in 1680. In 1687 Hesilrige was appointed Sheriff of Leicestershire and in 1690 was elected Member of Parliament for Leicestershire, holding the seat until 1695. Hesilrige died unmarried at the age of 36. He was succeeded in the baronetcy by his uncle Sir Robert Hesilrige, 5th Baronet.", "score": "1.4758295" }, { "id": "934980", "title": "Clere baronets", "text": " as \"Madam Williams\". Pepys strongly disapproved of the affair, but it endured until Lord Brouncker's death in 1684, and he left Abigail much of his property. The Cleres were an ancient Norfolk family. Sir Robert Clere was famous for his great wealth and served as High Sheriff of Norfolk in 1501. His son Sir John Clere was Treasurer of the King's Army in France in 1549. Sir John's son Edward Clere represented both Thetford and Grampound in Parliament. Edward's son Sir Edward Clere was High Sheriff of Norfolk in 1586 but was forced to sell the family estate of Blickling Hall. Sir Edward's son was the first Baronet. Sir Thomas Clere was the third son of Sir Robert Clere.", "score": "1.4705698" }, { "id": "15952806", "title": "Sir Thomas Isham, 3rd Baronet", "text": " Sir Thomas Isham, 3rd Baronet of Lamport (15 March 1656/57 – 26 July 1681) is known for a diary he wrote from 1671 to 1673 of his observations as a teenage member of the English aristocracy.", "score": "1.463424" }, { "id": "2908439", "title": "Grey Egerton baronets", "text": " The baronetcy was created on 5 April 1617 for Sir Roland Egerton, whose family were established by the 13th-century in Cheshire. The Anglo-Norman chevalier David le Clerc de Malpas migrated to England, and was appointed justice for Cheshire by King Henry III in 1252. Le Clerc held three knights' fees for the county, owing the King their service as and when summoned to war. His second son named Philip le Goch (translated from the brythonic as 'the Red') was lord of the manor of Egerton, Cheshire. The late 15th-century head of the family, Philip Egerton of Egerton, married Margery, daughter of Sir William Mainwaring; he died in 1474 at the height of the civil strife, leaving a number of sons: the second was Sir Ralph Egerton of ", "score": "1.4497828" }, { "id": "8382732", "title": "Sir Thomas Barlow, 3rd Baronet", "text": " had four children: Barlow succeeded to the title of 3rd Baronet Barlow, of Wimpole Street, London on 28 February 1968, after the death of his father. He was appointed a Deputy Lieutenant of Buckinghamshire in 1976. Barlow was also a conservationist and was a trustee of the Galapagos Conservation Trust. Barlow was also a trustee for over 20 years of the Barlow Collection of Oriental art collected by his father. In 1997 Sir Thomas, along with his brother Erasmus Barlow were both awarded honorary Doctors of Letters degrees by the University of Sussex, who were bequeathed the Barlow Collection in 1968 on the death of Sir Alan", "score": "1.4425223" }, { "id": "11963544", "title": "Sir Thomas Grosvenor, 3rd Baronet", "text": " Grosvenor was born at Eaton Hall, Cheshire, the son of Roger Grosvenor by his wife, Christian (or Christine), daughter of Thomas Myddleton of Chirk Castle, Denbighshire. He was less than five years old when his father, Roger, was killed in a duel with his cousin, Hugh Roberts, on 22 August 1661. Roger had been the son and heir of Sir Richard Grosvenor, 2nd Baronet, and therefore, Thomas succeeded to the baronetcy upon the death of his grandfather on 31 January 1665. He was eight years old at that time. Grosvenor was educated by a private tutor, who also accompanied him when he undertook the Grand Tour, in his case, a three-year ", "score": "1.4389455" }, { "id": "5601643", "title": "Sir George Thomas, 3rd Baronet", "text": " Sir George Thomas, 3rd Baronet (c. 1740 – 6 May 1815), was a British politician.", "score": "1.4364412" }, { "id": "32723556", "title": "Thursby baronets", "text": " The Thursby Baronetcy, of Ormerod House in the Parish of Burnley in the County Palatine of Lancaster and of Holmhurst in the Parish of Christchurch in the County of Southampton, was a title in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom. It was created on 26 July 1887 for John Hardy Thursby, then Honorary Colonel of the 3rd Battalion, East Lancashire Regiment. The Rev. John Hargreaves (1732-1812), had entered the Burnley coal industry through marriage in 1755 and in 1797 he acquired the lease-holds for most of the mineral rights in the area. After his death, the company adopted the name 'The Executors of John Hargreaves'. His nephew Colonel John Hargreaves (1775-1834), who inherited the business, married Charlotte Anne (died 1806), the only child of Lawrence Ormerod of Ormerod Hall in Cliviger. Although they had ", "score": "1.434699" } ]
[ "Sir Thomas Clarges, 4th Baronet\n Sir Thomas Clarges (c. 1780-17 February 1834) was the son of Sir Thomas Clarges, 3rd Baronet and Louisa Skrine. He was a pupil at Eton College, matriculated at Christ Church, Oxford in 1799, and graduated from Oxford University in 1802. He succeeded as the 4th Baronet Clarges, of St. Martin's in the Fields in the County of Middlesex, on 23 December 1782. From 1803 until his death, he was Constable of Durham Castle in the County Palatine. In addition to his landed estates (including Bitchfield and Norton Disney in Lincolnshire, and Sutton-on-Derwent, near York), he also owned a half-share in the Theatre Royal, Brighton, which he had purchased in 1807. He died on 17 February 1834 at Brighton, unmarried. On his death, his baronetcy became extinct. His will was proven (by probate) in March 1834.", "Sir Thomas Clarges, 3rd Baronet\n Sir Thomas Clarges, 3rd Baronet (1751–1782) was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1780 to 1782. Clarges was the son of Thomas Clarges of Aston, Hertfordshire and his wife Anne Shute of John Shute, 1st Viscount Barrington and was born on 4 October 1751. He succeeded his grandfather Sir Thomas Clarges, 2nd Baronet in the baronetcy on 19 February 1759. He was educated Eton College in 1765 and matriculated at Christ Church, Oxford in 1770. He married Louisa Skrine, daughter of William Skrine on 20 October 1777. Clarges was elected Member of Parliament for Lincoln at the 1780 general election and held the seat until his death on 23 December 1782.", "Sir Thomas Clarges, 2nd Baronet\n Sir Thomas Clarges, 2nd Baronet (25 July 1688 – 19 February 1759), of Aston, near Stevenage, Hertfordshire, was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1713 to 1715. Clarges was the eldest surviving son of Sir Walter Clarges, 1st Baronet, whom he succeeded circa 31 March 1706 and was educated at St Paul's School. Clarges was a Member of Parliament for Lostwithiel from 1713 to 1715. Clarges was appointed a Gentleman of the privy chamber by 1734 until his death. He married twice; firstly Katherine, the daughter and coheiress of John Berkeley, 4th Viscount Fitzhardinge and secondly Frances, with whom he had a son Thomas, who predeased him. He was succeeded by his grandson Thomas.", "Thomas Clarges\n Sir Thomas Clarges (c 1618 – 4 October 1695) was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons at various times between 1656 and 1695. He played an important part in bringing about the Restoration of the Monarchy in 1660.", "Robert Clarges\n Robert Clarges (c. 1693 - before 1727) was an English Tory MP. Clarges was the third son of Sir Walter Clarges, 1st Baronet, the first son of his marriage to Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Thomas Gould, Sheriff of London, widow of Sir Robert Wymondsell. He was educated at St Paul's School, London and Trinity College, Cambridge. His father died in 1706 whilst Clarges was still a minor and his inheritance of Stoke Poges Rectory Manor was held in trust for him until he became of age. He was elected MP for Reading from 1713 to 30 May 1716. Clarges was described as a Tory who might often vote Whig. He voted against the Septennial Act 1716. His election was declared void on 30 May 1716. He died unmarried apparently before April 1727 (he was not mentioned in his mother's will of that date). His estate was admininistered by his mother and elder brother. The Rectory Manor passed to his brother George.", "Thomas Clarges\n Clarges married Mary Proctor, daughter of George Proctor of Norwell Woodhouse in Nottinghamshire. They had a son Sir Walter Clarges, 1st Baronet.", "Sir Thomas Clavering, 7th Baronet\n Sir Thomas Clavering, 7th Baronet (19 June 1719 – 14 October 1794) was a British landowner and Member of Parliament. He was the son of Sir James Clavering, 6th Baronet and succeeded to the Baronetcy of Axwell and to the family estates on the death of his father in 1748. He was Member of Parliament for St Mawes 1753–1754, and for Shaftesbury 1754–60 (where he paid £2000 to secure the seat). He resigned his seat at Shaftesbury in December 1760 to fight a by-election for County Durham; he lost that election and the general election of 1761, but was elected for the constituency at the third attempt in 1768 and continued to ", "Sir Thomas Burnett, 3rd Baronet\n Sir Thomas Burnett of Leys, 3rd Baronet, (ca. 1658 – January 1714), Lord Clerk Register, PC, MP. He was, at Stonehaven, 21 April 1664, retoured as heir to his father, Sir Alexander Burnett, 2nd Baronet who had died the previous year. The 3rd Baronet is the grandson of Sir Thomas Burnett, 1st Baronet, who completed the reconstruction of Muchalls Castle and the great-grandson of Alexander Burnett of Leys (died 1619), who completed the construction of Crathes Castle.", "Thomas Clarges\n In 1656 Clarges was elected Member of Parliament for the Sheriffdoms of Ross, Sutherland, and Cromarty in the Second Protectorate Parliament. In 1659 he was MP for the Boroughs of Banff and Cullen, and Aberdeen and for the Boroughs of Peebles, Selkirk, Jedburgh, Lauder, North Berwick, Dunbar and Haddington in the Third Protectorate Parliament. When Richard Cromwell became Lord Protector he ordered Clarges to go immediately to Scotland with his letters to George Monck, Clarge's brother-in-law, to obtain Monck's view of his protectorate. Clarges became Monck's main agent as he set about planning the Restoration of the Monarchy. In April 1660 Clarges was elected Member of Parliament for Westminster in the Convention Parliament. On 5 May Monck sent Clarges as an envoy to King Charles II at Breda carrying a letter from the ", "List of extinct baronetcies\nClarges of St Martin's in the Fields (cr. 20 October 1674), extinct with the death of the fourth baronet. ; Lawrence of Brough Hall (cr. 6 July 1665), extinct with the death of the sixth baronet. ; May of Mayfield (cr. 30 June 1763), extinct with the death of the fourth baronet. ", "Thomas Clarges\n Clarges died at his house in Piccadilly, Mayfair, in London. His properties in Mayfair are commemorated in the name of Clarges Street, which is near Albemarle Street named after the site of the residence of his nephew Christopher Monck, 2nd Duke of Albemarle.", "Thomas Clarges\n Clarges was the son of John Clarges and his wife Anne Leaver. He was an apothecary in London. His sister Anne Clarges was the wife of the royalist General George Monck, later 1st Duke of Albemarle.", "Sir Thomas Hesilrige, 4th Baronet\n Sir Thomas Hesilrige, 4th Baronet (1664 - 11 July 1700) was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1690 to 1695. Hesilrige was the son of Sir Thomas Hesilrige, 3rd Baronet and his wife Elizabeth Fenwick, daughter of George Fenwick, of Bruntonhall, Northumberland. He succeeded to the baronetcy on the death of his father in 1680. In 1687 Hesilrige was appointed Sheriff of Leicestershire and in 1690 was elected Member of Parliament for Leicestershire, holding the seat until 1695. Hesilrige died unmarried at the age of 36. He was succeeded in the baronetcy by his uncle Sir Robert Hesilrige, 5th Baronet.", "Clere baronets\n as \"Madam Williams\". Pepys strongly disapproved of the affair, but it endured until Lord Brouncker's death in 1684, and he left Abigail much of his property. The Cleres were an ancient Norfolk family. Sir Robert Clere was famous for his great wealth and served as High Sheriff of Norfolk in 1501. His son Sir John Clere was Treasurer of the King's Army in France in 1549. Sir John's son Edward Clere represented both Thetford and Grampound in Parliament. Edward's son Sir Edward Clere was High Sheriff of Norfolk in 1586 but was forced to sell the family estate of Blickling Hall. Sir Edward's son was the first Baronet. Sir Thomas Clere was the third son of Sir Robert Clere.", "Sir Thomas Isham, 3rd Baronet\n Sir Thomas Isham, 3rd Baronet of Lamport (15 March 1656/57 – 26 July 1681) is known for a diary he wrote from 1671 to 1673 of his observations as a teenage member of the English aristocracy.", "Grey Egerton baronets\n The baronetcy was created on 5 April 1617 for Sir Roland Egerton, whose family were established by the 13th-century in Cheshire. The Anglo-Norman chevalier David le Clerc de Malpas migrated to England, and was appointed justice for Cheshire by King Henry III in 1252. Le Clerc held three knights' fees for the county, owing the King their service as and when summoned to war. His second son named Philip le Goch (translated from the brythonic as 'the Red') was lord of the manor of Egerton, Cheshire. The late 15th-century head of the family, Philip Egerton of Egerton, married Margery, daughter of Sir William Mainwaring; he died in 1474 at the height of the civil strife, leaving a number of sons: the second was Sir Ralph Egerton of ", "Sir Thomas Barlow, 3rd Baronet\n had four children: Barlow succeeded to the title of 3rd Baronet Barlow, of Wimpole Street, London on 28 February 1968, after the death of his father. He was appointed a Deputy Lieutenant of Buckinghamshire in 1976. Barlow was also a conservationist and was a trustee of the Galapagos Conservation Trust. Barlow was also a trustee for over 20 years of the Barlow Collection of Oriental art collected by his father. In 1997 Sir Thomas, along with his brother Erasmus Barlow were both awarded honorary Doctors of Letters degrees by the University of Sussex, who were bequeathed the Barlow Collection in 1968 on the death of Sir Alan", "Sir Thomas Grosvenor, 3rd Baronet\n Grosvenor was born at Eaton Hall, Cheshire, the son of Roger Grosvenor by his wife, Christian (or Christine), daughter of Thomas Myddleton of Chirk Castle, Denbighshire. He was less than five years old when his father, Roger, was killed in a duel with his cousin, Hugh Roberts, on 22 August 1661. Roger had been the son and heir of Sir Richard Grosvenor, 2nd Baronet, and therefore, Thomas succeeded to the baronetcy upon the death of his grandfather on 31 January 1665. He was eight years old at that time. Grosvenor was educated by a private tutor, who also accompanied him when he undertook the Grand Tour, in his case, a three-year ", "Sir George Thomas, 3rd Baronet\n Sir George Thomas, 3rd Baronet (c. 1740 – 6 May 1815), was a British politician.", "Thursby baronets\n The Thursby Baronetcy, of Ormerod House in the Parish of Burnley in the County Palatine of Lancaster and of Holmhurst in the Parish of Christchurch in the County of Southampton, was a title in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom. It was created on 26 July 1887 for John Hardy Thursby, then Honorary Colonel of the 3rd Battalion, East Lancashire Regiment. The Rev. John Hargreaves (1732-1812), had entered the Burnley coal industry through marriage in 1755 and in 1797 he acquired the lease-holds for most of the mineral rights in the area. After his death, the company adopted the name 'The Executors of John Hargreaves'. His nephew Colonel John Hargreaves (1775-1834), who inherited the business, married Charlotte Anne (died 1806), the only child of Lawrence Ormerod of Ormerod Hall in Cliviger. Although they had " ]
In what country is Têbo?
[ "People's Republic of China", "China", "CN", "PR China", "PRC", "cn", "CHN", "🇨🇳", "China PR", "Mainland China" ]
country
Têbo
6,051,351
15
[ { "id": "6797572", "title": "Tebo Regency", "text": " Tebo Regency is a regency of Jambi Province, Indonesia. It is located on the island of Sumatra. The regency has an area of 6,461 km² and had a population of 297,735 at the 2010 Census and 337,669 at the 2020 Census. The regency seat is at the town of Muara Tebo.", "score": "1.55442" }, { "id": "28019705", "title": "Nebo-M", "text": " 🇷🇺 russia", "score": "1.4179115" }, { "id": "3039337", "title": "Teka", "text": " Since Teka set up in Spain in 1964, the group has expanded from Europe to the five continents. At the end of 2013, Peru became the 33rd country to have its own Teka offices. Years earlier, it began making inroads in China where it now has a presence in several cities such as Kaiping, Weihai, and Shanghai. The Teka Group is growing rapidly in Asia through its subsidiaries in Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, China and Vietnam; in the Middle East, from its base in the Arab Emirates; Turkey and South America. It has launched a development plan in Africa, which includes both Maghreb and the south of the continent. In 2016 the Teka brand was relaunched in Australia & New Zealand through a partnership with local distributor Residentia Group. The group's sales in Europe account for 80% of its turnover, followed by America and the Asia-Pacific region.", "score": "1.4081842" }, { "id": "25357865", "title": "Teboil", "text": " Oy Teboil Ab is an oil company in Finland, engaged in the marketing, sales and distribution of petroleum products and operation of filling and service stations. It is a subsidiary of the Russian company Lukoil.", "score": "1.4048227" }, { "id": "30908775", "title": "Lubombo Transfrontier Conservation Area", "text": " Tembe Elephant Park is situated in Maputaland, in the north-eastern region of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa adjoining the Mozambique border. It is home to the province's biggest African elephant herd and its only indigenous elephants. Tembe's 300 km2 comprises a variety of unique sand forest, woodland, grassland and swampland habitats.", "score": "1.4005759" }, { "id": "32045128", "title": "Corruption in Equatorial Guinea", "text": " The French engineering firm Bouygues built Teodorin a free mansion in Malabo, the capital of Equatorial Guinea. He also ordered foreign firms to install zinc-tile roofs on thousands of poor Equatorialguinean homes at a time when he had a \"substantial financial interest\" in the zinc-roofing industry.", "score": "1.3901207" }, { "id": "11070050", "title": "Tebo Creek", "text": " Tebo Creek is a stream in Benton and Henry Counties in the U.S. state of Missouri. The stream begins at the confluence of East Fork Tebo Creek and the Middle Fork Tebo Creek just to the southeast of Calhoun and south of Missouri Route 52 at 38.46167°N, -93.60861°W. The stream flows generally south and southeast to enter the waters of Truman Reservoir east of Clinton. Prior to the formation of the lake the stream continued to the southeast to enter the South Grand River to the east of Racket on Missouri Route 7 and just northwest of Harry S Truman State Park in Benton County at 38.3°N, -93.46528°W. The name Tebo is a corruption of the French surnames Taveau or Thibeault. Variant names include: Big Tebo Creek, Tabo Creek, Teabeau Creek, Teabo Creek and Thibault River.", "score": "1.3856959" }, { "id": "6875841", "title": "Tetreuaresta timida", "text": " Mexico, Costa Rica.", "score": "1.3734219" }, { "id": "32245215", "title": "R.A.M Tebo II of Batibo", "text": " Subsequent years were spent in job search and business. Starting in Edea where he owned a small business, he retrained in accounting with the British School of accounting, Douala, and then worked for Guinness Cameroon briefly before leaving for an International transportation company that took him off the shores of Cameroon to Dubai. He returned to Cameroon in the declining days of his father's health; he was enthroned in 2005 upon the death of his father. Though not active in any political party, R.A.M Tebo II is an active member of the Northwest Fons Union (NOWEFU).", "score": "1.365185" }, { "id": "1600785", "title": "Dobo, The Gambia", "text": " Dobo is a small village located in North Bank, The Gambia, a country in West Africa.", "score": "1.3616526" }, { "id": "11993303", "title": "Nemacheilus tebo", "text": " Nemacheilus tebo is a species of ray-finned fish in the genus Nemacheilus from Kalimantan Timur in Indonesia.", "score": "1.3504647" }, { "id": "11901860", "title": "Zeebo Inc.", "text": " Zeebo Inc. had its headquarters in San Diego, California with offices in São Paulo, Brazil, Mexico City, Mexico and Shanghai, China. Zeebo marketing and development in Brazil are carried out by Zeebo Brasil, Zeebo Inc.'s Brazilian subsidiary. Marketing and development in Mexico was carried out by the Mexican subsidiary Zeebo Mexico. Manufacturing and distribution were provided by regional partners such as Tectoy in Brazil. Wireless bandwidth was provided by telecommunications partners such as Claro in Brazil and Telcel in Mexico. Zeebo also announced an agreement with AT&T in March, 2010. The company has stated that \"The agreement gives us access to AT&T's international roaming network, allowing us to carry out rapid trials of the Zeebo platform in new geographic areas as we establish longer-term agreements with local carriers for deployment of the system. It will also give us a chance to explore opportunities in the US market in the future.\" In June, 2010, it was reported that Zeebo Inc. raised $13.5 million in its latest round of venture funding.", "score": "1.3465323" }, { "id": "31700159", "title": "Tahtay Adiyabo", "text": " Tahtay Adiyabo ( Tigrinya \"Lower Adiyabo\") is one of the Districts of Ethiopia, or woredas, in the Tigray Region of Ethiopia. Part of the Semien Mi'irabawi Zone, Tahtay Adiyabo is bordered on the south by the Asigede Tsimbela, on the southwest by the Tekezé River which separates Tahtay Adiyabo from the Mi'irabawi Zone, on the north by Eritrea, and on the east by La'ilay Adiyabo; part of the northern border with Eritrea is delineated by the Mareb River. The northernmost point of this woreda is the northernmost point of Ethiopia. Towns in this woreda include Addi Awuala and Addi Hageray. The town of Shiraro is surrounded by Tahtay Adiyabo.", "score": "1.3445523" }, { "id": "9622418", "title": "Tebe-Tebe", "text": " Tebe-Tebe is a community council located in the Berea District of Lesotho. Its population in 2006 was 16,533.", "score": "1.3439507" }, { "id": "6872767", "title": "Tetreuaresta deleta", "text": " Brazil.", "score": "1.3436383" }, { "id": "11901859", "title": "Zeebo Inc.", "text": " The company introduced the Zeebo in limited quantities in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on June 1, 2009, with manufacturing and distribution provided by Tectoy. The system went on sale nationwide in Brazil in November the same year. In December, 2009, the Zeebo went on sale nationwide in Mexico.", "score": "1.3407173" }, { "id": "26165393", "title": "ArtBo", "text": " 2005, when Bogotá's chamber of commerce took on the project of strengthening and consolidating the local art scene. ArtBo was created as a nonprofit project to promote Colombia's culture and arts both locally and abroad through the participation of key Colombian art galleries as well as International galleries. It was started by the Colombian Government as a reaction to the ongoing Colombian conflict, as a way to help rebrand Colombia's capitol city as a destination for culture, business, and investment. Since 2012, under the direction of María Paz Gaviria, the fair has grown in size to becoming Latin America's second largest art fair, next to Zona Maco in Mexico. Internationally, ArtBo is sometimes referred to as the \"Art Basel of Latin America\".", "score": "1.3379875" }, { "id": "30908772", "title": "Lubombo Transfrontier Conservation Area", "text": " The Lubombo Transfrontier Conservation Area covers 4195 km2, of which 2783 km2 (66%) is in Mozambique, 1095 km2 (26%) is in South Africa, and 317 km2 (8%) is in Eswatini. It is situated on a low-lying coastal plain between the Lebombo Mountains in the west and the Indian Ocean in the east. The area offers a unique combination of big-game country, extensive wetlands, and beautiful undeveloped coastal areas. It links the Maputo Elephant Reserve in Mozambique through the Futi Corridor and the Lubombo Conservancy in Eswatini to the Tembe Elephant Park in South Africa, creating the first major elephant stronghold along Africa's eastern coastline.", "score": "1.3357329" }, { "id": "27642798", "title": "Tebedu", "text": "🇯🇵 Nemuro, Hokkaido, Japan ", "score": "1.3357006" }, { "id": "27978588", "title": "Teba", "text": " Teba is a town and municipality located in the province of Málaga in the autonomous community of Andalusia in southern Spain. It is situated in the northeast of the province, in Guadalteba comarca. As of 2018, its population is 3,818. The town is the site of the Battle of Teba, which took place in 1330 during the Reconquista. Scottish knight and feudal lord Sir James Douglas was killed at Teba during the same campaign.", "score": "1.3271554" } ]
[ "Tebo Regency\n Tebo Regency is a regency of Jambi Province, Indonesia. It is located on the island of Sumatra. The regency has an area of 6,461 km² and had a population of 297,735 at the 2010 Census and 337,669 at the 2020 Census. The regency seat is at the town of Muara Tebo.", "Nebo-M\n 🇷🇺 russia", "Teka\n Since Teka set up in Spain in 1964, the group has expanded from Europe to the five continents. At the end of 2013, Peru became the 33rd country to have its own Teka offices. Years earlier, it began making inroads in China where it now has a presence in several cities such as Kaiping, Weihai, and Shanghai. The Teka Group is growing rapidly in Asia through its subsidiaries in Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, China and Vietnam; in the Middle East, from its base in the Arab Emirates; Turkey and South America. It has launched a development plan in Africa, which includes both Maghreb and the south of the continent. In 2016 the Teka brand was relaunched in Australia & New Zealand through a partnership with local distributor Residentia Group. The group's sales in Europe account for 80% of its turnover, followed by America and the Asia-Pacific region.", "Teboil\n Oy Teboil Ab is an oil company in Finland, engaged in the marketing, sales and distribution of petroleum products and operation of filling and service stations. It is a subsidiary of the Russian company Lukoil.", "Lubombo Transfrontier Conservation Area\n Tembe Elephant Park is situated in Maputaland, in the north-eastern region of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa adjoining the Mozambique border. It is home to the province's biggest African elephant herd and its only indigenous elephants. Tembe's 300 km2 comprises a variety of unique sand forest, woodland, grassland and swampland habitats.", "Corruption in Equatorial Guinea\n The French engineering firm Bouygues built Teodorin a free mansion in Malabo, the capital of Equatorial Guinea. He also ordered foreign firms to install zinc-tile roofs on thousands of poor Equatorialguinean homes at a time when he had a \"substantial financial interest\" in the zinc-roofing industry.", "Tebo Creek\n Tebo Creek is a stream in Benton and Henry Counties in the U.S. state of Missouri. The stream begins at the confluence of East Fork Tebo Creek and the Middle Fork Tebo Creek just to the southeast of Calhoun and south of Missouri Route 52 at 38.46167°N, -93.60861°W. The stream flows generally south and southeast to enter the waters of Truman Reservoir east of Clinton. Prior to the formation of the lake the stream continued to the southeast to enter the South Grand River to the east of Racket on Missouri Route 7 and just northwest of Harry S Truman State Park in Benton County at 38.3°N, -93.46528°W. The name Tebo is a corruption of the French surnames Taveau or Thibeault. Variant names include: Big Tebo Creek, Tabo Creek, Teabeau Creek, Teabo Creek and Thibault River.", "Tetreuaresta timida\n Mexico, Costa Rica.", "R.A.M Tebo II of Batibo\n Subsequent years were spent in job search and business. Starting in Edea where he owned a small business, he retrained in accounting with the British School of accounting, Douala, and then worked for Guinness Cameroon briefly before leaving for an International transportation company that took him off the shores of Cameroon to Dubai. He returned to Cameroon in the declining days of his father's health; he was enthroned in 2005 upon the death of his father. Though not active in any political party, R.A.M Tebo II is an active member of the Northwest Fons Union (NOWEFU).", "Dobo, The Gambia\n Dobo is a small village located in North Bank, The Gambia, a country in West Africa.", "Nemacheilus tebo\n Nemacheilus tebo is a species of ray-finned fish in the genus Nemacheilus from Kalimantan Timur in Indonesia.", "Zeebo Inc.\n Zeebo Inc. had its headquarters in San Diego, California with offices in São Paulo, Brazil, Mexico City, Mexico and Shanghai, China. Zeebo marketing and development in Brazil are carried out by Zeebo Brasil, Zeebo Inc.'s Brazilian subsidiary. Marketing and development in Mexico was carried out by the Mexican subsidiary Zeebo Mexico. Manufacturing and distribution were provided by regional partners such as Tectoy in Brazil. Wireless bandwidth was provided by telecommunications partners such as Claro in Brazil and Telcel in Mexico. Zeebo also announced an agreement with AT&T in March, 2010. The company has stated that \"The agreement gives us access to AT&T's international roaming network, allowing us to carry out rapid trials of the Zeebo platform in new geographic areas as we establish longer-term agreements with local carriers for deployment of the system. It will also give us a chance to explore opportunities in the US market in the future.\" In June, 2010, it was reported that Zeebo Inc. raised $13.5 million in its latest round of venture funding.", "Tahtay Adiyabo\n Tahtay Adiyabo ( Tigrinya \"Lower Adiyabo\") is one of the Districts of Ethiopia, or woredas, in the Tigray Region of Ethiopia. Part of the Semien Mi'irabawi Zone, Tahtay Adiyabo is bordered on the south by the Asigede Tsimbela, on the southwest by the Tekezé River which separates Tahtay Adiyabo from the Mi'irabawi Zone, on the north by Eritrea, and on the east by La'ilay Adiyabo; part of the northern border with Eritrea is delineated by the Mareb River. The northernmost point of this woreda is the northernmost point of Ethiopia. Towns in this woreda include Addi Awuala and Addi Hageray. The town of Shiraro is surrounded by Tahtay Adiyabo.", "Tebe-Tebe\n Tebe-Tebe is a community council located in the Berea District of Lesotho. Its population in 2006 was 16,533.", "Tetreuaresta deleta\n Brazil.", "Zeebo Inc.\n The company introduced the Zeebo in limited quantities in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on June 1, 2009, with manufacturing and distribution provided by Tectoy. The system went on sale nationwide in Brazil in November the same year. In December, 2009, the Zeebo went on sale nationwide in Mexico.", "ArtBo\n 2005, when Bogotá's chamber of commerce took on the project of strengthening and consolidating the local art scene. ArtBo was created as a nonprofit project to promote Colombia's culture and arts both locally and abroad through the participation of key Colombian art galleries as well as International galleries. It was started by the Colombian Government as a reaction to the ongoing Colombian conflict, as a way to help rebrand Colombia's capitol city as a destination for culture, business, and investment. Since 2012, under the direction of María Paz Gaviria, the fair has grown in size to becoming Latin America's second largest art fair, next to Zona Maco in Mexico. Internationally, ArtBo is sometimes referred to as the \"Art Basel of Latin America\".", "Lubombo Transfrontier Conservation Area\n The Lubombo Transfrontier Conservation Area covers 4195 km2, of which 2783 km2 (66%) is in Mozambique, 1095 km2 (26%) is in South Africa, and 317 km2 (8%) is in Eswatini. It is situated on a low-lying coastal plain between the Lebombo Mountains in the west and the Indian Ocean in the east. The area offers a unique combination of big-game country, extensive wetlands, and beautiful undeveloped coastal areas. It links the Maputo Elephant Reserve in Mozambique through the Futi Corridor and the Lubombo Conservancy in Eswatini to the Tembe Elephant Park in South Africa, creating the first major elephant stronghold along Africa's eastern coastline.", "Tebedu\n🇯🇵 Nemuro, Hokkaido, Japan ", "Teba\n Teba is a town and municipality located in the province of Málaga in the autonomous community of Andalusia in southern Spain. It is situated in the northeast of the province, in Guadalteba comarca. As of 2018, its population is 3,818. The town is the site of the Battle of Teba, which took place in 1330 during the Reconquista. Scottish knight and feudal lord Sir James Douglas was killed at Teba during the same campaign." ]
Who is the author of Challenge?
[ "H. C. McNeile", "Herman Cyril McNeile", "Cyril McNeile", "Sapper" ]
author
Challenge (novel)
1,081,666
77
[ { "id": "25483987", "title": "Book of Challenges", "text": " The book was published as a paperback edition by Wizards of the Coast in June 2002. It was authored by Daniel Kaufman, Gwendolyn F.M. Kestrel, Mike Selinker, and Skip Williams. Cover art was by Todd Lockwood, with interior art by David Day and Wayne Reynolds. Mike Selinker was the lead designer.", "score": "1.5108769" }, { "id": "967845", "title": "The Man and the Challenge", "text": " SOURCE", "score": "1.4932964" }, { "id": "28181558", "title": "The Challenge (novel)", "text": " The Challenge is an Australian novel by E. V. Timms. It was the fifth in his Great South Land Saga of novels. It is set in Australia during the 1850s.", "score": "1.4605044" }, { "id": "32962367", "title": "Challenge (novel)", "text": " Challenge was the tenth and final Bulldog Drummond novel written by H. C. McNeile. It was published in 1935 under McNeile's pen name Sapper.", "score": "1.4525598" }, { "id": "3719741", "title": "The Boozer Challenge", "text": " The Boozer Challenge is a fiction book by author Charles Gill, son of famed New Yorker writer Brendan Gill, and brother of Michael Gates Gill, who wrote How Starbucks Saved My Life. The Boozer Challenge was published in 1987, by Dutton. The story is about four spoiled twenty-something children who are challenged by their billionaire father to earn $100,000 in one year in order to inherit his beautiful Hudson River estate.", "score": "1.4495788" }, { "id": "32956325", "title": "Challenge (economics magazine)", "text": " The magazine was established in 1952 and originally published by the Institute of Economic Affairs (New York University). It ceased publishing in 1967 but was revived in 1973 and published by M. E. Sharpe which was later taken over by Routledge.", "score": "1.4338953" }, { "id": "9717077", "title": "The Leadership Challenge", "text": " The Leadership Challenge is a suite of books, training products and assessments based on the book written by James Kouzes and Barry Z. Posner, published by Wiley. First published in 1987, the book's sixth edition was released in 2017.", "score": "1.4160829" }, { "id": "7067005", "title": "The Challenge (album)", "text": " The Challenge is a solo piano album by Hampton Hawes. It was recorded in 1968 and released by Victor. It was his only solo album.", "score": "1.4064958" }, { "id": "32956324", "title": "Challenge (economics magazine)", "text": " Challenge: The Magazine of Economic Affairs is a bimonthly magazine covering current affairs in economics. It is published by Routledge and the editor-in-chief is Jeff Madrick (The Cooper Union).", "score": "1.3978285" }, { "id": "3085879", "title": "Madeline Levine", "text": " changing world. Her books have been translated into multiple languages. Levine is also a co-founder of Challenge Success, a project at Stanford's Graduate School of Education. Challenge Success believes that our increasingly competitive world has led to tremendous anxiety about our children’s futures and has resulted in a high pressure, myopic focus on grades, test scores and performance. This kind of pressure and narrow focus isn’t helping our kids become the resilient, capable, meaningful contributors we need in the 21st century. Challenge Success provides families and schools with the practical research-based tools they need to raise healthy, motivated kids, capable of reaching their full potential. ", "score": "1.3967524" }, { "id": "12016622", "title": "Dark Challenge", "text": " Dark Challenge is the fifth book in the paranormal romance series Dark Series by American author Christine Feehan. It is the first book in a trilogy written within the Dark Series, and it starts several months after the events in Dark Magic.", "score": "1.383812" }, { "id": "25483984", "title": "Book of Challenges", "text": " Book of Challenges is a supplemental rulebook for the 3rd edition of the Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game that presents a number of ready-made dungeon encounters that a Dungeon Master can insert into a scenario.", "score": "1.3836883" }, { "id": "15683539", "title": "To Challenge Tomorrow", "text": " To Challenge Tomorrow was designed by David F. Nalle, and published by Ragnarok Enterprises in 1983 as a digest-sized box containing a 32-page book, a 32-page book, and a 20-page book, and a sample character sheet.", "score": "1.38273" }, { "id": "15583320", "title": "The Challenge of the Cults and New Religions", "text": " The Challenge of the Cults and New Religions: The Essential Guide to Their History, Their Doctrine, and Our Response is a Christian countercult non-fiction book about cults and new religious movements by Ron Rhodes. The book was published by Zondervan on September 1, 2001. The book defines cults and new religions by examining case studies of twelve groups chosen by Rhodes. The book includes a foreword by Lee Strobel, author of the book The Case for Christ.", "score": "1.3608013" }, { "id": "15399632", "title": "Wizard's Challenge II", "text": " Wizard's Challenge II was written by Kevin Melka, and published by TSR, Inc. It was part of the One-On-One volumes, a series of single-player adventures, which also includes Fighter's Challenge by John Terra and Cleric's Challenge by L. Richard Baker III.", "score": "1.3589578" }, { "id": "5080134", "title": "Massutmaning", "text": " Massutmaning (roughly translated as \"Mass Challenge\") is a self-published, non-fiction book written by Tino Sanandaji. The book has been translated to Norwegian and has been translated into English by Jonas Vesterberg", "score": "1.3577688" }, { "id": "28181559", "title": "The Challenge (novel)", "text": " In 1850s Australia, Miss Susan Leigh searches for her father.", "score": "1.3509839" }, { "id": "7067007", "title": "The Challenge (album)", "text": " The Challenge was released by Victor in Japan. The AllMusic reviewer concluded: \"the pianist shows that he could create stirring music without the assistance of a rhythm section.\" The Penguin Guide to Jazz commented that the album was important for being Hawes's only solo release, and noted that even the unsuccessful performance of \"Clementine\" provided the listener with an insight into \"Hawes's harmonic instincts and his fine structural intelligence.\"", "score": "1.3499677" }, { "id": "5632220", "title": "Steel Trapp: The Challenge", "text": " Steel Trapp: The Challenge is a young adult thriller novel written by Ridley Pearson, published in 2008 in the US by Disney Editions and distributed to Canada. It is also published in the UK by Quercus (publisher) under the shortened title Steel Trapp. The next book in the series is Steel Trapp: The Academy, was published in September 2010.", "score": "1.3474615" }, { "id": "10980234", "title": "Calvin Rutstrum", "text": " This book is a near-duplicate of Challenge of the Wilderness.", "score": "1.3471967" } ]
[ "Book of Challenges\n The book was published as a paperback edition by Wizards of the Coast in June 2002. It was authored by Daniel Kaufman, Gwendolyn F.M. Kestrel, Mike Selinker, and Skip Williams. Cover art was by Todd Lockwood, with interior art by David Day and Wayne Reynolds. Mike Selinker was the lead designer.", "The Man and the Challenge\n SOURCE", "The Challenge (novel)\n The Challenge is an Australian novel by E. V. Timms. It was the fifth in his Great South Land Saga of novels. It is set in Australia during the 1850s.", "Challenge (novel)\n Challenge was the tenth and final Bulldog Drummond novel written by H. C. McNeile. It was published in 1935 under McNeile's pen name Sapper.", "The Boozer Challenge\n The Boozer Challenge is a fiction book by author Charles Gill, son of famed New Yorker writer Brendan Gill, and brother of Michael Gates Gill, who wrote How Starbucks Saved My Life. The Boozer Challenge was published in 1987, by Dutton. The story is about four spoiled twenty-something children who are challenged by their billionaire father to earn $100,000 in one year in order to inherit his beautiful Hudson River estate.", "Challenge (economics magazine)\n The magazine was established in 1952 and originally published by the Institute of Economic Affairs (New York University). It ceased publishing in 1967 but was revived in 1973 and published by M. E. Sharpe which was later taken over by Routledge.", "The Leadership Challenge\n The Leadership Challenge is a suite of books, training products and assessments based on the book written by James Kouzes and Barry Z. Posner, published by Wiley. First published in 1987, the book's sixth edition was released in 2017.", "The Challenge (album)\n The Challenge is a solo piano album by Hampton Hawes. It was recorded in 1968 and released by Victor. It was his only solo album.", "Challenge (economics magazine)\n Challenge: The Magazine of Economic Affairs is a bimonthly magazine covering current affairs in economics. It is published by Routledge and the editor-in-chief is Jeff Madrick (The Cooper Union).", "Madeline Levine\n changing world. Her books have been translated into multiple languages. Levine is also a co-founder of Challenge Success, a project at Stanford's Graduate School of Education. Challenge Success believes that our increasingly competitive world has led to tremendous anxiety about our children’s futures and has resulted in a high pressure, myopic focus on grades, test scores and performance. This kind of pressure and narrow focus isn’t helping our kids become the resilient, capable, meaningful contributors we need in the 21st century. Challenge Success provides families and schools with the practical research-based tools they need to raise healthy, motivated kids, capable of reaching their full potential. ", "Dark Challenge\n Dark Challenge is the fifth book in the paranormal romance series Dark Series by American author Christine Feehan. It is the first book in a trilogy written within the Dark Series, and it starts several months after the events in Dark Magic.", "Book of Challenges\n Book of Challenges is a supplemental rulebook for the 3rd edition of the Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game that presents a number of ready-made dungeon encounters that a Dungeon Master can insert into a scenario.", "To Challenge Tomorrow\n To Challenge Tomorrow was designed by David F. Nalle, and published by Ragnarok Enterprises in 1983 as a digest-sized box containing a 32-page book, a 32-page book, and a 20-page book, and a sample character sheet.", "The Challenge of the Cults and New Religions\n The Challenge of the Cults and New Religions: The Essential Guide to Their History, Their Doctrine, and Our Response is a Christian countercult non-fiction book about cults and new religious movements by Ron Rhodes. The book was published by Zondervan on September 1, 2001. The book defines cults and new religions by examining case studies of twelve groups chosen by Rhodes. The book includes a foreword by Lee Strobel, author of the book The Case for Christ.", "Wizard's Challenge II\n Wizard's Challenge II was written by Kevin Melka, and published by TSR, Inc. It was part of the One-On-One volumes, a series of single-player adventures, which also includes Fighter's Challenge by John Terra and Cleric's Challenge by L. Richard Baker III.", "Massutmaning\n Massutmaning (roughly translated as \"Mass Challenge\") is a self-published, non-fiction book written by Tino Sanandaji. The book has been translated to Norwegian and has been translated into English by Jonas Vesterberg", "The Challenge (novel)\n In 1850s Australia, Miss Susan Leigh searches for her father.", "The Challenge (album)\n The Challenge was released by Victor in Japan. The AllMusic reviewer concluded: \"the pianist shows that he could create stirring music without the assistance of a rhythm section.\" The Penguin Guide to Jazz commented that the album was important for being Hawes's only solo release, and noted that even the unsuccessful performance of \"Clementine\" provided the listener with an insight into \"Hawes's harmonic instincts and his fine structural intelligence.\"", "Steel Trapp: The Challenge\n Steel Trapp: The Challenge is a young adult thriller novel written by Ridley Pearson, published in 2008 in the US by Disney Editions and distributed to Canada. It is also published in the UK by Quercus (publisher) under the shortened title Steel Trapp. The next book in the series is Steel Trapp: The Academy, was published in September 2010.", "Calvin Rutstrum\n This book is a near-duplicate of Challenge of the Wilderness." ]
Who is the author of Prime Time?
[ "Mike Tucker" ]
author
Prime Time (novel)
5,488,469
73
[ { "id": "5722912", "title": "David Zurawik", "text": " Zurawik is the author of The Jews of Prime Time (2003). After that book was published, Zurawik reported that he was working on a biography of Gertrude Berg based on records stored at Syracuse University.", "score": "1.7423515" }, { "id": "14299857", "title": "Prime Time (novel)", "text": " Prime Time is a BBC Books original novel written by Mike Tucker and based on the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. It features the Seventh Doctor and Ace.", "score": "1.6742439" }, { "id": "4472152", "title": "Marlo Lewis", "text": " In 1979, he published, together with his wife, a book entitled Prime Time which includes many backstage stories from the author's times as a producer.", "score": "1.6027747" }, { "id": "14299858", "title": "Prime Time (novel)", "text": " Detecting a mysterious sub-space signal in the Time Vortex, the Doctor and Ace land on the planet 'Blinni Gaar'. They soon discover that the native population are little more than zombies, addicted to the programmes of the dangerously powerful Channel 400. As the Doctor investigates, he finds that the television company has a sinister agenda that has nothing to do with entertainment.", "score": "1.5785078" }, { "id": "15850502", "title": "Prime Time TV", "text": " \"Prime Time TV\" is a song by Polish singer Basia released in 1986 as her debut solo single. It was included on her first album Time and Tide in 1987. The track was written by Basia, Danny White, and Peter Ross of Immaculate Fools, and produced by Danny and Basia.", "score": "1.5508299" }, { "id": "3411548", "title": "Prime Times", "text": " Prime Times is a 1983 American film starring Leslie Nielsen.", "score": "1.5398204" }, { "id": "1364675", "title": "Prime Time (radio program)", "text": " Ralph Benmergui took over as host of both Prime Time and The Entertainers in September 1987, adding a more irreverent and mocking tone to the program; one of his early coups was an interview with David Bowie. Contributors to the program under Benmergui's tenure included Nils Ling as a video reviewer, Edmonton Journal critic Helen Metalla as a record reviewer, Toronto Sun writer Jim Slotek as a television critic, and Geoff Pevere as a film reviewer. Benmergui left the program to become host of Midday in 1989. At this time, Prime Time and The Entertainers were separated, with Karen Gordon taking over as host of The Entertainers.", "score": "1.5274116" }, { "id": "1364674", "title": "Prime Time (radio program)", "text": " The program premiered on September 29, 1986 with host Stan Carew, initially focusing primarily on celebrity interviews and musical guests. It was a companion to Carew's weekend variety series The Entertainers.", "score": "1.5082068" }, { "id": "1949761", "title": "The Jews of Prime Time", "text": " The Jews of Prime Time is a 2003 book by David Zurawik.", "score": "1.5044763" }, { "id": "4539832", "title": "Hank Phillippi Ryan", "text": "Prime Time (2007), Harlequin. ISBN: 978-0-373-88135-2 ; Face Time (2007), Harlequin. ISBN: 978-0-373-88143-7 ; Air Time (2009), Mira. ISBN: 978-0-7783-2719-6 ; Drive Time (2009), Mira. ISBN: 978-0-7783-2797-4 ", "score": "1.5009102" }, { "id": "14736274", "title": "Sally Bedell Smith", "text": " Smith spent her early career working as a reporter for Time, TV Guide, and The New York Times, where she was a lead cultural news reporter, specializing in television. In 1981, Smith published her first book, Up The Tube: Prime-time TV and the Silverman Years, an inside look at the American television industry, its ratings wars of the 1970s, and the meteoric career of Fred Silverman, who famously worked as an executive at all of the Big Three TV networks. She won the Sigma Delta Chi Distinguished Service Award in 1982, and became a fellow at the Freedom Forum Media Studies Center in 1986. In 1996, she joined Vanity Fair as contributing editor, where she remains as of August 2016.", "score": "1.4585536" }, { "id": "25279586", "title": "Paul Preuss (author)", "text": " Paul Preuss (born March 7, 1942 in Albany, Georgia) is an American writer of science fiction and science articles, who also works as a science consultant for film companies. He is the author of numerous stand-alone novels as well as novels in Arthur C. Clarke's Venus Prime series, based upon incidents, characters, and places from Clarke's short stories. Preuss was a consulting editor for the six-book Dr. Bones series (1988-1989) published by Ace Books.", "score": "1.4528215" }, { "id": "1949762", "title": "The Jews of Prime Time", "text": " David Bianculli, a TV critic at the time for National Public Radio’s \"Fresh Air\" and the New York Daily News, wrote in his review, \"(Zurawik's) own thorough and thoroughly entertaining insights about so many TV shows, from 'The Goldbergs' and 'Rhoda' to 'Seinfeld' and 'The Nanny,' make this one of the most important, well-researched and addictively readable television books ever written.\" Book reviewer Joe Rosenberg wrote in the Baltimore Chronicle, \"According to Zurawik, the Jewish heads of pre-cable television at CBS, NBC, and ABC—like the Hollywood moguls of the pre-TV era and the owners of the New York Times and Washington Post—did not want to ‘taint’ their programming with 'Jewishness.'\" The book was reviewed in American Jewish History, Library Journal, Judaism, and The Chronicle of Higher Education.", "score": "1.4423405" }, { "id": "11622932", "title": "Ed Joyce (journalist)", "text": " In 1988, Doubleday published Prime Times Bad Times, Joyce's memoir of his time as president of CBS News. Then-Chicago Sun-Times TV and radio critic Robert Feder reviewed the book in May 1988, calling it an \"unbelievably detailed, if utterly self-serving, record of chaos at CBS from the moment Dan Rather succeeded Walter Cronkite as nightly news anchorman in 1981 until Joyce's downfall.\" Feder also wrote that Joyce was \"widely regarded throughout his career as aloof, arrogant and insensitive to others,\" and that the book did \"little to dispel that reputation despite the familiar alibi that he was only following orders.\" Feder concluded by writing that Joyce \"wastes our time settling old scores and vainly trying to rehabilitate his image.\"", "score": "1.4381433" }, { "id": "1364677", "title": "Prime Time (radio program)", "text": " United States. Noted segments aired on the program during Pevere's tenure included a documentary feature based on Marc Eliot's book Rockonomics, an episode which used the anniversary of John F. Kennedy's assassination to explore the prominence of paranoia and conspiracy themes in pop culture, and a weeklong series on the 50th anniversary of the classic film Citizen Kane which centred on an exclusive interview with the film's editor Robert Wise, by that time one of the last still-living members of the film's cast or crew, about his experiences working with Orson Welles. Pevere reacted negatively when CBC Television announced in 1992 that it was folding The National and The Journal into the new Prime Time News, on the grounds that the new program's title was too similar to Prime Time.", "score": "1.4326333" }, { "id": "29406893", "title": "Prime Time (Australian TV series)", "text": " Prime Time is an Australian soap opera drama television series produced by Crawford Productions that aired on the Nine Network in from January 1986 to January 1987. Prime Time was the last Australian soap produced with exterior location scenes shot on film and interior scenes shot on videotape. The series was not a popular success and was cancelled after sixty episodes.", "score": "1.4294829" }, { "id": "4539829", "title": "Hank Phillippi Ryan", "text": " nominee for Best Contemporary Novel 2015 and an Anthony nominee for Best Novel 2015. Ryan won her third Anthony Award in 2018 for Best Online Content for the Jungle Red Writers Blog; she is a founder and contributor. Her first four mysteries, beginning with the Agatha Award-winning Prime Time, feature Charlotte McNally, a Boston television reporter. Face Time was a BookSense Notable Book, and Air Time and Drive Time were both Anthony and Agatha Award nominees for best novel of 2009 and 2010. The McNally series is now available in all new editions. An award-winning investigative reporter at Boston's WHDH-TV and a television reporter ", "score": "1.4214022" }, { "id": "7142573", "title": "Prime Time Sports", "text": " 4:00–7:00 p.m. Howard Berger was the first producer of Prime Time Sports. Chris Clarke took over one year later and produced the show for eight years. Clarke is to this day the longest serving producer. Others who produced the show include Mike Gentile, Greg Sansone, Mike Damergis and Jeff Azzopardi. Since 2009, the co-hosting duties were usually provided on a weekly basis by either Stephen Brunt from The Globe and Mail newspaper or John Shannon, formerly the executive vice-president of programming and production for the NHL. A past co-host who still appeared regularly on the show was Doug Smith of the Toronto Star. Former ", "score": "1.4169533" }, { "id": "924336", "title": "Prime Time (Canadian TV program)", "text": " Film segments and interviews formed the content of Prime Time. Subjects included Israel's Moshe Dayan, magician Doug Henning and Uganda's Idi Amin. \"Backlot Canada\", a documentary by Peter Rowe, concerned the portrayal of Canada in American feature films. The program also included a satirical examination of Britain by Martyn Burke.", "score": "1.4082335" }, { "id": "3109371", "title": "Al Masini", "text": " launched in May 1977, with Testimony of Two Men, a six-hour series based on Taylor Caldwell’s best-selling novel, debuting on 93 stations. Another early program, David Frost’s conversations with Richard Nixon, drew 45 million viewers. Among the early executives to sign on were Frank Price of Universal Television, who offered the Caldwell novel, and Archa Knowlton, media-services director for General Foods. Operation Prime Time specials include many Emmy Award nominees and several Emmy winners, such as Ingrid Bergman in “A Woman Called Golda,” about Israeli Prime minister Golda Meir; Alec Guinness in “Smiley’s People”; Louis Gossett Jr. in Sadat, a ", "score": "1.4051998" } ]
[ "David Zurawik\n Zurawik is the author of The Jews of Prime Time (2003). After that book was published, Zurawik reported that he was working on a biography of Gertrude Berg based on records stored at Syracuse University.", "Prime Time (novel)\n Prime Time is a BBC Books original novel written by Mike Tucker and based on the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. It features the Seventh Doctor and Ace.", "Marlo Lewis\n In 1979, he published, together with his wife, a book entitled Prime Time which includes many backstage stories from the author's times as a producer.", "Prime Time (novel)\n Detecting a mysterious sub-space signal in the Time Vortex, the Doctor and Ace land on the planet 'Blinni Gaar'. They soon discover that the native population are little more than zombies, addicted to the programmes of the dangerously powerful Channel 400. As the Doctor investigates, he finds that the television company has a sinister agenda that has nothing to do with entertainment.", "Prime Time TV\n \"Prime Time TV\" is a song by Polish singer Basia released in 1986 as her debut solo single. It was included on her first album Time and Tide in 1987. The track was written by Basia, Danny White, and Peter Ross of Immaculate Fools, and produced by Danny and Basia.", "Prime Times\n Prime Times is a 1983 American film starring Leslie Nielsen.", "Prime Time (radio program)\n Ralph Benmergui took over as host of both Prime Time and The Entertainers in September 1987, adding a more irreverent and mocking tone to the program; one of his early coups was an interview with David Bowie. Contributors to the program under Benmergui's tenure included Nils Ling as a video reviewer, Edmonton Journal critic Helen Metalla as a record reviewer, Toronto Sun writer Jim Slotek as a television critic, and Geoff Pevere as a film reviewer. Benmergui left the program to become host of Midday in 1989. At this time, Prime Time and The Entertainers were separated, with Karen Gordon taking over as host of The Entertainers.", "Prime Time (radio program)\n The program premiered on September 29, 1986 with host Stan Carew, initially focusing primarily on celebrity interviews and musical guests. It was a companion to Carew's weekend variety series The Entertainers.", "The Jews of Prime Time\n The Jews of Prime Time is a 2003 book by David Zurawik.", "Hank Phillippi Ryan\nPrime Time (2007), Harlequin. ISBN: 978-0-373-88135-2 ; Face Time (2007), Harlequin. ISBN: 978-0-373-88143-7 ; Air Time (2009), Mira. ISBN: 978-0-7783-2719-6 ; Drive Time (2009), Mira. ISBN: 978-0-7783-2797-4 ", "Sally Bedell Smith\n Smith spent her early career working as a reporter for Time, TV Guide, and The New York Times, where she was a lead cultural news reporter, specializing in television. In 1981, Smith published her first book, Up The Tube: Prime-time TV and the Silverman Years, an inside look at the American television industry, its ratings wars of the 1970s, and the meteoric career of Fred Silverman, who famously worked as an executive at all of the Big Three TV networks. She won the Sigma Delta Chi Distinguished Service Award in 1982, and became a fellow at the Freedom Forum Media Studies Center in 1986. In 1996, she joined Vanity Fair as contributing editor, where she remains as of August 2016.", "Paul Preuss (author)\n Paul Preuss (born March 7, 1942 in Albany, Georgia) is an American writer of science fiction and science articles, who also works as a science consultant for film companies. He is the author of numerous stand-alone novels as well as novels in Arthur C. Clarke's Venus Prime series, based upon incidents, characters, and places from Clarke's short stories. Preuss was a consulting editor for the six-book Dr. Bones series (1988-1989) published by Ace Books.", "The Jews of Prime Time\n David Bianculli, a TV critic at the time for National Public Radio’s \"Fresh Air\" and the New York Daily News, wrote in his review, \"(Zurawik's) own thorough and thoroughly entertaining insights about so many TV shows, from 'The Goldbergs' and 'Rhoda' to 'Seinfeld' and 'The Nanny,' make this one of the most important, well-researched and addictively readable television books ever written.\" Book reviewer Joe Rosenberg wrote in the Baltimore Chronicle, \"According to Zurawik, the Jewish heads of pre-cable television at CBS, NBC, and ABC—like the Hollywood moguls of the pre-TV era and the owners of the New York Times and Washington Post—did not want to ‘taint’ their programming with 'Jewishness.'\" The book was reviewed in American Jewish History, Library Journal, Judaism, and The Chronicle of Higher Education.", "Ed Joyce (journalist)\n In 1988, Doubleday published Prime Times Bad Times, Joyce's memoir of his time as president of CBS News. Then-Chicago Sun-Times TV and radio critic Robert Feder reviewed the book in May 1988, calling it an \"unbelievably detailed, if utterly self-serving, record of chaos at CBS from the moment Dan Rather succeeded Walter Cronkite as nightly news anchorman in 1981 until Joyce's downfall.\" Feder also wrote that Joyce was \"widely regarded throughout his career as aloof, arrogant and insensitive to others,\" and that the book did \"little to dispel that reputation despite the familiar alibi that he was only following orders.\" Feder concluded by writing that Joyce \"wastes our time settling old scores and vainly trying to rehabilitate his image.\"", "Prime Time (radio program)\n United States. Noted segments aired on the program during Pevere's tenure included a documentary feature based on Marc Eliot's book Rockonomics, an episode which used the anniversary of John F. Kennedy's assassination to explore the prominence of paranoia and conspiracy themes in pop culture, and a weeklong series on the 50th anniversary of the classic film Citizen Kane which centred on an exclusive interview with the film's editor Robert Wise, by that time one of the last still-living members of the film's cast or crew, about his experiences working with Orson Welles. Pevere reacted negatively when CBC Television announced in 1992 that it was folding The National and The Journal into the new Prime Time News, on the grounds that the new program's title was too similar to Prime Time.", "Prime Time (Australian TV series)\n Prime Time is an Australian soap opera drama television series produced by Crawford Productions that aired on the Nine Network in from January 1986 to January 1987. Prime Time was the last Australian soap produced with exterior location scenes shot on film and interior scenes shot on videotape. The series was not a popular success and was cancelled after sixty episodes.", "Hank Phillippi Ryan\n nominee for Best Contemporary Novel 2015 and an Anthony nominee for Best Novel 2015. Ryan won her third Anthony Award in 2018 for Best Online Content for the Jungle Red Writers Blog; she is a founder and contributor. Her first four mysteries, beginning with the Agatha Award-winning Prime Time, feature Charlotte McNally, a Boston television reporter. Face Time was a BookSense Notable Book, and Air Time and Drive Time were both Anthony and Agatha Award nominees for best novel of 2009 and 2010. The McNally series is now available in all new editions. An award-winning investigative reporter at Boston's WHDH-TV and a television reporter ", "Prime Time Sports\n 4:00–7:00 p.m. Howard Berger was the first producer of Prime Time Sports. Chris Clarke took over one year later and produced the show for eight years. Clarke is to this day the longest serving producer. Others who produced the show include Mike Gentile, Greg Sansone, Mike Damergis and Jeff Azzopardi. Since 2009, the co-hosting duties were usually provided on a weekly basis by either Stephen Brunt from The Globe and Mail newspaper or John Shannon, formerly the executive vice-president of programming and production for the NHL. A past co-host who still appeared regularly on the show was Doug Smith of the Toronto Star. Former ", "Prime Time (Canadian TV program)\n Film segments and interviews formed the content of Prime Time. Subjects included Israel's Moshe Dayan, magician Doug Henning and Uganda's Idi Amin. \"Backlot Canada\", a documentary by Peter Rowe, concerned the portrayal of Canada in American feature films. The program also included a satirical examination of Britain by Martyn Burke.", "Al Masini\n launched in May 1977, with Testimony of Two Men, a six-hour series based on Taylor Caldwell’s best-selling novel, debuting on 93 stations. Another early program, David Frost’s conversations with Richard Nixon, drew 45 million viewers. Among the early executives to sign on were Frank Price of Universal Television, who offered the Caldwell novel, and Archa Knowlton, media-services director for General Foods. Operation Prime Time specials include many Emmy Award nominees and several Emmy winners, such as Ingrid Bergman in “A Woman Called Golda,” about Israeli Prime minister Golda Meir; Alec Guinness in “Smiley’s People”; Louis Gossett Jr. in Sadat, a " ]
In what city was Gerard Thomas born?
[ "Antwerp", "Antwerpen", "City of Antwerp", "Anvers" ]
place of birth
Gerard Thomas
2,167,964
97
[ { "id": "8366339", "title": "Gérard Besson", "text": " Gérard was born on 20 January 1942 in Port of Spain as the only child of Joseph and Margaret Besson. His father was a white plantation overseer, his coloured mother worked in the oil industry. After the early separation of his parents, he grew up in the Catholic, Patois-speaking household of his maternal grandmother. After elementary school, he attended St. Thomas High School in Belmont until the age of 15 when he started working in insurance and in manufacturing companies. After he received an inheritance on the death of his grandmother he travelled to Europe and Great Britain where he unavailingly tried to gain ground as a painter and writer. After his return to Trinidad, he worked as ", "score": "1.6828208" }, { "id": "27406266", "title": "Thomas Gerard (historian)", "text": " He was born at Trent, in Somerset, in 1593 and was educated at Gloucester Hall, Oxford.", "score": "1.6480589" }, { "id": "16397780", "title": "Don Gerard", "text": " Gerard was born October 31, 1965 in Chicago, Illinois. He moved to Champaign, Illinois in 1968, where he attained the rank of Eagle Scout in local Boy Scout Troop 7. He attended the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign but did not complete his studies. Prior to serving as mayor, he began a job as a facilities manager at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign where he continues to work.", "score": "1.6122988" }, { "id": "15360267", "title": "Bumi Thomas", "text": " Thomas was born in Glasgow in June 1983.", "score": "1.6063199" }, { "id": "27527397", "title": "Gerard Thomas", "text": " Gerard Thomas (1663–1721) was a late Flemish Baroque painter who specialized in studio and picture gallery interiors. He became a master in Antwerp's Guild of St. Luke in 1688–89, and was dean twice. Many of his paintings reflect a trend in Antwerp painting around 1700 that shows artists—often historical masters from earlier in the century like Peter Paul Rubens, Anthony van Dyck or Jacob Jordaens—in their studios, surrounded by paintings and sculptures, and teaching the craft to a young apprentice. The masters are often only hinted by the works of art pictured in the painting itself, however.", "score": "1.6024529" }, { "id": "9144862", "title": "Alma Thomas House", "text": " Built in 1875, by Thomas G. Allen, the Italianate row house was the residence and studio of noted African-American artist Alma Thomas (1892–1978). Rosa Douglass Sprague, daughter to Frederick Douglass, lived at 1530 15th Street, before Alma Thomas's parents moved in, in 1907. Noted African American artist Alma Thomas lived in the home until her death in 1978 along with a sister, J. Maurice Thomas. John Maurice Thomas, who was named for their father, lived at the home until her death in 2004, and the home passed to a nephew, who later sold the home. The building is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and is a contributing property to the Greater Fourteenth Street Historic District.", "score": "1.592786" }, { "id": "526472", "title": "Jack N. Gerard", "text": " Gerard was raised in Mud Lake, Idaho. His father was a salesman of John Deere tractors. For a year out of high school Gerard was a student at the University of Idaho. He then served as a missionary for the LDS Church in Sydney, Australia. He later graduated from George Washington University (GWU).", "score": "1.5831301" }, { "id": "32512823", "title": "Gerald Thomas (theatre director)", "text": " Gerald Thomas Sievers, best known as simply Gerald Thomas (born July 1, 1954, Rio de Janeiro ) is a theatre and opera director and playwright who has spent his life in the United States, England, Brazil and Germany. After graduating as a reader of philosophy at the British Museum Reading Room, Thomas began his life in the theater at Ellen Stewart's La MaMa E.T.C. in New York City. During this period Thomas became an illustrator for the Op-Ed page of the New York Times while conducting workshops at La MaMa E.T.C. where he adapted and directed world premieres of Samuel Beckett's prose and dramatic pieces. In the early 80s, Thomas began working with Beckett himself in Paris ", "score": "1.5819395" }, { "id": "3463656", "title": "Christopher Gérard", "text": " Christopher Gérard was born to an Irish mother and a Belgian father. At age twelve, he was the youngest member of a team of archeologists who searched a Merovingian necropolis in the Ardennes. He studied classical philology at the Université libre de Bruxelles. He became a language teacher by profession.", "score": "1.5778158" }, { "id": "1116591", "title": "Robin Thomas", "text": " Born in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, Thomas attended the Mercersburg Academy and graduated in 1967. Thomas earned a BFA from Carnegie-Mellon University where he was accepted into the drama department as an actor. Transitioning in his junior year to the Sociology department, he graduated from the Art department with a major in sculpture. Upon graduation he moved to New York. Thomas spent his early years in New York as a carpenter, specializing in renovations of restaurants and apartments. He also worked as a sculptor, creating kinetic works employing plexiglas, stainless steel, teflon, water, oil, air, pumps, motors, and lights. His works were exhibited at the Huntsville Museum of Art, The Three Rivers Arts Festival, and at various galleries in SoHo. He was invited to create works for Tiffany's windows for two consecutive years. While in New York, he also started a construction company renovating lofts and apartments to augment his income as an artist.", "score": "1.5766864" }, { "id": "12815959", "title": "Gerard", "text": "Gerard Joling (born 1960), Dutch pop singer ; Gerard Mortier (1943–2014), Belgian opera director and administrator ; Gerard Nolan (1946–1992), American rock drummer ; Gerard Schwarz (born 1947), American conductor ; Gerard Way (born 1977), American singer-songwriter and comic book writer ", "score": "1.5482645" }, { "id": "15098937", "title": "Sir Thomas Gerard, 1st Baronet", "text": " Sir Thomas Gerard, 1st Baronet (1560 – 16 February 1621) was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons at various times between 1597 and 1621. Gerard was the son of Sir Thomas Gerard, of Bryn Hall and his wife Elizabeth Port, daughter of Sir John Port, of Etwall, Derbyshire. His brother Fr. John Gerard, was later ordained a Roman Catholic priest of the Society of Jesus and operated an underground ministry in Elizabethan England. Thomas Gerard matriculated at Brasenose College, Oxford on 20 July 1578, aged 18. In 1579 he was a student of the Inner Temple. His parents and brother John were Catholics and ", "score": "1.5471964" }, { "id": "2691039", "title": "Thomas Gerard, 1st Baron Gerard", "text": " Thomas Gerard, 1st Baron Gerard (c. 1564 – 15 January 1618) was a Staffordshire and Lancashire landowner and politician, a member of six English parliaments for three different constituencies. Although a prominent member of the Essex faction in the reign of Elizabeth I, he avoided involvement in the Essex Rebellion and received greater honours, including a peerage, in the reign of James I.", "score": "1.5460274" }, { "id": "27406270", "title": "Thomas Gerard (historian)", "text": "Thomas Gerard of Trent, 2011 article, Dorset Ancestors website ", "score": "1.5392942" }, { "id": "2691040", "title": "Thomas Gerard, 1st Baron Gerard", "text": "Sir Gilbert Gerard of Ince, Lancashire, and Gerrard's Bromley, Staffordshire. Gilbert was a distinguished barrister who was appointed Attorney General at the beginning of Elizabeth's reign and held the post for more than 22 years, until he was appointed Master of the Rolls in 1581. He was an important figure in the imposition of the Elizabethan Religious Settlement. ; Anne Ratcliffe, daughter of Thomas Ratcliffe of Winmarleigh, Lancashire. An heiress who brought considerable wealth to the marriage, her wardship was held by Sir John Holcroft, Gilbert Gerard's uncle, who arranged the marriage. Like many of the Lancashire gentry, she remained a Catholic to the end of her life. Thomas Gerard's parents were: Thomas Gerard was educated privately by a Thomas Taylor. It is thought his childhood was spent in the south of England, as he was described as coming from Harrow on the Hill at his admission to Caius College, Cambridge, in 1580, aged 16. He was first returned to the House of Commons of England aged only 20, as member for Lancaster.", "score": "1.5382009" }, { "id": "27433299", "title": "Michel Thomas", "text": " Thomas was born in Łódź, Poland, to a wealthy Jewish family who owned textile factories. When he was seven years old, his parents sent him to Breslau, Germany (now Wrocław, Poland), where he fitted in comfortably. The rise of the Nazis drove him to leave for the University of Bordeaux in France in 1933, and subsequently the Sorbonne and the University of Vienna.", "score": "1.5381305" }, { "id": "29272925", "title": "Regis Deon Thomas", "text": " Thomas was born on June 16, 1970. He was the oldest of four children and grew up in South-Central Los Angeles. He was a member of the Bounty Hunter Bloods street gang, a Bloods subset based out of Watts, Los Angeles, California. Thomas was convicted of perjury in 1990. He had once worked at a liquor store as a security guard, but the building was burned down during the 1992 Los Angeles riots, resulting in Thomas being out of work for a year.", "score": "1.5377901" }, { "id": "24953795", "title": "Jay Thomas", "text": " Thomas was born in Kermit, Texas, to Katharine (née Guzzino) and Timothy Harry Terrell. He was raised in his Italian American mother's Catholic religion; his father was Protestant. Thomas was raised in New Orleans, where he attended and graduated from Jesuit High School. He went on to attend and graduate from Jacksonville University. Thomas was the quarterback on his high-school football team and also quarterbacked in college, a skill he later used on The Late Show with David Letterman.", "score": "1.5367613" }, { "id": "27269379", "title": "Leo Gerard", "text": " Gerard was born in 1947 in Creighton Mine, Ontario, at the time an unincorporated suburb of Sudbury. His father, Wilfred Gerard, was a miner at the Creighton Mine and a key organizer with the International Mine Mill and Smelter Workers' Union (which merged with the United Steelworkers in 1967). He grew up in Sudbury. Taught that unions were supposed to be engaged on social issues and not just collective bargaining, Gerard often listened in on union meetings conducted in the family home. He handed out leaflets on the eve of a strike at the age of 11, and accompanied his father on a union organizing drive at the age ", "score": "1.5350221" }, { "id": "26241635", "title": "Olivier Thomas", "text": " Thomas was born in Saint-Denis, Paris. He counts Le Mans UC 72, AS Nancy, Troyes AC, FC Nantes Atlantique and AC Ajaccio as his former clubs.", "score": "1.5325191" } ]
[ "Gérard Besson\n Gérard was born on 20 January 1942 in Port of Spain as the only child of Joseph and Margaret Besson. His father was a white plantation overseer, his coloured mother worked in the oil industry. After the early separation of his parents, he grew up in the Catholic, Patois-speaking household of his maternal grandmother. After elementary school, he attended St. Thomas High School in Belmont until the age of 15 when he started working in insurance and in manufacturing companies. After he received an inheritance on the death of his grandmother he travelled to Europe and Great Britain where he unavailingly tried to gain ground as a painter and writer. After his return to Trinidad, he worked as ", "Thomas Gerard (historian)\n He was born at Trent, in Somerset, in 1593 and was educated at Gloucester Hall, Oxford.", "Don Gerard\n Gerard was born October 31, 1965 in Chicago, Illinois. He moved to Champaign, Illinois in 1968, where he attained the rank of Eagle Scout in local Boy Scout Troop 7. He attended the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign but did not complete his studies. Prior to serving as mayor, he began a job as a facilities manager at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign where he continues to work.", "Bumi Thomas\n Thomas was born in Glasgow in June 1983.", "Gerard Thomas\n Gerard Thomas (1663–1721) was a late Flemish Baroque painter who specialized in studio and picture gallery interiors. He became a master in Antwerp's Guild of St. Luke in 1688–89, and was dean twice. Many of his paintings reflect a trend in Antwerp painting around 1700 that shows artists—often historical masters from earlier in the century like Peter Paul Rubens, Anthony van Dyck or Jacob Jordaens—in their studios, surrounded by paintings and sculptures, and teaching the craft to a young apprentice. The masters are often only hinted by the works of art pictured in the painting itself, however.", "Alma Thomas House\n Built in 1875, by Thomas G. Allen, the Italianate row house was the residence and studio of noted African-American artist Alma Thomas (1892–1978). Rosa Douglass Sprague, daughter to Frederick Douglass, lived at 1530 15th Street, before Alma Thomas's parents moved in, in 1907. Noted African American artist Alma Thomas lived in the home until her death in 1978 along with a sister, J. Maurice Thomas. John Maurice Thomas, who was named for their father, lived at the home until her death in 2004, and the home passed to a nephew, who later sold the home. The building is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and is a contributing property to the Greater Fourteenth Street Historic District.", "Jack N. Gerard\n Gerard was raised in Mud Lake, Idaho. His father was a salesman of John Deere tractors. For a year out of high school Gerard was a student at the University of Idaho. He then served as a missionary for the LDS Church in Sydney, Australia. He later graduated from George Washington University (GWU).", "Gerald Thomas (theatre director)\n Gerald Thomas Sievers, best known as simply Gerald Thomas (born July 1, 1954, Rio de Janeiro ) is a theatre and opera director and playwright who has spent his life in the United States, England, Brazil and Germany. After graduating as a reader of philosophy at the British Museum Reading Room, Thomas began his life in the theater at Ellen Stewart's La MaMa E.T.C. in New York City. During this period Thomas became an illustrator for the Op-Ed page of the New York Times while conducting workshops at La MaMa E.T.C. where he adapted and directed world premieres of Samuel Beckett's prose and dramatic pieces. In the early 80s, Thomas began working with Beckett himself in Paris ", "Christopher Gérard\n Christopher Gérard was born to an Irish mother and a Belgian father. At age twelve, he was the youngest member of a team of archeologists who searched a Merovingian necropolis in the Ardennes. He studied classical philology at the Université libre de Bruxelles. He became a language teacher by profession.", "Robin Thomas\n Born in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, Thomas attended the Mercersburg Academy and graduated in 1967. Thomas earned a BFA from Carnegie-Mellon University where he was accepted into the drama department as an actor. Transitioning in his junior year to the Sociology department, he graduated from the Art department with a major in sculpture. Upon graduation he moved to New York. Thomas spent his early years in New York as a carpenter, specializing in renovations of restaurants and apartments. He also worked as a sculptor, creating kinetic works employing plexiglas, stainless steel, teflon, water, oil, air, pumps, motors, and lights. His works were exhibited at the Huntsville Museum of Art, The Three Rivers Arts Festival, and at various galleries in SoHo. He was invited to create works for Tiffany's windows for two consecutive years. While in New York, he also started a construction company renovating lofts and apartments to augment his income as an artist.", "Gerard\nGerard Joling (born 1960), Dutch pop singer ; Gerard Mortier (1943–2014), Belgian opera director and administrator ; Gerard Nolan (1946–1992), American rock drummer ; Gerard Schwarz (born 1947), American conductor ; Gerard Way (born 1977), American singer-songwriter and comic book writer ", "Sir Thomas Gerard, 1st Baronet\n Sir Thomas Gerard, 1st Baronet (1560 – 16 February 1621) was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons at various times between 1597 and 1621. Gerard was the son of Sir Thomas Gerard, of Bryn Hall and his wife Elizabeth Port, daughter of Sir John Port, of Etwall, Derbyshire. His brother Fr. John Gerard, was later ordained a Roman Catholic priest of the Society of Jesus and operated an underground ministry in Elizabethan England. Thomas Gerard matriculated at Brasenose College, Oxford on 20 July 1578, aged 18. In 1579 he was a student of the Inner Temple. His parents and brother John were Catholics and ", "Thomas Gerard, 1st Baron Gerard\n Thomas Gerard, 1st Baron Gerard (c. 1564 – 15 January 1618) was a Staffordshire and Lancashire landowner and politician, a member of six English parliaments for three different constituencies. Although a prominent member of the Essex faction in the reign of Elizabeth I, he avoided involvement in the Essex Rebellion and received greater honours, including a peerage, in the reign of James I.", "Thomas Gerard (historian)\nThomas Gerard of Trent, 2011 article, Dorset Ancestors website ", "Thomas Gerard, 1st Baron Gerard\nSir Gilbert Gerard of Ince, Lancashire, and Gerrard's Bromley, Staffordshire. Gilbert was a distinguished barrister who was appointed Attorney General at the beginning of Elizabeth's reign and held the post for more than 22 years, until he was appointed Master of the Rolls in 1581. He was an important figure in the imposition of the Elizabethan Religious Settlement. ; Anne Ratcliffe, daughter of Thomas Ratcliffe of Winmarleigh, Lancashire. An heiress who brought considerable wealth to the marriage, her wardship was held by Sir John Holcroft, Gilbert Gerard's uncle, who arranged the marriage. Like many of the Lancashire gentry, she remained a Catholic to the end of her life. Thomas Gerard's parents were: Thomas Gerard was educated privately by a Thomas Taylor. It is thought his childhood was spent in the south of England, as he was described as coming from Harrow on the Hill at his admission to Caius College, Cambridge, in 1580, aged 16. He was first returned to the House of Commons of England aged only 20, as member for Lancaster.", "Michel Thomas\n Thomas was born in Łódź, Poland, to a wealthy Jewish family who owned textile factories. When he was seven years old, his parents sent him to Breslau, Germany (now Wrocław, Poland), where he fitted in comfortably. The rise of the Nazis drove him to leave for the University of Bordeaux in France in 1933, and subsequently the Sorbonne and the University of Vienna.", "Regis Deon Thomas\n Thomas was born on June 16, 1970. He was the oldest of four children and grew up in South-Central Los Angeles. He was a member of the Bounty Hunter Bloods street gang, a Bloods subset based out of Watts, Los Angeles, California. Thomas was convicted of perjury in 1990. He had once worked at a liquor store as a security guard, but the building was burned down during the 1992 Los Angeles riots, resulting in Thomas being out of work for a year.", "Jay Thomas\n Thomas was born in Kermit, Texas, to Katharine (née Guzzino) and Timothy Harry Terrell. He was raised in his Italian American mother's Catholic religion; his father was Protestant. Thomas was raised in New Orleans, where he attended and graduated from Jesuit High School. He went on to attend and graduate from Jacksonville University. Thomas was the quarterback on his high-school football team and also quarterbacked in college, a skill he later used on The Late Show with David Letterman.", "Leo Gerard\n Gerard was born in 1947 in Creighton Mine, Ontario, at the time an unincorporated suburb of Sudbury. His father, Wilfred Gerard, was a miner at the Creighton Mine and a key organizer with the International Mine Mill and Smelter Workers' Union (which merged with the United Steelworkers in 1967). He grew up in Sudbury. Taught that unions were supposed to be engaged on social issues and not just collective bargaining, Gerard often listened in on union meetings conducted in the family home. He handed out leaflets on the eve of a strike at the age of 11, and accompanied his father on a union organizing drive at the age ", "Olivier Thomas\n Thomas was born in Saint-Denis, Paris. He counts Le Mans UC 72, AS Nancy, Troyes AC, FC Nantes Atlantique and AC Ajaccio as his former clubs." ]
What sport does Matteo Pivotto play?
[ "association football", "football", "soccer" ]
sport
Matteo Pivotto
2,876,696
61
[ { "id": "31636643", "title": "Matteo Pivotto", "text": " Matteo Pivotto (born September 5, 1974 in Montecchio Maggiore) is an Italian professional football player. He spent 6 seasons (70 games, 2 goals) in the Serie A for A.S. Roma, U.S. Lecce and Modena F.C.", "score": "1.9606993" }, { "id": "3472180", "title": "Matteo Mazzantini", "text": " Matteo Mazzantini (born Livorno, 24 October 1976) is an Italian rugby union footballer. His position in the field is as a scrum-half. He played for Benetton Treviso (1996–2002), Rugby Rovigo (2002–2003), Arix Viadana (2003–2006) and SKG Gran Parma (2006- current). Mazzantini had his first cap for Italy at 5 February 2000, in a 34-20 win over Scotland. He played at the Six Nations in 2001, 2002 and 2003. He was capped twice at the 2003 Rugby World Cup finals. He was awarded nine caps for his national team. Mazzantini is married with Elisa Facchini, a veterinary surgeon who also plays as wing for Italy women's national rugby union team and the Red Panthers, Benetton Treviso's female team.", "score": "1.7417893" }, { "id": "2552682", "title": "Matteo Panunzi", "text": " Matteo Panunzi (Rome, 12 May 1997) is an Italian rugby union player. His usual position is as a Scrum-Half and he currently plays for Petrarca Padova in Top12. For 2015–16 Pro12 season, he named like Permit Player for Zebre. In 2016 and 2017, Panunzi was named in the Italy Under 20 squad.", "score": "1.6917236" }, { "id": "31429136", "title": "Matteo Barbini", "text": " Matteo Barbini (born 8 June 1982 in Venice) is an Italian rugby union player. His usual position is in the centres. He plays for English National Division One club Esher RFC, although is yet to represent them in the league due to a long-standing injury suffered pre-season. He has previously played for Italian club Benetton Treviso, and been capped for the national team, and was a part of their squad at the 2003 Rugby World Cup in Australia. Barbini represented Italy at the under-21 Six Nations competition during 2002, and had subsequently moved up into the senior national side by the following summer for the Test matches in New ", "score": "1.6859316" }, { "id": "25226038", "title": "Matteo Sereni", "text": " He was internationally selected at the age of 16 for the Italian national under-17 team, and played for the Italian national under-23 team at the 1997 Mediterranean Games, where Italy were champions.", "score": "1.6754167" }, { "id": "2845560", "title": "Matteo Muccignat", "text": " Matteo Muccignat (Pordenone, 8 August 1985) is a retired Italian rugby union player. His usual position was as a Prop and he played for Valorugby Emilia in Top12. Until 2015–16 Pro12 season he played for Benetton Treviso. In 2010 Muccignat was also named in the Italy A squad for 2010 IRB Nations Cup.", "score": "1.665854" }, { "id": "31269261", "title": "Matteo Piano", "text": " Matteo Piano (born 24 October 1990) is an Italian volleyball player, a member of Italy men's national volleyball team and Revivre Milano. Matteo Piano has a standing reach of 209 cm. He was silver medalist at the 2016 Olympics and the 2015 World Cup, silver medalist at the European Championship 2013, and bronze medalist of the World League (2013, 2014).", "score": "1.6514585" }, { "id": "13543098", "title": "Matteo Franchetti", "text": " Matteo Franchetti (born 3 May 1996) also known as “Big-Pippo18” is an Italian football player. He plays for US Arcella.", "score": "1.6416259" }, { "id": "32779715", "title": "Matteo Zanusso", "text": " Matteo Zanusso (born 9 April 1993) is an Italian rugby union player who plays as a Prop. He currently competes for Benetton in the Pro14. Born in San Dona di Piave, Matteo played locally for San Dona rugby club, which is known for its youth academy. Later he joined the first team, of which in his first year, the club achieved promotion to the National Championship of Excellence. In summer 2014, he joined Benetton Treviso, later fellow San Dona team member Amar Kudin, joined as well.", "score": "1.6397369" }, { "id": "32407526", "title": "Matteo Falsaperla", "text": " Matteo Flasaperla (Roma, 5 May 1990) is an Italian rugby union player. His usual position is as a Fullback and he currently plays for Mogliano in Top10. From 2019 to 2021, he played for Valorugby Emilia in Top12. From 2013 to 2018 Falsaperla was part of the Italy Sevens squad.", "score": "1.639721" }, { "id": "5080042", "title": "Matteo Aicardi", "text": " Matteo Aicardi (born 19 April 1986) is an Italian water polo center forward. He won the world title in 2011 and two medals at the 2012 and 2016 Olympics. In 2012 he was awarded the Gold Collar of Sporting Merit from the Italian Olympic Committee.", "score": "1.6384841" }, { "id": "5587710", "title": "Matteo Ferro", "text": " Matteo Ferro (Rovigo, 9 July 1992) is an Italian rugby union player. His usual position is as a Flanker and he currently plays for Rovigo Delta in Top12 with the role of Captain. In 2012, Ferro was named in the Italy Under 20 squad and in 2014 he was also named in Emerging Italy squad for 2014 IRB Tbilisi Cup", "score": "1.6271555" }, { "id": "2166532", "title": "Andrea Lovotti", "text": " Andrea Lovotti (born 28 July 1989) is an Italian rugby union player who plays as a Prop. He currently plays for Zebre in the Pro14. He grew up in the youth sporting team of Piacenza Gossolengo, in 2008-09 season he passed to Rugby Calvisano. After beginning down the ranks of the Italian system he returned to his previous youth club Calvisano at the top flight of the National Championship of Excellence where he immediately won the title of Champion of Italy and the Excellence Trophy. In May 2014, it was announced that he moved to Zebre. In 2009 Lovotti was named in the Italy Under 20 ", "score": "1.6144947" }, { "id": "31234038", "title": "Matteo Corazzi", "text": " Matteo Corazzi (born 10 September 1994) is an Italian rugby union player. His usual position is as a Flanker. He played for Mogliano in Top12 from 2013 to 2021. From 2015 to 2017 Corazzi was named in the Emerging Italy squad for the annual World Rugby Nations Cup.", "score": "1.6022098" }, { "id": "3600148", "title": "Matteo Cornelli", "text": " Matteo Cornelli (Piacenza, 6 June 1995) is an Italian rugby union player. His usual position is as a Flanker and he currently plays for Fiamme Oro in Top12. In 2016–17 Pro12 season, he was named Additional Player for Zebre. After playing for Italy Under 20 in 2014 and 2015, in 2018 Cornelli also was named in the Emerging Italy squad.", "score": "1.5994982" }, { "id": "27802651", "title": "Matteo Barbini (footballer)", "text": " Born in Venice, Barbini started playing football with local team Sesto Bagnarola at the age of 5, before joining Sanvitese at the age of 10 and then moving to Treviso at the age of 15. In August 2009, aged 18, he was signed by Serie A club Milan and spent one season in the club's youth system.", "score": "1.598811" }, { "id": "12561299", "title": "Matteo Piscopo", "text": " Matteo Piscopo (born 9 August 1954) is a Canadian retired international soccer player.", "score": "1.5941545" }, { "id": "5441838", "title": "Matteo Canali", "text": " Matteo Canali (Marino, 11 September 1998) is an Italian rugby union player. His usual position is as a Lock and he currently plays for Petrarca Padova in Top10. For 2020–21 Pro14 season, he was named as Permit Player for Benetton Rugby. In 2018 Canali was named in the Italy Under 20 squad. On the 14 October 2021, he was selected by Alessandro Troncon to be part of an Italy A 28-man squad and on 8 December he was named in Emerging Italy 27-man squad for the 2021 end-of-year rugby union internationals.", "score": "1.5919198" }, { "id": "31269262", "title": "Matteo Piano", "text": " He debuted with the Italy men's national volleyball team in 2013. In 2013 Italy, including Piano, won bronze medal of World League. In the same year he achieved silver medal of European Championship. In 2014 he and his Italian teammates won bronze of World League held in Florence, Italy.", "score": "1.5878475" }, { "id": "1989109", "title": "Andrea Pratichetti", "text": " Andrea Pratichetti (born 26 November 1988) is an Italian rugby union player who currently plays for Mogliano as a centre in Top12. Pratichetti was raised at Rugby Roma, where his uncle Carlo was a player and then a coach. Andrea was then passed on to UR Capitolina's youth team, before being hired as a professional by Calvisano. At Calvisano he played alongside is older brother and Italian international Matteo. Andrea then joined Rovigo for a year, before signing for Treviso in 2010. He played for Benetton from 2010 to 2017. He debuted for the Italian national rugby union team in 2012 against Canada. From 2017 he is also part of the Italy Sevens squad also to participate at the Qualifying Tournament for the 2020 Summer Olympics and the 2020 World Rugby Sevens Challenger Series.", "score": "1.5786239" } ]
[ "Matteo Pivotto\n Matteo Pivotto (born September 5, 1974 in Montecchio Maggiore) is an Italian professional football player. He spent 6 seasons (70 games, 2 goals) in the Serie A for A.S. Roma, U.S. Lecce and Modena F.C.", "Matteo Mazzantini\n Matteo Mazzantini (born Livorno, 24 October 1976) is an Italian rugby union footballer. His position in the field is as a scrum-half. He played for Benetton Treviso (1996–2002), Rugby Rovigo (2002–2003), Arix Viadana (2003–2006) and SKG Gran Parma (2006- current). Mazzantini had his first cap for Italy at 5 February 2000, in a 34-20 win over Scotland. He played at the Six Nations in 2001, 2002 and 2003. He was capped twice at the 2003 Rugby World Cup finals. He was awarded nine caps for his national team. Mazzantini is married with Elisa Facchini, a veterinary surgeon who also plays as wing for Italy women's national rugby union team and the Red Panthers, Benetton Treviso's female team.", "Matteo Panunzi\n Matteo Panunzi (Rome, 12 May 1997) is an Italian rugby union player. His usual position is as a Scrum-Half and he currently plays for Petrarca Padova in Top12. For 2015–16 Pro12 season, he named like Permit Player for Zebre. In 2016 and 2017, Panunzi was named in the Italy Under 20 squad.", "Matteo Barbini\n Matteo Barbini (born 8 June 1982 in Venice) is an Italian rugby union player. His usual position is in the centres. He plays for English National Division One club Esher RFC, although is yet to represent them in the league due to a long-standing injury suffered pre-season. He has previously played for Italian club Benetton Treviso, and been capped for the national team, and was a part of their squad at the 2003 Rugby World Cup in Australia. Barbini represented Italy at the under-21 Six Nations competition during 2002, and had subsequently moved up into the senior national side by the following summer for the Test matches in New ", "Matteo Sereni\n He was internationally selected at the age of 16 for the Italian national under-17 team, and played for the Italian national under-23 team at the 1997 Mediterranean Games, where Italy were champions.", "Matteo Muccignat\n Matteo Muccignat (Pordenone, 8 August 1985) is a retired Italian rugby union player. His usual position was as a Prop and he played for Valorugby Emilia in Top12. Until 2015–16 Pro12 season he played for Benetton Treviso. In 2010 Muccignat was also named in the Italy A squad for 2010 IRB Nations Cup.", "Matteo Piano\n Matteo Piano (born 24 October 1990) is an Italian volleyball player, a member of Italy men's national volleyball team and Revivre Milano. Matteo Piano has a standing reach of 209 cm. He was silver medalist at the 2016 Olympics and the 2015 World Cup, silver medalist at the European Championship 2013, and bronze medalist of the World League (2013, 2014).", "Matteo Franchetti\n Matteo Franchetti (born 3 May 1996) also known as “Big-Pippo18” is an Italian football player. He plays for US Arcella.", "Matteo Zanusso\n Matteo Zanusso (born 9 April 1993) is an Italian rugby union player who plays as a Prop. He currently competes for Benetton in the Pro14. Born in San Dona di Piave, Matteo played locally for San Dona rugby club, which is known for its youth academy. Later he joined the first team, of which in his first year, the club achieved promotion to the National Championship of Excellence. In summer 2014, he joined Benetton Treviso, later fellow San Dona team member Amar Kudin, joined as well.", "Matteo Falsaperla\n Matteo Flasaperla (Roma, 5 May 1990) is an Italian rugby union player. His usual position is as a Fullback and he currently plays for Mogliano in Top10. From 2019 to 2021, he played for Valorugby Emilia in Top12. From 2013 to 2018 Falsaperla was part of the Italy Sevens squad.", "Matteo Aicardi\n Matteo Aicardi (born 19 April 1986) is an Italian water polo center forward. He won the world title in 2011 and two medals at the 2012 and 2016 Olympics. In 2012 he was awarded the Gold Collar of Sporting Merit from the Italian Olympic Committee.", "Matteo Ferro\n Matteo Ferro (Rovigo, 9 July 1992) is an Italian rugby union player. His usual position is as a Flanker and he currently plays for Rovigo Delta in Top12 with the role of Captain. In 2012, Ferro was named in the Italy Under 20 squad and in 2014 he was also named in Emerging Italy squad for 2014 IRB Tbilisi Cup", "Andrea Lovotti\n Andrea Lovotti (born 28 July 1989) is an Italian rugby union player who plays as a Prop. He currently plays for Zebre in the Pro14. He grew up in the youth sporting team of Piacenza Gossolengo, in 2008-09 season he passed to Rugby Calvisano. After beginning down the ranks of the Italian system he returned to his previous youth club Calvisano at the top flight of the National Championship of Excellence where he immediately won the title of Champion of Italy and the Excellence Trophy. In May 2014, it was announced that he moved to Zebre. In 2009 Lovotti was named in the Italy Under 20 ", "Matteo Corazzi\n Matteo Corazzi (born 10 September 1994) is an Italian rugby union player. His usual position is as a Flanker. He played for Mogliano in Top12 from 2013 to 2021. From 2015 to 2017 Corazzi was named in the Emerging Italy squad for the annual World Rugby Nations Cup.", "Matteo Cornelli\n Matteo Cornelli (Piacenza, 6 June 1995) is an Italian rugby union player. His usual position is as a Flanker and he currently plays for Fiamme Oro in Top12. In 2016–17 Pro12 season, he was named Additional Player for Zebre. After playing for Italy Under 20 in 2014 and 2015, in 2018 Cornelli also was named in the Emerging Italy squad.", "Matteo Barbini (footballer)\n Born in Venice, Barbini started playing football with local team Sesto Bagnarola at the age of 5, before joining Sanvitese at the age of 10 and then moving to Treviso at the age of 15. In August 2009, aged 18, he was signed by Serie A club Milan and spent one season in the club's youth system.", "Matteo Piscopo\n Matteo Piscopo (born 9 August 1954) is a Canadian retired international soccer player.", "Matteo Canali\n Matteo Canali (Marino, 11 September 1998) is an Italian rugby union player. His usual position is as a Lock and he currently plays for Petrarca Padova in Top10. For 2020–21 Pro14 season, he was named as Permit Player for Benetton Rugby. In 2018 Canali was named in the Italy Under 20 squad. On the 14 October 2021, he was selected by Alessandro Troncon to be part of an Italy A 28-man squad and on 8 December he was named in Emerging Italy 27-man squad for the 2021 end-of-year rugby union internationals.", "Matteo Piano\n He debuted with the Italy men's national volleyball team in 2013. In 2013 Italy, including Piano, won bronze medal of World League. In the same year he achieved silver medal of European Championship. In 2014 he and his Italian teammates won bronze of World League held in Florence, Italy.", "Andrea Pratichetti\n Andrea Pratichetti (born 26 November 1988) is an Italian rugby union player who currently plays for Mogliano as a centre in Top12. Pratichetti was raised at Rugby Roma, where his uncle Carlo was a player and then a coach. Andrea was then passed on to UR Capitolina's youth team, before being hired as a professional by Calvisano. At Calvisano he played alongside is older brother and Italian international Matteo. Andrea then joined Rovigo for a year, before signing for Treviso in 2010. He played for Benetton from 2010 to 2017. He debuted for the Italian national rugby union team in 2012 against Canada. From 2017 he is also part of the Italy Sevens squad also to participate at the Qualifying Tournament for the 2020 Summer Olympics and the 2020 World Rugby Sevens Challenger Series." ]
In what city was Ricardo Maliandi born?
[ "La Plata" ]
place of birth
Ricardo Maliandi
4,320,975
36
[ { "id": "32946339", "title": "Ricardo Maliandi", "text": " Ricardo Guillermo Maliandi (born in La Plata, 1930, died 12 February 2015) Argentine writer and philosopher, devoted to ethics. He was professor in many Argentine universities and researcher in CONICET. Doctor in Philosophy for Mainz University, Germany. He received Konex Prize in 1986 for his labor on ethics. As well he is chairman of Argentine Association of Ethical Researches, fellow of National Academy of Sciences and honorary member of Argentine Association of Bioethics. His researches started on axiology, especially the works of Nicolai Hartmann, from who he has translated many books. Afterward he made an approach to Discourse Ethics and became friend of one of his founders, Karl-Otto Apel. From many years he works in an original propose which he call \"ethics of convergence\".", "score": "1.8411748" }, { "id": "11725714", "title": "Ricardo Estanislao Zulueta", "text": " Zulueta was born in Havana, Cuba and grew up in Miami, Florida. Since 1985 he has lived/worked in New York City and Miami. Zulueta studied Visual Art, Museum Studies, and Arts Policy at graduate school at New York University where he was selected to be the distinguished Helbein Scholar. Dr. Zulueta earned a M.F.A. in Visual Arts and a Ph.D. in Cinema and Interactive Media Studies, both with Academic Merit Honors at the University of Miami where he was named a McKnight Doctoral Fellow.", "score": "1.6394675" }, { "id": "28389933", "title": "Federico Fong", "text": " Born in Northern California's Bay Area in 1967 to a Panamanian father of Chinese descent and an American mother, Fong relocated at a young age with his family to Mexico City where he has lived for the majority of his life. He was a resident of Brooklyn, New York for a few years and then relocated to Mexico City to continue working mainly with band La Barranca.", "score": "1.5692995" }, { "id": "32946345", "title": "Ricardo Maliandi", "text": " Cristina Ambrosini (editor) ''Ética. Convergencias y divergencias''. Homenaje a Ricardo Maliandi, Remedios de Escalada, Ediciones de la UNLa, 2009, 443 pp., ISBN: 978-987-1326-38-9. Michelini, Dorando; José San Martín y Jutta Wester (editores) Ética, discurso, conflictividad. Homenaje a Ricardo Maliandi, Universidad Nacional de Río Cuarto, Argentina, 1995, ISBN: 978-950-665-019-3.", "score": "1.5692738" }, { "id": "7893037", "title": "Ricardo Migliorisi", "text": " Ricardo Migliorisi, (January 6, 1948 – June 14, 2019) born in Asunción, Paraguay, on January 6, 1948 to Isolina Salsa Ferraris and Salvador Migliorisi Tumino, of Italian origin. Migliorisi was a Paraguayan painter, costume designer, scenery designer and architect. Migliorisi won national and international awards. Migliorisi showed his work in many countries including The United States of America and Europe.", "score": "1.5619702" }, { "id": "29776252", "title": "Ricardo de Jaxa Malachowski", "text": " Ricardo de Jaxa Malchowski was born on May 14, 1887 in Odessa at the very southwest of the Russian Empire (current day Ukraine). He is the son of Agusto de Jaxa Malachowski and Malwina Kulisicz. His Father was Agusto (Pole) and his mother was Malwina (Slovakian). At age 13, Ricardo traveled to Saint Petersburg and applied to the Navy Academy of Odessa. However, he was not admitted into the program because of his poor vision. He then continued his education in a secondary school in Odessa, where he graduated in 1905. He traveled to Paris shortly after to attend the École des Beaux-Arts and pursued architecture. The architect Malachowski ", "score": "1.5613394" }, { "id": "26489429", "title": "Ricardo Rodríguez Marengo", "text": " Ricardo was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina and moved at the age of 9 to Santiago, Chile after his father was transladed. He would join the inferior of Universidad Catolica at the age of 12, after his soccer trainer of school recommended him so.", "score": "1.5478258" }, { "id": "15898218", "title": "Ricardo Chávez", "text": " Ricardo Chávez was born in Mexico City on November 24, 1965, to a middle-class family. He is the youngest of three brothers. His father is an engineer and his mother is a housewife, and were both in the entertainment business before getting married. His father sang Mexican music and opened concerts for Pedro Infante and his mother worked as a model. At the age of 16 when he was studying bachelor’s to become a Classical Dance Performer at the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes of México, Ricardo started working in theater.", "score": "1.5470481" }, { "id": "14164099", "title": "Ricardo Araujo (musician)", "text": " Ricardo Araujo was born in 1978 in Bogota (Colombia). Since his very youth, he evolved in the abstract universe of painting and music. He began his musical studies in 1989 with pianist Lile Tiempo, and in 1990, as Marie-Louise Toupouzien's student, he was awarded by Belgium Superior Jury in the excellence category. At 12, he gave his first piano recital in Brussels, playing Bach and Mozart. Seven months later, he made his debut with Brussels' Royal Conservatoire chamber orchestra, when Martha Argerich noticed him. In 1991, back in Colombia, he simultaneously went on with his pianist, music director and composer training. He quickly ", "score": "1.5261741" }, { "id": "32589780", "title": "Ricardo Darín", "text": " Darín was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on January 26, 1957, to actor Ricardo Darín Sr. and actress Renée Roxana. His family is of Italian and Lebanese origin, and has held strong ties to the Argentine showbusiness community. His parents divorced in 1969 when he was 12 years old, and his father died of cancer on January 5, 1989.", "score": "1.5235023" }, { "id": "1737480", "title": "Mike Amigorena", "text": " He was born in Maipú, Mendoza Province to a Basque Argentine father and an Italian Argentine mother. Amigorena was especially restless as an adolescent and was expelled from a number of secondary schools. He left Maipú for Buenos Aires in search of fame in 1992, and initially struggled in a variety of menial jobs, living hand-to-mouth in a tenement for a number of years.", "score": "1.5216696" }, { "id": "9031253", "title": "Álvaro Saieh", "text": " Álvaro Saieh was born on 14 September 1949, in Villanueva, La Guajira, Colombia. Of Palestinian and Lebanese ancestry, his parents are Chilean José Saieh and Colombian Elena Bendeck. At the age of three his family moved to Talca, Chile, where they started Casa Saieh, a family business that offered from electrical appliances to clothing. In this city, he started his education, finishing high school at Liceo Abate Molina. At 17 years old he moved to Santiago to pursue a degree in commercial engineering at Universidad de Chile, from which he graduated in 1972. In 1973 he started a postgraduate degree in Economics at the same university. Later, he attended The University of Chicago, where he pursued a master's degree in arts (1976) and a PhD in economics. His first years as a professional he worked in the public sector, being an economic adviser for the Ministerio de Vivienda y Urbanismo and the Ministerio de Obras Públicas. He was also an economic adviser for the Banco Central de Chile and delegate of the Superintendencia de Bancos at Banco Continental.", "score": "1.520187" }, { "id": "29184828", "title": "Ricardo Ramina", "text": " Ricardo Ramina was born in Curitiba, Brazil, where he studied medicine at the Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Paraná. After graduating he moved to Hannover, Germany, in order to do a Neurosurgery residency under Prof. Majid Samii at the KRH Klinikum Nordstadt. After concluding his residency, Ricardo Ramina, continued to work at the KRH Klinikum Nordstadt, where he eventually became senior attending physician. In 1986 Ramina moved back to Curitiba, Brazil where he founded the Institute of Neurology of Curitiba. Ramina has written numerous scientific publication and books.", "score": "1.5147443" }, { "id": "5001004", "title": "Marcos Losekann", "text": " Marcos Losekann was born in Independência, a small town in Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. He is the only child of Elaine Ciechowics Losekann and Ary Losekann, a truck driver. Losekann was a law student when, as he said, “The journalism chose him”. One night, he was invited by friends to go to a pizzeria, \"I had already eaten dinner, there was no reason to be there, and I had no money to pay for the pizza. But I went. And right at the entrance, one person became ill, had a seizure and collapsed. This person was called Flavio Damiani. He was the chief reporter of local TV. \" Damiani TV was an affiliate of TV Globo, RBS Cruz Alta. Losekann began making visits to his new friend and became accustomed to the ", "score": "1.5062634" }, { "id": "1464552", "title": "Ricardo Graziano", "text": " Born in Mogi das Cruzes, Brazil, he showed an early interest in dance, following his sister to her jazz classes from the age of eight. His mother then sent him to the Marcela Campos Escola de Bailados until he was 16. He completed his training at the Academy of Dance in Mannheim, Germany, where he spent two years.", "score": "1.5020576" }, { "id": "6881045", "title": "January 1974", "text": " Pico Rivera, California. ; Born: ; Mehdi Ben Slimane, Tunisian footballer; in Le Kram, Tunisia ; Mario Benetton, Italian Olympic track cyclist; in Padua, Italy ; Cadu (born Ricardo Frederico Rodrigues Antunes), Brazilian footballer; in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil ; Constantinos Carydis, Greek conductor; in Athens, Greece ; Abha Dawesar, Indian novelist; in New Delhi, Delhi, India ; Ivone De Franceschi, Italian footballer; in Padua, Italy ; Derek Kilmer, member of the United States House of Representatives from Washington; in Port Angeles, Washington ; Reem Maged, Egyptian journalist ; Samukeliso Moyo, Zimbabwean Olympic long-distance runner; in Gwanda, Matabeleland South Province, ", "score": "1.4979742" }, { "id": "28528394", "title": "Monchi Balestra", "text": " Ramón Marcelo Balestra was born on October 8, 1967, in Casilda, a city in the province of Santa Fe, Argentina. He's worked for several radio stations since he was thirteen. When he was eighteen he got his own radio station called FM TOP. At the age of 20 he went to California, United States, where he worked for many Latin radio stations. Then he came back to Santa Fe Province where he became a local celebrity. At this stage of his career he received his first nominations for Broadcasting and Martín Fierro Awards.", "score": "1.4912221" }, { "id": "29173775", "title": "Ricardo Moniz", "text": " Moniz was born in the Netherlands to a Surinamese father, and an Indonesian mother of Chinese descent.", "score": "1.4911988" }, { "id": "6660241", "title": "Ricardo Zurita", "text": " Zurita was born in Quito, Ecuador and moved to New York City at the age of 5. Growing up in Queens, Zurita attended the prestigious Stuyvesant High School. He attended College of Architecture, Art, and Planning at Cornell University afterwards, graduating with a Bachelor of Architecture in 1984. After graduation he practiced in New York, including tenures with Rafael Viñoly Architects and Beyer Blinder Belle, and in Madrid, Spain as a designer for the National Training Center for the 1992 Olympics. In 2002, he founded his eponymous firm RZAPS, located in New York.", "score": "1.4889858" }, { "id": "12966774", "title": "Ricardo Garcia (musician)", "text": " in Malawi. Garcia returned to Europe in 1999 and settled in Barcelona. Julie Gunn became his manager in 2001. He performs worldwide as well as in Spain, France and in Scotland, where he has played in the Edinburgh Festival for nineteen years running. He has performed in many other countries in Europe, Asia, Africa and North America. He regularly tours East Africa and has worked there supported by the Spanish Embassy on various tours. He toured to Montreal and Vancouver in 2005-8, and performed in many locations in the USA. From May 8–19, 2006, Garcia was Artist-in-Residence with his group Flamenco Flow at ", "score": "1.4889553" } ]
[ "Ricardo Maliandi\n Ricardo Guillermo Maliandi (born in La Plata, 1930, died 12 February 2015) Argentine writer and philosopher, devoted to ethics. He was professor in many Argentine universities and researcher in CONICET. Doctor in Philosophy for Mainz University, Germany. He received Konex Prize in 1986 for his labor on ethics. As well he is chairman of Argentine Association of Ethical Researches, fellow of National Academy of Sciences and honorary member of Argentine Association of Bioethics. His researches started on axiology, especially the works of Nicolai Hartmann, from who he has translated many books. Afterward he made an approach to Discourse Ethics and became friend of one of his founders, Karl-Otto Apel. From many years he works in an original propose which he call \"ethics of convergence\".", "Ricardo Estanislao Zulueta\n Zulueta was born in Havana, Cuba and grew up in Miami, Florida. Since 1985 he has lived/worked in New York City and Miami. Zulueta studied Visual Art, Museum Studies, and Arts Policy at graduate school at New York University where he was selected to be the distinguished Helbein Scholar. Dr. Zulueta earned a M.F.A. in Visual Arts and a Ph.D. in Cinema and Interactive Media Studies, both with Academic Merit Honors at the University of Miami where he was named a McKnight Doctoral Fellow.", "Federico Fong\n Born in Northern California's Bay Area in 1967 to a Panamanian father of Chinese descent and an American mother, Fong relocated at a young age with his family to Mexico City where he has lived for the majority of his life. He was a resident of Brooklyn, New York for a few years and then relocated to Mexico City to continue working mainly with band La Barranca.", "Ricardo Maliandi\n Cristina Ambrosini (editor) ''Ética. Convergencias y divergencias''. Homenaje a Ricardo Maliandi, Remedios de Escalada, Ediciones de la UNLa, 2009, 443 pp., ISBN: 978-987-1326-38-9. Michelini, Dorando; José San Martín y Jutta Wester (editores) Ética, discurso, conflictividad. Homenaje a Ricardo Maliandi, Universidad Nacional de Río Cuarto, Argentina, 1995, ISBN: 978-950-665-019-3.", "Ricardo Migliorisi\n Ricardo Migliorisi, (January 6, 1948 – June 14, 2019) born in Asunción, Paraguay, on January 6, 1948 to Isolina Salsa Ferraris and Salvador Migliorisi Tumino, of Italian origin. Migliorisi was a Paraguayan painter, costume designer, scenery designer and architect. Migliorisi won national and international awards. Migliorisi showed his work in many countries including The United States of America and Europe.", "Ricardo de Jaxa Malachowski\n Ricardo de Jaxa Malchowski was born on May 14, 1887 in Odessa at the very southwest of the Russian Empire (current day Ukraine). He is the son of Agusto de Jaxa Malachowski and Malwina Kulisicz. His Father was Agusto (Pole) and his mother was Malwina (Slovakian). At age 13, Ricardo traveled to Saint Petersburg and applied to the Navy Academy of Odessa. However, he was not admitted into the program because of his poor vision. He then continued his education in a secondary school in Odessa, where he graduated in 1905. He traveled to Paris shortly after to attend the École des Beaux-Arts and pursued architecture. The architect Malachowski ", "Ricardo Rodríguez Marengo\n Ricardo was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina and moved at the age of 9 to Santiago, Chile after his father was transladed. He would join the inferior of Universidad Catolica at the age of 12, after his soccer trainer of school recommended him so.", "Ricardo Chávez\n Ricardo Chávez was born in Mexico City on November 24, 1965, to a middle-class family. He is the youngest of three brothers. His father is an engineer and his mother is a housewife, and were both in the entertainment business before getting married. His father sang Mexican music and opened concerts for Pedro Infante and his mother worked as a model. At the age of 16 when he was studying bachelor’s to become a Classical Dance Performer at the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes of México, Ricardo started working in theater.", "Ricardo Araujo (musician)\n Ricardo Araujo was born in 1978 in Bogota (Colombia). Since his very youth, he evolved in the abstract universe of painting and music. He began his musical studies in 1989 with pianist Lile Tiempo, and in 1990, as Marie-Louise Toupouzien's student, he was awarded by Belgium Superior Jury in the excellence category. At 12, he gave his first piano recital in Brussels, playing Bach and Mozart. Seven months later, he made his debut with Brussels' Royal Conservatoire chamber orchestra, when Martha Argerich noticed him. In 1991, back in Colombia, he simultaneously went on with his pianist, music director and composer training. He quickly ", "Ricardo Darín\n Darín was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on January 26, 1957, to actor Ricardo Darín Sr. and actress Renée Roxana. His family is of Italian and Lebanese origin, and has held strong ties to the Argentine showbusiness community. His parents divorced in 1969 when he was 12 years old, and his father died of cancer on January 5, 1989.", "Mike Amigorena\n He was born in Maipú, Mendoza Province to a Basque Argentine father and an Italian Argentine mother. Amigorena was especially restless as an adolescent and was expelled from a number of secondary schools. He left Maipú for Buenos Aires in search of fame in 1992, and initially struggled in a variety of menial jobs, living hand-to-mouth in a tenement for a number of years.", "Álvaro Saieh\n Álvaro Saieh was born on 14 September 1949, in Villanueva, La Guajira, Colombia. Of Palestinian and Lebanese ancestry, his parents are Chilean José Saieh and Colombian Elena Bendeck. At the age of three his family moved to Talca, Chile, where they started Casa Saieh, a family business that offered from electrical appliances to clothing. In this city, he started his education, finishing high school at Liceo Abate Molina. At 17 years old he moved to Santiago to pursue a degree in commercial engineering at Universidad de Chile, from which he graduated in 1972. In 1973 he started a postgraduate degree in Economics at the same university. Later, he attended The University of Chicago, where he pursued a master's degree in arts (1976) and a PhD in economics. His first years as a professional he worked in the public sector, being an economic adviser for the Ministerio de Vivienda y Urbanismo and the Ministerio de Obras Públicas. He was also an economic adviser for the Banco Central de Chile and delegate of the Superintendencia de Bancos at Banco Continental.", "Ricardo Ramina\n Ricardo Ramina was born in Curitiba, Brazil, where he studied medicine at the Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Paraná. After graduating he moved to Hannover, Germany, in order to do a Neurosurgery residency under Prof. Majid Samii at the KRH Klinikum Nordstadt. After concluding his residency, Ricardo Ramina, continued to work at the KRH Klinikum Nordstadt, where he eventually became senior attending physician. In 1986 Ramina moved back to Curitiba, Brazil where he founded the Institute of Neurology of Curitiba. Ramina has written numerous scientific publication and books.", "Marcos Losekann\n Marcos Losekann was born in Independência, a small town in Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. He is the only child of Elaine Ciechowics Losekann and Ary Losekann, a truck driver. Losekann was a law student when, as he said, “The journalism chose him”. One night, he was invited by friends to go to a pizzeria, \"I had already eaten dinner, there was no reason to be there, and I had no money to pay for the pizza. But I went. And right at the entrance, one person became ill, had a seizure and collapsed. This person was called Flavio Damiani. He was the chief reporter of local TV. \" Damiani TV was an affiliate of TV Globo, RBS Cruz Alta. Losekann began making visits to his new friend and became accustomed to the ", "Ricardo Graziano\n Born in Mogi das Cruzes, Brazil, he showed an early interest in dance, following his sister to her jazz classes from the age of eight. His mother then sent him to the Marcela Campos Escola de Bailados until he was 16. He completed his training at the Academy of Dance in Mannheim, Germany, where he spent two years.", "January 1974\n Pico Rivera, California. ; Born: ; Mehdi Ben Slimane, Tunisian footballer; in Le Kram, Tunisia ; Mario Benetton, Italian Olympic track cyclist; in Padua, Italy ; Cadu (born Ricardo Frederico Rodrigues Antunes), Brazilian footballer; in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil ; Constantinos Carydis, Greek conductor; in Athens, Greece ; Abha Dawesar, Indian novelist; in New Delhi, Delhi, India ; Ivone De Franceschi, Italian footballer; in Padua, Italy ; Derek Kilmer, member of the United States House of Representatives from Washington; in Port Angeles, Washington ; Reem Maged, Egyptian journalist ; Samukeliso Moyo, Zimbabwean Olympic long-distance runner; in Gwanda, Matabeleland South Province, ", "Monchi Balestra\n Ramón Marcelo Balestra was born on October 8, 1967, in Casilda, a city in the province of Santa Fe, Argentina. He's worked for several radio stations since he was thirteen. When he was eighteen he got his own radio station called FM TOP. At the age of 20 he went to California, United States, where he worked for many Latin radio stations. Then he came back to Santa Fe Province where he became a local celebrity. At this stage of his career he received his first nominations for Broadcasting and Martín Fierro Awards.", "Ricardo Moniz\n Moniz was born in the Netherlands to a Surinamese father, and an Indonesian mother of Chinese descent.", "Ricardo Zurita\n Zurita was born in Quito, Ecuador and moved to New York City at the age of 5. Growing up in Queens, Zurita attended the prestigious Stuyvesant High School. He attended College of Architecture, Art, and Planning at Cornell University afterwards, graduating with a Bachelor of Architecture in 1984. After graduation he practiced in New York, including tenures with Rafael Viñoly Architects and Beyer Blinder Belle, and in Madrid, Spain as a designer for the National Training Center for the 1992 Olympics. In 2002, he founded his eponymous firm RZAPS, located in New York.", "Ricardo Garcia (musician)\n in Malawi. Garcia returned to Europe in 1999 and settled in Barcelona. Julie Gunn became his manager in 2001. He performs worldwide as well as in Spain, France and in Scotland, where he has played in the Edinburgh Festival for nineteen years running. He has performed in many other countries in Europe, Asia, Africa and North America. He regularly tours East Africa and has worked there supported by the Spanish Embassy on various tours. He toured to Montreal and Vancouver in 2005-8, and performed in many locations in the USA. From May 8–19, 2006, Garcia was Artist-in-Residence with his group Flamenco Flow at " ]
What sport does José Luis Contaja play?
[ "association football", "football", "soccer" ]
sport
José Luis Contaja
4,766,062
35
[ { "id": "10175236", "title": "José Luis Contaja", "text": " He played for San José and Real Potosi. He was sued by former club San José in June 2016 due to an alleged breach of contract.", "score": "1.7332236" }, { "id": "7536204", "title": "List of Spanish sportspeople", "text": "José Luis Abajo ", "score": "1.6747322" }, { "id": "10175235", "title": "José Luis Contaja", "text": " José Luis Contaja Vicente (born 2 June 1987 in Oruro) is a Bolivian football defender.", "score": "1.5729213" }, { "id": "14364896", "title": "José Martínez Morote", "text": " Morote started competing in athletics when he was 16 years old. Prior to taking up the sport, he was involved with football but switched to athletics after a teacher suggested his speed with the ball was better suited for athletics. He has competed in international competitions in Tunisia, Hungary, Sweden, Australia, France, Prague, Brazil and China. Locally, he participated in a number of workshops where he was coached by Camilo and Maxi. He is a member of Club Paralímpico de la Región athletic club in Castilla-La Mancha, where he is the only male participant. He has been funded by the 'Castilla-La Mancha Olímpica' program run by the Foundation for Culture and Sports of Castilla-La Mancha. When ", "score": "1.517668" }, { "id": "30639088", "title": "Víctor Sojo", "text": " Víctor Manuel Sojo Jiménez (born November 24, 1983 in Puente Genil, Córdoba) is a field hockey striker from Spain. He finished in fourth position with the Men's National Team at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece, and won the silver medal four years later in Beijing.", "score": "1.5038872" }, { "id": "448236", "title": "Augusto Batioja", "text": " Born in Guayaquil, he played as junior for several Ecuatorian clubs such as Modelo Sport, Manta, LDU Guayaquil and Barcelona SC. Still young, he debuted in the senior teams of both Manta and LDU Guayaquil.", "score": "1.502296" }, { "id": "27273481", "title": "José Luis Mentxaca", "text": " Mentxaka was born in Deusto; his father Nicolás and brother (also called Nicolás) were also footballers.", "score": "1.4904083" }, { "id": "6608261", "title": "José Ballbe", "text": " José Carlos Ballbe Sala (born 21 February 1985 in Terrassa) is a Spanish field hockey player. At the 2012 Summer Olympics, he competed for the national team in the men's tournament.", "score": "1.4840007" }, { "id": "27637765", "title": "Jose Rojas (racquetball)", "text": " Rojas has been on Team USA six times. Most recently, Rojas competed in the 2015 Pan American Games in Toronto, where he and Jansen Allen won gold in Men's Doubles by defeating Bolivians Conrrado Moscoso and Roland Keller in the final, 15-8, 15-5. He also was a silver medalist in Toronto in the Team competition. Also, Rojas won gold in singles at the 2014 Pan American Championships by defeating Andres Parrilla of Mexico in the final, 15-4, 15-11, in Santa Cruz, Bolivia, where he also earned a silver medal in doubles with David Horn after losing the final to Mexicans Daniel De ", "score": "1.4838274" }, { "id": "7536203", "title": "List of Spanish sportspeople", "text": "José Álvarez de Bohórquez ; Beatriz Ferrer-Salat ; Jaime García ; Julio García Fernández de los Ríos ; Marcellino Gavilán ; Juan Antonio Jimenez ; José Navarro Morenés ; Ignacio Rambla ; Rafael Soto ", "score": "1.4615757" }, { "id": "7448292", "title": "Juantxo García-Mauriño", "text": " Juan (\"Juantxo\") de Dios García-Mauriño Sanchís (born March 11, 1964 in Barcelona) is a former field hockey player from Spain. He won the silver medal with the Men's National Team at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia. He is an architect and accomplished writer that has published a series of articles in local journals about sports that provide a glimpse behind the scenes with a particular sense of humour.", "score": "1.4583936" }, { "id": "25303191", "title": "José Luis (footballer, born 1943)", "text": " José Luis López Peinado (born 21 May 1943 in Tetuán, Spanish Morocco), known as just José Luis, is a Spanish former professional association football player who played as a defender. He started his career with one season Rayo Vallecano, before representing Real Madrid from 1967 to 1976. Born in Spanish Morocco, he represented the Spain national team.", "score": "1.4583606" }, { "id": "14364894", "title": "José Martínez Morote", "text": " José Martínez Morote (born 5 February 1984 in Hellín, Albacete) is a Paralympic athlete from Spain competing mainly in category T20 track and field events. He has an intellectual disability, attended school in Cruz de Mayo and serves as a mentor to local track and field athletes. While he originally started sport playing football, he switched to athletics by the age of 16 at the suggestion of a teacher who noticed his speed with the ball. He has gone on to compete at the 2007 World Games, the 2011 IPC World Athletics Championships in Christchurch, New Zealand and the 2012 Summer Paralympics. Martínez has held at least two athletics scholarships to continue his participation in the sport.", "score": "1.4562325" }, { "id": "2259082", "title": "José Fernandez (athlete)", "text": " José Manuel Fernández Barranquero (born 19 March 1975 in Málaga) is a paralympic athlete from Spain competing mainly in category T46 track events. Fernandez competed in three Paralympics over varting distances. His first games were in 1992 Summer Paralympics in his home country where he competed in the 1500m, 10000m and marathon. In 1996 he competed in the 100m, 200m, 400m and 800m but was still unable to win that elusive medal. However, in the 2000 Summer Paralympics he competed in the 400m, won a bronze in the 800m and was part of the silver medal winning Spanish 400m relay team.", "score": "1.4558073" }, { "id": "25443676", "title": "Luis Medina Cantalejo", "text": " Professionally, Medina Cantalejo is a sports assessor who lives in Tomares, west of Seville.", "score": "1.4557166" }, { "id": "27366842", "title": "Carlos Borja (soccer, born 1988)", "text": " Carlos Roberto Borja Baltazar (born January 18, 1988 in Orange, California) is an American soccer player currently without a club.", "score": "1.4555017" }, { "id": "26581151", "title": "José Luis González (rugby union)", "text": " José Luis González (born 11 September 1997 in Argentina) is an Argentine rugby union player who plays for the in the Rugby Pro D2. His playing position is hooker. He joined the Mont-de-Marsan in January 2021, having previously played in his home land for in the 2019 Currie Cup First Division and Ceibos in the first Súper Liga Americana de Rugby season. He also represented Argentina XV ten times between 2017 and 2019. His performances saw him named in the Argentina squad for the 2020 and 2021 internationals.", "score": "1.449599" }, { "id": "7447592", "title": "Carlos Roca (field hockey)", "text": " Carlos Roca Portolés (April 29, 1958 – June 10, 2003) was a field hockey player from Spain who won the silver medal with the Men's National Team at the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow.", "score": "1.449174" }, { "id": "29142716", "title": "Luis Álvarez de Cervera", "text": " Luis Álvarez de Cervera (born 23 July 1947 in Madrid) is a Spanish equestrian who competed at six Olympic Games between 1972 and 1996. He was the first Spaniard to do so; as of 2010, the only other Spaniard to compete at six Olympics is water polo player Manuel Estiarte. He was part of the Spanish team that came fourth in the Mixed Jumping at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics, missing out on bronze by 0.75 points. Luis Álvarez de Cervera collaborated, together with the also prominent Olympic riders Joaquín Larraín Coddou and Luis Lucio, in the Spanish translation made by the Panamanian rider Anastasios Moschos of the official instruction handbook of the German National Equestrian Federation, Tecnicas Avanzadas de Equitación - Manual Oficial de Instrucción de la Federación Ecuestre Alemana. This Spanish edition was foreworded by the former president of the International Federation for Equestrian Sports (FEI), the Infanta Doña Pilar, Duchess of Badajoz and was published in Spain and Latin America.", "score": "1.4476264" }, { "id": "27273480", "title": "José Luis Mentxaca", "text": " José Luis Mentxaka Fernández (born 21 April 1942) is a Spanish former professional footballer who played as a forward.", "score": "1.4464939" } ]
[ "José Luis Contaja\n He played for San José and Real Potosi. He was sued by former club San José in June 2016 due to an alleged breach of contract.", "List of Spanish sportspeople\nJosé Luis Abajo ", "José Luis Contaja\n José Luis Contaja Vicente (born 2 June 1987 in Oruro) is a Bolivian football defender.", "José Martínez Morote\n Morote started competing in athletics when he was 16 years old. Prior to taking up the sport, he was involved with football but switched to athletics after a teacher suggested his speed with the ball was better suited for athletics. He has competed in international competitions in Tunisia, Hungary, Sweden, Australia, France, Prague, Brazil and China. Locally, he participated in a number of workshops where he was coached by Camilo and Maxi. He is a member of Club Paralímpico de la Región athletic club in Castilla-La Mancha, where he is the only male participant. He has been funded by the 'Castilla-La Mancha Olímpica' program run by the Foundation for Culture and Sports of Castilla-La Mancha. When ", "Víctor Sojo\n Víctor Manuel Sojo Jiménez (born November 24, 1983 in Puente Genil, Córdoba) is a field hockey striker from Spain. He finished in fourth position with the Men's National Team at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece, and won the silver medal four years later in Beijing.", "Augusto Batioja\n Born in Guayaquil, he played as junior for several Ecuatorian clubs such as Modelo Sport, Manta, LDU Guayaquil and Barcelona SC. Still young, he debuted in the senior teams of both Manta and LDU Guayaquil.", "José Luis Mentxaca\n Mentxaka was born in Deusto; his father Nicolás and brother (also called Nicolás) were also footballers.", "José Ballbe\n José Carlos Ballbe Sala (born 21 February 1985 in Terrassa) is a Spanish field hockey player. At the 2012 Summer Olympics, he competed for the national team in the men's tournament.", "Jose Rojas (racquetball)\n Rojas has been on Team USA six times. Most recently, Rojas competed in the 2015 Pan American Games in Toronto, where he and Jansen Allen won gold in Men's Doubles by defeating Bolivians Conrrado Moscoso and Roland Keller in the final, 15-8, 15-5. He also was a silver medalist in Toronto in the Team competition. Also, Rojas won gold in singles at the 2014 Pan American Championships by defeating Andres Parrilla of Mexico in the final, 15-4, 15-11, in Santa Cruz, Bolivia, where he also earned a silver medal in doubles with David Horn after losing the final to Mexicans Daniel De ", "List of Spanish sportspeople\nJosé Álvarez de Bohórquez ; Beatriz Ferrer-Salat ; Jaime García ; Julio García Fernández de los Ríos ; Marcellino Gavilán ; Juan Antonio Jimenez ; José Navarro Morenés ; Ignacio Rambla ; Rafael Soto ", "Juantxo García-Mauriño\n Juan (\"Juantxo\") de Dios García-Mauriño Sanchís (born March 11, 1964 in Barcelona) is a former field hockey player from Spain. He won the silver medal with the Men's National Team at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia. He is an architect and accomplished writer that has published a series of articles in local journals about sports that provide a glimpse behind the scenes with a particular sense of humour.", "José Luis (footballer, born 1943)\n José Luis López Peinado (born 21 May 1943 in Tetuán, Spanish Morocco), known as just José Luis, is a Spanish former professional association football player who played as a defender. He started his career with one season Rayo Vallecano, before representing Real Madrid from 1967 to 1976. Born in Spanish Morocco, he represented the Spain national team.", "José Martínez Morote\n José Martínez Morote (born 5 February 1984 in Hellín, Albacete) is a Paralympic athlete from Spain competing mainly in category T20 track and field events. He has an intellectual disability, attended school in Cruz de Mayo and serves as a mentor to local track and field athletes. While he originally started sport playing football, he switched to athletics by the age of 16 at the suggestion of a teacher who noticed his speed with the ball. He has gone on to compete at the 2007 World Games, the 2011 IPC World Athletics Championships in Christchurch, New Zealand and the 2012 Summer Paralympics. Martínez has held at least two athletics scholarships to continue his participation in the sport.", "José Fernandez (athlete)\n José Manuel Fernández Barranquero (born 19 March 1975 in Málaga) is a paralympic athlete from Spain competing mainly in category T46 track events. Fernandez competed in three Paralympics over varting distances. His first games were in 1992 Summer Paralympics in his home country where he competed in the 1500m, 10000m and marathon. In 1996 he competed in the 100m, 200m, 400m and 800m but was still unable to win that elusive medal. However, in the 2000 Summer Paralympics he competed in the 400m, won a bronze in the 800m and was part of the silver medal winning Spanish 400m relay team.", "Luis Medina Cantalejo\n Professionally, Medina Cantalejo is a sports assessor who lives in Tomares, west of Seville.", "Carlos Borja (soccer, born 1988)\n Carlos Roberto Borja Baltazar (born January 18, 1988 in Orange, California) is an American soccer player currently without a club.", "José Luis González (rugby union)\n José Luis González (born 11 September 1997 in Argentina) is an Argentine rugby union player who plays for the in the Rugby Pro D2. His playing position is hooker. He joined the Mont-de-Marsan in January 2021, having previously played in his home land for in the 2019 Currie Cup First Division and Ceibos in the first Súper Liga Americana de Rugby season. He also represented Argentina XV ten times between 2017 and 2019. His performances saw him named in the Argentina squad for the 2020 and 2021 internationals.", "Carlos Roca (field hockey)\n Carlos Roca Portolés (April 29, 1958 – June 10, 2003) was a field hockey player from Spain who won the silver medal with the Men's National Team at the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow.", "Luis Álvarez de Cervera\n Luis Álvarez de Cervera (born 23 July 1947 in Madrid) is a Spanish equestrian who competed at six Olympic Games between 1972 and 1996. He was the first Spaniard to do so; as of 2010, the only other Spaniard to compete at six Olympics is water polo player Manuel Estiarte. He was part of the Spanish team that came fourth in the Mixed Jumping at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics, missing out on bronze by 0.75 points. Luis Álvarez de Cervera collaborated, together with the also prominent Olympic riders Joaquín Larraín Coddou and Luis Lucio, in the Spanish translation made by the Panamanian rider Anastasios Moschos of the official instruction handbook of the German National Equestrian Federation, Tecnicas Avanzadas de Equitación - Manual Oficial de Instrucción de la Federación Ecuestre Alemana. This Spanish edition was foreworded by the former president of the International Federation for Equestrian Sports (FEI), the Infanta Doña Pilar, Duchess of Badajoz and was published in Spain and Latin America.", "José Luis Mentxaca\n José Luis Mentxaka Fernández (born 21 April 1942) is a Spanish former professional footballer who played as a forward." ]
In what city was Jesús Antonio Hernández born?
[ "Los Mochis", "Los Mochis" ]
place of birth
Jesús Antonio Hernández
953,696
77
[ { "id": "12594300", "title": "Jesús Hernández (footballer, born 1993)", "text": " Hernández was born in Cumaná, Sucre, and began his career in the 2015 education tournament with ACD Lara until Torneo Clausura 2017, he accumulated 5365 minutes, in 73 games with 26 goals. He plays with Deportivo Anzoátegui, Llaneros de Guanare y Aragua FC.", "score": "1.7745559" }, { "id": "10015728", "title": "Jesús Hernández (footballer, born 2004)", "text": "Notes ", "score": "1.7694702" }, { "id": "30557603", "title": "Jesús Adrián Rodríguez Samaniego", "text": " Samaniego was born in 1975 in Chihuahua, Mexico. Samaniego lived with his girlfriend and his two daughters in the Chihuahua City's Santa Rosa neighborhood.", "score": "1.6875802" }, { "id": "6012823", "title": "Jesús Hernández (footballer, born 2001)", "text": " Hernández is a product of Monagas. He got his professional debut for the club at the age of 17, on 21 October 2018, against Metropolitanos.", "score": "1.6614791" }, { "id": "10015726", "title": "Jesús Hernández (footballer, born 2004)", "text": " Jesús Hernández Moreno (born 9 January 2004) is a Mexican professional footballer who plays as a forward for Liga MX club Querétaro. He was included in The Guardian's \"Next Generation\" list for 2021.", "score": "1.6531861" }, { "id": "12594299", "title": "Jesús Hernández (footballer, born 1993)", "text": " Jesús Isaac Hernández Córdova (born 6 January 1993) is a Venezuelan footballer who currently plays for Deportes Iquique as Striker in the Primera División de Chile.", "score": "1.6237444" }, { "id": "30516730", "title": "Paul Hernandez", "text": " Hernandez was born in East Austin, the oldest of eight children of Paul Hernandez, Sr. and Maria Olivarez Hernandez. He attended Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic School, St. Edward's Prep School for Boys, and Johnston High School. In his early 20s Hernandez helped support his family by working for a ring-making company where he saw how discriminatory practices impacted workers. Hernandez experienced racism on the job, which paid low wages and lacked advancement. When the local Economy Furniture Company workers went on strike in the late 1960s, Hernandez learned from the organizers how they sought to change their workplace. Hernandez attempted to organize his coworkers at the ring-making company. Subsequently the company let him go. From these experiences Hernandez developed an attitude he called \"mentality of resistance' against forces of repression, suppression and oppression. He felt a deep compassion for how the lives of his East Austin community were negatively affected by Austin's political establishment. Hernandez had pneumonia as young man. While in the hospital recovering, a priest, brought him books to read including Rules for Radicals and \"Liberation Theology.\" Reading these expanding his political perspectives and he realized he wanted take political action and not simply react.", "score": "1.6223729" }, { "id": "10015727", "title": "Jesús Hernández (footballer, born 2004)", "text": " Hernández was part of the Mexico U-20 squad that competed at the 2021 Revelations Cup, where Mexico won the competition.", "score": "1.6192428" }, { "id": "14683864", "title": "Antonio Alarcó Hernandez", "text": " Hernandez was born and raised in Santa Cruz de Tenerife on 31 August 1951. He attended University of La Laguna where he studied Medicine and Surgery and graduated with a Bachelors. He also obtained a Doctorate degree in 1980 in the same field. Later, he became a doctor in Information Sciences and a doctor in Sociology. In 1980, Hernandez was appointed professor of Pathology and Surgical Clinic at the Faculty of Medicine of the University of La Laguna. Since 1996, he has also been the professor of surgery at the same university. He is the Chief physician at Hospital Universitario de Canarias. He has authored numerous books, published in national and international magazines.", "score": "1.616775" }, { "id": "30025221", "title": "José M. Hernández", "text": " Hernández was born in French Camp, California, but calls Stockton, California, his hometown. His family is from La Piedad, Michoacán, Mexico, with indigenous Purépecha roots. In an August 25, 2009, conversation with President Felipe Calderón of Mexico, Hernández stated that as a child, he lived half the year in La Piedad and half in the United States. As a child, Hernández worked alongside his family and other farmworkers throughout the fields of California, harvesting crops and moving from one town to another. He attended many schools and didn't learn to speak English until he was 12. His first memory of space is about adjusting the television in order ", "score": "1.6142507" }, { "id": "27522651", "title": "Jesús Hernández Hernández", "text": " Jesús Hernández Hernández (born 27 October 1991) is a Mexican Paralympic swimmer. He represented Mexico at the 2016 Summer Paralympics, where he won a bronze medal in the 50 meters backstroke S4 event, and at the 2020 Summer Paralympics, where he won a gold medal in the 150 meters individual medley SM3 event. He also participated at the 2019 Parapan American Games, where he won two gold medals and two silver medals.", "score": "1.610474" }, { "id": "30439022", "title": "Jesús Hernández (cyclist)", "text": " Born in Ávila, Hernández turned professional in 2004, and has taken part in the Vuelta a España three times, but withdrew on the first two occasions during the third week. He finished 19th in the 2009 event. He is well known as being the long-term friend and domestique of Alberto Contador, accompanying Contador at each of his last four teams as a professional cyclist. During the Astana years Lance Armstrong applied to him the nickname \"Sweet baby Jesus\". He rode his first Tour de France in 2010 with being part of Contador's winning team, although that title was later stripped.", "score": "1.6074724" }, { "id": "25381694", "title": "Carlos Hernández Vázquez", "text": " Carlos Hernández Vázquez was born on August 14, 1983 at the Lying-In Hospital in Celaya, Guanajuato. As a teenager, Hernández was interested in photography, and briefly attempted a career as a reporter. His parents sent him to live in México City in the hopes that it would help his academic growth.", "score": "1.6033256" }, { "id": "8644516", "title": "Christopher J. Hernandez", "text": " Hernandez was born in Fresno, California and is Mexican American.", "score": "1.596941" }, { "id": "12772718", "title": "Joseph Marion Hernández", "text": " José Mariano Hernández or Joseph Marion Hernández (May 26, 1788 – June 8, 1857) was an American politician, plantation owner, and soldier. He was the first from the Florida Territory and the first Hispanic American to serve in the United States Congress. A member of the Whig Party, he served from September 1822 to March 1823. José Mariano Hernández was born in St. Augustine, Florida during Florida's second Spanish period. His parents were Minorcans who had originally come to the region as indentured servants in Andrew Turnbull's New Smyrna colony. Prior to the American acquisition of Florida, Hernández owned three plantations south of St. Augustine (in what was then East Florida): San Jose, Mala Compra, and Bella ", "score": "1.5937424" }, { "id": "902786", "title": "José Hernández (footballer, born 1997)", "text": "Notes ", "score": "1.5923526" }, { "id": "3073566", "title": "Luis Almarcha Hernández", "text": " Hernández was born at Orihuela, in the province of Alicante. He began his ecclesiastical studies at the local Diocesan Seminary at the age of eleven, studying humanities, philosophy, and theology, and ten years later, in 1908, he moved to Rome, where he obtained his doctorate in canon law at the Gregorian University. He was ordained a priest on July 17, 1910, and on his return to Orihuela two years later, became a canon priest at the cathedral there. He was named professor of the seminary there and Prefect of Discipline. In 1923, he was named cantor of the cathedral, and in 1924, general vicar of the diocese. ", "score": "1.5920849" }, { "id": "960318", "title": "Jesús Álvarez Amaya", "text": " Jesús Álvarez Amaya was born on November 19, 1925 in the La Merced neighborhood in Mexico City. He came from modest background, working as a baker in his youth. He studied art at the Escuela de Arte para Trabajadores (Art School for Workers) and later studied with noted artist Ramón Alva de la Canal. He later worked as an assistant to Diego Rivera for the mural done at the Insurgentes Theater, as well as the Olympic Stadium at the Ciudad Universitaria. He was a lifelong militant communist, involved in activities mostly through the Taller de Gráfica Popular, for example printing posters during the student uprising in 1968. He was a heavy reader especially valuing poetry, and that of his friend Jaime Sabines. He was also a fan of Carlos Monsiváis. He died on June 21, 2010 in Mexico City of cancer which could not be treated because of his advanced age.", "score": "1.5907402" }, { "id": "6202042", "title": "Tim Z. Hernandez", "text": " Born in Dinuba, California, Hernandez was raised in the San Joaquin Valley of Central California, where he lived in predominantly farm-worker communities in the agricultural region. His family roots are in Texas, New Mexico, and East Los Angeles. Early in his life, Hernandez's parents were migrant farmworkers, following the seasons across the southwest. It was during this time on the road that he developed an interest in travel and stories. In his adolescent years, Hernandez was immersed in acting and visual arts. As a teenager, he focused mainly on painting. He met the artist Joseph De La Cruz in 1990 and began his first apprenticeship at the age of 16. In ", "score": "1.5892524" }, { "id": "31949158", "title": "John of Jesus Hernández y Delgado", "text": " point of throwing him into a bonfire, burned as a traditional part of the festival of Saint John the Baptist, which caused the boy the loss of his left eye. He accepted this treatment with deep resignation as a trial of his faith and kept at his job, combining prayer and penance to deal with it. Hernández learned to read and in 1641 moved to the city of Puerto de la Cruz for better work. While he was making a better living, he felt drawn to follow a more religious way of life, a desire he put off, however, to support his mother. During that period, though, he first begin ", "score": "1.5858958" } ]
[ "Jesús Hernández (footballer, born 1993)\n Hernández was born in Cumaná, Sucre, and began his career in the 2015 education tournament with ACD Lara until Torneo Clausura 2017, he accumulated 5365 minutes, in 73 games with 26 goals. He plays with Deportivo Anzoátegui, Llaneros de Guanare y Aragua FC.", "Jesús Hernández (footballer, born 2004)\nNotes ", "Jesús Adrián Rodríguez Samaniego\n Samaniego was born in 1975 in Chihuahua, Mexico. Samaniego lived with his girlfriend and his two daughters in the Chihuahua City's Santa Rosa neighborhood.", "Jesús Hernández (footballer, born 2001)\n Hernández is a product of Monagas. He got his professional debut for the club at the age of 17, on 21 October 2018, against Metropolitanos.", "Jesús Hernández (footballer, born 2004)\n Jesús Hernández Moreno (born 9 January 2004) is a Mexican professional footballer who plays as a forward for Liga MX club Querétaro. He was included in The Guardian's \"Next Generation\" list for 2021.", "Jesús Hernández (footballer, born 1993)\n Jesús Isaac Hernández Córdova (born 6 January 1993) is a Venezuelan footballer who currently plays for Deportes Iquique as Striker in the Primera División de Chile.", "Paul Hernandez\n Hernandez was born in East Austin, the oldest of eight children of Paul Hernandez, Sr. and Maria Olivarez Hernandez. He attended Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic School, St. Edward's Prep School for Boys, and Johnston High School. In his early 20s Hernandez helped support his family by working for a ring-making company where he saw how discriminatory practices impacted workers. Hernandez experienced racism on the job, which paid low wages and lacked advancement. When the local Economy Furniture Company workers went on strike in the late 1960s, Hernandez learned from the organizers how they sought to change their workplace. Hernandez attempted to organize his coworkers at the ring-making company. Subsequently the company let him go. From these experiences Hernandez developed an attitude he called \"mentality of resistance' against forces of repression, suppression and oppression. He felt a deep compassion for how the lives of his East Austin community were negatively affected by Austin's political establishment. Hernandez had pneumonia as young man. While in the hospital recovering, a priest, brought him books to read including Rules for Radicals and \"Liberation Theology.\" Reading these expanding his political perspectives and he realized he wanted take political action and not simply react.", "Jesús Hernández (footballer, born 2004)\n Hernández was part of the Mexico U-20 squad that competed at the 2021 Revelations Cup, where Mexico won the competition.", "Antonio Alarcó Hernandez\n Hernandez was born and raised in Santa Cruz de Tenerife on 31 August 1951. He attended University of La Laguna where he studied Medicine and Surgery and graduated with a Bachelors. He also obtained a Doctorate degree in 1980 in the same field. Later, he became a doctor in Information Sciences and a doctor in Sociology. In 1980, Hernandez was appointed professor of Pathology and Surgical Clinic at the Faculty of Medicine of the University of La Laguna. Since 1996, he has also been the professor of surgery at the same university. He is the Chief physician at Hospital Universitario de Canarias. He has authored numerous books, published in national and international magazines.", "José M. Hernández\n Hernández was born in French Camp, California, but calls Stockton, California, his hometown. His family is from La Piedad, Michoacán, Mexico, with indigenous Purépecha roots. In an August 25, 2009, conversation with President Felipe Calderón of Mexico, Hernández stated that as a child, he lived half the year in La Piedad and half in the United States. As a child, Hernández worked alongside his family and other farmworkers throughout the fields of California, harvesting crops and moving from one town to another. He attended many schools and didn't learn to speak English until he was 12. His first memory of space is about adjusting the television in order ", "Jesús Hernández Hernández\n Jesús Hernández Hernández (born 27 October 1991) is a Mexican Paralympic swimmer. He represented Mexico at the 2016 Summer Paralympics, where he won a bronze medal in the 50 meters backstroke S4 event, and at the 2020 Summer Paralympics, where he won a gold medal in the 150 meters individual medley SM3 event. He also participated at the 2019 Parapan American Games, where he won two gold medals and two silver medals.", "Jesús Hernández (cyclist)\n Born in Ávila, Hernández turned professional in 2004, and has taken part in the Vuelta a España three times, but withdrew on the first two occasions during the third week. He finished 19th in the 2009 event. He is well known as being the long-term friend and domestique of Alberto Contador, accompanying Contador at each of his last four teams as a professional cyclist. During the Astana years Lance Armstrong applied to him the nickname \"Sweet baby Jesus\". He rode his first Tour de France in 2010 with being part of Contador's winning team, although that title was later stripped.", "Carlos Hernández Vázquez\n Carlos Hernández Vázquez was born on August 14, 1983 at the Lying-In Hospital in Celaya, Guanajuato. As a teenager, Hernández was interested in photography, and briefly attempted a career as a reporter. His parents sent him to live in México City in the hopes that it would help his academic growth.", "Christopher J. Hernandez\n Hernandez was born in Fresno, California and is Mexican American.", "Joseph Marion Hernández\n José Mariano Hernández or Joseph Marion Hernández (May 26, 1788 – June 8, 1857) was an American politician, plantation owner, and soldier. He was the first from the Florida Territory and the first Hispanic American to serve in the United States Congress. A member of the Whig Party, he served from September 1822 to March 1823. José Mariano Hernández was born in St. Augustine, Florida during Florida's second Spanish period. His parents were Minorcans who had originally come to the region as indentured servants in Andrew Turnbull's New Smyrna colony. Prior to the American acquisition of Florida, Hernández owned three plantations south of St. Augustine (in what was then East Florida): San Jose, Mala Compra, and Bella ", "José Hernández (footballer, born 1997)\nNotes ", "Luis Almarcha Hernández\n Hernández was born at Orihuela, in the province of Alicante. He began his ecclesiastical studies at the local Diocesan Seminary at the age of eleven, studying humanities, philosophy, and theology, and ten years later, in 1908, he moved to Rome, where he obtained his doctorate in canon law at the Gregorian University. He was ordained a priest on July 17, 1910, and on his return to Orihuela two years later, became a canon priest at the cathedral there. He was named professor of the seminary there and Prefect of Discipline. In 1923, he was named cantor of the cathedral, and in 1924, general vicar of the diocese. ", "Jesús Álvarez Amaya\n Jesús Álvarez Amaya was born on November 19, 1925 in the La Merced neighborhood in Mexico City. He came from modest background, working as a baker in his youth. He studied art at the Escuela de Arte para Trabajadores (Art School for Workers) and later studied with noted artist Ramón Alva de la Canal. He later worked as an assistant to Diego Rivera for the mural done at the Insurgentes Theater, as well as the Olympic Stadium at the Ciudad Universitaria. He was a lifelong militant communist, involved in activities mostly through the Taller de Gráfica Popular, for example printing posters during the student uprising in 1968. He was a heavy reader especially valuing poetry, and that of his friend Jaime Sabines. He was also a fan of Carlos Monsiváis. He died on June 21, 2010 in Mexico City of cancer which could not be treated because of his advanced age.", "Tim Z. Hernandez\n Born in Dinuba, California, Hernandez was raised in the San Joaquin Valley of Central California, where he lived in predominantly farm-worker communities in the agricultural region. His family roots are in Texas, New Mexico, and East Los Angeles. Early in his life, Hernandez's parents were migrant farmworkers, following the seasons across the southwest. It was during this time on the road that he developed an interest in travel and stories. In his adolescent years, Hernandez was immersed in acting and visual arts. As a teenager, he focused mainly on painting. He met the artist Joseph De La Cruz in 1990 and began his first apprenticeship at the age of 16. In ", "John of Jesus Hernández y Delgado\n point of throwing him into a bonfire, burned as a traditional part of the festival of Saint John the Baptist, which caused the boy the loss of his left eye. He accepted this treatment with deep resignation as a trial of his faith and kept at his job, combining prayer and penance to deal with it. Hernández learned to read and in 1641 moved to the city of Puerto de la Cruz for better work. While he was making a better living, he felt drawn to follow a more religious way of life, a desire he put off, however, to support his mother. During that period, though, he first begin " ]
In what city was Martin Simonson born?
[ "Gothenburg", "Göteborg" ]
place of birth
Martin Simonson
5,102,920
99
[ { "id": "14745010", "title": "Erik Simonson", "text": " Simonson was born in Duluth, Minnesota.", "score": "1.9036641" }, { "id": "14045137", "title": "Robert Simonson", "text": " Robert Simonson was born in Wisconsin; he has lived in Brooklyn since 1988.", "score": "1.831639" }, { "id": "30057997", "title": "Martin Simonson", "text": " Martin Simonson is a Swedish scholar, novelist, and translator, specialized in fantasy literature and science fiction. He teaches at the University of the Basque Country in Spain, and is mainly known for being the Spanish translator of some of the works of J.R.R. Tolkien. Simonson, who was born in Göteborg, Sweden, in 1973, holds a Ph.D. in English literature (March 2006). Before moving to Spain, he studied psychology, anthropology and creative writing at the University of Göteborg and Fridhems Folkhögskola. He is the author of various novels, among others The Wind of the Wild Lands, the first part of the saga The Faceless Keeper, which takes place in a parallel world and explores themes of identity, personal relationships, the power of nature and spirituality. He has written and edited a number of books on fantasy, science fiction, Western American literature and Gothic horror, and he has translated novels, plays, and graphic novels from English, Swedish and Norwegian into Spanish. Simonson has also published various books and articles on the works of J.R.R. Tolkien.", "score": "1.7330155" }, { "id": "12684411", "title": "Martin Andreasson", "text": " Martin Andreasson (born 1 October 1970 in Malmö), is a Swedish Liberal People's Party politician, a member of the Riksdag 2002–2006. He is openly gay. He is also an active member of Swedish science fiction fandom.", "score": "1.7056215" }, { "id": "4765653", "title": "Mark Simonson", "text": " Mark Simonson (born 1955) is an American independent type designer who works in St. Paul, Minnesota.", "score": "1.6983253" }, { "id": "11412755", "title": "Per-Martin Meyerson", "text": " Dr Per-Martin Meyerson, born 21 August 1927 in Stockholm, Sweden, died 18 August 2013 in Dalhalla, Sweden, was a Swedish economist, an entrepreneur and a policy maker.", "score": "1.6883858" }, { "id": "30482154", "title": "Lee Simonson", "text": " Lee Simonson (June 26, 1888, New York City – January 23, 1967, Yonkers) was an American architect painter, stage setting designer. He acted as a stage set designer for the Washington Square Players (1915–1917). When it became the Theatre Guild in 1919, he became a stage setting staff of the theater.", "score": "1.6664704" }, { "id": "14045136", "title": "Robert Simonson", "text": " Robert Simonson (born September 11, 1964) is an American journalist and author.", "score": "1.6644068" }, { "id": "250923", "title": "Jan Simonsen", "text": " Simonsen was born in Stavanger to businesspersons Viktor Holck Simonsen (1913–90) and Martha Espevoll (1917–91). He was born and raised in the city district Våland, and later lived a few years in Eiganes. He studied social science at Rogaland University College and has a minor in history. He was editor for the publications Strandbuen, Video- og TV-guiden and the official Progress Party publication Fremskritt. He was not married. While he was christened in the Church of Norway, and as an adult remained a strong supporter of the church, he left it during the term of Gunnar Stålsett as bishop of Oslo. This was as Stålsett had been the chairman of the Centre Party in the 1970s, and got his bid for bishop supported by Centre Party MPs in 1998, with Simonsen thinking the choice to have been too politicized. When Stålsett stepped down in 2005, and was succeeded by Ole Christian Kvarme, Simonsen however rejoined the church. In 2005 Simonsen was a competitor on the television show Robinson VIP, a Scandinavian adaptation and celebrity edition of Survivor, achieving the position as runner-up. His favourite Album was Satisfaction by The Rolling Stones, and his favourite writer was Leon Uris.", "score": "1.6531004" }, { "id": "25203429", "title": "Martin Meyerson", "text": " Meyerson was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1922 and graduated from Columbia University. He then obtained his MA in city planning from Harvard University, and began working for the Philadelphia City Planning Commission. In 1948, he became an assistant professor at the University of Chicago. In 1952 Meyerson came to University of Pennsylvania as associate professor of city and regional planning (in the Graduate School of Fine Arts). In 1957 he moved to Harvard as a full professor (the \"Williams Professor\"). From 1963 to 1966 he served as dean of the College of Environmental Design at the University of California, Berkeley; he was the acting chancellor in 1965 during the student unrest there, and is credited with helping to defuse the tension that had built up on that campus. According to UC President Clark Kerr, Meyerson thereby ", "score": "1.6453195" }, { "id": "8507697", "title": "Roy W. Simonson", "text": " University of Maryland until relocating to Oberlin, Ohio, in 1993. Roy Simonson was born to Norwegian immigrants (Otto & Johanna Simonson) on September 7, 1908 on a farm in Agate, North Dakota 16 miles from the Canadian border. He was the second of eight children. He attended high school in Bisbee at age 11. In 1926, Simonson attended North Dakota Agricultural College in Fargo to study engineering, later switching to agriculture in 1929. He studied soils under Charles E. Kellogg and helped map the soils of McKenzie County, ND summer, 1932. He earned his Bachelor of Science in Soils and Chemistry in 1934, and then studied at the University ", "score": "1.6369882" }, { "id": "14745009", "title": "Erik Simonson", "text": " Erik Simonson (born May 26, 1968) is a Minnesota politician and former member of the Minnesota Senate. A member of the Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party (DFL), he represented District 7 which includes the city of Duluth in St. Louis County in northeastern Minnesota.", "score": "1.6294314" }, { "id": "27239131", "title": "Walt Simonson", "text": " Walter Simonson was born September 2, 1946 in Knoxville, Tennessee, and lived there for two and a half years. When his father, who worked for the United States Department of Agriculture, received a promotion at work that required him to relocate to Washington, D.C., Simonson, his younger brother and his parents moved to Maryland, where Simonson's parents still lived as of 1989. Simonson first read comics as a child, through the subscriptions to Walt Disney's Comics and Stories that his brother had. By the age of ten he was an avid fan of the work of Carl Barks, Little Lulu, Little Iodine, and Alex Toth's work on The Land Unknown. He also enjoyed drawing from a very young ", "score": "1.6255894" }, { "id": "1361260", "title": "Roland Poirier Martinsson", "text": " Roland Poirier Martinsson (born in Aahus, Kristianstad County, Sweden, 15 February 1962) is an author, conservative philosopher and radio- and TV-personality from Sweden, now living in Austin, Texas. As a columnist, he writes mainly on American politics from a social and cultural point of view. He is a regular contributor to Svenska Dagbladet and Expressen, two major Swedish newspapers. He has also written for The Weekly Standard. Martinsson is married and has three children. In 1997, he left the Church of Sweden and converted to Roman Catholicism. Poirier Martinsson received his PhD in philosophy from Lund University, Sweden, in 2001 for a thesis on the justification of empirical beliefs (published in 2001 as A Two-Front Battle). His books are mainly concerned with the historic and contemporary relations between science, religion, culture and society.", "score": "1.6169996" }, { "id": "7013134", "title": "Hans Mosesson", "text": " Hans Kristoffer Mosesson (born 1 August 1944) is a Swedish actor and musician. Hans Mosesson was born in the Enskede district of Stockholm. He studied medicine at the University of Lund in the 1970s. In Lund, he met the newly founded leftist theater and musical group Nationalteatern, and Mosesson quit his studies and joined the group and moved with them to Gothenburg. He both wrote and sang the songs \"Plast's sång\" and \"Lägg av!\", among others. Mosesson has also been in many Swedish films and TV-productions. In recent years, he has become a household face in Sweden after starring in a long-running series of commercials for grocery chain ICA.", "score": "1.6023967" }, { "id": "16415810", "title": "Per-Martin Hamberg", "text": " Per-Martin Hamberg (born 14 July 1912 in Grundsunda, Sweden,– d. 11. December 1974 in Lidingö, Sweden) was a Swedish composer, scriptwriter, director, author and radio producer. Per-Martin Hamberg was born in Ångermanland, but, at age 3, came to Stugun in Jämtland County where his father worked as priest. Per-Martin finished High School at Östersund in 1932. Already during his high school years he performed at local city shows with his own melodies. Then he moved to Stockholm, where he passed the exam in Philosophy at Stockholm University in 1939. In high school at Östersund he met Karin Juel, and with her help he was able to publish a number of ", "score": "1.597547" }, { "id": "28463344", "title": "Martin Kolberg", "text": " Kolberg was born in the city of Drammen, Buskerud. He is the son of railroad worker Kjell O. J. Kolberg (1921-) and homemaker Ruth Utengen (1921-2006). After finishing primary school, Kolberg attended Oslo Technical College, but later dropped out. He since completed training as an electrician. He held a variety of jobs, including mailman, Lab assistant at a cable wire factory and also as assistant at the local shoe-factory.", "score": "1.5906576" }, { "id": "6265234", "title": "Rolf Martinsson", "text": " Rolf Martinsson (born 1 May 1956 in Glimåkra, Skåne, Sweden) is a Swedish composer. Martinsson studied composition at Malmö Academy of Music, Lund University 1981-85 under Brian Ferneyhough, Sven-David Sandström, Hans Eklund, Sven-Eric Johanson, Jan W. Morthenson and Sven-Erik Bäck. Since 1987 he has taught composition and arranging at the same academy. In 1980, he was one of the founders of FUTIM (Föreningen unga tonsättare i Malmö), Association of young composers in Malmö. In 1984 he was the producer for UNM (Ung nordisk musik), Young Scandinavian music, in Malmö and in 1986 was elected into the Association of Swedish composers. Since 2002 he has been artistic director (for new music) of the Malmö Symphony Orchestra. Rolf Martinsson has written pieces in many different genres such as orchestral music, solo concertos, choral music, chamber music and music for radio theatre. Several pieces have been commissioned by Swedish and overseas ensembles.", "score": "1.5777876" }, { "id": "14568035", "title": "Simon Flem Devold", "text": " Simon Flem Devold birthname Helge Flem Devold (17 March 1929 – 20 May 2015) born in Namsos, Norway, was a Norwegian author, journalist and jazz clarinetist. When he was three years of age he and his family moved to Ålesund, where he was raised. His change of name from Helge to Simon occurred in connection with his affiliation with Subud, a worldwide association with Indonesian Indonesian roots where «the desire for the individual is to find the person you want to be here on earth». In 2012, Devold received the Fritt Ord Honorary Award for his «groundbreaking commitment as a facilitator of children's voices, life experiences and rights» through the column «På skråss» in Aftenposten, often based on taboo themes.", "score": "1.5731983" }, { "id": "3531500", "title": "Einar Jonasson", "text": " Einar Sigurjon Jonasson (17 June 1887 – 8 July 1935) was a politician in Manitoba, Canada. He served in the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba from 1932 to 1935, as a member of the Manitoba Liberal Party. Jonasson was born in Mountain, North Dakota, the son of Einar Jonasson and Jonina Sigfusdottir, both Icelandic immigrants. His family moved to Canada in 1888, and he was educated at Vernon, British Columbia, and Gimli, Manitoba. He married Anna Tergersen. Jonasson served as clerk for Gimli from 1908 to 1920, as chair of the Gimli school board from 1918 to 1923 and as mayor of the Town of Gimli from 1924 to 1926. He also became the secretary-treasurer of the Rural Municipality of Gimli in 1911, and continued to hold this office into ", "score": "1.5655688" } ]
[ "Erik Simonson\n Simonson was born in Duluth, Minnesota.", "Robert Simonson\n Robert Simonson was born in Wisconsin; he has lived in Brooklyn since 1988.", "Martin Simonson\n Martin Simonson is a Swedish scholar, novelist, and translator, specialized in fantasy literature and science fiction. He teaches at the University of the Basque Country in Spain, and is mainly known for being the Spanish translator of some of the works of J.R.R. Tolkien. Simonson, who was born in Göteborg, Sweden, in 1973, holds a Ph.D. in English literature (March 2006). Before moving to Spain, he studied psychology, anthropology and creative writing at the University of Göteborg and Fridhems Folkhögskola. He is the author of various novels, among others The Wind of the Wild Lands, the first part of the saga The Faceless Keeper, which takes place in a parallel world and explores themes of identity, personal relationships, the power of nature and spirituality. He has written and edited a number of books on fantasy, science fiction, Western American literature and Gothic horror, and he has translated novels, plays, and graphic novels from English, Swedish and Norwegian into Spanish. Simonson has also published various books and articles on the works of J.R.R. Tolkien.", "Martin Andreasson\n Martin Andreasson (born 1 October 1970 in Malmö), is a Swedish Liberal People's Party politician, a member of the Riksdag 2002–2006. He is openly gay. He is also an active member of Swedish science fiction fandom.", "Mark Simonson\n Mark Simonson (born 1955) is an American independent type designer who works in St. Paul, Minnesota.", "Per-Martin Meyerson\n Dr Per-Martin Meyerson, born 21 August 1927 in Stockholm, Sweden, died 18 August 2013 in Dalhalla, Sweden, was a Swedish economist, an entrepreneur and a policy maker.", "Lee Simonson\n Lee Simonson (June 26, 1888, New York City – January 23, 1967, Yonkers) was an American architect painter, stage setting designer. He acted as a stage set designer for the Washington Square Players (1915–1917). When it became the Theatre Guild in 1919, he became a stage setting staff of the theater.", "Robert Simonson\n Robert Simonson (born September 11, 1964) is an American journalist and author.", "Jan Simonsen\n Simonsen was born in Stavanger to businesspersons Viktor Holck Simonsen (1913–90) and Martha Espevoll (1917–91). He was born and raised in the city district Våland, and later lived a few years in Eiganes. He studied social science at Rogaland University College and has a minor in history. He was editor for the publications Strandbuen, Video- og TV-guiden and the official Progress Party publication Fremskritt. He was not married. While he was christened in the Church of Norway, and as an adult remained a strong supporter of the church, he left it during the term of Gunnar Stålsett as bishop of Oslo. This was as Stålsett had been the chairman of the Centre Party in the 1970s, and got his bid for bishop supported by Centre Party MPs in 1998, with Simonsen thinking the choice to have been too politicized. When Stålsett stepped down in 2005, and was succeeded by Ole Christian Kvarme, Simonsen however rejoined the church. In 2005 Simonsen was a competitor on the television show Robinson VIP, a Scandinavian adaptation and celebrity edition of Survivor, achieving the position as runner-up. His favourite Album was Satisfaction by The Rolling Stones, and his favourite writer was Leon Uris.", "Martin Meyerson\n Meyerson was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1922 and graduated from Columbia University. He then obtained his MA in city planning from Harvard University, and began working for the Philadelphia City Planning Commission. In 1948, he became an assistant professor at the University of Chicago. In 1952 Meyerson came to University of Pennsylvania as associate professor of city and regional planning (in the Graduate School of Fine Arts). In 1957 he moved to Harvard as a full professor (the \"Williams Professor\"). From 1963 to 1966 he served as dean of the College of Environmental Design at the University of California, Berkeley; he was the acting chancellor in 1965 during the student unrest there, and is credited with helping to defuse the tension that had built up on that campus. According to UC President Clark Kerr, Meyerson thereby ", "Roy W. Simonson\n University of Maryland until relocating to Oberlin, Ohio, in 1993. Roy Simonson was born to Norwegian immigrants (Otto & Johanna Simonson) on September 7, 1908 on a farm in Agate, North Dakota 16 miles from the Canadian border. He was the second of eight children. He attended high school in Bisbee at age 11. In 1926, Simonson attended North Dakota Agricultural College in Fargo to study engineering, later switching to agriculture in 1929. He studied soils under Charles E. Kellogg and helped map the soils of McKenzie County, ND summer, 1932. He earned his Bachelor of Science in Soils and Chemistry in 1934, and then studied at the University ", "Erik Simonson\n Erik Simonson (born May 26, 1968) is a Minnesota politician and former member of the Minnesota Senate. A member of the Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party (DFL), he represented District 7 which includes the city of Duluth in St. Louis County in northeastern Minnesota.", "Walt Simonson\n Walter Simonson was born September 2, 1946 in Knoxville, Tennessee, and lived there for two and a half years. When his father, who worked for the United States Department of Agriculture, received a promotion at work that required him to relocate to Washington, D.C., Simonson, his younger brother and his parents moved to Maryland, where Simonson's parents still lived as of 1989. Simonson first read comics as a child, through the subscriptions to Walt Disney's Comics and Stories that his brother had. By the age of ten he was an avid fan of the work of Carl Barks, Little Lulu, Little Iodine, and Alex Toth's work on The Land Unknown. He also enjoyed drawing from a very young ", "Roland Poirier Martinsson\n Roland Poirier Martinsson (born in Aahus, Kristianstad County, Sweden, 15 February 1962) is an author, conservative philosopher and radio- and TV-personality from Sweden, now living in Austin, Texas. As a columnist, he writes mainly on American politics from a social and cultural point of view. He is a regular contributor to Svenska Dagbladet and Expressen, two major Swedish newspapers. He has also written for The Weekly Standard. Martinsson is married and has three children. In 1997, he left the Church of Sweden and converted to Roman Catholicism. Poirier Martinsson received his PhD in philosophy from Lund University, Sweden, in 2001 for a thesis on the justification of empirical beliefs (published in 2001 as A Two-Front Battle). His books are mainly concerned with the historic and contemporary relations between science, religion, culture and society.", "Hans Mosesson\n Hans Kristoffer Mosesson (born 1 August 1944) is a Swedish actor and musician. Hans Mosesson was born in the Enskede district of Stockholm. He studied medicine at the University of Lund in the 1970s. In Lund, he met the newly founded leftist theater and musical group Nationalteatern, and Mosesson quit his studies and joined the group and moved with them to Gothenburg. He both wrote and sang the songs \"Plast's sång\" and \"Lägg av!\", among others. Mosesson has also been in many Swedish films and TV-productions. In recent years, he has become a household face in Sweden after starring in a long-running series of commercials for grocery chain ICA.", "Per-Martin Hamberg\n Per-Martin Hamberg (born 14 July 1912 in Grundsunda, Sweden,– d. 11. December 1974 in Lidingö, Sweden) was a Swedish composer, scriptwriter, director, author and radio producer. Per-Martin Hamberg was born in Ångermanland, but, at age 3, came to Stugun in Jämtland County where his father worked as priest. Per-Martin finished High School at Östersund in 1932. Already during his high school years he performed at local city shows with his own melodies. Then he moved to Stockholm, where he passed the exam in Philosophy at Stockholm University in 1939. In high school at Östersund he met Karin Juel, and with her help he was able to publish a number of ", "Martin Kolberg\n Kolberg was born in the city of Drammen, Buskerud. He is the son of railroad worker Kjell O. J. Kolberg (1921-) and homemaker Ruth Utengen (1921-2006). After finishing primary school, Kolberg attended Oslo Technical College, but later dropped out. He since completed training as an electrician. He held a variety of jobs, including mailman, Lab assistant at a cable wire factory and also as assistant at the local shoe-factory.", "Rolf Martinsson\n Rolf Martinsson (born 1 May 1956 in Glimåkra, Skåne, Sweden) is a Swedish composer. Martinsson studied composition at Malmö Academy of Music, Lund University 1981-85 under Brian Ferneyhough, Sven-David Sandström, Hans Eklund, Sven-Eric Johanson, Jan W. Morthenson and Sven-Erik Bäck. Since 1987 he has taught composition and arranging at the same academy. In 1980, he was one of the founders of FUTIM (Föreningen unga tonsättare i Malmö), Association of young composers in Malmö. In 1984 he was the producer for UNM (Ung nordisk musik), Young Scandinavian music, in Malmö and in 1986 was elected into the Association of Swedish composers. Since 2002 he has been artistic director (for new music) of the Malmö Symphony Orchestra. Rolf Martinsson has written pieces in many different genres such as orchestral music, solo concertos, choral music, chamber music and music for radio theatre. Several pieces have been commissioned by Swedish and overseas ensembles.", "Simon Flem Devold\n Simon Flem Devold birthname Helge Flem Devold (17 March 1929 – 20 May 2015) born in Namsos, Norway, was a Norwegian author, journalist and jazz clarinetist. When he was three years of age he and his family moved to Ålesund, where he was raised. His change of name from Helge to Simon occurred in connection with his affiliation with Subud, a worldwide association with Indonesian Indonesian roots where «the desire for the individual is to find the person you want to be here on earth». In 2012, Devold received the Fritt Ord Honorary Award for his «groundbreaking commitment as a facilitator of children's voices, life experiences and rights» through the column «På skråss» in Aftenposten, often based on taboo themes.", "Einar Jonasson\n Einar Sigurjon Jonasson (17 June 1887 – 8 July 1935) was a politician in Manitoba, Canada. He served in the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba from 1932 to 1935, as a member of the Manitoba Liberal Party. Jonasson was born in Mountain, North Dakota, the son of Einar Jonasson and Jonina Sigfusdottir, both Icelandic immigrants. His family moved to Canada in 1888, and he was educated at Vernon, British Columbia, and Gimli, Manitoba. He married Anna Tergersen. Jonasson served as clerk for Gimli from 1908 to 1920, as chair of the Gimli school board from 1918 to 1923 and as mayor of the Town of Gimli from 1924 to 1926. He also became the secretary-treasurer of the Rural Municipality of Gimli in 1911, and continued to hold this office into " ]
What is the religion of John Orr?
[ "Anglicanism", "Anglicanism, Anglican Church" ]
religion
John Orr (bishop)
4,729,181
48
[ { "id": "3630775", "title": "Matt Orr", "text": "Notes ", "score": "1.8723071" }, { "id": "30943427", "title": "J. Edwin Orr", "text": " James Edwin Orr (January 15, 1912 – April 22, 1987) was a Baptist Christian minister, hymn-writer, professor, author and promoter of Church revival and renewal.", "score": "1.603513" }, { "id": "4657492", "title": "John Orr (bowls)", "text": " He was a doctor by trade and lived in Park Terrace, Edinburgh.", "score": "1.5809441" }, { "id": "9172510", "title": "John Orr (scholar of French)", "text": " John Orr, FBA (4 June 1885 – 10 August 1966) was an English-born Scottish-Australian scholar of French language and philology, and a translator of French literature.", "score": "1.5635065" }, { "id": "30943429", "title": "J. Edwin Orr", "text": " marriage the Orrs evangelised in Australia (1939) China, Canada and the United States of America. In 1939 Orr enrolled at Northwest University. On 15 January 1940 he was ordained into the Baptist Christian ministry, at Newark, New Jersey, United States. He received his MA from Northwest University in 1941, and his Th.D. from Northern Baptist Seminary in 1943. During World War II he served as a chaplain in the US Air Force in the Pacific. After the war he continued his studies and took his Ph.D. at Oxford University in 1948, with a thesis on the second evangelical awakening in Britain. ", "score": "1.5475557" }, { "id": "9300819", "title": "Johnny Orr (basketball, born 1927)", "text": " John Michael Orr (June 10, 1927 – December 30, 2013) was an American basketball player and coach, best known as the head coach of men's basketball at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, University of Michigan, and at Iowa State University. In the 1975–76 season, Orr was named National Coach of the Year.", "score": "1.5319827" }, { "id": "15112584", "title": "John Orr (bishop)", "text": " The Most Rev John Orr was a 20th-century Anglican Bishop. Born in 1874 and educated at Trinity College, Dublin, he was ordained in 1900. He began his ministry with curacies at St John’s, Dublin and All Saints, Aghade, and St Nicholas, Dundalk and Kilmore Cathedral. In 1912 he became Rector of Sligo and in 1917 appointed Dean of Tuam. In 1923 he became Bishop of Tuam and in 1927 was translated to Meath. He died in post on 21 July 1938", "score": "1.5168493" }, { "id": "8804561", "title": "Lawrence Orr", "text": " Orr was born at 2 Ulster Terrace in Belfast on 16 September 1918, the son of clerk William Robert Macauley Orr and the former Evelyn Sarah Storey. He was later chairman of the Ulster Unionist MPs in the House of Commons from 1964 to 1974 and also Imperial Grand Master of the Orange Order. He defended the influence of Orangemen in the UUP, saying they are \"neither bigoted nor uncharitable ... we do not seek to injure or upbraid a man on account of his religious opinions ... and that they treated those who differed from them with all the common courtesies of a civilised community.\" Orr warned members not to \"follow any narrow-minded part or copy the medieval Roman church in restricting the liberty of conscience of our members.\" He also resisted attempts by Westminster to interfere in Northern Ireland's affairs. He married Jean Hughes and she bore five children, William, Mary, John, Robin and Christopher.", "score": "1.5149276" }, { "id": "14223562", "title": "Orr (Catch-22)", "text": " Orr's motivation throughout is to escape the squadron and the war. He is also known for being very mechanically adept and uses his skills to make his and Yossarian's tent as comfortable as possible. This is because Yossarian is his friend, and although it is Orr's intent to escape, he wants to make things comfortable and good for him.", "score": "1.4997894" }, { "id": "9172511", "title": "John Orr (scholar of French)", "text": " Orr was born in 1885 in Cumberland to Scottish parents. When he was still a boy, the family migrated to Tasmania, where he attended Launceston High School and the University of Tasmania (he read classics at the latter). He won a Rhodes Scholarship to study at Balliol College, Oxford, beginning in 1905. He initially studied classics, switching to law for his finals, which he sat in 1909. A period of ill health led him to France and Switzerland for recuperation; there, he met his future wife, Augusta Berthe Brisac, and also developed an interest in French language and literature. In 1911, he was awarded the Licence-ès-Lettres by the University of Paris. He completed the BLitt at the University of Oxford in 1913.", "score": "1.4997127" }, { "id": "10908397", "title": "Don Orr", "text": " Donald C. Orr was an American football player and official.", "score": "1.4937043" }, { "id": "11799873", "title": "John Orr (priest)", "text": " John Orr was an 18th-century Irish Anglican priest. Barton was educated at Trinity College, Dublin, He was Rector of Maryborough then Archdeacon of Ferns from 1757 until his 1767.", "score": "1.4921277" }, { "id": "876117", "title": "James Orr (theologian)", "text": " James Orr (1844–6 September 1913 ) was a Scottish Presbyterian minister and professor of church history and then theology. He was an influential defender of evangelical doctrine and a contributor to The Fundamentals.", "score": "1.4895378" }, { "id": "876119", "title": "James Orr (theologian)", "text": " Orr was a vocal critic of theological liberalism (of Albrecht Ritschl especially) and helped establish Christian fundamentalism. His lectures and writings upheld the doctrines of the virgin birth and resurrection of Jesus, and the infallibility of the Bible. In contrast to modern fundamentalists and his friend B.B. Warfield, he did not agree with the stronger position of Biblical inerrancy. Like Warfield, but also unlike modern Christian fundamentalists, he advocated a position which he called \"theistic evolution\". Orr wrote that \"evolution is coming to be recognized as but a new name for 'creation', only that the creative power now works from within, instead of, as in the old conception, in an external plastic fashion.\" In his book Revelation and Inspiration (1910), he wrote that evolution is not in conflict with the Christian theistic view of the world.", "score": "1.4879961" }, { "id": "31870381", "title": "1966 in Ireland", "text": "Sydney Sparkes Orr, Professor of Philosophy at the University of Tasmania (born 1914). ", "score": "1.4836974" }, { "id": "5758712", "title": "Orr (surname)", "text": "Orr, bomber pilot in the novel Catch-22 by Joseph Heller ; George Orr, protagonist in the novel The Lathe of Heaven by Ursula K. Le Guin ; John Orr, protagonist in the novel The Bridge by Iain Banks ", "score": "1.483078" }, { "id": "876118", "title": "James Orr (theologian)", "text": " Orr was born in Glasgow and spent his childhood in Manchester and Leeds. He was orphaned and became an apprentice bookbinder, but went on to enter Glasgow University in 1865. In 1870, he obtained an M.A. in Philosophy of Mind, and after graduating from the theological college of the United Presbyterian Church, he was ordained a minister in Hawick. In 1885 he received a D.D. from Glasgow University, and in the early 1890s delivered a series of lectures that later became the influential The Christian View of God and the World. He was appointed professor of Church history in 1891 at the theological college of the United Presbyterian Church. He was one of the primary promoters of the union of the United Presbyterian Church with the Free Church of Scotland, and he represented the United Presbyterians in the unification talks. After they joined in 1900, he moved to Free Church College (now Trinity College, Glasgow), as professor of apologetics and theology. He lectured widely in both Britain and the United States.", "score": "1.4808292" }, { "id": "14223561", "title": "Orr (Catch-22)", "text": " Orr is a fictional character in the classic 1961 novel Catch-22 by Joseph Heller. Orr is a World War II bomber pilot who shares a tent with his good friend, the protagonist of the novel, Yossarian. Described as \"a warm-hearted, simple-minded gnome,\" Orr is generally considered crazy. His most notable feature is repeatedly being shot down over water, but, until his final flight, always managing to survive along with his entire crew. On his final flight, perhaps two-thirds of the way through the novel, he is again shot down into the Mediterranean, and is lost at sea. Only in the last ten pages of the novel does Heller reveal that Orr's crashes were part of an elaborate (and successful) plot to escape the war. Orr is the only airman of the group to successfully get away by the end of the novel.", "score": "1.4807577" }, { "id": "9172514", "title": "John Orr (scholar of French)", "text": " Languages and Literatures from 1963 to 1966; he was Romance editor for the Modern Language Review from 1948 to 1958, and was among the founders of French Studies. Orr was the subject of a Festschrift: Studies in Romance Philology and French Literature Presented to John Orr by Pupils, Colleagues and Friends (1953). He was elected a fellow of the British Academy in 1952 and was awarded three honorary doctorates. He was a Commander of the French Legion of Honour and a Knight Commander of the Spanish Civil Order of Alfonso X, the Wise. He died in 1966; his wife and their only child had predeceased him.", "score": "1.4749172" }, { "id": "9815603", "title": "Ori Orr", "text": " Orr was born in Kfar Haim, Mandatory Palestine, in 1939. He was awarded a Bachelor of Arts degree in Political Science & History from Tel Aviv University.", "score": "1.4674275" } ]
[ "Matt Orr\nNotes ", "J. Edwin Orr\n James Edwin Orr (January 15, 1912 – April 22, 1987) was a Baptist Christian minister, hymn-writer, professor, author and promoter of Church revival and renewal.", "John Orr (bowls)\n He was a doctor by trade and lived in Park Terrace, Edinburgh.", "John Orr (scholar of French)\n John Orr, FBA (4 June 1885 – 10 August 1966) was an English-born Scottish-Australian scholar of French language and philology, and a translator of French literature.", "J. Edwin Orr\n marriage the Orrs evangelised in Australia (1939) China, Canada and the United States of America. In 1939 Orr enrolled at Northwest University. On 15 January 1940 he was ordained into the Baptist Christian ministry, at Newark, New Jersey, United States. He received his MA from Northwest University in 1941, and his Th.D. from Northern Baptist Seminary in 1943. During World War II he served as a chaplain in the US Air Force in the Pacific. After the war he continued his studies and took his Ph.D. at Oxford University in 1948, with a thesis on the second evangelical awakening in Britain. ", "Johnny Orr (basketball, born 1927)\n John Michael Orr (June 10, 1927 – December 30, 2013) was an American basketball player and coach, best known as the head coach of men's basketball at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, University of Michigan, and at Iowa State University. In the 1975–76 season, Orr was named National Coach of the Year.", "John Orr (bishop)\n The Most Rev John Orr was a 20th-century Anglican Bishop. Born in 1874 and educated at Trinity College, Dublin, he was ordained in 1900. He began his ministry with curacies at St John’s, Dublin and All Saints, Aghade, and St Nicholas, Dundalk and Kilmore Cathedral. In 1912 he became Rector of Sligo and in 1917 appointed Dean of Tuam. In 1923 he became Bishop of Tuam and in 1927 was translated to Meath. He died in post on 21 July 1938", "Lawrence Orr\n Orr was born at 2 Ulster Terrace in Belfast on 16 September 1918, the son of clerk William Robert Macauley Orr and the former Evelyn Sarah Storey. He was later chairman of the Ulster Unionist MPs in the House of Commons from 1964 to 1974 and also Imperial Grand Master of the Orange Order. He defended the influence of Orangemen in the UUP, saying they are \"neither bigoted nor uncharitable ... we do not seek to injure or upbraid a man on account of his religious opinions ... and that they treated those who differed from them with all the common courtesies of a civilised community.\" Orr warned members not to \"follow any narrow-minded part or copy the medieval Roman church in restricting the liberty of conscience of our members.\" He also resisted attempts by Westminster to interfere in Northern Ireland's affairs. He married Jean Hughes and she bore five children, William, Mary, John, Robin and Christopher.", "Orr (Catch-22)\n Orr's motivation throughout is to escape the squadron and the war. He is also known for being very mechanically adept and uses his skills to make his and Yossarian's tent as comfortable as possible. This is because Yossarian is his friend, and although it is Orr's intent to escape, he wants to make things comfortable and good for him.", "John Orr (scholar of French)\n Orr was born in 1885 in Cumberland to Scottish parents. When he was still a boy, the family migrated to Tasmania, where he attended Launceston High School and the University of Tasmania (he read classics at the latter). He won a Rhodes Scholarship to study at Balliol College, Oxford, beginning in 1905. He initially studied classics, switching to law for his finals, which he sat in 1909. A period of ill health led him to France and Switzerland for recuperation; there, he met his future wife, Augusta Berthe Brisac, and also developed an interest in French language and literature. In 1911, he was awarded the Licence-ès-Lettres by the University of Paris. He completed the BLitt at the University of Oxford in 1913.", "Don Orr\n Donald C. Orr was an American football player and official.", "John Orr (priest)\n John Orr was an 18th-century Irish Anglican priest. Barton was educated at Trinity College, Dublin, He was Rector of Maryborough then Archdeacon of Ferns from 1757 until his 1767.", "James Orr (theologian)\n James Orr (1844–6 September 1913 ) was a Scottish Presbyterian minister and professor of church history and then theology. He was an influential defender of evangelical doctrine and a contributor to The Fundamentals.", "James Orr (theologian)\n Orr was a vocal critic of theological liberalism (of Albrecht Ritschl especially) and helped establish Christian fundamentalism. His lectures and writings upheld the doctrines of the virgin birth and resurrection of Jesus, and the infallibility of the Bible. In contrast to modern fundamentalists and his friend B.B. Warfield, he did not agree with the stronger position of Biblical inerrancy. Like Warfield, but also unlike modern Christian fundamentalists, he advocated a position which he called \"theistic evolution\". Orr wrote that \"evolution is coming to be recognized as but a new name for 'creation', only that the creative power now works from within, instead of, as in the old conception, in an external plastic fashion.\" In his book Revelation and Inspiration (1910), he wrote that evolution is not in conflict with the Christian theistic view of the world.", "1966 in Ireland\nSydney Sparkes Orr, Professor of Philosophy at the University of Tasmania (born 1914). ", "Orr (surname)\nOrr, bomber pilot in the novel Catch-22 by Joseph Heller ; George Orr, protagonist in the novel The Lathe of Heaven by Ursula K. Le Guin ; John Orr, protagonist in the novel The Bridge by Iain Banks ", "James Orr (theologian)\n Orr was born in Glasgow and spent his childhood in Manchester and Leeds. He was orphaned and became an apprentice bookbinder, but went on to enter Glasgow University in 1865. In 1870, he obtained an M.A. in Philosophy of Mind, and after graduating from the theological college of the United Presbyterian Church, he was ordained a minister in Hawick. In 1885 he received a D.D. from Glasgow University, and in the early 1890s delivered a series of lectures that later became the influential The Christian View of God and the World. He was appointed professor of Church history in 1891 at the theological college of the United Presbyterian Church. He was one of the primary promoters of the union of the United Presbyterian Church with the Free Church of Scotland, and he represented the United Presbyterians in the unification talks. After they joined in 1900, he moved to Free Church College (now Trinity College, Glasgow), as professor of apologetics and theology. He lectured widely in both Britain and the United States.", "Orr (Catch-22)\n Orr is a fictional character in the classic 1961 novel Catch-22 by Joseph Heller. Orr is a World War II bomber pilot who shares a tent with his good friend, the protagonist of the novel, Yossarian. Described as \"a warm-hearted, simple-minded gnome,\" Orr is generally considered crazy. His most notable feature is repeatedly being shot down over water, but, until his final flight, always managing to survive along with his entire crew. On his final flight, perhaps two-thirds of the way through the novel, he is again shot down into the Mediterranean, and is lost at sea. Only in the last ten pages of the novel does Heller reveal that Orr's crashes were part of an elaborate (and successful) plot to escape the war. Orr is the only airman of the group to successfully get away by the end of the novel.", "John Orr (scholar of French)\n Languages and Literatures from 1963 to 1966; he was Romance editor for the Modern Language Review from 1948 to 1958, and was among the founders of French Studies. Orr was the subject of a Festschrift: Studies in Romance Philology and French Literature Presented to John Orr by Pupils, Colleagues and Friends (1953). He was elected a fellow of the British Academy in 1952 and was awarded three honorary doctorates. He was a Commander of the French Legion of Honour and a Knight Commander of the Spanish Civil Order of Alfonso X, the Wise. He died in 1966; his wife and their only child had predeceased him.", "Ori Orr\n Orr was born in Kfar Haim, Mandatory Palestine, in 1939. He was awarded a Bachelor of Arts degree in Political Science & History from Tel Aviv University." ]
What sport does VOKO-Irodion play?
[ "volleyball" ]
sport
VOKO-Irodion
6,087,186
49
[ { "id": "5010310", "title": "VOKO-Irodion", "text": " VOKO-Irodion is a volleyball club from Oosterhout. VOKO was founded in 1974 as an agreement between former Oosterhout volleyball clubs LEC and RELAX. The first team plays in the Dutch third division, and their goal is promote to the national divisions.", "score": "1.7997112" }, { "id": "3090972", "title": "Nikko Landeros", "text": " Nikko Landeros (born April 28, 1989) is an ice sled hockey player and paralympic freestyle skier from the United States. He took part in the 2010 Winter Paralympics in Vancouver, where USA won gold. They beat Japan 2-0 in the final. He was also on the team USA in the 2014 Winter Paralympics in Sochi, which won gold by beating Russia 1-0 in the final. He and his best friend Tyler Carron had an accident when they were 17. Both lost their legs. His father is a native of Mexico and his mother is from Milan, Italy.", "score": "1.397317" }, { "id": "7967888", "title": "Spirydion Albański", "text": " Spirydion Jan Albański (4 October 1907 – 30 March 1992), nicknamed \"Spirytus\" and \"Romek\", was a Polish football goalkeeper in the 1930s. He played for Pogoń Lwów and the Polish National Team. Albański was born in Lwów (Lviv). He graduated from high school after the Second World War, when he was forced to move from Lwów to Upper Silesia, worked in the coal-mining industry. He was later a civil servant, and also a soccer coach.", "score": "1.3244538" }, { "id": "10252696", "title": "Serhiy Vovkodav", "text": " Serhiy Vovkodav (Сергій Васильович Вовкодав; born 2 July 1988) is a Ukrainian professional football defender who plays for FC Poltava in the Ukrainian First League. Playing in the youth competitions of the Ukrainian Premier League in 2006–2013, on 27 May 2021 retained its record with the most games in competitions among under-21 teams.", "score": "1.3173528" }, { "id": "30032799", "title": "A1 Belarus", "text": " Amediateka, START, ivi, The Walt Disney Studios movies and cartoons. The service is accessible from Android and iOS mobile devices, Smart TV running on Tizen, WebOS, Android TV, on RedboxMini, Xiaomi Mi Box 3, Apple TV (via AirPlay) boxes. Desktop users can access the video service via the VOKA application for Windows or on the website. In 2018, VOKA launched proprietary media content: \"Our Football\" and \"Our Hockey\" offering broadcasts of games with Belarusian clubs and national teams, live streaming of concerts, music festivals, conferences and forums, as well as cyber sports tournaments in the section \"Cybersport\". Also available for ", "score": "1.3166358" }, { "id": "243363", "title": "Evgeny Voronov", "text": " Voronov is also a member of the senior Russian national basketball team. He competed with the team for the first time at the 2010 FIBA World Championship after previously making appearances with the junior national team, including helping the team to a gold medal at the 2005 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship. He was part of the Russian team that won the bronze medal at the 2012 Summer Olympics.", "score": "1.3049479" }, { "id": "32863715", "title": "Sergei Voronov (ice hockey)", "text": " the 1992-93 season. Voronov remained with the Thunder for the remainder of the season, scoring six points in 40 games but did not play any games in the postseason. After two seasons in the North American minor leagues, Voronov returned to Russia. Voronov spent the next 10 out of his 11 seasons in Russia, including four seasons in the Russian Superleague, where he won a championship with the Metallurg Magnitogorsk during the 2000-01 season. He joined Titan Klin of the VHL in 2004 and remained with the team until his retirement in 2008. Since his retirement, Voronov became an assistant coach with HC MVD and later became head coach of Buran Voronezh.", "score": "1.2985795" }, { "id": "26064234", "title": "Sport in Pakistan", "text": " Vovinam is a emerging sport in Pakistan, Pakistan Vovinam Federation is the governing body of Vovinam in Pakistan, Federation is non profit organization which is coordinate with Punjab Sindh Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Baluchistan Islamabad Azad Kashmir and Gilgit-bultistan provinces Vovinam Associations. Pakistani Vovinam team also Participated in international Vovinam Championships and got silver and bronze medals, 2013 and 2019.", "score": "1.2952102" }, { "id": "28446167", "title": "Toki (video game)", "text": " to travel through murky lakes, steep canyons, over frozen ice-capped mountain ranges and lava-spewing volcanoes alike. To progress in his quest and be ultimately victorious, Toki will have to battle all manner of dangerous wild animals and various mutants of Vookimedlo's creation; not to mention Vookimedlo's own abominable guardians who act as level bosses. In some ports of the game, Toki was named \"JuJu\", Miho was named \"Wanda\" and Vookimedlo was named \"Dr. Stark\". Also, in some ports it was not Vookimedlo who kidnaps princess Miho, but his chief henchman, the half-invisible giant known as Bashtar. In some ports Bashtar was the final boss of the game, and not Vookimedlo.", "score": "1.2869596" }, { "id": "30612860", "title": "Oosterhout", "text": " • VOKO, Volleyball • ATV Scorpio, Athletics • SCO-Tofs, Football • TSC, Football • VV Oosterhout, Football • De Warande, Hockey • OZ&PC De Warande, Swimming and Water polo • De Voltreffers, Korfball • De Glaskoning Twins, Baseball", "score": "1.2796797" }, { "id": "26698858", "title": "2008 Kazakhstan Premier League", "text": " 2, 2–2) and Shakhter vs. Okzhetpes (Round 3, 2–1) were awarded against Okzhetpes because of unknown reasons. ; match_OKZ_VOS_note=OKZ_AKT ; match_SHA_OKZ_note=OKZ_AKT match_KRT_VOS_note=The games have been counted as lost with a score of 3–0 for Vostok because of their participation in a fixed game with Shakhter. ; match_MEG_VOS_note=KRT_VOS ; match_TOB_VOS_note=KRT_VOS ; match_VOS_AKT_note=KRT_VOS ; match_VOS_AST_note=KRT_VOS ; match_VOS_IRT_note=KRT_VOS ; match_VOS_OKZ_note=KRT_VOS ; match_VOS_ZHE_note=KRT_VOS match_SHA_VOS_note=The result of the game (Shakhter 2–1 Vostok) has been discarded. match_MEG_ZHE_note=The games Megasport vs. Zhetysu (Round 1, 2–1) and Megasport vs. Astana (Round 2, 0–0) were awarded against Megasport because they fielded two ineligible players. ; match_MEG_AST_note=MEG_ZHE update=complete ; source=kff.kz {{#invoke:sports results|main }}", "score": "1.2792854" }, { "id": "14469164", "title": "Kuroko's Basketball The Movie: Last Game", "text": " The U.S. street basketball team named Jabberwock (ジャバウォック) came to Japan and played a friendly match with the Japanese team (Strky (スターキー)), but after the Japanese team suffered a crushing defeat, Jabberwock team members began to mock the Japanese basketball. Their comments infuriated Riko's father, so he assembled a team of five Generation of Miracles members plus Tetsuya Kuroko and Taiga Kagami, called Vorpal Swords (ヴォルパル・ソード), to perform a Revenge match (リベンジ • マッチ) against Jabberwock.", "score": "1.2652025" }, { "id": "8139328", "title": "Reta Vortaro", "text": "Thus, at reta-vortaro.de/revo/art/pilk.html one can find the meaning of pilko (ball), along with the derived forms piedpilkado (Association football or soccer) and piedpilko (soccer ball); korbopilkado (the sport of basketball) and korbopilko (the ball used in that game; manpilkado (handball, the game) and manpilko (the ball used for playing handball); and flugpilkado (the sport of volleyball) and flugpilko (the ball used in volleyball). The page also shows equivalents for the word pilko in English (\"ball\"), as well as in 17 other languages. One who knows the Esperanto root-form of a word (for nouns, this is the word without the -o ending; for adjectives, the word without the -a ending) can look up a web page giving the Esperanto word's meanings, along with related words and example sentences. ", "score": "1.2644325" }, { "id": "26996634", "title": "Alexei Voronov", "text": " Voronov began his career with his hometown team Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg who later became Spartak Yekaterinburg and Dinamo-Energija Yekaterinburg. He played with the team from 1993 to 2003, playing in the Russian Superleague until their relegation to the Vysshaya Liga 2001. He then moved to Sputnik Nizhny Tagil of the Vysshaya Liga in 2003 and stayed for four seasons before returning to Yekaterinburg in 2007 to join Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg, a new team founded the previous year to replace the former Dinamo-Energija team that folded in 2006. He then spent a season with Yugra Khanty-Mansiysk before returning to Avtomobilist for the 2009–10 KHL season, playing 44 games and scoring ", "score": "1.2640461" }, { "id": "25592139", "title": "Slava Voynov", "text": " Voynov has played for Russia at the World Under-18 Tournament, the World Junior Tournament, the 2014 Olympics and the 2016 World Championship. He was a member of the Russian team at the 2018 Winter Olympics and won the gold medal.", "score": "1.2638292" }, { "id": "14608952", "title": "List of Kuroko's Basketball characters", "text": " an important role in the second match with Kaijo. They play point guard, center and small forward respectively. The rest of Seirin's team, Furihata, Fukuda and Kawahara see extremely limited playing time due to the skill of their starters (only the former has ever played in a game) and are mostly found on the bench. However, Furihata played an important role in the second match with Kaijo. They play point guard, center and small forward respectively. Riko Aida (相田 リコ) ; , Ayumi Fujimura (VOMIC) ; Riko, the team's coach, is a second-year student. One reason for her unique position as a ", "score": "1.2621815" }, { "id": "14519440", "title": "Madagascar", "text": " A number of traditional pastimes have emerged in Madagascar. Moraingy, a type of hand-to-hand combat, is a popular spectator sport in coastal regions. It is traditionally practiced by men, but women have recently begun to participate. The wrestling of zebu cattle, which is named savika or tolon-omby, is also practiced in many regions. In addition to sports, a wide variety of games are played. Among the most emblematic is fanorona, a board game widespread throughout the Highland regions. According to folk legend, the succession of King Andrianjaka after his father Ralambo was partially the result of the obsession that Andrianjaka's older brother may have had with playing fanorona to the detriment of his other responsibilities. Western recreational activities were introduced to Madagascar over the past two centuries. Rugby union is considered the national sport of Madagascar. Soccer is also popular. Madagascar has produced a ", "score": "1.2614034" }, { "id": "13453028", "title": "Yan Kuzenok", "text": " Yan is a student of the Faculty of Physical Education and Sports in Podolsk Sports and Social Institute, graduate of the Kontakt sports club (Novy Urengoy). As of December 16, 2014, he held 128 games and scored 22 goals for Dina Moscow. He played his 50th game in the XXI Russian Championship on March 3, 2013, in Yekaterinburg against Sinara. His 100th game was within the playoffs of the XXII Russian Championship on June 1, 2014, in Troitsk against “Gazprom-Yugra”.", "score": "1.2595356" }, { "id": "5564404", "title": "Roman Volod'kov", "text": " Roman Volod'kov (Роман Володьков; born August 12, 1973 in Zaporizhzhia) is a retired diver from Ukraine, who represented his native country in three consecutive Summer Olympics, starting in 1996. He won a bronze medal in the synchronized 10m platform event at the 2001 World Aquatics Championships and a silver medal in the same event at the 2003 World Aquatics Championships.", "score": "1.2589447" }, { "id": "3472316", "title": "Valentina Vorontsova", "text": " Valentina Grigoryevna Vorontsova (Валентина Григорьевна Воронцова, born 26 July 1982) is a Russian female water polo player. She was a member of the Russia women's national water polo team, playing as goalkeeper. She was a part of the team at the 2004 Summer Olympics and 2008 Summer Olympics. On club level she played for Kinef Kirishi in Russia.", "score": "1.2581115" } ]
[ "VOKO-Irodion\n VOKO-Irodion is a volleyball club from Oosterhout. VOKO was founded in 1974 as an agreement between former Oosterhout volleyball clubs LEC and RELAX. The first team plays in the Dutch third division, and their goal is promote to the national divisions.", "Nikko Landeros\n Nikko Landeros (born April 28, 1989) is an ice sled hockey player and paralympic freestyle skier from the United States. He took part in the 2010 Winter Paralympics in Vancouver, where USA won gold. They beat Japan 2-0 in the final. He was also on the team USA in the 2014 Winter Paralympics in Sochi, which won gold by beating Russia 1-0 in the final. He and his best friend Tyler Carron had an accident when they were 17. Both lost their legs. His father is a native of Mexico and his mother is from Milan, Italy.", "Spirydion Albański\n Spirydion Jan Albański (4 October 1907 – 30 March 1992), nicknamed \"Spirytus\" and \"Romek\", was a Polish football goalkeeper in the 1930s. He played for Pogoń Lwów and the Polish National Team. Albański was born in Lwów (Lviv). He graduated from high school after the Second World War, when he was forced to move from Lwów to Upper Silesia, worked in the coal-mining industry. He was later a civil servant, and also a soccer coach.", "Serhiy Vovkodav\n Serhiy Vovkodav (Сергій Васильович Вовкодав; born 2 July 1988) is a Ukrainian professional football defender who plays for FC Poltava in the Ukrainian First League. Playing in the youth competitions of the Ukrainian Premier League in 2006–2013, on 27 May 2021 retained its record with the most games in competitions among under-21 teams.", "A1 Belarus\n Amediateka, START, ivi, The Walt Disney Studios movies and cartoons. The service is accessible from Android and iOS mobile devices, Smart TV running on Tizen, WebOS, Android TV, on RedboxMini, Xiaomi Mi Box 3, Apple TV (via AirPlay) boxes. Desktop users can access the video service via the VOKA application for Windows or on the website. In 2018, VOKA launched proprietary media content: \"Our Football\" and \"Our Hockey\" offering broadcasts of games with Belarusian clubs and national teams, live streaming of concerts, music festivals, conferences and forums, as well as cyber sports tournaments in the section \"Cybersport\". Also available for ", "Evgeny Voronov\n Voronov is also a member of the senior Russian national basketball team. He competed with the team for the first time at the 2010 FIBA World Championship after previously making appearances with the junior national team, including helping the team to a gold medal at the 2005 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship. He was part of the Russian team that won the bronze medal at the 2012 Summer Olympics.", "Sergei Voronov (ice hockey)\n the 1992-93 season. Voronov remained with the Thunder for the remainder of the season, scoring six points in 40 games but did not play any games in the postseason. After two seasons in the North American minor leagues, Voronov returned to Russia. Voronov spent the next 10 out of his 11 seasons in Russia, including four seasons in the Russian Superleague, where he won a championship with the Metallurg Magnitogorsk during the 2000-01 season. He joined Titan Klin of the VHL in 2004 and remained with the team until his retirement in 2008. Since his retirement, Voronov became an assistant coach with HC MVD and later became head coach of Buran Voronezh.", "Sport in Pakistan\n Vovinam is a emerging sport in Pakistan, Pakistan Vovinam Federation is the governing body of Vovinam in Pakistan, Federation is non profit organization which is coordinate with Punjab Sindh Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Baluchistan Islamabad Azad Kashmir and Gilgit-bultistan provinces Vovinam Associations. Pakistani Vovinam team also Participated in international Vovinam Championships and got silver and bronze medals, 2013 and 2019.", "Toki (video game)\n to travel through murky lakes, steep canyons, over frozen ice-capped mountain ranges and lava-spewing volcanoes alike. To progress in his quest and be ultimately victorious, Toki will have to battle all manner of dangerous wild animals and various mutants of Vookimedlo's creation; not to mention Vookimedlo's own abominable guardians who act as level bosses. In some ports of the game, Toki was named \"JuJu\", Miho was named \"Wanda\" and Vookimedlo was named \"Dr. Stark\". Also, in some ports it was not Vookimedlo who kidnaps princess Miho, but his chief henchman, the half-invisible giant known as Bashtar. In some ports Bashtar was the final boss of the game, and not Vookimedlo.", "Oosterhout\n • VOKO, Volleyball • ATV Scorpio, Athletics • SCO-Tofs, Football • TSC, Football • VV Oosterhout, Football • De Warande, Hockey • OZ&PC De Warande, Swimming and Water polo • De Voltreffers, Korfball • De Glaskoning Twins, Baseball", "2008 Kazakhstan Premier League\n 2, 2–2) and Shakhter vs. Okzhetpes (Round 3, 2–1) were awarded against Okzhetpes because of unknown reasons. ; match_OKZ_VOS_note=OKZ_AKT ; match_SHA_OKZ_note=OKZ_AKT match_KRT_VOS_note=The games have been counted as lost with a score of 3–0 for Vostok because of their participation in a fixed game with Shakhter. ; match_MEG_VOS_note=KRT_VOS ; match_TOB_VOS_note=KRT_VOS ; match_VOS_AKT_note=KRT_VOS ; match_VOS_AST_note=KRT_VOS ; match_VOS_IRT_note=KRT_VOS ; match_VOS_OKZ_note=KRT_VOS ; match_VOS_ZHE_note=KRT_VOS match_SHA_VOS_note=The result of the game (Shakhter 2–1 Vostok) has been discarded. match_MEG_ZHE_note=The games Megasport vs. Zhetysu (Round 1, 2–1) and Megasport vs. Astana (Round 2, 0–0) were awarded against Megasport because they fielded two ineligible players. ; match_MEG_AST_note=MEG_ZHE update=complete ; source=kff.kz {{#invoke:sports results|main }}", "Kuroko's Basketball The Movie: Last Game\n The U.S. street basketball team named Jabberwock (ジャバウォック) came to Japan and played a friendly match with the Japanese team (Strky (スターキー)), but after the Japanese team suffered a crushing defeat, Jabberwock team members began to mock the Japanese basketball. Their comments infuriated Riko's father, so he assembled a team of five Generation of Miracles members plus Tetsuya Kuroko and Taiga Kagami, called Vorpal Swords (ヴォルパル・ソード), to perform a Revenge match (リベンジ • マッチ) against Jabberwock.", "Reta Vortaro\nThus, at reta-vortaro.de/revo/art/pilk.html one can find the meaning of pilko (ball), along with the derived forms piedpilkado (Association football or soccer) and piedpilko (soccer ball); korbopilkado (the sport of basketball) and korbopilko (the ball used in that game; manpilkado (handball, the game) and manpilko (the ball used for playing handball); and flugpilkado (the sport of volleyball) and flugpilko (the ball used in volleyball). The page also shows equivalents for the word pilko in English (\"ball\"), as well as in 17 other languages. One who knows the Esperanto root-form of a word (for nouns, this is the word without the -o ending; for adjectives, the word without the -a ending) can look up a web page giving the Esperanto word's meanings, along with related words and example sentences. ", "Alexei Voronov\n Voronov began his career with his hometown team Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg who later became Spartak Yekaterinburg and Dinamo-Energija Yekaterinburg. He played with the team from 1993 to 2003, playing in the Russian Superleague until their relegation to the Vysshaya Liga 2001. He then moved to Sputnik Nizhny Tagil of the Vysshaya Liga in 2003 and stayed for four seasons before returning to Yekaterinburg in 2007 to join Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg, a new team founded the previous year to replace the former Dinamo-Energija team that folded in 2006. He then spent a season with Yugra Khanty-Mansiysk before returning to Avtomobilist for the 2009–10 KHL season, playing 44 games and scoring ", "Slava Voynov\n Voynov has played for Russia at the World Under-18 Tournament, the World Junior Tournament, the 2014 Olympics and the 2016 World Championship. He was a member of the Russian team at the 2018 Winter Olympics and won the gold medal.", "List of Kuroko's Basketball characters\n an important role in the second match with Kaijo. They play point guard, center and small forward respectively. The rest of Seirin's team, Furihata, Fukuda and Kawahara see extremely limited playing time due to the skill of their starters (only the former has ever played in a game) and are mostly found on the bench. However, Furihata played an important role in the second match with Kaijo. They play point guard, center and small forward respectively. Riko Aida (相田 リコ) ; , Ayumi Fujimura (VOMIC) ; Riko, the team's coach, is a second-year student. One reason for her unique position as a ", "Madagascar\n A number of traditional pastimes have emerged in Madagascar. Moraingy, a type of hand-to-hand combat, is a popular spectator sport in coastal regions. It is traditionally practiced by men, but women have recently begun to participate. The wrestling of zebu cattle, which is named savika or tolon-omby, is also practiced in many regions. In addition to sports, a wide variety of games are played. Among the most emblematic is fanorona, a board game widespread throughout the Highland regions. According to folk legend, the succession of King Andrianjaka after his father Ralambo was partially the result of the obsession that Andrianjaka's older brother may have had with playing fanorona to the detriment of his other responsibilities. Western recreational activities were introduced to Madagascar over the past two centuries. Rugby union is considered the national sport of Madagascar. Soccer is also popular. Madagascar has produced a ", "Yan Kuzenok\n Yan is a student of the Faculty of Physical Education and Sports in Podolsk Sports and Social Institute, graduate of the Kontakt sports club (Novy Urengoy). As of December 16, 2014, he held 128 games and scored 22 goals for Dina Moscow. He played his 50th game in the XXI Russian Championship on March 3, 2013, in Yekaterinburg against Sinara. His 100th game was within the playoffs of the XXII Russian Championship on June 1, 2014, in Troitsk against “Gazprom-Yugra”.", "Roman Volod'kov\n Roman Volod'kov (Роман Володьков; born August 12, 1973 in Zaporizhzhia) is a retired diver from Ukraine, who represented his native country in three consecutive Summer Olympics, starting in 1996. He won a bronze medal in the synchronized 10m platform event at the 2001 World Aquatics Championships and a silver medal in the same event at the 2003 World Aquatics Championships.", "Valentina Vorontsova\n Valentina Grigoryevna Vorontsova (Валентина Григорьевна Воронцова, born 26 July 1982) is a Russian female water polo player. She was a member of the Russia women's national water polo team, playing as goalkeeper. She was a part of the team at the 2004 Summer Olympics and 2008 Summer Olympics. On club level she played for Kinef Kirishi in Russia." ]
What genre is Mars?
[ "science fiction film", "sci-fi film", "science fiction movie", "sci-fi movie", "scifi film", "scifi movie", "sci fi film", "sci fi movie", "scifi-film", "scifi" ]
genre
Mars (1968 film)
3,024,339
78
[ { "id": "16446980", "title": "Mars Diaries", "text": " The Mars Diaries is a science fiction series for young adults by the best-selling author, Sigmund Brouwer, published by Tyndale House Publishers in 2000 - 2002. Set in an experimental community on Mars in the year 2039, the Mars Diaries feature fourteen-year-old virtual reality specialist Tyce Sanders. It was re-published by Tyndale House Publishers in 2009 and 2012 as a 5 volume series titled Robot Wars.", "score": "1.6251144" }, { "id": "28787801", "title": "A Princess of Mars", "text": " genre, A Princess of Mars and its sequels are the best known, and they were a dominant influence on subsequent authors. Initially published in magazines with general readership, by the 1930s the planetary romance had become very popular in the emerging science fiction pulp magazines. The novel can also be classified as the closely related genre sword and planet, which consists of what are essentially sword and sorcery stories that take place on another planet. A Princess of Mars is widely considered to be the archetypal novel of the sword and planet genre. The novel also shares a number of elements of Westerns, such as desert settings, women taken captive, and a climactic life-or-death confrontation with the antagonist.", "score": "1.6231494" }, { "id": "27458622", "title": "Mars Chronicles", "text": " Mars Chronicles is a limited vinyl album by electronica group Kreidler, released in 2011.", "score": "1.6116518" }, { "id": "5539693", "title": "Mars (B'z album)", "text": " Mars is the third Mini-Album for the Japanese rock duo B'z, released in 1991. The album sold 1,730,500 copies in total, reaching #1 at Oricon.", "score": "1.596959" }, { "id": "5248483", "title": "The Mars Canon", "text": " The Mars Canon (火星のカノン) is a 2002 Japanese film directed by Shiori Kazama. Themes of the film include adultery and homosexuality, as Mars connotes both fighting and sexual intercourse.", "score": "1.5863266" }, { "id": "14365823", "title": "Before Mars (novel)", "text": " Before Mars is a 2018 science fiction novel by British writer Emma Newman. It was first published in the United States as a paperback original in April 2018 by Ace Books, and in the United Kingdom by Gollancz. An audio edition of the book was published in April 2018 in the United States by Tantor Audio, and in the United Kingdom by Orion Publishing. Before Mars is the third book in Newman's four-book Planetfall series, and takes place on Mars during the same period as the events on Earth in the previous book, After Atlas. Before Mars concerns Dr. Anna Kubrin, a geologist and artist, who has been sent to the planet to paint Martian landscapes. The novel was a finalist for the 2018 BSFA Award for Best Novel.", "score": "1.5689977" }, { "id": "12795508", "title": "Maybe Mars", "text": " Maybe Mars is an independent record label founded in 2007. Their current catalogue includes Carsick Cars, P.K.14, Joyside, Snapline, SMZB, Liu Kun, Dear Eloise, among others.", "score": "1.5554895" }, { "id": "27458625", "title": "Mars Chronicles", "text": " The record contains 4 different remixes of a song called Mars, with each member of the band contributing a version. \"LX\" can be attributed to Alex Paulick, \"Sølyst\" is Thomas Klein's moniker for his solo-albums, Andreas Reihse has released as \"April\", which leaves \"Lo Firer Esplendor\" to Detlef Weinrich. Mars Chronicles seems to be a verbicide on Ray Bradbury's book The Martian Chronicles (in German: \"Die Mars Chroniken\" ).", "score": "1.5525534" }, { "id": "5539694", "title": "Mars (B'z album)", "text": "1) Kodoku no Runaway (孤独のRunaway) - 5:03 ; 2) Mars - 1:24 ; 3) Loving All Night ~Octopus Style~ - 5:50 ; 4) Love & Chain ~Godzilla Style~ - 5:45 ; 5) Lady Navigation ~Cookie & Car Stereo Style~ - 5:12 ", "score": "1.5517609" }, { "id": "29268613", "title": "Mars in Aries", "text": " Mars in Aries (a literal translation of the German original title, Mars im Widder) is the most widely known novel by the Austrian writer Alexander Lernet-Holenia. It was written during the winter of 1939-1940 and is about the author's combat experience during the invasion of Poland by the German Wehrmacht at the start of World War II. The novel draws its disturbing quality from an intimate interlacing of precisely described authentic combat episodes with a concept of a pervasive Otherworld that merges with our reality in a way that makes it difficult to determine whether one has already transgressed its borders. It stands in the tradition of the early 20th-century Austrian psychological novel genre of which Schnitzler's Dream Story and Perutz' The Master of the Day of Judgement are other famous examples.", "score": "1.5482109" }, { "id": "5041650", "title": "Mars Rising", "text": " Mars Rising is a vertically scrolling shooter written by David Wareing and published by Ambrosia Software for Macintosh computers in 1998. Mars Risings setting and gameplay has been compared to similar scrolling shooters Xevious and Raiden. It was followed by Deimos Rising in 2001.", "score": "1.5480738" }, { "id": "11863070", "title": "30 Seconds to Mars (album)", "text": " progressive sounds with influences and elements from new wave, space rock, and electronica. Upon release, 30 Seconds to Mars received mostly positive reviews from music critics, who commended the album's lyrical content and the band's musicianship, which has been compared to the works of Pink Floyd, Tool, and Brian Eno. The album debuted at number 107 on the Billboard 200 and number one on the US Top Heatseekers. It was a slow-burning success that eventually sold two million copies worldwide. It produced two singles, \"Capricorn (A Brand New Name)\" and \"Edge of the Earth\". Thirty Seconds to Mars promoted the album by opening concerts for bands such as Puddle of Mudd, Incubus, Sevendust, and Chevelle.", "score": "1.5469079" }, { "id": "2363289", "title": "The Gods of Mars", "text": " While the novel is an example of science fiction, it is most closely related to the planetary romance genre. The genre is similar to sword and sorcery, but includes scientific aspects. Planetary romances mostly take place on the surface of an alien world, frequently include sword fighting, monsters, supernatural elements such as telepathic abilities (as opposed to magic), and civilizations similar to Earth in pre-technological eras, particularly with the inclusion of kingdoms, empires or religious societies. Spacecraft may appear, but are not central to the story (something which makes these tales distinct from Space Opera, where spaceships are usually a key focus of the narrative). There were some Planetary Romances prior to the publication of the Barsoom novels, but A Princess of Mars and The Gods of Mars and other novels in the Barsoom series were the most influential on the numerous similar stories that were published subsequently.", "score": "1.5438688" }, { "id": "31898057", "title": "Thirty Seconds to Mars", "text": " The style of the band's first studio album combined progressive metal and space rock with influences and elements from electronica, utilizing programming and synthesizers. Ryan Rayhill from Blender described the album as a \"high-minded space opera of epic scope befitting prog-rock prototypes Rush,\" and wrote that Thirty Seconds to Mars \"emerged with an eponymous debut that sounds like Tool on The Dark Side of the Moon,\" referring to the 1973 album by Pink Floyd. Whereas the eponymous concept album's lyrics focus on human struggle and self-determination, A Beautiful Lie s lyrics are more personal and the music introduces screaming vocals. The transformation that ", "score": "1.5432479" }, { "id": "31898059", "title": "Thirty Seconds to Mars", "text": " their record label. Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic acknowledged the band's progression, referring to the overall style of the record as a mixture of synth rock, heavy metal, and progressive rock. In Love, Lust, Faith and Dreams the band experimented with different instruments and drew influences from a wider and more varied range of styles. The album mixes experimental instrumentation with elements both symphonic and electronic, and the music introduces a minimalist approach full of ethereal sonics. The record carries the concept album format of This Is War and expands the spectrum to revolve around the themes after which it is named.", "score": "1.5381383" }, { "id": "32806930", "title": "Thuvia, Maid of Mars", "text": " The novel can be classed as a planetary romance. This genre is a subset of science fiction, similar to sword and sorcery, but including scientific elements. Most of the action in a planetary romance is on the surface of an alien world, usually includes sword fighting, monsters, supernatural elements as telepathy rather than magic, and involves civilizations echoing those on Earth in pre-technological eras, particularly composed of kingdoms or theocratic nations. Spacecraft may appear, but are usually not central to the story.", "score": "1.5370634" }, { "id": "11863076", "title": "30 Seconds to Mars (album)", "text": " The style of the album combined progressive metal and space rock with influences and elements from new wave and electronica, utilizing programming and synthesizers. According to Jared Leto, the band wanted to create \"something that had cohesiveness and kind of an atmospheric musical story to it\". He identified groups that had a sense of identity and atmosphere as being influential on the album's songwriting. He cited classic stoner rock artists, to which he and his brother Shannon had listened while growing up. Eventually, they gravitated toward more conceptual work like Pink Floyd, David Bowie and The Cure. Thirty Seconds to Mars also drew influences from acts such as Björk, Rush, and Depeche Mode; according to Shannon Leto, the inspirations derived from \"mostly big conceptional bands; bands ", "score": "1.529388" }, { "id": "13477444", "title": "Mars (comics)", "text": " Mars is a 1984 American comic book series published by First Comics that ran for 12 issues. Inspired by the pulp science fiction stories of the 1930s and 1940s, creators Mark Wheatley and Marc Hempel collaborated on the story featuring a group of explorers and engineers sent to Mars with the goal of terraforming the red planet. When all communication with earth is lost, the team of terraformers must make a decision that will not only forever change their lives but perhaps the future of the human race. The complete series was collected and released by IDW Publishing in 2005 as both a 288-page trade paperback and limited edition hardcover; this release featured a new cover by Wheatley and Hempel, digitally recolored interior art, and 32 pages of supplemental material detailing the history of the project.", "score": "1.5288494" }, { "id": "31913345", "title": "The Mars Room", "text": " The Mars Room is a 2018 novel by American author Rachel Kushner. The book was released on May 1, 2018 through Scribner. It was shortlisted for the 2018 Man Booker Prize. On November 5, 2018, it received the 2018 Prix Médicis Étranger. The title also received a Gold Medal for Fiction from the California Book Awards.", "score": "1.5271755" }, { "id": "12749718", "title": "Mars: Tada, Kimi wo Aishiteru (film)", "text": " Mars: Tada, Kimi wo Aishiteru (MARS~ただ、君を愛してる~) is a 2016 Japanese youth romantic drama film directed by Saiji Yakumo, written by and starring Taisuke Fujigaya, Masataka Kubota, Marie Iitoyo, Hirona Yamazaki and Yu Inaba. The film is the finale for the Japanese television drama series of the same name and based on the manga series Mars, written and illustrated by Fuyumi Soryo. It was released in Japan by Showgate on June 18, 2016.", "score": "1.5263934" } ]
[ "Mars Diaries\n The Mars Diaries is a science fiction series for young adults by the best-selling author, Sigmund Brouwer, published by Tyndale House Publishers in 2000 - 2002. Set in an experimental community on Mars in the year 2039, the Mars Diaries feature fourteen-year-old virtual reality specialist Tyce Sanders. It was re-published by Tyndale House Publishers in 2009 and 2012 as a 5 volume series titled Robot Wars.", "A Princess of Mars\n genre, A Princess of Mars and its sequels are the best known, and they were a dominant influence on subsequent authors. Initially published in magazines with general readership, by the 1930s the planetary romance had become very popular in the emerging science fiction pulp magazines. The novel can also be classified as the closely related genre sword and planet, which consists of what are essentially sword and sorcery stories that take place on another planet. A Princess of Mars is widely considered to be the archetypal novel of the sword and planet genre. The novel also shares a number of elements of Westerns, such as desert settings, women taken captive, and a climactic life-or-death confrontation with the antagonist.", "Mars Chronicles\n Mars Chronicles is a limited vinyl album by electronica group Kreidler, released in 2011.", "Mars (B'z album)\n Mars is the third Mini-Album for the Japanese rock duo B'z, released in 1991. The album sold 1,730,500 copies in total, reaching #1 at Oricon.", "The Mars Canon\n The Mars Canon (火星のカノン) is a 2002 Japanese film directed by Shiori Kazama. Themes of the film include adultery and homosexuality, as Mars connotes both fighting and sexual intercourse.", "Before Mars (novel)\n Before Mars is a 2018 science fiction novel by British writer Emma Newman. It was first published in the United States as a paperback original in April 2018 by Ace Books, and in the United Kingdom by Gollancz. An audio edition of the book was published in April 2018 in the United States by Tantor Audio, and in the United Kingdom by Orion Publishing. Before Mars is the third book in Newman's four-book Planetfall series, and takes place on Mars during the same period as the events on Earth in the previous book, After Atlas. Before Mars concerns Dr. Anna Kubrin, a geologist and artist, who has been sent to the planet to paint Martian landscapes. The novel was a finalist for the 2018 BSFA Award for Best Novel.", "Maybe Mars\n Maybe Mars is an independent record label founded in 2007. Their current catalogue includes Carsick Cars, P.K.14, Joyside, Snapline, SMZB, Liu Kun, Dear Eloise, among others.", "Mars Chronicles\n The record contains 4 different remixes of a song called Mars, with each member of the band contributing a version. \"LX\" can be attributed to Alex Paulick, \"Sølyst\" is Thomas Klein's moniker for his solo-albums, Andreas Reihse has released as \"April\", which leaves \"Lo Firer Esplendor\" to Detlef Weinrich. Mars Chronicles seems to be a verbicide on Ray Bradbury's book The Martian Chronicles (in German: \"Die Mars Chroniken\" ).", "Mars (B'z album)\n1) Kodoku no Runaway (孤独のRunaway) - 5:03 ; 2) Mars - 1:24 ; 3) Loving All Night ~Octopus Style~ - 5:50 ; 4) Love & Chain ~Godzilla Style~ - 5:45 ; 5) Lady Navigation ~Cookie & Car Stereo Style~ - 5:12 ", "Mars in Aries\n Mars in Aries (a literal translation of the German original title, Mars im Widder) is the most widely known novel by the Austrian writer Alexander Lernet-Holenia. It was written during the winter of 1939-1940 and is about the author's combat experience during the invasion of Poland by the German Wehrmacht at the start of World War II. The novel draws its disturbing quality from an intimate interlacing of precisely described authentic combat episodes with a concept of a pervasive Otherworld that merges with our reality in a way that makes it difficult to determine whether one has already transgressed its borders. It stands in the tradition of the early 20th-century Austrian psychological novel genre of which Schnitzler's Dream Story and Perutz' The Master of the Day of Judgement are other famous examples.", "Mars Rising\n Mars Rising is a vertically scrolling shooter written by David Wareing and published by Ambrosia Software for Macintosh computers in 1998. Mars Risings setting and gameplay has been compared to similar scrolling shooters Xevious and Raiden. It was followed by Deimos Rising in 2001.", "30 Seconds to Mars (album)\n progressive sounds with influences and elements from new wave, space rock, and electronica. Upon release, 30 Seconds to Mars received mostly positive reviews from music critics, who commended the album's lyrical content and the band's musicianship, which has been compared to the works of Pink Floyd, Tool, and Brian Eno. The album debuted at number 107 on the Billboard 200 and number one on the US Top Heatseekers. It was a slow-burning success that eventually sold two million copies worldwide. It produced two singles, \"Capricorn (A Brand New Name)\" and \"Edge of the Earth\". Thirty Seconds to Mars promoted the album by opening concerts for bands such as Puddle of Mudd, Incubus, Sevendust, and Chevelle.", "The Gods of Mars\n While the novel is an example of science fiction, it is most closely related to the planetary romance genre. The genre is similar to sword and sorcery, but includes scientific aspects. Planetary romances mostly take place on the surface of an alien world, frequently include sword fighting, monsters, supernatural elements such as telepathic abilities (as opposed to magic), and civilizations similar to Earth in pre-technological eras, particularly with the inclusion of kingdoms, empires or religious societies. Spacecraft may appear, but are not central to the story (something which makes these tales distinct from Space Opera, where spaceships are usually a key focus of the narrative). There were some Planetary Romances prior to the publication of the Barsoom novels, but A Princess of Mars and The Gods of Mars and other novels in the Barsoom series were the most influential on the numerous similar stories that were published subsequently.", "Thirty Seconds to Mars\n The style of the band's first studio album combined progressive metal and space rock with influences and elements from electronica, utilizing programming and synthesizers. Ryan Rayhill from Blender described the album as a \"high-minded space opera of epic scope befitting prog-rock prototypes Rush,\" and wrote that Thirty Seconds to Mars \"emerged with an eponymous debut that sounds like Tool on The Dark Side of the Moon,\" referring to the 1973 album by Pink Floyd. Whereas the eponymous concept album's lyrics focus on human struggle and self-determination, A Beautiful Lie s lyrics are more personal and the music introduces screaming vocals. The transformation that ", "Thirty Seconds to Mars\n their record label. Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic acknowledged the band's progression, referring to the overall style of the record as a mixture of synth rock, heavy metal, and progressive rock. In Love, Lust, Faith and Dreams the band experimented with different instruments and drew influences from a wider and more varied range of styles. The album mixes experimental instrumentation with elements both symphonic and electronic, and the music introduces a minimalist approach full of ethereal sonics. The record carries the concept album format of This Is War and expands the spectrum to revolve around the themes after which it is named.", "Thuvia, Maid of Mars\n The novel can be classed as a planetary romance. This genre is a subset of science fiction, similar to sword and sorcery, but including scientific elements. Most of the action in a planetary romance is on the surface of an alien world, usually includes sword fighting, monsters, supernatural elements as telepathy rather than magic, and involves civilizations echoing those on Earth in pre-technological eras, particularly composed of kingdoms or theocratic nations. Spacecraft may appear, but are usually not central to the story.", "30 Seconds to Mars (album)\n The style of the album combined progressive metal and space rock with influences and elements from new wave and electronica, utilizing programming and synthesizers. According to Jared Leto, the band wanted to create \"something that had cohesiveness and kind of an atmospheric musical story to it\". He identified groups that had a sense of identity and atmosphere as being influential on the album's songwriting. He cited classic stoner rock artists, to which he and his brother Shannon had listened while growing up. Eventually, they gravitated toward more conceptual work like Pink Floyd, David Bowie and The Cure. Thirty Seconds to Mars also drew influences from acts such as Björk, Rush, and Depeche Mode; according to Shannon Leto, the inspirations derived from \"mostly big conceptional bands; bands ", "Mars (comics)\n Mars is a 1984 American comic book series published by First Comics that ran for 12 issues. Inspired by the pulp science fiction stories of the 1930s and 1940s, creators Mark Wheatley and Marc Hempel collaborated on the story featuring a group of explorers and engineers sent to Mars with the goal of terraforming the red planet. When all communication with earth is lost, the team of terraformers must make a decision that will not only forever change their lives but perhaps the future of the human race. The complete series was collected and released by IDW Publishing in 2005 as both a 288-page trade paperback and limited edition hardcover; this release featured a new cover by Wheatley and Hempel, digitally recolored interior art, and 32 pages of supplemental material detailing the history of the project.", "The Mars Room\n The Mars Room is a 2018 novel by American author Rachel Kushner. The book was released on May 1, 2018 through Scribner. It was shortlisted for the 2018 Man Booker Prize. On November 5, 2018, it received the 2018 Prix Médicis Étranger. The title also received a Gold Medal for Fiction from the California Book Awards.", "Mars: Tada, Kimi wo Aishiteru (film)\n Mars: Tada, Kimi wo Aishiteru (MARS~ただ、君を愛してる~) is a 2016 Japanese youth romantic drama film directed by Saiji Yakumo, written by and starring Taisuke Fujigaya, Masataka Kubota, Marie Iitoyo, Hirona Yamazaki and Yu Inaba. The film is the finale for the Japanese television drama series of the same name and based on the manga series Mars, written and illustrated by Fuyumi Soryo. It was released in Japan by Showgate on June 18, 2016." ]
Who is the author of Facing the Future?
[ "Tim LaHaye", "Timothy LaHaye", "Timothy F. \"Tim\" LaHaye", "Timothy Francis LaHaye", "Tim Francis LaHaye" ]
author
Facing the Future
4,086,555
9
[ { "id": "11151769", "title": "Outsights", "text": "Irdeto: Facing the future through scenario planning ", "score": "1.5803525" }, { "id": "5162891", "title": "Andy Hines", "text": "Thinking about the Future: Guidelines for Strategic Foresight, 2nd edition (co-author: Peter C. Bishop), 2015, 2007, ISBN: 978-0996773409 (2nd) ISBN: 978-0978931704 (1st) ; Teaching about the Future,(co-author: Peter C. Bishop), 2012, ISBN: 978-0230363496 - Received the 2014 Association of Professional Futurists Most Significant Futures Work Award for Methods and Practice. ; ConsumerShift: How Changing Values Are Reshaping the Consumer Landscape, 2011, ISBN: 978-1614660033 ; 2025: Science and Technology Reshapes US and Global Society, (co-author: Joseph F Coates, John Mahaffie), 1997, ISBN: 978-1886939097 ; Managing Your Future as an Association: Thinking about Trends and Working with Their Consequences, (co-author: Jennifer Jarrett, Joseph F Coates, John Mahaffie), 1994,ISBN: 978-0880340847 A. Hines, A. & J. Gold, “An organizational futurist role ", "score": "1.5520623" }, { "id": "28865620", "title": "Madeline Ashby", "text": "How to Future (with Scott Smith), 2020. ", "score": "1.5447769" }, { "id": "7877140", "title": "Monica Witni", "text": "\"I've Got to Face the Future\" (with Jack Gould) ", "score": "1.5406575" }, { "id": "15272045", "title": "Richard Watson (author)", "text": " What Matters (McKinsey & Company). He is a proponent of scenario planning and an advocate of preferred futures, believing it is incumbent upon organisations to create compelling visions of the future and work towards their realisation. In addition to writing, Watson works with the Technology Foresight Practice at Imperial College London and Lectures at London Business School and the King's Fund. He is also a network member of Stratforma and has worked with the Strategic Trends Unit at the UK Ministry of Defence, the RAND Corporation, CSIRO, the Cabinet Office and the Departments of Education in the UK and Australia.", "score": "1.5402529" }, { "id": "26500743", "title": "Christiana Figueres", "text": "Co-author with Tom Rivett-Carnac, The Future We Choose: Surviving the Climate Crisis (Manilla Press, 2020) ISBN: 9780525658351. ", "score": "1.5347173" }, { "id": "29889270", "title": "Liam Fox", "text": " In September 2013, Fox launched Rising Tides: Facing the Challenges of a New Era, a 384-page book in which he warns that many of the world’s institutions are ill-equipped to tackle the economic and security threats of the 21st century.", "score": "1.518848" }, { "id": "7730294", "title": "Peter Schwartz (futurist)", "text": "His first book, The Art of the Long View (Doubleday, 1991) is considered by many to be the seminal publication on scenario planning. It was voted the best all time book on the future by the Association of Professional Futurists and is used as a textbook by many business schools. ; Inevitable Surprises (Gotham, 2003) is a look at the forces at play in today's world, and how they will continue to affect the world. ; He also wrote The Long Boom (Perseus, 1999) with co-authors Peter Leyden and Joel Hyatt, which is a book about the future of the global ", "score": "1.51674" }, { "id": "16268605", "title": "A History of the Future (TV series)", "text": " Public Affairs, and Professor of Global Transformation. ; Prof. Naomi Oreskes, Professor of History of Science at Harvard University, and co-author of The Collapse of Western Civilization. ; Prof. Timothy Snyder, Professor of History at Yale University, and author of The Road to Unfreedom. ; Dr. Carissa Véliz, Researcher at the Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics at the University of Oxford, and editor of the Oxford Handbook of Digital Ethics. The series features interviews with 18 leading academics, including  historians, scientists, political scientists, and technology experts of eight different nationalities, currently working for institutions such as the OECD, and universities like Oxford, Harvard, MIT, IE, Yale, and the London School of Economics. ", "score": "1.5158182" }, { "id": "5890520", "title": "Who Owns the Future?", "text": " Who Owns the Future? a non-fiction book written by Jaron Lanier published by Simon & Schuster in 2013. The book was well received and won multiple awards in 2014: Peace Prize of the German Book Trade, the Goldsmith Book Prize, and Top honors at the San Francisco Book Festival.", "score": "1.5070415" }, { "id": "8682671", "title": "Futures studies", "text": " (Iain McKay) ; Homo Deus: A Brief History of Tomorrow (Yuval Noah Harari, 2016) ; Warnings: Finding Cassandras to Stop Catastrophes, Richard A. Clarke and R. P. Eddy ; Future Agenda Tim Jones ; Future Frequencies Derek Woodgate with Wayne Pethrick ; Social Theory and Social Change Trevor Nobel ; Scenario-based Strategy Paul De Ruijter ; Scenario Planning: The Link between Future and Strategy Mats Lindgren & Hans Banhold ; Creating Better Futures Jay Ogilvy ; Questioning the Future: Methods and Tools for Organisational and Societal Transformation Sohail Inayatullah ; Strategic Foresight: Learning from the Future Patricia Lustig ; History and Future: Using Historical Thinking to Imagine the Future David Stanley For further suggestions, please visit A Resource Bibliography by Dr. Peter Bishop", "score": "1.5051861" }, { "id": "14250715", "title": "Winning the Future", "text": " Winning the Future: A 21st Century Contract with America is a book by former U.S. Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich that outlines Gingrich's plans for the United States of America. Published in 2005 by Regnery Publishing, its themes include: Social Security reform, immigration reform, education reform, increasing the usage of health savings accounts, allowing the disabled the option of working, and American interests within the world trading system. The C-SPAN interview show After Words debuted on January 2, 2005; Gingrich was interviewed by Norm Ornstein for the first program, and Winning the Future was the subject of the interview.", "score": "1.4951591" }, { "id": "9257378", "title": "David Fleming (writer)", "text": " Alongside the final edition of Lean Logic, Chelsea Green simultaneously published a paperback version - Surviving the Future: Culture, Carnival and Capital in the Aftermath of the Market Economy - conceived by Fleming's erstwhile colleague Shaun Chamberlin and drawn from the content of the larger book, but edited to produce a more conventionally formatted, read-it-front-to-back introduction to Fleming's work. Fleming's vision of the future is challenging, as he sees in the present \"an economy that is destroying the very foundations on which it depends\" (ecologically, economically and culturally), but many reviewers have commented on the positive spirit and humour that ", "score": "1.4942424" }, { "id": "4228012", "title": "Sohail Inayatullah", "text": " Inayatullah is co-editor (along with Jian-Bang Deng) of the Journal of Futures Studies, one of the top journals in futures studies. He is also associated editor of New Renaissance and is on the editorial boards of Futures, Development, Peace and Democracy in South Asia, and foresight. Inayatullah is also the co-founder of educational think tank Metafuture.org along with Dr Ivana Milojević.", "score": "1.4901795" }, { "id": "356590", "title": "The Future and Its Enemies", "text": " The Future and Its Enemies: The Growing Conflict Over Creativity, Enterprise, and Progress is a 1998 book by Virginia Postrel where she describes the growing conflict in post-Cold War society between \"dynamism\" – marked by constant change, creativity and exploration in the pursuit of progress – and \"stasism\", where progress is controlled by careful and cautious planning. Postrel endorses the former, illustrates the differences between the two, and argues that dynamism should be embraced rather than feared.", "score": "1.4877181" }, { "id": "25435459", "title": "On the Future", "text": " On the Future: Prospects for Humanity is a 2018 nonfiction book by British cosmologist and Astronomer Royal Martin Rees. It is a short, \"big concept\" book on the future of humanity and on potential dangers, such as nuclear warfare, climate change, biotech, and artificial intelligence, and the possibility of human extinction.", "score": "1.4875178" }, { "id": "9634476", "title": "Alec Ross (author)", "text": "2021: Alec Ross. The Raging 2020s: Companies, Countries, People – and the Fight for Our Future. Henry Holt and Co. ; 2016: Alec Ross. The Industries of the Future. Simon & Schuster. ", "score": "1.4844856" }, { "id": "8682670", "title": "Futures studies", "text": " When Humans Transcend Biology (Ray Kurzweil) ; Abundance: The Future Is Better Than You Think (Peter Diamandis) ; Brave New World (Aldous Huxley) ; The Next 100 Years: A Forecast for the 21st Century (George Friedman) ; Future Shock (Alvin & Heidi Toffler) ; Thinking About the Future (Andy Hines and Peter C. Bishop) ; The Third Wave (Alvin & Heidi Toffler) ; Futurewise: Six Faces of Global Change (Patrick Dixon) ; Our Final Hour (Martin Rees) ; The Revenge of Gaia (James Lovelock) ; The Skeptical Environmentalist (Bjørn Lomborg) ; Surviving 1,000 Centuries Can We Do It? (Roger-Maurice Bonnet and Lodewijk Woltjer) ; Paris in the Twentieth Century (Jules Verne) ; The Communist Manifesto (Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels) ; An Anarchist ", "score": "1.4751384" }, { "id": "29515955", "title": "Lindiwe Mazibuko", "text": "Owning the Future: Mazibuko and the Changing Face of the DA (2013), by Donwald Pressly, Kwela Books, Cape Town, ISBN: 9780795706240. ", "score": "1.4683692" }, { "id": "5162893", "title": "Andy Hines", "text": " Than You Might Think,” World Future Review, October/November 2009. ; A. Hines, P. Bishop & T. Collins, “The Current State of Scenario Development: An Overview of Techniques,” Foresight, Vol. 9, #1, pp. 5–25. (Received the 2008 Emerald Literati Awards’ Outstanding Paper accolade for best article published in Foresight). ; A. Hines, “The Futures of Futures: A Scenario Salon,” Foresight, Vol. 5, #4, 2003. ; A. Hines, “An Audit for Organizational Futurists: 10 Questions Every Organizational Futurist Should Be Able to Answer,” Foresight, Vol. 5, #1, 2003. (Received the 2003 Emerald Literati Awards’ Outstanding Paper accolade for best article published in Foresight). ; A. Hines. “A Practitioner’s View of the Future of Futures Studies,” Futures, Vol. 34, 2002, ", "score": "1.4680703" } ]
[ "Outsights\nIrdeto: Facing the future through scenario planning ", "Andy Hines\nThinking about the Future: Guidelines for Strategic Foresight, 2nd edition (co-author: Peter C. Bishop), 2015, 2007, ISBN: 978-0996773409 (2nd) ISBN: 978-0978931704 (1st) ; Teaching about the Future,(co-author: Peter C. Bishop), 2012, ISBN: 978-0230363496 - Received the 2014 Association of Professional Futurists Most Significant Futures Work Award for Methods and Practice. ; ConsumerShift: How Changing Values Are Reshaping the Consumer Landscape, 2011, ISBN: 978-1614660033 ; 2025: Science and Technology Reshapes US and Global Society, (co-author: Joseph F Coates, John Mahaffie), 1997, ISBN: 978-1886939097 ; Managing Your Future as an Association: Thinking about Trends and Working with Their Consequences, (co-author: Jennifer Jarrett, Joseph F Coates, John Mahaffie), 1994,ISBN: 978-0880340847 A. Hines, A. & J. Gold, “An organizational futurist role ", "Madeline Ashby\nHow to Future (with Scott Smith), 2020. ", "Monica Witni\n\"I've Got to Face the Future\" (with Jack Gould) ", "Richard Watson (author)\n What Matters (McKinsey & Company). He is a proponent of scenario planning and an advocate of preferred futures, believing it is incumbent upon organisations to create compelling visions of the future and work towards their realisation. In addition to writing, Watson works with the Technology Foresight Practice at Imperial College London and Lectures at London Business School and the King's Fund. He is also a network member of Stratforma and has worked with the Strategic Trends Unit at the UK Ministry of Defence, the RAND Corporation, CSIRO, the Cabinet Office and the Departments of Education in the UK and Australia.", "Christiana Figueres\nCo-author with Tom Rivett-Carnac, The Future We Choose: Surviving the Climate Crisis (Manilla Press, 2020) ISBN: 9780525658351. ", "Liam Fox\n In September 2013, Fox launched Rising Tides: Facing the Challenges of a New Era, a 384-page book in which he warns that many of the world’s institutions are ill-equipped to tackle the economic and security threats of the 21st century.", "Peter Schwartz (futurist)\nHis first book, The Art of the Long View (Doubleday, 1991) is considered by many to be the seminal publication on scenario planning. It was voted the best all time book on the future by the Association of Professional Futurists and is used as a textbook by many business schools. ; Inevitable Surprises (Gotham, 2003) is a look at the forces at play in today's world, and how they will continue to affect the world. ; He also wrote The Long Boom (Perseus, 1999) with co-authors Peter Leyden and Joel Hyatt, which is a book about the future of the global ", "A History of the Future (TV series)\n Public Affairs, and Professor of Global Transformation. ; Prof. Naomi Oreskes, Professor of History of Science at Harvard University, and co-author of The Collapse of Western Civilization. ; Prof. Timothy Snyder, Professor of History at Yale University, and author of The Road to Unfreedom. ; Dr. Carissa Véliz, Researcher at the Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics at the University of Oxford, and editor of the Oxford Handbook of Digital Ethics. The series features interviews with 18 leading academics, including  historians, scientists, political scientists, and technology experts of eight different nationalities, currently working for institutions such as the OECD, and universities like Oxford, Harvard, MIT, IE, Yale, and the London School of Economics. ", "Who Owns the Future?\n Who Owns the Future? a non-fiction book written by Jaron Lanier published by Simon & Schuster in 2013. The book was well received and won multiple awards in 2014: Peace Prize of the German Book Trade, the Goldsmith Book Prize, and Top honors at the San Francisco Book Festival.", "Futures studies\n (Iain McKay) ; Homo Deus: A Brief History of Tomorrow (Yuval Noah Harari, 2016) ; Warnings: Finding Cassandras to Stop Catastrophes, Richard A. Clarke and R. P. Eddy ; Future Agenda Tim Jones ; Future Frequencies Derek Woodgate with Wayne Pethrick ; Social Theory and Social Change Trevor Nobel ; Scenario-based Strategy Paul De Ruijter ; Scenario Planning: The Link between Future and Strategy Mats Lindgren & Hans Banhold ; Creating Better Futures Jay Ogilvy ; Questioning the Future: Methods and Tools for Organisational and Societal Transformation Sohail Inayatullah ; Strategic Foresight: Learning from the Future Patricia Lustig ; History and Future: Using Historical Thinking to Imagine the Future David Stanley For further suggestions, please visit A Resource Bibliography by Dr. Peter Bishop", "Winning the Future\n Winning the Future: A 21st Century Contract with America is a book by former U.S. Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich that outlines Gingrich's plans for the United States of America. Published in 2005 by Regnery Publishing, its themes include: Social Security reform, immigration reform, education reform, increasing the usage of health savings accounts, allowing the disabled the option of working, and American interests within the world trading system. The C-SPAN interview show After Words debuted on January 2, 2005; Gingrich was interviewed by Norm Ornstein for the first program, and Winning the Future was the subject of the interview.", "David Fleming (writer)\n Alongside the final edition of Lean Logic, Chelsea Green simultaneously published a paperback version - Surviving the Future: Culture, Carnival and Capital in the Aftermath of the Market Economy - conceived by Fleming's erstwhile colleague Shaun Chamberlin and drawn from the content of the larger book, but edited to produce a more conventionally formatted, read-it-front-to-back introduction to Fleming's work. Fleming's vision of the future is challenging, as he sees in the present \"an economy that is destroying the very foundations on which it depends\" (ecologically, economically and culturally), but many reviewers have commented on the positive spirit and humour that ", "Sohail Inayatullah\n Inayatullah is co-editor (along with Jian-Bang Deng) of the Journal of Futures Studies, one of the top journals in futures studies. He is also associated editor of New Renaissance and is on the editorial boards of Futures, Development, Peace and Democracy in South Asia, and foresight. Inayatullah is also the co-founder of educational think tank Metafuture.org along with Dr Ivana Milojević.", "The Future and Its Enemies\n The Future and Its Enemies: The Growing Conflict Over Creativity, Enterprise, and Progress is a 1998 book by Virginia Postrel where she describes the growing conflict in post-Cold War society between \"dynamism\" – marked by constant change, creativity and exploration in the pursuit of progress – and \"stasism\", where progress is controlled by careful and cautious planning. Postrel endorses the former, illustrates the differences between the two, and argues that dynamism should be embraced rather than feared.", "On the Future\n On the Future: Prospects for Humanity is a 2018 nonfiction book by British cosmologist and Astronomer Royal Martin Rees. It is a short, \"big concept\" book on the future of humanity and on potential dangers, such as nuclear warfare, climate change, biotech, and artificial intelligence, and the possibility of human extinction.", "Alec Ross (author)\n2021: Alec Ross. The Raging 2020s: Companies, Countries, People – and the Fight for Our Future. Henry Holt and Co. ; 2016: Alec Ross. The Industries of the Future. Simon & Schuster. ", "Futures studies\n When Humans Transcend Biology (Ray Kurzweil) ; Abundance: The Future Is Better Than You Think (Peter Diamandis) ; Brave New World (Aldous Huxley) ; The Next 100 Years: A Forecast for the 21st Century (George Friedman) ; Future Shock (Alvin & Heidi Toffler) ; Thinking About the Future (Andy Hines and Peter C. Bishop) ; The Third Wave (Alvin & Heidi Toffler) ; Futurewise: Six Faces of Global Change (Patrick Dixon) ; Our Final Hour (Martin Rees) ; The Revenge of Gaia (James Lovelock) ; The Skeptical Environmentalist (Bjørn Lomborg) ; Surviving 1,000 Centuries Can We Do It? (Roger-Maurice Bonnet and Lodewijk Woltjer) ; Paris in the Twentieth Century (Jules Verne) ; The Communist Manifesto (Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels) ; An Anarchist ", "Lindiwe Mazibuko\nOwning the Future: Mazibuko and the Changing Face of the DA (2013), by Donwald Pressly, Kwela Books, Cape Town, ISBN: 9780795706240. ", "Andy Hines\n Than You Might Think,” World Future Review, October/November 2009. ; A. Hines, P. Bishop & T. Collins, “The Current State of Scenario Development: An Overview of Techniques,” Foresight, Vol. 9, #1, pp. 5–25. (Received the 2008 Emerald Literati Awards’ Outstanding Paper accolade for best article published in Foresight). ; A. Hines, “The Futures of Futures: A Scenario Salon,” Foresight, Vol. 5, #4, 2003. ; A. Hines, “An Audit for Organizational Futurists: 10 Questions Every Organizational Futurist Should Be Able to Answer,” Foresight, Vol. 5, #1, 2003. (Received the 2003 Emerald Literati Awards’ Outstanding Paper accolade for best article published in Foresight). ; A. Hines. “A Practitioner’s View of the Future of Futures Studies,” Futures, Vol. 34, 2002, " ]
What sport does Guilherme Andrade play?
[ "association football", "football", "soccer" ]
sport
Guilherme Andrade
376,145
69
[ { "id": "14619181", "title": "Guilherme Andrade", "text": " Guilherme Andrade da Silva, commonly known as Guilherme Andrade, (born 31 January 1989 in Montes Claros) is a Brazilian footballer who plays as a right back for Barretos.", "score": "1.8003852" }, { "id": "14619183", "title": "Guilherme Andrade", "text": " FIFA Club World Cup", "score": "1.7243946" }, { "id": "32961236", "title": "Luís Andrade", "text": " Andrade was born in Lisbon. After playing his youth football at Sporting CP, he went on to represent G.D. Estoril Praia, C.F. Estrela da Amadora, C.F. Os Belenenses, S.L. Benfica (five years, with one season loaned to S.C. Braga), Académica de Coimbra, C.D. Pinhalnovense, C.D. Olivais e Moscavide and Odivelas FC. Andrade also had abroad spells with CD Tenerife (Spanish second division) and AEP Paphos FC (Cypriot First Division, a few months), and finished his 20-year senior career in the regional championships in 2013, with Grupo Sportivo Loures and Odivelas again. He amassed Primeira Liga totals of 193 games and one goal over 12 seasons, and was a member of the Portuguese national side that competed at the 1996 Olympic Games, helping them reach the fourth place.", "score": "1.6404369" }, { "id": "16553344", "title": "Guilherme Giovannoni", "text": " Giovannoni has competed with the senior men's Brazilian national basketball team, at the 2002, 2006, 2010, and 2014 FIBA World Cups. He was also a part of the Brazilian teams at the 2012 Summer Olympics, and the 2016 Summer Olympics.", "score": "1.6156116" }, { "id": "12958365", "title": "Guilherme (footballer, born July 1991)", "text": "Notes ", "score": "1.6138732" }, { "id": "1458371", "title": "Lourenço Andrade", "text": " Lourenço Andrade de Souza Feijo is a Brazilian footballer who played professionally in Belgium, Mexico, and the United States. Andrade played two games with Tilleur Liégeois in Belgium during the 1996-1997 season. He then moved to Mexico where he played for a variety of teams over the next six years. In 2003, Andrade moved to the United States to sign with the El Paso Patriots of the USL A-League. In 2004, Andrade moved down to the DFW Tornados of the USL Premier Development League. He was All Southern Conference. In 2005, he rejoined the Patriots who had moved down to the USL PDL as well.", "score": "1.6135058" }, { "id": "31379539", "title": "Israel Andrade", "text": " Andrade played with the senior Brazilian national basketball team at three consecutive Summer Olympic Games, at the 1984 Summer Olympic Games, the 1988 Summer Olympic games, and the 1992 Summer Olympic Games. Andrade was also a member of the Brazilian national team that won the gold medal at the 1987 Pan American Games, where he scored 78 points in seven games during the tournament. He also played at the 1982 FIBA World Cup, the 1986 FIBA World Cup, and the 1990 FIBA World Cup.", "score": "1.6104383" }, { "id": "26506721", "title": "Guilherme Só", "text": " Guilherme Só (pronounced SAH) (born April 22, 1986, in Porto Alegre) is a Brazilian football player.", "score": "1.6065884" }, { "id": "12958364", "title": "Guilherme (footballer, born July 1991)", "text": " Guilherme joined Solomon Islands side Marist Fire in 2017, playing in three OFC Champions League games, scoring five goals. He started the season well, with four goals in his first six games. However, he was detained by police along with compatriots Marcelo and Diego in late 2017, as their visas had failed to process. He left Marist and returned to his native Brazil.", "score": "1.5983813" }, { "id": "14619182", "title": "Guilherme Andrade", "text": "Corinthians ; FIFA Club World Cup: 2012 ; Campeonato Paulista: 2013 ; Recopa Sudamericana: 2013 ", "score": "1.5957937" }, { "id": "4477819", "title": "Guilherme (footballer, born 2000)", "text": "Notes ", "score": "1.5955106" }, { "id": "27833431", "title": "Guilherme Weisheimer", "text": " Guilherme Weisheimer (born October 22, 1981 in Porto Alegre) was a former Brazilian striker. He began playing football for Gremio youth team from the age of 10. He played for first time to Gremio's senior team in 2000-01, playing at the same team with Ronaldinho. He played 34 games with Gremio, in championship and Cup, and scored 8 goals until December 2002. In January 2003 he was loan transferred to Criciúma Esporte Clube for 6 months. He returned in the summer of 2003 to his team Gremio, to be again loan transferred to Ulbra (3rd Division team) until December 2003. In January 2005, he returned to his country to play for the teams Caxias and Veranopolis. One year later, in January 2006 he signed for the Greek club Aris Salonica, to be transferred twelve months later for AC Omonia.", "score": "1.5924594" }, { "id": "8117008", "title": "Guilherme Parede", "text": " Guilherme Parede Pinheiro is a professional Brazilian football player who plays as a forward for CA Talleres.", "score": "1.5882304" }, { "id": "32333359", "title": "Jorge Andrade", "text": " Jorge Manuel Almeida Gomes de Andrade, OIH (born 9 April 1978) is a Portuguese football manager former and former professional player who played as a central defender. After playing two years with Porto he went on to represent Deportivo (169 official appearances in five seasons) and Juventus, appearing rarely for the latter club due to injury. Andrade earned more than 50 caps for Portugal, representing the country in one World Cup and one European Championship and helping it finish second in Euro 2004.", "score": "1.5881603" }, { "id": "8236076", "title": "Guilherme Mendes Barbosa", "text": " Guilherme Mendes Barbosa (born 20 November 1981 in Contagem), commonly known as Guilherme Barbosa is a Brazilian football player, currently plays for Uberaba Sport Club.", "score": "1.584423" }, { "id": "29419152", "title": "Guilherme de Cássio Alves", "text": " the latter. In 1997, Guilherme returned to his country with Grêmio Foot-Ball Porto Alegrense. In the following year he moved to CR Vasco da Gama, where he was very rarely played, but also helped to the Torneio Rio – São Paulo conquest. Still in 1999, Guilherme signed with Clube Atlético Mineiro, where he experienced his best years as a professional. In the year's Série A, he was crowned top scorer by breaking the record which belonged to club legend Reinaldo, and led the team to the vice-championship. Guilherme played one year on loan with Sport Club Corinthians Paulista, scoring twice in his debut, a 3–2 home win against Sport Club Internacional. ", "score": "1.5773907" }, { "id": "11129553", "title": "Guilherme Schettine", "text": " Guilherme Schettine Guimarães (born 10 October 1995), known as Guilherme Schettine or simply Guilherme, is a Brazilian professional footballer who plays as a forward for Portuguese club Vizela on loan from Braga.", "score": "1.5714507" }, { "id": "15538598", "title": "Bruno Andrade (footballer, born 1989)", "text": " Born in São Bernardo do Campo, Andrade began his senior career in 2007 with PAEC. In February 2008 he was loaned out to Italian side Reggina, and spent the entire 2008-09 season on loan at Dutch team Helmond Sport. After the loan spell ended, Helmond made the deal permanent. On 20 December 2010, Andrade was linked with Italian Serie B club Atalanta. On 29 January 2017 Andrade signed to Hapoel Kfar Saba until the end of the season. Ahead of the 2019–20 season, Andrade joined Belgian club KFC Esperanza Pelt. On 19 June 2020, Andrade signed with RKSV Halsteren competing in the Hoofdklasse.", "score": "1.5676492" }, { "id": "3139986", "title": "Guilherme Milhomem Gusmão", "text": " He made a big impression this at Cruzeiro, who were comfortably top scorers in the Campeonato Brasileiro 2007. Guilherme played as a supporting striker, where he showed excellent vision for the killer pass. 2008 in his second season, he was fifth top scorer with 28 goals.", "score": "1.5660675" }, { "id": "4512939", "title": "Andrade (footballer, born 1981)", "text": " Andrade born in São Paulo, one of the two cities famous of football and its products (another is Rio de Janeiro). After his contract with Vasco da Gama finished, he joined Sporting Braga on January, 2007, signed a contract last until 30 June 2010. He was returned to Vasco da Gama in July 2007, signed a two-year deal. While under contract with Vasco da Gama, Andrade agreed a pre-contract deal with Cádiz to join them in July 2008 on a 2-year deal with a further 1-year extension option. In 2009 he signed with Sport Recife. In November 2009 Sport Recife released midfielder by mutual agreement, making him a free agent now. On 9 February 2010 Coritiba Foot Ball Club signed former Sport Recife midfielder on a free transfer.", "score": "1.5649866" } ]
[ "Guilherme Andrade\n Guilherme Andrade da Silva, commonly known as Guilherme Andrade, (born 31 January 1989 in Montes Claros) is a Brazilian footballer who plays as a right back for Barretos.", "Guilherme Andrade\n FIFA Club World Cup", "Luís Andrade\n Andrade was born in Lisbon. After playing his youth football at Sporting CP, he went on to represent G.D. Estoril Praia, C.F. Estrela da Amadora, C.F. Os Belenenses, S.L. Benfica (five years, with one season loaned to S.C. Braga), Académica de Coimbra, C.D. Pinhalnovense, C.D. Olivais e Moscavide and Odivelas FC. Andrade also had abroad spells with CD Tenerife (Spanish second division) and AEP Paphos FC (Cypriot First Division, a few months), and finished his 20-year senior career in the regional championships in 2013, with Grupo Sportivo Loures and Odivelas again. He amassed Primeira Liga totals of 193 games and one goal over 12 seasons, and was a member of the Portuguese national side that competed at the 1996 Olympic Games, helping them reach the fourth place.", "Guilherme Giovannoni\n Giovannoni has competed with the senior men's Brazilian national basketball team, at the 2002, 2006, 2010, and 2014 FIBA World Cups. He was also a part of the Brazilian teams at the 2012 Summer Olympics, and the 2016 Summer Olympics.", "Guilherme (footballer, born July 1991)\nNotes ", "Lourenço Andrade\n Lourenço Andrade de Souza Feijo is a Brazilian footballer who played professionally in Belgium, Mexico, and the United States. Andrade played two games with Tilleur Liégeois in Belgium during the 1996-1997 season. He then moved to Mexico where he played for a variety of teams over the next six years. In 2003, Andrade moved to the United States to sign with the El Paso Patriots of the USL A-League. In 2004, Andrade moved down to the DFW Tornados of the USL Premier Development League. He was All Southern Conference. In 2005, he rejoined the Patriots who had moved down to the USL PDL as well.", "Israel Andrade\n Andrade played with the senior Brazilian national basketball team at three consecutive Summer Olympic Games, at the 1984 Summer Olympic Games, the 1988 Summer Olympic games, and the 1992 Summer Olympic Games. Andrade was also a member of the Brazilian national team that won the gold medal at the 1987 Pan American Games, where he scored 78 points in seven games during the tournament. He also played at the 1982 FIBA World Cup, the 1986 FIBA World Cup, and the 1990 FIBA World Cup.", "Guilherme Só\n Guilherme Só (pronounced SAH) (born April 22, 1986, in Porto Alegre) is a Brazilian football player.", "Guilherme (footballer, born July 1991)\n Guilherme joined Solomon Islands side Marist Fire in 2017, playing in three OFC Champions League games, scoring five goals. He started the season well, with four goals in his first six games. However, he was detained by police along with compatriots Marcelo and Diego in late 2017, as their visas had failed to process. He left Marist and returned to his native Brazil.", "Guilherme Andrade\nCorinthians ; FIFA Club World Cup: 2012 ; Campeonato Paulista: 2013 ; Recopa Sudamericana: 2013 ", "Guilherme (footballer, born 2000)\nNotes ", "Guilherme Weisheimer\n Guilherme Weisheimer (born October 22, 1981 in Porto Alegre) was a former Brazilian striker. He began playing football for Gremio youth team from the age of 10. He played for first time to Gremio's senior team in 2000-01, playing at the same team with Ronaldinho. He played 34 games with Gremio, in championship and Cup, and scored 8 goals until December 2002. In January 2003 he was loan transferred to Criciúma Esporte Clube for 6 months. He returned in the summer of 2003 to his team Gremio, to be again loan transferred to Ulbra (3rd Division team) until December 2003. In January 2005, he returned to his country to play for the teams Caxias and Veranopolis. One year later, in January 2006 he signed for the Greek club Aris Salonica, to be transferred twelve months later for AC Omonia.", "Guilherme Parede\n Guilherme Parede Pinheiro is a professional Brazilian football player who plays as a forward for CA Talleres.", "Jorge Andrade\n Jorge Manuel Almeida Gomes de Andrade, OIH (born 9 April 1978) is a Portuguese football manager former and former professional player who played as a central defender. After playing two years with Porto he went on to represent Deportivo (169 official appearances in five seasons) and Juventus, appearing rarely for the latter club due to injury. Andrade earned more than 50 caps for Portugal, representing the country in one World Cup and one European Championship and helping it finish second in Euro 2004.", "Guilherme Mendes Barbosa\n Guilherme Mendes Barbosa (born 20 November 1981 in Contagem), commonly known as Guilherme Barbosa is a Brazilian football player, currently plays for Uberaba Sport Club.", "Guilherme de Cássio Alves\n the latter. In 1997, Guilherme returned to his country with Grêmio Foot-Ball Porto Alegrense. In the following year he moved to CR Vasco da Gama, where he was very rarely played, but also helped to the Torneio Rio – São Paulo conquest. Still in 1999, Guilherme signed with Clube Atlético Mineiro, where he experienced his best years as a professional. In the year's Série A, he was crowned top scorer by breaking the record which belonged to club legend Reinaldo, and led the team to the vice-championship. Guilherme played one year on loan with Sport Club Corinthians Paulista, scoring twice in his debut, a 3–2 home win against Sport Club Internacional. ", "Guilherme Schettine\n Guilherme Schettine Guimarães (born 10 October 1995), known as Guilherme Schettine or simply Guilherme, is a Brazilian professional footballer who plays as a forward for Portuguese club Vizela on loan from Braga.", "Bruno Andrade (footballer, born 1989)\n Born in São Bernardo do Campo, Andrade began his senior career in 2007 with PAEC. In February 2008 he was loaned out to Italian side Reggina, and spent the entire 2008-09 season on loan at Dutch team Helmond Sport. After the loan spell ended, Helmond made the deal permanent. On 20 December 2010, Andrade was linked with Italian Serie B club Atalanta. On 29 January 2017 Andrade signed to Hapoel Kfar Saba until the end of the season. Ahead of the 2019–20 season, Andrade joined Belgian club KFC Esperanza Pelt. On 19 June 2020, Andrade signed with RKSV Halsteren competing in the Hoofdklasse.", "Guilherme Milhomem Gusmão\n He made a big impression this at Cruzeiro, who were comfortably top scorers in the Campeonato Brasileiro 2007. Guilherme played as a supporting striker, where he showed excellent vision for the killer pass. 2008 in his second season, he was fifth top scorer with 28 goals.", "Andrade (footballer, born 1981)\n Andrade born in São Paulo, one of the two cities famous of football and its products (another is Rio de Janeiro). After his contract with Vasco da Gama finished, he joined Sporting Braga on January, 2007, signed a contract last until 30 June 2010. He was returned to Vasco da Gama in July 2007, signed a two-year deal. While under contract with Vasco da Gama, Andrade agreed a pre-contract deal with Cádiz to join them in July 2008 on a 2-year deal with a further 1-year extension option. In 2009 he signed with Sport Recife. In November 2009 Sport Recife released midfielder by mutual agreement, making him a free agent now. On 9 February 2010 Coritiba Foot Ball Club signed former Sport Recife midfielder on a free transfer." ]
Who was the screenwriter for White Gold?
[ "John Jopson", "John Charles Jopson" ]
screenwriter
White Gold (2003 film)
6,164,657
71
[ { "id": "1406989", "title": "White Gold (TV series)", "text": " The show is produced by BBC Comedy along with Fudge Park Productions, which was established in 2015 by the creators of The Inbetweeners – Damon Beesley and Iain Morris. Beesley created White Gold and acts as show runner and executive producer, in addition to having written eight of the 12 episodes. Joe Thomas and Chris Niel wrote two episodes each. Production of series 2 was suspended in November 2017 following allegations of sexual assault against Ed Westwick. Filming recommenced in November 2018.", "score": "1.62092" }, { "id": "6960426", "title": "James Gordon White", "text": " James Gordon White was a screenwriter best known for his work in the exploitation field.", "score": "1.6046026" }, { "id": "7348796", "title": "White Gold (2010 film)", "text": " White Gold is a 2010 South African film, directed by Jayan Moodley and Paul Railton, produced by African Lotus Productions in association with Serendipity Productions and African Mediums. Its release was timed to coincide with the celebrations of the 150th anniversary of Indian presence in South Africa. The film is a historical drama revolving around the experiences of Indian indentured labourers recruited for the sugar plantations of the 19th-century Colony of Natal, and their children and grandchildren. Jayan Moodley, who wrote the script and co-directed, was inspired by her own family history.", "score": "1.5963888" }, { "id": "14947818", "title": "Lloyd Gold", "text": " Lloyd \"Lucky\" Gold (born September 6, 1950) is an American screenwriter and playwright. Gold's plays have been produced at the Eugene O'Neill Theatre, the Seattle Repertory Theatre, the McCarter Theater and others. He wrote numerous film scripts for Miramax and was script doctor on Marvin's Room and Shakespeare in Love. He is co-creator of the PBS American Mystery Series, produced by Robert Redford and Rebecca Eaton. Gold has written both series and long form for television including USA Network's Stealing Christmas. He is the recipient of an NEA grant, 4 Emmys and 3 WGA Awards.", "score": "1.5928769" }, { "id": "10955227", "title": "James L. White", "text": " to pen the screenplay for a thriller called \"Red Money.\" The film was never made, but it marked White's breakthrough into screenwriting after decades of attempts. In a 2005 award acceptance speech before the Friends of the Black Oscar Nominees group, White publicly thanked Poitier, \"I would like to publicly thank Mr. Poitier, who was the first person in Hollywood to take a chance on me as a screenwriter.\" White was working on two screenplays at the time of his death in 2015 - a biopic on Bessie Smith titled \"Empress of the Blues\" and second film focusing on Dinah Washington, which is in pre-production. James L. White died from complications of liver and pancreatic cancer at his home in Santa Monica, California, on July 23, 2015, at the age of 67. He was survived by his wife, Elizabeth, two daughters and a son.", "score": "1.5923346" }, { "id": "30437171", "title": "Victor Gold (journalist)", "text": " Victor \"Vic\" Gold (September 25, 1928 – June 5, 2017) was an American journalist, author, and Republican political consultant. Gold began his career as a lawyer and advisor to the Democratic Party in Alabama before switching to the Republican Party. He worked as deputy press secretary for Senator Barry Goldwater during the 1964 presidential election and press secretary for Vice President Spiro T. Agnew from 1970 to 1973. Gold left politics for a time to work as a writer and political commentator, returning in 1979 as a speechwriter to the presidential campaign of George H. W. Bush and was an advisor to Bush's 1988 and 1992 campaigns. Later in life, Gold split with the Republicans over issues including the 2003 invasion of Iraq and formally left the party in 2016. He was the author of several published works of non-fiction. He co-wrote George H. W. Bush's 1987 autobiography and co-wrote a novel in 1988 with Lynne Cheney.", "score": "1.5898615" }, { "id": "28415889", "title": "Richard Price (writer)", "text": " to Raymond Chandler and Saul Bellow. In July 2010, a group art show inspired by Lush Life was held in nine galleries in New York City. Price wrote a detective novel entitled The Whites under the pen name Harry Brandt. The book was released February 17, 2015. Film producer Scott Rudin will be producing a film version of the novel. Price has written numerous screenplays, including The Color of Money (1986) (for which he was nominated for an Oscar), Life Lessons (the Martin Scorsese segment of New York Stories) (1989), Sea of Love (1989), Mad Dog and Glory (1993), Ransom (1996), and Shaft ", "score": "1.5822694" }, { "id": "6066789", "title": "White Gold (1927 film)", "text": " White Gold is a 1927 silent film dramatic western produced and distributed by Cecil B. DeMille and directed by William K. Howard.", "score": "1.5588473" }, { "id": "10955226", "title": "James L. White", "text": " James L. White (November 15, 1947 – July 23, 2015) was an American screenwriter best known for his original screenplay for the 2004 film, Ray, a biopic on Ray Charles. White received a BAFTA Award nomination for Best Original Screenplay for his work on Ray. White was born on November 15, 1947, in Mount Sterling, Kentucky. He was raised by his single mother in Mount Sterling, approximately 35 miles east of Lexington. A love of reading led White to pursue a career as a writer. He served in the U.S. Navy before enrolling at the University of Massachusetts. He left the university after a year and worked a series of jobs in the Boston area. He moved to Los Angeles during the 1970s to pursue screenwriting. White credited his friend, actor Sidney Poitier, with helping in get his first screenwriting job. Poitier hired White to ", "score": "1.5572791" }, { "id": "6147341", "title": "White Gold (1949 film)", "text": " White Gold (German: Weißes Gold) is a 1949 Austrian drama film directed by Eduard von Borsody and starring Heinrich Gretler, Alma Seidler and Robert Freitag. The film's art direction was by Julius von Borsody.", "score": "1.547535" }, { "id": "28145643", "title": "F. Clifton White", "text": " Frederick Clifton White Sr. (June 13, 1918 - January 9, 1993), was an American political consultant and campaign manager for candidates of the Republican Party, the New York Conservative Party, and some foreign clients. He is best remembered as the moving force behind the Draft Goldwater Committee from 1961 to 1964, which secured a majority of delegates to nominate U.S. Senator Barry M. Goldwater of Arizona as the presidential candidate of the Republican Party.", "score": "1.5433555" }, { "id": "6934438", "title": "Gold (1974 film)", "text": " The movie is based on a 1970 novel by Wilbur Smith. The story was based on a real-life flooding of a gold mine near Johannesburg in 1968. Smith researched the book by working in a gold mine for a few weeks. \"I was a sort of privileged member of the team, I could ask questions and not be told to shut up,” he says. The New York Times said \"Mr Smith, an adventure writer disdainful of subtleties, blasts his way to a finale strewn with broken bodies and orange blossoms.\"", "score": "1.5327855" }, { "id": "31539882", "title": "Paul Dehn", "text": " Paul Edward Dehn (pronounced \"Dain\"; 5 November 1912 – 30 September 1976) was a British screenwriter, best known for Goldfinger, The Spy Who Came in from the Cold, Planet of the Apes sequels and Murder on the Orient Express. Dehn and his partner, James Bernard, won the Academy Award for Best Story for Seven Days to Noon.", "score": "1.5305461" }, { "id": "7941434", "title": "Jim Lehrer", "text": "An adaptation of White Widow has been written by Luke Wilson ; Viva Max! (1969) writing credit with Elliott Baker ; The Last Debate (2000) writing credit with Jon Maas ", "score": "1.529402" }, { "id": "10192493", "title": "Jon Manchip White", "text": " brief, scene of a group of men and women, all naked, engaged in sexual congress. After a brief stint in the British Foreign Service, White went back to writing for television and film, including five years spent travelling and living in places such as Madrid and Paris, as a script doctor with Samuel Bronston Productions. There amongst other Bronston productions, he made contributions to such epic films as El Cid and 55 Days at Peking. He was also a script doctor on the science fiction film The Day of the Triffids. Later he finished his movie career as Walt Disney's European story editor, based in Berlin. By 1962, White was back to writing for television, including writing an episode of The Avengers ", "score": "1.5283244" }, { "id": "30391239", "title": "Alan White (novelist)", "text": " Alan White (born 23 February 1924) is an English novelist and journalist. He used his experiences as a Second World War commando leader in his writings. He also wrote using the names \"Alec Haig\", \"James Fraser\" and \"Alec Whitney\". Under the pseudonym \"Joe Balham\" he wrote seven novels based on The Sweeney television series. His novel The Long Day's Dying was made into a 1968 film directed by Peter Collinson. White wrote mysteries, as well as war and adventure novels.", "score": "1.5229604" }, { "id": "6362353", "title": "C. Gardner Sullivan", "text": " White Gold (1927) (producer) ; 179) Tempest (Taylor, 1928) (writer) ; 180) The Woman Disputed (H. King and Taylor, 1928) (screenplay) ; 181) Sadie Thompson (Walsh, 1928) (titles, editor) ; 182) Alibi (West, 1929) (screenplay) ; 183) The Locked Door (Fitzmaurice, 1929) (screen adaptation) ; 184) All Quiet on the Western Front (1930) (supervising story chief) ; 185) What Men Want (1930) (supervising story editor) ; 186) Hell's Heroes (1930) (chief story supervisor) ; 187) The Cuban Love Song (Van Dyke, 1931) (screenplay) ; 188) Huddle (Wood, 1932) (dialogue continuity) ; 189) Strange Interlude (Strange Interval) (Leonard, 1932) (dialogue ", "score": "1.5191991" }, { "id": "2298332", "title": "White Lightning (1973 film)", "text": " White Lightning is a 1973 American action film directed by Joseph Sargent and starring Burt Reynolds as the main character Robert \"Gator\" McKlusky, Jennifer Billingsley, Ned Beatty, Bo Hopkins, R.G. Armstrong, and Diane Ladd (erroneously billed in the opening and closing credits as “Diane Lad”). It was written by William W. Norton.", "score": "1.5074497" }, { "id": "13779579", "title": "Brian McDonald (screenwriter)", "text": " Brian McDonald has written numerous screenplays. Those produced include the mockumentary short film White Face in 2001, and a thriller feature called Inheritance in 2004.", "score": "1.5049667" }, { "id": "32301195", "title": "Stiles White", "text": " White began his career as a production assistant for Stan Winston Studios, working on projects ranging from Interview with the Vampire to Galaxy Quest. In 2004, he co-created the short-lived animated television series Da Boom Crew. White made his screenwriting debut co-writing the 2005 horror film Boogeyman with his future spouse, Juliet Snowden. In 2014, White made his directing debut with the supernatural horror film Ouija, based on the Hasbro's board game of same name whose script he once again co-wrote with Snowden. The film was released on October 24, 2014 by Universal Pictures, grossing more than $102 million with a budget of just $5 million.", "score": "1.504536" } ]
[ "White Gold (TV series)\n The show is produced by BBC Comedy along with Fudge Park Productions, which was established in 2015 by the creators of The Inbetweeners – Damon Beesley and Iain Morris. Beesley created White Gold and acts as show runner and executive producer, in addition to having written eight of the 12 episodes. Joe Thomas and Chris Niel wrote two episodes each. Production of series 2 was suspended in November 2017 following allegations of sexual assault against Ed Westwick. Filming recommenced in November 2018.", "James Gordon White\n James Gordon White was a screenwriter best known for his work in the exploitation field.", "White Gold (2010 film)\n White Gold is a 2010 South African film, directed by Jayan Moodley and Paul Railton, produced by African Lotus Productions in association with Serendipity Productions and African Mediums. Its release was timed to coincide with the celebrations of the 150th anniversary of Indian presence in South Africa. The film is a historical drama revolving around the experiences of Indian indentured labourers recruited for the sugar plantations of the 19th-century Colony of Natal, and their children and grandchildren. Jayan Moodley, who wrote the script and co-directed, was inspired by her own family history.", "Lloyd Gold\n Lloyd \"Lucky\" Gold (born September 6, 1950) is an American screenwriter and playwright. Gold's plays have been produced at the Eugene O'Neill Theatre, the Seattle Repertory Theatre, the McCarter Theater and others. He wrote numerous film scripts for Miramax and was script doctor on Marvin's Room and Shakespeare in Love. He is co-creator of the PBS American Mystery Series, produced by Robert Redford and Rebecca Eaton. Gold has written both series and long form for television including USA Network's Stealing Christmas. He is the recipient of an NEA grant, 4 Emmys and 3 WGA Awards.", "James L. White\n to pen the screenplay for a thriller called \"Red Money.\" The film was never made, but it marked White's breakthrough into screenwriting after decades of attempts. In a 2005 award acceptance speech before the Friends of the Black Oscar Nominees group, White publicly thanked Poitier, \"I would like to publicly thank Mr. Poitier, who was the first person in Hollywood to take a chance on me as a screenwriter.\" White was working on two screenplays at the time of his death in 2015 - a biopic on Bessie Smith titled \"Empress of the Blues\" and second film focusing on Dinah Washington, which is in pre-production. James L. White died from complications of liver and pancreatic cancer at his home in Santa Monica, California, on July 23, 2015, at the age of 67. He was survived by his wife, Elizabeth, two daughters and a son.", "Victor Gold (journalist)\n Victor \"Vic\" Gold (September 25, 1928 – June 5, 2017) was an American journalist, author, and Republican political consultant. Gold began his career as a lawyer and advisor to the Democratic Party in Alabama before switching to the Republican Party. He worked as deputy press secretary for Senator Barry Goldwater during the 1964 presidential election and press secretary for Vice President Spiro T. Agnew from 1970 to 1973. Gold left politics for a time to work as a writer and political commentator, returning in 1979 as a speechwriter to the presidential campaign of George H. W. Bush and was an advisor to Bush's 1988 and 1992 campaigns. Later in life, Gold split with the Republicans over issues including the 2003 invasion of Iraq and formally left the party in 2016. He was the author of several published works of non-fiction. He co-wrote George H. W. Bush's 1987 autobiography and co-wrote a novel in 1988 with Lynne Cheney.", "Richard Price (writer)\n to Raymond Chandler and Saul Bellow. In July 2010, a group art show inspired by Lush Life was held in nine galleries in New York City. Price wrote a detective novel entitled The Whites under the pen name Harry Brandt. The book was released February 17, 2015. Film producer Scott Rudin will be producing a film version of the novel. Price has written numerous screenplays, including The Color of Money (1986) (for which he was nominated for an Oscar), Life Lessons (the Martin Scorsese segment of New York Stories) (1989), Sea of Love (1989), Mad Dog and Glory (1993), Ransom (1996), and Shaft ", "White Gold (1927 film)\n White Gold is a 1927 silent film dramatic western produced and distributed by Cecil B. DeMille and directed by William K. Howard.", "James L. White\n James L. White (November 15, 1947 – July 23, 2015) was an American screenwriter best known for his original screenplay for the 2004 film, Ray, a biopic on Ray Charles. White received a BAFTA Award nomination for Best Original Screenplay for his work on Ray. White was born on November 15, 1947, in Mount Sterling, Kentucky. He was raised by his single mother in Mount Sterling, approximately 35 miles east of Lexington. A love of reading led White to pursue a career as a writer. He served in the U.S. Navy before enrolling at the University of Massachusetts. He left the university after a year and worked a series of jobs in the Boston area. He moved to Los Angeles during the 1970s to pursue screenwriting. White credited his friend, actor Sidney Poitier, with helping in get his first screenwriting job. Poitier hired White to ", "White Gold (1949 film)\n White Gold (German: Weißes Gold) is a 1949 Austrian drama film directed by Eduard von Borsody and starring Heinrich Gretler, Alma Seidler and Robert Freitag. The film's art direction was by Julius von Borsody.", "F. Clifton White\n Frederick Clifton White Sr. (June 13, 1918 - January 9, 1993), was an American political consultant and campaign manager for candidates of the Republican Party, the New York Conservative Party, and some foreign clients. He is best remembered as the moving force behind the Draft Goldwater Committee from 1961 to 1964, which secured a majority of delegates to nominate U.S. Senator Barry M. Goldwater of Arizona as the presidential candidate of the Republican Party.", "Gold (1974 film)\n The movie is based on a 1970 novel by Wilbur Smith. The story was based on a real-life flooding of a gold mine near Johannesburg in 1968. Smith researched the book by working in a gold mine for a few weeks. \"I was a sort of privileged member of the team, I could ask questions and not be told to shut up,” he says. The New York Times said \"Mr Smith, an adventure writer disdainful of subtleties, blasts his way to a finale strewn with broken bodies and orange blossoms.\"", "Paul Dehn\n Paul Edward Dehn (pronounced \"Dain\"; 5 November 1912 – 30 September 1976) was a British screenwriter, best known for Goldfinger, The Spy Who Came in from the Cold, Planet of the Apes sequels and Murder on the Orient Express. Dehn and his partner, James Bernard, won the Academy Award for Best Story for Seven Days to Noon.", "Jim Lehrer\nAn adaptation of White Widow has been written by Luke Wilson ; Viva Max! (1969) writing credit with Elliott Baker ; The Last Debate (2000) writing credit with Jon Maas ", "Jon Manchip White\n brief, scene of a group of men and women, all naked, engaged in sexual congress. After a brief stint in the British Foreign Service, White went back to writing for television and film, including five years spent travelling and living in places such as Madrid and Paris, as a script doctor with Samuel Bronston Productions. There amongst other Bronston productions, he made contributions to such epic films as El Cid and 55 Days at Peking. He was also a script doctor on the science fiction film The Day of the Triffids. Later he finished his movie career as Walt Disney's European story editor, based in Berlin. By 1962, White was back to writing for television, including writing an episode of The Avengers ", "Alan White (novelist)\n Alan White (born 23 February 1924) is an English novelist and journalist. He used his experiences as a Second World War commando leader in his writings. He also wrote using the names \"Alec Haig\", \"James Fraser\" and \"Alec Whitney\". Under the pseudonym \"Joe Balham\" he wrote seven novels based on The Sweeney television series. His novel The Long Day's Dying was made into a 1968 film directed by Peter Collinson. White wrote mysteries, as well as war and adventure novels.", "C. Gardner Sullivan\n White Gold (1927) (producer) ; 179) Tempest (Taylor, 1928) (writer) ; 180) The Woman Disputed (H. King and Taylor, 1928) (screenplay) ; 181) Sadie Thompson (Walsh, 1928) (titles, editor) ; 182) Alibi (West, 1929) (screenplay) ; 183) The Locked Door (Fitzmaurice, 1929) (screen adaptation) ; 184) All Quiet on the Western Front (1930) (supervising story chief) ; 185) What Men Want (1930) (supervising story editor) ; 186) Hell's Heroes (1930) (chief story supervisor) ; 187) The Cuban Love Song (Van Dyke, 1931) (screenplay) ; 188) Huddle (Wood, 1932) (dialogue continuity) ; 189) Strange Interlude (Strange Interval) (Leonard, 1932) (dialogue ", "White Lightning (1973 film)\n White Lightning is a 1973 American action film directed by Joseph Sargent and starring Burt Reynolds as the main character Robert \"Gator\" McKlusky, Jennifer Billingsley, Ned Beatty, Bo Hopkins, R.G. Armstrong, and Diane Ladd (erroneously billed in the opening and closing credits as “Diane Lad”). It was written by William W. Norton.", "Brian McDonald (screenwriter)\n Brian McDonald has written numerous screenplays. Those produced include the mockumentary short film White Face in 2001, and a thriller feature called Inheritance in 2004.", "Stiles White\n White began his career as a production assistant for Stan Winston Studios, working on projects ranging from Interview with the Vampire to Galaxy Quest. In 2004, he co-created the short-lived animated television series Da Boom Crew. White made his screenwriting debut co-writing the 2005 horror film Boogeyman with his future spouse, Juliet Snowden. In 2014, White made his directing debut with the supernatural horror film Ouija, based on the Hasbro's board game of same name whose script he once again co-wrote with Snowden. The film was released on October 24, 2014 by Universal Pictures, grossing more than $102 million with a budget of just $5 million." ]
Who is the father of Searching?
[ "War Admiral" ]
father
Searching (horse)
5,712,833
95
[ { "id": "2909662", "title": "Searching (film)", "text": " Searching is a 2018 American mystery thriller computer screen film directed by Aneesh Chaganty in his feature debut and written by Chaganty and Sev Ohanian. Set entirely on computer screens and smartphones, the film follows a father (John Cho) trying to find his missing 16-year-old daughter (Michelle La) with the help of a police detective (Debra Messing). It is the first mainstream Hollywood thriller headlined by an Asian-American actor. The film premiered at the Sundance Film Festival on January 21, 2018, and was theatrically released in the United States on August 31, 2018, by Screen Gems. The film was a financial and critical success, grossing over $75 million worldwide against a $880,000 budget and receiving praise for its direction, acting, unique visual presentation and unpredictable storyline. At the Independent Spirit Awards, Cho was nominated for Best Male Lead. A sequel is in development.", "score": "1.6726155" }, { "id": "11983979", "title": "In Search of My Father", "text": " In Search of My Father: The Journey of a Child Holocaust Survivor is a 2010 book by a Holocaust survivor Paul Drexler. The book chronicles the author's research about his father's death during a British bombardment days before German capitulation.", "score": "1.5266058" }, { "id": "7763815", "title": "The Search (novel)", "text": " The original Arabic title is الطريق which means \"the way\" or \"the quest\" and is very close to the word used by Muslim sufists [called Sufist Ways الطرق الصوفية] for the different \"ways\" or \"schools\" by which to approach God. The name of the hero's father in the novel \"Sayed Sayed Al-Rehaimi\" is reminiscent of an omnipotent supreme being, the name in Arabic means literally \"Master Master the Compassionate\", his last name being very close to al-Rahim, one of the 99 names of God in the Quran. Saber's search for him seems to be a thinly disguised search for God or Meaning. This theme of search for meaning or way of existence is comparable to other novels by Mahfouz, notably Children of Gebelawi (1959), The Beggar (1965), Heart of the Night (1975) and The Harafish (1977).", "score": "1.4513757" }, { "id": "162964", "title": "The Search (2014 film)", "text": " The Search is a 2014 French drama film written and directed by Michel Hazanavicius and produced by Hazanavicius and Thomas Langmann. The film is a reiteration of the Oscar-winning post-Holocaust drama also called The Search, directed by Fred Zinnemann, in which a compassionate westerner helps a lost child find what is left of his family amidst the chaotic flood of post-war civilian refugees. In the 1948 film, the backdrop is post-war Berlin; The Search (2014) takes place in the \"front lines of the Russian invasion of Chechnya\" during the first year of the Second Chechen War (1999-2009). The Search was selected to compete for the Palme d'Or in the main competition section at the 2014 Cannes Film Festival.", "score": "1.4496491" }, { "id": "11093061", "title": "Stage mother", "text": " Fathers have also been known to manage their children in this way, such as Joseph Jackson (patriarch of the Jackson family), Murry Wilson (father of three of The Beach Boys), Joe Simpson (father of Jessica and Ashlee Simpson), Jeff Archuleta (father of American Idol runner-up David Archuleta), Mathew Knowles (father of Beyoncé and Solange Knowles), Ira David Wood III (father of Evan Rachel Wood) and Kit Culkin (father of Macaulay and Kieran Culkin). A historical example of such a father was Leopold Mozart, who recognized his son's musical ability at an early age and made the most of it. Abraham Quintanilla, Jr., father of Tejano superstar Selena, is credited with having discovered Selena's gift of singing; he rounded ", "score": "1.4473953" }, { "id": "1506036", "title": "Runners (film)", "text": " An English father heads for London in search of his missing teenage daughter.", "score": "1.4410939" }, { "id": "11983981", "title": "In Search of My Father", "text": " The Sydney Morning Herald praised In Search of My Father as \"full of powerful moments, told simply, with disturbing openness\". A review in The Australian illustrates the book's \"painful reminder that when nations go to war, it is invariably the innocent who suffer most\".", "score": "1.4365221" }, { "id": "10721900", "title": "The Search (short story)", "text": " The Search is a science fiction short story by Canadian-American writer A. E. van Vogt, originally published in Astounding in January 1943. The story involves time travel and is told in a non-linear fashion with multiple plot twists.", "score": "1.4351912" }, { "id": "7346496", "title": "A Son of Man", "text": " A circumspect American teenager from Minneapolis joins his mysterious father in Ecuador, where they embark on a treasure hunt for Incan gold.", "score": "1.4310752" }, { "id": "2909670", "title": "Searching (film)", "text": "John Cho as David Kim, Margot's father ; Debra Messing as Detective Sergeant Rosemary Vick ; Michelle La as Margot Kim, the daughter of David and Pamela ; Kya Dawn Lau as 9-year-old Margot Kim ; Megan Liu as 7-year-old Margot Kim ; Alex Jayne Go as 5-year-old Margot Kim ; Sara Sohn as Pamela Nam Kim, David's wife ; Joseph Lee as Peter Kim, David's brother and Margot’s uncle ; Steven Michael Eich as Robert Vick, Rosemary's son ; Ric Sarabia as Randy Cartoff, ex-convict ; Sean O'Bryan as Radio Jockey ; Colin Woodell as 911 Operator ", "score": "1.4306943" }, { "id": "26233935", "title": "Legend of the Lost Tomb", "text": " Fifteen-year-old John Robie's father is an Egyptologist who goes missing during an excavation in Egypt. After arriving in Egypt to search for his missing father, he meets seventeen-year-old Karen Lacy. The two team up to find clues to John's missing father and to his excavations which included a map to the treasures of the Pharaoh Ramesses II. While they are on their search, they are pursued by mysterious men who are in search of the map as well.", "score": "1.4304719" }, { "id": "32956623", "title": "Nanook's Great Hunt", "text": " From Mediatoon's press flyer: \"A boy's journey into manhood through his quest to find his missing father... Set in the harsh landscape of the Canadian Arctic, this enchanting tale evolves around Nanook, a twelve-year-old Inuit boy, who embarks upon a journey to find his missing father, undertaking the challenge of hunting down the mythical bear, Suaq Nanok.\"", "score": "1.4299126" }, { "id": "162968", "title": "The Search (2014 film)", "text": "Bérénice Bejo as Carole ; Annette Bening as Helen ; Maksim Emelyanov as Kolia ; Abdul Khalim Mamutsiev as Hadji ; Zukhra Duishvili as Raïssa ; Lela Bagakashvili as Elina ; Yuriy Tsurilo as The Colonel ; Anton Dolgov as Soldier ; Mamuka Matchitidze as Father ; Rusudan Pareulidze as Mother ", "score": "1.4284911" }, { "id": "6709265", "title": "Search (South Korean TV series)", "text": "Jang Dong-yoon as Yong Dong-jin ; Yong Dong-jin is a sergeant and special military dog handler who follows the traces of the enemy. He was selected as the first soldier of the army's elite warrior in the search battalion, and is currently waiting for the date of his discharge. Before receiving the national call, he also had a history of volunteering abroad at a Korean-American animal protection group on the veterinary road. When it is decided to send a reconnaissance and pursuit dog to the Choi Jeong-ye special lease, he joins the search team as the youngest member. He is in charge of Korea's best military dog. ; Krystal Jung as Son Ye-rim ; First Lieutenant Son Ye-rim is ", "score": "1.4264874" }, { "id": "7763814", "title": "The Search (novel)", "text": " The Search is a novel written and published by Nobel Prize-winning author Naguib Mahfouz in 1964. It was translated from Arabic into English in 1987 by Mohamed Islam, edited by Magdi Wahba, and published by Doubleday in 1991.", "score": "1.4155872" }, { "id": "11122121", "title": "Searching (TV series)", "text": " Searching is a British television sitcom which originally aired on ITV in 1995.", "score": "1.4070141" }, { "id": "8337058", "title": "The Search", "text": " The Search is a 1948 American film directed by Fred Zinnemann which tells the story of a young Auschwitz survivor and his mother who search for each other across post-World War II Europe. It stars Montgomery Clift, Ivan Jandl, Jarmila Novotná and Aline MacMahon. Many scenes were shot amidst the actual ruins of post-war German cities, namely Ingolstadt, Munich, Nuremberg, and Würzburg. Filming took place between June and November, 1947, initially on location in Germany, before the cast and crew went to a film studio in Zurich, Switzerland, to film the interior scenes. Although released in the United States in March, 1948, it was not released in Britain until May 1950. Its European premiere was held ", "score": "1.3948152" }, { "id": "25470387", "title": "Geraldine Hunt", "text": " Hunt is the mother of three children; Rosalind Hunt of the musical group Chéri, singer Freddie James and writer Jeanne (Dupuis) Croteau.", "score": "1.3925416" }, { "id": "7867618", "title": "The Return (memoir)", "text": " The Return: Fathers, Sons and the Land in Between is a memoir by Hisham Matar that was first published in June 2016. The memoir centers on Matar's return to his native Libya in 2012 to search for the truth behind the 1990 disappearance of his father, a prominent political dissident of the Gaddafi regime. It won the 2017 Pulitzer Prize for Biography or Autobiography, the inaugural 2017 PEN/Jean Stein Book Award and the 2017 Folio Prize, becoming the first nonfiction book to do so.", "score": "1.3907747" }, { "id": "11122122", "title": "Searching (TV series)", "text": "Prunella Scales as Mrs. Tilston ; Julia St John as Chancy ; Victoria Carling as Lena ; Clare Cathcart as Dora ; Regina Freedman as Milly ; Robert Gwilym as Daniel Carter ; Amanda Bellamy as Hetty ; Reginald Marsh as Chancy's dad ; Marcia Warren as Chancy's mum ; Mabel Aitken as April ; Mark Williams as Gerald ; James Nesbitt as Duncan ; David Gooderson as Mr. Gillespie ; Jo Kendall as Nurse ", "score": "1.3892144" } ]
[ "Searching (film)\n Searching is a 2018 American mystery thriller computer screen film directed by Aneesh Chaganty in his feature debut and written by Chaganty and Sev Ohanian. Set entirely on computer screens and smartphones, the film follows a father (John Cho) trying to find his missing 16-year-old daughter (Michelle La) with the help of a police detective (Debra Messing). It is the first mainstream Hollywood thriller headlined by an Asian-American actor. The film premiered at the Sundance Film Festival on January 21, 2018, and was theatrically released in the United States on August 31, 2018, by Screen Gems. The film was a financial and critical success, grossing over $75 million worldwide against a $880,000 budget and receiving praise for its direction, acting, unique visual presentation and unpredictable storyline. At the Independent Spirit Awards, Cho was nominated for Best Male Lead. A sequel is in development.", "In Search of My Father\n In Search of My Father: The Journey of a Child Holocaust Survivor is a 2010 book by a Holocaust survivor Paul Drexler. The book chronicles the author's research about his father's death during a British bombardment days before German capitulation.", "The Search (novel)\n The original Arabic title is الطريق which means \"the way\" or \"the quest\" and is very close to the word used by Muslim sufists [called Sufist Ways الطرق الصوفية] for the different \"ways\" or \"schools\" by which to approach God. The name of the hero's father in the novel \"Sayed Sayed Al-Rehaimi\" is reminiscent of an omnipotent supreme being, the name in Arabic means literally \"Master Master the Compassionate\", his last name being very close to al-Rahim, one of the 99 names of God in the Quran. Saber's search for him seems to be a thinly disguised search for God or Meaning. This theme of search for meaning or way of existence is comparable to other novels by Mahfouz, notably Children of Gebelawi (1959), The Beggar (1965), Heart of the Night (1975) and The Harafish (1977).", "The Search (2014 film)\n The Search is a 2014 French drama film written and directed by Michel Hazanavicius and produced by Hazanavicius and Thomas Langmann. The film is a reiteration of the Oscar-winning post-Holocaust drama also called The Search, directed by Fred Zinnemann, in which a compassionate westerner helps a lost child find what is left of his family amidst the chaotic flood of post-war civilian refugees. In the 1948 film, the backdrop is post-war Berlin; The Search (2014) takes place in the \"front lines of the Russian invasion of Chechnya\" during the first year of the Second Chechen War (1999-2009). The Search was selected to compete for the Palme d'Or in the main competition section at the 2014 Cannes Film Festival.", "Stage mother\n Fathers have also been known to manage their children in this way, such as Joseph Jackson (patriarch of the Jackson family), Murry Wilson (father of three of The Beach Boys), Joe Simpson (father of Jessica and Ashlee Simpson), Jeff Archuleta (father of American Idol runner-up David Archuleta), Mathew Knowles (father of Beyoncé and Solange Knowles), Ira David Wood III (father of Evan Rachel Wood) and Kit Culkin (father of Macaulay and Kieran Culkin). A historical example of such a father was Leopold Mozart, who recognized his son's musical ability at an early age and made the most of it. Abraham Quintanilla, Jr., father of Tejano superstar Selena, is credited with having discovered Selena's gift of singing; he rounded ", "Runners (film)\n An English father heads for London in search of his missing teenage daughter.", "In Search of My Father\n The Sydney Morning Herald praised In Search of My Father as \"full of powerful moments, told simply, with disturbing openness\". A review in The Australian illustrates the book's \"painful reminder that when nations go to war, it is invariably the innocent who suffer most\".", "The Search (short story)\n The Search is a science fiction short story by Canadian-American writer A. E. van Vogt, originally published in Astounding in January 1943. The story involves time travel and is told in a non-linear fashion with multiple plot twists.", "A Son of Man\n A circumspect American teenager from Minneapolis joins his mysterious father in Ecuador, where they embark on a treasure hunt for Incan gold.", "Searching (film)\nJohn Cho as David Kim, Margot's father ; Debra Messing as Detective Sergeant Rosemary Vick ; Michelle La as Margot Kim, the daughter of David and Pamela ; Kya Dawn Lau as 9-year-old Margot Kim ; Megan Liu as 7-year-old Margot Kim ; Alex Jayne Go as 5-year-old Margot Kim ; Sara Sohn as Pamela Nam Kim, David's wife ; Joseph Lee as Peter Kim, David's brother and Margot’s uncle ; Steven Michael Eich as Robert Vick, Rosemary's son ; Ric Sarabia as Randy Cartoff, ex-convict ; Sean O'Bryan as Radio Jockey ; Colin Woodell as 911 Operator ", "Legend of the Lost Tomb\n Fifteen-year-old John Robie's father is an Egyptologist who goes missing during an excavation in Egypt. After arriving in Egypt to search for his missing father, he meets seventeen-year-old Karen Lacy. The two team up to find clues to John's missing father and to his excavations which included a map to the treasures of the Pharaoh Ramesses II. While they are on their search, they are pursued by mysterious men who are in search of the map as well.", "Nanook's Great Hunt\n From Mediatoon's press flyer: \"A boy's journey into manhood through his quest to find his missing father... Set in the harsh landscape of the Canadian Arctic, this enchanting tale evolves around Nanook, a twelve-year-old Inuit boy, who embarks upon a journey to find his missing father, undertaking the challenge of hunting down the mythical bear, Suaq Nanok.\"", "The Search (2014 film)\nBérénice Bejo as Carole ; Annette Bening as Helen ; Maksim Emelyanov as Kolia ; Abdul Khalim Mamutsiev as Hadji ; Zukhra Duishvili as Raïssa ; Lela Bagakashvili as Elina ; Yuriy Tsurilo as The Colonel ; Anton Dolgov as Soldier ; Mamuka Matchitidze as Father ; Rusudan Pareulidze as Mother ", "Search (South Korean TV series)\nJang Dong-yoon as Yong Dong-jin ; Yong Dong-jin is a sergeant and special military dog handler who follows the traces of the enemy. He was selected as the first soldier of the army's elite warrior in the search battalion, and is currently waiting for the date of his discharge. Before receiving the national call, he also had a history of volunteering abroad at a Korean-American animal protection group on the veterinary road. When it is decided to send a reconnaissance and pursuit dog to the Choi Jeong-ye special lease, he joins the search team as the youngest member. He is in charge of Korea's best military dog. ; Krystal Jung as Son Ye-rim ; First Lieutenant Son Ye-rim is ", "The Search (novel)\n The Search is a novel written and published by Nobel Prize-winning author Naguib Mahfouz in 1964. It was translated from Arabic into English in 1987 by Mohamed Islam, edited by Magdi Wahba, and published by Doubleday in 1991.", "Searching (TV series)\n Searching is a British television sitcom which originally aired on ITV in 1995.", "The Search\n The Search is a 1948 American film directed by Fred Zinnemann which tells the story of a young Auschwitz survivor and his mother who search for each other across post-World War II Europe. It stars Montgomery Clift, Ivan Jandl, Jarmila Novotná and Aline MacMahon. Many scenes were shot amidst the actual ruins of post-war German cities, namely Ingolstadt, Munich, Nuremberg, and Würzburg. Filming took place between June and November, 1947, initially on location in Germany, before the cast and crew went to a film studio in Zurich, Switzerland, to film the interior scenes. Although released in the United States in March, 1948, it was not released in Britain until May 1950. Its European premiere was held ", "Geraldine Hunt\n Hunt is the mother of three children; Rosalind Hunt of the musical group Chéri, singer Freddie James and writer Jeanne (Dupuis) Croteau.", "The Return (memoir)\n The Return: Fathers, Sons and the Land in Between is a memoir by Hisham Matar that was first published in June 2016. The memoir centers on Matar's return to his native Libya in 2012 to search for the truth behind the 1990 disappearance of his father, a prominent political dissident of the Gaddafi regime. It won the 2017 Pulitzer Prize for Biography or Autobiography, the inaugural 2017 PEN/Jean Stein Book Award and the 2017 Folio Prize, becoming the first nonfiction book to do so.", "Searching (TV series)\nPrunella Scales as Mrs. Tilston ; Julia St John as Chancy ; Victoria Carling as Lena ; Clare Cathcart as Dora ; Regina Freedman as Milly ; Robert Gwilym as Daniel Carter ; Amanda Bellamy as Hetty ; Reginald Marsh as Chancy's dad ; Marcia Warren as Chancy's mum ; Mabel Aitken as April ; Mark Williams as Gerald ; James Nesbitt as Duncan ; David Gooderson as Mr. Gillespie ; Jo Kendall as Nurse " ]
Who is the author of Nuclear Alert?
[ "Jean-Michel Charlier" ]
author
Nuclear Alert (Buck Danny)
5,317,180
64
[ { "id": "12749066", "title": "Nuclear Alert (Buck Danny)", "text": " Nuclear Alert is the thirteenth story arc in Buck Danny, a Franco-Belgian comic book series by Jean-Michel Charlier and.", "score": "1.52687" }, { "id": "6826195", "title": "Dr. Strangelove", "text": " Stanley Kubrick started with nothing but a vague idea to make a thriller about a nuclear accident that built on the widespread Cold War fear for survival. While doing research, Kubrick gradually became aware of the subtle and paradoxical \"balance of terror\" between nuclear powers. At Kubrick's request, Alastair Buchan (the head of the Institute for Strategic Studies) recommended the thriller novel Red Alert by Peter George. Kubrick was impressed with the book, which had also been praised by game theorist and future Nobel Prize in Economics winner Thomas Schelling in an article written for the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists and reprinted in The Observer, and immediately bought the film rights. In 2006, Schelling wrote that conversations between Kubrick, Schelling, and George ", "score": "1.5165762" }, { "id": "31797848", "title": "David Wylie (author)", "text": " to light the inadequacy of the evacuation plan recommended by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts should Cambridge become a target of nuclear attack. This resulted in hearings on the topic and eventually the publication of a pamphlet titled \"Cambridge and nuclear weapons: Is there a place to hide?\" The pamphlet was so well received by the citizens of Cambridge that communities across the state and country requested copies and a reprint was ordered. Wylie was also instrumental in the establishment of the Cambridge Peace Commission through a city ordinance. His book is the product of these experiences plus decades of research and advocacy ", "score": "1.5099564" }, { "id": "12749076", "title": "Nuclear Alert (Buck Danny)", "text": " the second American president featured in the Buck Danny novels, as John F. Kennedy had previously appeared in the 1962 novel Les Voleurs de Satellites (\"Satellite Thieves\"). Finally, the Cancun trade summit targeted by the terrorists was an actual event, the North–South Summit on International Cooperation and Development, taking place from October 21 to October 24, 1981. The three \"Nuclear Alert\" novels were the first in \"Buck Danny\" not to have been drawn by Victor Hubinon because of the artist's death in 1979. Instead, Charlier chose younger artist, who was himself a longtime fan of \"Buck Danny\" as well as a former military pilot, to work with him. Bergèse has provided the drawing for every novel since, and was also left in charge of the story after Charlier's death.", "score": "1.4610077" }, { "id": "13547627", "title": "Nukespeak", "text": " Nukespeak: Nuclear Language, Visions and Mindset is a 1982 book by Stephen Hilgartner, Richard C. Bell and Rory O'Connor. This book is a concise history of nuclear weapons and nuclear power in the United States, with special emphasis on the language of the \"nuclear mindset\". The National Council of Teachers of English gave the book's authors an Orwell Award in 1982.", "score": "1.4606514" }, { "id": "7346214", "title": "Eric Booth", "text": " In addition to his acting and teaching careers Booth founded Alert Publishing, Inc. in 1985, and wrote three books on the lifestyles and trends of American people. He became a major figure in trend analysis, frequently quoted by and interviewed in the major media.", "score": "1.4593563" }, { "id": "12073440", "title": "Henry D. Sokolski", "text": " which completed its report in July 1999; served as a member of the Central Intelligence Agency's Senior Advisory Panel from 1995 to 1996; and was a member of the Commission on the Prevention of Weapons of Mass Destruction Proliferation and Terrorism, which operated until 2010. Sokolski has authored and edited a number of books on nuclear proliferation, including Underestimated: Our Not So Peaceful Nuclear Future, (Carlisle, PA: Strategic Studies Institute, 2016); Best of Intentions: America's Campaign Against Strategic Weapons Proliferation, (Westport, CT: Praeger, 2001); Should We Let the Bomb Spread?, (Carlisle, PA: Strategic Studies Institute, 2016); Moving Beyond Pretense: Nuclear Power and Nonproliferation, (Carlisle, ", "score": "1.4591645" }, { "id": "127303", "title": "Peter Oborne", "text": " Written with David Morrison, Oborne's book A Dangerous Delusion: Why the Iranian Nuclear Threat is a Myth (2013) sought to dispel what the authors see as a common misconception of a malign intent behind Iran's nuclear power programme, and objects to the current sanctions against Iran and argues against any military intervention. The Times leader writer Oliver Kamm disagreed with the author's notion that Ayatollah Khomeini was \"one of the greatest theologians of all time\" whose \"teaching contained insights which went far deeper than anything the rationalists and materialists of the United States could imagine\" suggesting those insights fall somewhat short of the proposals of ", "score": "1.457932" }, { "id": "12749067", "title": "Nuclear Alert (Buck Danny)", "text": " Like the rest of \"Buck Danny,\" Nuclear Alert was originally published in several (three) different novels before being made into a single album during the nineties. The three novels were Mission Apocalypse, Les Pilotes de l'Enfer (The Pilots from Hell), and Le Feu du Ciel (Fire From Heaven), in 1982, 1983 and 1985 respectively.", "score": "1.4502964" }, { "id": "16364991", "title": "Ward Wilson", "text": "Five Myths About Nuclear Weapons, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2013. Review. ; In addition to the Five Myths About Nuclear Weapons book, Wilson is an avid writer of op-eds, journal articles, reports, and briefing papers. ; \"Strengthening Nonproliferation\", British American Security Information Council, October 2013 ; \"Rethinking the Utility of Nuclear Weapons,” Parameters, 2013. ; \"Myth of Nuclear Necessity,\" op-ed, The New York Times, January 13, 2013. ; “The Myth of Nuclear Deterrence,” Nonproliferation Review, 2008. ; “The Winning Weapon? Rethinking Nuclear Weapons in Light of Hiroshima,” International Security, 2007. ", "score": "1.4477768" }, { "id": "31797849", "title": "David Wylie (author)", "text": " the topics of nuclear disarmament, citizen activism, and global democracy. Wylie also maintains a blog called Idea Ransacker at http://thewylieblog.blogspot.com which he updates regularly with relevant news and commentary. He is also a regular contributor to Massachusetts newspapers, including the Cambridge Chronicle In his book, Wylie calls on the citizenry to act locally to build the global democracy needed to keep international peace. He recognizes the fact that the nuclear threat is difficult to make personal because most people feel that they are unable to effect change individually. According to Wylie though, tremendous power lies in our cities and towns; the ", "score": "1.4397273" }, { "id": "12749068", "title": "Nuclear Alert (Buck Danny)", "text": " Most of the novel follows two separate plots, one for the protagonists and one for the villains. The former - Buck Danny, Jerry Tumbler and Sonny Tuckson - are now pilots on the USS John F. Kennedy and have recently transferred to flying F-14 Tomcats. The trio of pilots is temporarily reassigned from their training exercises in the Caribbean, to represent the United States at an air show in the fictional Central American nation of Managua. Meanwhile, Interpol and U.S. intelligence have been observing an increase in criminal actions throughout the world, which they believe are being committed by the same people. They are revealed to be an anti-capitalist terrorist organization, which steals ", "score": "1.4390094" }, { "id": "11384310", "title": "Daniel Poneman", "text": " Poneman has published widely on national security issues and is the author of Nuclear Power in the Developing World and Argentina: Democracy on Trial. His third book, Going Critical: The First North Korean Nuclear Crisis (coauthored with Joel Wit and Robert Gallucci), received the 2005 Douglas Dillon Award for Distinguished Writing on American Diplomacy. Poneman is a member of the Council of Foreign Relations.", "score": "1.4356592" }, { "id": "12747166", "title": "Robert Peter Gale", "text": " Gale has published over 1150 scientific articles and more than 20 books, mostly on leukemia (biology and treatment), transplantation (biology, immunology and treatment), cancer immunology, and radiation health effects and accident response. He has written on medical topics, nuclear energy and weapons and politics of US-Soviet relations in articles for The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Washington Post, USA Today and Wall Street Journal. In addition to his academic publications, Gale has written popular books on the Chernobyl accident and US nuclear energy policy. He has written parts of screenplays for, and appeared in, several movies including Chernobyl: The Final Warning (with Jon Voight), Fat Man and Little Boy (with Paul Newman), and City of Joy (with Patrick Swazye). His latest book, Radiation: What it is, What you need to know, with Eric Lax, was published in February 2013.", "score": "1.4327422" }, { "id": "14944247", "title": "Albert Carnesale", "text": "Carnesale, Albert; Doty, Paul; Hoffman, Stanley; Huntington, Samuel P.; Nye, Joseph S.; Sagan, Scott D. (1983), Living with Nuclear Weapons, Harvard University Press and Bantam Books, ISBN: 978-0674536654 ; Carnesale, Albert; Allison, Graham T; Nye, Joseph S. Jr. (1985), Hawks, Doves, and Owls: An Agenda for Avoiding Nuclear War, W.W. Norton, ISBN: 978-0393019957 ; Carnesale, Albert; Haass, Richard N. (1987), Superpower Arms Control: Setting the Record Straight, Ballinger Publishing Company, ISBN: 978-0887302299 ; Carnesale, Albert; Allison, Graham T., Nye, Joseph S., Jr. (1988), Fateful Visions: Avoiding Nuclear Catastrophe, Ballinger Publishing Company, ISBN: 978-0887302725 ; Carnesale, Albert; Blackwill, Robert D. (1993), New Nuclear Nations: Consequences for U.S. Policy, Council on Foreign Relations ISBN: 978-0876091531 ; Carnesale is also the author of more than 50 scholarly articles. ", "score": "1.4323905" }, { "id": "28206231", "title": "List of nuclear holocaust fiction", "text": " Loud Silence by Wilson Tucker ; The Long Tomorrow by Leigh Brackett ; Long Voyage Back by George Cockcroft, under the pen name Luke Rhinehart, 1983 ; Malevil by Robert Merle ; The Martian Chronicles by Ray Bradbury ; Metro 2033 by Dmitry Glukhovsky ; The Metrozone Series by Simon Morden ; Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell ; Not This August by C.M. Kornbluth ; Obernewtyn and subsequent novels in the series by Isobelle Carmody ; On the Beach by Nevil Shute ; One Second After by William R. Forstchen ; The Outward Urge, by John Wyndham and Lucas Parkes ; The Pelbar Cycle Book One ", "score": "1.4320726" }, { "id": "25524939", "title": "Duck Hook", "text": "Burr, William. (2015). Nixon's Nuclear Specter The Secret Alert of 1969, Madman Diplomacy, and the Vietnam War. University Press of Kansas. ISBN: 978-0700620821 ; Nina Tannenwald (2006) \"Nuclear Weapons and the Vietnam War.\" Journal of Strategic Studies, 29:4, 675-722 ", "score": "1.4308525" }, { "id": "24970077", "title": "William Arkin", "text": " bombs. He then provided an analysis of the causes of civilian casualties after the Kosovo war (1999). Arkin has also visited war zones in the former Yugoslavia, Lebanon, Afghanistan, Eritrea and Israel on behalf of governments, the United Nations and independent inquiries. From 1985 until 2002, he wrote a column in the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists called the \"Last Word\", and co-authored a bi-monthly publication by the Natural Resources Defense Council called the \"Nuclear Notebook.\" He has served as an independent consultant and held positions at the Institute for Policy Studies, Center for Defense Information, Greenpeace and Human Rights Watch. He ", "score": "1.4265238" }, { "id": "10139195", "title": "Selig S. Harrison", "text": "co-editor of India and the United States (Macmillan, 1960) ; co-author with K. Subrahmanyam of Superpower Rivalry in the Indian Ocean: Indian and American Perspectives (Oxford University Press, 1989) ; co-author with Anthony Lake, After the Wars: Reconstruction in Afghanistan, Indochina, Central America, Southern Africa, and the Horn of Africa,(Transaction Publishers, 1990) ; co-author with Diego Cordovez of Out of Afghanistan: The Inside Story of the Soviet Withdrawal (Oxford, 1995) ; co-editor with Masashi Nishihara, U. N. Peacekeeping: Japanese and American Perspectives, (Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 1995) ; editor of Japan's Nuclear Future: The Plutonium Debate and East Asian Security (Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 1996) ; co-author with Leonard Spector, Nuclear Weapons and the Security of Korea, (Brookings Institution Press, 1997) ; co-editor with Paul H. Kreisberg, Dennis Kux & Lee Hamilton, India and Pakistan:The First Fifty Years (Woodrow Wilson Center Press), 1998) ; co-editor with Clyde V. Prestowitz of \"Miracle\": Redefining U.S. Economic and Security Principles (Economic Strategy Institute, 1999) ; Pakistan: State of the Union (Center for International Policy, 2009) ", "score": "1.4258823" }, { "id": "503277", "title": "Emergency population warning", "text": " Between 1953 and 1992, the UK government had an alert system known as the \"four-minute warning\". Its purpose was to warn the population, through a combination of air-raid sirens and messages over television and radio, of an impending nuclear missile attack from the Soviet Union; its name derived from the expected amount of time between knowledge of the strike and the missile landing. The system was dismantled following the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the end of the Cold War. In 2013, the government conducted trials of a public alert system using both SMS messaging and Cell Broadcast technology to send alert messages to mobile devices in areas affected by an emergency. A report was published ", "score": "1.425566" } ]
[ "Nuclear Alert (Buck Danny)\n Nuclear Alert is the thirteenth story arc in Buck Danny, a Franco-Belgian comic book series by Jean-Michel Charlier and.", "Dr. Strangelove\n Stanley Kubrick started with nothing but a vague idea to make a thriller about a nuclear accident that built on the widespread Cold War fear for survival. While doing research, Kubrick gradually became aware of the subtle and paradoxical \"balance of terror\" between nuclear powers. At Kubrick's request, Alastair Buchan (the head of the Institute for Strategic Studies) recommended the thriller novel Red Alert by Peter George. Kubrick was impressed with the book, which had also been praised by game theorist and future Nobel Prize in Economics winner Thomas Schelling in an article written for the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists and reprinted in The Observer, and immediately bought the film rights. In 2006, Schelling wrote that conversations between Kubrick, Schelling, and George ", "David Wylie (author)\n to light the inadequacy of the evacuation plan recommended by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts should Cambridge become a target of nuclear attack. This resulted in hearings on the topic and eventually the publication of a pamphlet titled \"Cambridge and nuclear weapons: Is there a place to hide?\" The pamphlet was so well received by the citizens of Cambridge that communities across the state and country requested copies and a reprint was ordered. Wylie was also instrumental in the establishment of the Cambridge Peace Commission through a city ordinance. His book is the product of these experiences plus decades of research and advocacy ", "Nuclear Alert (Buck Danny)\n the second American president featured in the Buck Danny novels, as John F. Kennedy had previously appeared in the 1962 novel Les Voleurs de Satellites (\"Satellite Thieves\"). Finally, the Cancun trade summit targeted by the terrorists was an actual event, the North–South Summit on International Cooperation and Development, taking place from October 21 to October 24, 1981. The three \"Nuclear Alert\" novels were the first in \"Buck Danny\" not to have been drawn by Victor Hubinon because of the artist's death in 1979. Instead, Charlier chose younger artist, who was himself a longtime fan of \"Buck Danny\" as well as a former military pilot, to work with him. Bergèse has provided the drawing for every novel since, and was also left in charge of the story after Charlier's death.", "Nukespeak\n Nukespeak: Nuclear Language, Visions and Mindset is a 1982 book by Stephen Hilgartner, Richard C. Bell and Rory O'Connor. This book is a concise history of nuclear weapons and nuclear power in the United States, with special emphasis on the language of the \"nuclear mindset\". The National Council of Teachers of English gave the book's authors an Orwell Award in 1982.", "Eric Booth\n In addition to his acting and teaching careers Booth founded Alert Publishing, Inc. in 1985, and wrote three books on the lifestyles and trends of American people. He became a major figure in trend analysis, frequently quoted by and interviewed in the major media.", "Henry D. Sokolski\n which completed its report in July 1999; served as a member of the Central Intelligence Agency's Senior Advisory Panel from 1995 to 1996; and was a member of the Commission on the Prevention of Weapons of Mass Destruction Proliferation and Terrorism, which operated until 2010. Sokolski has authored and edited a number of books on nuclear proliferation, including Underestimated: Our Not So Peaceful Nuclear Future, (Carlisle, PA: Strategic Studies Institute, 2016); Best of Intentions: America's Campaign Against Strategic Weapons Proliferation, (Westport, CT: Praeger, 2001); Should We Let the Bomb Spread?, (Carlisle, PA: Strategic Studies Institute, 2016); Moving Beyond Pretense: Nuclear Power and Nonproliferation, (Carlisle, ", "Peter Oborne\n Written with David Morrison, Oborne's book A Dangerous Delusion: Why the Iranian Nuclear Threat is a Myth (2013) sought to dispel what the authors see as a common misconception of a malign intent behind Iran's nuclear power programme, and objects to the current sanctions against Iran and argues against any military intervention. The Times leader writer Oliver Kamm disagreed with the author's notion that Ayatollah Khomeini was \"one of the greatest theologians of all time\" whose \"teaching contained insights which went far deeper than anything the rationalists and materialists of the United States could imagine\" suggesting those insights fall somewhat short of the proposals of ", "Nuclear Alert (Buck Danny)\n Like the rest of \"Buck Danny,\" Nuclear Alert was originally published in several (three) different novels before being made into a single album during the nineties. The three novels were Mission Apocalypse, Les Pilotes de l'Enfer (The Pilots from Hell), and Le Feu du Ciel (Fire From Heaven), in 1982, 1983 and 1985 respectively.", "Ward Wilson\nFive Myths About Nuclear Weapons, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2013. Review. ; In addition to the Five Myths About Nuclear Weapons book, Wilson is an avid writer of op-eds, journal articles, reports, and briefing papers. ; \"Strengthening Nonproliferation\", British American Security Information Council, October 2013 ; \"Rethinking the Utility of Nuclear Weapons,” Parameters, 2013. ; \"Myth of Nuclear Necessity,\" op-ed, The New York Times, January 13, 2013. ; “The Myth of Nuclear Deterrence,” Nonproliferation Review, 2008. ; “The Winning Weapon? Rethinking Nuclear Weapons in Light of Hiroshima,” International Security, 2007. ", "David Wylie (author)\n the topics of nuclear disarmament, citizen activism, and global democracy. Wylie also maintains a blog called Idea Ransacker at http://thewylieblog.blogspot.com which he updates regularly with relevant news and commentary. He is also a regular contributor to Massachusetts newspapers, including the Cambridge Chronicle In his book, Wylie calls on the citizenry to act locally to build the global democracy needed to keep international peace. He recognizes the fact that the nuclear threat is difficult to make personal because most people feel that they are unable to effect change individually. According to Wylie though, tremendous power lies in our cities and towns; the ", "Nuclear Alert (Buck Danny)\n Most of the novel follows two separate plots, one for the protagonists and one for the villains. The former - Buck Danny, Jerry Tumbler and Sonny Tuckson - are now pilots on the USS John F. Kennedy and have recently transferred to flying F-14 Tomcats. The trio of pilots is temporarily reassigned from their training exercises in the Caribbean, to represent the United States at an air show in the fictional Central American nation of Managua. Meanwhile, Interpol and U.S. intelligence have been observing an increase in criminal actions throughout the world, which they believe are being committed by the same people. They are revealed to be an anti-capitalist terrorist organization, which steals ", "Daniel Poneman\n Poneman has published widely on national security issues and is the author of Nuclear Power in the Developing World and Argentina: Democracy on Trial. His third book, Going Critical: The First North Korean Nuclear Crisis (coauthored with Joel Wit and Robert Gallucci), received the 2005 Douglas Dillon Award for Distinguished Writing on American Diplomacy. Poneman is a member of the Council of Foreign Relations.", "Robert Peter Gale\n Gale has published over 1150 scientific articles and more than 20 books, mostly on leukemia (biology and treatment), transplantation (biology, immunology and treatment), cancer immunology, and radiation health effects and accident response. He has written on medical topics, nuclear energy and weapons and politics of US-Soviet relations in articles for The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Washington Post, USA Today and Wall Street Journal. In addition to his academic publications, Gale has written popular books on the Chernobyl accident and US nuclear energy policy. He has written parts of screenplays for, and appeared in, several movies including Chernobyl: The Final Warning (with Jon Voight), Fat Man and Little Boy (with Paul Newman), and City of Joy (with Patrick Swazye). His latest book, Radiation: What it is, What you need to know, with Eric Lax, was published in February 2013.", "Albert Carnesale\nCarnesale, Albert; Doty, Paul; Hoffman, Stanley; Huntington, Samuel P.; Nye, Joseph S.; Sagan, Scott D. (1983), Living with Nuclear Weapons, Harvard University Press and Bantam Books, ISBN: 978-0674536654 ; Carnesale, Albert; Allison, Graham T; Nye, Joseph S. Jr. (1985), Hawks, Doves, and Owls: An Agenda for Avoiding Nuclear War, W.W. Norton, ISBN: 978-0393019957 ; Carnesale, Albert; Haass, Richard N. (1987), Superpower Arms Control: Setting the Record Straight, Ballinger Publishing Company, ISBN: 978-0887302299 ; Carnesale, Albert; Allison, Graham T., Nye, Joseph S., Jr. (1988), Fateful Visions: Avoiding Nuclear Catastrophe, Ballinger Publishing Company, ISBN: 978-0887302725 ; Carnesale, Albert; Blackwill, Robert D. (1993), New Nuclear Nations: Consequences for U.S. Policy, Council on Foreign Relations ISBN: 978-0876091531 ; Carnesale is also the author of more than 50 scholarly articles. ", "List of nuclear holocaust fiction\n Loud Silence by Wilson Tucker ; The Long Tomorrow by Leigh Brackett ; Long Voyage Back by George Cockcroft, under the pen name Luke Rhinehart, 1983 ; Malevil by Robert Merle ; The Martian Chronicles by Ray Bradbury ; Metro 2033 by Dmitry Glukhovsky ; The Metrozone Series by Simon Morden ; Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell ; Not This August by C.M. Kornbluth ; Obernewtyn and subsequent novels in the series by Isobelle Carmody ; On the Beach by Nevil Shute ; One Second After by William R. Forstchen ; The Outward Urge, by John Wyndham and Lucas Parkes ; The Pelbar Cycle Book One ", "Duck Hook\nBurr, William. (2015). Nixon's Nuclear Specter The Secret Alert of 1969, Madman Diplomacy, and the Vietnam War. University Press of Kansas. ISBN: 978-0700620821 ; Nina Tannenwald (2006) \"Nuclear Weapons and the Vietnam War.\" Journal of Strategic Studies, 29:4, 675-722 ", "William Arkin\n bombs. He then provided an analysis of the causes of civilian casualties after the Kosovo war (1999). Arkin has also visited war zones in the former Yugoslavia, Lebanon, Afghanistan, Eritrea and Israel on behalf of governments, the United Nations and independent inquiries. From 1985 until 2002, he wrote a column in the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists called the \"Last Word\", and co-authored a bi-monthly publication by the Natural Resources Defense Council called the \"Nuclear Notebook.\" He has served as an independent consultant and held positions at the Institute for Policy Studies, Center for Defense Information, Greenpeace and Human Rights Watch. He ", "Selig S. Harrison\nco-editor of India and the United States (Macmillan, 1960) ; co-author with K. Subrahmanyam of Superpower Rivalry in the Indian Ocean: Indian and American Perspectives (Oxford University Press, 1989) ; co-author with Anthony Lake, After the Wars: Reconstruction in Afghanistan, Indochina, Central America, Southern Africa, and the Horn of Africa,(Transaction Publishers, 1990) ; co-author with Diego Cordovez of Out of Afghanistan: The Inside Story of the Soviet Withdrawal (Oxford, 1995) ; co-editor with Masashi Nishihara, U. N. Peacekeeping: Japanese and American Perspectives, (Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 1995) ; editor of Japan's Nuclear Future: The Plutonium Debate and East Asian Security (Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 1996) ; co-author with Leonard Spector, Nuclear Weapons and the Security of Korea, (Brookings Institution Press, 1997) ; co-editor with Paul H. Kreisberg, Dennis Kux & Lee Hamilton, India and Pakistan:The First Fifty Years (Woodrow Wilson Center Press), 1998) ; co-editor with Clyde V. Prestowitz of \"Miracle\": Redefining U.S. Economic and Security Principles (Economic Strategy Institute, 1999) ; Pakistan: State of the Union (Center for International Policy, 2009) ", "Emergency population warning\n Between 1953 and 1992, the UK government had an alert system known as the \"four-minute warning\". Its purpose was to warn the population, through a combination of air-raid sirens and messages over television and radio, of an impending nuclear missile attack from the Soviet Union; its name derived from the expected amount of time between knowledge of the strike and the missile landing. The system was dismantled following the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the end of the Cold War. In 2013, the government conducted trials of a public alert system using both SMS messaging and Cell Broadcast technology to send alert messages to mobile devices in areas affected by an emergency. A report was published " ]
Who is the father of Ma Xiu?
[ "Ma Teng" ]
father
Ma Xiu
208,738
30
[ { "id": "10330488", "title": "Ma Ying-jeou", "text": " Ma's father is Ma Ho-ling, his mother is Chin Hou-hsiu and his wife is Christine Chow Ma. Apart from that, he has two daughters, Ma Wei-chung and Kelly Ma. Ma speaks Hunanese, Mandarin and English.", "score": "1.6511563" }, { "id": "27384238", "title": "Ma Yuehan", "text": " Ma's son, Ma Qiwei, served as Vice President of Beijing Institute of Physical Education. His second daughter, Ma Peilun, married Mou Zuoyun, a pioneer of basketball in China. Both Ma Qiwei and Mou Zuoyun followed Ma's footsteps to study at Springfield College in the US.", "score": "1.6140163" }, { "id": "27532800", "title": "Ma Xichong", "text": " According to the Spring and Autumn Annals of the Ten Kingdoms, citing another work now lost, the Miscellaneous Records from a Blue Box (青箱雜記, Qingxiang Zaji), Ma Xichong was born in 912. His father was Chu's founder Ma Yin. HIs mother was not Ma Yin's wife, but was otherwise not named in historical sources, although it is known that Ma Yin's 30th son Ma Xi'e, who was older than he was, was born of the same mother. Ma Yin's 35th son Ma Xiguang, who was born of Lady Chen, was also older. In 947, then-Chu prince Ma Xifan (Ma Yin's ", "score": "1.5995729" }, { "id": "12116417", "title": "Ma Yin", "text": "Father ; Ma Yuanfeng (馬元豐), posthumously honored King Jingzhuang of Chu ; Wife ; Name unknown, mother of Ma Xizhen ; Major Concubines ; Consort Yuan, mother of Ma Xisheng and Ma Xiwang ; Lady Chen, mother of Ma Xifan ; Lady Hua, mother of Ma Xigao ; Children (Ma Yin had at least 35 sons, but the names of most of them were lost to history) ; Ma Xizhen (馬希振), became Taoist monk ; Ma Xisheng (馬希聲) (899–932), later prince ; Ma Xifan (馬希範) (899–947), later prince ; Ma Xiwang (馬希旺) (d. ~933) ; Ma Xigao (馬希杲) (poisoned by Ma Xifan 945) ; Ma Xi'e (馬希萼), later prince ; Ma Xiguang (馬希廣), later prince (died 950) ; Ma Xichong (馬希崇), later prince ; Ma Xizhan (馬希瞻) (died 949) ; Ma Xineng (馬希能) ; Ma Xiguan (馬希貫) ; Ma Xiyin (馬希隱) ; Ma Xijun (馬希濬) ; Ma Xizhi (馬希知) ; Ma Xilang (馬希朗) ; daughter, Empress Ma of Southern Han, wife of Liu Yan ; daughter, wife of Qian Chuansu (錢傳璛), son of Qian Liu the King of Wuyue ", "score": "1.5823779" }, { "id": "31337090", "title": "Ma Zhong (Shu Han)", "text": " Ma Zhong had three sons: Ma Xiu (馬脩), Ma Hui (馬恢) and Ma Rong (馬融). Ma Hui's son, Ma Yi (馬義), served as the Administrator of Jianning County during the Jin dynasty.", "score": "1.5766299" }, { "id": "9147974", "title": "The X-Family", "text": " but as he keeps on preserving the force field, it also weakens him in the process, making him unable to use his powers under certain circumstances. Jiu Wu has been famous since young for his \"Jiu Bu Qin Gui Shou\" (九步擒鬼手), which indicates the ability to find the opponent's Achilles' Heel within nine steps. No one has ever escaped this attack until he meets the father of the Ye He Na La Family. The playful grandfather of Xia Tian (夏天), Xia Yu (夏宇) and Xia Mei (夏美); and the head of the family. Xia Liu (because his name sounds like \"pervert\" ", "score": "1.5660875" }, { "id": "4894837", "title": "Tagawa Matsu", "text": " Xiaoxuan 鄭曉嵐 the father of Zheng Chouyu, fought against the Japanese invaders in the Second Sino-Japanese War. Zheng Chouyu 鄭愁予 was born in Shandong in mainland China in 1933 and called himself a \"child of the resistance\" against Japan and he became a refugee during the war, moving from place to place across China to avoid the Japanese. He moved to Taiwan in 1949 and focuses his work on building stronger ties between Taiwan and mainland China. Zheng Chouyu was born in mainland China, he identified as Chinese and he felt alienated after he was forced to move to Taiwan in 1949 which was previously under Japanese rule and felt strange and foreign to him. He is Koxinga's 11th generation descendant and his original name is Zheng Wenji.", "score": "1.5558741" }, { "id": "6547535", "title": "Ma Xifan", "text": " Yin's first son, Ma Xizhen (馬希振), was said to be born of his wife, who was not named in historical sources. (Lady Chen later bore at least one younger son among Ma Yin's at least 35 sons, Ma Xiguang.) Ma Xifan and his brother, Ma Yin's second son Ma Xisheng, were born on the same day, but Ma Xisheng was born earlier on that day. (Another brother, unnamed in historical sources, was therefore likely born on the same day of a different mother, between Ma Xisheng's and Ma Xifan's births.) In 909 — by which time Tang had fallen, and Ma ", "score": "1.5474297" }, { "id": "10185572", "title": "Ma Man-fai", "text": " He was born in Hong Kong in 1905 into a merchant family of Ma Ying-piu, an Australian Chinese who founded the Sincere Department Store in Hong Kong in 1900, and his wife Fok Hing-tong. Ma Ying-piu also a supporter of the anti-Qing revolution and funded Sun Yat-sen's revolutionary activities. Ma attributed his father and his time in London as a buyer of his father's company as the inspirations of his liberal values. His mother was a social reformer, founder of the Chinese YWCA of Hong Kong and an anti-mui tsai movement leader. Ma Man-fai was educated at the Lingnan College in Canton and lived in Mainland China during the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong. In 1932, he was a director of the Tung Wah Hospital. ", "score": "1.5356604" }, { "id": "5310227", "title": "Ma Xisheng", "text": " Ma Xisheng was born in 899, during the reign of Emperor Zhaozong of Tang, as the second son of the warlord Ma Yin. At that time, Ma Yin had just taken control of Tan Prefecture (in modern Changsha, Hunan) following the assassination of Ma Yin's predecessor Liu Jianfeng, and was not yet fully in control of Wu'an Circuit (武安, headquartered at Tan Prefecture), which would eventually become the central circuit for the Chu state, but was in the process of gradually consolidating his control. Ma Xisheng's mother Lady Yin, while Ma Yin's favorite, was not Ma Yin's wife — as Ma Yin's first son, Ma Xizhen (馬希振), was said to be born of his wife, who was not named in historical sources. ", "score": "1.5311155" }, { "id": "28669768", "title": "Ma Xiyin", "text": " Ma Xiyin was a son of Chu's founder Ma Yin (King Wumu) — the youngest, according to the Zizhi Tongjian. During the subsequent reign of Ma Xiyin's older brother (Ma Yin's fourth son) Ma Xifan (Prince Wenzhao), Ma Xiyin was made the deputy military governor of Jingjiang. By 950, Chu was embroiled in a civil war between Ma Xiyin's older brothers Ma Xiguang (Ma Yin's 35th son), who had taken the throne after Ma Xifan's death, and Ma Xi'e (Prince Gongxiao, Ma Yin's 30th son), who considered himself to have a superior claim on the throne. In light of Chu's civil war, Liu Sheng, the emperor of Chu's southern neighbor Southern Han, sent the eunuch general Wu Huai'en (吳懷恩) to the border between Southern Han and Jingjiang, trying to see if he could take advantage of ", "score": "1.5292989" }, { "id": "12116413", "title": "Ma Yin", "text": " rights. Ma Yin's oldest son, Ma Xizhen (馬希振), was born of his wife (whose name was not recorded in history), but his favorite son was his second son Ma Xisheng, who was born of his favorite concubine Consort Yuan. Ma Xizhen, not wanting to fight over the succession with Ma Xisheng, became a Taoist monk and retired from politics. In 929, Ma formally put Ma Xisheng, who then carried the title of deputy military governor of Wu'an and acting mayor of the capital Changsha, in charge of the Chu administration. From this point on, all matters of state were to be reported to Ma Xisheng first, before ", "score": "1.5272259" }, { "id": "9147964", "title": "The X-Family", "text": "Xia Xiong (夏雄) Xia Tian (夏天) / Gui Long (鬼龍) Lan Ling Wang (蘭陵王) Jiu Wu (灸舞) Xia Liu (夏流) Ye Si Ren (葉思仁) Xia Yu (夏宇) / Gui Feng (鬼鳳) Xia Mei (夏美) / Gui Wa (鬼娃) Xiu (脩) Han (寒) a Chord Mother of Xia Yu (夏宇), Xia Tian (夏天), and Xia Mei (夏美). Ye Si Ren's (葉思仁) ex-wife. As the sole bread winner in the family and owner of a truck company, she takes on the roles that traditionally belonged to fathers and sons. Despite her tough exterior, she desires the closeness and comfort of a normal family life. ", "score": "1.5232635" }, { "id": "8076330", "title": "Ma Shitu", "text": " Ma was twice married. His first wife was killed by the Kuomintang.", "score": "1.5212641" }, { "id": "9147968", "title": "The X-Family", "text": " a \"Ma Gua\" (麻瓜 / Muggle). Xiu believes Xia Tian has the potential to become a \"Zhong Ji Tie Ke Ren\" (終極鐵克人/ Ultimate Iron Man), a savior of worlds, so he teaches Xia Tian how to play guitar and control Gui Long (鬼龍 / Ghostly Dragon) - his evil half with greater power, who on several occasions, attempts to destroy Xia Tian in order to become the dominant personality. His biggest motivation for developing his power and guitar skills is Han, a girl that he met when he was a child and has liked her ever since. When he takes off the ", "score": "1.5166149" }, { "id": "15079036", "title": "Ma Haide", "text": " Ma's wife was Chou Sufei (aka Zhou Sufei 周苏菲), an actress. They had a son Chou Youma (aka Zhou Youma 周幼马) (b. 1943) and a daughter Liang Bi. On October 3, 1988, Ma died in Beijing at the age of 78. He is buried at the Babaoshan Revolutionary Cemetery in Beijing, China.", "score": "1.5147717" }, { "id": "30056023", "title": "Hsu King-shing", "text": " Hsu's daughter married a footballer, which the father of Hsu's son-in-law was Fung King Cheong, also a footballer and manager of Singtao. Hsu's son Louis Hsu Che-Shek is a tennis player who represented Hong Kong, as well as a medical doctor. Louis Hsu was involved in the invention of halo-pelvic traction, a medical operation led by John O'Brien. Louis Hsu also wrote some research papers on the topic. Hsu died in Queen Mary Hospital, Hong Kong Island on 11 February 1986.", "score": "1.5146413" }, { "id": "29218731", "title": "Ma Ying-piu", "text": " Ma Ying-piu (21 December 1860 – 15 July 1944) was a Hong Kong retailer and businessman. He founded the Sincere Department Store in 1900, the first Chinese-owned department store in China and was the \"father of Chinese department stores\".", "score": "1.5116184" }, { "id": "7719250", "title": "List of The X-Family characters", "text": " given the \"Feng Long Ka\" (封龍卡) to Xia Tian instead of him, the eldest son, because of his Ma Gua status. Evil sees his jealousy and uses that to turn him evil by giving him a ring to absorb other people's powers. The ring unwittingly unlocks Xia Yu's sealed power. As it turns out, he is not a Ma Gua by birth. Rather, his father secretly sealed his power upon birth because he exhibited the pure evil genes. When he fully comes into his powers, his dark instincts start to take over. The situation forces his father to use \"Xi Hun Qu\" (洗魂曲 / Soul Cleansing Melody) to cleanse his soul ", "score": "1.5083277" }, { "id": "28243022", "title": "Ma Guanghui", "text": " Ma Guanghui was a son of Ma Xizhen (馬希振), the oldest son of Ma Yin (King Wumu), the founder of Chu. Not only was Ma Xizhen the oldest, but he was born of Ma Yin's wife, which should have made him the heir under Confucian succession principles, but Ma Yin favored his second son Ma Xisheng, who was born of his favorite concubine Consort Yuan. Not willing to engage in a succession struggle with Ma Xisheng, Ma Xizhen resigned and became a Taoist priest, dying during the Qingtai era (934-936). Nothing is known about Ma Guanghui's mother or whether he had siblings.", "score": "1.5039887" } ]
[ "Ma Ying-jeou\n Ma's father is Ma Ho-ling, his mother is Chin Hou-hsiu and his wife is Christine Chow Ma. Apart from that, he has two daughters, Ma Wei-chung and Kelly Ma. Ma speaks Hunanese, Mandarin and English.", "Ma Yuehan\n Ma's son, Ma Qiwei, served as Vice President of Beijing Institute of Physical Education. His second daughter, Ma Peilun, married Mou Zuoyun, a pioneer of basketball in China. Both Ma Qiwei and Mou Zuoyun followed Ma's footsteps to study at Springfield College in the US.", "Ma Xichong\n According to the Spring and Autumn Annals of the Ten Kingdoms, citing another work now lost, the Miscellaneous Records from a Blue Box (青箱雜記, Qingxiang Zaji), Ma Xichong was born in 912. His father was Chu's founder Ma Yin. HIs mother was not Ma Yin's wife, but was otherwise not named in historical sources, although it is known that Ma Yin's 30th son Ma Xi'e, who was older than he was, was born of the same mother. Ma Yin's 35th son Ma Xiguang, who was born of Lady Chen, was also older. In 947, then-Chu prince Ma Xifan (Ma Yin's ", "Ma Yin\nFather ; Ma Yuanfeng (馬元豐), posthumously honored King Jingzhuang of Chu ; Wife ; Name unknown, mother of Ma Xizhen ; Major Concubines ; Consort Yuan, mother of Ma Xisheng and Ma Xiwang ; Lady Chen, mother of Ma Xifan ; Lady Hua, mother of Ma Xigao ; Children (Ma Yin had at least 35 sons, but the names of most of them were lost to history) ; Ma Xizhen (馬希振), became Taoist monk ; Ma Xisheng (馬希聲) (899–932), later prince ; Ma Xifan (馬希範) (899–947), later prince ; Ma Xiwang (馬希旺) (d. ~933) ; Ma Xigao (馬希杲) (poisoned by Ma Xifan 945) ; Ma Xi'e (馬希萼), later prince ; Ma Xiguang (馬希廣), later prince (died 950) ; Ma Xichong (馬希崇), later prince ; Ma Xizhan (馬希瞻) (died 949) ; Ma Xineng (馬希能) ; Ma Xiguan (馬希貫) ; Ma Xiyin (馬希隱) ; Ma Xijun (馬希濬) ; Ma Xizhi (馬希知) ; Ma Xilang (馬希朗) ; daughter, Empress Ma of Southern Han, wife of Liu Yan ; daughter, wife of Qian Chuansu (錢傳璛), son of Qian Liu the King of Wuyue ", "Ma Zhong (Shu Han)\n Ma Zhong had three sons: Ma Xiu (馬脩), Ma Hui (馬恢) and Ma Rong (馬融). Ma Hui's son, Ma Yi (馬義), served as the Administrator of Jianning County during the Jin dynasty.", "The X-Family\n but as he keeps on preserving the force field, it also weakens him in the process, making him unable to use his powers under certain circumstances. Jiu Wu has been famous since young for his \"Jiu Bu Qin Gui Shou\" (九步擒鬼手), which indicates the ability to find the opponent's Achilles' Heel within nine steps. No one has ever escaped this attack until he meets the father of the Ye He Na La Family. The playful grandfather of Xia Tian (夏天), Xia Yu (夏宇) and Xia Mei (夏美); and the head of the family. Xia Liu (because his name sounds like \"pervert\" ", "Tagawa Matsu\n Xiaoxuan 鄭曉嵐 the father of Zheng Chouyu, fought against the Japanese invaders in the Second Sino-Japanese War. Zheng Chouyu 鄭愁予 was born in Shandong in mainland China in 1933 and called himself a \"child of the resistance\" against Japan and he became a refugee during the war, moving from place to place across China to avoid the Japanese. He moved to Taiwan in 1949 and focuses his work on building stronger ties between Taiwan and mainland China. Zheng Chouyu was born in mainland China, he identified as Chinese and he felt alienated after he was forced to move to Taiwan in 1949 which was previously under Japanese rule and felt strange and foreign to him. He is Koxinga's 11th generation descendant and his original name is Zheng Wenji.", "Ma Xifan\n Yin's first son, Ma Xizhen (馬希振), was said to be born of his wife, who was not named in historical sources. (Lady Chen later bore at least one younger son among Ma Yin's at least 35 sons, Ma Xiguang.) Ma Xifan and his brother, Ma Yin's second son Ma Xisheng, were born on the same day, but Ma Xisheng was born earlier on that day. (Another brother, unnamed in historical sources, was therefore likely born on the same day of a different mother, between Ma Xisheng's and Ma Xifan's births.) In 909 — by which time Tang had fallen, and Ma ", "Ma Man-fai\n He was born in Hong Kong in 1905 into a merchant family of Ma Ying-piu, an Australian Chinese who founded the Sincere Department Store in Hong Kong in 1900, and his wife Fok Hing-tong. Ma Ying-piu also a supporter of the anti-Qing revolution and funded Sun Yat-sen's revolutionary activities. Ma attributed his father and his time in London as a buyer of his father's company as the inspirations of his liberal values. His mother was a social reformer, founder of the Chinese YWCA of Hong Kong and an anti-mui tsai movement leader. Ma Man-fai was educated at the Lingnan College in Canton and lived in Mainland China during the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong. In 1932, he was a director of the Tung Wah Hospital. ", "Ma Xisheng\n Ma Xisheng was born in 899, during the reign of Emperor Zhaozong of Tang, as the second son of the warlord Ma Yin. At that time, Ma Yin had just taken control of Tan Prefecture (in modern Changsha, Hunan) following the assassination of Ma Yin's predecessor Liu Jianfeng, and was not yet fully in control of Wu'an Circuit (武安, headquartered at Tan Prefecture), which would eventually become the central circuit for the Chu state, but was in the process of gradually consolidating his control. Ma Xisheng's mother Lady Yin, while Ma Yin's favorite, was not Ma Yin's wife — as Ma Yin's first son, Ma Xizhen (馬希振), was said to be born of his wife, who was not named in historical sources. ", "Ma Xiyin\n Ma Xiyin was a son of Chu's founder Ma Yin (King Wumu) — the youngest, according to the Zizhi Tongjian. During the subsequent reign of Ma Xiyin's older brother (Ma Yin's fourth son) Ma Xifan (Prince Wenzhao), Ma Xiyin was made the deputy military governor of Jingjiang. By 950, Chu was embroiled in a civil war between Ma Xiyin's older brothers Ma Xiguang (Ma Yin's 35th son), who had taken the throne after Ma Xifan's death, and Ma Xi'e (Prince Gongxiao, Ma Yin's 30th son), who considered himself to have a superior claim on the throne. In light of Chu's civil war, Liu Sheng, the emperor of Chu's southern neighbor Southern Han, sent the eunuch general Wu Huai'en (吳懷恩) to the border between Southern Han and Jingjiang, trying to see if he could take advantage of ", "Ma Yin\n rights. Ma Yin's oldest son, Ma Xizhen (馬希振), was born of his wife (whose name was not recorded in history), but his favorite son was his second son Ma Xisheng, who was born of his favorite concubine Consort Yuan. Ma Xizhen, not wanting to fight over the succession with Ma Xisheng, became a Taoist monk and retired from politics. In 929, Ma formally put Ma Xisheng, who then carried the title of deputy military governor of Wu'an and acting mayor of the capital Changsha, in charge of the Chu administration. From this point on, all matters of state were to be reported to Ma Xisheng first, before ", "The X-Family\nXia Xiong (夏雄) Xia Tian (夏天) / Gui Long (鬼龍) Lan Ling Wang (蘭陵王) Jiu Wu (灸舞) Xia Liu (夏流) Ye Si Ren (葉思仁) Xia Yu (夏宇) / Gui Feng (鬼鳳) Xia Mei (夏美) / Gui Wa (鬼娃) Xiu (脩) Han (寒) a Chord Mother of Xia Yu (夏宇), Xia Tian (夏天), and Xia Mei (夏美). Ye Si Ren's (葉思仁) ex-wife. As the sole bread winner in the family and owner of a truck company, she takes on the roles that traditionally belonged to fathers and sons. Despite her tough exterior, she desires the closeness and comfort of a normal family life. ", "Ma Shitu\n Ma was twice married. His first wife was killed by the Kuomintang.", "The X-Family\n a \"Ma Gua\" (麻瓜 / Muggle). Xiu believes Xia Tian has the potential to become a \"Zhong Ji Tie Ke Ren\" (終極鐵克人/ Ultimate Iron Man), a savior of worlds, so he teaches Xia Tian how to play guitar and control Gui Long (鬼龍 / Ghostly Dragon) - his evil half with greater power, who on several occasions, attempts to destroy Xia Tian in order to become the dominant personality. His biggest motivation for developing his power and guitar skills is Han, a girl that he met when he was a child and has liked her ever since. When he takes off the ", "Ma Haide\n Ma's wife was Chou Sufei (aka Zhou Sufei 周苏菲), an actress. They had a son Chou Youma (aka Zhou Youma 周幼马) (b. 1943) and a daughter Liang Bi. On October 3, 1988, Ma died in Beijing at the age of 78. He is buried at the Babaoshan Revolutionary Cemetery in Beijing, China.", "Hsu King-shing\n Hsu's daughter married a footballer, which the father of Hsu's son-in-law was Fung King Cheong, also a footballer and manager of Singtao. Hsu's son Louis Hsu Che-Shek is a tennis player who represented Hong Kong, as well as a medical doctor. Louis Hsu was involved in the invention of halo-pelvic traction, a medical operation led by John O'Brien. Louis Hsu also wrote some research papers on the topic. Hsu died in Queen Mary Hospital, Hong Kong Island on 11 February 1986.", "Ma Ying-piu\n Ma Ying-piu (21 December 1860 – 15 July 1944) was a Hong Kong retailer and businessman. He founded the Sincere Department Store in 1900, the first Chinese-owned department store in China and was the \"father of Chinese department stores\".", "List of The X-Family characters\n given the \"Feng Long Ka\" (封龍卡) to Xia Tian instead of him, the eldest son, because of his Ma Gua status. Evil sees his jealousy and uses that to turn him evil by giving him a ring to absorb other people's powers. The ring unwittingly unlocks Xia Yu's sealed power. As it turns out, he is not a Ma Gua by birth. Rather, his father secretly sealed his power upon birth because he exhibited the pure evil genes. When he fully comes into his powers, his dark instincts start to take over. The situation forces his father to use \"Xi Hun Qu\" (洗魂曲 / Soul Cleansing Melody) to cleanse his soul ", "Ma Guanghui\n Ma Guanghui was a son of Ma Xizhen (馬希振), the oldest son of Ma Yin (King Wumu), the founder of Chu. Not only was Ma Xizhen the oldest, but he was born of Ma Yin's wife, which should have made him the heir under Confucian succession principles, but Ma Yin favored his second son Ma Xisheng, who was born of his favorite concubine Consort Yuan. Not willing to engage in a succession struggle with Ma Xisheng, Ma Xizhen resigned and became a Taoist priest, dying during the Qingtai era (934-936). Nothing is known about Ma Guanghui's mother or whether he had siblings." ]
In what country is North Lake?
[ "Canada", "Dominion of Canada", "British North America", "CAN", "CA", "ca", "can", "Can." ]
country
North Lake (Nova Scotia)
5,308,029
57
[ { "id": "6950240", "title": "North Lake station", "text": " The North Lake is a former railway station located near North Lake, Thunder Bay District, Ontario. It lies close to La Verendrye Provincial Park and to the well known Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness in the Boundary Waters between Canada and the United States. It was constructed in 1907 as a major station along the Port Arthur, Duluth and Western Railway.", "score": "1.6511772" }, { "id": "29185663", "title": "North Lake (Western Australia)", "text": " North Lake is a freshwater lake in the suburb of North Lake, located 18 km south of the central business district of Perth, the capital of Western Australia, and 8 km from the Indian Ocean. The suburb and lake are located within the City of Cockburn local government area. It is part of the northernmost lake within a chain of lakes which make up the Beeliar Regional Park (North Lake, Bibra Lake, South Lake, Booragoon Lake, Yangebup Lake, and Thomsons Lake). The lake has been known by this name since 1877, and the name was approved for the suburb in 1954.", "score": "1.5735984" }, { "id": "29654290", "title": "North Lake, Western Australia", "text": " The Lakeside Recreation Centre is located in North Lake on the corner of Farrington Road and Bibra Drive. It is home to four basketball courts, a Baptist church, a gym, and a creche. Lakeside Recreation Centre is the home court of the State Basketball League team, the Lakeside Lightning. Apart from North Lake and the surrounding Beeliar Regional Park, the suburb contains the Perth Spanish Club, a golf driving range, Adventure World, Cockburn Ice Skating arena, and an adventure playground next to the lake at Progress Drive.", "score": "1.5597675" }, { "id": "9700436", "title": "North Country (New York)", "text": " The North Country (Pays du Nord) is a region of the U.S. state of New York that encompasses the state's extreme northern frontier, bordered by Lake Champlain to the east, the Adirondack Mountains to the south, the Canadian border to the north, and Lake Ontario and the Saint Lawrence Seaway to the west. A mostly rural area, the North Country includes seven counties. Fort Drum, a U.S. Army base, is also located in the North Country, as is the Adirondack Park. As of 2009, the population of the region was 429,092. The term \"North Country\" was first widely popularized within New York by the 1900 novel Eben Holden by Irving Bacheller.", "score": "1.5553267" }, { "id": "29654287", "title": "North Lake, Western Australia", "text": " North Lake is a suburb located 18 km south of the central business district of Perth, the capital of Western Australia, and 8 km from the Indian Ocean. Named after the eponymous lake, the suburb and lake are located within the City of Cockburn local government area.", "score": "1.5340031" }, { "id": "10929160", "title": "North Lake Parish, New Brunswick", "text": " North Lake is a civil parish in York County, New Brunswick, Canada. For governance purposes it forms the local service district of the parish of North Lake, which is a member of the Western Valley Regional Service Commission (WVRSC).", "score": "1.5186801" }, { "id": "274987", "title": "North Lake Early College High School", "text": " North Lake Early College High School, also known as North Lake Collegiate Academy, is a public high school located in Dallas County, Texas and operated by the Dallas Independent School District (DISD). It has a campus for 9th and 10th grade students at the main campus at North Lake College in Irving and will have a campus for 11th and 12th grade students in the future. Under Texas law, DISD can have operations, including schools, outside of its own boundaries, and North Lake College is not in the DISD boundaries. The school opened with grade 9 students in 2019 and will expand by one grade level per year.", "score": "1.5034609" }, { "id": "31922937", "title": "North Long Lake", "text": " At 6,000 acres (24 km²), North Long Lake is one of the larger lakes in the Brainerd Lakes Area of the U.S. state of Minnesota.", "score": "1.4993573" }, { "id": "31037121", "title": "North Lake, Wisconsin", "text": " James Barney Marsh (1856-1936), engineer and bridge builder, was born in North Lake. In 2020, team 5 in the pee wee division of the Lake Country Chiefs football league took all other opponents by storm on the road to total dominance.", "score": "1.4896163" }, { "id": "9700438", "title": "North Country (New York)", "text": " North Country consists of Clinton, Essex, Franklin, Hamilton, St. Lawrence, Jefferson and Lewis Counties. The New York State Department of Labor, the New York State Regional Development Council, and the Empire State Development Agency serve people who live in the state-sanctioned North Country. The contemporary North Country takes in the largest area of all the North Countries. It extends from the Canadian border on the north to the Erie Canal on the south, and from the shores of Lake Ontario in the west to the edge of Lake Champlain in the east. The contemporary North Country includes all of the Adirondack Park, 14 counties, 14 cities, 255 towns and almost 40 percent of the state’s geographic area. The Adirondack North Country Association, an economic development organization that also promotes tourism, serves people living in the contemporary North Country, as does North Country Public Radio.\"", "score": "1.4874824" }, { "id": "3417579", "title": "North Shore (Lake Superior)", "text": "Thunder Bay, Ontario ; Lake Nipigon ; Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario ", "score": "1.4823542" }, { "id": "6899100", "title": "Lakes of the North, Michigan", "text": " Lakes of the North is an unincorporated community and census-designated place (CDP) in Antrim County in the U.S. state of Michigan. The CDP is located in Mancelona and Star townships. The population was 925 at the 2010 census. The community of Lakes of the North was listed as a newly-organized census-designated place for the 2010 census, meaning it now has officially defined boundaries and population statistics for the first time.", "score": "1.4769666" }, { "id": "31704950", "title": "North Spirit Lake First Nation", "text": " North Spirit Lake First Nation is a small Oji-Cree First Nation reserve in Northern Ontario, located north of Red Lake, Ontario. It is connected to Sandy Lake First Nation, and Deer Lake First Nation by winter/ice roads. It is part of the Keewaytinook Okimakanak Council (Northern Chiefs) and the Nishnawbe Aski Nation. North Spirit Lake is policed by the Nishnawbe-Aski Police Service, an Aboriginal-based service.", "score": "1.476757" }, { "id": "6950243", "title": "North Lake station", "text": " areas. This pattern was designed by architect Ralph Benjamin Pratt and first introduced in 1901 as plan 100-3. North Lake utilized the updated Plan 100-29 which debuted in 1907 and resulted in a slightly larger station. In 1918 the bankrupt CNoR was nationalized into the Canadian National Railways (CNR) and the line became known as the CNR-North Lake Sub-Division. North Lake Station remained in service until 1923, when, due to a lack of business on this portion of line, CNR decided to shorten the line by 24 miles. Service terminated at Mackies on Whitefish Lake, Milepost 47. The station and its nearby coal bunker were abandoned by CNR.", "score": "1.463294" }, { "id": "29654289", "title": "North Lake, Western Australia", "text": " There are no schools within the suburb, with many North Lake residents using the state government primary schools in Coolbellup and Kardinya. Directly to the north of the suburb lies Murdoch University and Kennedy Baptist College.", "score": "1.456485" }, { "id": "14927840", "title": "North Lakes, Queensland", "text": " The suburb is mostly made up of newly developed housing originally around the North Lakes Golf Course. Lake Eden is within the suburb of North Lakes. The lake is surrounded by a public park and features many waterbirds and other wildlife. Amenities at the lakeside park include a café, children's playground and walking track. The North Lakes Business Park is a commercial site situated on the edge of the North Lakes masterplanned community. It started construction in 2007 and is planned to take more than ten years to fully complete. Construction of a road bridge crossing the Bruce Highway and leading to Dakabin railway station opened on 12 December 2014; the distance is approximately 2.5 km. The Moreton Bay Rail Link from Petrie to Kippa-Ring with closest station Mango Hill just south of Westfield North Lakes opened on 4 October 2016.", "score": "1.4535897" }, { "id": "14927837", "title": "North Lakes, Queensland", "text": " North Lakes is a suburb of the Moreton Bay Region, Queensland, Australia. North Lakes is located approximately 26 km north of the Brisbane central business district. At the the suburb recorded a population of 21,671.", "score": "1.4524608" }, { "id": "6950245", "title": "North Lake station", "text": " North Lake Station sat derelict in its remote locate until the 1970s when efforts were made to save the deteriorating structure. A group based out of Nolalu called the Localmotive Society attempted to renovate the old station. Unfortunately resistance from the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources (MNR) forced the group to alter their plans and construct a replica station one mile east on Addie Lake. Work began in early in 1977 and was completed by the end of that summer. However, attempts to create a park and trails around the station were never realized and the replica was burned by the MNR in 2004.", "score": "1.4478253" }, { "id": "11043751", "title": "North Caribou Lake First Nation", "text": " North Caribou Lake First Nation or Weagamow First Nation, sometimes also known as Round Lake First Nation, is an Oji-Cree First Nations band government who inhabit the Kenora District in northern Ontario, Canada. It is approximately 320 km by air north of Sioux Lookout. As of January 2008, the First Nations had a registered population of 928 people, of which their on-Reserve population was 677.", "score": "1.4460986" }, { "id": "25916754", "title": "North Tea Lake", "text": " North Tea Lake is a lake in the Ottawa River drainage basin in the geographic townships of Ballantyne and Wilkes in the Unorganized South Part of Nipissing District in Northeastern Ontario, Canada. It is on the Amable du Fond River and lies in the northwest of Algonquin Provincial Park. The lake is a popular destination for canoeists. The primary inflow is the Amable du Fond River arriving from Kawawaymog Lake at the west. The primary outflow is the Amable du Fond River, at the northeast to Manitou Lake, which flows via the Mattawa River to the Ottawa River.", "score": "1.4450576" } ]
[ "North Lake station\n The North Lake is a former railway station located near North Lake, Thunder Bay District, Ontario. It lies close to La Verendrye Provincial Park and to the well known Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness in the Boundary Waters between Canada and the United States. It was constructed in 1907 as a major station along the Port Arthur, Duluth and Western Railway.", "North Lake (Western Australia)\n North Lake is a freshwater lake in the suburb of North Lake, located 18 km south of the central business district of Perth, the capital of Western Australia, and 8 km from the Indian Ocean. The suburb and lake are located within the City of Cockburn local government area. It is part of the northernmost lake within a chain of lakes which make up the Beeliar Regional Park (North Lake, Bibra Lake, South Lake, Booragoon Lake, Yangebup Lake, and Thomsons Lake). The lake has been known by this name since 1877, and the name was approved for the suburb in 1954.", "North Lake, Western Australia\n The Lakeside Recreation Centre is located in North Lake on the corner of Farrington Road and Bibra Drive. It is home to four basketball courts, a Baptist church, a gym, and a creche. Lakeside Recreation Centre is the home court of the State Basketball League team, the Lakeside Lightning. Apart from North Lake and the surrounding Beeliar Regional Park, the suburb contains the Perth Spanish Club, a golf driving range, Adventure World, Cockburn Ice Skating arena, and an adventure playground next to the lake at Progress Drive.", "North Country (New York)\n The North Country (Pays du Nord) is a region of the U.S. state of New York that encompasses the state's extreme northern frontier, bordered by Lake Champlain to the east, the Adirondack Mountains to the south, the Canadian border to the north, and Lake Ontario and the Saint Lawrence Seaway to the west. A mostly rural area, the North Country includes seven counties. Fort Drum, a U.S. Army base, is also located in the North Country, as is the Adirondack Park. As of 2009, the population of the region was 429,092. The term \"North Country\" was first widely popularized within New York by the 1900 novel Eben Holden by Irving Bacheller.", "North Lake, Western Australia\n North Lake is a suburb located 18 km south of the central business district of Perth, the capital of Western Australia, and 8 km from the Indian Ocean. Named after the eponymous lake, the suburb and lake are located within the City of Cockburn local government area.", "North Lake Parish, New Brunswick\n North Lake is a civil parish in York County, New Brunswick, Canada. For governance purposes it forms the local service district of the parish of North Lake, which is a member of the Western Valley Regional Service Commission (WVRSC).", "North Lake Early College High School\n North Lake Early College High School, also known as North Lake Collegiate Academy, is a public high school located in Dallas County, Texas and operated by the Dallas Independent School District (DISD). It has a campus for 9th and 10th grade students at the main campus at North Lake College in Irving and will have a campus for 11th and 12th grade students in the future. Under Texas law, DISD can have operations, including schools, outside of its own boundaries, and North Lake College is not in the DISD boundaries. The school opened with grade 9 students in 2019 and will expand by one grade level per year.", "North Long Lake\n At 6,000 acres (24 km²), North Long Lake is one of the larger lakes in the Brainerd Lakes Area of the U.S. state of Minnesota.", "North Lake, Wisconsin\n James Barney Marsh (1856-1936), engineer and bridge builder, was born in North Lake. In 2020, team 5 in the pee wee division of the Lake Country Chiefs football league took all other opponents by storm on the road to total dominance.", "North Country (New York)\n North Country consists of Clinton, Essex, Franklin, Hamilton, St. Lawrence, Jefferson and Lewis Counties. The New York State Department of Labor, the New York State Regional Development Council, and the Empire State Development Agency serve people who live in the state-sanctioned North Country. The contemporary North Country takes in the largest area of all the North Countries. It extends from the Canadian border on the north to the Erie Canal on the south, and from the shores of Lake Ontario in the west to the edge of Lake Champlain in the east. The contemporary North Country includes all of the Adirondack Park, 14 counties, 14 cities, 255 towns and almost 40 percent of the state’s geographic area. The Adirondack North Country Association, an economic development organization that also promotes tourism, serves people living in the contemporary North Country, as does North Country Public Radio.\"", "North Shore (Lake Superior)\nThunder Bay, Ontario ; Lake Nipigon ; Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario ", "Lakes of the North, Michigan\n Lakes of the North is an unincorporated community and census-designated place (CDP) in Antrim County in the U.S. state of Michigan. The CDP is located in Mancelona and Star townships. The population was 925 at the 2010 census. The community of Lakes of the North was listed as a newly-organized census-designated place for the 2010 census, meaning it now has officially defined boundaries and population statistics for the first time.", "North Spirit Lake First Nation\n North Spirit Lake First Nation is a small Oji-Cree First Nation reserve in Northern Ontario, located north of Red Lake, Ontario. It is connected to Sandy Lake First Nation, and Deer Lake First Nation by winter/ice roads. It is part of the Keewaytinook Okimakanak Council (Northern Chiefs) and the Nishnawbe Aski Nation. North Spirit Lake is policed by the Nishnawbe-Aski Police Service, an Aboriginal-based service.", "North Lake station\n areas. This pattern was designed by architect Ralph Benjamin Pratt and first introduced in 1901 as plan 100-3. North Lake utilized the updated Plan 100-29 which debuted in 1907 and resulted in a slightly larger station. In 1918 the bankrupt CNoR was nationalized into the Canadian National Railways (CNR) and the line became known as the CNR-North Lake Sub-Division. North Lake Station remained in service until 1923, when, due to a lack of business on this portion of line, CNR decided to shorten the line by 24 miles. Service terminated at Mackies on Whitefish Lake, Milepost 47. The station and its nearby coal bunker were abandoned by CNR.", "North Lake, Western Australia\n There are no schools within the suburb, with many North Lake residents using the state government primary schools in Coolbellup and Kardinya. Directly to the north of the suburb lies Murdoch University and Kennedy Baptist College.", "North Lakes, Queensland\n The suburb is mostly made up of newly developed housing originally around the North Lakes Golf Course. Lake Eden is within the suburb of North Lakes. The lake is surrounded by a public park and features many waterbirds and other wildlife. Amenities at the lakeside park include a café, children's playground and walking track. The North Lakes Business Park is a commercial site situated on the edge of the North Lakes masterplanned community. It started construction in 2007 and is planned to take more than ten years to fully complete. Construction of a road bridge crossing the Bruce Highway and leading to Dakabin railway station opened on 12 December 2014; the distance is approximately 2.5 km. The Moreton Bay Rail Link from Petrie to Kippa-Ring with closest station Mango Hill just south of Westfield North Lakes opened on 4 October 2016.", "North Lakes, Queensland\n North Lakes is a suburb of the Moreton Bay Region, Queensland, Australia. North Lakes is located approximately 26 km north of the Brisbane central business district. At the the suburb recorded a population of 21,671.", "North Lake station\n North Lake Station sat derelict in its remote locate until the 1970s when efforts were made to save the deteriorating structure. A group based out of Nolalu called the Localmotive Society attempted to renovate the old station. Unfortunately resistance from the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources (MNR) forced the group to alter their plans and construct a replica station one mile east on Addie Lake. Work began in early in 1977 and was completed by the end of that summer. However, attempts to create a park and trails around the station were never realized and the replica was burned by the MNR in 2004.", "North Caribou Lake First Nation\n North Caribou Lake First Nation or Weagamow First Nation, sometimes also known as Round Lake First Nation, is an Oji-Cree First Nations band government who inhabit the Kenora District in northern Ontario, Canada. It is approximately 320 km by air north of Sioux Lookout. As of January 2008, the First Nations had a registered population of 928 people, of which their on-Reserve population was 677.", "North Tea Lake\n North Tea Lake is a lake in the Ottawa River drainage basin in the geographic townships of Ballantyne and Wilkes in the Unorganized South Part of Nipissing District in Northeastern Ontario, Canada. It is on the Amable du Fond River and lies in the northwest of Algonquin Provincial Park. The lake is a popular destination for canoeists. The primary inflow is the Amable du Fond River arriving from Kawawaymog Lake at the west. The primary outflow is the Amable du Fond River, at the northeast to Manitou Lake, which flows via the Mattawa River to the Ottawa River." ]
Who is the author of The Empire?
[ "D. C. Moore" ]
author
The Empire (play)
5,923,656
81
[ { "id": "33153838", "title": "Empire (H. Beam Piper book)", "text": " Empire is a collection of short stories by American writer H. Beam Piper, edited by John F. Carr. The book was published in 1981 by Ace Books, and again in 1986. Most of these stories take place in his Terro-Human Future History, with the sole exception being \"The Return\".", "score": "1.5406861" }, { "id": "10366243", "title": "The Course of Empire (history book)", "text": " The book was widely-praised, called \"a permanent contribution to history\" by Kirkus. The book was awarded a National Book Award in 1953.", "score": "1.4875058" }, { "id": "1589538", "title": "Otia Imperialia", "text": " Otia Imperialia (\"Recreation for an Emperor\") is an early 13th-century encyclopedic work, the best known work of Gervase of Tilbury. It is an example of Speculum literature. Also known as the \"Book of Marvels\", it primarily concerns the three fields of history, geography, and physics, but its credibility has been questioned by numerous scholars including philosopher Gottfried Leibniz, who was alerted to the fact that it contains many mythological stories. Its manner of writing is perhaps because the work was written to provide entertainment to Holy Roman Emperor Otto IV. However, many scholars consider it a very important work in that it \"recognizes the correctness of the papal claims in the conflict between Church and Empire.\" It was written between 1210 and 1214, although some give the dates as between 1209 and 1214 and numerous authors state it was published c.1211.", "score": "1.4839205" }, { "id": "15742712", "title": "Annals of the Empire", "text": " Annals of the Empire (Annales de l’Empire) is a history of Germany written by the French philosopher and author Voltaire at the request of Princess Luise Dorothea of Saxe-Meiningen in 1753. The first volume appeared in December 1753 and the second in March 1754. It is largely compiled from previous work by German historians: Voltaire described his role as like an architect, assembling a building from individual pieces of masonry.", "score": "1.4702457" }, { "id": "30444892", "title": "Fiction set in ancient Rome", "text": "Empire of the Atom, by A. E. van Vogt, translates Graves' novel about Claudius(above) into a science fiction context. ; The Foundation series by Isaac Asimov, about the fall of a galactic empire, is derived from Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. ; Dominic Flandry series by Poul Andersen, a space empire similarly inspired by Gibbon's history (and by Asimov) is decaying and about to collapse into a Long Night of barbarism; a heroic secret agent fights to stave off this fate. ; Julian Comstock by Robert Charles Wilson, about a post-apocalyptic America transformed into a neo-Roman Empire, and a high born youth who, like Julian the Apostate, fights the power of the Church. ; Bread and Circuses (Star Trek: The Original Series) ; Tarzan ", "score": "1.4689453" }, { "id": "10366241", "title": "The Course of Empire (history book)", "text": " The Course of Empire is a 1952 book by the American journalist and historian Bernard DeVoto. It is the third volume of a trilogy that includes The Year of Decision (1942) and Across the Wide Missouri (1947).", "score": "1.4676088" }, { "id": "27030056", "title": "Arkady Martine", "text": " Martine's first novel, A Memory Called Empire, published in 2019, is the beginning of her Teixcalaan series. It is set in a future where the Teixcalaanli empire governs most of human space, and is about to absorb Lsel, an independent mining station. Lsel ambassador Mahit Dzmare is sent to the imperial capital to prevent this, and finds herself embroiled in the empire's succession crisis. Martine said that the book was in many respects a fictional version of her postdoctoral research on Byzantine imperialism on the frontier to Armenia in the 11th century, particularly the annexation of the Kingdom of Ani. In The Verge, Andrew Liptak praised the novel as a \"brilliant blend of cyberpunk, space opera, ", "score": "1.4588847" }, { "id": "8399706", "title": "Lars Brownworth", "text": " the murderous Julio-Claudian Dynasty. All of his previous books reached the New York Times Best Seller Lists. He made his television debut in the Netflix series Rise of Empires: Ottomans, released in 2020. He maintains a blog called Finding History where he responds to reader and listener submitted questions. He has been interviewed by The New York Times and NPR's \"Here and Now\", has written for The Wall Street Journal and resides in Stony Brook, New York, with his wife, the former Catherine Tipmore. He used to serve as the chair of the history department at Washington Christian Academy in Olney, Maryland.", "score": "1.4558697" }, { "id": "14407969", "title": "Empire (Vidal novel)", "text": " Empire is the fourth historical novel in the Narratives of Empire series by Gore Vidal, published in 1987. The novel concerns the fictional newspaper dynasty of half-sibling characters Caroline and Blaise Sanford. Playing these characters against real-life figures of the years 1898 to 1907, the novel portrays the conjunction of government and mass media in the creation of modern-day America. As with Vidal's other books in his Narratives of Empire series, this novel offers an insight into the journalism of the time, following the exploits of William Randolph Hearst in his efforts to displace Theodore Roosevelt as president in 1904. Following the events leading up to and following the ascension of Theodore Roosevelt to the presidency following William McKinley's assassination, it includes pithy portraits of such leading public figures of the day as Roosevelt, Hearst, Henry Brooks Adams, Henry James, Secretary of State John Hay and President William McKinley. In this tome, the descendants of Charlie Schuyler, the fictitious main character, continue the American saga of empire building. Nevertheless, most of the characters in this novel are nonfiction and historic.", "score": "1.45279" }, { "id": "6618885", "title": "Empire of the East", "text": " Empire of the East is a novel by Fred Saberhagen published in 1979.", "score": "1.4489222" }, { "id": "2792462", "title": "Servant of the Empire", "text": " Servant of the Empire is a fantasy novel by American writers Raymond E. Feist and Janny Wurts. Published in 1990, it is the second book in the Empire Trilogy, preceded by 1987's Daughter of the Empire and followed by Mistress of the Empire in 1992.", "score": "1.4484622" }, { "id": "28704059", "title": "Empire (graphic novel)", "text": " Empire is a 1978 graphic novel written by Samuel R. Delany and illustrated by Howard Chaykin.", "score": "1.4429271" }, { "id": "12239911", "title": "Encyclopedia of the Roman Empire", "text": " The Encyclopedia of the Roman Empire, written by Matthew Bunson in 1994 and published by Facts on File, is a detailed depiction of the history of the Roman Empire. This work, of roughly 494 pages (a 2002 revised version contains 636 pages) stores more than 2,000 entries.", "score": "1.4424944" }, { "id": "25228372", "title": "The British Empire: A survey", "text": "I. The Dominions and Dependencies of the Empire, Forewords by HRH the Duke of Connaught and the Rt. Hon. Leo Amery, First Lord of the Admiralty: 13 chapters by various authors ; II. The Story of the Empire, by Sir Charles Lucas ; III. Constitution, Administration, and Laws of the Empire'', by Prof. A. Berriedale Keith ; IV. The Resources of the Empire and Their Development, by Evans Lewin ; V. Health Problems of the Empire - Past, Present, and Future by Dr. Andrew Balfour and Dr. H. H. Scott ; VI. The Press and Communications of the Empire, by J. Saxon Mills ; VII. The Trade, Commerce, and Shipping of the Empire, by Sir Charles McLeod and Prof. A. W. Kirkaldy ; VIII. Makers of the Empire, by Hugh Gunn ; IX. The Native Races of the Empire, by Sir Godfrey Lagden ; X. The Universities and Educational Systems of the Empire, by Arthur Percival Newton ; XI. The Literature of the Empire and The Art of the Empire by Edward Salmon and Major A. A. Longden ; XII. Migration Within the Empire, by Major E. A. Belcher and James A. Williamson ", "score": "1.4422657" }, { "id": "5148943", "title": "Ronald Syme", "text": " to the character of the men who are in charge of the imperial administration, in particular that of the colonies. In his own words, the \"strength and vitality of an empire is frequently due to the new aristocracy from the periphery\". This book is currently out of print. Syme's biography of Sallust (1964), based on his Sather Lectures at the University of California, is also regarded as authoritative. His four books and numerous essays on the Historia Augusta, including the publication Emperors and Biography: Studies in the Historia Augusta, firmly established the fraudulent nature of that work; he famously dubbed the anonymous ", "score": "1.4345347" }, { "id": "2792467", "title": "Daughter of the Empire", "text": " Daughter of the Empire is a political fantasy novel by American writers Raymond E. Feist and Janny Wurts. Published in 1987, it is the first book in the Empire Trilogy and was followed by Servant of the Empire in 1990.", "score": "1.4342785" }, { "id": "428344", "title": "Pax Britannica Trilogy", "text": "Heaven’s Command: An Imperial Progress (1973) ; Pax Britannica: The Climax of Empire (1968) ; Farewell the Trumpets: An Imperial Retreat (1978) The Pax Britannica Trilogy comprises three books of history written by Jan Morris. The books cover the British Empire, from the earliest days of the East India Company to the troubled years of independence and nineteen-sixties post-colonialism. The books were written and published over a ten-year period, beginning in 1968 with Pax Britannica: The Climax of Empire. The books in chronological order are;", "score": "1.4336932" }, { "id": "32835059", "title": "America, Empire of Liberty", "text": " America, Empire of Liberty: A New History is a book on the history of the United States by author David Reynolds published in the United Kingdom in January 2009 by Penguin and in the United States in October 2009.", "score": "1.4298722" }, { "id": "6652452", "title": "The Scarlet Empire", "text": " The Scarlet Empire is a dystopian novel written by David MacLean Parry, a political satire first published in 1906. The book was one item in the major wave of utopian and dystopian literature that characterized the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.", "score": "1.4293455" }, { "id": "14440269", "title": "The Historians' History of the World", "text": " Google Books link to Volume VII Part XI: The History of the Later Roman Empire states that, along with over 75 additional authors, the work is based chiefly upon the following authorities: Agathias, Appian, Augustan History, J. B. Bury, Henry Fynes Clinton, George Kedrenos, Anna Komnene, Cassius Dio, Doukas (historian), Einhard, Eutropius (historian), George Finlay, Heinrich Gelzer, Edward Gibbon, Wilhelm von Giesebrecht, Ferdinand Gregorovius, Gustav Hertzberg, Thomas Hodgkin (historian), Jordanes, John Malalas, Procopius, Leopold von Ranke, Strabo, Tacitus, Marcus Velleius Paterculus, Georg Weber, Joannes Zonaras, and Zosimus. Beginning with the reign of Arcadius in 395, Book I: The Later Roman Empire in the ", "score": "1.4255883" } ]
[ "Empire (H. Beam Piper book)\n Empire is a collection of short stories by American writer H. Beam Piper, edited by John F. Carr. The book was published in 1981 by Ace Books, and again in 1986. Most of these stories take place in his Terro-Human Future History, with the sole exception being \"The Return\".", "The Course of Empire (history book)\n The book was widely-praised, called \"a permanent contribution to history\" by Kirkus. The book was awarded a National Book Award in 1953.", "Otia Imperialia\n Otia Imperialia (\"Recreation for an Emperor\") is an early 13th-century encyclopedic work, the best known work of Gervase of Tilbury. It is an example of Speculum literature. Also known as the \"Book of Marvels\", it primarily concerns the three fields of history, geography, and physics, but its credibility has been questioned by numerous scholars including philosopher Gottfried Leibniz, who was alerted to the fact that it contains many mythological stories. Its manner of writing is perhaps because the work was written to provide entertainment to Holy Roman Emperor Otto IV. However, many scholars consider it a very important work in that it \"recognizes the correctness of the papal claims in the conflict between Church and Empire.\" It was written between 1210 and 1214, although some give the dates as between 1209 and 1214 and numerous authors state it was published c.1211.", "Annals of the Empire\n Annals of the Empire (Annales de l’Empire) is a history of Germany written by the French philosopher and author Voltaire at the request of Princess Luise Dorothea of Saxe-Meiningen in 1753. The first volume appeared in December 1753 and the second in March 1754. It is largely compiled from previous work by German historians: Voltaire described his role as like an architect, assembling a building from individual pieces of masonry.", "Fiction set in ancient Rome\nEmpire of the Atom, by A. E. van Vogt, translates Graves' novel about Claudius(above) into a science fiction context. ; The Foundation series by Isaac Asimov, about the fall of a galactic empire, is derived from Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. ; Dominic Flandry series by Poul Andersen, a space empire similarly inspired by Gibbon's history (and by Asimov) is decaying and about to collapse into a Long Night of barbarism; a heroic secret agent fights to stave off this fate. ; Julian Comstock by Robert Charles Wilson, about a post-apocalyptic America transformed into a neo-Roman Empire, and a high born youth who, like Julian the Apostate, fights the power of the Church. ; Bread and Circuses (Star Trek: The Original Series) ; Tarzan ", "The Course of Empire (history book)\n The Course of Empire is a 1952 book by the American journalist and historian Bernard DeVoto. It is the third volume of a trilogy that includes The Year of Decision (1942) and Across the Wide Missouri (1947).", "Arkady Martine\n Martine's first novel, A Memory Called Empire, published in 2019, is the beginning of her Teixcalaan series. It is set in a future where the Teixcalaanli empire governs most of human space, and is about to absorb Lsel, an independent mining station. Lsel ambassador Mahit Dzmare is sent to the imperial capital to prevent this, and finds herself embroiled in the empire's succession crisis. Martine said that the book was in many respects a fictional version of her postdoctoral research on Byzantine imperialism on the frontier to Armenia in the 11th century, particularly the annexation of the Kingdom of Ani. In The Verge, Andrew Liptak praised the novel as a \"brilliant blend of cyberpunk, space opera, ", "Lars Brownworth\n the murderous Julio-Claudian Dynasty. All of his previous books reached the New York Times Best Seller Lists. He made his television debut in the Netflix series Rise of Empires: Ottomans, released in 2020. He maintains a blog called Finding History where he responds to reader and listener submitted questions. He has been interviewed by The New York Times and NPR's \"Here and Now\", has written for The Wall Street Journal and resides in Stony Brook, New York, with his wife, the former Catherine Tipmore. He used to serve as the chair of the history department at Washington Christian Academy in Olney, Maryland.", "Empire (Vidal novel)\n Empire is the fourth historical novel in the Narratives of Empire series by Gore Vidal, published in 1987. The novel concerns the fictional newspaper dynasty of half-sibling characters Caroline and Blaise Sanford. Playing these characters against real-life figures of the years 1898 to 1907, the novel portrays the conjunction of government and mass media in the creation of modern-day America. As with Vidal's other books in his Narratives of Empire series, this novel offers an insight into the journalism of the time, following the exploits of William Randolph Hearst in his efforts to displace Theodore Roosevelt as president in 1904. Following the events leading up to and following the ascension of Theodore Roosevelt to the presidency following William McKinley's assassination, it includes pithy portraits of such leading public figures of the day as Roosevelt, Hearst, Henry Brooks Adams, Henry James, Secretary of State John Hay and President William McKinley. In this tome, the descendants of Charlie Schuyler, the fictitious main character, continue the American saga of empire building. Nevertheless, most of the characters in this novel are nonfiction and historic.", "Empire of the East\n Empire of the East is a novel by Fred Saberhagen published in 1979.", "Servant of the Empire\n Servant of the Empire is a fantasy novel by American writers Raymond E. Feist and Janny Wurts. Published in 1990, it is the second book in the Empire Trilogy, preceded by 1987's Daughter of the Empire and followed by Mistress of the Empire in 1992.", "Empire (graphic novel)\n Empire is a 1978 graphic novel written by Samuel R. Delany and illustrated by Howard Chaykin.", "Encyclopedia of the Roman Empire\n The Encyclopedia of the Roman Empire, written by Matthew Bunson in 1994 and published by Facts on File, is a detailed depiction of the history of the Roman Empire. This work, of roughly 494 pages (a 2002 revised version contains 636 pages) stores more than 2,000 entries.", "The British Empire: A survey\nI. The Dominions and Dependencies of the Empire, Forewords by HRH the Duke of Connaught and the Rt. Hon. Leo Amery, First Lord of the Admiralty: 13 chapters by various authors ; II. The Story of the Empire, by Sir Charles Lucas ; III. Constitution, Administration, and Laws of the Empire'', by Prof. A. Berriedale Keith ; IV. The Resources of the Empire and Their Development, by Evans Lewin ; V. Health Problems of the Empire - Past, Present, and Future by Dr. Andrew Balfour and Dr. H. H. Scott ; VI. The Press and Communications of the Empire, by J. Saxon Mills ; VII. The Trade, Commerce, and Shipping of the Empire, by Sir Charles McLeod and Prof. A. W. Kirkaldy ; VIII. Makers of the Empire, by Hugh Gunn ; IX. The Native Races of the Empire, by Sir Godfrey Lagden ; X. The Universities and Educational Systems of the Empire, by Arthur Percival Newton ; XI. The Literature of the Empire and The Art of the Empire by Edward Salmon and Major A. A. Longden ; XII. Migration Within the Empire, by Major E. A. Belcher and James A. Williamson ", "Ronald Syme\n to the character of the men who are in charge of the imperial administration, in particular that of the colonies. In his own words, the \"strength and vitality of an empire is frequently due to the new aristocracy from the periphery\". This book is currently out of print. Syme's biography of Sallust (1964), based on his Sather Lectures at the University of California, is also regarded as authoritative. His four books and numerous essays on the Historia Augusta, including the publication Emperors and Biography: Studies in the Historia Augusta, firmly established the fraudulent nature of that work; he famously dubbed the anonymous ", "Daughter of the Empire\n Daughter of the Empire is a political fantasy novel by American writers Raymond E. Feist and Janny Wurts. Published in 1987, it is the first book in the Empire Trilogy and was followed by Servant of the Empire in 1990.", "Pax Britannica Trilogy\nHeaven’s Command: An Imperial Progress (1973) ; Pax Britannica: The Climax of Empire (1968) ; Farewell the Trumpets: An Imperial Retreat (1978) The Pax Britannica Trilogy comprises three books of history written by Jan Morris. The books cover the British Empire, from the earliest days of the East India Company to the troubled years of independence and nineteen-sixties post-colonialism. The books were written and published over a ten-year period, beginning in 1968 with Pax Britannica: The Climax of Empire. The books in chronological order are;", "America, Empire of Liberty\n America, Empire of Liberty: A New History is a book on the history of the United States by author David Reynolds published in the United Kingdom in January 2009 by Penguin and in the United States in October 2009.", "The Scarlet Empire\n The Scarlet Empire is a dystopian novel written by David MacLean Parry, a political satire first published in 1906. The book was one item in the major wave of utopian and dystopian literature that characterized the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.", "The Historians' History of the World\n Google Books link to Volume VII Part XI: The History of the Later Roman Empire states that, along with over 75 additional authors, the work is based chiefly upon the following authorities: Agathias, Appian, Augustan History, J. B. Bury, Henry Fynes Clinton, George Kedrenos, Anna Komnene, Cassius Dio, Doukas (historian), Einhard, Eutropius (historian), George Finlay, Heinrich Gelzer, Edward Gibbon, Wilhelm von Giesebrecht, Ferdinand Gregorovius, Gustav Hertzberg, Thomas Hodgkin (historian), Jordanes, John Malalas, Procopius, Leopold von Ranke, Strabo, Tacitus, Marcus Velleius Paterculus, Georg Weber, Joannes Zonaras, and Zosimus. Beginning with the reign of Arcadius in 395, Book I: The Later Roman Empire in the " ]
Who was the director of The Tree?
[ "Todd Field", "William Todd Field" ]
director
The Tree (1993 film)
5,960,645
82
[ { "id": "31830643", "title": "The Tree (2010 film)", "text": " The Tree was written and directed by Julie Bertuccelli, it is based on the screenplay by Elizabeth J. Mars, produced by Sue Taylor of Taylor Media, Yael Fogiel and Laetitia Gonzalez of Les Films du Poisson, and is a co-production between Australia and France. It came to be a co-production when Julie Bertuccelli was given the book Our Father Who Art in the Tree by a close friend. When she looked into getting the rights for the film she found that Australian producer Sue Taylor already had them, however she did not have a director. It just so happened that Julie is a director, and from there the co-production was born. The tree used in the film is Teviotville Tree, located in the small town of Teviotville in the state of Queensland. It has a 34 m spread, 20 m height and 2.31 m diameter at 1 m above ground, which is the narrowest point. The tree has low branches which have not been pruned off, and when they are laden with fruit they reach the ground. It is very rare to find this in a Moreton Bay Fig tree. It is estimated that it was planted in 1880.", "score": "1.6257787" }, { "id": "3067364", "title": "Orange Tree Theatre", "text": " From 1986 to 2014 the theatre ran a trainee director scheme, each year appointing two young assistant directors. Graduates of this scheme included Rachel Kavanaugh, Timothy Sheader, Sean Holmes, Dominic Hill, and Anthony Clark. This was replaced by a Resident Director position in 2014/15. The Orange Tree currently runs an MA in Theatre Directing with St Mary's University, Twickenham which started in 2016–17.", "score": "1.5631036" }, { "id": "15172973", "title": "The Tree (1969 film)", "text": " The Tree is a 1969 American film that was written, produced, and directed, by Robert Guenette. A psychological drama revolving around the kidnapping of a young child, the film stars Jordan Christopher, Eileen Heckart, Alan Landers, Gale Dixon, James Broderick, Kathy Ryan, Ruth Ford, and George Rose.", "score": "1.5503144" }, { "id": "4895642", "title": "The Tree (1993 film)", "text": " The Tree is a 1993 short film that Todd Field created while a fellow at the AFI Conservatory. It is a non-verbal dramatic piece following the life of a boy born at the turn of the century. The single setting, an apple tree set high on a rural ridge, is where we glimpse the boy mature, fall in love, go to war, return with his own son, and finally pay his last respects as a very old man who has seen much change. The set was designed using the tree as a scale foreground visual anchor and employing forced perspective for other items appearing in frame, including distant mountains, a train, and a town in transition. The scene changes from season to season and year to year all achieved practically using trompe-l'œil. The film is loosely based upon and inspired by the story The Giving Tree by Shel Silverstein.", "score": "1.533947" }, { "id": "31830638", "title": "The Tree (2010 film)", "text": " The Tree is a French-Australian 2010 film co-produced between Australia and France. It was filmed in the small town of Boonah in Queensland, Australia, and follows the lives of Dawn (Charlotte Gainsbourg) and her four children after the unexpected death of her husband Peter (Aden Young). The film is an adaptation of the 2002 debut novel Our Father Who Art in the Tree by Australian writer and performer Judy Pascoe. The film closed the Cannes Film Festival on 23 May 2010 following the Awards Ceremony and received a seven-minute standing ovation. In addition, The Tree premiered at the 2010 Sydney Film Festival. The film is distributed in the US by Zeitgeist Films, opening on 15 July 2011 in New York, on 22 July in Los Angeles, Boston and Washington, D.C., and throughout the country over the summer.", "score": "1.5217158" }, { "id": "14581175", "title": "The Christmas Tree (1996 film)", "text": " The Christmas Tree is a 1996 American made-for-television Christmas drama film directed by Sally Field, starring Julie Harris and Andrew McCarthy and produced by Walt Disney Television which premiered on ABC on December 22, 1996.", "score": "1.5210862" }, { "id": "13431240", "title": "The Learning Tree", "text": " The film The Learning Tree is based on Gordon Parks's 1963 semi-autobiographical novel of the same name. Parks also wrote the screenplay, and as a result, the script for the movie did not deviate much from the book, except for featuring fewer characters for the sake of time. In addition to being the screenwriter, he was also the director, producer, and music composer. Assisting him with directing were Jack Aldworth and Fred Giles. Also working with Parks was James Lydon as associate producer and Burnett Guffey as cinematographer. These men tried to include as many black technicians as possible for the film. Parks personally chose Kyle Johnson to play the character of Newt, after a brief meeting with him in a Beverly Hills hotel. However, during the meeting, he gave no inclination that ", "score": "1.517122" }, { "id": "9217648", "title": "The Education of Little Tree (film)", "text": " things, disappeared off the face of the earth in Alabama, where he was a Ku Kluxer, and reappeared in the Oklahoma-Texas area near the Cherokee reservation of the western Cherokee nation, where he proceeded to write several books. It strikes me he spent his literary life, and whoever he was in his second phase, in some kind of grand apology for his first life.\" Friedenberg was originally drawn to the book and chose to adapt it as he felt that \"characters and milieu they were in represented everything that was good about America and everything that was bad.\" Prior to Friedenberg's involvement, filmmakers Steven Spielberg and his former producing partnership between Peter Guber and Jon Peters had considered adapting the work into a feature film. Joseph Ashton, who stars in the film as the titular Little Tree, is himself of Cherokee ancestry.", "score": "1.5086992" }, { "id": "12865723", "title": "Bob and the Trees", "text": " Director Diego Ongaro moved from Paris to Brooklyn, New York to Sandisfield, Massachusetts, where he befriended Bob Tarasuk, a farmer and logger. Tarasuk and Matthew Gallagher, Tarasuk's son-in-law and business partner, took Ongaro to their work, where he \"saw the conditions these guys lived under and how hard it is and the knowledge required\", and, after he saw \"how charismatic a character Bob was\", Ongaro \"felt [he] had a story\". Originally a short released in 2011, the film was expanded to feature-length with fifteen days of shooting in November 2014.", "score": "1.5039461" }, { "id": "14581176", "title": "The Christmas Tree (1996 film)", "text": " A story about a forming friendship between an elderly nun, Sister Anthony (Julie Harris), and New York's Rockefeller Center's head gardener Richard Reilly (Andrew McCarthy), who wants to fell a tree which she has been growing for decades and move it to New York City for Christmas display.", "score": "1.5037715" }, { "id": "29169408", "title": "Brian Metcalf", "text": " Metcalf directed the micro-budgeted drama/thriller The Lost Tree. The premiere was held at the TCL Chinese Theatre before a limited theatrical release in 2012. Metcalf wrote, directed and produced Living Among Us which stars John Heard (in his final performance), William Sadler, James Russo, Esme Bianco, Andrew Keegan and Thomas Ian Nicholas. The film was distributed by Sony Pictures Home Entertainment and given a limited theatrical release in 2017. The film was panned by critics, carrying a 14% rating at Rotten Tomatoes. Metcalf designed the poster for the Syrian documentary Little Gandhi, and won the Murray Weissman Award for it. Metcalf created, funded and directed the drama/thriller film Adverse, with a cast including Mickey ", "score": "1.501703" }, { "id": "5722660", "title": "Thomas Tree", "text": "The Trees ; “Some Girls” (1982) – starring Gretchen Murray written by Thomas Tree and CJC – Directed by Paul Barrera Christy McCool ; “Neals Deal With Meals” (1990) – directed by Vincent Prect, written by Thomas Tree and CJC ; “Old Man Bagman” (1991) written by Thomas Tree and CJC – directed by Robert Reed Altman, (stars Albert Crane IV and is dedicated to his memory) Thomas Tree & Cory Joseph Coppage ; “So Quickly” (1993) – starring Jade Vaccarelli, directed by Robert Reed Altman ", "score": "1.4957471" }, { "id": "28088835", "title": "Harold Lee Tichenor", "text": " (director) ; Boreal Forest: Spring and Summer (1978) (director) ; Gyros: Handle with Care (1978) (producer/director) ; The Snow War (1978) (writer/producer/director) ; Three Rivers (1978) (director) ; Edmonton Art Gallery (1977) (director) ; Katei Seikatsu: Japanese Family Life (1976) (producer/director) ; The Magic of Water (1975) (director) ; Chief Dan George Speaks (1974) (codirector/editor) ; Concerto for Water, Sun and Wilderness (1972) (director) ; Together (1972) (director) ; Bharata Natyam (1971) (director) ; Three Very Short Films (1967–1971) (director) ; Yard Limit (1970) (codirector) ; Life Cycle of Leucochloridium variae (1969) (director) - about Leucochloridium variae parasite ; Four Passes of the Invisible Hand (1966) (director) ", "score": "1.4954658" }, { "id": "15766440", "title": "The Halloween Tree (film)", "text": "Gordon Hunt - Recording Director ; Jill Ziegenhagen - Talent Coordinator ; Kris Zimmerman - Recording Director, Animation Casting Director ; David Kirschner - Executive Producer ; Mark Young - Co-Executive Producer ; Kunio Shimamura - Associate Producer ; Catherine Winder - Production Executive ; Al Gmuer - Art Director ; William DeBoer Jr. - Negative Consultant ; Jerry Mills - Technical Director ; Michelle Douglas - Supervising Editor ; Joy Avery - Program Executive ; Jim Katz - Production Manager ; Floro Dery - Character Designer ; Edwin Collins - Supervising Recording Engineer ; Alvy Dorman - Recording Engineer ; Jim Hearn - Track Reader ; Sync Sound - Post Production Sound Services ", "score": "1.4944541" }, { "id": "12212483", "title": "The Fruitless Tree", "text": " The director who is a married woman without any children in real life, confronts with the issue of infertility which is a concern in Niger. She shares a collection of stories about wives and husbands who refuse to be tested.", "score": "1.484525" }, { "id": "5722655", "title": "Thomas Tree", "text": " Trees were regulars at the Blue Note, a Boulder nightclub where they performed with the likes of Hüsker Dü, Mau Mau 55, Firehose, Aviators, Buddy Rich. When Tree and CJC moved their partnership to Hollywood in 1986, they renamed the project Bodhitrees. In addition to Tree and CJC, Bodhitrees included Ronnie Nelson (Bass) James \"Fabe\" Fabery- (Guitar) Michael King (Bass) Alexander Christopher (Guitar) and drummer Ron Rosing (from Billy Corgan's first band \"The Marked\"). Tree was also hired by Rolling Stones producer Don Was to film the first 360-video with 'birds-eye' technology of a Rolling Stones concert at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada on March 4, 2006. Tree (Tectonic Phlegm Publishing) has been a member of ASCAP since 1988.", "score": "1.4809382" }, { "id": "7670364", "title": "The Tree of Knowledge (1920 film)", "text": " The Tree of Knowledge is a lost 1920 American silent drama film produced by Famous Players-Lasky and distributed by Paramount Pictures. It was directed by William C. deMille and starred Robert Warwick. It is based on an 1897 play, The Tree of Knowledge, by R. C. Carton. In a prologue to the film involving a Garden of Eden scene, Yvonne Gardelle appears nude as Lilith to tempt Adam, who was played by dancer Theodore Kosloff. The two actors of the prologue were promoted in print advertisements for the film.", "score": "1.4807444" }, { "id": "11285438", "title": "Jonathan Messer", "text": " film Joshua Tree starring Taylor Dayne. Messer also worked as the Assistant Director to Jim Sharman in the production of Three Furies at the Sydney Opera House. He has also directed and produced music videos for the bands Tiltmeter, Nokturnal and 67 Special. Messer trained in Los Angeles for three years, and developed his film making skills and experience studying film direction at the American Film Institute. He then worked as production assistant for the Kennedy-Marshall Company producing feature films such as Seabiscuit and The Bourne Supremacy. Before graduation from the MFA program in directing at the American Film Institute (AFI) in 2002, Messer underwent an internship at Killer Films in New York, working in ", "score": "1.4781106" }, { "id": "2138394", "title": "The Christmas Tree (1966 film)", "text": " The Christmas Tree is a 1966 British children's adventure film about getting a Christmas tree to a London hospital for Christmas. It follows their escapades such as the difficulties in getting the tree inside a public bus, on the back of a jeep, and carrying it through villages and rescuing it from a river. Directed by Jim Clark and written by Ed Harper and Michael Barnes, it stars William Burleigh, Kate Nicholls and Anthony Honour, with an early role for Brian Blessed as a policeman.", "score": "1.475637" }, { "id": "31260756", "title": "Dore Schary", "text": " for 556 performances. (It was later filmed, without Schary's involvement.) Less successful was The Highest Tree (1959), which Schary wrote, produced and directed (and featured a young Robert Redford in the cast ) and Triple Play (1959), a collection of short plays, which he produced. Schary wrote and produced the film version of Sunrise at Campobello, which was released by Warner Brothers, directed by Donehue, in 1960. He also had a brief uncredited role in the film as Chairman of the Connecticut Delegation. On Broadway, Schary had another huge hit as producer and director with the Meredith Wilson musical, The Unsinkable Molly Brown (1960) starring Tammy Grimes, which ", "score": "1.4700456" } ]
[ "The Tree (2010 film)\n The Tree was written and directed by Julie Bertuccelli, it is based on the screenplay by Elizabeth J. Mars, produced by Sue Taylor of Taylor Media, Yael Fogiel and Laetitia Gonzalez of Les Films du Poisson, and is a co-production between Australia and France. It came to be a co-production when Julie Bertuccelli was given the book Our Father Who Art in the Tree by a close friend. When she looked into getting the rights for the film she found that Australian producer Sue Taylor already had them, however she did not have a director. It just so happened that Julie is a director, and from there the co-production was born. The tree used in the film is Teviotville Tree, located in the small town of Teviotville in the state of Queensland. It has a 34 m spread, 20 m height and 2.31 m diameter at 1 m above ground, which is the narrowest point. The tree has low branches which have not been pruned off, and when they are laden with fruit they reach the ground. It is very rare to find this in a Moreton Bay Fig tree. It is estimated that it was planted in 1880.", "Orange Tree Theatre\n From 1986 to 2014 the theatre ran a trainee director scheme, each year appointing two young assistant directors. Graduates of this scheme included Rachel Kavanaugh, Timothy Sheader, Sean Holmes, Dominic Hill, and Anthony Clark. This was replaced by a Resident Director position in 2014/15. The Orange Tree currently runs an MA in Theatre Directing with St Mary's University, Twickenham which started in 2016–17.", "The Tree (1969 film)\n The Tree is a 1969 American film that was written, produced, and directed, by Robert Guenette. A psychological drama revolving around the kidnapping of a young child, the film stars Jordan Christopher, Eileen Heckart, Alan Landers, Gale Dixon, James Broderick, Kathy Ryan, Ruth Ford, and George Rose.", "The Tree (1993 film)\n The Tree is a 1993 short film that Todd Field created while a fellow at the AFI Conservatory. It is a non-verbal dramatic piece following the life of a boy born at the turn of the century. The single setting, an apple tree set high on a rural ridge, is where we glimpse the boy mature, fall in love, go to war, return with his own son, and finally pay his last respects as a very old man who has seen much change. The set was designed using the tree as a scale foreground visual anchor and employing forced perspective for other items appearing in frame, including distant mountains, a train, and a town in transition. The scene changes from season to season and year to year all achieved practically using trompe-l'œil. The film is loosely based upon and inspired by the story The Giving Tree by Shel Silverstein.", "The Tree (2010 film)\n The Tree is a French-Australian 2010 film co-produced between Australia and France. It was filmed in the small town of Boonah in Queensland, Australia, and follows the lives of Dawn (Charlotte Gainsbourg) and her four children after the unexpected death of her husband Peter (Aden Young). The film is an adaptation of the 2002 debut novel Our Father Who Art in the Tree by Australian writer and performer Judy Pascoe. The film closed the Cannes Film Festival on 23 May 2010 following the Awards Ceremony and received a seven-minute standing ovation. In addition, The Tree premiered at the 2010 Sydney Film Festival. The film is distributed in the US by Zeitgeist Films, opening on 15 July 2011 in New York, on 22 July in Los Angeles, Boston and Washington, D.C., and throughout the country over the summer.", "The Christmas Tree (1996 film)\n The Christmas Tree is a 1996 American made-for-television Christmas drama film directed by Sally Field, starring Julie Harris and Andrew McCarthy and produced by Walt Disney Television which premiered on ABC on December 22, 1996.", "The Learning Tree\n The film The Learning Tree is based on Gordon Parks's 1963 semi-autobiographical novel of the same name. Parks also wrote the screenplay, and as a result, the script for the movie did not deviate much from the book, except for featuring fewer characters for the sake of time. In addition to being the screenwriter, he was also the director, producer, and music composer. Assisting him with directing were Jack Aldworth and Fred Giles. Also working with Parks was James Lydon as associate producer and Burnett Guffey as cinematographer. These men tried to include as many black technicians as possible for the film. Parks personally chose Kyle Johnson to play the character of Newt, after a brief meeting with him in a Beverly Hills hotel. However, during the meeting, he gave no inclination that ", "The Education of Little Tree (film)\n things, disappeared off the face of the earth in Alabama, where he was a Ku Kluxer, and reappeared in the Oklahoma-Texas area near the Cherokee reservation of the western Cherokee nation, where he proceeded to write several books. It strikes me he spent his literary life, and whoever he was in his second phase, in some kind of grand apology for his first life.\" Friedenberg was originally drawn to the book and chose to adapt it as he felt that \"characters and milieu they were in represented everything that was good about America and everything that was bad.\" Prior to Friedenberg's involvement, filmmakers Steven Spielberg and his former producing partnership between Peter Guber and Jon Peters had considered adapting the work into a feature film. Joseph Ashton, who stars in the film as the titular Little Tree, is himself of Cherokee ancestry.", "Bob and the Trees\n Director Diego Ongaro moved from Paris to Brooklyn, New York to Sandisfield, Massachusetts, where he befriended Bob Tarasuk, a farmer and logger. Tarasuk and Matthew Gallagher, Tarasuk's son-in-law and business partner, took Ongaro to their work, where he \"saw the conditions these guys lived under and how hard it is and the knowledge required\", and, after he saw \"how charismatic a character Bob was\", Ongaro \"felt [he] had a story\". Originally a short released in 2011, the film was expanded to feature-length with fifteen days of shooting in November 2014.", "The Christmas Tree (1996 film)\n A story about a forming friendship between an elderly nun, Sister Anthony (Julie Harris), and New York's Rockefeller Center's head gardener Richard Reilly (Andrew McCarthy), who wants to fell a tree which she has been growing for decades and move it to New York City for Christmas display.", "Brian Metcalf\n Metcalf directed the micro-budgeted drama/thriller The Lost Tree. The premiere was held at the TCL Chinese Theatre before a limited theatrical release in 2012. Metcalf wrote, directed and produced Living Among Us which stars John Heard (in his final performance), William Sadler, James Russo, Esme Bianco, Andrew Keegan and Thomas Ian Nicholas. The film was distributed by Sony Pictures Home Entertainment and given a limited theatrical release in 2017. The film was panned by critics, carrying a 14% rating at Rotten Tomatoes. Metcalf designed the poster for the Syrian documentary Little Gandhi, and won the Murray Weissman Award for it. Metcalf created, funded and directed the drama/thriller film Adverse, with a cast including Mickey ", "Thomas Tree\nThe Trees ; “Some Girls” (1982) – starring Gretchen Murray written by Thomas Tree and CJC – Directed by Paul Barrera Christy McCool ; “Neals Deal With Meals” (1990) – directed by Vincent Prect, written by Thomas Tree and CJC ; “Old Man Bagman” (1991) written by Thomas Tree and CJC – directed by Robert Reed Altman, (stars Albert Crane IV and is dedicated to his memory) Thomas Tree & Cory Joseph Coppage ; “So Quickly” (1993) – starring Jade Vaccarelli, directed by Robert Reed Altman ", "Harold Lee Tichenor\n (director) ; Boreal Forest: Spring and Summer (1978) (director) ; Gyros: Handle with Care (1978) (producer/director) ; The Snow War (1978) (writer/producer/director) ; Three Rivers (1978) (director) ; Edmonton Art Gallery (1977) (director) ; Katei Seikatsu: Japanese Family Life (1976) (producer/director) ; The Magic of Water (1975) (director) ; Chief Dan George Speaks (1974) (codirector/editor) ; Concerto for Water, Sun and Wilderness (1972) (director) ; Together (1972) (director) ; Bharata Natyam (1971) (director) ; Three Very Short Films (1967–1971) (director) ; Yard Limit (1970) (codirector) ; Life Cycle of Leucochloridium variae (1969) (director) - about Leucochloridium variae parasite ; Four Passes of the Invisible Hand (1966) (director) ", "The Halloween Tree (film)\nGordon Hunt - Recording Director ; Jill Ziegenhagen - Talent Coordinator ; Kris Zimmerman - Recording Director, Animation Casting Director ; David Kirschner - Executive Producer ; Mark Young - Co-Executive Producer ; Kunio Shimamura - Associate Producer ; Catherine Winder - Production Executive ; Al Gmuer - Art Director ; William DeBoer Jr. - Negative Consultant ; Jerry Mills - Technical Director ; Michelle Douglas - Supervising Editor ; Joy Avery - Program Executive ; Jim Katz - Production Manager ; Floro Dery - Character Designer ; Edwin Collins - Supervising Recording Engineer ; Alvy Dorman - Recording Engineer ; Jim Hearn - Track Reader ; Sync Sound - Post Production Sound Services ", "The Fruitless Tree\n The director who is a married woman without any children in real life, confronts with the issue of infertility which is a concern in Niger. She shares a collection of stories about wives and husbands who refuse to be tested.", "Thomas Tree\n Trees were regulars at the Blue Note, a Boulder nightclub where they performed with the likes of Hüsker Dü, Mau Mau 55, Firehose, Aviators, Buddy Rich. When Tree and CJC moved their partnership to Hollywood in 1986, they renamed the project Bodhitrees. In addition to Tree and CJC, Bodhitrees included Ronnie Nelson (Bass) James \"Fabe\" Fabery- (Guitar) Michael King (Bass) Alexander Christopher (Guitar) and drummer Ron Rosing (from Billy Corgan's first band \"The Marked\"). Tree was also hired by Rolling Stones producer Don Was to film the first 360-video with 'birds-eye' technology of a Rolling Stones concert at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada on March 4, 2006. Tree (Tectonic Phlegm Publishing) has been a member of ASCAP since 1988.", "The Tree of Knowledge (1920 film)\n The Tree of Knowledge is a lost 1920 American silent drama film produced by Famous Players-Lasky and distributed by Paramount Pictures. It was directed by William C. deMille and starred Robert Warwick. It is based on an 1897 play, The Tree of Knowledge, by R. C. Carton. In a prologue to the film involving a Garden of Eden scene, Yvonne Gardelle appears nude as Lilith to tempt Adam, who was played by dancer Theodore Kosloff. The two actors of the prologue were promoted in print advertisements for the film.", "Jonathan Messer\n film Joshua Tree starring Taylor Dayne. Messer also worked as the Assistant Director to Jim Sharman in the production of Three Furies at the Sydney Opera House. He has also directed and produced music videos for the bands Tiltmeter, Nokturnal and 67 Special. Messer trained in Los Angeles for three years, and developed his film making skills and experience studying film direction at the American Film Institute. He then worked as production assistant for the Kennedy-Marshall Company producing feature films such as Seabiscuit and The Bourne Supremacy. Before graduation from the MFA program in directing at the American Film Institute (AFI) in 2002, Messer underwent an internship at Killer Films in New York, working in ", "The Christmas Tree (1966 film)\n The Christmas Tree is a 1966 British children's adventure film about getting a Christmas tree to a London hospital for Christmas. It follows their escapades such as the difficulties in getting the tree inside a public bus, on the back of a jeep, and carrying it through villages and rescuing it from a river. Directed by Jim Clark and written by Ed Harper and Michael Barnes, it stars William Burleigh, Kate Nicholls and Anthony Honour, with an early role for Brian Blessed as a policeman.", "Dore Schary\n for 556 performances. (It was later filmed, without Schary's involvement.) Less successful was The Highest Tree (1959), which Schary wrote, produced and directed (and featured a young Robert Redford in the cast ) and Triple Play (1959), a collection of short plays, which he produced. Schary wrote and produced the film version of Sunrise at Campobello, which was released by Warner Brothers, directed by Donehue, in 1960. He also had a brief uncredited role in the film as Chairman of the Connecticut Delegation. On Broadway, Schary had another huge hit as producer and director with the Meredith Wilson musical, The Unsinkable Molly Brown (1960) starring Tammy Grimes, which " ]
Who was the composer of I'm in Love?
[ "Bobby Ljunggren", "Robert Vasilis Ljunggren", "Robert Vasilis Engdahl" ]
composer
I'm in Love (Sanna Nielsen song)
75,913
78
[ { "id": "31191650", "title": "I Am in Love", "text": " \"I Am in Love\" is a 1953 popular song written by Cole Porter, for his musical Can-Can, where it was introduced by Peter Cookson.", "score": "1.704954" }, { "id": "9316754", "title": "I'm in Love with a Memory", "text": " The song was composed by Don Lee and George White. It was released on Crescent 101 in 1981/1982.", "score": "1.6949222" }, { "id": "3298068", "title": "I'm in Love (Evelyn "Champagne" King song)", "text": " \"I'm in Love\" is a 1981 single by singer Evelyn \"Champagne\" King. The single was a hit on three different music charts in the United States, hitting number one on both the Soul and dance charts and number 40 on the Billboard Hot 100. It was the first of two chart entries by King to reach number one on both the Soul and dance charts.", "score": "1.6220545" }, { "id": "12578470", "title": "I'm in Love with You (album)", "text": " Album Singles", "score": "1.6196187" }, { "id": "30740052", "title": "I'm in Love with You (Joy Williams song)", "text": "The song has been frequently popularised through YouTube fan videos. ", "score": "1.61652" }, { "id": "12578469", "title": "I'm in Love with You (album)", "text": "David Krieger - art direction ; Joel Brodsky - photography ; Mia Krinsky - co-ordination ; Bob Scerbo - production supervision ; Abrim Tillmon - arrangement, songwriting ; James Mitchell - arrangement, songwriting, production (credited as Katouzzion) ", "score": "1.6158909" }, { "id": "25529587", "title": "I'm in Love (Melba Moore album)", "text": " I'm in Love is the sixteenth album by singer Melba Moore, released in 1988.", "score": "1.6142516" }, { "id": "9203604", "title": "I'm in Love (Evelyn King album)", "text": "Singles ", "score": "1.6088564" }, { "id": "8063591", "title": "I'm in Love (Bobby Womack song)", "text": " \"I'm in Love\" is a 1968 song written by Bobby Womack. It was first recorded by Wilson Pickett which gave him a top-ten R&B hit on Billboard's chart in 1968, peaking at number 4 as well as peaking at number 45 on the Billboard Hot 100.", "score": "1.5963302" }, { "id": "9203599", "title": "I'm in Love (Evelyn King album)", "text": " I'm in Love is the fourth album released by R&B singer Evelyn \"Champagne\" King on RCA Records in 1981. It was produced by Morrie Brown, Willie Lester, Rodney Brown, Kashif, and Lawrence Jones.", "score": "1.5940226" }, { "id": "3298069", "title": "I'm in Love (Evelyn "Champagne" King song)", "text": "12\" single PD-12244 (US) 7\" single PB-12243 (US) ", "score": "1.5796757" }, { "id": "8900454", "title": "I'm in Love Again (song)", "text": " \"I'm in Love Again\" is a 1956 single by Fats Domino. The song was written by Domino and his longtime collaborator, Dave Bartholomew. The single was Domino's fifth number one on the R&B Best Sellers list, where it stayed at the top for seven weeks. \"I'm in Love Again\" also peaked at number three for two weeks on the pop chart. \"I'm in Love Again\" was a double-sided hit for Domino as the B-side of the pop standard, \"My Blue Heaven\".", "score": "1.571996" }, { "id": "5665289", "title": "I'm in Love (Ginuwine song)", "text": " \"I'm in Love\" is a song by American recording artist Ginuwine. It was co-written and produced by Troy Oliver for his fifth studio album Back II Da Basics (2005). Released as the second and final single from the album, it reached number 69 on the US Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart.", "score": "1.5702227" }, { "id": "14060736", "title": "I'm Not at All in Love", "text": " \"I'm Not at All in Love\" is a popular song written by Richard Adler and Jerry Ross, published in 1954. It was first presented in the musical The Pajama Game by Janis Paige. In the 1957 film version, it was sung by Doris Day and it appears in the soundtrack album.", "score": "1.5628413" }, { "id": "12578467", "title": "I'm in Love with You (album)", "text": " I'm in Love with You is the third studio album by American vocal group, The Detroit Emeralds, released in 1973 through Westbound Records.", "score": "1.5525908" }, { "id": "30740050", "title": "I'm in Love with You (Joy Williams song)", "text": " \"I'm in Love with You\" is a 2005 song by Joy Williams off her third album, Genesis. Joy said that the song is dedicated to her husband stating in a Christian interview: ''\"I'm in Love with You\" is a love song to my best friend and the man that I have committed my life to. Nate and I were married in June of last year (2004). Every single line from this song is a memory for me, and each line has been taken from my journal. Nate didn't have any idea I was writing this song. I never told him until the day ", "score": "1.5493213" }, { "id": "8063592", "title": "I'm in Love (Bobby Womack song)", "text": " \"I'm in Love\" was written in response to some of the criticism he had been receiving after marrying the widow of the recently deceased Sam Cooke.", "score": "1.5338006" }, { "id": "12399040", "title": "Jule Styne", "text": " Doris Day in 1948), and \"I Fall In Love Too Easily.\" He collaborated with Leo Robin on the score for the 1955 musical film My Sister Eileen. In 1947, Styne wrote his first score for a Broadway musical, High Button Shoes, with Cahn, and over the next several decades wrote the scores for many Broadway shows, most notably Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, Peter Pan (additional music), Bells Are Ringing, Gypsy, Do Re Mi, Funny Girl, Lorelei, Sugar (with a story based on the movie Some Like It Hot, but all new music), and the Tony-winning Hallelujah, Baby!. Styne wrote original music for the short-lived themed amusement park Freedomland U.S.A. ", "score": "1.5290147" }, { "id": "31293273", "title": "In Case You're in Love", "text": "Conductor: Harold Battiste ; Arranger, Producer: Sonny Bono ; Mastering: Bob Irwin ; Engineer: Stan Ross ", "score": "1.5247761" }, { "id": "3298071", "title": "I'm in Love (Evelyn "Champagne" King song)", "text": " Janet Jackson sampled \"I'm In Love\" in her 2004 song \"R&B Junkie.\"", "score": "1.5216331" } ]
[ "I Am in Love\n \"I Am in Love\" is a 1953 popular song written by Cole Porter, for his musical Can-Can, where it was introduced by Peter Cookson.", "I'm in Love with a Memory\n The song was composed by Don Lee and George White. It was released on Crescent 101 in 1981/1982.", "I'm in Love (Evelyn "Champagne" King song)\n \"I'm in Love\" is a 1981 single by singer Evelyn \"Champagne\" King. The single was a hit on three different music charts in the United States, hitting number one on both the Soul and dance charts and number 40 on the Billboard Hot 100. It was the first of two chart entries by King to reach number one on both the Soul and dance charts.", "I'm in Love with You (album)\n Album Singles", "I'm in Love with You (Joy Williams song)\nThe song has been frequently popularised through YouTube fan videos. ", "I'm in Love with You (album)\nDavid Krieger - art direction ; Joel Brodsky - photography ; Mia Krinsky - co-ordination ; Bob Scerbo - production supervision ; Abrim Tillmon - arrangement, songwriting ; James Mitchell - arrangement, songwriting, production (credited as Katouzzion) ", "I'm in Love (Melba Moore album)\n I'm in Love is the sixteenth album by singer Melba Moore, released in 1988.", "I'm in Love (Evelyn King album)\nSingles ", "I'm in Love (Bobby Womack song)\n \"I'm in Love\" is a 1968 song written by Bobby Womack. It was first recorded by Wilson Pickett which gave him a top-ten R&B hit on Billboard's chart in 1968, peaking at number 4 as well as peaking at number 45 on the Billboard Hot 100.", "I'm in Love (Evelyn King album)\n I'm in Love is the fourth album released by R&B singer Evelyn \"Champagne\" King on RCA Records in 1981. It was produced by Morrie Brown, Willie Lester, Rodney Brown, Kashif, and Lawrence Jones.", "I'm in Love (Evelyn "Champagne" King song)\n12\" single PD-12244 (US) 7\" single PB-12243 (US) ", "I'm in Love Again (song)\n \"I'm in Love Again\" is a 1956 single by Fats Domino. The song was written by Domino and his longtime collaborator, Dave Bartholomew. The single was Domino's fifth number one on the R&B Best Sellers list, where it stayed at the top for seven weeks. \"I'm in Love Again\" also peaked at number three for two weeks on the pop chart. \"I'm in Love Again\" was a double-sided hit for Domino as the B-side of the pop standard, \"My Blue Heaven\".", "I'm in Love (Ginuwine song)\n \"I'm in Love\" is a song by American recording artist Ginuwine. It was co-written and produced by Troy Oliver for his fifth studio album Back II Da Basics (2005). Released as the second and final single from the album, it reached number 69 on the US Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart.", "I'm Not at All in Love\n \"I'm Not at All in Love\" is a popular song written by Richard Adler and Jerry Ross, published in 1954. It was first presented in the musical The Pajama Game by Janis Paige. In the 1957 film version, it was sung by Doris Day and it appears in the soundtrack album.", "I'm in Love with You (album)\n I'm in Love with You is the third studio album by American vocal group, The Detroit Emeralds, released in 1973 through Westbound Records.", "I'm in Love with You (Joy Williams song)\n \"I'm in Love with You\" is a 2005 song by Joy Williams off her third album, Genesis. Joy said that the song is dedicated to her husband stating in a Christian interview: ''\"I'm in Love with You\" is a love song to my best friend and the man that I have committed my life to. Nate and I were married in June of last year (2004). Every single line from this song is a memory for me, and each line has been taken from my journal. Nate didn't have any idea I was writing this song. I never told him until the day ", "I'm in Love (Bobby Womack song)\n \"I'm in Love\" was written in response to some of the criticism he had been receiving after marrying the widow of the recently deceased Sam Cooke.", "Jule Styne\n Doris Day in 1948), and \"I Fall In Love Too Easily.\" He collaborated with Leo Robin on the score for the 1955 musical film My Sister Eileen. In 1947, Styne wrote his first score for a Broadway musical, High Button Shoes, with Cahn, and over the next several decades wrote the scores for many Broadway shows, most notably Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, Peter Pan (additional music), Bells Are Ringing, Gypsy, Do Re Mi, Funny Girl, Lorelei, Sugar (with a story based on the movie Some Like It Hot, but all new music), and the Tony-winning Hallelujah, Baby!. Styne wrote original music for the short-lived themed amusement park Freedomland U.S.A. ", "In Case You're in Love\nConductor: Harold Battiste ; Arranger, Producer: Sonny Bono ; Mastering: Bob Irwin ; Engineer: Stan Ross ", "I'm in Love (Evelyn "Champagne" King song)\n Janet Jackson sampled \"I'm In Love\" in her 2004 song \"R&B Junkie.\"" ]
What sport does Michael Gibson play?
[ "association football", "football", "soccer" ]
sport
Michael Gibson (soccer)
5,153,011
99
[ { "id": "40466", "title": "Darryl Gibson (lacrosse)", "text": " Darryl Gibson (born July 28, 1976 in Toronto, Ontario) is a Canadian lacrosse player for the Buffalo Bandits in the National Lacrosse League.", "score": "1.6570897" }, { "id": "30136057", "title": "Harry Gibson (field hockey)", "text": " Harry Jay Gibson (born 25 March 1993) is an English field hockey player, who plays as a goalkeeper for Surbiton and the England and Great Britain national teams. He was educated at Millfield.", "score": "1.6424105" }, { "id": "30136058", "title": "Harry Gibson (field hockey)", "text": " Gibson plays club hockey in the Men's England Hockey League Premier Division for Surbiton. He previously played for Loughborough Students and Hampstead & Westminster.", "score": "1.6392995" }, { "id": "25636170", "title": "Adam Gibson", "text": " Adam Matthew Gibson (born 30 October 1986) is an Australian professional basketball player for the Knox Raiders of the NBL1 South. He made his National Basketball League (NBL) debut in 2005, and has played for five NBL franchises. He is a two-time NBL champion, having won his first in 2007, with the Brisbane Bullets and his second in 2009, with the South Dragons. He is also a five-time All-NBL Team member and was crowned the NBL Best Defensive Player in 2009. Gibson is a long-time member of the Australian Boomers, having played at the 2012 London Olympics and at the 2010, and 2014 FIBA World Cups.", "score": "1.6345017" }, { "id": "5969275", "title": "Mike Gibson (footballer)", "text": " Michael James Gibson (born Derby, 15 July 1939) is an English former professional footballer. He played for Shrewsbury Town, Bristol City and Gillingham between 1960 and 1974 making over 480 Football League appearances in the years since the Second World War.", "score": "1.6281288" }, { "id": "30650847", "title": "Mike Gibson (rugby union)", "text": " Gibson played the bulk of his career for North of Ireland F.C. (\"North\") While studying, Gibson played for Cambridge University. In February 1966 he played for London Irish against St Mary's Hospital. He continued playing club rugby until 42.", "score": "1.6095722" }, { "id": "12067567", "title": "Michael Gibson (TV presenter)", "text": " Michael Gibson (born 29 October 1980 in Blackburn, Lancashire) is a TV presenter and documentary director. He presented the MTV Select television program which aired weekday afternoons on MTV across Europe.", "score": "1.6025689" }, { "id": "3892443", "title": "Mike Gibson (basketball)", "text": " Michael Jerome Gibson (born October 27, 1960) is a retired professional basketball power forward who played two seasons in the National Basketball Association (NBA) as a member of the Washington Bullets (1983–84) and the Detroit Pistons (1985–86). Born in Williamsburg County, South Carolina, he was drafted out of University of South Carolina Upstate by the Bullets during the second round of the 1982 NBA draft. Until the addition of Torrey Craig for the Denver Nuggets in 2017 via two-way contract, he was the only player in Upstate's history to ever play in the NBA. In 1993 he won with Hapoel Galil-Elion a historical championship in Israel; it was the first time after 23 years that another team other than Maccabi Tel Aviv won.", "score": "1.5972991" }, { "id": "28840583", "title": "John Gibson (ice hockey, born 1993)", "text": " with the new AHL club San Diego Gulls. When Andersen had the flu, Gibson was recalled on November 24 and started when the Flames met the Ducks in which the Ducks won 5–3. Gibson started for the next 9 games posting a 4–4–1 record. On January 6, 2016, it was announced that Gibson was selected to his first All-Star Game. On August 4, 2018, the Ducks re-signed Gibson to an eight-year, $51.2 million contract extension worth $6.4 million annually. On February 13, 2019, Gibson was placed on injured reserve by the Anaheim Ducks, due to head, back, and neck injuries obtained from a collision with teammate Jaycob Megna.", "score": "1.5968816" }, { "id": "1735237", "title": "Michael Gibson (musician)", "text": " Gibson was born and raised in Wilmington, Delaware and attended Harvard University for two years before transferring to the Berklee College of Music in Boston, Massachusetts to study music composition and theory. He was also a licensed pilot, and he and Larry Blank flew together. Gibson died in Dover, New Jersey in July 2005 after a lengthy battle with cancer. He was survived by his wife of 21 years, Ellen, and son Andrew.", "score": "1.5925461" }, { "id": "2743780", "title": "Russ Gibson", "text": " Gibson was born and raised in Fall River, Massachusetts, and was a graduate of B.M.C. Durfee High School, where he was a three-sport star, including playing forward for the 1956 New England championship basketball team. Gibson played briefly for the Falmouth All-Stars of the Cape Cod Baseball League in 1957, just prior to being signed by the Red Sox. In his only game with Falmouth, he hit two home runs.", "score": "1.5829613" }, { "id": "28358874", "title": "Josh Gibson (footballer)", "text": " Gibson began playing football with Surrey Park and played junior football for East Burwood, before moving on to play for the Oakleigh Chargers in the TAC Cup and Victorian Football League side Port Melbourne. Gibson was recruited from Port Melbourne Football Club in the Victorian Football League (VFL) and drafted onto the Kangaroos (North Melbourne) rookie list in 2006.", "score": "1.5782864" }, { "id": "28092172", "title": "Antonio Gibson (safety)", "text": " Gibson played for the Birmingham Fire of the World League of American Football during the 1992 WLAF season.", "score": "1.5762279" }, { "id": "2474569", "title": "Mike Gibson (sports journalist)", "text": " Gibson began his media career as a print journalist covering greyhound racing and rugby league. He moved to the 2SM radio breakfast show in the 1970s before going to 2GB in 1979. He began hosting Wide World of Sports in 1981. He also wrote a regular column for The Australian Women's Weekly, having previously written columns for two Sydney daily newspapers. He co-hosted Good Morning Australia with Kerri-Anne Kennerley for several years from 1988. He was an original presenter of the Nine Network's program Nine's Wide World of Sports, opposite Australian cricket captain Ian Chappell. He hosted The Back Page, with friend and comedian Billy Birmingham, on Fox Sports for 16 years. Birmingham parodied Gibson on the program in a segment called \"The Wired World of Sports\". In 2007, he was awarded Australian Sports Commission Media Awards Lifetime Achievement Award. Gibson retired in 2013.", "score": "1.575536" }, { "id": "28840584", "title": "John Gibson (ice hockey, born 1993)", "text": " Gibson represented Team North America at the World Cup of Hockey 2016.", "score": "1.5713506" }, { "id": "31765797", "title": "Montel Gibson", "text": " Montel Gibson (born 15 December 1997) is an English footballer who plays as a forward for Stourbridge. He has previously played professionally for Notts County and Grimsby Town. Having started his career with County he went on to play at Non-League level for Romulus, Barwell, Hednesford Town, Sutton Coldfield Town, Ilkeston Town, Redditch United, Bedworth United, Halesowen Town and Altrincham.", "score": "1.5698986" }, { "id": "8633771", "title": "Brandon Gibson", "text": " Brandon Lewis Gibson (born August 13, 1987) is a former American football wide receiver. He played college football and basketball at Washington State and was drafted by the Philadelphia Eagles in the sixth round of the 2009 NFL Draft. He also played for the St. Louis Rams and Miami Dolphins.", "score": "1.5650449" }, { "id": "12929083", "title": "Chad Gibson", "text": " over 12 years and over 200 professional games. The former A-League Captain continued to play for one season in the division below the A-League, where he won the NSW Premier League Championship in 2007 with Blacktown City Demons where he scored the match winning goal in his final official game. In 2008 he joined NSW State League Division 1 side, Stanmore Hawks. He returned to playing park football with various clubs and later signed on for Joeys FC United in the New England Mutual Premier League in a mentoring role to the young team, giving back to rural Australian football. Gibson now plays again for his first ever junior club, Belmore Eagles, alongside his father on the pitch, as recently reported by Football NSW. Gibson is currently a Creative Director and Sports Photographer.", "score": "1.5648905" }, { "id": "40467", "title": "Darryl Gibson (lacrosse)", "text": " Reference:", "score": "1.5640643" }, { "id": "25554024", "title": "Pat Gibson", "text": " Pat plays in the Summer in the Orrell and District League for the Millstone team, and in the winter in the Ormskirk league for Collywobblers.", "score": "1.5617459" } ]
[ "Darryl Gibson (lacrosse)\n Darryl Gibson (born July 28, 1976 in Toronto, Ontario) is a Canadian lacrosse player for the Buffalo Bandits in the National Lacrosse League.", "Harry Gibson (field hockey)\n Harry Jay Gibson (born 25 March 1993) is an English field hockey player, who plays as a goalkeeper for Surbiton and the England and Great Britain national teams. He was educated at Millfield.", "Harry Gibson (field hockey)\n Gibson plays club hockey in the Men's England Hockey League Premier Division for Surbiton. He previously played for Loughborough Students and Hampstead & Westminster.", "Adam Gibson\n Adam Matthew Gibson (born 30 October 1986) is an Australian professional basketball player for the Knox Raiders of the NBL1 South. He made his National Basketball League (NBL) debut in 2005, and has played for five NBL franchises. He is a two-time NBL champion, having won his first in 2007, with the Brisbane Bullets and his second in 2009, with the South Dragons. He is also a five-time All-NBL Team member and was crowned the NBL Best Defensive Player in 2009. Gibson is a long-time member of the Australian Boomers, having played at the 2012 London Olympics and at the 2010, and 2014 FIBA World Cups.", "Mike Gibson (footballer)\n Michael James Gibson (born Derby, 15 July 1939) is an English former professional footballer. He played for Shrewsbury Town, Bristol City and Gillingham between 1960 and 1974 making over 480 Football League appearances in the years since the Second World War.", "Mike Gibson (rugby union)\n Gibson played the bulk of his career for North of Ireland F.C. (\"North\") While studying, Gibson played for Cambridge University. In February 1966 he played for London Irish against St Mary's Hospital. He continued playing club rugby until 42.", "Michael Gibson (TV presenter)\n Michael Gibson (born 29 October 1980 in Blackburn, Lancashire) is a TV presenter and documentary director. He presented the MTV Select television program which aired weekday afternoons on MTV across Europe.", "Mike Gibson (basketball)\n Michael Jerome Gibson (born October 27, 1960) is a retired professional basketball power forward who played two seasons in the National Basketball Association (NBA) as a member of the Washington Bullets (1983–84) and the Detroit Pistons (1985–86). Born in Williamsburg County, South Carolina, he was drafted out of University of South Carolina Upstate by the Bullets during the second round of the 1982 NBA draft. Until the addition of Torrey Craig for the Denver Nuggets in 2017 via two-way contract, he was the only player in Upstate's history to ever play in the NBA. In 1993 he won with Hapoel Galil-Elion a historical championship in Israel; it was the first time after 23 years that another team other than Maccabi Tel Aviv won.", "John Gibson (ice hockey, born 1993)\n with the new AHL club San Diego Gulls. When Andersen had the flu, Gibson was recalled on November 24 and started when the Flames met the Ducks in which the Ducks won 5–3. Gibson started for the next 9 games posting a 4–4–1 record. On January 6, 2016, it was announced that Gibson was selected to his first All-Star Game. On August 4, 2018, the Ducks re-signed Gibson to an eight-year, $51.2 million contract extension worth $6.4 million annually. On February 13, 2019, Gibson was placed on injured reserve by the Anaheim Ducks, due to head, back, and neck injuries obtained from a collision with teammate Jaycob Megna.", "Michael Gibson (musician)\n Gibson was born and raised in Wilmington, Delaware and attended Harvard University for two years before transferring to the Berklee College of Music in Boston, Massachusetts to study music composition and theory. He was also a licensed pilot, and he and Larry Blank flew together. Gibson died in Dover, New Jersey in July 2005 after a lengthy battle with cancer. He was survived by his wife of 21 years, Ellen, and son Andrew.", "Russ Gibson\n Gibson was born and raised in Fall River, Massachusetts, and was a graduate of B.M.C. Durfee High School, where he was a three-sport star, including playing forward for the 1956 New England championship basketball team. Gibson played briefly for the Falmouth All-Stars of the Cape Cod Baseball League in 1957, just prior to being signed by the Red Sox. In his only game with Falmouth, he hit two home runs.", "Josh Gibson (footballer)\n Gibson began playing football with Surrey Park and played junior football for East Burwood, before moving on to play for the Oakleigh Chargers in the TAC Cup and Victorian Football League side Port Melbourne. Gibson was recruited from Port Melbourne Football Club in the Victorian Football League (VFL) and drafted onto the Kangaroos (North Melbourne) rookie list in 2006.", "Antonio Gibson (safety)\n Gibson played for the Birmingham Fire of the World League of American Football during the 1992 WLAF season.", "Mike Gibson (sports journalist)\n Gibson began his media career as a print journalist covering greyhound racing and rugby league. He moved to the 2SM radio breakfast show in the 1970s before going to 2GB in 1979. He began hosting Wide World of Sports in 1981. He also wrote a regular column for The Australian Women's Weekly, having previously written columns for two Sydney daily newspapers. He co-hosted Good Morning Australia with Kerri-Anne Kennerley for several years from 1988. He was an original presenter of the Nine Network's program Nine's Wide World of Sports, opposite Australian cricket captain Ian Chappell. He hosted The Back Page, with friend and comedian Billy Birmingham, on Fox Sports for 16 years. Birmingham parodied Gibson on the program in a segment called \"The Wired World of Sports\". In 2007, he was awarded Australian Sports Commission Media Awards Lifetime Achievement Award. Gibson retired in 2013.", "John Gibson (ice hockey, born 1993)\n Gibson represented Team North America at the World Cup of Hockey 2016.", "Montel Gibson\n Montel Gibson (born 15 December 1997) is an English footballer who plays as a forward for Stourbridge. He has previously played professionally for Notts County and Grimsby Town. Having started his career with County he went on to play at Non-League level for Romulus, Barwell, Hednesford Town, Sutton Coldfield Town, Ilkeston Town, Redditch United, Bedworth United, Halesowen Town and Altrincham.", "Brandon Gibson\n Brandon Lewis Gibson (born August 13, 1987) is a former American football wide receiver. He played college football and basketball at Washington State and was drafted by the Philadelphia Eagles in the sixth round of the 2009 NFL Draft. He also played for the St. Louis Rams and Miami Dolphins.", "Chad Gibson\n over 12 years and over 200 professional games. The former A-League Captain continued to play for one season in the division below the A-League, where he won the NSW Premier League Championship in 2007 with Blacktown City Demons where he scored the match winning goal in his final official game. In 2008 he joined NSW State League Division 1 side, Stanmore Hawks. He returned to playing park football with various clubs and later signed on for Joeys FC United in the New England Mutual Premier League in a mentoring role to the young team, giving back to rural Australian football. Gibson now plays again for his first ever junior club, Belmore Eagles, alongside his father on the pitch, as recently reported by Football NSW. Gibson is currently a Creative Director and Sports Photographer.", "Darryl Gibson (lacrosse)\n Reference:", "Pat Gibson\n Pat plays in the Summer in the Orrell and District League for the Millstone team, and in the winter in the Ormskirk league for Collywobblers." ]
Who was the composer of Symphony No. 33?
[ "Michael Haydn", "Johann Michael Haydn" ]
composer
Symphony No. 33 (Michael Haydn)
2,664,743
59
[ { "id": "1057795", "title": "Symphony No. 33 (Haydn)", "text": " The Symphony No. 33 in C major (Hoboken I/33) is a festive symphony by Joseph Haydn. The precise date of composition is unknown. Haydn scholar H.C. Robbins Landon has dated this work to 1763–65. It has also been suggested that it was written in 1760 or 1761, along with Symphony no. 32.", "score": "1.7065983" }, { "id": "1842072", "title": "Symphony No. 33 (Mozart)", "text": " The Symphony No. 33 in B major, K. 319, was written by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, and dated on 9 July 1779.", "score": "1.6668217" }, { "id": "5804553", "title": "Symphony No. 27 (Haydn)", "text": " In 1946, a copy of the symphony was discovered in the summer palace of Baron Samuel von Brukenthal near the city of Hermannstadt (now Sibiu in Romania). Originally thought to be an original discovery, the symphony briefly acquired the nickname Hermannstädter after it was recorded under that title by the Prague Symphony Orchestra with the Rumanian conductor Constantin Silvestri. Because of the political climate in Eastern Europe following the Second World War, it was some time before musicologists were able to examine the find and realize that the manuscript was a copy of a work that had already been published by Breitkopf & Hartel in 1907.", "score": "1.6247168" }, { "id": "14159283", "title": "List of symphony composers", "text": " Le Flem (1881–1984), French composer of 4 symphonies ; Nikolai Myaskovsky (1881–1950), Russian composer of 27 symphonies, as well as 3 sinfoniette for strings. ; Nikolai Roslavets (1881–1944), Russian composer of 1 symphony and 1 chamber symphony ; Karl Weigl (1881–1949), Austrian composer of 6 symphonies ; Marion Bauer (1882–1955), American composer of 1 symphony ; Walter Braunfels (1882–1954), German composer of 1 symphony (Sinfonia brevis op. 69) plus a Sinfonia concertante for violin, viola, 2 horns and strings ; Alf Hurum (1882–1972), Norwegian composer of a Symphony in D minor (1927) ; Zoltán Kodály (1882–1967), Hungarian composer of ", "score": "1.6225823" }, { "id": "798396", "title": "Symphony No. 4 (Nielsen)", "text": " Symphony No. 4, Op. 29, FS 76, also known as \"The Inextinguishable\" (Det Uudslukkelige), was completed by Danish composer Carl Nielsen in 1916. Composed against the backdrop of the First World War, this symphony is among the most dramatic that Nielsen wrote, featuring a \"battle\" between two sets of timpani.", "score": "1.6211774" }, { "id": "30794537", "title": "Symphony No. 30 (Haydn)", "text": " The Symphony No. 30 in C major, Hoboken I/30, is a symphony by Joseph Haydn composed in 1765, at the age of 33. It is nicknamed the Alleluia Symphony because of Haydn's use of a Gregorian Alleluia chant in the opening movement.", "score": "1.6189837" }, { "id": "14159287", "title": "List of symphony composers", "text": " (1883–1964), English composer of 1 symphony, plus a Choral Symphony, composed in 1910 but not premiered until 2014. ; Joseph Matthias Hauer (1883–1959), Austrian composer of 1 symphony and 1 sinfonietta ; Manolis Kalomiris (1883–1962), Greek composer of 3 symphonies (No. 1, Leventia, for mixed chorus and orchestra, 1920, r. 1937, 1952; No. 2, Symphony of the Simple and Good People, for mezzo-soprano, mixed chorus, and orchestra, 1931; and No. 3, Palamiki, D minor, for reciter and orchestra, 1955) ; Paul von Klenau (1883–1946), Danish composer of 9 symphonies ; Alexander Krein (1883–1951), Russian composer of 1 symphony ; ", "score": "1.6183268" }, { "id": "14159361", "title": "List of symphony composers", "text": " Natra (born 1924), Romanian–Israeli composer of 3 symphonies and 1 symphony for strings ; Serge Nigg (1924–2008), French composer of 1 symphony (Jérôme Bosch, 1960) ; Mikhaïl Nosyrev (1924–1981), Russian composer of 4 symphonies ; Else Marie Pade (1924–2016), Danish composer of 2 symphonies ; Joly Braga Santos (1924–1988), Portuguese composer of 6 symphonies ; Ernest Tomlinson (1924–2015), English composer of 2 symphonies ; Yasushi Akutagawa (1925–1989), Japanese composer of 1 numbered symphony (1954), plus a Symphony \"Twin Stars\", for children (1957) and the Ellora Symphony (1958) ; Jurriaan Andriessen (1925–1996), Dutch composer of 8 numbered symphonies, plus a ", "score": "1.6181277" }, { "id": "14159349", "title": "List of symphony composers", "text": " sinfoniettas ; Vincent Persichetti (1915–1987), American composer of 9 symphonies ; Humphrey Searle (1915–1982), British composer of 5 symphonies ; Carlos Surinach (1915–1997), American composer of Catalan origin, he wrote 3 symphonies ; Denis ApIvor (1916–2004), British composer of 5 symphonies ; Karl-Birger Blomdahl (1916–1968), Swedish composer of 3 symphonies ; Houston Bright (1916–1970), American composer of 1 symphony ; Peter Crossley-Holland (1916–2001), British composer of 1 symphony ; Henri Dutilleux (1916–2013), French composer of 2 symphonies ; Einar Englund (1916–1999), Finnish composer of 7 symphonies ; Ellis Kohs (1916–2000), American composer of 2 symphonies ; Tolia Nikiprowetzky (1916–1997), ", "score": "1.6169703" }, { "id": "32763878", "title": "Symphony No. 34 (Haydn)", "text": " The scoring of the symphony is typical of Haydn in this period: two oboes, bassoon, two horns, strings and continuo.", "score": "1.6154338" }, { "id": "14159270", "title": "List of symphony composers", "text": " Gregory Mason (1873–1953), American composer of 3 symphonies ; Henri Rabaud (1873–1949), French composer of 2 symphonies ; Sergei Rachmaninoff (1873–1943), Russian composer of 3 numbered symphonies, as well as the choral symphony The Bells, Op. 35 (1913); also symphonic is the unfinished Youth Symphony in D minor (1891)—see. ; Julius Bittner (1874–1939), Austrian composer of 2 symphonies ; Gustav Holst (1874–1934), English composer of a Symphony F major (The Cotswolds, 1900), as well as a First Choral Symphony (1924), for soprano, mixed chorus, and orchestra (fragmentary sketches also exist for a Second Choral Symphony); in addition, the composer also ", "score": "1.6143618" }, { "id": "14159263", "title": "List of symphony composers", "text": " 1 symphony ; Cornelis Dopper (1870–1939), Dutch composer of 7 symphonies ; Emil Młynarski (1870–1935), Polish composer of a Symphony in F major (Polonia, Op. 14, 1910) ; Vítězslav Novák (1870–1949), Czech composer of two unnumbered symphonies (the Autumn Symphony, 1934, for mixed chorus and orchestra; and the May Symphony, 1943, for soloists, mixed chorus, and orchestra) ; Joseph Ryelandt (1870–1965), Belgian composer of 6 symphonies ; Florent Schmitt (1870–1958), French composer of 3 symphonies, chronologically as: a Symphonie concertante, for piano and orchestra (1932); a symphony for strings, Janiana (1941); and a \"Symphony No. 2\" (1957) ; Hermann Suter ", "score": "1.6138356" }, { "id": "33086773", "title": "Symphony No. 34 (Mozart)", "text": " Symphony No. 34 in C major, K. 338, was written by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in 1780, and completed on 29 August.", "score": "1.6132288" }, { "id": "14159317", "title": "List of symphony composers", "text": " of 3 symphonies (the second for strings) and a Symphonie concertante for trumpet and orchestra ; Nicolai Berezowsky (1900–1953), Russian–American violinist and composer of 4 symphonies ; Willy Burkhard (1900–1955), Swiss composer of 1 symphony (Piccola sinfonia giocosa for small orchestra) ; Alan Bush (1900–1995), British composer of 4 symphonies ; Aaron Copland (1900–1990), American composer of 3 numbered symphonies, a Symphony for organ and orchestra (later arranged without organ as Symphony No. 1), and a Dance Symphony for orchestra. The fourth movement of No. 3 is based on his famous Fanfare for the Common Man ; Pierre-Octave Ferroud (1900–1936), ", "score": "1.6122577" }, { "id": "14159286", "title": "List of symphony composers", "text": " del mar\" (1945) ; Hermann Wolfgang von Waltershausen (1882–1954), German composer of 1 symphony ; Paul Hastings Allen (1883–1952), American composer of 8 symphonies ; Sir Arnold Bax (1883–1953), English composer of 7 numbered symphonies, preceded by a Symphony in F major (completed piano score 1907; orchestrated in 2012–13 by Martin Yates); the tone poem Spring Fire (1913) is classified occasionally as an unnumbered, programmatic symphony. Bax also composed a Sinfonietta—see ; Alfredo Casella (1883–1947), Italian composer of 3 symphonies (No. 1, B minor, 1906; No. 2, C minor, 1909; and No. 3, titled Sinfonia, 1940) ; Sir George ", "score": "1.6118965" }, { "id": "14159274", "title": "List of symphony composers", "text": " are three additional symphonic projects in fragmentary form: No. 7, Sinfonia gaia (1936); No. 8 (1937); and No. 9 (c. 1930s) ; Cyril Rootham (1875–1938), English composer of 2 symphonies, of which the Second (The Revelation of St. John, 1938) is for orchestra and chorus ; Donald Tovey (1875–1940), British composer of a Symphony in D major (1913) ; Richard Wetz (1875–1935), German composer of 3 symphonies (No. 1, C minor, 1917; No. 2, A major, 1919; and No. 3, B-flat minor, 1922) ; Hakon Børresen (1876–1954), Danish composer of 3 symphonies (No. 1, C minor, 1901; No. 2, ", "score": "1.6115396" }, { "id": "14159339", "title": "List of symphony composers", "text": " Golubev (1910–1988), Russian composer of 7 symphonies ; Charles Jones (1910–1997), Canadian–American composer of 4 symphonies ; Erland von Koch (1910–2009), Swedish composer of 6 symphonies (No. 1, 1938; No. 2, Sinfonia Dalecarlica, 1945; No. 3, 1948; No. 4, Sinfonia seria, 1953, r. 1962; No. 5, Lapponica, 1977; and No. 6, Salva la terra, 1992); also symphonic is the Sinfonietta (1949) ; Rolf Liebermann (1910–1999), Swiss composer of 1 symphony ; Marijan Lipovšek (1910–1995), Slovenian composer of 1 symphony ; Jean Martinon (1910–1976), French conductor and composer of 4 numbered symphonies plus a sinfonietta and a Symphonie de voyages ", "score": "1.6107635" }, { "id": "14159239", "title": "List of symphony composers", "text": " Mihalovich (1842–1929), Hungarian composer of 4 symphonies ; Arthur Sullivan (1842–1900), British composer of 1 symphony ; Edvard Grieg (1843–1907), Norwegian composer of the Symphony in C minor (1864), as well as sketches for a second. ; Asger Hamerik (1843–1923), Danish conductor and composer of 8 symphonies ; Heinrich von Herzogenberg (1843–1900), Austrian composer of 8 symphonies ; Charles Lefebvre (1843–1917), French composer of 1 symphony ; Miguel Marqués (1843–1918), Spanish composer of 5 symphonies ; Hermann Graedener (1844–1929), German composer of 2 symphonies ; Émile Paladilhe (1844–1926), French composer of 1 symphony ; Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov (1844–1908), Russian composer of 3 symphonies, the ", "score": "1.6099546" }, { "id": "14159289", "title": "List of symphony composers", "text": " minor, 1914; No. 2, My Country, D minor, 1919; No. 3, Song under the Stars, D-flat major, in one movement, 1929; and No. 4, Invocatio, D minor, for organ and orchestra, 1936) ; Albert Wolff (1884–1970), French conductor and composer of 1 symphony ; Julio Fonseca (1885–1950), Costa Rican composer of the \"Great Symphonic Fantasy on folk motifs\" ; Henri Collet (1885–1951), French composer of \"Symphonie de l'Alhambra\" (1947) ; Dimitrie Cuclin (1885–1978), Romanian composer of 20 symphonies ; Werner Josten (1885–1963), German–American composer of 1 symphony ; Otto Klemperer (1885–1973), German conductor and composer of 6 symphonies ; ", "score": "1.6081984" }, { "id": "14159322", "title": "List of symphony composers", "text": " earlier symphony (lost) ; Arnold Walter (1902–1973), Austrian–Canadian composer of 1 symphony ; Sir William Walton (1902–1983), English composer of 2 symphonies ; Meredith Willson (1902–1984), American composer of 2 symphonies ; Stefan Wolpe (1902–1972), German-born composer of a Symphony (1955–56) ; Sir Lennox Berkeley (1903–1989), English composer of 4 symphonies ; Boris Blacher (1903–1975), German composer of 2 symphonies ; Vernon Duke (1903–1969), Russian–American composer of 3 symphonies ; Antiochos Evangelatos (1903–1981), Greek composer of 2 symphonies and 1 sinfonietta ; Jerzy Fitelberg (1903–1951), Polish–American composer of 2 symphonies, plus a symphony for strings and a sinfonietta ; Vittorio ", "score": "1.6066777" } ]
[ "Symphony No. 33 (Haydn)\n The Symphony No. 33 in C major (Hoboken I/33) is a festive symphony by Joseph Haydn. The precise date of composition is unknown. Haydn scholar H.C. Robbins Landon has dated this work to 1763–65. It has also been suggested that it was written in 1760 or 1761, along with Symphony no. 32.", "Symphony No. 33 (Mozart)\n The Symphony No. 33 in B major, K. 319, was written by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, and dated on 9 July 1779.", "Symphony No. 27 (Haydn)\n In 1946, a copy of the symphony was discovered in the summer palace of Baron Samuel von Brukenthal near the city of Hermannstadt (now Sibiu in Romania). Originally thought to be an original discovery, the symphony briefly acquired the nickname Hermannstädter after it was recorded under that title by the Prague Symphony Orchestra with the Rumanian conductor Constantin Silvestri. Because of the political climate in Eastern Europe following the Second World War, it was some time before musicologists were able to examine the find and realize that the manuscript was a copy of a work that had already been published by Breitkopf & Hartel in 1907.", "List of symphony composers\n Le Flem (1881–1984), French composer of 4 symphonies ; Nikolai Myaskovsky (1881–1950), Russian composer of 27 symphonies, as well as 3 sinfoniette for strings. ; Nikolai Roslavets (1881–1944), Russian composer of 1 symphony and 1 chamber symphony ; Karl Weigl (1881–1949), Austrian composer of 6 symphonies ; Marion Bauer (1882–1955), American composer of 1 symphony ; Walter Braunfels (1882–1954), German composer of 1 symphony (Sinfonia brevis op. 69) plus a Sinfonia concertante for violin, viola, 2 horns and strings ; Alf Hurum (1882–1972), Norwegian composer of a Symphony in D minor (1927) ; Zoltán Kodály (1882–1967), Hungarian composer of ", "Symphony No. 4 (Nielsen)\n Symphony No. 4, Op. 29, FS 76, also known as \"The Inextinguishable\" (Det Uudslukkelige), was completed by Danish composer Carl Nielsen in 1916. Composed against the backdrop of the First World War, this symphony is among the most dramatic that Nielsen wrote, featuring a \"battle\" between two sets of timpani.", "Symphony No. 30 (Haydn)\n The Symphony No. 30 in C major, Hoboken I/30, is a symphony by Joseph Haydn composed in 1765, at the age of 33. It is nicknamed the Alleluia Symphony because of Haydn's use of a Gregorian Alleluia chant in the opening movement.", "List of symphony composers\n (1883–1964), English composer of 1 symphony, plus a Choral Symphony, composed in 1910 but not premiered until 2014. ; Joseph Matthias Hauer (1883–1959), Austrian composer of 1 symphony and 1 sinfonietta ; Manolis Kalomiris (1883–1962), Greek composer of 3 symphonies (No. 1, Leventia, for mixed chorus and orchestra, 1920, r. 1937, 1952; No. 2, Symphony of the Simple and Good People, for mezzo-soprano, mixed chorus, and orchestra, 1931; and No. 3, Palamiki, D minor, for reciter and orchestra, 1955) ; Paul von Klenau (1883–1946), Danish composer of 9 symphonies ; Alexander Krein (1883–1951), Russian composer of 1 symphony ; ", "List of symphony composers\n Natra (born 1924), Romanian–Israeli composer of 3 symphonies and 1 symphony for strings ; Serge Nigg (1924–2008), French composer of 1 symphony (Jérôme Bosch, 1960) ; Mikhaïl Nosyrev (1924–1981), Russian composer of 4 symphonies ; Else Marie Pade (1924–2016), Danish composer of 2 symphonies ; Joly Braga Santos (1924–1988), Portuguese composer of 6 symphonies ; Ernest Tomlinson (1924–2015), English composer of 2 symphonies ; Yasushi Akutagawa (1925–1989), Japanese composer of 1 numbered symphony (1954), plus a Symphony \"Twin Stars\", for children (1957) and the Ellora Symphony (1958) ; Jurriaan Andriessen (1925–1996), Dutch composer of 8 numbered symphonies, plus a ", "List of symphony composers\n sinfoniettas ; Vincent Persichetti (1915–1987), American composer of 9 symphonies ; Humphrey Searle (1915–1982), British composer of 5 symphonies ; Carlos Surinach (1915–1997), American composer of Catalan origin, he wrote 3 symphonies ; Denis ApIvor (1916–2004), British composer of 5 symphonies ; Karl-Birger Blomdahl (1916–1968), Swedish composer of 3 symphonies ; Houston Bright (1916–1970), American composer of 1 symphony ; Peter Crossley-Holland (1916–2001), British composer of 1 symphony ; Henri Dutilleux (1916–2013), French composer of 2 symphonies ; Einar Englund (1916–1999), Finnish composer of 7 symphonies ; Ellis Kohs (1916–2000), American composer of 2 symphonies ; Tolia Nikiprowetzky (1916–1997), ", "Symphony No. 34 (Haydn)\n The scoring of the symphony is typical of Haydn in this period: two oboes, bassoon, two horns, strings and continuo.", "List of symphony composers\n Gregory Mason (1873–1953), American composer of 3 symphonies ; Henri Rabaud (1873–1949), French composer of 2 symphonies ; Sergei Rachmaninoff (1873–1943), Russian composer of 3 numbered symphonies, as well as the choral symphony The Bells, Op. 35 (1913); also symphonic is the unfinished Youth Symphony in D minor (1891)—see. ; Julius Bittner (1874–1939), Austrian composer of 2 symphonies ; Gustav Holst (1874–1934), English composer of a Symphony F major (The Cotswolds, 1900), as well as a First Choral Symphony (1924), for soprano, mixed chorus, and orchestra (fragmentary sketches also exist for a Second Choral Symphony); in addition, the composer also ", "List of symphony composers\n 1 symphony ; Cornelis Dopper (1870–1939), Dutch composer of 7 symphonies ; Emil Młynarski (1870–1935), Polish composer of a Symphony in F major (Polonia, Op. 14, 1910) ; Vítězslav Novák (1870–1949), Czech composer of two unnumbered symphonies (the Autumn Symphony, 1934, for mixed chorus and orchestra; and the May Symphony, 1943, for soloists, mixed chorus, and orchestra) ; Joseph Ryelandt (1870–1965), Belgian composer of 6 symphonies ; Florent Schmitt (1870–1958), French composer of 3 symphonies, chronologically as: a Symphonie concertante, for piano and orchestra (1932); a symphony for strings, Janiana (1941); and a \"Symphony No. 2\" (1957) ; Hermann Suter ", "Symphony No. 34 (Mozart)\n Symphony No. 34 in C major, K. 338, was written by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in 1780, and completed on 29 August.", "List of symphony composers\n of 3 symphonies (the second for strings) and a Symphonie concertante for trumpet and orchestra ; Nicolai Berezowsky (1900–1953), Russian–American violinist and composer of 4 symphonies ; Willy Burkhard (1900–1955), Swiss composer of 1 symphony (Piccola sinfonia giocosa for small orchestra) ; Alan Bush (1900–1995), British composer of 4 symphonies ; Aaron Copland (1900–1990), American composer of 3 numbered symphonies, a Symphony for organ and orchestra (later arranged without organ as Symphony No. 1), and a Dance Symphony for orchestra. The fourth movement of No. 3 is based on his famous Fanfare for the Common Man ; Pierre-Octave Ferroud (1900–1936), ", "List of symphony composers\n del mar\" (1945) ; Hermann Wolfgang von Waltershausen (1882–1954), German composer of 1 symphony ; Paul Hastings Allen (1883–1952), American composer of 8 symphonies ; Sir Arnold Bax (1883–1953), English composer of 7 numbered symphonies, preceded by a Symphony in F major (completed piano score 1907; orchestrated in 2012–13 by Martin Yates); the tone poem Spring Fire (1913) is classified occasionally as an unnumbered, programmatic symphony. Bax also composed a Sinfonietta—see ; Alfredo Casella (1883–1947), Italian composer of 3 symphonies (No. 1, B minor, 1906; No. 2, C minor, 1909; and No. 3, titled Sinfonia, 1940) ; Sir George ", "List of symphony composers\n are three additional symphonic projects in fragmentary form: No. 7, Sinfonia gaia (1936); No. 8 (1937); and No. 9 (c. 1930s) ; Cyril Rootham (1875–1938), English composer of 2 symphonies, of which the Second (The Revelation of St. John, 1938) is for orchestra and chorus ; Donald Tovey (1875–1940), British composer of a Symphony in D major (1913) ; Richard Wetz (1875–1935), German composer of 3 symphonies (No. 1, C minor, 1917; No. 2, A major, 1919; and No. 3, B-flat minor, 1922) ; Hakon Børresen (1876–1954), Danish composer of 3 symphonies (No. 1, C minor, 1901; No. 2, ", "List of symphony composers\n Golubev (1910–1988), Russian composer of 7 symphonies ; Charles Jones (1910–1997), Canadian–American composer of 4 symphonies ; Erland von Koch (1910–2009), Swedish composer of 6 symphonies (No. 1, 1938; No. 2, Sinfonia Dalecarlica, 1945; No. 3, 1948; No. 4, Sinfonia seria, 1953, r. 1962; No. 5, Lapponica, 1977; and No. 6, Salva la terra, 1992); also symphonic is the Sinfonietta (1949) ; Rolf Liebermann (1910–1999), Swiss composer of 1 symphony ; Marijan Lipovšek (1910–1995), Slovenian composer of 1 symphony ; Jean Martinon (1910–1976), French conductor and composer of 4 numbered symphonies plus a sinfonietta and a Symphonie de voyages ", "List of symphony composers\n Mihalovich (1842–1929), Hungarian composer of 4 symphonies ; Arthur Sullivan (1842–1900), British composer of 1 symphony ; Edvard Grieg (1843–1907), Norwegian composer of the Symphony in C minor (1864), as well as sketches for a second. ; Asger Hamerik (1843–1923), Danish conductor and composer of 8 symphonies ; Heinrich von Herzogenberg (1843–1900), Austrian composer of 8 symphonies ; Charles Lefebvre (1843–1917), French composer of 1 symphony ; Miguel Marqués (1843–1918), Spanish composer of 5 symphonies ; Hermann Graedener (1844–1929), German composer of 2 symphonies ; Émile Paladilhe (1844–1926), French composer of 1 symphony ; Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov (1844–1908), Russian composer of 3 symphonies, the ", "List of symphony composers\n minor, 1914; No. 2, My Country, D minor, 1919; No. 3, Song under the Stars, D-flat major, in one movement, 1929; and No. 4, Invocatio, D minor, for organ and orchestra, 1936) ; Albert Wolff (1884–1970), French conductor and composer of 1 symphony ; Julio Fonseca (1885–1950), Costa Rican composer of the \"Great Symphonic Fantasy on folk motifs\" ; Henri Collet (1885–1951), French composer of \"Symphonie de l'Alhambra\" (1947) ; Dimitrie Cuclin (1885–1978), Romanian composer of 20 symphonies ; Werner Josten (1885–1963), German–American composer of 1 symphony ; Otto Klemperer (1885–1973), German conductor and composer of 6 symphonies ; ", "List of symphony composers\n earlier symphony (lost) ; Arnold Walter (1902–1973), Austrian–Canadian composer of 1 symphony ; Sir William Walton (1902–1983), English composer of 2 symphonies ; Meredith Willson (1902–1984), American composer of 2 symphonies ; Stefan Wolpe (1902–1972), German-born composer of a Symphony (1955–56) ; Sir Lennox Berkeley (1903–1989), English composer of 4 symphonies ; Boris Blacher (1903–1975), German composer of 2 symphonies ; Vernon Duke (1903–1969), Russian–American composer of 3 symphonies ; Antiochos Evangelatos (1903–1981), Greek composer of 2 symphonies and 1 sinfonietta ; Jerzy Fitelberg (1903–1951), Polish–American composer of 2 symphonies, plus a symphony for strings and a sinfonietta ; Vittorio " ]
In what city was György Kárpáti born?
[ "Budapest", "Buda Pest", "Buda-Pest", "Budapešť", "Budapesta", "Budapeszt", "Buda", "Ofen", "Budín", "Budim", "Budon", "Pest", "Pešť", "Pešta", "Óbuda", "Alt-Ofen", "Kőbánya" ]
place of birth
György Kárpáti (film director)
178,789
72
[ { "id": "8937825", "title": "György Kárpáti", "text": " György was born Jewish. He was a great friend of the former water polo player and distinguished Italian actor Bud Spencer.", "score": "1.8417847" }, { "id": "8937822", "title": "György Kárpáti", "text": " György Kárpáti (June 23, 1935 – June 17, 2020) was a Hungarian water polo player who competed at the 1952 Summer Olympics, 1956 Summer Olympics, 1960 Summer Olympics, and 1964 Summer Olympics. He is one of eight male athletes who won four or more Olympic medals in water polo, and one of ten male athletes who won three Olympic gold medals in water polo.", "score": "1.7380052" }, { "id": "8937823", "title": "György Kárpáti", "text": " Kárpáti was born in Budapest, and was a member of the Hungarian team which won the gold medal in the 1952 tournament. He played five matches and scored four goals. Four years later he was a member of the Hungarian team which won again the gold medal in the 1956 Olympic tournament. He played six matches and scored at least six goals (not all scorers are known). At the 1960 Games he won the bronze medal with the Hungarian team. He played four matches and scored five goals. His last Olympic tournament was in Tokyo 1964 where he won his third gold medal. He played six matches and scored four goals for the Hungarian team. Kárpáti studied and gained a degree in law, but he never practised it, he also got a degree in coaching in 1964, which he used when he was assistant coach to Dezső Gyarmati for the national team between 1970-80. Their main success was winning the gold medal at the 1976 Summer Olympics. In 1982, Kárpáti was elected in to the International Swimming Hall of Fame, and from 1994 he became a member of the Association of Immortal Hungarian Athletes.", "score": "1.7342722" }, { "id": "32730366", "title": "György Kárpáti (film director)", "text": " György Kárpáti received his first degree in medicine in 1957 and his second degree in film directing in 1964. He was employed until 1991 as a film director by the MAFILM-MOVI studios of the Hungarian state film industry. As a freelance producer-director he was responsible for more than 300 productions for the Hungarian Television Network, including comedies, music shows, documentaries, scientific programmes, live broadcasts, variety shows, and programmes on jazz and the cinema. From 1973-83 he was commissioned by the International Committee of the Red Cross to shoot documentaries in 80 countries over five continents. From his graduation in 1964 until his retirement in 1999 he taught non-fiction directing and editing at the Academy of Drama and Film (SzFF) in Budapest.", "score": "1.7105815" }, { "id": "30557385", "title": "George Barati", "text": " George Barati (born György Braunstein) (April 3, 1913, Győr, Hungary - June 22, 1996, San Jose, California) was a Hungarian-American cellist, composer, and conductor. Barati studied under Zoltán Kodály and Leo Weiner while a student at the Liszt Academy of Music in the 1930s, and became widely known as a performer throughout Hungary, both as a soloist and with the Pro Ideale Quartet. He immigrated to the United States in 1938, where he studied composition at Princeton under Roger Sessions and taught cello performance until 1943. He then relocated to California, where he was cellist with the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra (1946–50) and worked with chamber ensembles. In 1950, Barati moved to Oahu, where he became the conductor of the Honolulu Symphony Orchestra, a position he held from 1950 to 1967. He also began doing international tours as a conductor. He returned to California in 1968 and was co-director of the Villa Montalvo Center for Art in Saratoga, California, from 1971 to 1980 he directed the Santa Cruz County Symphony Orchestra.", "score": "1.6882052" }, { "id": "30981163", "title": "Dénes Györgyi", "text": " Gyorgyi was born in Budapest into a well-known clan of artists which stretched back generations. On his father's side, his great grandfather, Alajos Giergl (1793–1868) was a silversmith who originated from the Tyrol and his grandfather, Alajos Györgyi Giergl (1821–1863), was a well-known painter in Pest. His father, Kálmán Györgyi (1860–1930) was a craftsman and art theorist, the director of the National Society of Applied Arts and editor of its journal. Two other close relatives, Géza Gyorgyi (1851–1934) and Kálmán Giergl (1863–1934) were well known architects. The latter built the Music Academy and Klotild Palaces in Pest. Also notable in the clan was Henrik Giergl (1827–1871), a glass artist and trader.", "score": "1.6689303" }, { "id": "15904949", "title": "Rudolf Kárpáti", "text": " Rudolf Kárpáti (17 July 1920 – 1 February 1999) was a fencer from Hungary, who won six gold medals in sabre at four Olympic Games (1948–1960). He also won seven gold, three silver and two bronze medals at the world championships. For his achievements he was named Hungarian Sportsman of the year in 1959 and 1960. Kárpáti graduated from the National Conservatory majoring in the history of music; he was also an accomplished violinist and the artistic director of the People’s Army Central Artistic Ensemble (1961–1986). Besides fencing and music, he was an employee at the Hungarian State Credit Bank and an officer with the Hungarian Army – he retired as Colonel, and later in 1990 was promoted to Major General. Kárpáti was a member of the Hungarian Fencing Federation from 1961 to 1991. After retiring from competitions, in 1977 he became president of the Budapest Fencing Federation and an administrator with the Fédération Internationale d'Escrime.", "score": "1.6672239" }, { "id": "32730365", "title": "György Kárpáti (film director)", "text": " György Kárpáti (born 3 July 1933 in Budapest) is a Hungarian film director whose most celebrated feature film is Nem szoktam hazudni (I Hardly Ever Lie, 1966). Over the last five decades he has directed around 200 films, including documentaries, feature films, short films and commercials. His films have won several awards at major international film festivals, and he has received the Hungarian Programme of the Year award eight times for his television programmes.", "score": "1.661755" }, { "id": "32730367", "title": "György Kárpáti (film director)", "text": " As a member of the Executive Board of the European League of Institutes of the Arts (ELIA), he was made Chevalier of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the government of France in 1992 and of the Order of the White Rose of Finland in 1998, both distinctions given for his contribution to European art teaching and for bilateral cultural relations.", "score": "1.655071" }, { "id": "29915902", "title": "György Károly", "text": " Károly was born in Budapest on 31 August 1953, the only son of György Károly (1924–2003), a butcher, and Ilona Szabó (1928–2014), a tailor. He spent his early life in Szigetszentmiklós, where he finished his primary school years. After he completed his studies in Budapest. Károly was educated as a geologist and began to write in the 1970s. He published his first poems in Élet és Irodalom (“Life and Literature”). He was poetic silent in the 1980s. In the nineties Károly began writing again.", "score": "1.6462694" }, { "id": "27251652", "title": "György Hajós", "text": " Hajós was born February 21, 1912, in Budapest; his great-grandfather, Adam Clark, was the famous Scottish engineer who built the Chain Bridge in Budapest. He earned a teaching degree from the University of Budapest in 1935. He then took a position at the Technical University of Budapest, where he stayed from 1935 to 1949. While at the Technical University of Budapest, he earned a doctorate in 1938. He became a professor at the Eötvös Loránd University in 1949 and remained there until his death in 1972. Additionally he was president of the János Bolyai Mathematical Society from 1963 to 1972.", "score": "1.6322618" }, { "id": "32822686", "title": "György Harag", "text": " György Harag was born on June 4, 1925 at Marghita in a Hungarian Jewish family. He was the son of Kádár Magda and Harag Jenő, timber-merchant. He started his elemental schools on Marghita, but finished it in Tășnad. Made his high-school studies on Oradea Mare, first at Emanoil Gojdu High School, then at Jewish High School of Oradea Mare, finally he sat his school examinations in Szent László High School. After graduation he worked for a year as an apprentice, learning ceramics making in Budapest. He shows close ties to theater from his earliest childhood. He faced, first, at Tășnad, some itinerant ", "score": "1.6256437" }, { "id": "8937824", "title": "György Kárpáti", "text": " After a long illness Kárpáti died on 17 June 2020, aged 84 years. He was buried in the Farkasréti Cemetery on 2 July 2020.", "score": "1.6184146" }, { "id": "29273490", "title": "Gyula Kautz", "text": " Born in Győr, he started his University studies at the Royal Academy of Philosophy at Győr. After two academic years, he moved to Pest to study at the University of Pest, where he earned his doctorate in law in 1850. He then went on to study abroad for a year, visiting universities of Berlin, Heidelberg and Leipzig. He was influenced by the English classical school of Economics, and also by Wilhelm Roscher, then a professor at Leipzig, a representative of the German historian school.", "score": "1.6148458" }, { "id": "26156483", "title": "György Gattyán", "text": " He was born on 24 May 1970 in Budapest. His father worked as a mason and a construction entrepreneur; his mother was a homemaker. He attended the Corvin Mátyás High School and continues his studies at the Faculty of Physical Education and Sport Sciences (later part of Semmelweis University for few years). He trained at the Ikarus Sports Club as a runner; his trainer was István Tomhauser.", "score": "1.6121979" }, { "id": "28000471", "title": "György Szrogh", "text": " Szrogh György (January 23, 1915 – 1999) was a Hungarian architect and professor. He graduated in 1938 from Royal Jozsef Nador Technical University. After finished his studies, he worked in several places, such as the Louis Hidas studio, MÉMOSZ Construction Company, City Building Research Institute (VATI) and Residential Building Design Bureau (LAKÓTERV). He had participated in the UNESCO foreign exchange program between 1966 and 1967. At that time he was in England, Mexico and United States of America, when he learned new principles and methods of design. From 1966 he was professor at the Hungarian College of Applied Arts and led the Department of Architecture from 1966 to 1984. ", "score": "1.6107867" }, { "id": "33032567", "title": "Paul Gyorgy", "text": " Gyorgy was born on April 7, 1893 in Nagyvárad, Hungary to a Jewish family. He was said to be an avid reader and musician as a child. His father was a general practitioner in the community. Influenced by his father's occupation and with his parents' encouragement, Gyorgy began to pursue a career in medicine. He attended the University of Budapest Medical School and graduated with Doctor of Medicine degree in 1915. In 1920, after the end of World War I, Gyorgy was offered a job at the University of Heidelberg as an assistant to the physician and researcher Ernst Moro. He remained at the University of Heidelberg until 1933, obtaining full ", "score": "1.6086941" }, { "id": "31804518", "title": "György Ligeti (musician)", "text": " Ligeti was born in Kaposvár, Hungary. He attended the Munkácsy Mihály Gimnázium és Szakközépiskola in Kaposvár. Ligeti obtained a Master of Arts in Communication and media studies from the University of Pécs in 2012. Ligeti moved to London, United Kingdom where he worked as a shop assistant at the Algerian Coffee Stores from 2004 to 2009. On 26 February 2009, Ligeti was interviewed by Magyar Rádió. In 2010 Ligeti became the radio presenter of the Stockholm Syndrome Radio which aims to present new Hungarian indie rock bands. On 25 July 2013, Ligeti was interviewed by Phenomenon.hu in order to present his favourite meal, Aglio olio peperoncino. In 2014 Ligeti sang Odett's song called Éjszaka, while Odett sang We Are Rockstars's 2014 single Rólunk szól at the Szimfonik Live 2014. Ligeti considers himself as a Parni -Scythian.", "score": "1.6074659" }, { "id": "9437779", "title": "List of people from Kaposvár", "text": "Sándor Abday (1800 – 1882), Hungarian actor, theater director ; György Buzsáki (born 1949), Hungarian neuroscientist ; Péter Frankl (born 1953), Hungarian mathematician, street performer, columnist, educator ; Péter Hanák (1921 - 1997), Hungarian historian, cultural historian ; János Haraszti (1924 – 2007), Hungarian veterinarian, university teacher, researcher ; Moritz Kaposi (1837 – 1902), Hungarian physician, dermatologist, discoverer of the skin tumor called Kaposi's sarcoma ; Ernő Lendvai (1925 – 1993), Hungarian mathematician, music theorists ; György Németh (born 1956), Hungarian historian, teacher ; Lajos Papp (born 1948), Hungarian heart surgeon, professor ; Virag Dora (born 1993), Hungarian medical doctor, ", "score": "1.6044738" }, { "id": "9437774", "title": "List of people from Kaposvár", "text": "László Babarczy (born 1941), Hungarian theater director ; Aurél Bernáth (1895–1982), Hungarian painter, art theorist ; István Bors (1938 - 2003), Hungarian sculptor ; Béla Faragó (born 1961), Hungarian composer ; Sándor Galimberti (1883 - 1915), Hungarian painter ; János Gyenes (1912 - 1995), Hungarian photographer ; Zsolt Homonnay (born 1971), Hungarian actor ; Ilona Ivancsics (born 1960), Hungarian actress ; Ferenc Martyn (1899 – 1986), Hungarian artist, sculptor, graphic designer ; Zoltán Őszi (born 1967), Hungarian graphic designer, illustrator ; Judit Pogány (born 1944), Hungarian actress ; József Rippl-Rónai (1861 - 1927), Hungarian painter ; Magdolna Szőnyi (1915 - 1992), Hungarian arts teacher, artist ; Klári Varga (born 1970), Hungarian actress ; Zsuzsanna Varga (born 1970), Hungarian actress ; János Vaszary (1817 - 1939), Hungarian painter, graphic artist ", "score": "1.6030774" } ]
[ "György Kárpáti\n György was born Jewish. He was a great friend of the former water polo player and distinguished Italian actor Bud Spencer.", "György Kárpáti\n György Kárpáti (June 23, 1935 – June 17, 2020) was a Hungarian water polo player who competed at the 1952 Summer Olympics, 1956 Summer Olympics, 1960 Summer Olympics, and 1964 Summer Olympics. He is one of eight male athletes who won four or more Olympic medals in water polo, and one of ten male athletes who won three Olympic gold medals in water polo.", "György Kárpáti\n Kárpáti was born in Budapest, and was a member of the Hungarian team which won the gold medal in the 1952 tournament. He played five matches and scored four goals. Four years later he was a member of the Hungarian team which won again the gold medal in the 1956 Olympic tournament. He played six matches and scored at least six goals (not all scorers are known). At the 1960 Games he won the bronze medal with the Hungarian team. He played four matches and scored five goals. His last Olympic tournament was in Tokyo 1964 where he won his third gold medal. He played six matches and scored four goals for the Hungarian team. Kárpáti studied and gained a degree in law, but he never practised it, he also got a degree in coaching in 1964, which he used when he was assistant coach to Dezső Gyarmati for the national team between 1970-80. Their main success was winning the gold medal at the 1976 Summer Olympics. In 1982, Kárpáti was elected in to the International Swimming Hall of Fame, and from 1994 he became a member of the Association of Immortal Hungarian Athletes.", "György Kárpáti (film director)\n György Kárpáti received his first degree in medicine in 1957 and his second degree in film directing in 1964. He was employed until 1991 as a film director by the MAFILM-MOVI studios of the Hungarian state film industry. As a freelance producer-director he was responsible for more than 300 productions for the Hungarian Television Network, including comedies, music shows, documentaries, scientific programmes, live broadcasts, variety shows, and programmes on jazz and the cinema. From 1973-83 he was commissioned by the International Committee of the Red Cross to shoot documentaries in 80 countries over five continents. From his graduation in 1964 until his retirement in 1999 he taught non-fiction directing and editing at the Academy of Drama and Film (SzFF) in Budapest.", "George Barati\n George Barati (born György Braunstein) (April 3, 1913, Győr, Hungary - June 22, 1996, San Jose, California) was a Hungarian-American cellist, composer, and conductor. Barati studied under Zoltán Kodály and Leo Weiner while a student at the Liszt Academy of Music in the 1930s, and became widely known as a performer throughout Hungary, both as a soloist and with the Pro Ideale Quartet. He immigrated to the United States in 1938, where he studied composition at Princeton under Roger Sessions and taught cello performance until 1943. He then relocated to California, where he was cellist with the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra (1946–50) and worked with chamber ensembles. In 1950, Barati moved to Oahu, where he became the conductor of the Honolulu Symphony Orchestra, a position he held from 1950 to 1967. He also began doing international tours as a conductor. He returned to California in 1968 and was co-director of the Villa Montalvo Center for Art in Saratoga, California, from 1971 to 1980 he directed the Santa Cruz County Symphony Orchestra.", "Dénes Györgyi\n Gyorgyi was born in Budapest into a well-known clan of artists which stretched back generations. On his father's side, his great grandfather, Alajos Giergl (1793–1868) was a silversmith who originated from the Tyrol and his grandfather, Alajos Györgyi Giergl (1821–1863), was a well-known painter in Pest. His father, Kálmán Györgyi (1860–1930) was a craftsman and art theorist, the director of the National Society of Applied Arts and editor of its journal. Two other close relatives, Géza Gyorgyi (1851–1934) and Kálmán Giergl (1863–1934) were well known architects. The latter built the Music Academy and Klotild Palaces in Pest. Also notable in the clan was Henrik Giergl (1827–1871), a glass artist and trader.", "Rudolf Kárpáti\n Rudolf Kárpáti (17 July 1920 – 1 February 1999) was a fencer from Hungary, who won six gold medals in sabre at four Olympic Games (1948–1960). He also won seven gold, three silver and two bronze medals at the world championships. For his achievements he was named Hungarian Sportsman of the year in 1959 and 1960. Kárpáti graduated from the National Conservatory majoring in the history of music; he was also an accomplished violinist and the artistic director of the People’s Army Central Artistic Ensemble (1961–1986). Besides fencing and music, he was an employee at the Hungarian State Credit Bank and an officer with the Hungarian Army – he retired as Colonel, and later in 1990 was promoted to Major General. Kárpáti was a member of the Hungarian Fencing Federation from 1961 to 1991. After retiring from competitions, in 1977 he became president of the Budapest Fencing Federation and an administrator with the Fédération Internationale d'Escrime.", "György Kárpáti (film director)\n György Kárpáti (born 3 July 1933 in Budapest) is a Hungarian film director whose most celebrated feature film is Nem szoktam hazudni (I Hardly Ever Lie, 1966). Over the last five decades he has directed around 200 films, including documentaries, feature films, short films and commercials. His films have won several awards at major international film festivals, and he has received the Hungarian Programme of the Year award eight times for his television programmes.", "György Kárpáti (film director)\n As a member of the Executive Board of the European League of Institutes of the Arts (ELIA), he was made Chevalier of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the government of France in 1992 and of the Order of the White Rose of Finland in 1998, both distinctions given for his contribution to European art teaching and for bilateral cultural relations.", "György Károly\n Károly was born in Budapest on 31 August 1953, the only son of György Károly (1924–2003), a butcher, and Ilona Szabó (1928–2014), a tailor. He spent his early life in Szigetszentmiklós, where he finished his primary school years. After he completed his studies in Budapest. Károly was educated as a geologist and began to write in the 1970s. He published his first poems in Élet és Irodalom (“Life and Literature”). He was poetic silent in the 1980s. In the nineties Károly began writing again.", "György Hajós\n Hajós was born February 21, 1912, in Budapest; his great-grandfather, Adam Clark, was the famous Scottish engineer who built the Chain Bridge in Budapest. He earned a teaching degree from the University of Budapest in 1935. He then took a position at the Technical University of Budapest, where he stayed from 1935 to 1949. While at the Technical University of Budapest, he earned a doctorate in 1938. He became a professor at the Eötvös Loránd University in 1949 and remained there until his death in 1972. Additionally he was president of the János Bolyai Mathematical Society from 1963 to 1972.", "György Harag\n György Harag was born on June 4, 1925 at Marghita in a Hungarian Jewish family. He was the son of Kádár Magda and Harag Jenő, timber-merchant. He started his elemental schools on Marghita, but finished it in Tășnad. Made his high-school studies on Oradea Mare, first at Emanoil Gojdu High School, then at Jewish High School of Oradea Mare, finally he sat his school examinations in Szent László High School. After graduation he worked for a year as an apprentice, learning ceramics making in Budapest. He shows close ties to theater from his earliest childhood. He faced, first, at Tășnad, some itinerant ", "György Kárpáti\n After a long illness Kárpáti died on 17 June 2020, aged 84 years. He was buried in the Farkasréti Cemetery on 2 July 2020.", "Gyula Kautz\n Born in Győr, he started his University studies at the Royal Academy of Philosophy at Győr. After two academic years, he moved to Pest to study at the University of Pest, where he earned his doctorate in law in 1850. He then went on to study abroad for a year, visiting universities of Berlin, Heidelberg and Leipzig. He was influenced by the English classical school of Economics, and also by Wilhelm Roscher, then a professor at Leipzig, a representative of the German historian school.", "György Gattyán\n He was born on 24 May 1970 in Budapest. His father worked as a mason and a construction entrepreneur; his mother was a homemaker. He attended the Corvin Mátyás High School and continues his studies at the Faculty of Physical Education and Sport Sciences (later part of Semmelweis University for few years). He trained at the Ikarus Sports Club as a runner; his trainer was István Tomhauser.", "György Szrogh\n Szrogh György (January 23, 1915 – 1999) was a Hungarian architect and professor. He graduated in 1938 from Royal Jozsef Nador Technical University. After finished his studies, he worked in several places, such as the Louis Hidas studio, MÉMOSZ Construction Company, City Building Research Institute (VATI) and Residential Building Design Bureau (LAKÓTERV). He had participated in the UNESCO foreign exchange program between 1966 and 1967. At that time he was in England, Mexico and United States of America, when he learned new principles and methods of design. From 1966 he was professor at the Hungarian College of Applied Arts and led the Department of Architecture from 1966 to 1984. ", "Paul Gyorgy\n Gyorgy was born on April 7, 1893 in Nagyvárad, Hungary to a Jewish family. He was said to be an avid reader and musician as a child. His father was a general practitioner in the community. Influenced by his father's occupation and with his parents' encouragement, Gyorgy began to pursue a career in medicine. He attended the University of Budapest Medical School and graduated with Doctor of Medicine degree in 1915. In 1920, after the end of World War I, Gyorgy was offered a job at the University of Heidelberg as an assistant to the physician and researcher Ernst Moro. He remained at the University of Heidelberg until 1933, obtaining full ", "György Ligeti (musician)\n Ligeti was born in Kaposvár, Hungary. He attended the Munkácsy Mihály Gimnázium és Szakközépiskola in Kaposvár. Ligeti obtained a Master of Arts in Communication and media studies from the University of Pécs in 2012. Ligeti moved to London, United Kingdom where he worked as a shop assistant at the Algerian Coffee Stores from 2004 to 2009. On 26 February 2009, Ligeti was interviewed by Magyar Rádió. In 2010 Ligeti became the radio presenter of the Stockholm Syndrome Radio which aims to present new Hungarian indie rock bands. On 25 July 2013, Ligeti was interviewed by Phenomenon.hu in order to present his favourite meal, Aglio olio peperoncino. In 2014 Ligeti sang Odett's song called Éjszaka, while Odett sang We Are Rockstars's 2014 single Rólunk szól at the Szimfonik Live 2014. Ligeti considers himself as a Parni -Scythian.", "List of people from Kaposvár\nSándor Abday (1800 – 1882), Hungarian actor, theater director ; György Buzsáki (born 1949), Hungarian neuroscientist ; Péter Frankl (born 1953), Hungarian mathematician, street performer, columnist, educator ; Péter Hanák (1921 - 1997), Hungarian historian, cultural historian ; János Haraszti (1924 – 2007), Hungarian veterinarian, university teacher, researcher ; Moritz Kaposi (1837 – 1902), Hungarian physician, dermatologist, discoverer of the skin tumor called Kaposi's sarcoma ; Ernő Lendvai (1925 – 1993), Hungarian mathematician, music theorists ; György Németh (born 1956), Hungarian historian, teacher ; Lajos Papp (born 1948), Hungarian heart surgeon, professor ; Virag Dora (born 1993), Hungarian medical doctor, ", "List of people from Kaposvár\nLászló Babarczy (born 1941), Hungarian theater director ; Aurél Bernáth (1895–1982), Hungarian painter, art theorist ; István Bors (1938 - 2003), Hungarian sculptor ; Béla Faragó (born 1961), Hungarian composer ; Sándor Galimberti (1883 - 1915), Hungarian painter ; János Gyenes (1912 - 1995), Hungarian photographer ; Zsolt Homonnay (born 1971), Hungarian actor ; Ilona Ivancsics (born 1960), Hungarian actress ; Ferenc Martyn (1899 – 1986), Hungarian artist, sculptor, graphic designer ; Zoltán Őszi (born 1967), Hungarian graphic designer, illustrator ; Judit Pogány (born 1944), Hungarian actress ; József Rippl-Rónai (1861 - 1927), Hungarian painter ; Magdolna Szőnyi (1915 - 1992), Hungarian arts teacher, artist ; Klári Varga (born 1970), Hungarian actress ; Zsuzsanna Varga (born 1970), Hungarian actress ; János Vaszary (1817 - 1939), Hungarian painter, graphic artist " ]
In what country is Batsère?
[ "France", "fr", "FR", "République française", "La France", "Republic of France", "French Republic", "FRA", "the Hexagon" ]
country
Batsère
144,816
60
[ { "id": "13786207", "title": "Batsère", "text": " Batsère (Vathsèra) is a commune in the Hautes-Pyrénées department in southwestern France.", "score": "1.8017813" }, { "id": "30920071", "title": "Batseri", "text": " Batseri is a village in Sangla Valley in the Kinnaur district of Himachal Pradesh state of India.", "score": "1.5843759" }, { "id": "7719531", "title": "Batsor", "text": " Batsor, also Batshar and Batchar is a village in Nalbari district of the Indian state of Western Assam. It is surrounded by Belsor, Churchuri and Goalpara.", "score": "1.4218478" }, { "id": "26230175", "title": "Batsara Strict Nature Reserve", "text": " Batsara Strict Nature Reserve (ბაწარის სახელმწიფო ნაკრძალი) is a protected area in Akhmeta Municipality, Kakheti region of Georgia in Pankisi Gorge on the bank of Alazani River, 700–2,000 meters above sea level at the foot of the Greater Caucasus. It borders with Ilto Managed Reserve which includes part of Ilto valley.", "score": "1.3855572" }, { "id": "3362928", "title": "Miniopterus bat coronavirus 1", "text": " The common bent-wing bat can be found in the following countries: Afghanistan, Albania, Algeria, Armenia, Australia, Austria, Azerbaijan, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Cameroon, China, Croatia, possibly Ethiopia, France, Georgia, Gibraltar, Greece, Guinea, Hungary, India, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Italy, Japan, Jordan, possibly Kenya, North Korea, South Korea, Laos, Lebanon, Liberia, Libyan Arab Jamahiriya, Malaysia, Malta, Montenegro, Morocco, Myanmar, Nepal, Nigeria, North Macedonia, Pakistan, Palestine, Papua New Guinea, Philippines, Portugal, Romania, Russian Federation, San Marino, Saudi Arabia, Serbia, Sierra Leone, Slovakia, Slovenia, Solomon Islands, Spain, Sri Lanka, Switzerland, Syrian Arab Republic, Taiwan, Tajikistan, Thailand, Tunisia, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Vietnam, and Yemen.", "score": "1.3520246" }, { "id": "32797869", "title": "Peters's epauletted fruit bat", "text": " Peters's epauletted fruit bat is found in Southern Africa, where it has been documented at a range of elevations between 500-2185 m above sea level. Its range includes the following countries: Angola, Botswana, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Eswatini, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Tanzania, Zambia, and Zimbabwe.", "score": "1.3463559" }, { "id": "10475454", "title": "Simon Mbatshi Batshia", "text": " Batshia's governorship was characterized by the battle for the decentralized distribution of 40% of provincial income from the central government. His term was marked by the creation of a provincial fiscal office (REPERE – Régie Provinciale d’Encadrement des Recettes) as well as the establishment of the COPIDE (Commission pour la Promotion des Investissements et du Développement du Bas-Congo - Commission of Investments and Development Promotion in Bas-Congo) and the CLCFT (Commission de Lutte contre la Corruption, la Fraude et les Tracasseries administratives - Anti-Corruption, Frauds and Bureaucracy Commission).", "score": "1.3450668" }, { "id": "8186811", "title": "Batsari", "text": " Batsari is a Local Government Area in Katsina State, Nigeria. Its headquarters are in the town of Batsari. It has an area of 1,107 km2 and a population of 208,978 at the 2006 census. The postal code of the area is 820.", "score": "1.3412125" }, { "id": "32824346", "title": "Midas free-tailed bat", "text": " The free-tailed bat is found in Benin, Botswana, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Central African Republic, Chad, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Gambia, Ghana, Kenya, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mozambique, Namibia, Niger, Nigeria, Rwanda, Saudi Arabia, Senegal, South Africa, Sudan, Tanzania, Togo, Uganda, Zambia, and Zimbabwe.", "score": "1.3397753" }, { "id": "2702549", "title": "Bate, Burkina Faso", "text": " Bate, Burkina Faso is a town in the Sidéradougou Department of Comoé Province in south-western Burkina Faso. The town had an estimated population of 1,098 in 2005.", "score": "1.339464" }, { "id": "8594182", "title": "Bateleur", "text": " of the Congo and a majority of Uganda, Kenya and Tanzania. In Southern Africa, the bateleur is found quite widely, being found almost throughout, where habitat is favorable, Angola, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Malawi and Mozambique. Additionally, they may range Botswana in all but southernmost portion also being found still in northern and eastern Namibia and northwestern South Africa, where its range has contracted considerably from as far south once as the Cape Province to almost entirely to being found exclusively within protected areas north of the Orange River excepting a portion of Kruger National Park. The species is possibly extirpated from Swaziland in southern Africa. The bateleur is regarded as a vagrant in the countries of Tunisia, Cyprus and rarely Egypt, Israel and Iraq. In April 2012 a juvenile bateleur was seen in Algeciras in southern Spain.", "score": "1.3362589" }, { "id": "7876714", "title": "Bat Cave, Nepal", "text": " The Bat Cave (Chameri Gufa in Nepali language) is a solutional cave in the Kaski District in Pokhara, Nepal. It is known for a habitat of Horseshoe bats inside the cave, over the walls and ceiling. The cave is formed of limestone. It is a show cave and one of the most popular tourist destinations in Pokhara.", "score": "1.3359365" }, { "id": "1048006", "title": "Mathew Batsiua", "text": " Mathew Jansen Batsiua (born May 27, 1971) is a Nauruan politician. Batsiua, a former health minister and former foreign minister of Nauru, has served as a member of parliament for the constituency of Boe since 2004.", "score": "1.3331265" }, { "id": "14718389", "title": "Battarrea phalloides", "text": " conditions) vegetation. In Belgium, specimens were found on sandy soil under dead elderflower bushes. In North America, Battarrea phalloides has been collected from the Yukon Territory, western Canada; the US, where it is confined to the west— Southern California, New Mexico, and Arizona— Mexico, and Hawaii. It has also been reported growing in South America (Brazil), Africa (Morocco), Europe (Belgium), China, and Australia. Due to a decline in sightings, B. phalloides was granted legal protection in Hungary in 2005, making it a finable offense to pick them. It received similar protected status in the United Kingdom in 1998. The habitat and range of Battarrea stevenii include arid regions of the western and southwestern United States, Australia, South Africa, and several European countries, including Russia.", "score": "1.3314136" }, { "id": "26947840", "title": "Batavierenrace", "text": " The Batavierenrace is a student relay race organized in the Netherlands each year in May. It is a 185 km running race starting off at the Radboud University Nijmegen in Nijmegen and it takes the up to 8500 participants in 25 stages (16 men's stages and 9 women's stages) through Germany to the campus of the University of Twente in Enschede. It was listed in 2012, in the Guinness World Records as the relay race with the highest number of participants (8,509). On April 23 and 24, 2021 the 49th Batavierenrace will take place. Although mainly a Benelux event, teams from all over the world participate. The start is at the midnight hour on a Friday and ends late in the afternoon of Saturday. All participants wear ", "score": "1.3305478" }, { "id": "8137898", "title": "Lesser mouse-eared bat", "text": " Lesser mouse-eared bats can be found in the following countries: Afghanistan, Albania, Austria, Bangladesh, Bulgaria, China, Croatia, France, Georgia, Germany, Greece, Hungary, India, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Italy, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Lebanon, Mongolia, Pakistan, Portugal, Romania, Russia, Slovenia, Spain, Switzerland, Syria, Turkmenistan, and Ukraine.", "score": "1.323531" }, { "id": "32824342", "title": "Mongalla free-tailed bat", "text": " The Mongalla free-tailed bat (Mops demonstrator) is a species of bat in the family Molossidae. It is found in Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ivory Coast, Ghana, Kenya, Mali, Sudan, and Uganda. Its natural habitats are dry savanna, moist savanna, and subtropical or tropical seasonally wet or flooded lowland grassland. It is threatened by habitat loss.", "score": "1.3229992" }, { "id": "14233102", "title": "Bats, Landes", "text": " Bats (Gascon: Vaths) is a commune in the Landes department in Nouvelle-Aquitaine in southwestern France.", "score": "1.3226995" }, { "id": "7719535", "title": "Batsor", "text": " The village is connected to Nalbari and Gauhati by bus and other privately owned vehicles. National Highway 31 is to the north and is accessible through south by Hajo-Doulashal road.", "score": "1.3198001" }, { "id": "8137909", "title": "Long-fingered bat", "text": " The long-fingered bat is native to the coastal regions of Morocco, Algeria, and Tunisia (North Africa), parts of the Iberian Peninsula, Southern and South-East France, Bulgaria, Italy, and part of the Balkan peninsula. It can also be found on some islands in the Mediterranean Sea, such as Mallorca and Menorca. In Asia, it is distributed from Turkey through Syria and Lebanon to Israel, Iran, Iraq and Uzbekistan. It inhabits wetlands and caves up to elevations of 900 m. The current long-fingered bat population is thought to be decreasing. In Spain, it decreased between 30-50% since 2006, probably comprising less than 10,000 individuals in 30 colonies with more than 20 bats. In France, the known population is less than 3,800 individuals. The Bulgarian population is estimated at around 20,000 individuals. It is more abundant in the eastern region than the western region.", "score": "1.3190672" } ]
[ "Batsère\n Batsère (Vathsèra) is a commune in the Hautes-Pyrénées department in southwestern France.", "Batseri\n Batseri is a village in Sangla Valley in the Kinnaur district of Himachal Pradesh state of India.", "Batsor\n Batsor, also Batshar and Batchar is a village in Nalbari district of the Indian state of Western Assam. It is surrounded by Belsor, Churchuri and Goalpara.", "Batsara Strict Nature Reserve\n Batsara Strict Nature Reserve (ბაწარის სახელმწიფო ნაკრძალი) is a protected area in Akhmeta Municipality, Kakheti region of Georgia in Pankisi Gorge on the bank of Alazani River, 700–2,000 meters above sea level at the foot of the Greater Caucasus. It borders with Ilto Managed Reserve which includes part of Ilto valley.", "Miniopterus bat coronavirus 1\n The common bent-wing bat can be found in the following countries: Afghanistan, Albania, Algeria, Armenia, Australia, Austria, Azerbaijan, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Cameroon, China, Croatia, possibly Ethiopia, France, Georgia, Gibraltar, Greece, Guinea, Hungary, India, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Italy, Japan, Jordan, possibly Kenya, North Korea, South Korea, Laos, Lebanon, Liberia, Libyan Arab Jamahiriya, Malaysia, Malta, Montenegro, Morocco, Myanmar, Nepal, Nigeria, North Macedonia, Pakistan, Palestine, Papua New Guinea, Philippines, Portugal, Romania, Russian Federation, San Marino, Saudi Arabia, Serbia, Sierra Leone, Slovakia, Slovenia, Solomon Islands, Spain, Sri Lanka, Switzerland, Syrian Arab Republic, Taiwan, Tajikistan, Thailand, Tunisia, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Vietnam, and Yemen.", "Peters's epauletted fruit bat\n Peters's epauletted fruit bat is found in Southern Africa, where it has been documented at a range of elevations between 500-2185 m above sea level. Its range includes the following countries: Angola, Botswana, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Eswatini, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Tanzania, Zambia, and Zimbabwe.", "Simon Mbatshi Batshia\n Batshia's governorship was characterized by the battle for the decentralized distribution of 40% of provincial income from the central government. His term was marked by the creation of a provincial fiscal office (REPERE – Régie Provinciale d’Encadrement des Recettes) as well as the establishment of the COPIDE (Commission pour la Promotion des Investissements et du Développement du Bas-Congo - Commission of Investments and Development Promotion in Bas-Congo) and the CLCFT (Commission de Lutte contre la Corruption, la Fraude et les Tracasseries administratives - Anti-Corruption, Frauds and Bureaucracy Commission).", "Batsari\n Batsari is a Local Government Area in Katsina State, Nigeria. Its headquarters are in the town of Batsari. It has an area of 1,107 km2 and a population of 208,978 at the 2006 census. The postal code of the area is 820.", "Midas free-tailed bat\n The free-tailed bat is found in Benin, Botswana, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Central African Republic, Chad, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Gambia, Ghana, Kenya, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mozambique, Namibia, Niger, Nigeria, Rwanda, Saudi Arabia, Senegal, South Africa, Sudan, Tanzania, Togo, Uganda, Zambia, and Zimbabwe.", "Bate, Burkina Faso\n Bate, Burkina Faso is a town in the Sidéradougou Department of Comoé Province in south-western Burkina Faso. The town had an estimated population of 1,098 in 2005.", "Bateleur\n of the Congo and a majority of Uganda, Kenya and Tanzania. In Southern Africa, the bateleur is found quite widely, being found almost throughout, where habitat is favorable, Angola, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Malawi and Mozambique. Additionally, they may range Botswana in all but southernmost portion also being found still in northern and eastern Namibia and northwestern South Africa, where its range has contracted considerably from as far south once as the Cape Province to almost entirely to being found exclusively within protected areas north of the Orange River excepting a portion of Kruger National Park. The species is possibly extirpated from Swaziland in southern Africa. The bateleur is regarded as a vagrant in the countries of Tunisia, Cyprus and rarely Egypt, Israel and Iraq. In April 2012 a juvenile bateleur was seen in Algeciras in southern Spain.", "Bat Cave, Nepal\n The Bat Cave (Chameri Gufa in Nepali language) is a solutional cave in the Kaski District in Pokhara, Nepal. It is known for a habitat of Horseshoe bats inside the cave, over the walls and ceiling. The cave is formed of limestone. It is a show cave and one of the most popular tourist destinations in Pokhara.", "Mathew Batsiua\n Mathew Jansen Batsiua (born May 27, 1971) is a Nauruan politician. Batsiua, a former health minister and former foreign minister of Nauru, has served as a member of parliament for the constituency of Boe since 2004.", "Battarrea phalloides\n conditions) vegetation. In Belgium, specimens were found on sandy soil under dead elderflower bushes. In North America, Battarrea phalloides has been collected from the Yukon Territory, western Canada; the US, where it is confined to the west— Southern California, New Mexico, and Arizona— Mexico, and Hawaii. It has also been reported growing in South America (Brazil), Africa (Morocco), Europe (Belgium), China, and Australia. Due to a decline in sightings, B. phalloides was granted legal protection in Hungary in 2005, making it a finable offense to pick them. It received similar protected status in the United Kingdom in 1998. The habitat and range of Battarrea stevenii include arid regions of the western and southwestern United States, Australia, South Africa, and several European countries, including Russia.", "Batavierenrace\n The Batavierenrace is a student relay race organized in the Netherlands each year in May. It is a 185 km running race starting off at the Radboud University Nijmegen in Nijmegen and it takes the up to 8500 participants in 25 stages (16 men's stages and 9 women's stages) through Germany to the campus of the University of Twente in Enschede. It was listed in 2012, in the Guinness World Records as the relay race with the highest number of participants (8,509). On April 23 and 24, 2021 the 49th Batavierenrace will take place. Although mainly a Benelux event, teams from all over the world participate. The start is at the midnight hour on a Friday and ends late in the afternoon of Saturday. All participants wear ", "Lesser mouse-eared bat\n Lesser mouse-eared bats can be found in the following countries: Afghanistan, Albania, Austria, Bangladesh, Bulgaria, China, Croatia, France, Georgia, Germany, Greece, Hungary, India, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Italy, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Lebanon, Mongolia, Pakistan, Portugal, Romania, Russia, Slovenia, Spain, Switzerland, Syria, Turkmenistan, and Ukraine.", "Mongalla free-tailed bat\n The Mongalla free-tailed bat (Mops demonstrator) is a species of bat in the family Molossidae. It is found in Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ivory Coast, Ghana, Kenya, Mali, Sudan, and Uganda. Its natural habitats are dry savanna, moist savanna, and subtropical or tropical seasonally wet or flooded lowland grassland. It is threatened by habitat loss.", "Bats, Landes\n Bats (Gascon: Vaths) is a commune in the Landes department in Nouvelle-Aquitaine in southwestern France.", "Batsor\n The village is connected to Nalbari and Gauhati by bus and other privately owned vehicles. National Highway 31 is to the north and is accessible through south by Hajo-Doulashal road.", "Long-fingered bat\n The long-fingered bat is native to the coastal regions of Morocco, Algeria, and Tunisia (North Africa), parts of the Iberian Peninsula, Southern and South-East France, Bulgaria, Italy, and part of the Balkan peninsula. It can also be found on some islands in the Mediterranean Sea, such as Mallorca and Menorca. In Asia, it is distributed from Turkey through Syria and Lebanon to Israel, Iran, Iraq and Uzbekistan. It inhabits wetlands and caves up to elevations of 900 m. The current long-fingered bat population is thought to be decreasing. In Spain, it decreased between 30-50% since 2006, probably comprising less than 10,000 individuals in 30 colonies with more than 20 bats. In France, the known population is less than 3,800 individuals. The Bulgarian population is estimated at around 20,000 individuals. It is more abundant in the eastern region than the western region." ]
In what country is Valdearcos de la Vega?
[ "Spain", "España", "Kingdom of Spain", "ES", "ESP" ]
country
Valdearcos de la Vega
1,273,302
39
[ { "id": "26273240", "title": "Valdearcos de la Vega", "text": " Valdearcos de la Vega is a municipality located in the province of Valladolid, Castile and León, Spain. According to the 2004 census (INE), the municipality has a population of 115 inhabitants.", "score": "1.8901286" }, { "id": "26273252", "title": "Vega de Valdetronco", "text": " Vega de Valdetronco is a municipality located in the province of Valladolid, Castile and León, Spain. According to the 2004 census (INE), the municipality has a population of 162 inhabitants.", "score": "1.6120703" }, { "id": "25554680", "title": "Vega de Valcarce", "text": " Vega de Valcarce (A Veiga de Valcarce in Galician language) is a village and municipality located in the region of El Bierzo (province of León, Castile and León, Spain). According to a census (INE), the municipality has a population of 865 inhabitants. The mayoress is María Luisa González Santín. The village is at an altitude of 631 m (2070.21 ft), and the average rainfall is around 622.05mm (24.49 in). The village is along the route of the Camino de Santiago, which brings tourists in the spring and summer months. There are several accommodations for these tourists. The Valcarce River runs through the village, and there are various tourist attractions throughout the village and surrounding the village as well. It is one of Galician speaking councils of Castilla y León The village recognizes many of the religious holidays celebrated by the average Spaniard.", "score": "1.6000885" }, { "id": "25554585", "title": "Posada de Valdeón", "text": " Vega de Liordes, an enclave in the Leon sector of Picos de Europa belonging to the municipality of Posada de Valdeón registered -35.8 C on January 7, 2021.", "score": "1.4970565" }, { "id": "25501803", "title": "Villademor de la Vega", "text": " Villademor de la Vega is a municipality located in the province of León, Castile and León, Spain. According to the 2013 census (INE), the municipality has a population of 390 inhabitants.", "score": "1.4915804" }, { "id": "12218106", "title": "Vega de Viejos", "text": " Vega de Viejos or La Vega de los Viejos (Astur-Leonese: Veiga Viechos) is a locality located in the municipality of Cabrillanes, in León province, Castile and León, Spain. As of 2020, it has a population of 42.", "score": "1.4771906" }, { "id": "3880512", "title": "Roman Catholic Diocese of La Vega", "text": " The Roman Catholic Diocese of La Vega (Dioecesis Vegensis) (erected 25 September 1953) is a suffragan diocese of the Archdiocese of Santiago de los Caballeros.", "score": "1.4741443" }, { "id": "8653881", "title": "Tourism in the Dominican Republic", "text": "Santiago de los Caballeros Puerto Plata Puerto Plata (city) ; Sosúa ; Playa Dorada ; Cabarete Samaná ; Samaná (town) Las Terrenas La Vega La Vega (city) ; Constanza ; Jarabacoa ; Bonao María Trinidad Sánchez Nagua ; Río San Juan Montecristi Santiago de los Caballeros or simply Santiago (English: Saint James of the Thirty Knights) is the second-largest city in the Dominican Republic, and the fourth-largest city in the Caribbean. It is the capital of the Santiago Province and the major metropolis in the north-central region of the country. Its urban population reaches 550,753 inhabitants, and if rural areas are included its population rises to 691,262.Santiago is located approximately 155 km (96 mi) northwest of Santo Domingo with an average altitude of ", "score": "1.4708378" }, { "id": "26273249", "title": "Vega de Ruiponce", "text": " Vega de Ruiponce is a municipality located in the province of Valladolid, Castile and León, Spain. According to the 2004 census (INE), the municipality has a population of 129 inhabitants. Its economy is mainly focused on the primary sector, specifically livestock and agriculture.", "score": "1.4649329" }, { "id": "13685471", "title": "Reales de La Vega", "text": " Reales de La Vega is a professional basketball team based in La Vega Province, Dominican Republic. The team currently plays in the Dominican top division, Liga Nacional de Baloncesto.", "score": "1.4591331" }, { "id": "12215961", "title": "Lope de Vega Theatre, Valladolid", "text": " The Lope de Vega Theatre (Teatro Lope de Vega) is a theatre in Valladolid, Spain, situated on María de Molina street. It was inaugurated in 1861, designed by the architect Jerónimo de la Gándara. In the seventeenth century the site of the theatre was a patio equipped with a stage for putting on plays and covered boxes for the audience. The patio was covered in the eighteenth century, and the Plaza de la Comedia lasted until 1856, when it was proposed to replace the now-ruinous building with a new theatre. Jerónimo de Gándara was the architect. The Teatro Lope de Vega was inaugurated on 8 December 1861. The facade, restored in 1920, is in the classical style. It has two levels, each with three arches, and a pediment that holds a medallion with the likeness of Lope de Vega sculpted by Ponciano Ponzano. More ", "score": "1.4438586" }, { "id": "31101300", "title": "Vega Sicilia", "text": " Bodegas Vega Sicilia is a Spanish winery located in the Ribera del Duero Denominación de Origen in the Province of Valladolid, Castile and León (northern Spain). The winery was founded in 1864 by Don Eloy Lecanda y Chaves, who planted various grapes from the Bordeaux wine region of France, including Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot, which are still being used in the wines today. Since 1982, the same year that the Ribera del Duero was granted Denominación de Origen (DO) status, the winery has been owned by the Álvarez family who are members of the Primum Familiae Vini. In comparing the ", "score": "1.4419527" }, { "id": "12218107", "title": "Vega de Viejos", "text": " Vega de Viejos is located 92km northwest of León, Spain.", "score": "1.4248934" }, { "id": "25338347", "title": "Valdepeñas (DO)", "text": " Valdepeñas is a Spanish Denominación de Origen Protegida (DOP) for wines located in the province of Ciudad Real in the south of Castile-La Mancha (Spain). It is almost completely surrounded by another DOP (La Mancha) but is an independent DOP due to its long history of producing a distinct style of wine known aloque or clarete which is made by mixing white and red grapes. 2016´s harvest is formed by 55.9 million kilos of red grapes and 43.2 million kilos of white grapes. Valdepeñas is a natural crossroads between the south of Spain, the Mediterranean regions to the east, Extremadura to the west and central plains to the north. To the south of the DOP is the Sierra Morena range a natural frontier with Andalusia, and to the east and west there are mountains reaching a height of 1000 m. The most prized vineyards are in Los Llanos in the west and in Las Aberturas in the north. The total area planted to vines is 22,332.11 ha (2016).", "score": "1.4078515" }, { "id": "13506991", "title": "Vega de Magaz", "text": " Vega de Magaz is located 60km west of León, Spain.", "score": "1.4069778" }, { "id": "1294723", "title": "Daniel de la Vega", "text": " Daniel de la Vega (30 June 1892 – 29 July 1971) was a Chilean journalist, poet, playwright, chronicler, and novelist. De la Vega was born in Quilpué (now part of Greater Valparaiso) into an educated family who instilled in him a love of literature. He graduated from the lyceum in Quilpué. The poetry in his first book, El calor del Terruño (1912), has been called \"light and delicate\" with an \"arresting mysticism\". He was friends with poet and playwright Víctor Domingo Silva. In 1953, he received the 12th Chilean National Prize in Literature for his work in both journalism and theater. His primary contributions were published originally in periodicals, notably in the column \"Hoy\" (\"Today\") in Ultimas Noticias, but he put together over forty books as well. De la Vega died in Santiago de Chile.", "score": "1.4069126" }, { "id": "6025736", "title": "La Vega, Dominican Republic", "text": " La Vega, is the fourth largest city and municipality of the Dominican Republic. It is in La Vega Province. The city is known as the Carnaval epicenter of the Dominican Republic for its tradition and culture, its large agricultural production methods throughout its province.", "score": "1.4037478" }, { "id": "8377858", "title": "Valdebebas", "text": " Valdebebas is situated 8 kilometers from Plaza de Castilla and the Cuatro Torres complex in northeastern Madrid. The area is bordered to the north by La Moraleja, to the south by IFEMA, to the east by Barajas International Airport T-4 and to the west by Sanchinarro.", "score": "1.400008" }, { "id": "733162", "title": "Valdepeñas", "text": "🇫🇷 Cognac, France ", "score": "1.3993849" }, { "id": "5008023", "title": "Vega, Gijón", "text": " Vega is a parish of the municipality of Gijón / Xixón, in Asturias, Spain. Its population was 3,507 in 2012. Vega is a residential and rural area, bordering with the districts of Granda, Castiello Bernueces, Santurio, Caldones, Llavandera y Samartín de Güerces. The famous La Camocha coal mine (closed 2007) was located in Vega. The mining town of La Camocha (including El Vaticano and Ciudad Virginia barrios) is located in the mine surroundings.", "score": "1.3943553" } ]
[ "Valdearcos de la Vega\n Valdearcos de la Vega is a municipality located in the province of Valladolid, Castile and León, Spain. According to the 2004 census (INE), the municipality has a population of 115 inhabitants.", "Vega de Valdetronco\n Vega de Valdetronco is a municipality located in the province of Valladolid, Castile and León, Spain. According to the 2004 census (INE), the municipality has a population of 162 inhabitants.", "Vega de Valcarce\n Vega de Valcarce (A Veiga de Valcarce in Galician language) is a village and municipality located in the region of El Bierzo (province of León, Castile and León, Spain). According to a census (INE), the municipality has a population of 865 inhabitants. The mayoress is María Luisa González Santín. The village is at an altitude of 631 m (2070.21 ft), and the average rainfall is around 622.05mm (24.49 in). The village is along the route of the Camino de Santiago, which brings tourists in the spring and summer months. There are several accommodations for these tourists. The Valcarce River runs through the village, and there are various tourist attractions throughout the village and surrounding the village as well. It is one of Galician speaking councils of Castilla y León The village recognizes many of the religious holidays celebrated by the average Spaniard.", "Posada de Valdeón\n Vega de Liordes, an enclave in the Leon sector of Picos de Europa belonging to the municipality of Posada de Valdeón registered -35.8 C on January 7, 2021.", "Villademor de la Vega\n Villademor de la Vega is a municipality located in the province of León, Castile and León, Spain. According to the 2013 census (INE), the municipality has a population of 390 inhabitants.", "Vega de Viejos\n Vega de Viejos or La Vega de los Viejos (Astur-Leonese: Veiga Viechos) is a locality located in the municipality of Cabrillanes, in León province, Castile and León, Spain. As of 2020, it has a population of 42.", "Roman Catholic Diocese of La Vega\n The Roman Catholic Diocese of La Vega (Dioecesis Vegensis) (erected 25 September 1953) is a suffragan diocese of the Archdiocese of Santiago de los Caballeros.", "Tourism in the Dominican Republic\nSantiago de los Caballeros Puerto Plata Puerto Plata (city) ; Sosúa ; Playa Dorada ; Cabarete Samaná ; Samaná (town) Las Terrenas La Vega La Vega (city) ; Constanza ; Jarabacoa ; Bonao María Trinidad Sánchez Nagua ; Río San Juan Montecristi Santiago de los Caballeros or simply Santiago (English: Saint James of the Thirty Knights) is the second-largest city in the Dominican Republic, and the fourth-largest city in the Caribbean. It is the capital of the Santiago Province and the major metropolis in the north-central region of the country. Its urban population reaches 550,753 inhabitants, and if rural areas are included its population rises to 691,262.Santiago is located approximately 155 km (96 mi) northwest of Santo Domingo with an average altitude of ", "Vega de Ruiponce\n Vega de Ruiponce is a municipality located in the province of Valladolid, Castile and León, Spain. According to the 2004 census (INE), the municipality has a population of 129 inhabitants. Its economy is mainly focused on the primary sector, specifically livestock and agriculture.", "Reales de La Vega\n Reales de La Vega is a professional basketball team based in La Vega Province, Dominican Republic. The team currently plays in the Dominican top division, Liga Nacional de Baloncesto.", "Lope de Vega Theatre, Valladolid\n The Lope de Vega Theatre (Teatro Lope de Vega) is a theatre in Valladolid, Spain, situated on María de Molina street. It was inaugurated in 1861, designed by the architect Jerónimo de la Gándara. In the seventeenth century the site of the theatre was a patio equipped with a stage for putting on plays and covered boxes for the audience. The patio was covered in the eighteenth century, and the Plaza de la Comedia lasted until 1856, when it was proposed to replace the now-ruinous building with a new theatre. Jerónimo de Gándara was the architect. The Teatro Lope de Vega was inaugurated on 8 December 1861. The facade, restored in 1920, is in the classical style. It has two levels, each with three arches, and a pediment that holds a medallion with the likeness of Lope de Vega sculpted by Ponciano Ponzano. More ", "Vega Sicilia\n Bodegas Vega Sicilia is a Spanish winery located in the Ribera del Duero Denominación de Origen in the Province of Valladolid, Castile and León (northern Spain). The winery was founded in 1864 by Don Eloy Lecanda y Chaves, who planted various grapes from the Bordeaux wine region of France, including Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot, which are still being used in the wines today. Since 1982, the same year that the Ribera del Duero was granted Denominación de Origen (DO) status, the winery has been owned by the Álvarez family who are members of the Primum Familiae Vini. In comparing the ", "Vega de Viejos\n Vega de Viejos is located 92km northwest of León, Spain.", "Valdepeñas (DO)\n Valdepeñas is a Spanish Denominación de Origen Protegida (DOP) for wines located in the province of Ciudad Real in the south of Castile-La Mancha (Spain). It is almost completely surrounded by another DOP (La Mancha) but is an independent DOP due to its long history of producing a distinct style of wine known aloque or clarete which is made by mixing white and red grapes. 2016´s harvest is formed by 55.9 million kilos of red grapes and 43.2 million kilos of white grapes. Valdepeñas is a natural crossroads between the south of Spain, the Mediterranean regions to the east, Extremadura to the west and central plains to the north. To the south of the DOP is the Sierra Morena range a natural frontier with Andalusia, and to the east and west there are mountains reaching a height of 1000 m. The most prized vineyards are in Los Llanos in the west and in Las Aberturas in the north. The total area planted to vines is 22,332.11 ha (2016).", "Vega de Magaz\n Vega de Magaz is located 60km west of León, Spain.", "Daniel de la Vega\n Daniel de la Vega (30 June 1892 – 29 July 1971) was a Chilean journalist, poet, playwright, chronicler, and novelist. De la Vega was born in Quilpué (now part of Greater Valparaiso) into an educated family who instilled in him a love of literature. He graduated from the lyceum in Quilpué. The poetry in his first book, El calor del Terruño (1912), has been called \"light and delicate\" with an \"arresting mysticism\". He was friends with poet and playwright Víctor Domingo Silva. In 1953, he received the 12th Chilean National Prize in Literature for his work in both journalism and theater. His primary contributions were published originally in periodicals, notably in the column \"Hoy\" (\"Today\") in Ultimas Noticias, but he put together over forty books as well. De la Vega died in Santiago de Chile.", "La Vega, Dominican Republic\n La Vega, is the fourth largest city and municipality of the Dominican Republic. It is in La Vega Province. The city is known as the Carnaval epicenter of the Dominican Republic for its tradition and culture, its large agricultural production methods throughout its province.", "Valdebebas\n Valdebebas is situated 8 kilometers from Plaza de Castilla and the Cuatro Torres complex in northeastern Madrid. The area is bordered to the north by La Moraleja, to the south by IFEMA, to the east by Barajas International Airport T-4 and to the west by Sanchinarro.", "Valdepeñas\n🇫🇷 Cognac, France ", "Vega, Gijón\n Vega is a parish of the municipality of Gijón / Xixón, in Asturias, Spain. Its population was 3,507 in 2012. Vega is a residential and rural area, bordering with the districts of Granda, Castiello Bernueces, Santurio, Caldones, Llavandera y Samartín de Güerces. The famous La Camocha coal mine (closed 2007) was located in Vega. The mining town of La Camocha (including El Vaticano and Ciudad Virginia barrios) is located in the mine surroundings." ]
In what city was Bert Myers born?
[ "Frederick", "Frederick, Maryland", "Frederick, MD" ]
place of birth
Bert Myers
3,485,927
45
[ { "id": "1691398", "title": "Bert Myers", "text": " James Albert Myers (April 8, 1874 – October 12, 1915) was an American professional baseball player who played in parts of three seasons for the St. Louis Browns, Washington Senators and Philadelphia Phillies. He was born in Frederick, Maryland and died in Washington, D.C. at the age of 41.", "score": "1.8787081" }, { "id": "14894574", "title": "Harry C. Myers", "text": " He was born in New Haven, Connecticut, on September 5, 1882. When he was young, Myers moved to Philadelphia, where he received most of his education. He studied drawing and design at the Philadelphia Art School for three years. Turning from art to drama, he acted for two years with the Girard Avenue Stock Company and with other troupes in subsequent years. Myers had been a theatre actor for 10 years before he went into films as an actor for Siegmund Lubin's Lubin Studios in 1909. By 1914, he was directing his own comedy shorts featuring him and his wife, Rosemary Theby, for Universal, the Vim Comedy Company, and Pathé studios. After 1920 he had many starring roles in feature-length films, the most notable of which was as the eccentric alcoholic millionaire in Charlie Chaplin's City Lights (1931). His career declined after the introduction of sound films. Myers died on December 25, 1938, in Hollywood, California, at age 56, from pneumonia.", "score": "1.6669997" }, { "id": "32924262", "title": "Wilson Myers", "text": " Wilson \"Serious\" Myers (born Ernest Wilson Myers or Wilson Ernestine Myers, October 2, 1906 – July 10, 1992) was an American jazz double-bassist, vocalist, bandleader and arranger, best known for his contributions to New Orleans jazz.", "score": "1.6327035" }, { "id": "7271081", "title": "Scott Myers", "text": " Scott Myers (born 1958, USA) is an American painter and sculptor who lives and works in Texas. He graduated Texas A&M University in 1984 with a doctorate in veterinary medicine. He studied sculpture throughout Italy focusing on Florence, Venice and Rome. Sculpting in Tuscany, he cast his work in bronze at the prestigious Fonderia d'Arte Massimo Del Chiaro in Pietrasanta. In 1994, Myers became an elected member of the National Sculpture Society. On February 12, 2011, Myers was featured in the popular television show Texas Country Reporter. Myers was inducted in the inaugural class of the Haltom City High School Hall of Fame on March 10, ", "score": "1.6282525" }, { "id": "14238214", "title": "Jerome Myers", "text": " Jerome Myers (March 20, 1867 – June 19, 1940) was an American artist and writer associated with the Ashcan School, particularly known for his sympathetic depictions of the urban landscape and its people. He was one of the main organizers of the 1913 Armory Show, which introduced European modernism to America. Born in Petersburg, Virginia and raised in Philadelphia, Trenton and Baltimore, he spent his adult life in New York City. Myers worked briefly as an actor and scene painter. He then studied art for a year at Cooper Union followed by study at the Art Students League over a period of eight years where his main teacher was George de Forest Brush. In 1896 he went to Paris, but only stayed a few months, believing that his main classroom was ", "score": "1.6226747" }, { "id": "13931045", "title": "Russell Myers", "text": " Russell Kommer Myers (born October 9, 1938) is an American cartoonist best known for his newspaper comic strip Broom-Hilda. Born in Pittsburg, Kansas, Myers was raised in Oklahoma where his father taught at the University of Tulsa. Myers was interested in cartooning from an early age. After his first strip submission for syndication failed, he began working for Hallmark Cards in Kansas City, MO in 1960 as an illustrator of greeting cards. He continued to submit comic strip concepts for syndication in his free time.", "score": "1.6218705" }, { "id": "32477463", "title": "George Steele", "text": " Myers was born in Detroit on April 16, 1937, and was raised in Madison Heights, Michigan. During high school, he found success in track, baseball, basketball, and football. In 1956, Myers entered Michigan State University as a football player for the Michigan State Spartans, but his career as a football player was immediately cut short as a result of knee problems. In 1961, he was with the Grand Rapids Blazers (UFL). After earning a bachelor of science degree from Michigan State University and a master's degree from Central Michigan University, Myers became a teacher, amateur wrestling coach, and football coach at Madison High School in Madison Heights, Michigan. There he would eventually become a member of the Michigan Coaches Hall of Fame.", "score": "1.6196313" }, { "id": "32061233", "title": "Forrest Myers", "text": " Myers studied at the San Francisco Art Institute, from 1958 to 1960; and moved to New York City in 1961. During the early to mid-1960s he was a founding member of The Park Place Gallery. His large steel Untitled from 1969-1970 is included in the outdoor plaza at The Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller Empire State Plaza Art Collection in Albany, New York. Myers life and career has been interviewed by national and international television personalities. The Art and Times of Frosty Myers, a feature length movie documenting his extraordinary life, is also a unique and fascinating window into the New York art scene of the 60s and 70s. With his wife Debra Arch Myers, Frosty divides his time between homes in Damascus, Pennsylvania, where there is a large museum of his work, and St. Augustine, Florida.", "score": "1.612654" }, { "id": "4918435", "title": "Lon Myers", "text": " Myers was Jewish, and was born in Richmond, Virginia, to Solomon H. Myers, a clerk. He was in the first graduating class of Richmond High School. His father moved the family to Jersey City, New Jersey, in 1875 after he graduated high school, and then to New York City, where he became a bookkeeper.", "score": "1.6104157" }, { "id": "27045125", "title": "Jack Elliott Myers", "text": " Jack Myers was born in Lynn, Massachusetts, to Jewish parents Alvin G. and Ruth L. Myers, and developed an interest in writing and poetry at a young age. In his twenties he worked many odd jobs to support his self-directed study of poetry.", "score": "1.6098169" }, { "id": "32924263", "title": "Wilson Myers", "text": " Myers was born in Germantown, Pennsylvania. He began his professional career in the American South, gaining his nickname \"Serious\" for his love of classical music. He played drums with Bessie Smith in the mid-1920s, and also played guitar and banjo professionally. He first played bass with King Oliver, then with the Bechet-Ladnier New Orleans Footwarmers. In the 1930s he played in Europe in the bands of Django Reinhardt, Lucky Millinder, and Willie Lewis. On his return he played in New York City and Philadelphia with Sidney Bechet and Mezz Mezzrow, as well as leading his own band and contributing arrangements. One of his key recordings, as bassist and vocalist, was \"Preachin' Blues\", first recorded with Bechet's New Orleans Footwarmers in 1940, and described as a precursor of rhythm and blues music. He also worked with the Spirits of Rhythm in the 1930s and 1940s, and in the latter decade played with Jimmy Dorsey, Bob Mosley, Tiger Haynes, Rex Stewart, and for a short time with Duke Ellington. He worked locally in Philadelphia into the 1970s, playing music in addition to working as a preacher. He died in Philadelphia in 1992.", "score": "1.5988728" }, { "id": "14238233", "title": "Charles Samuel Myers", "text": " Myers was born in Kensington, London on 13 March 1873, the eldest son of Wolf Myers, a merchant, and his wife, Esther Eugenie Moses. His family was Jewish. In the 1881 census he is an 8-year-old scholar living at 27 Arundel Gardens, Kensington, London with his parents, 4 brothers and 4 servants. In the 1891 census he was a scholar, aged 18 living at 49 Leinster Gardens, Paddington, London, with his parents, 4 brothers, a visitor, and 4 servants (cook, housemaid, parlourmaid, and ladies' maid).", "score": "1.5953486" }, { "id": "32772469", "title": "Robert Hill Myers", "text": " Robert Hill Myers (March 30, 1856 – November 16, 1921 ) was a lawyer, judge and political figure in Manitoba. He represented Minnedosa from 1892 to 1903 in the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba as a Liberal. He was born in Oxford County, Canada West, the son of Robert Myers, a native of England, and Margaret Hill, a native of Scotland. Myers was educated at the Collegiate Institute in Stratford and at Osgoode Hall. He was called to the Ontario bar in 1880, then moved to Manitoba in 1882 and was called to the Manitoba bar the following year. In 1885, Myers married Annie McLeod. He practised law briefly in Winnipeg and Brandon before settling in Minnedosa, where he was in practice for 21 years. In January 1903, he was named county court judge for Winnipeg. Myers died in Winnipeg at the age of 65. His former home in Minnedosa was designated a Manitoba Municipal Heritage site in 1986.", "score": "1.587939" }, { "id": "8950684", "title": "Heavy D", "text": " Dwight Arrington Myers was born on May 24, 1967 in Mandeville, Manchester, Jamaica, the son of nurse Eulahlee Lee and machine technician Clifford Vincent Myers. In the early 1970s, his family moved to Mount Vernon, New York, where he was raised. In an interview, his mother stated that he spent most of his childhood hanging out with his brother Floyd and his childhood friend Mo.", "score": "1.5860612" }, { "id": "9504862", "title": "Joseph Myers", "text": " Joseph William Myers (March 18, 1882 – February 11, 1956) was an American pitcher in Major League Baseball, born in Wilmington, Delaware. He stood at 5ft 10in and weighed 205 lbs. Myers started his organized baseball career on October 7, 1905, with the American League's Philadelphia Athletics. In his only major league start, he pitched a five-inning complete game, allowing two earned runs. Myers then spent 1906 to 1912 in the Tri-State League. He played in York, Reading, Harrisburg, and Trenton before settling in with the Harrisburg Senators for four seasons. In 1911, he set his career-high in wins, with 19. Myers died in 1956 in Delaware City, Delaware.", "score": "1.5844867" }, { "id": "8555005", "title": "Burt Myers", "text": " .", "score": "1.5843143" }, { "id": "3731490", "title": "William Starr Myers", "text": " William Starr Myers (June 17, 1877 – January 27, 1956) was a Princeton University professor, historian, white supremacist, and anti-immigrant activist who chronicled New Jersey and the GOP and argued publicly for the inferiority of African Americans. Myers was the son of J. Norris Myers and Laura Virginia Starr of Baltimore, the family later moving to North Carolina. Myers married Margaret Barr on 8 June 1910. Myers graduated from the University of North Carolina, class of 1897. Myers, the class of '97 poet, evidently felt great pride in his alma mater and was a prolific song writer who wrote several school-related songs which remain famous. \"Hark the Sound\" and \"Tar Heel Born\" are two of his most famous. At ", "score": "1.5812564" }, { "id": "4061446", "title": "Norman Myers", "text": " Myers was born in Whitewell (Lancashire, then Yorkshire) and was raised until the age of 11 on the family farm, without electricity, gas or an internal toilet. He lived in Kenya for over 30 years and later settled in Headington, Oxford, England. He attended grammar school and then the University of Oxford (BA French and German, Keble College 1958, MA 1963) and became a District Officer in the last few years of the Kenya Administration from 1958 to 1961. He then worked as a high school teacher in Nairobi from 1961 to 1966 and a freelance writer and broadcaster until 1969. In 1972, after PhD studies at the University of California, Berkeley (graduated 1973) he became a consultant for the UN, the World Bank and other organisations, remaining in Kenya until the early 1980s. He and Dorothy have a daughter, retired marathon runner Mara Yamauchi, who they raised in Kenya until the age of 8. He died in Oxford on 20 October 2019 after a long illness.", "score": "1.5810387" }, { "id": "9747617", "title": "Bill Myers (baseball)", "text": " William Vandeveer Myers (October 31, 1886 – death date unknown) was an American Negro league catcher between 1908 and 1921. A native of Brooklyn, New York, Myers made his Negro leagues debut in 1908 with the Brooklyn Royal Giants. He played for Brooklyn again in 1910, and went on to play for the Cleveland Tate Stars in 1921.", "score": "1.5803854" }, { "id": "9779164", "title": "LeRoy Myers", "text": " LeRoy Myers (November 10, 1919 – April 26, 2004) was an African American tap dancer and manager of the Copasetics. He was born in North Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and learned to tap dance on the street corners of Philadelphia. When Bill \"Bojangles\" Robinson died in 1949, LeRoy Myers and some close friends were inspired to form the Copasetics, named after Bill Robinsons' favorite expression, \"Everything is Copasetic.\" The Copasetics was a fraternity of black entertainers that were influential in the revival of tap dancing in the late 1970s through the 1980s. LeRoy Myers was elected as the club's first president. The original membership included Billy Strayhorn, ", "score": "1.5800004" } ]
[ "Bert Myers\n James Albert Myers (April 8, 1874 – October 12, 1915) was an American professional baseball player who played in parts of three seasons for the St. Louis Browns, Washington Senators and Philadelphia Phillies. He was born in Frederick, Maryland and died in Washington, D.C. at the age of 41.", "Harry C. Myers\n He was born in New Haven, Connecticut, on September 5, 1882. When he was young, Myers moved to Philadelphia, where he received most of his education. He studied drawing and design at the Philadelphia Art School for three years. Turning from art to drama, he acted for two years with the Girard Avenue Stock Company and with other troupes in subsequent years. Myers had been a theatre actor for 10 years before he went into films as an actor for Siegmund Lubin's Lubin Studios in 1909. By 1914, he was directing his own comedy shorts featuring him and his wife, Rosemary Theby, for Universal, the Vim Comedy Company, and Pathé studios. After 1920 he had many starring roles in feature-length films, the most notable of which was as the eccentric alcoholic millionaire in Charlie Chaplin's City Lights (1931). His career declined after the introduction of sound films. Myers died on December 25, 1938, in Hollywood, California, at age 56, from pneumonia.", "Wilson Myers\n Wilson \"Serious\" Myers (born Ernest Wilson Myers or Wilson Ernestine Myers, October 2, 1906 – July 10, 1992) was an American jazz double-bassist, vocalist, bandleader and arranger, best known for his contributions to New Orleans jazz.", "Scott Myers\n Scott Myers (born 1958, USA) is an American painter and sculptor who lives and works in Texas. He graduated Texas A&M University in 1984 with a doctorate in veterinary medicine. He studied sculpture throughout Italy focusing on Florence, Venice and Rome. Sculpting in Tuscany, he cast his work in bronze at the prestigious Fonderia d'Arte Massimo Del Chiaro in Pietrasanta. In 1994, Myers became an elected member of the National Sculpture Society. On February 12, 2011, Myers was featured in the popular television show Texas Country Reporter. Myers was inducted in the inaugural class of the Haltom City High School Hall of Fame on March 10, ", "Jerome Myers\n Jerome Myers (March 20, 1867 – June 19, 1940) was an American artist and writer associated with the Ashcan School, particularly known for his sympathetic depictions of the urban landscape and its people. He was one of the main organizers of the 1913 Armory Show, which introduced European modernism to America. Born in Petersburg, Virginia and raised in Philadelphia, Trenton and Baltimore, he spent his adult life in New York City. Myers worked briefly as an actor and scene painter. He then studied art for a year at Cooper Union followed by study at the Art Students League over a period of eight years where his main teacher was George de Forest Brush. In 1896 he went to Paris, but only stayed a few months, believing that his main classroom was ", "Russell Myers\n Russell Kommer Myers (born October 9, 1938) is an American cartoonist best known for his newspaper comic strip Broom-Hilda. Born in Pittsburg, Kansas, Myers was raised in Oklahoma where his father taught at the University of Tulsa. Myers was interested in cartooning from an early age. After his first strip submission for syndication failed, he began working for Hallmark Cards in Kansas City, MO in 1960 as an illustrator of greeting cards. He continued to submit comic strip concepts for syndication in his free time.", "George Steele\n Myers was born in Detroit on April 16, 1937, and was raised in Madison Heights, Michigan. During high school, he found success in track, baseball, basketball, and football. In 1956, Myers entered Michigan State University as a football player for the Michigan State Spartans, but his career as a football player was immediately cut short as a result of knee problems. In 1961, he was with the Grand Rapids Blazers (UFL). After earning a bachelor of science degree from Michigan State University and a master's degree from Central Michigan University, Myers became a teacher, amateur wrestling coach, and football coach at Madison High School in Madison Heights, Michigan. There he would eventually become a member of the Michigan Coaches Hall of Fame.", "Forrest Myers\n Myers studied at the San Francisco Art Institute, from 1958 to 1960; and moved to New York City in 1961. During the early to mid-1960s he was a founding member of The Park Place Gallery. His large steel Untitled from 1969-1970 is included in the outdoor plaza at The Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller Empire State Plaza Art Collection in Albany, New York. Myers life and career has been interviewed by national and international television personalities. The Art and Times of Frosty Myers, a feature length movie documenting his extraordinary life, is also a unique and fascinating window into the New York art scene of the 60s and 70s. With his wife Debra Arch Myers, Frosty divides his time between homes in Damascus, Pennsylvania, where there is a large museum of his work, and St. Augustine, Florida.", "Lon Myers\n Myers was Jewish, and was born in Richmond, Virginia, to Solomon H. Myers, a clerk. He was in the first graduating class of Richmond High School. His father moved the family to Jersey City, New Jersey, in 1875 after he graduated high school, and then to New York City, where he became a bookkeeper.", "Jack Elliott Myers\n Jack Myers was born in Lynn, Massachusetts, to Jewish parents Alvin G. and Ruth L. Myers, and developed an interest in writing and poetry at a young age. In his twenties he worked many odd jobs to support his self-directed study of poetry.", "Wilson Myers\n Myers was born in Germantown, Pennsylvania. He began his professional career in the American South, gaining his nickname \"Serious\" for his love of classical music. He played drums with Bessie Smith in the mid-1920s, and also played guitar and banjo professionally. He first played bass with King Oliver, then with the Bechet-Ladnier New Orleans Footwarmers. In the 1930s he played in Europe in the bands of Django Reinhardt, Lucky Millinder, and Willie Lewis. On his return he played in New York City and Philadelphia with Sidney Bechet and Mezz Mezzrow, as well as leading his own band and contributing arrangements. One of his key recordings, as bassist and vocalist, was \"Preachin' Blues\", first recorded with Bechet's New Orleans Footwarmers in 1940, and described as a precursor of rhythm and blues music. He also worked with the Spirits of Rhythm in the 1930s and 1940s, and in the latter decade played with Jimmy Dorsey, Bob Mosley, Tiger Haynes, Rex Stewart, and for a short time with Duke Ellington. He worked locally in Philadelphia into the 1970s, playing music in addition to working as a preacher. He died in Philadelphia in 1992.", "Charles Samuel Myers\n Myers was born in Kensington, London on 13 March 1873, the eldest son of Wolf Myers, a merchant, and his wife, Esther Eugenie Moses. His family was Jewish. In the 1881 census he is an 8-year-old scholar living at 27 Arundel Gardens, Kensington, London with his parents, 4 brothers and 4 servants. In the 1891 census he was a scholar, aged 18 living at 49 Leinster Gardens, Paddington, London, with his parents, 4 brothers, a visitor, and 4 servants (cook, housemaid, parlourmaid, and ladies' maid).", "Robert Hill Myers\n Robert Hill Myers (March 30, 1856 – November 16, 1921 ) was a lawyer, judge and political figure in Manitoba. He represented Minnedosa from 1892 to 1903 in the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba as a Liberal. He was born in Oxford County, Canada West, the son of Robert Myers, a native of England, and Margaret Hill, a native of Scotland. Myers was educated at the Collegiate Institute in Stratford and at Osgoode Hall. He was called to the Ontario bar in 1880, then moved to Manitoba in 1882 and was called to the Manitoba bar the following year. In 1885, Myers married Annie McLeod. He practised law briefly in Winnipeg and Brandon before settling in Minnedosa, where he was in practice for 21 years. In January 1903, he was named county court judge for Winnipeg. Myers died in Winnipeg at the age of 65. His former home in Minnedosa was designated a Manitoba Municipal Heritage site in 1986.", "Heavy D\n Dwight Arrington Myers was born on May 24, 1967 in Mandeville, Manchester, Jamaica, the son of nurse Eulahlee Lee and machine technician Clifford Vincent Myers. In the early 1970s, his family moved to Mount Vernon, New York, where he was raised. In an interview, his mother stated that he spent most of his childhood hanging out with his brother Floyd and his childhood friend Mo.", "Joseph Myers\n Joseph William Myers (March 18, 1882 – February 11, 1956) was an American pitcher in Major League Baseball, born in Wilmington, Delaware. He stood at 5ft 10in and weighed 205 lbs. Myers started his organized baseball career on October 7, 1905, with the American League's Philadelphia Athletics. In his only major league start, he pitched a five-inning complete game, allowing two earned runs. Myers then spent 1906 to 1912 in the Tri-State League. He played in York, Reading, Harrisburg, and Trenton before settling in with the Harrisburg Senators for four seasons. In 1911, he set his career-high in wins, with 19. Myers died in 1956 in Delaware City, Delaware.", "Burt Myers\n .", "William Starr Myers\n William Starr Myers (June 17, 1877 – January 27, 1956) was a Princeton University professor, historian, white supremacist, and anti-immigrant activist who chronicled New Jersey and the GOP and argued publicly for the inferiority of African Americans. Myers was the son of J. Norris Myers and Laura Virginia Starr of Baltimore, the family later moving to North Carolina. Myers married Margaret Barr on 8 June 1910. Myers graduated from the University of North Carolina, class of 1897. Myers, the class of '97 poet, evidently felt great pride in his alma mater and was a prolific song writer who wrote several school-related songs which remain famous. \"Hark the Sound\" and \"Tar Heel Born\" are two of his most famous. At ", "Norman Myers\n Myers was born in Whitewell (Lancashire, then Yorkshire) and was raised until the age of 11 on the family farm, without electricity, gas or an internal toilet. He lived in Kenya for over 30 years and later settled in Headington, Oxford, England. He attended grammar school and then the University of Oxford (BA French and German, Keble College 1958, MA 1963) and became a District Officer in the last few years of the Kenya Administration from 1958 to 1961. He then worked as a high school teacher in Nairobi from 1961 to 1966 and a freelance writer and broadcaster until 1969. In 1972, after PhD studies at the University of California, Berkeley (graduated 1973) he became a consultant for the UN, the World Bank and other organisations, remaining in Kenya until the early 1980s. He and Dorothy have a daughter, retired marathon runner Mara Yamauchi, who they raised in Kenya until the age of 8. He died in Oxford on 20 October 2019 after a long illness.", "Bill Myers (baseball)\n William Vandeveer Myers (October 31, 1886 – death date unknown) was an American Negro league catcher between 1908 and 1921. A native of Brooklyn, New York, Myers made his Negro leagues debut in 1908 with the Brooklyn Royal Giants. He played for Brooklyn again in 1910, and went on to play for the Cleveland Tate Stars in 1921.", "LeRoy Myers\n LeRoy Myers (November 10, 1919 – April 26, 2004) was an African American tap dancer and manager of the Copasetics. He was born in North Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and learned to tap dance on the street corners of Philadelphia. When Bill \"Bojangles\" Robinson died in 1949, LeRoy Myers and some close friends were inspired to form the Copasetics, named after Bill Robinsons' favorite expression, \"Everything is Copasetic.\" The Copasetics was a fraternity of black entertainers that were influential in the revival of tap dancing in the late 1970s through the 1980s. LeRoy Myers was elected as the club's first president. The original membership included Billy Strayhorn, " ]
In what country is Kanaküla?
[ "Estonia", "Republic of Estonia", "Estland", "Eesti", "ee", "EST", "🇪🇪" ]
country
Kanaküla
2,634,990
59
[ { "id": "29346151", "title": "Kanaküla", "text": " Kanaküla is a village in Saarde Parish, Pärnu County, in southwestern Estonia.", "score": "1.451229" }, { "id": "8255075", "title": "Kauppakorkeakoulun Ylioppilaskunnan Laulajat", "text": "USA and Canada 2010 ; Spain 2009 ; China 2006 ; Germany 2003 ; Brazil 2002 ", "score": "1.3774467" }, { "id": "8764217", "title": "Kankaanpää", "text": " Ala-Honkajoki, Hapua, Jyränkylä, Karhusaari, Korvaluoma, Kyynärjärvi, Narvi, Niinisalo, Santaskylä, Taulunoja, Venesjärvi, Veneskoski, Verttuu and Vihteljärvi.", "score": "1.366905" }, { "id": "5557167", "title": "Houaïlou", "text": " The town is part of the Ajië-Aro Kanak cultural grouping, and Ajië is the local language. Over 90% of the population identified as Kanak in the 2014 census. There are some European mine workers and farmers, and a small number of Polynesians, and Asian from different countries.", "score": "1.3628795" }, { "id": "5557497", "title": "Poum", "text": " There is one boarding middle school near Poum village. The Kanak population pursue diverse subsistence activities, sometimes combined with paid work. There is one service station and store, opened in the 2010s. Tourists can stay at a western style hotel complex, the Malabou Beach hotel on Nehoue Bay, which is owned by the Northern Province corporation, Grands Hôtels - it has 35 employees. There are also two tourist cottages (Golone and Poingam), a campsite (Pagop) and home stays are also possible. Fishing is still pursued mainly by the islanders, especially from Tiabet, although commercial fish sales are affected by the long distances ", "score": "1.3606842" }, { "id": "7793526", "title": "Kanak people", "text": " Kanak (French spelling until 1984: Canaque) are the indigenous Melanesian inhabitants of New Caledonia, an overseas collectivity of France in the southwest Pacific. According to the 2019 census, they make up 41.2% of the total population with around 112,000 people. The Kanaks refer to the European inhabitants of New Caledonia as Caldoches. Though Melanesian settlement is recorded on Grande Terre's Presqu'île de Foué as far back as the Lapita culture, the origin of the Kanak people is unclear. Ethnographic research has shown that Polynesian seafarers have intermarried with the Kanaks over the centuries. New Caledonia was annexed to France in 1853, and became an overseas territory of France in 1956. ", "score": "1.355988" }, { "id": "11694206", "title": "Kanake", "text": " Kanake (or Kanacke, Kana(c)k; pl. Kanacken or Kanaks/Kanax) is a German word for people from German-speaking countries with roots in Turkey, Arab countries and Persian speaking countries. It is used as a derogatory word, but also as a self-denomination. It was transferred with more ambiguous connotations to Southern European immigrants in the 1960s, and is now usually used with an exclusively derogatory connotation against people with roots in the \"Orient\" (German term for the area which includes North Africa, Middle East and Afghanistan). The word is originally derived from the Hawaiian word for human, kanaka. Until 2009, several rough translations of the word \"Kanak\" were admitted: \"goddess\". In its resolution n°5195, the Academy of the Polynesian languages Pa ' umotu specified a definition more faithful to the primal Polynesian language Mamaka Kaïo of origin, that of ", "score": "1.3310968" }, { "id": "10704879", "title": "Kanacea", "text": " Kanacea (pronounced ) (Kanathea ) is a volcanic island with seven peaks in Fiji's Lau archipelago. It is 15 km west of Vanua Balavu. Covering an area of 12.48 sqkm, it has a maximum elevation of 259 meters. The island features a coconut plantation and many streams, and is circled by great beaches and fringing reefs with a boat opening and a large lagoon on the northeastern side. Plantation buildings and a school remain. Kanacea is privately owned. Its main economic activity was centered on copra and sugarcane, and it retains a coconut plantation.", "score": "1.3159219" }, { "id": "273375", "title": "Lifou Island", "text": " The term Kanak is used for natives of the islands and their native language of the island is Drehu, with people descending from Melanesians and Polynesians. With a total of 19 different tribes inhabiting the three Loyalty Islands, six of which are on Lifou. The current traditional high chief of the island is Evanes Boula, who is chief of 13 of the three islands tribes, succeeding Henri Boula on 13 June 1999.", "score": "1.3103461" }, { "id": "7793529", "title": "Kanak people", "text": " The word 'Kanak' is derived from kanaka maoli, a Hawaiian phrase meaning 'ordinary person' which was at one time applied indiscriminately by European colonisers, traders and missionaries in Oceania to any non-European Pacific islander. Prior to European contact, there were no unified states in New Caledonia, and no single self-appellation used to refer to its inhabitants. Other words have been coined from Kanak in the past few generations: Kanaky is an ethno-political name for the island or the entire territory. Kanéka is a musical genre associated with the Kanak, stylistically a form of reggae with added flutes, percussion and harmonies. Kaneka often has political lyrics and is sung in Drehu, Paici or other Melanesian languages, or in French. The word \"kanak\" is grammatically invariable. The German racial epithet Kanake — which is now applied to all non-whites, even Southern Europeans in some cases, and especially to Turkish immigrants – also derives from the same source, and was originally applied to people from German colonial possessions in Oceania.", "score": "1.3023126" }, { "id": "3378633", "title": "Seutula", "text": " Seutula (Sjöskog) is a district in Vantaa, Finland, located inside the curve of the River Vantaa. Seutula is also a village in the medieval town of Helsinki, stretching to Rajakoski in the north, Lavanko in the east covering the whole district of Kiila, and including Sotilaskorpi in the south. On the other hand, the western part of the river's curve, including the Königstedt Manor, belongs to the village of Riipilä. Seutula is often considered a region stretching even outside the official district, and it has an active local community. In terms of government, Seutula, Riipilä, and Kiila belong to the ", "score": "1.2988763" }, { "id": "8764221", "title": "Kankaanpää", "text": "🇸🇪 Bollnäs, Sweden ; 🇳🇴 Flekkefjord, Norway ; Gagra, Georgia ; 🇩🇪 Misburg, Germany ; Morsø Municipality, Denmark Kankaanpää is twinned with: ", "score": "1.2971942" }, { "id": "3765747", "title": "Eteläsuomalainen osakunta", "text": " The Nation has friendship contracts with several student nations, student associations and student societies at universities in Finland, Estonia, Sweden, Denmark, Norway and Germany.", "score": "1.2932088" }, { "id": "11428948", "title": "Kaniakapupu", "text": " Kaniakapūpū (\"the singing of the land shells\"), known formerly as Luakaha (\"place of relaxation\"), is the ruins of the former summer palace of King Kamehameha III and Queen Kalama on the island of Oahu in Hawaii. Built in the 1840s, and situated in the cool uplands of the Nuʻuanu Valley, it served as the king and queen's summer retreat after the capital of the Kingdom of Hawaii moved from Lahaina to Honolulu in 1845. It was famous for being the site of a grand luau attended by an estimated ten thousand guests during the 1847 Hawaiian Sovereignty Restoration Day celebration. The palace had fallen into ruins by 1874; no records exist about its condition in the intervening years. Rediscovered in the 1950s, the site was cleared and efforts were made to stabilize the ruins from further damage by the elements and invasive plant growth. The site remains officially off-limits to the public and trespassers are subjected to citations, although the site is not regularly monitored.", "score": "1.2900085" }, { "id": "11441240", "title": "Chuuk State", "text": "Namoneas ; Faichuuk ; Hall Islands ; Namonuito Atoll (Magur Islands) (northwest) ; Pattiw (Western Islands) ; Mortlock Islands Chuuk State (also known as Truk) is one of the four states of the Federated States of Micronesia (FSM). The other states are Kosrae State, Pohnpei State, and Yap State. It consists of several island groups: Chuuk is the most populous state of the FSM with 50,000 inhabitants on 120 km2. Chuuk Lagoon is where most people live. Weno Island in the lagoon functions as state capital and is FSM's biggest city. It is scheduled to possibly vote for independence in 2022.", "score": "1.2857672" }, { "id": "15643198", "title": "List of diasporas", "text": " to New Caledonia in the 1910s due to racial fears of Kanaks live among the country's white European-descent majority. Today, an estimated 30,000 Australian descendants of Kanaks live in the state of Queensland, where the main concentration of Australian plantation agriculture took place. ; Newfie, a colloquial name for people from the Canadian province of Newfoundland and Labrador, originally for inhabitants of the Island of Newfoundland. The Newfie diaspora frequently emigrated to other provinces of Canada for employment opportunities in the tens of thousands since the 1920s, while some Newfoundlanders went to the US and the UK in a lesser extent. Newfoundland became Canada's 10th province in 1949, after 350 years of British rule. ; New York City relocatees ", "score": "1.2826098" }, { "id": "31421723", "title": "Kanak railway station", "text": " Kanak railway station is located in Pakistan.", "score": "1.2814294" }, { "id": "2231289", "title": "Nuuk", "text": " KANUKOKA (Kalaallit Nunaanni Kommunit Kattuffiat) was based in Nuuk. It was an association of Greenland's municipalities, led by Enok Sandgreen. The aim of the organisation was to facilitate cooperation among all five municipalities of Greenland: Avannaata, Kujalleq, Qeqertalik, Qeqqata, and Sermersooq. However, Sermersooq and Qeqertalik both withdrew and KANUKOKA was dissolved as of Tuesday, 31 July, 2018. The organisation ran the municipal elections every four years, with the last election taking place in 2016. All municipal authorities in Greenland were members of the organisation up until its 2018 dissolution. The association was overseen by Maliina Abelsen, the Minister for Social Affairs in the Government of Greenland.", "score": "1.2787704" }, { "id": "12984230", "title": "Laiaküla", "text": " Laiaküla is a village in Viimsi Parish, Harju County in northern Estonia. It's located about 10 km east of the centre of Tallinn. Laiaküla is an exclave of Viimsi Parish, situated between Tallinn and Maardu. As of 2011 Census, the settlement's population was 740, of which the Estonians were 461 (62.3%). Laiaküla is reachable from the centre of Tallinn by Tallinn Bus Company's route nr. 34A (Viru keskus – Muuga aedlinn), average traveling time is about 29 minutes (the stop's name is Käära).", "score": "1.2701046" }, { "id": "7793540", "title": "Kanak people", "text": " New Caledonia or Territoire des Nouvelle-Caledonie et Dependances, is approximately 1,200 kilometres (750 mi) off the northeast coast of Australia. Of its 500 islands, the five main ones are inhabited, are spread across an area 30 miles wide and over 250 miles in length. As of 2009, the Melanesian Kanak people constituted 40.3% (99,078) of the population of 245,580 in New Caledonia, a minority in their ancestral land. The other groups consist of Europeans (mostly French) at 29%, Wallisian 9%, people of mixed ancestry (8%), and other groups including Polynesians, Indonesians, Vietnamese and those (believed to be chiefly of European ancestry) who identified simply as \"Caledonian.\" In 1774, Cook landed in Balade and estimated a population of around 50,000 for the whole island. A minimum of 100,000 is more likely, considering the amount of land that can be shown to have been cultivated pre-colonially. This declined to 27,000 during early colonial rule as a result of disease. Kanaks were historically associated with tribes, including the Bwaarhat, Tiendanite, Goa, and Goosana, as well as clans, such as the Poowe.", "score": "1.2694666" } ]
[ "Kanaküla\n Kanaküla is a village in Saarde Parish, Pärnu County, in southwestern Estonia.", "Kauppakorkeakoulun Ylioppilaskunnan Laulajat\nUSA and Canada 2010 ; Spain 2009 ; China 2006 ; Germany 2003 ; Brazil 2002 ", "Kankaanpää\n Ala-Honkajoki, Hapua, Jyränkylä, Karhusaari, Korvaluoma, Kyynärjärvi, Narvi, Niinisalo, Santaskylä, Taulunoja, Venesjärvi, Veneskoski, Verttuu and Vihteljärvi.", "Houaïlou\n The town is part of the Ajië-Aro Kanak cultural grouping, and Ajië is the local language. Over 90% of the population identified as Kanak in the 2014 census. There are some European mine workers and farmers, and a small number of Polynesians, and Asian from different countries.", "Poum\n There is one boarding middle school near Poum village. The Kanak population pursue diverse subsistence activities, sometimes combined with paid work. There is one service station and store, opened in the 2010s. Tourists can stay at a western style hotel complex, the Malabou Beach hotel on Nehoue Bay, which is owned by the Northern Province corporation, Grands Hôtels - it has 35 employees. There are also two tourist cottages (Golone and Poingam), a campsite (Pagop) and home stays are also possible. Fishing is still pursued mainly by the islanders, especially from Tiabet, although commercial fish sales are affected by the long distances ", "Kanak people\n Kanak (French spelling until 1984: Canaque) are the indigenous Melanesian inhabitants of New Caledonia, an overseas collectivity of France in the southwest Pacific. According to the 2019 census, they make up 41.2% of the total population with around 112,000 people. The Kanaks refer to the European inhabitants of New Caledonia as Caldoches. Though Melanesian settlement is recorded on Grande Terre's Presqu'île de Foué as far back as the Lapita culture, the origin of the Kanak people is unclear. Ethnographic research has shown that Polynesian seafarers have intermarried with the Kanaks over the centuries. New Caledonia was annexed to France in 1853, and became an overseas territory of France in 1956. ", "Kanake\n Kanake (or Kanacke, Kana(c)k; pl. Kanacken or Kanaks/Kanax) is a German word for people from German-speaking countries with roots in Turkey, Arab countries and Persian speaking countries. It is used as a derogatory word, but also as a self-denomination. It was transferred with more ambiguous connotations to Southern European immigrants in the 1960s, and is now usually used with an exclusively derogatory connotation against people with roots in the \"Orient\" (German term for the area which includes North Africa, Middle East and Afghanistan). The word is originally derived from the Hawaiian word for human, kanaka. Until 2009, several rough translations of the word \"Kanak\" were admitted: \"goddess\". In its resolution n°5195, the Academy of the Polynesian languages Pa ' umotu specified a definition more faithful to the primal Polynesian language Mamaka Kaïo of origin, that of ", "Kanacea\n Kanacea (pronounced ) (Kanathea ) is a volcanic island with seven peaks in Fiji's Lau archipelago. It is 15 km west of Vanua Balavu. Covering an area of 12.48 sqkm, it has a maximum elevation of 259 meters. The island features a coconut plantation and many streams, and is circled by great beaches and fringing reefs with a boat opening and a large lagoon on the northeastern side. Plantation buildings and a school remain. Kanacea is privately owned. Its main economic activity was centered on copra and sugarcane, and it retains a coconut plantation.", "Lifou Island\n The term Kanak is used for natives of the islands and their native language of the island is Drehu, with people descending from Melanesians and Polynesians. With a total of 19 different tribes inhabiting the three Loyalty Islands, six of which are on Lifou. The current traditional high chief of the island is Evanes Boula, who is chief of 13 of the three islands tribes, succeeding Henri Boula on 13 June 1999.", "Kanak people\n The word 'Kanak' is derived from kanaka maoli, a Hawaiian phrase meaning 'ordinary person' which was at one time applied indiscriminately by European colonisers, traders and missionaries in Oceania to any non-European Pacific islander. Prior to European contact, there were no unified states in New Caledonia, and no single self-appellation used to refer to its inhabitants. Other words have been coined from Kanak in the past few generations: Kanaky is an ethno-political name for the island or the entire territory. Kanéka is a musical genre associated with the Kanak, stylistically a form of reggae with added flutes, percussion and harmonies. Kaneka often has political lyrics and is sung in Drehu, Paici or other Melanesian languages, or in French. The word \"kanak\" is grammatically invariable. The German racial epithet Kanake — which is now applied to all non-whites, even Southern Europeans in some cases, and especially to Turkish immigrants – also derives from the same source, and was originally applied to people from German colonial possessions in Oceania.", "Seutula\n Seutula (Sjöskog) is a district in Vantaa, Finland, located inside the curve of the River Vantaa. Seutula is also a village in the medieval town of Helsinki, stretching to Rajakoski in the north, Lavanko in the east covering the whole district of Kiila, and including Sotilaskorpi in the south. On the other hand, the western part of the river's curve, including the Königstedt Manor, belongs to the village of Riipilä. Seutula is often considered a region stretching even outside the official district, and it has an active local community. In terms of government, Seutula, Riipilä, and Kiila belong to the ", "Kankaanpää\n🇸🇪 Bollnäs, Sweden ; 🇳🇴 Flekkefjord, Norway ; Gagra, Georgia ; 🇩🇪 Misburg, Germany ; Morsø Municipality, Denmark Kankaanpää is twinned with: ", "Eteläsuomalainen osakunta\n The Nation has friendship contracts with several student nations, student associations and student societies at universities in Finland, Estonia, Sweden, Denmark, Norway and Germany.", "Kaniakapupu\n Kaniakapūpū (\"the singing of the land shells\"), known formerly as Luakaha (\"place of relaxation\"), is the ruins of the former summer palace of King Kamehameha III and Queen Kalama on the island of Oahu in Hawaii. Built in the 1840s, and situated in the cool uplands of the Nuʻuanu Valley, it served as the king and queen's summer retreat after the capital of the Kingdom of Hawaii moved from Lahaina to Honolulu in 1845. It was famous for being the site of a grand luau attended by an estimated ten thousand guests during the 1847 Hawaiian Sovereignty Restoration Day celebration. The palace had fallen into ruins by 1874; no records exist about its condition in the intervening years. Rediscovered in the 1950s, the site was cleared and efforts were made to stabilize the ruins from further damage by the elements and invasive plant growth. The site remains officially off-limits to the public and trespassers are subjected to citations, although the site is not regularly monitored.", "Chuuk State\nNamoneas ; Faichuuk ; Hall Islands ; Namonuito Atoll (Magur Islands) (northwest) ; Pattiw (Western Islands) ; Mortlock Islands Chuuk State (also known as Truk) is one of the four states of the Federated States of Micronesia (FSM). The other states are Kosrae State, Pohnpei State, and Yap State. It consists of several island groups: Chuuk is the most populous state of the FSM with 50,000 inhabitants on 120 km2. Chuuk Lagoon is where most people live. Weno Island in the lagoon functions as state capital and is FSM's biggest city. It is scheduled to possibly vote for independence in 2022.", "List of diasporas\n to New Caledonia in the 1910s due to racial fears of Kanaks live among the country's white European-descent majority. Today, an estimated 30,000 Australian descendants of Kanaks live in the state of Queensland, where the main concentration of Australian plantation agriculture took place. ; Newfie, a colloquial name for people from the Canadian province of Newfoundland and Labrador, originally for inhabitants of the Island of Newfoundland. The Newfie diaspora frequently emigrated to other provinces of Canada for employment opportunities in the tens of thousands since the 1920s, while some Newfoundlanders went to the US and the UK in a lesser extent. Newfoundland became Canada's 10th province in 1949, after 350 years of British rule. ; New York City relocatees ", "Kanak railway station\n Kanak railway station is located in Pakistan.", "Nuuk\n KANUKOKA (Kalaallit Nunaanni Kommunit Kattuffiat) was based in Nuuk. It was an association of Greenland's municipalities, led by Enok Sandgreen. The aim of the organisation was to facilitate cooperation among all five municipalities of Greenland: Avannaata, Kujalleq, Qeqertalik, Qeqqata, and Sermersooq. However, Sermersooq and Qeqertalik both withdrew and KANUKOKA was dissolved as of Tuesday, 31 July, 2018. The organisation ran the municipal elections every four years, with the last election taking place in 2016. All municipal authorities in Greenland were members of the organisation up until its 2018 dissolution. The association was overseen by Maliina Abelsen, the Minister for Social Affairs in the Government of Greenland.", "Laiaküla\n Laiaküla is a village in Viimsi Parish, Harju County in northern Estonia. It's located about 10 km east of the centre of Tallinn. Laiaküla is an exclave of Viimsi Parish, situated between Tallinn and Maardu. As of 2011 Census, the settlement's population was 740, of which the Estonians were 461 (62.3%). Laiaküla is reachable from the centre of Tallinn by Tallinn Bus Company's route nr. 34A (Viru keskus – Muuga aedlinn), average traveling time is about 29 minutes (the stop's name is Käära).", "Kanak people\n New Caledonia or Territoire des Nouvelle-Caledonie et Dependances, is approximately 1,200 kilometres (750 mi) off the northeast coast of Australia. Of its 500 islands, the five main ones are inhabited, are spread across an area 30 miles wide and over 250 miles in length. As of 2009, the Melanesian Kanak people constituted 40.3% (99,078) of the population of 245,580 in New Caledonia, a minority in their ancestral land. The other groups consist of Europeans (mostly French) at 29%, Wallisian 9%, people of mixed ancestry (8%), and other groups including Polynesians, Indonesians, Vietnamese and those (believed to be chiefly of European ancestry) who identified simply as \"Caledonian.\" In 1774, Cook landed in Balade and estimated a population of around 50,000 for the whole island. A minimum of 100,000 is more likely, considering the amount of land that can be shown to have been cultivated pre-colonially. This declined to 27,000 during early colonial rule as a result of disease. Kanaks were historically associated with tribes, including the Bwaarhat, Tiendanite, Goa, and Goosana, as well as clans, such as the Poowe." ]
What is Christopher Butson's occupation?
[ "priest", "reverend", "priestess" ]
occupation
Christopher Butson (priest)
262,900
56
[ { "id": "13044447", "title": "Butson", "text": "Christopher Butson, Church of Ireland bishop ; Christopher Butson (priest), Irish Anglican priest ; Matthew Butson, New Zealand Paralympic alpine skier ; Richard Butson, Canadian surgeon Butson is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: ", "score": "1.6410567" }, { "id": "28911603", "title": "Christopher Paul Hasson", "text": " Hasson was an F/A-18 aircraft mechanic in the Marine Corps from 1988 to 1993, achieving the rank of corporal. He was then on active duty with the Army National Guard for approximately two years. He served with the Virginia Army National Guard as an infantryman with Alpha Company, 1st Battalion, 183rd Infantry Regiment. In September 1995, Hasson transferred to the Arizona Army National Guard and left in March 1996, exiting with the same rank as when he joined. He served in the Coast Guard for more than twenty years, initially as an Electronics Technician. At the time of his arrest, Hasson was an acquisitions officer for the Coast Guard's National Security Cutter program at Coast Guard Headquarters, having served in that post since June 2016.", "score": "1.6181002" }, { "id": "13457356", "title": "James Butson", "text": " The Ven. James Strange Butson (10 February 1778 – 29 January 1845) was an Irish Anglican priest. Butson was the son of Bishop Christopher Butson. He was educated at Winchester College and New College, Oxford. He was the Prebendary of Kilconnell in Clonfert Cathedral from 1809 until 1812; and Archdeacon of Clonfert from 1812 until his death. His son was himself Archdeacon of Clonfert, then Dean of Kilmacduagh.", "score": "1.5662149" }, { "id": "8949623", "title": "Richard Butson", "text": " Butson was born in Hankow, China of British parents on 24 October 1922. He was educated in England at Leighton Park School and then at the University of Cambridge and University College Hospital, graduating MB, BChir in 1945. He served in the Home Guard and a Light Rescue Squad in London during the Blitz and as a Medical Officer with the Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey in the Antarctic from 1946 to 1948. During his year in Antarctica, the expedition found a route for dog teams over the 5,000-foot high mountains of the Grahamland Peninsula and surveyed the last thousand miles of the most inaccessible coastline of the world. For Bravery and Distinguished Service in Antarctica, Butson was awarded ", "score": "1.5361611" }, { "id": "32851767", "title": "Christopher Hewison", "text": " Christopher Jon Hewison (born October 6, 1979) was an English cricketer. Born in Gateshead, Tyne and Wear, he was a right-handed batsman and a right-arm medium-pace bowler. He also played occasional as a wicket-keeper. He played first-class and List A cricket for Nottinghamshire, and Durham CB during his four-year first-class career. Most recently, he has played Minor Counties Cricket for Northumberland.", "score": "1.5336826" }, { "id": "30440284", "title": "Christopher Grigson", "text": " firm, A/S Athene. He ran the company for several years from his father-in-law's death in 1974 until the company closed due to oil crises of the 1970s. After the business closed he worked as an independent consultant in hydrodynamics, including investigation of the sinking of the bulk ore carrier Derbyshire. In 1992 he and his family moved to Grimstad, and Grigson began lecturing at the University of Agder Engineering College, teaching hydrodynamics and basic physics. He published nearly 20 papers in the journal of the Royal Institution of Naval Architects before his death of cancer in Grimstad on 19 February 2001. Grigson was a fellow of the Royal Institution of Naval Architects.", "score": "1.5147324" }, { "id": "30889111", "title": "Christopher Rawson", "text": " Christopher Rawson (born Christopher Comstock Hart), is an American writer, university teacher and theater critic. Rawson was born in Providence, Rhode Island. His biological father was noted stage and film actor Richard Hart. His parents divorced shortly after he was born, and he was adopted by his stepfather, Jonathan Rawson.", "score": "1.5140688" }, { "id": "30440282", "title": "Christopher Grigson", "text": " Grigson was born in Hoshangabad, India to Sir Wilfrid Grigson, Deputy Commissioner of the Central Provinces and Berar, and his wife, Lady Phyllis Grigson. Grigson and his sister Claudia (who later married Henry Chilver) were both educated at a prep school in Sussex. While visiting his uncle and aunt in Cambridge he became ill with osteomyelitis of the hip, which left him bedridden for two years. Unable to leave, he was brought up by his uncle and aunt, and in 1946 won a place to study mechanical science at Trinity College, Cambridge. Despite still being ill he gained Firsts in both the Part I and Part II mechanical science triposes. After his health improved he took a PhD in electronics at Cambridge.", "score": "1.5016072" }, { "id": "8949633", "title": "Richard Butson", "text": " Butson was entitled to the following medals ", "score": "1.5010865" }, { "id": "3340685", "title": "Robert Christopherson", "text": " Robert Christopherson (born October 7, 1936) is an American boxer. He competed in the men's light heavyweight event at the 1964 Summer Olympics. At the 1964 Summer Olympics, he defeated Barkat Ali of Pakistan in the Round of 32, before losing to Aleksei Kiselyov of the Soviet Union in the Round of 16.", "score": "1.5009598" }, { "id": "28911615", "title": "Christopher Paul Hasson", "text": " Hasson is married. He lived in Silver Spring, Maryland.", "score": "1.5006844" }, { "id": "30281635", "title": "Christopher Harison", "text": " Christopher Harison (c. 1825 - 8 November 1897) was a British military officer and forestry official in South Africa. He served as Conservator of Forests and was an authority on forest practice in the region. Harison was born at Sutton Place, Seaford, East Sussex. He first arrived in the Cape of Good Hope in 1849 as a captain in the Perthshire Regiment (later the 2nd Battalion of the Black Watch, Royal Highland Regiment) to take part in the Eighth Frontier War (1850–1853). He resigned his commission on returning to England, married Louise Marie Millett Moorman, the daughter of a naval officer, and returned to Cape Agulhas to breed horses. The stud farm was not a ", "score": "1.4991028" }, { "id": "11888969", "title": "Jason Todd Ipson", "text": " Jason Todd Ipson (born July 28, 1972) is an American director, screenwriter, producer, fashion photographer and licensed physician and surgeon. Transitioning from surgical residency to the USC School of Cinematic Arts in 1999, he went on to form Asgaard Entertainment as well as write/direct the theatrically released feature films Unrest and Everybody Wants to be Italian.", "score": "1.4947748" }, { "id": "8949628", "title": "Richard Butson", "text": " Butson did postgraduate surgical studies in London until 1952, when he emigrated to Canada, settling in Hamilton, Ontario in 1953, where he practiced as a surgeon. With the establishment of McMaster University Medical School in 1970, he joined the part-time faculty, ending with the appointment of Clinical Professor in the Department of Surgery. He was Chief of Staff of St. Joseph's Hospital, a 600-bed teaching hospital, for two years and Head of the Service of General Surgery for many years. He has published about 20 papers on surgical topics. He found time to obtain a Doctorate in addition to his medical degree. Butson joined the Canadian Militia in 1956 as Medical Officer to the Royal Hamilton Light Infantry until 1972. He later commanded Hamilton's 23 Medical Company, with the ", "score": "1.4859821" }, { "id": "30889113", "title": "Christopher Rawson", "text": " active in several theater organizations. He is a board member of the American Theatre Hall of Fame, for which he supervises the annual nominations and balloting for the selection of new inductees. He has long been active in the American Theatre Critics Association (ATCA), which he has twice served as chair (1991–93 and 2007–11) and for which he has organized conferences in London, at Connecticut's O'Neill Theater Center, at Canada's Shaw and Stratford Festivals and at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival. In 2019 he was named ATCA Historian and he continues to chronicle its history through its website at www.americantheatrecritics.org. He was also a founding member of ", "score": "1.4813939" }, { "id": "30889112", "title": "Christopher Rawson", "text": " Rawson's main discipline is as a theater critic. From 1983 to 2009, he was full-time theater critic and theater editor at the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, covering theater not just in Pittsburgh but also irregularly in New York, London and the Canadian theater festivals. In 1984, he started the annual Post-Gazette (Pittsburgh) Performer of the Year Award, now (2019) in its 36th year. In 2009, he semi-retired, continuing as that paper's part-time senior theater critic. He also appears as the occasional critic for KDKA-TV. Mr. Rawson attended Deerfield Academy. His B.A. is from Harvard University and his M.A. and Ph.D. from the University of Washington at Seattle. Rawson ", "score": "1.472117" }, { "id": "5042823", "title": "Ryan Christopherson", "text": " Ryan Christopherson (born July 26, 1972) is a former running back in the National Football League for the Jacksonville Jaguars and Arizona Cardinals. He played college football at Wyoming and was drafted in the fifth round of the 1995 NFL Draft.", "score": "1.4710922" }, { "id": "28911602", "title": "Christopher Paul Hasson", "text": " Christopher Paul Hasson (born c. 1969) is a former United States Coast Guard lieutenant and self-described white nationalist who pleaded guilty to federal gun and drug crimes in 2019, and the following year was sentenced to more than 13 years in prison. Although not charged with a terrorism offense, prosecutors called Hasson a \"domestic terrorist\" and accused him of plotting the targeted assassinations of high-profile American politicians, media figures, and others, as well as indiscriminate terror attacks against what Hasson called \"leftists in general.\"", "score": "1.4695096" }, { "id": "31591368", "title": "Matthew Butson", "text": " Matthew Butson is a Paralympic medalist from New Zealand who competed in alpine skiing. He competed in the 1998 Winter Paralympics where he won three gold medals in Giant Slalom, Slalom and Super G, and a silver in Downhill.", "score": "1.4693394" }, { "id": "7167085", "title": "John Christopherson (cricketer)", "text": " John Clifford Christopherson (1 June 1909 – 8 January 1999) was an English cricketer and cricket administrator. Christopherson played first-class cricket for Cambridge University and for Kent County Cricket Club. Christopherson was born in 1909 in Blackheath in metropolitan Kent. He attended Uppingham School where he played in the Cricket XI from 1925 to 1928. He went up to Cambridge University and played in the 1929 Freshmen's match and in trial matches as well as for Kent's Second XI in the Minor Counties Championship in 1930 before making his first-class cricket debut for Kent against Derbyshire in May 1931. Later the ", "score": "1.4682438" } ]
[ "Butson\nChristopher Butson, Church of Ireland bishop ; Christopher Butson (priest), Irish Anglican priest ; Matthew Butson, New Zealand Paralympic alpine skier ; Richard Butson, Canadian surgeon Butson is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: ", "Christopher Paul Hasson\n Hasson was an F/A-18 aircraft mechanic in the Marine Corps from 1988 to 1993, achieving the rank of corporal. He was then on active duty with the Army National Guard for approximately two years. He served with the Virginia Army National Guard as an infantryman with Alpha Company, 1st Battalion, 183rd Infantry Regiment. In September 1995, Hasson transferred to the Arizona Army National Guard and left in March 1996, exiting with the same rank as when he joined. He served in the Coast Guard for more than twenty years, initially as an Electronics Technician. At the time of his arrest, Hasson was an acquisitions officer for the Coast Guard's National Security Cutter program at Coast Guard Headquarters, having served in that post since June 2016.", "James Butson\n The Ven. James Strange Butson (10 February 1778 – 29 January 1845) was an Irish Anglican priest. Butson was the son of Bishop Christopher Butson. He was educated at Winchester College and New College, Oxford. He was the Prebendary of Kilconnell in Clonfert Cathedral from 1809 until 1812; and Archdeacon of Clonfert from 1812 until his death. His son was himself Archdeacon of Clonfert, then Dean of Kilmacduagh.", "Richard Butson\n Butson was born in Hankow, China of British parents on 24 October 1922. He was educated in England at Leighton Park School and then at the University of Cambridge and University College Hospital, graduating MB, BChir in 1945. He served in the Home Guard and a Light Rescue Squad in London during the Blitz and as a Medical Officer with the Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey in the Antarctic from 1946 to 1948. During his year in Antarctica, the expedition found a route for dog teams over the 5,000-foot high mountains of the Grahamland Peninsula and surveyed the last thousand miles of the most inaccessible coastline of the world. For Bravery and Distinguished Service in Antarctica, Butson was awarded ", "Christopher Hewison\n Christopher Jon Hewison (born October 6, 1979) was an English cricketer. Born in Gateshead, Tyne and Wear, he was a right-handed batsman and a right-arm medium-pace bowler. He also played occasional as a wicket-keeper. He played first-class and List A cricket for Nottinghamshire, and Durham CB during his four-year first-class career. Most recently, he has played Minor Counties Cricket for Northumberland.", "Christopher Grigson\n firm, A/S Athene. He ran the company for several years from his father-in-law's death in 1974 until the company closed due to oil crises of the 1970s. After the business closed he worked as an independent consultant in hydrodynamics, including investigation of the sinking of the bulk ore carrier Derbyshire. In 1992 he and his family moved to Grimstad, and Grigson began lecturing at the University of Agder Engineering College, teaching hydrodynamics and basic physics. He published nearly 20 papers in the journal of the Royal Institution of Naval Architects before his death of cancer in Grimstad on 19 February 2001. Grigson was a fellow of the Royal Institution of Naval Architects.", "Christopher Rawson\n Christopher Rawson (born Christopher Comstock Hart), is an American writer, university teacher and theater critic. Rawson was born in Providence, Rhode Island. His biological father was noted stage and film actor Richard Hart. His parents divorced shortly after he was born, and he was adopted by his stepfather, Jonathan Rawson.", "Christopher Grigson\n Grigson was born in Hoshangabad, India to Sir Wilfrid Grigson, Deputy Commissioner of the Central Provinces and Berar, and his wife, Lady Phyllis Grigson. Grigson and his sister Claudia (who later married Henry Chilver) were both educated at a prep school in Sussex. While visiting his uncle and aunt in Cambridge he became ill with osteomyelitis of the hip, which left him bedridden for two years. Unable to leave, he was brought up by his uncle and aunt, and in 1946 won a place to study mechanical science at Trinity College, Cambridge. Despite still being ill he gained Firsts in both the Part I and Part II mechanical science triposes. After his health improved he took a PhD in electronics at Cambridge.", "Richard Butson\n Butson was entitled to the following medals ", "Robert Christopherson\n Robert Christopherson (born October 7, 1936) is an American boxer. He competed in the men's light heavyweight event at the 1964 Summer Olympics. At the 1964 Summer Olympics, he defeated Barkat Ali of Pakistan in the Round of 32, before losing to Aleksei Kiselyov of the Soviet Union in the Round of 16.", "Christopher Paul Hasson\n Hasson is married. He lived in Silver Spring, Maryland.", "Christopher Harison\n Christopher Harison (c. 1825 - 8 November 1897) was a British military officer and forestry official in South Africa. He served as Conservator of Forests and was an authority on forest practice in the region. Harison was born at Sutton Place, Seaford, East Sussex. He first arrived in the Cape of Good Hope in 1849 as a captain in the Perthshire Regiment (later the 2nd Battalion of the Black Watch, Royal Highland Regiment) to take part in the Eighth Frontier War (1850–1853). He resigned his commission on returning to England, married Louise Marie Millett Moorman, the daughter of a naval officer, and returned to Cape Agulhas to breed horses. The stud farm was not a ", "Jason Todd Ipson\n Jason Todd Ipson (born July 28, 1972) is an American director, screenwriter, producer, fashion photographer and licensed physician and surgeon. Transitioning from surgical residency to the USC School of Cinematic Arts in 1999, he went on to form Asgaard Entertainment as well as write/direct the theatrically released feature films Unrest and Everybody Wants to be Italian.", "Richard Butson\n Butson did postgraduate surgical studies in London until 1952, when he emigrated to Canada, settling in Hamilton, Ontario in 1953, where he practiced as a surgeon. With the establishment of McMaster University Medical School in 1970, he joined the part-time faculty, ending with the appointment of Clinical Professor in the Department of Surgery. He was Chief of Staff of St. Joseph's Hospital, a 600-bed teaching hospital, for two years and Head of the Service of General Surgery for many years. He has published about 20 papers on surgical topics. He found time to obtain a Doctorate in addition to his medical degree. Butson joined the Canadian Militia in 1956 as Medical Officer to the Royal Hamilton Light Infantry until 1972. He later commanded Hamilton's 23 Medical Company, with the ", "Christopher Rawson\n active in several theater organizations. He is a board member of the American Theatre Hall of Fame, for which he supervises the annual nominations and balloting for the selection of new inductees. He has long been active in the American Theatre Critics Association (ATCA), which he has twice served as chair (1991–93 and 2007–11) and for which he has organized conferences in London, at Connecticut's O'Neill Theater Center, at Canada's Shaw and Stratford Festivals and at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival. In 2019 he was named ATCA Historian and he continues to chronicle its history through its website at www.americantheatrecritics.org. He was also a founding member of ", "Christopher Rawson\n Rawson's main discipline is as a theater critic. From 1983 to 2009, he was full-time theater critic and theater editor at the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, covering theater not just in Pittsburgh but also irregularly in New York, London and the Canadian theater festivals. In 1984, he started the annual Post-Gazette (Pittsburgh) Performer of the Year Award, now (2019) in its 36th year. In 2009, he semi-retired, continuing as that paper's part-time senior theater critic. He also appears as the occasional critic for KDKA-TV. Mr. Rawson attended Deerfield Academy. His B.A. is from Harvard University and his M.A. and Ph.D. from the University of Washington at Seattle. Rawson ", "Ryan Christopherson\n Ryan Christopherson (born July 26, 1972) is a former running back in the National Football League for the Jacksonville Jaguars and Arizona Cardinals. He played college football at Wyoming and was drafted in the fifth round of the 1995 NFL Draft.", "Christopher Paul Hasson\n Christopher Paul Hasson (born c. 1969) is a former United States Coast Guard lieutenant and self-described white nationalist who pleaded guilty to federal gun and drug crimes in 2019, and the following year was sentenced to more than 13 years in prison. Although not charged with a terrorism offense, prosecutors called Hasson a \"domestic terrorist\" and accused him of plotting the targeted assassinations of high-profile American politicians, media figures, and others, as well as indiscriminate terror attacks against what Hasson called \"leftists in general.\"", "Matthew Butson\n Matthew Butson is a Paralympic medalist from New Zealand who competed in alpine skiing. He competed in the 1998 Winter Paralympics where he won three gold medals in Giant Slalom, Slalom and Super G, and a silver in Downhill.", "John Christopherson (cricketer)\n John Clifford Christopherson (1 June 1909 – 8 January 1999) was an English cricketer and cricket administrator. Christopherson played first-class cricket for Cambridge University and for Kent County Cricket Club. Christopherson was born in 1909 in Blackheath in metropolitan Kent. He attended Uppingham School where he played in the Cricket XI from 1925 to 1928. He went up to Cambridge University and played in the 1929 Freshmen's match and in trial matches as well as for Kent's Second XI in the Minor Counties Championship in 1930 before making his first-class cricket debut for Kent against Derbyshire in May 1931. Later the " ]
What sport does Albert Cox play?
[ "association football", "football", "soccer" ]
sport
Albert Cox
3,262,149
71
[ { "id": "29155558", "title": "Albert Cox (footballer)", "text": " Albert Edward Harrison Cox (24 June 1917 in Treeton, Rotherham – April 2003) was a footballer who played as a left-back for Sheffield United and Halifax Town.", "score": "1.7767161" }, { "id": "9000060", "title": "Albert Lyman Cox", "text": " Cox was an All-Southern college football end for the North Carolina Tar Heels of the University of North Carolina. He was also a member of the baseball and track teams. At UNC, he was a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon.", "score": "1.750848" }, { "id": "5098341", "title": "Ernie Cox", "text": " Ernest \"Ernie\" Cox (February 17, 1894 – February 26, 1962), was a star football player in the Canadian Football League. Cox was born in Hamilton, Ontario. He played for eleven seasons for the Hamilton Tigers. He died in his home town of Hamilton, and was inducted into the Canadian Football Hall of Fame in 1963 and into the Canada's Sports Hall of Fame in 1975.", "score": "1.7204996" }, { "id": "16244368", "title": "Albert Prince-Cox", "text": " Captain Albert James Prince-Cox (8 August 1890 – 26 October 1967) was an English football manager, player and referee, boxer, boxing promoter and a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society. Prince-Cox became the Secretary-manager of Bristol Rovers in 1930. At the time of his appointment the club were struggling financially, but he was credited with turning the situation around through his use of the player transfer market to buy and sell players for a profit. He left The Pirates (a nickname that he introduced, along with the team's blue and white quartered shirts, which are still worn today) in 1936. He then spent two years working as a full-time boxing promoter, before being appointed as manager of Gloucester City in 1938, at which point he was one of the best-known sporting figures in the West of England. He died in late 1967, aged 77, in Bristol.", "score": "1.7171345" }, { "id": "29155559", "title": "Albert Cox (footballer)", "text": " Cox joined Sheffield United from amateur side Woodhouse Mill United F.C., and quickly settled into the first team at Bramall Lane. He made his league debut against Blackpool at Bramall Lane on 20 February 1936, in a 1–0 win. In 1936, Sheffield United reached the FA Cup semi-finals, where they met fellow Second Division side Fulham. Regular left-back, Charlie Wilkinson was injured and unavailable to play in the semi-final, so the inexperienced Cox took his place. Cox remained \"cool in defence\" as Fulham were defeated 2–1. Wilkinson recovered from his injury in time for the final and manager, Teddy Davison, \"opted for (Wilkinson's) age and experience\" over Cox. Cox was often described as a 'bungle of energy' on the field of play. His partner at full-back in the late 1930s was Harry Hooper. Although World War II interrupted his career, Cox played on for several seasons after hostilities had ended, and became one of the most consistent left-backs in the Football League. In total he made 267 league appearances for the Blades with 5 goals. He was transferred to Halifax Town during the 1952 close season.", "score": "1.672548" }, { "id": "26231309", "title": "Abbie Cox", "text": " Albert Edward \"Abbie\" Cox (July 16, 1902 – May 10, 1985) was a Canadian professional ice hockey goaltender. Cox played a total of five games in the National Hockey League for the Montreal Maroons, New York Americans, Detroit Red Wings and Montreal Canadiens. He was born in London, Ontario. Cox played junior hockey in Ottawa and Iroquois Falls, winning the Memorial Cup in 1923. Cox graduated to senior hockey in 1923, playing first with the New Haven Eagles and then the Boston Maples. Cox signed with the New York Hockey Club of the USAHA in 1925 but was ruled ineligible to play in amateur play and was suspended for the season. Cox ", "score": "1.6637602" }, { "id": "15954058", "title": "Bob Cox (ice hockey)", "text": " Bob Cox (born 30 May 1941, Kimberley, British Columbia), Canada, is a retired professional ice hockey Centre. When playing he stood 5 feet 10 inches and weighed 165 lb. He shot right. Statistically, Cox was one of the best players to ever skate on the Palestra ice.", "score": "1.6476047" }, { "id": "16142879", "title": "Charlie Cox (footballer, born 1905)", "text": " William Charles Cox (born 27 November 1901 – 1978) was a footballer who played as a left back, centre half or left half for Southend United and West Ham United in the English Football League. He also played for Glico Works and Ilford.", "score": "1.622822" }, { "id": "13762036", "title": "Raphael Cox", "text": " Raphael Cox (born July 7, 1986 in Tacoma, Washington) is an American soccer player who currently plays for the Tacoma Stars in the Major Arena Soccer League, alongside his younger brother Jamael. Off the pitch, RCox is widely known for his ability to stroke his beard and chuckle.", "score": "1.599206" }, { "id": "2133490", "title": "Walter Cox (footballer, born 1872)", "text": " Cox was born in Southampton and started playing for the newly formed Southampton St Mary's club in 1892 as an outfield player. He later converted to a goalkeeper and made his first-team debut when he replaced Jack Barrett in an FA Cup match at the Antelope Ground against Reading on 3 November 1894. Cox retained his place for the next cup match against Marlow before being replaced by H. Williamson. Cox made his Southern League debut away to Royal Ordnance on 5 October 1895 before Tom Cain took over as the first-choice 'keeper. Although Cain was preferred for League matches, Cox played in all five FA Cup matches, where the club reached the First Round proper for the second consecutive season, going down 3–2 ", "score": "1.5833912" }, { "id": "26231310", "title": "Abbie Cox", "text": " a professional in 1926 with the Springfield Indians, then an affiliate of the New York Rangers. Cox played two seasons with Springfield, then signed with the Montreal Maroons organization. He played one game with the Maroons in the 1929–30 season, but played mostly for the minor league Windsor Bulldogs. Cox would spend the rest of his career mainly in the minor leagues, but played occasional games in the NHL. He played two games in 1933–34 for the Detroit Red Wings, and one for the New York Americans. He played one game in the 1935–36 season for the Montreal Canadiens. Cox retired after the 1936–37 season. Cox continued in hockey as a linesman.", "score": "1.5814033" }, { "id": "32784998", "title": "Stan Cox", "text": " Stanley Ernest Walter Cox (15 July 1918 – 27 June 2012) was a British athlete who competed in two Olympic games in 1948 and 1952. Born in Wood Green, England, he served with Royal Air Force in World War II before competing in the 10,000-metre event at the 1948 Summer Olympics. Unable to participate in the 1950 British Empire Games, he returned to the Olympics in 1952, although he did not complete his event, the marathon, due to the flu. At the 1954 British Empire and Commonwealth Games, he suffered a sunstroke and collapsed within two miles (3 km) of the finish. He retired from running in 1956, but continued to work with UK Athletics for several years and was due to participate in the ceremonies of the 2012 Summer Olympics.", "score": "1.5796034" }, { "id": "7336944", "title": "Ernie Cox (baseball)", "text": " Ernest Thompson \"Ernie\" Cox (February 19, 1894 – April 29, 1974) was a Major League Baseball pitcher who played in one game for the Chicago White Sox on May 5,. He faced six batters, gave up one hit, two walks, and two earned runs for a career ERA of 18.00.", "score": "1.5685416" }, { "id": "5337718", "title": "Danny Cox (ice hockey)", "text": " Daniel Smith \"Silent Danny\" Cox (October 12, 1903 — August 8, 1982) was a professional ice hockey left winger who played 321 games in the National Hockey League between 1926 and 1934. He played for the Toronto St. Patricks, Toronto Maple Leafs, Ottawa Senators, Detroit Falcons, and New York Rangers. He spent the last several years of his playing career in the minor leagues, including serving as a player-coach in the Pacific Coast Hockey League, retiring in 1941. He was born in Little Current, Ontario.", "score": "1.5679567" }, { "id": "12548445", "title": "Nik Cox", "text": " Cox played football for the Montmorency Football Club in the Northern Football Netball League. He began playing for the Northern Knights in 2019, and had his 2020 season cancelled due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. During his 2019 season with the Knights, he kicked 9 goals from 10 games, and averaged 12.5 disposals and 4.9 marks a game. Cox represented Vic Metro in the 2019 AFL Under 18 Championships. He began training with in late 2019 and early 2020 as part of the NAB AFL Academy.", "score": "1.5669575" }, { "id": "16553386", "title": "Bill Cox (baseball)", "text": " Cox played all or part of five seasons in Major League Baseball, from 1936 until 1940, for the St. Louis Cardinals, Chicago White Sox and St. Louis Browns. He also officiated at high school and college basketball games and at the Illinois State High School Finals in Champaign, Illinois.", "score": "1.5608302" }, { "id": "2618206", "title": "Charlie Cox (Australian footballer)", "text": " Charles Cavendish Stewart Cox (18 February 1873 – 26 August 1947) was an Australian rules footballer who played with St Kilda in the Victorian Football League (VFL).", "score": "1.5547256" }, { "id": "30565425", "title": "Darron Cox", "text": " Darron Cox (born November 21, 1967) is a former Major League Baseball player. Cox played in fifteen games for the Montreal Expos in the season. He had six hits in twenty-five at-bats, with one home run and two RBIs. Cox attended the University of Oklahoma. In 1987, he played collegiate summer baseball with the Harwich Mariners of the Cape Cod Baseball League, and returned to the league the following season to play with the Wareham Gatemen. He was drafted by the Cincinnati Reds in the fifth round of the 1989 amateur draft.", "score": "1.5535873" }, { "id": "5889036", "title": "Derek Cox (athlete)", "text": " He represented England in the shot put, long jump and high jump at the 1954 British Empire and Commonwealth Games in Vancouver, Canada.", "score": "1.5530574" }, { "id": "12249395", "title": "Walter Cox (footballer, born 1863)", "text": " remainder of the season, and he kept clean sheets in wins against Notts County, Derby County and Aston Villa. Cox also played in both FA Cup ties played in February 1889. He played 13 League matches and Burnley finished 9th in the League conceding 62 goals in 22 games, the second worst defence that season. However, Cox did improve the defence. In the opening 9 games, before Cox was signed, Burnley conceded 38 goals from 9 games at a rate of 4.22 goals per game. From Cox making his debut until the end of the season Cox conceded 24 goals in 13 games at a rate of 1.84 goals per game. Cox remained the first choice goalkeeper into the 1889–90 season. The Burnley team suffered several heavy defeats while Cox ", "score": "1.552204" } ]
[ "Albert Cox (footballer)\n Albert Edward Harrison Cox (24 June 1917 in Treeton, Rotherham – April 2003) was a footballer who played as a left-back for Sheffield United and Halifax Town.", "Albert Lyman Cox\n Cox was an All-Southern college football end for the North Carolina Tar Heels of the University of North Carolina. He was also a member of the baseball and track teams. At UNC, he was a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon.", "Ernie Cox\n Ernest \"Ernie\" Cox (February 17, 1894 – February 26, 1962), was a star football player in the Canadian Football League. Cox was born in Hamilton, Ontario. He played for eleven seasons for the Hamilton Tigers. He died in his home town of Hamilton, and was inducted into the Canadian Football Hall of Fame in 1963 and into the Canada's Sports Hall of Fame in 1975.", "Albert Prince-Cox\n Captain Albert James Prince-Cox (8 August 1890 – 26 October 1967) was an English football manager, player and referee, boxer, boxing promoter and a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society. Prince-Cox became the Secretary-manager of Bristol Rovers in 1930. At the time of his appointment the club were struggling financially, but he was credited with turning the situation around through his use of the player transfer market to buy and sell players for a profit. He left The Pirates (a nickname that he introduced, along with the team's blue and white quartered shirts, which are still worn today) in 1936. He then spent two years working as a full-time boxing promoter, before being appointed as manager of Gloucester City in 1938, at which point he was one of the best-known sporting figures in the West of England. He died in late 1967, aged 77, in Bristol.", "Albert Cox (footballer)\n Cox joined Sheffield United from amateur side Woodhouse Mill United F.C., and quickly settled into the first team at Bramall Lane. He made his league debut against Blackpool at Bramall Lane on 20 February 1936, in a 1–0 win. In 1936, Sheffield United reached the FA Cup semi-finals, where they met fellow Second Division side Fulham. Regular left-back, Charlie Wilkinson was injured and unavailable to play in the semi-final, so the inexperienced Cox took his place. Cox remained \"cool in defence\" as Fulham were defeated 2–1. Wilkinson recovered from his injury in time for the final and manager, Teddy Davison, \"opted for (Wilkinson's) age and experience\" over Cox. Cox was often described as a 'bungle of energy' on the field of play. His partner at full-back in the late 1930s was Harry Hooper. Although World War II interrupted his career, Cox played on for several seasons after hostilities had ended, and became one of the most consistent left-backs in the Football League. In total he made 267 league appearances for the Blades with 5 goals. He was transferred to Halifax Town during the 1952 close season.", "Abbie Cox\n Albert Edward \"Abbie\" Cox (July 16, 1902 – May 10, 1985) was a Canadian professional ice hockey goaltender. Cox played a total of five games in the National Hockey League for the Montreal Maroons, New York Americans, Detroit Red Wings and Montreal Canadiens. He was born in London, Ontario. Cox played junior hockey in Ottawa and Iroquois Falls, winning the Memorial Cup in 1923. Cox graduated to senior hockey in 1923, playing first with the New Haven Eagles and then the Boston Maples. Cox signed with the New York Hockey Club of the USAHA in 1925 but was ruled ineligible to play in amateur play and was suspended for the season. Cox ", "Bob Cox (ice hockey)\n Bob Cox (born 30 May 1941, Kimberley, British Columbia), Canada, is a retired professional ice hockey Centre. When playing he stood 5 feet 10 inches and weighed 165 lb. He shot right. Statistically, Cox was one of the best players to ever skate on the Palestra ice.", "Charlie Cox (footballer, born 1905)\n William Charles Cox (born 27 November 1901 – 1978) was a footballer who played as a left back, centre half or left half for Southend United and West Ham United in the English Football League. He also played for Glico Works and Ilford.", "Raphael Cox\n Raphael Cox (born July 7, 1986 in Tacoma, Washington) is an American soccer player who currently plays for the Tacoma Stars in the Major Arena Soccer League, alongside his younger brother Jamael. Off the pitch, RCox is widely known for his ability to stroke his beard and chuckle.", "Walter Cox (footballer, born 1872)\n Cox was born in Southampton and started playing for the newly formed Southampton St Mary's club in 1892 as an outfield player. He later converted to a goalkeeper and made his first-team debut when he replaced Jack Barrett in an FA Cup match at the Antelope Ground against Reading on 3 November 1894. Cox retained his place for the next cup match against Marlow before being replaced by H. Williamson. Cox made his Southern League debut away to Royal Ordnance on 5 October 1895 before Tom Cain took over as the first-choice 'keeper. Although Cain was preferred for League matches, Cox played in all five FA Cup matches, where the club reached the First Round proper for the second consecutive season, going down 3–2 ", "Abbie Cox\n a professional in 1926 with the Springfield Indians, then an affiliate of the New York Rangers. Cox played two seasons with Springfield, then signed with the Montreal Maroons organization. He played one game with the Maroons in the 1929–30 season, but played mostly for the minor league Windsor Bulldogs. Cox would spend the rest of his career mainly in the minor leagues, but played occasional games in the NHL. He played two games in 1933–34 for the Detroit Red Wings, and one for the New York Americans. He played one game in the 1935–36 season for the Montreal Canadiens. Cox retired after the 1936–37 season. Cox continued in hockey as a linesman.", "Stan Cox\n Stanley Ernest Walter Cox (15 July 1918 – 27 June 2012) was a British athlete who competed in two Olympic games in 1948 and 1952. Born in Wood Green, England, he served with Royal Air Force in World War II before competing in the 10,000-metre event at the 1948 Summer Olympics. Unable to participate in the 1950 British Empire Games, he returned to the Olympics in 1952, although he did not complete his event, the marathon, due to the flu. At the 1954 British Empire and Commonwealth Games, he suffered a sunstroke and collapsed within two miles (3 km) of the finish. He retired from running in 1956, but continued to work with UK Athletics for several years and was due to participate in the ceremonies of the 2012 Summer Olympics.", "Ernie Cox (baseball)\n Ernest Thompson \"Ernie\" Cox (February 19, 1894 – April 29, 1974) was a Major League Baseball pitcher who played in one game for the Chicago White Sox on May 5,. He faced six batters, gave up one hit, two walks, and two earned runs for a career ERA of 18.00.", "Danny Cox (ice hockey)\n Daniel Smith \"Silent Danny\" Cox (October 12, 1903 — August 8, 1982) was a professional ice hockey left winger who played 321 games in the National Hockey League between 1926 and 1934. He played for the Toronto St. Patricks, Toronto Maple Leafs, Ottawa Senators, Detroit Falcons, and New York Rangers. He spent the last several years of his playing career in the minor leagues, including serving as a player-coach in the Pacific Coast Hockey League, retiring in 1941. He was born in Little Current, Ontario.", "Nik Cox\n Cox played football for the Montmorency Football Club in the Northern Football Netball League. He began playing for the Northern Knights in 2019, and had his 2020 season cancelled due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. During his 2019 season with the Knights, he kicked 9 goals from 10 games, and averaged 12.5 disposals and 4.9 marks a game. Cox represented Vic Metro in the 2019 AFL Under 18 Championships. He began training with in late 2019 and early 2020 as part of the NAB AFL Academy.", "Bill Cox (baseball)\n Cox played all or part of five seasons in Major League Baseball, from 1936 until 1940, for the St. Louis Cardinals, Chicago White Sox and St. Louis Browns. He also officiated at high school and college basketball games and at the Illinois State High School Finals in Champaign, Illinois.", "Charlie Cox (Australian footballer)\n Charles Cavendish Stewart Cox (18 February 1873 – 26 August 1947) was an Australian rules footballer who played with St Kilda in the Victorian Football League (VFL).", "Darron Cox\n Darron Cox (born November 21, 1967) is a former Major League Baseball player. Cox played in fifteen games for the Montreal Expos in the season. He had six hits in twenty-five at-bats, with one home run and two RBIs. Cox attended the University of Oklahoma. In 1987, he played collegiate summer baseball with the Harwich Mariners of the Cape Cod Baseball League, and returned to the league the following season to play with the Wareham Gatemen. He was drafted by the Cincinnati Reds in the fifth round of the 1989 amateur draft.", "Derek Cox (athlete)\n He represented England in the shot put, long jump and high jump at the 1954 British Empire and Commonwealth Games in Vancouver, Canada.", "Walter Cox (footballer, born 1863)\n remainder of the season, and he kept clean sheets in wins against Notts County, Derby County and Aston Villa. Cox also played in both FA Cup ties played in February 1889. He played 13 League matches and Burnley finished 9th in the League conceding 62 goals in 22 games, the second worst defence that season. However, Cox did improve the defence. In the opening 9 games, before Cox was signed, Burnley conceded 38 goals from 9 games at a rate of 4.22 goals per game. From Cox making his debut until the end of the season Cox conceded 24 goals in 13 games at a rate of 1.84 goals per game. Cox remained the first choice goalkeeper into the 1889–90 season. The Burnley team suffered several heavy defeats while Cox " ]