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'Allo_'Allo!_11400370 | From the article on ''Allo 'Allo!', restate the 'Episodes' content. | with clips from the original series and new interviews. The actors who reprised their roles were: Gorden Kaye, Vicki Michelle, Sue Hodge, Kirsten Cooke, Arthur Bostrom, Guy Siner, Robin Parkinson, John D. Collins and Nicholas Frankau. In addition, Richard Gibson and Sam Kelly are interviewed, although they are not repr... | [
"'Allo 'Allo! — Stage show\n\nThe show gave rise to a successful touring stage-show featuring most of the TV cast. This ran from 1986 to 1992, and included three London stage runs as well as international tours. In January 1990 Gorden Kaye suffered serious head injuries in a car accident. As a result, his understud... |
'Allo_'Allo!_11400363 | Summarize the '"René Recaps" device' part of ''Allo 'Allo!'. | As each episode builds on previous ones, viewers are often required to have followed the series to the episode they have reached in order to understand the plot. As Allo Allo! revolved around individual story arcs spread across several episodes, the creators opted for using a comical version of the "As you remember ...... | [
"'Allo 'Allo! — Stage show\n\nThe show gave rise to a successful touring stage-show featuring most of the TV cast. This ran from 1986 to 1992, and included three London stage runs as well as international tours. In January 1990 Gorden Kaye suffered serious head injuries in a car accident. As a result, his understud... |
'Allo_'Allo!_11400371 | Based on the article about ''Allo 'Allo!', describe the 'Cultural references' section. | The show's premise was not to make fun of the war but to spoof war-based film and TV dramas, and in particular a BBC1 drama Secret Army, which ran from 1977 to 1979 and dealt with the activities of a Belgian "escape line" that returned allied pilots to Britain, working from a Brussels café and later restaurant. Many of... | [
"'Allo 'Allo! — Stage show\n\nThe show gave rise to a successful touring stage-show featuring most of the TV cast. This ran from 1986 to 1992, and included three London stage runs as well as international tours. In January 1990 Gorden Kaye suffered serious head injuries in a car accident. As a result, his understud... |
'Allo_'Allo!_11400379 | From the article on ''Allo 'Allo!', restate the 'Stage show' content. | at Bournemouth's Pier Theatre in 1996. In 2007 Gorden Kaye, Sue Hodge and Guy Siner reprised their roles in a production of the stage show in Brisbane, Australia. They were joined by Steven Tandy as Colonel von Strohm and Jason Gann as Herr Flick. A new touring show, based on the 1992 tour written by David Croft and Je... | [
"'Allo 'Allo! — Stage show\n\nThe show gave rise to a successful touring stage-show featuring most of the TV cast. This ran from 1986 to 1992, and included three London stage runs as well as international tours. In January 1990 Gorden Kaye suffered serious head injuries in a car accident. As a result, his understud... |
'Allo_'Allo!_11400377 | Describe the 'Other music' section of the article about ''Allo 'Allo!'. | British airmen in a prisoner of war camp could be seen singing "Hitler Has Only Got One Ball". In 1986, Gorden Kaye and Vicki Michelle released a version of the hit song "Je t'aime... moi non-plus". The characters of Yvette and René could be heard talking and canoodling in a comic manner whilst the familiar musical "Je... | [
"'Allo 'Allo! — Stage show\n\nThe show gave rise to a successful touring stage-show featuring most of the TV cast. This ran from 1986 to 1992, and included three London stage runs as well as international tours. In January 1990 Gorden Kaye suffered serious head injuries in a car accident. As a result, his understud... |
'Allo_'Allo!_11400353 | Reconstruct the content from the article about ''Allo 'Allo!'. | Allo Allo! is a British sitcom television series created by David Croft and Jeremy Lloyd, starring Gorden Kaye, and originally broadcast on BBC One. The sitcom focuses on the life of a café owner in the French town of Nouvion, during the German occupation of France in the Second World War, who has to deal with problems... | [
"'Allo 'Allo! — Stage show\n\nThe show gave rise to a successful touring stage-show featuring most of the TV cast. This ran from 1986 to 1992, and included three London stage runs as well as international tours. In January 1990 Gorden Kaye suffered serious head injuries in a car accident. As a result, his understud... |
'Allo_'Allo!_11400373 | Reconstruct the content about 'Music' from the article on ''Allo 'Allo!'. | Having a café-cabaret in the plot, music was often performed on the show. This usually took place with Madame Edith singing, and either Lt. Gruber or Leclerc at the piano. Occasionally, Gruber sang and played piano at the same time. Characters could also be seen whistling or humming tunes at certain points. | [
"'Allo 'Allo! — Stage show\n\nThe show gave rise to a successful touring stage-show featuring most of the TV cast. This ran from 1986 to 1992, and included three London stage runs as well as international tours. In January 1990 Gorden Kaye suffered serious head injuries in a car accident. As a result, his understud... |
'Allo_'Allo!_11400361 | Describe the 'Lloyd & Croft sitcom elements' section of the article about ''Allo 'Allo!'. | As with previous sitcoms created before Allo Allo!, such as Lloyd and Croft's earlier collaboration Are You Being Served?, much of the humour is derived from classic elements of comedy including classic farce set-ups, physical comedy and visual gags, alongside a large amount of sexual innuendo, and a fast-paced running... | [
"'Allo 'Allo! — Stage show\n\nThe show gave rise to a successful touring stage-show featuring most of the TV cast. This ran from 1986 to 1992, and included three London stage runs as well as international tours. In January 1990 Gorden Kaye suffered serious head injuries in a car accident. As a result, his understud... |
'Allo_'Allo!_11400359 | Based on the article about ''Allo 'Allo!', describe the 'Premise' section. | a forged copy upon being found, only for it be lost again and sought out by not only by von Strohm, but also Herr Flick who, rather than return it to Berlin, intends to keep it himself. The second storyline concerns the involvement of two stranded British airmen, shot down while over Nouvion. Because of their predicame... | [
"'Allo 'Allo! — Stage show\n\nThe show gave rise to a successful touring stage-show featuring most of the TV cast. This ran from 1986 to 1992, and included three London stage runs as well as international tours. In January 1990 Gorden Kaye suffered serious head injuries in a car accident. As a result, his understud... |
'Allo_'Allo!_11400360 | Reconstruct the content about 'Premise' from the article on ''Allo 'Allo!'. | also help in her schemes, sometimes devised by London who relay these plans via a radio installed within the bedroom of Edith's mother. Often, the schemes devised are so complicated that they invariably backfire, especially when they collide with other schemes conducted by von Strohm and his assistants, often leaving h... | [
"'Allo 'Allo! — Stage show\n\nThe show gave rise to a successful touring stage-show featuring most of the TV cast. This ran from 1986 to 1992, and included three London stage runs as well as international tours. In January 1990 Gorden Kaye suffered serious head injuries in a car accident. As a result, his understud... |
'Allo_'Allo!_11400380 | Describe the 'Locations' section of the article about ''Allo 'Allo!'. | All filming was done in Norfolk, much of it at Lynford Hall. Between 1982 and 1987, and from 1989 to 1992, all interior scenes were filmed in front of a studio audience at the BBC Television Centre studios in London. For the fifth series, recorded from December 1987 to August 1988, production moved to BBC Elstree Centr... | [
"'Allo 'Allo! — Stage show\n\nThe show gave rise to a successful touring stage-show featuring most of the TV cast. This ran from 1986 to 1992, and included three London stage runs as well as international tours. In January 1990 Gorden Kaye suffered serious head injuries in a car accident. As a result, his understud... |
'Allo_'Allo!_11400366 | What information does the article about ''Allo 'Allo!' provide on '"Foreign" languages'? | Crabtree, introduced in the second series. Because his character was English with a poor grasp of French, the actor, Arthur Bostrom, spoke perfectly in the English style but mangled his words when speaking in the French style. Bostrom therefore altered certain words in his sentences, substituting different vowels and/o... | [
"'Allo 'Allo! — Stage show\n\nThe show gave rise to a successful touring stage-show featuring most of the TV cast. This ran from 1986 to 1992, and included three London stage runs as well as international tours. In January 1990 Gorden Kaye suffered serious head injuries in a car accident. As a result, his understud... |
'Allo_'Allo!_11400357 | What does the article about ''Allo 'Allo!' say regarding 'Premise'? | Kurt von Strohm; the sabotage plans of the Resistance's leader Michelle Dubois; the efforts by Gestapo agent Herr Otto Flick to find a stolen painting and unmask Resistance members; and the love affairs with his waitresses, particularly Yvette Carte-Blanche, each of which he must conceal from both his wife Edith Artois... | [
"'Allo 'Allo! — Stage show\n\nThe show gave rise to a successful touring stage-show featuring most of the TV cast. This ran from 1986 to 1992, and included three London stage runs as well as international tours. In January 1990 Gorden Kaye suffered serious head injuries in a car accident. As a result, his understud... |
'Allo_'Allo!_11400356 | Describe the 'Premise' section of the article about ''Allo 'Allo!'. | Allo Allo! is set during the Second World War, between the occupation of France by German Axis powers in 1940 and its eventual liberation by Allied forces in July 1944. The story of the sitcom focuses on René Artois, a café owner in Nouvion and a reluctant member of the town's local French Resistance cell who operates ... | [
"'Allo 'Allo! — Stage show\n\nThe show gave rise to a successful touring stage-show featuring most of the TV cast. This ran from 1986 to 1992, and included three London stage runs as well as international tours. In January 1990 Gorden Kaye suffered serious head injuries in a car accident. As a result, his understud... |
'Allo_'Allo!_11400365 | Based on the article about ''Allo 'Allo!', describe the '"Foreign" languages' section. | specific accent and speaking style to be devised. While the French-speaking characters mainly spoke with a French accent, the English-speaking characters mostly employed Bertie Wooster-esque "top-hole, old chap!"-style banter in an upper-class English accent, and German-speaking characters mainly spoke in a guttural ma... | [
"'Allo 'Allo! — Stage show\n\nThe show gave rise to a successful touring stage-show featuring most of the TV cast. This ran from 1986 to 1992, and included three London stage runs as well as international tours. In January 1990 Gorden Kaye suffered serious head injuries in a car accident. As a result, his understud... |
'Allo_'Allo!_(series_5)_24948227 | Describe the content of the article about ''Allo 'Allo! (series 5)'. | by different writers; the director's role was shared between four people, the series was taped entirely in the studio (except the wedding scene of episode 6, which was shot on location in an actual church); and not all of the secondary characters appear in each of the series' episodes. Series 5 also sees the first appe... | [
"'Allo 'Allo! (series 5)\n\nby different writers; the director's role was shared between four people, the series was taped entirely in the studio (except the wedding scene of episode 6, which was shot on location in an actual church); and not all of the secondary characters appear in each of the series' episodes. S... |
'Allo_'Allo!_(series_5)_24948226 | Describe the content of the article about ''Allo 'Allo! (series 5)'. | The fifth series of the British sitcom series 'Allo 'Allo! contains twenty-six episodes which first aired between 3 September 1988 and 25 February 1989. Series 5 is longer than any of the other series, and contains almost a third of the total number of episodes. The series was made with a view to airing the show in the... | [
"'Allo 'Allo! (series 5)\n\nby different writers; the director's role was shared between four people, the series was taped entirely in the studio (except the wedding scene of episode 6, which was shot on location in an actual church); and not all of the secondary characters appear in each of the series' episodes. S... |
'Allo_'Allo!_(series_5)_24948228 | What does the article about ''Allo 'Allo! (series 5)' say regarding 'Cast'? | • Gorden Kaye as René Artois • Carmen Silvera as Edith Artois • Rose Hill as Madame Fanny La Fan • Vicki Michelle as Yvette Carte-Blanche • Sue Hodge as Mimi Labonq • Kirsten Cooke as Michelle Dubois • Jack Haig as Monsieur Roger LeClerc • Kenneth Connor as Monsieur Alfonse • Richard Marner as Colonel Kurt von Strohm •... | [
"'Allo 'Allo! (series 5)\n\nby different writers; the director's role was shared between four people, the series was taped entirely in the studio (except the wedding scene of episode 6, which was shot on location in an actual church); and not all of the secondary characters appear in each of the series' episodes. S... |
'Alī_ibn_Mākūlā_8329364 | From the article on ''Alī ibn Mākūlā', restate the 'Life' content. | and once led an embassy to Bukhara to obtain the recognition of the new Abbāsid caliph Al-Muqtadi (1075-1094). One anecdote tells of a personal application made by Ibn Mākūlā on behalf of the grammarian Al-Akhfash the Younger, requesting a pension from the vizier Abū al-Ḥasan Alī ibn ‘Īsā. This was angrily rejected it ... | [
"'Alī ibn Mākūlā — Life\n\nand once led an embassy to Bukhara to obtain the recognition of the new Abbāsid caliph Al-Muqtadi (1075-1094). One anecdote tells of a personal application made by Ibn Mākūlā on behalf of the grammarian Al-Akhfash the Younger, requesting a pension from the vizier Abū al-Ḥasan Alī ibn ‘Īsā... |
'Alī_ibn_Mākūlā_8329362 | Describe the content of the article about ''Alī ibn Mākūlā'. | Abū Naṣr Alī ibn Hibat-Allāh ibn Ja'far ibn Allakān ibn Muḥammad ibn Dulaf ibn Abī Dulaf al-Qāsim ibn ‘Īsā al-Ijlī, surnamed Sa’d al-Muluk and known as Ibn Mākūlā (ابن ماكولا) (1030 or 1031 - †1082 / 1083); was a highly regarded muḥaddith (Ḥadīth scholar) who authored several works. His magnum opus was his biographical... | [
"'Alī ibn Mākūlā — Life\n\nand once led an embassy to Bukhara to obtain the recognition of the new Abbāsid caliph Al-Muqtadi (1075-1094). One anecdote tells of a personal application made by Ibn Mākūlā on behalf of the grammarian Al-Akhfash the Younger, requesting a pension from the vizier Abū al-Ḥasan Alī ibn ‘Īsā... |
'Alī_ibn_Mākūlā_8329363 | Reconstruct the content about 'Life' from the article on ''Alī ibn Mākūlā'. | Abū Naṣr ibn Mākūlā was a native of the village Ukbara on the Tigris north of Baghdād and the son of Hibat-Alāhā ibn Makula, vizier to the Buyid ruler of Baṣrah, Jalāl-al-dawla. He gained the title ‘al-Amīr’ (أمير), or ‘prince’, maybe in his own right, or in reference to his famous ancestor Abū Dulaf al-Ijlī. His famil... | [
"'Alī ibn Mākūlā — Life\n\nand once led an embassy to Bukhara to obtain the recognition of the new Abbāsid caliph Al-Muqtadi (1075-1094). One anecdote tells of a personal application made by Ibn Mākūlā on behalf of the grammarian Al-Akhfash the Younger, requesting a pension from the vizier Abū al-Ḥasan Alī ibn ‘Īsā... |
'Alī_ibn_Mākūlā_8329365 | Based on the article about ''Alī ibn Mākūlā', describe the 'Works' section. | Al-Ikmāl (الإكمال) (‘Completion’); full title al-Ikmāl fī raf’ al-irtiyāb ‘an al-mu’talif wa al-mukhtalif min al-asmā’ wa al-kunā wa al-ansāb (الإكمال في رفع الارتياب عن المؤتلف والمختلف في الأسماء والكنى والأنساب); 4 vols., (written 1071 – 1075) standard treatise on orthography and pronunciation of proper names. – Not... | [
"'Alī ibn Mākūlā — Life\n\nand once led an embassy to Bukhara to obtain the recognition of the new Abbāsid caliph Al-Muqtadi (1075-1094). One anecdote tells of a personal application made by Ibn Mākūlā on behalf of the grammarian Al-Akhfash the Younger, requesting a pension from the vizier Abū al-Ḥasan Alī ibn ‘Īsā... |
'Amanave_8588374 | What information does the article about ''Amanave' provide? | the Community Resiliency Leadership Award at the National Disaster Preparedness Training Center in 2010, due to his handling of the 2009 tsunami. The executive director of the center told reporters: "In spite of the fact that something like eighty percent of his village was destroyed, there were no casualties. And base... | [
"'Amanave\n\nthe Community Resiliency Leadership Award at the National Disaster Preparedness Training Center in 2010, due to his handling of the 2009 tsunami. The executive director of the center told reporters: \"In spite of the fact that something like eighty percent of his village was destroyed, there were no ca... |
'Amanave_8588378 | Based on the article about ''Amanave', describe the 'Economy' section. | As of 1995, business license records from the government show eleven commercial enterprises based in the village. Businesses included five grocery stores, a retail shop, a gas station, and several bus companies. There is also banana production on the western side of the village, upslope from the shoreline road near Mal... | [
"'Amanave\n\nthe Community Resiliency Leadership Award at the National Disaster Preparedness Training Center in 2010, due to his handling of the 2009 tsunami. The executive director of the center told reporters: \"In spite of the fact that something like eighty percent of his village was destroyed, there were no ca... |
'Amanave_8588377 | Explain what ''Amanave' covers in the 'Demographics' section. | The 1990 U.S. Census reported 53 houses in 'Amanave. The proportion of 'Amanave inhabitants born outside of American Samoa was 17% in the early 1980s and 29% in the late 1980s. In 1990, 43 percent of village residents were born outside of American Samoa. | [
"'Amanave\n\nthe Community Resiliency Leadership Award at the National Disaster Preparedness Training Center in 2010, due to his handling of the 2009 tsunami. The executive director of the center told reporters: \"In spite of the fact that something like eighty percent of his village was destroyed, there were no ca... |
'Amanave_8588376 | Based on the article about ''Amanave', describe the 'Landmarks' section. | Cape Taputapu National Natural Landmark is an exhibit of offshore volcanic rocks, shoreline, and blowholes sculpted by waves. Large sculptures of erosion-resistant volcanic rock dot the water shore, and one of these islets is a volcanic vent through which lava poured during the major episode of volcanism that made Tutu... | [
"'Amanave\n\nthe Community Resiliency Leadership Award at the National Disaster Preparedness Training Center in 2010, due to his handling of the 2009 tsunami. The executive director of the center told reporters: \"In spite of the fact that something like eighty percent of his village was destroyed, there were no ca... |
'Amanave_8588375 | From the article on ''Amanave', restate the 'History' content. | The first formal school established on the island was Atauloma Girls School in 'Amanave, which opened in 1900–1901. Although originally located in the village of 'Amanave, it was later relocated to Afao. Remains from the historic site can still be viewed on the top of the hill in the Atauloma area of Afao village. Duri... | [
"'Amanave\n\nthe Community Resiliency Leadership Award at the National Disaster Preparedness Training Center in 2010, due to his handling of the 2009 tsunami. The executive director of the center told reporters: \"In spite of the fact that something like eighty percent of his village was destroyed, there were no ca... |
'Amanave_8588373 | Reconstruct the content from the article about ''Amanave'. | Amanave (Āmanave) is a village on the coast of Tutuila Island, American Samoa. It is located close to the island's western tip, Cape Taputapu, and to the south of the village of Poloa. It is located in Lealataua County. 'Amanave was severely damaged by the 2009 tsunami. However, of a population of about 500 residents, ... | [
"'Amanave\n\nthe Community Resiliency Leadership Award at the National Disaster Preparedness Training Center in 2010, due to his handling of the 2009 tsunami. The executive director of the center told reporters: \"In spite of the fact that something like eighty percent of his village was destroyed, there were no ca... |
'Amran_8901466 | Summarize the 'History and architecture' part of ''Amran'. | may have been partly because 'Amran, located in the middle of the al-Bawn plain on level ground, was less defensible, whereas al-Jannat had a more strategic location. The 10th-century writer al-Hamdani described the ancient palace at 'Amran, but he gives no details about its population or any indication that it was sti... | [
"'Amran — History and architecture\n\nmay have been partly because 'Amran, located in the middle of the al-Bawn plain on level ground, was less defensible, whereas al-Jannat had a more strategic location. The 10th-century writer al-Hamdani described the ancient palace at 'Amran, but he gives no details about its po... |
'Amran_8901467 | Explain what ''Amran' covers in the 'Economic development' section. | The road through the city from Sana'a was modernized following Chinese investment and is over 200 km long, and the old medical centre has been transformed into a small public hospital. The city is located in a fertile area in what was the centre of the area's coffee industry. | [
"'Amran — History and architecture\n\nmay have been partly because 'Amran, located in the middle of the al-Bawn plain on level ground, was less defensible, whereas al-Jannat had a more strategic location. The 10th-century writer al-Hamdani described the ancient palace at 'Amran, but he gives no details about its po... |
'Amran_8901465 | What does the article about ''Amran' say regarding 'History and architecture'? | 'Amran has a long history, dating back to the pre-Islamic era. During that period, it was one of the main centers of the Bakil tribal confederation. At the time of the Sabaean kingdom, the town blossomed into a fortress. A series of bronze plaques from that time were found in the town in the mid-nineteenth century and ... | [
"'Amran — History and architecture\n\nmay have been partly because 'Amran, located in the middle of the al-Bawn plain on level ground, was less defensible, whereas al-Jannat had a more strategic location. The 10th-century writer al-Hamdani described the ancient palace at 'Amran, but he gives no details about its po... |
'Anata_6615842 | Based on the article about ''Anata', describe the 'Main families' section. | The families are Shiha, Abd al-Latif, Ibrahim, Alayan, Hilwa, Salama, Hamdan, Abu Haniya Musah and al-Kiswani. The latter family fled to 'Anata during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War. | [
"'Anata — Main families\n\nThe families are Shiha, Abd al-Latif, Ibrahim, Alayan, Hilwa, Salama, Hamdan, Abu Haniya Musah and al-Kiswani. The latter family fled to 'Anata during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.",
"'Anata — Byzantine period\n\nThere are ruins of a Byzantine-era church in the town, proving that it was in... |
'Anata_6615834 | Summarize the 'Byzantine period' part of ''Anata'. | There are ruins of a Byzantine-era church in the town, proving that it was inhabited prior to the Muslim conquest of Palestine by the Rashidun Caliphate in the 7th century. | [
"'Anata — Main families\n\nThe families are Shiha, Abd al-Latif, Ibrahim, Alayan, Hilwa, Salama, Hamdan, Abu Haniya Musah and al-Kiswani. The latter family fled to 'Anata during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.",
"'Anata — Byzantine period\n\nThere are ruins of a Byzantine-era church in the town, proving that it was in... |
'Anata_6615831 | What information does the article about ''Anata' provide? | 'Anata (عناتا) is a Palestinian town in the Jerusalem Governorate in the central West Bank, located four kilometers northeast of Jerusalem's Old City. According to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics, 'Anata had a population of 9,600 in 2006. Its total land area is 30,603 dunams, of which over half now lies wi... | [
"'Anata — Main families\n\nThe families are Shiha, Abd al-Latif, Ibrahim, Alayan, Hilwa, Salama, Hamdan, Abu Haniya Musah and al-Kiswani. The latter family fled to 'Anata during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.",
"'Anata — Byzantine period\n\nThere are ruins of a Byzantine-era church in the town, proving that it was in... |
'Anata_6615841 | Describe the 'Israeli and PA period (1967-current)' section of the article about ''Anata'. | of 'Anata have been confiscated by Israel. Of the 1877 dunums which remain in residents' hands, after creation of the Palestinian National Authority in 1994, 957 dunums became part of Area B, 220 dunums part of Area C, and 700 dunums have been declared a closed military zone by the Israeli authorities. The Dahyat as-Sa... | [
"'Anata — Main families\n\nThe families are Shiha, Abd al-Latif, Ibrahim, Alayan, Hilwa, Salama, Hamdan, Abu Haniya Musah and al-Kiswani. The latter family fled to 'Anata during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.",
"'Anata — Byzantine period\n\nThere are ruins of a Byzantine-era church in the town, proving that it was in... |
'Anata_6615837 | Describe the 'Ottoman period' section of the article about ''Anata'. | of which are still to be seen." In 1863 Victor Guérin visited the village and described it as being a small, situated on a hill, and with 200 inhabitants. Socin found from an official Ottoman village list from about 1870 that 'Anata had 25 houses and a population of 70, though the population count included men, only. A... | [
"'Anata — Main families\n\nThe families are Shiha, Abd al-Latif, Ibrahim, Alayan, Hilwa, Salama, Hamdan, Abu Haniya Musah and al-Kiswani. The latter family fled to 'Anata during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.",
"'Anata — Byzantine period\n\nThere are ruins of a Byzantine-era church in the town, proving that it was in... |
'Anata_6615839 | Reconstruct the content about 'Jordanian period (1948-1967)' from the article on ''Anata'. | In the wake of the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, 'Anata came under Jordanian rule. The Jordanian census of 1961 found 852 inhabitants in 'Anata. | [
"'Anata — Main families\n\nThe families are Shiha, Abd al-Latif, Ibrahim, Alayan, Hilwa, Salama, Hamdan, Abu Haniya Musah and al-Kiswani. The latter family fled to 'Anata during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.",
"'Anata — Byzantine period\n\nThere are ruins of a Byzantine-era church in the town, proving that it was in... |
'Anata_6615843 | From the article on ''Anata', restate the 'Sanctuaries' content. | 'Anata contains two sanctuaries, dedicated to Saleh and possibly Jeremiah. The former is a mosque dedicated to the prophet Saleh (Biblical Shelah), but Saleh's tomb is believed to be in the village of Nabi Salih to the northwest. The latter sanctuary is a cave dedicated to a "Rumia" which according to Charles Simon Cle... | [
"'Anata — Main families\n\nThe families are Shiha, Abd al-Latif, Ibrahim, Alayan, Hilwa, Salama, Hamdan, Abu Haniya Musah and al-Kiswani. The latter family fled to 'Anata during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.",
"'Anata — Byzantine period\n\nThere are ruins of a Byzantine-era church in the town, proving that it was in... |
'Anata_6615833 | Based on the article about ''Anata', describe the 'Bronze and Iron Ages' section. | Edward Robinson identified 'Anata with Biblical Anathoth, birthplace of Jeremiah, in his Biblical researches in Palestine. An alternative etymology links the toponym to the Canaanite goddess Anat. | [
"'Anata — Main families\n\nThe families are Shiha, Abd al-Latif, Ibrahim, Alayan, Hilwa, Salama, Hamdan, Abu Haniya Musah and al-Kiswani. The latter family fled to 'Anata during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.",
"'Anata — Byzantine period\n\nThere are ruins of a Byzantine-era church in the town, proving that it was in... |
'Anata_6615840 | Based on the article about ''Anata', describe the 'Israeli and PA period (1967-current)' section. | 328 dunams for Alon, ; 717 dunams for Nofei Prat, ; 820 dunams for Kfar Adumim, ; 783 dunams for Almon. After the Six-Day War in 1967, 'Anata has been under Israeli occupation. The population in the 1967 census conducted by the Israeli authorities was 1,260, 121 of whom originated from the Israeli territory. At the tim... | [
"'Anata — Main families\n\nThe families are Shiha, Abd al-Latif, Ibrahim, Alayan, Hilwa, Salama, Hamdan, Abu Haniya Musah and al-Kiswani. The latter family fled to 'Anata during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.",
"'Anata — Byzantine period\n\nThere are ruins of a Byzantine-era church in the town, proving that it was in... |
'Anata_6615836 | What information does the article about ''Anata' provide on 'Ottoman period'? | The village was incorporated into the Ottoman Empire in 1516 with all of Palestine, and in 1596 'Anata appeared in Ottoman tax registers as being in the Nahiya of Quds of the Liwa of Quds. It had a population of 10 Muslim households. The villagers paid a fixed tax rate of 40 % on agricultural products, including wheat... | [
"'Anata — Main families\n\nThe families are Shiha, Abd al-Latif, Ibrahim, Alayan, Hilwa, Salama, Hamdan, Abu Haniya Musah and al-Kiswani. The latter family fled to 'Anata during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.",
"'Anata — Byzantine period\n\nThere are ruins of a Byzantine-era church in the town, proving that it was in... |
'Anata_6615832 | What information does the article about ''Anata' provide on 'History'? | 'Anata is a village on an ancient site, old stones have been reused in village homes, and cisterns dug into rock have been found, together with caves and ancient agricultural terraces. | [
"'Anata — Main families\n\nThe families are Shiha, Abd al-Latif, Ibrahim, Alayan, Hilwa, Salama, Hamdan, Abu Haniya Musah and al-Kiswani. The latter family fled to 'Anata during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.",
"'Anata — Byzantine period\n\nThere are ruins of a Byzantine-era church in the town, proving that it was in... |
'Anata_6615838 | From the article on ''Anata', restate the 'British Mandate period' content. | In the 1922 census of Palestine conducted by the British Mandate authorities, 'Anata had a population of 285, all Muslim, increasing in the 1931 census to 438, still all Muslim, in 98 houses. In the 1945 statistics 'Anata had a population of 540 Muslims, with 18,496 dunams of land, according to an official land and p... | [
"'Anata — Main families\n\nThe families are Shiha, Abd al-Latif, Ibrahim, Alayan, Hilwa, Salama, Hamdan, Abu Haniya Musah and al-Kiswani. The latter family fled to 'Anata during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.",
"'Anata — Byzantine period\n\nThere are ruins of a Byzantine-era church in the town, proving that it was in... |
'Anin_1471600 | Summarize the following section from the article on ''Anin'. | 'Anin (عانين) a Palestinian village in the West Bank governorate of Jenin. According to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics, the village had a population of 3,719 inhabitants in mid-year 2006. | [
"'Anin\n\n'Anin (عانين) a Palestinian village in the West Bank governorate of Jenin. According to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics, the village had a population of 3,719 inhabitants in mid-year 2006.",
"'Anin — Ottoman era\n\n'Anin, like the rest of Palestine, was incorporated into the Ottoman Empire ... |
'Anin_1471602 | What information does the article about ''Anin' provide on 'Ottoman era'? | 'Anin, like the rest of Palestine, was incorporated into the Ottoman Empire in 1517, and in the census of 1596 it was a part of the nahiya ("subdistrict") of Sahil Atlit which was under the administration of the liwa ("district") of Lajjun. The village had a population of 16 households, all Muslim. The villagers paid... | [
"'Anin\n\n'Anin (عانين) a Palestinian village in the West Bank governorate of Jenin. According to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics, the village had a population of 3,719 inhabitants in mid-year 2006.",
"'Anin — Ottoman era\n\n'Anin, like the rest of Palestine, was incorporated into the Ottoman Empire ... |
'Anin_1471601 | What does the article about ''Anin' say regarding 'History'? | Potsherds from Iron Age I, IA II, Persian, early and late Roman, Byzantine, early Muslim and the Middle Ages have been found here. "Immediately north of the village is a rock-cut passage large enough to walk along, extending about 50 feet and lined with cement; it then becomes about a foot high. This leads out on to a... | [
"'Anin\n\n'Anin (عانين) a Palestinian village in the West Bank governorate of Jenin. According to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics, the village had a population of 3,719 inhabitants in mid-year 2006.",
"'Anin — Ottoman era\n\n'Anin, like the rest of Palestine, was incorporated into the Ottoman Empire ... |
'Aoa_9478957 | Reconstruct the content from the article about ''Aoa'. | Aoa is a village on the north-east coast of Tutuila Island, American Samoa. It is located on the north coast, close to the island's eastern tip, at a narrowing of the island and is connected by road with Amouli on the south coast. Aoa is the oldest site on Tutuila to yield ceramics. Located in a large U-shaped valley o... | [
"'Aoa\n\nAoa is a village on the north-east coast of Tutuila Island, American Samoa. It is located on the north coast, close to the island's eastern tip, at a narrowing of the island and is connected by road with Amouli on the south coast. Aoa is the oldest site on Tutuila to yield ceramics. Located in a large U-sh... |
'Aoa_9478959 | Describe the 'History' section of the article about ''Aoa'. | In 1942, Austrian immigrant to the U.S., Karl Paul Lippe, was billeted in the village of 'Aoa. He had joined the U.S. Marine Corps and was sent to the Samoan Islands. In the village of 'Aoa, Lippe was embraced by High Chief Logo, who asked him to move into his fale. Eventually, Lippe fell in love with Malele, the chief... | [
"'Aoa\n\nAoa is a village on the north-east coast of Tutuila Island, American Samoa. It is located on the north coast, close to the island's eastern tip, at a narrowing of the island and is connected by road with Amouli on the south coast. Aoa is the oldest site on Tutuila to yield ceramics. Located in a large U-sh... |
'Aoa_9478958 | What information does the article about ''Aoa' provide? | chiefly sport of pigeon-snaring. Archeologists believe they served as military lookouts due to their placement at strategic vantage points, perhaps as a military lookout for enemy canoes. Besides the star mounds, lepita pottery has been discovered in ‘Aoa. Some estimates date some of the potshards discovered here to 20... | [
"'Aoa\n\nAoa is a village on the north-east coast of Tutuila Island, American Samoa. It is located on the north coast, close to the island's eastern tip, at a narrowing of the island and is connected by road with Amouli on the south coast. Aoa is the oldest site on Tutuila to yield ceramics. Located in a large U-sh... |
'Aoa_9478960 | What information does the article about ''Aoa' provide on 'Geography'? | The steep and mountainous terrain of the northern coast separates the villages along this coast from Pago Pago and other Tutuila villages. A narrow and unpaved road (as of 1975) connects Aoa with its neighboring villages. | [
"'Aoa\n\nAoa is a village on the north-east coast of Tutuila Island, American Samoa. It is located on the north coast, close to the island's eastern tip, at a narrowing of the island and is connected by road with Amouli on the south coast. Aoa is the oldest site on Tutuila to yield ceramics. Located in a large U-sh... |
'Aql_12893500 | Describe the 'Shī‘ī Legal Implementation' section of the article about ''Aql'. | In Shī‘ī jurisprudence, ‘aql is the process of using intellect or logic to deduce law. Legal scholars in both Sunni and Shī‘ī Islamic traditions share Quranic interpretation, the Sunnah, and Ijma‘ "consensus" as sources of Islamic law and judicial decisions (ḥukm). However, Twelvers of the Ja‘farī school of law utilize... | [
"'Aql — Shī‘ī Legal Implementation\n\nIn Shī‘ī jurisprudence, ‘aql is the process of using intellect or logic to deduce law. Legal scholars in both Sunni and Shī‘ī Islamic traditions share Quranic interpretation, the Sunnah, and Ijma‘ \"consensus\" as sources of Islamic law and judicial decisions (ḥukm). However, T... |
'Aql_12893499 | From the article on ''Aql', restate the 'History' content. | In Islam, the term ‘aql was heavily elucidated by early Shī‘ah thinkers; it came to replace and expand the pre-Islamic concept of ḥilm (حلم) "serene justice and self-control, dignity" in opposition to the negative notions of ignorance (jahl) and stupidity (safah). The "possessor of ‘aql", or al-‘āqīl (plural al-‘uqqāl)... | [
"'Aql — Shī‘ī Legal Implementation\n\nIn Shī‘ī jurisprudence, ‘aql is the process of using intellect or logic to deduce law. Legal scholars in both Sunni and Shī‘ī Islamic traditions share Quranic interpretation, the Sunnah, and Ijma‘ \"consensus\" as sources of Islamic law and judicial decisions (ḥukm). However, T... |
'Aql_12893498 | Describe the content of the article about ''Aql'. | ‘Aql (عقل, meaning "intellect"), is an Arabic language term used in Islamic philosophy or theology for the intellect or the rational faculty of the soul or mind. It is the normal translation of the Greek term nous. In jurisprudence, it is associated with using reason as a source for sharia "religious law" and has been ... | [
"'Aql — Shī‘ī Legal Implementation\n\nIn Shī‘ī jurisprudence, ‘aql is the process of using intellect or logic to deduce law. Legal scholars in both Sunni and Shī‘ī Islamic traditions share Quranic interpretation, the Sunnah, and Ijma‘ \"consensus\" as sources of Islamic law and judicial decisions (ḥukm). However, T... |
'Aqqaba_8678633 | Describe the 'Ottoman era' section of the article about ''Aqqaba'. | 'Aqqaba, like the rest of Palestine, was incorporated into the Ottoman Empire in 1517, and in the census of 1596, the village was located in the Nahiya of Jabal Sami of the Liwa of Nablus. The population was 22 households and 5 bachelors, all Muslim. The villagers paid a fixed tax rate of 33.3% on various agricultural ... | [
"'Aqqaba — Ottoman era\n\n'Aqqaba, like the rest of Palestine, was incorporated into the Ottoman Empire in 1517, and in the census of 1596, the village was located in the Nahiya of Jabal Sami of the Liwa of Nablus. The population was 22 households and 5 bachelors, all Muslim. The villagers paid a fixed tax rate of ... |
'Aqqaba_8678634 | Based on the article about ''Aqqaba', describe the 'British Mandate of Palestine' section. | In the 1922 census of Palestine, conducted by the British Mandate authorities, 'Aqqaba had a population of 330; 322 Muslims and 8 Christian Orthodox, increasing in the 1931 census to 411; 9 Christians and 403 Muslims, in a total of 89 houses. In the 1945 statistics the population was 600; 20 Christians and 580 Muslims,... | [
"'Aqqaba — Ottoman era\n\n'Aqqaba, like the rest of Palestine, was incorporated into the Ottoman Empire in 1517, and in the census of 1596, the village was located in the Nahiya of Jabal Sami of the Liwa of Nablus. The population was 22 households and 5 bachelors, all Muslim. The villagers paid a fixed tax rate of ... |
'Aqqaba_8678635 | From the article on ''Aqqaba', restate the 'Jordanian era' content. | In the wake of the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, and after the 1949 Armistice Agreements, 'Aqqaba came under Jordanian rule. In 1961, the population had reached 1,164. | [
"'Aqqaba — Ottoman era\n\n'Aqqaba, like the rest of Palestine, was incorporated into the Ottoman Empire in 1517, and in the census of 1596, the village was located in the Nahiya of Jabal Sami of the Liwa of Nablus. The population was 22 households and 5 bachelors, all Muslim. The villagers paid a fixed tax rate of ... |
'Aqqaba_8678631 | What information does the article about ''Aqqaba' provide? | 'Aqqaba (عقّابة) is a Palestinian town located on a slope in the Jordan Valley in the northern West Bank, 15 kilometers northeast of Jenin in the Tubas Governorate. According to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics (PCBS), the town had a population of 6,598 inhabitants in the 2007 census. | [
"'Aqqaba — Ottoman era\n\n'Aqqaba, like the rest of Palestine, was incorporated into the Ottoman Empire in 1517, and in the census of 1596, the village was located in the Nahiya of Jabal Sami of the Liwa of Nablus. The population was 22 households and 5 bachelors, all Muslim. The villagers paid a fixed tax rate of ... |
'Aqqaba_8678636 | What information does the article about ''Aqqaba' provide on 'Post 1967'? | Since the Six-Day War in 1967, 'Aqqaba has been held under Israeli occupation. 'Aqqaba is made up of three main families: Abu Arra, Abu Ghannam and al-Masri. During clear weather, Haifa could be seen from the west on the Mediterranean Sea as well as the summit of Jabal ash-Sheikh in Lebanon, while from the east the mou... | [
"'Aqqaba — Ottoman era\n\n'Aqqaba, like the rest of Palestine, was incorporated into the Ottoman Empire in 1517, and in the census of 1596, the village was located in the Nahiya of Jabal Sami of the Liwa of Nablus. The population was 22 households and 5 bachelors, all Muslim. The villagers paid a fixed tax rate of ... |
'Ara_30943496 | Describe the 'History' section of the article about ''Ara'. | Burial caves along with white mosaic pavements have been excavated at the village. Pottery remains from the Middle Bronze IIb and forward have been found here. Some of the burial caves have been dated to the Middle and Late Bronze Ages and the Roman era. Byzantine lamps, glass vases and ceramics have also been found. A... | [
"'Ara — History\n\nBurial caves along with white mosaic pavements have been excavated at the village. Pottery remains from the Middle Bronze IIb and forward have been found here. Some of the burial caves have been dated to the Middle and Late Bronze Ages and the Roman era. Byzantine lamps, glass vases and ceramics ... |
'Ara_30943495 | What information does the article about ''Ara' provide? | 'Ara (עָרָה; عاره) is a village in the Haifa District in northern Israel, located in the Wadi Ara valley. Since 1985, 'Ara has been part of the Ar'ara local council. It is north of highway 65, between Ar'ara and Kfar Qara. Its population of 4,600 (as of 2004) is almost entirely Muslim. | [
"'Ara — History\n\nBurial caves along with white mosaic pavements have been excavated at the village. Pottery remains from the Middle Bronze IIb and forward have been found here. Some of the burial caves have been dated to the Middle and Late Bronze Ages and the Roman era. Byzantine lamps, glass vases and ceramics ... |
'Ara_30943498 | Reconstruct the content about 'British Mandate era' from the article on ''Ara'. | In the 1922 census of Palestine conducted by the British Mandate authorities, 'Arah had a population 372, all Muslims This had increased at the time of the 1931 census to 673 Muslims, in 115 occupied houses. In the 1945 statistics, 'Ara was counted with Ar'ara, together they had a population of 2,290 Muslims, of which ... | [
"'Ara — History\n\nBurial caves along with white mosaic pavements have been excavated at the village. Pottery remains from the Middle Bronze IIb and forward have been found here. Some of the burial caves have been dated to the Middle and Late Bronze Ages and the Roman era. Byzantine lamps, glass vases and ceramics ... |
'Arab_al-Jahalin_29170907 | Summarize the following section from the article on ''Arab al-Jahalin'. | ʿArab al-Jahalin also known as al-Jabal (عرب الجهالّين; ערב אל-ג'האלין) is a Palestinian Bedouin neighborhood in the Jerusalem Governorate, located five kilometers southeast of Jerusalem in the West Bank. According to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics (PCBS), ʿArab al-Jahalin had a population of approximatel... | [
"'Arab al-Jahalin\n\nʿArab al-Jahalin also known as al-Jabal (عرب الجهالّين; ערב אל-ג'האלין) is a Palestinian Bedouin neighborhood in the Jerusalem Governorate, located five kilometers southeast of Jerusalem in the West Bank. According to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics (PCBS), ʿArab al-Jahalin had a p... |
'Arab_al-Jahalin_29170908 | Explain what ''Arab al-Jahalin' covers in the 'History' section. | The ʿArab al-Jahalin tribe were originally based around Tel Arad in the northern Negev, but were entirely evicted from the area in the early 1950s by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF). Prior to Israel's victory in the 1967 Six-Day War, they negotiated with Palestinian landowners to set up semi-permanent camps in, and pas... | [
"'Arab al-Jahalin\n\nʿArab al-Jahalin also known as al-Jabal (عرب الجهالّين; ערב אל-ג'האלין) is a Palestinian Bedouin neighborhood in the Jerusalem Governorate, located five kilometers southeast of Jerusalem in the West Bank. According to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics (PCBS), ʿArab al-Jahalin had a p... |
'Arab_al-Jahalin_29170910 | What information does the article about ''Arab al-Jahalin' provide on 'Post-1967'? | Since the 1967 war, 'Arab al-Jahalin has been under Israeli occupation. In 1975 the IDF confiscated 4,217 dunams of land from 'Arab al-Jahalin, land which in 1977 was used for construction the Israeli settlement of Ma'ale Adumim. After the 1995 accords, 3.3% (or 74 dunams) of the land was classified as Area B, the rema... | [
"'Arab al-Jahalin\n\nʿArab al-Jahalin also known as al-Jabal (عرب الجهالّين; ערב אל-ג'האלין) is a Palestinian Bedouin neighborhood in the Jerusalem Governorate, located five kilometers southeast of Jerusalem in the West Bank. According to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics (PCBS), ʿArab al-Jahalin had a p... |
'Arab_al-Jahalin_29170909 | Reconstruct the content about 'Jordanian period' from the article on ''Arab al-Jahalin'. | In the wake of the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, and after the 1949 Armistice Agreements, the area came under Jordanian rule. | [
"'Arab al-Jahalin\n\nʿArab al-Jahalin also known as al-Jabal (عرب الجهالّين; ערב אל-ג'האלין) is a Palestinian Bedouin neighborhood in the Jerusalem Governorate, located five kilometers southeast of Jerusalem in the West Bank. According to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics (PCBS), ʿArab al-Jahalin had a p... |
'Arab_al-Jahalin_29170911 | Summarize the 'Post-1967' part of ''Arab al-Jahalin'. | In 1997 and 1998, two further forcible expulsions of the Jahalin were implemented, with a further 1,050 relocated to Abu Dis. In the same year, an appeal resulted in a deal between the Israeli Civil Administration and representatives of 35 al-Jahalin families (about 200 individuals) who were permitted to "lease" what I... | [
"'Arab al-Jahalin\n\nʿArab al-Jahalin also known as al-Jabal (عرب الجهالّين; ערב אל-ג'האלין) is a Palestinian Bedouin neighborhood in the Jerusalem Governorate, located five kilometers southeast of Jerusalem in the West Bank. According to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics (PCBS), ʿArab al-Jahalin had a p... |
'Arab_al-Jahalin_29170912 | What information does the article about ''Arab al-Jahalin' provide on 'Post-1967'? | al-Jahalin to sell off their livestock. The area is also affected by a strong stench, caused by high quantities of methane gas, a process that will continue for at least two decades even after the proposed closure of the dump. In 2012, plans to relocate the tribe adjacent to the Abu Dis garbage dump were dropped, with ... | [
"'Arab al-Jahalin\n\nʿArab al-Jahalin also known as al-Jabal (عرب الجهالّين; ערב אל-ג'האלין) is a Palestinian Bedouin neighborhood in the Jerusalem Governorate, located five kilometers southeast of Jerusalem in the West Bank. According to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics (PCBS), ʿArab al-Jahalin had a p... |
'Asir_Province_18989637 | Reconstruct the content about 'Geography' from the article on ''Asir Province'. | The ʿAsir Region is situated on a high plateau that receives more rainfall than the rest of the country and contains the country's highest peaks, which rise to almost 3000 m at Jabal Sawda near Abha. Though data is exceedingly sparse and unreliable, the average annual rainfall in the highlands probably ranges from 300 ... | [
"'Asir Province — Geography\n\nThe ʿAsir Region is situated on a high plateau that receives more rainfall than the rest of the country and contains the country's highest peaks, which rise to almost 3000 m at Jabal Sawda near Abha. Though data is exceedingly sparse and unreliable, the average annual rainfall in the ... |
'Asir_Province_18989642 | Describe the 'Development project' section of the article about ''Asir Province'. | In 2019, the Saudi government launched an infrastructure development project in ʿAsir Region. The project is expected to cost more than 1 billion Saudi Riyals. The provided projects will include health care, transportation and municipal services. The project is in line with the Saudi Vision 2030 to diversify non-petrol... | [
"'Asir Province — Geography\n\nThe ʿAsir Region is situated on a high plateau that receives more rainfall than the rest of the country and contains the country's highest peaks, which rise to almost 3000 m at Jabal Sawda near Abha. Though data is exceedingly sparse and unreliable, the average annual rainfall in the ... |
'Asir_Province_18989643 | Summarize the 'List of governors' part of ''Asir Province'. | Turki bin Ahmed Al Sudairi (1900s–8 June 1969) ; Fahd bin Saad bin Abdul Rahman (8 June 1969–1971) ; Khalid bin Faisal (1971–2007) ; Faisal bin Khalid (2007–2018) ; Turki bin Talal (2018–present) | [
"'Asir Province — Geography\n\nThe ʿAsir Region is situated on a high plateau that receives more rainfall than the rest of the country and contains the country's highest peaks, which rise to almost 3000 m at Jabal Sawda near Abha. Though data is exceedingly sparse and unreliable, the average annual rainfall in the ... |
'Asir_Province_18989640 | Based on the article about ''Asir Province', describe the 'History' section. | his Bedouin warriors also known as the Ikhwan to occupy ʿAsir, and the ruler of the region, Hasan Al Idrissi, had to leave. Therefore, he asked for protection from Imam Yahya, the ruler of Yemen and went there. From then on ʿAsir has been controlled by the House of Saud, a situation formalized in 1934 with the signing ... | [
"'Asir Province — Geography\n\nThe ʿAsir Region is situated on a high plateau that receives more rainfall than the rest of the country and contains the country's highest peaks, which rise to almost 3000 m at Jabal Sawda near Abha. Though data is exceedingly sparse and unreliable, the average annual rainfall in the ... |
'Asir_Province_18989636 | Reconstruct the content from the article about ''Asir Province'. | The ʿAsir Region (عَسِيرٌ) is a region of Saudi Arabia located in the southwest of the country that is named after the ʿAsīr tribe. It has an area of 76693 km2 and an estimated population of 2,211,875 (2017). It shares a short border with the Saada Governorate of Yemen. The capital of the ʿAsir Region is Abha. Other to... | [
"'Asir Province — Geography\n\nThe ʿAsir Region is situated on a high plateau that receives more rainfall than the rest of the country and contains the country's highest peaks, which rise to almost 3000 m at Jabal Sawda near Abha. Though data is exceedingly sparse and unreliable, the average annual rainfall in the ... |
'Asir_Province_18989638 | Describe the 'Governorates' section of the article about ''Asir Province'. | 1) Abha (+366,551) ; 2) Muhayil (+228,979) ; 3) An-Namas (+54,119) ; 4) Billasmar (+34,080) ; 5) Billahmar (+25,709) ; 6) Balqarn ; 7) Bareq (+74,391) ; 8) Bishah (+205,346) ; 9) Khamis Mushayt (+512,599) ; 10) Rijal Alma (+65,406) ; 11) Zahran Al-Janub (+63,119) ; 12) Tathlith (+59,188) ; 13) Sarat Abidah (+67,120) ; ... | [
"'Asir Province — Geography\n\nThe ʿAsir Region is situated on a high plateau that receives more rainfall than the rest of the country and contains the country's highest peaks, which rise to almost 3000 m at Jabal Sawda near Abha. Though data is exceedingly sparse and unreliable, the average annual rainfall in the ... |
'Asir_Province_18989639 | Explain what ''Asir Province' covers in the 'History' section. | In 25 B.C. Aelius Gallus marched his legions south from Egypt on a 1,300-mile expedition to take control of the ancient overland trade routes between the Mediterranean and what is now Hadhramaut in Yemen. The Romans wanted control of those routes because they were desperate for money and hoped to raise some by capturin... | [
"'Asir Province — Geography\n\nThe ʿAsir Region is situated on a high plateau that receives more rainfall than the rest of the country and contains the country's highest peaks, which rise to almost 3000 m at Jabal Sawda near Abha. Though data is exceedingly sparse and unreliable, the average annual rainfall in the ... |
'Asta_Bowen_12031997 | Based on the article about ''Asta Bowen', describe the 'Positions' section. | Bowen depicts the role of the television as central in our society, and considers it detrimental to effective literature teaching. | [
"'Asta Bowen — Positions\n\nBowen depicts the role of the television as central in our society, and considers it detrimental to effective literature teaching.",
"'Asta Bowen — The wolf myth\n\nRobisch the \"humanistic traits\" of the wolves: in Wolf: The Journey Home, she sees Marta as an \"eco-feminist icon, a s... |
'Asta_Bowen_12031995 | Explain what ''Asta Bowen' covers in the 'The wolf myth' section. | Robisch the "humanistic traits" of the wolves: in Wolf: The Journey Home, she sees Marta as an "eco-feminist icon, a strong female character" and as "totem for positive gender identity". Finally, she compares the myth to the Turner's Frontier Thesis: "Bowen's fictionalised rendition of lupine restoration involved copio... | [
"'Asta Bowen — Positions\n\nBowen depicts the role of the television as central in our society, and considers it detrimental to effective literature teaching.",
"'Asta Bowen — The wolf myth\n\nRobisch the \"humanistic traits\" of the wolves: in Wolf: The Journey Home, she sees Marta as an \"eco-feminist icon, a s... |
'Asta_Bowen_12031996 | Based on the article about ''Asta Bowen', describe the 'Work reception' section. | Her first novel, Wolf: The Journey Home, is well received and was nominated for the 2006 Teens' Top Ten award by the American Library Association. | [
"'Asta Bowen — Positions\n\nBowen depicts the role of the television as central in our society, and considers it detrimental to effective literature teaching.",
"'Asta Bowen — The wolf myth\n\nRobisch the \"humanistic traits\" of the wolves: in Wolf: The Journey Home, she sees Marta as an \"eco-feminist icon, a s... |
'Asta_Bowen_12031992 | Based on the article about ''Asta Bowen', describe the 'Biography' section. | 'Asta Bowen was born in a family of Irish descent. She was raised in Orland Park, Illinois in Illinois. She published her first book, The Huckleberry Book in 1988. Nine years later, her best known work, Wolf: The Journey Home was published. From 1988 to 2001, she published a column in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Sh... | [
"'Asta Bowen — Positions\n\nBowen depicts the role of the television as central in our society, and considers it detrimental to effective literature teaching.",
"'Asta Bowen — The wolf myth\n\nRobisch the \"humanistic traits\" of the wolves: in Wolf: The Journey Home, she sees Marta as an \"eco-feminist icon, a s... |
'Asta_Bowen_12031993 | Summarize the 'The wolf myth' part of ''Asta Bowen'. | 'Asta Bowen writes young-adult fiction, with a focus on the myth of the wolf. In Wolf: The Journey Home, there is a scene where a wolf body allows to find the killer has been compared by the professor of American Literature and American Studies S. K. Robisch to a real poaching in the Yellowstone Park, against one male ... | [
"'Asta Bowen — Positions\n\nBowen depicts the role of the television as central in our society, and considers it detrimental to effective literature teaching.",
"'Asta Bowen — The wolf myth\n\nRobisch the \"humanistic traits\" of the wolves: in Wolf: The Journey Home, she sees Marta as an \"eco-feminist icon, a s... |
'Atara_6736241 | Summarize the 'Sanctuary of Sheikh al-Qatrawani' part of ''Atara'. | On the Dahrat Hamoud hill about 1.5 km south-west of 'Atara, standing at about 820 meters above sea level, lies the Maqam (shrine) of Sheikh al-Qatrawani. The shrine is one of a series of watchtowers overlooking the coast built by the Mamluks in the 16th century. The sanctuary, built atop the ruins of an ancient Byzant... | [
"'Atara — Sanctuary of Sheikh al-Qatrawani\n\nOn the Dahrat Hamoud hill about 1.5 km south-west of 'Atara, standing at about 820 meters above sea level, lies the Maqam (shrine) of Sheikh al-Qatrawani. The shrine is one of a series of watchtowers overlooking the coast built by the Mamluks in the 16th century. The sa... |
'Atara_6736238 | From the article on ''Atara', restate the 'Jordanian era' content. | In the wake of the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, and after the 1949 Armistice Agreements, 'Atara came under Jordanian rule. The Jordanian census of 1961 found 1,110 inhabitants. | [
"'Atara — Sanctuary of Sheikh al-Qatrawani\n\nOn the Dahrat Hamoud hill about 1.5 km south-west of 'Atara, standing at about 820 meters above sea level, lies the Maqam (shrine) of Sheikh al-Qatrawani. The shrine is one of a series of watchtowers overlooking the coast built by the Mamluks in the 16th century. The sa... |
'Atara_6736242 | What information does the article about ''Atara' provide on 'Sanctuary of Sheikh al-Qatrawani'? | of Gaza. Popular belief suggests that al-Qatrawani left his home town of Qatra due to his inability to fulfill his religious duties there, thus relocating to the deserted hill of Dar Hamouda where he "lived in prayer and self-mortification". Another popular tale claims when al-Qatrawani died, his dead body descended on... | [
"'Atara — Sanctuary of Sheikh al-Qatrawani\n\nOn the Dahrat Hamoud hill about 1.5 km south-west of 'Atara, standing at about 820 meters above sea level, lies the Maqam (shrine) of Sheikh al-Qatrawani. The shrine is one of a series of watchtowers overlooking the coast built by the Mamluks in the 16th century. The sa... |
'Atara_6736246 | What information does the article about ''Atara' provide on 'Demographics'? | Emigration surged between 1952 and 1955 to the Gulf Arab states, due to poor economic conditions in the West Bank. Several others moved to Ramallah and Jerusalem for work. By 1961, the population was 1,110, however, it decreased tremendously after the 1967 Six-Day War, in which Israel captured and occupied the West Ban... | [
"'Atara — Sanctuary of Sheikh al-Qatrawani\n\nOn the Dahrat Hamoud hill about 1.5 km south-west of 'Atara, standing at about 820 meters above sea level, lies the Maqam (shrine) of Sheikh al-Qatrawani. The shrine is one of a series of watchtowers overlooking the coast built by the Mamluks in the 16th century. The sa... |
'Atara_6736237 | Reconstruct the content about 'British Mandate of Palestine' from the article on ''Atara'. | At the time of the 1922 census of Palestine, Atara had a population of 407 Muslims, increasing in the 1931 census to 559 Muslims in 133 houses. In 1922, the Jewish National Fund established a moshav on 500 dunams of land. Known as Ataroth, it was one of the first Zionist hill settlements. In the 1945 statistics the pop... | [
"'Atara — Sanctuary of Sheikh al-Qatrawani\n\nOn the Dahrat Hamoud hill about 1.5 km south-west of 'Atara, standing at about 820 meters above sea level, lies the Maqam (shrine) of Sheikh al-Qatrawani. The shrine is one of a series of watchtowers overlooking the coast built by the Mamluks in the 16th century. The sa... |
'Atara_6736240 | Summarize the 'Sanctuaries' part of ''Atara'. | 'Atara contains two sanctuaries for saintly figures. The village's old mosque encases the Sanctuary of I'mar. There used to stand a Byzantine church. | [
"'Atara — Sanctuary of Sheikh al-Qatrawani\n\nOn the Dahrat Hamoud hill about 1.5 km south-west of 'Atara, standing at about 820 meters above sea level, lies the Maqam (shrine) of Sheikh al-Qatrawani. The shrine is one of a series of watchtowers overlooking the coast built by the Mamluks in the 16th century. The sa... |
'Atara_6736247 | From the article on ''Atara', restate the 'Economy' content. | Until the early 1950s, 'Atara's inhabitants were dependent on agriculture as a main source of income. After 1967, many inhabitants began to work in Israel. As a result, agricultural production has been further reduced and a substantial portion of 'Atara's economy became dependent residents working abroad. Transportatio... | [
"'Atara — Sanctuary of Sheikh al-Qatrawani\n\nOn the Dahrat Hamoud hill about 1.5 km south-west of 'Atara, standing at about 820 meters above sea level, lies the Maqam (shrine) of Sheikh al-Qatrawani. The shrine is one of a series of watchtowers overlooking the coast built by the Mamluks in the 16th century. The sa... |
'Atara_6736245 | Describe the 'Sanctuary of Sheikh al-Qatrawani' section of the article about ''Atara'. | It possibly also drew water from the nearby spring of Wadi as-Saqi, located two kilometers south of the site. To the west of the Sheikh al-Qatrawani sanctuary is a winepress cut through stone. Its basin is 1.8 meters deep and is coated with a layer of white plaster. A stone-cut cave is located in front of the shrine, b... | [
"'Atara — Sanctuary of Sheikh al-Qatrawani\n\nOn the Dahrat Hamoud hill about 1.5 km south-west of 'Atara, standing at about 820 meters above sea level, lies the Maqam (shrine) of Sheikh al-Qatrawani. The shrine is one of a series of watchtowers overlooking the coast built by the Mamluks in the 16th century. The sa... |
'Atara_6736234 | Based on the article about ''Atara', describe the 'Location' section. | 'Atara is located 10.7 km (horizontally) north of Ramallah. It is bordered by Silwad to the east, 'Abwein to the north, Burham, 'Ajjul and Umm Safa to the west, and Bir Zeit to the south. | [
"'Atara — Sanctuary of Sheikh al-Qatrawani\n\nOn the Dahrat Hamoud hill about 1.5 km south-west of 'Atara, standing at about 820 meters above sea level, lies the Maqam (shrine) of Sheikh al-Qatrawani. The shrine is one of a series of watchtowers overlooking the coast built by the Mamluks in the 16th century. The sa... |
'Atara_6736244 | Based on the article about ''Atara', describe the 'Sanctuary of Sheikh al-Qatrawani' section. | Antiquities. The sanctuary is a rectangular building 9.8 meters in width, and 5.9 meters in length. It has two semi-spherical domes, measuring 3.8 and 3.9 meters in diameter respectively. The eastern dome is built of finely cut stones, while the western dome is built of small rough field-stones, but both kinds are of l... | [
"'Atara — Sanctuary of Sheikh al-Qatrawani\n\nOn the Dahrat Hamoud hill about 1.5 km south-west of 'Atara, standing at about 820 meters above sea level, lies the Maqam (shrine) of Sheikh al-Qatrawani. The shrine is one of a series of watchtowers overlooking the coast built by the Mamluks in the 16th century. The sa... |
'Atara_6736236 | Summarize the 'Ottoman era' part of ''Atara'. | In 1517, the village was incorporated into the Ottoman Empire with the rest of Palestine. In 1596 it appeared in the tax registers as being in the Nahiya of Quds of the Liwa of Quds. It had a population of 55 Muslim households who paid a fixed tax rate of 33.3% on various agricultural products, including wheat, barley,... | [
"'Atara — Sanctuary of Sheikh al-Qatrawani\n\nOn the Dahrat Hamoud hill about 1.5 km south-west of 'Atara, standing at about 820 meters above sea level, lies the Maqam (shrine) of Sheikh al-Qatrawani. The shrine is one of a series of watchtowers overlooking the coast built by the Mamluks in the 16th century. The sa... |
'Atara_6736233 | Reconstruct the content from the article about ''Atara'. | Atara (عطارة ′Atâra) is a Palestinian village in the Ramallah and al-Bireh Governorate, located 15 kilometers north of Ramallah in the central West Bank. A village of nearly 2,300 inhabitants, it is situated along a mountain ridge line with four peaks and is built upon the second highest point in the West Bank at 810 m... | [
"'Atara — Sanctuary of Sheikh al-Qatrawani\n\nOn the Dahrat Hamoud hill about 1.5 km south-west of 'Atara, standing at about 820 meters above sea level, lies the Maqam (shrine) of Sheikh al-Qatrawani. The shrine is one of a series of watchtowers overlooking the coast built by the Mamluks in the 16th century. The sa... |
'Aunofo_Havea_Funaki_21658367 | What information does the article about ''Aunofo Havea Funaki' provide on 'Career'? | a daytime skipper licence, and she subsequently obtained licences as a boat master and as a yacht captain. Funaki gradually built up her sailing experience to cover monohulls, catamarans, and motorboats. Following a three-month course in 2018 at the Northeast Maritime Institute in Fairhaven, Massachusetts, she became t... | [
"'Aunofo Havea Funaki — Personal life\n\nFunaki is the mother of five children.",
"'Aunofo Havea Funaki — Career\n\na daytime skipper licence, and she subsequently obtained licences as a boat master and as a yacht captain. Funaki gradually built up her sailing experience to cover monohulls, catamarans, and motorb... |
'Aunofo_Havea_Funaki_21658366 | Explain what ''Aunofo Havea Funaki' covers in the 'Career' section. | Having been working as a weaver, at the age of 25 Funaki was given a job of cleaning yachts, something that no other women did. From this she graduated to being a cook on a tourist yacht and was taught how to sail by its owners. Her decision to try to become a captain came about when she realised that she already knew ... | [
"'Aunofo Havea Funaki — Personal life\n\nFunaki is the mother of five children.",
"'Aunofo Havea Funaki — Career\n\na daytime skipper licence, and she subsequently obtained licences as a boat master and as a yacht captain. Funaki gradually built up her sailing experience to cover monohulls, catamarans, and motorb... |
'Aunofo_Havea_Funaki_21658364 | Describe the content of the article about ''Aunofo Havea Funaki'. | 'Aunofo Havea Funaki is the first woman from Tonga to become a licensed sea captain. The owner of a business that takes tourists to "swim with the whales", she has captained a traditional Polynesian canoe that sailed from the Pacific islands to the USA. | [
"'Aunofo Havea Funaki — Personal life\n\nFunaki is the mother of five children.",
"'Aunofo Havea Funaki — Career\n\na daytime skipper licence, and she subsequently obtained licences as a boat master and as a yacht captain. Funaki gradually built up her sailing experience to cover monohulls, catamarans, and motorb... |
'Aunofo_Havea_Funaki_21658365 | From the article on ''Aunofo Havea Funaki', restate the 'Early life' content. | 'Aunofo Havea Funaki was born in Tu'anuku on the island of Vava'u in the Kingdom of Tonga. She had five brothers and three sisters. | [
"'Aunofo Havea Funaki — Personal life\n\nFunaki is the mother of five children.",
"'Aunofo Havea Funaki — Career\n\na daytime skipper licence, and she subsequently obtained licences as a boat master and as a yacht captain. Funaki gradually built up her sailing experience to cover monohulls, catamarans, and motorb... |
'Aunofo_Havea_Funaki_21658368 | Explain what ''Aunofo Havea Funaki' covers in the 'Career' section. | States, Cocos Island and the Galápagos Islands. Funaki was the only female captain, sailing on the Hine Moana, which had ten different nationalities. In 2012, she captained an all-woman crew sailing in the Polynesian islands. She later had the opportunity to use a vaka for ecotourism purposes in Vava'u, to emphasise he... | [
"'Aunofo Havea Funaki — Personal life\n\nFunaki is the mother of five children.",
"'Aunofo Havea Funaki — Career\n\na daytime skipper licence, and she subsequently obtained licences as a boat master and as a yacht captain. Funaki gradually built up her sailing experience to cover monohulls, catamarans, and motorb... |
'Blue_Blazes'_Rawden_13455836 | What information does the article about ''Blue Blazes' Rawden' provide on 'Cast'? | William S. Hart as Blue Blazes Rawden ; Maude George as Babette DuFresne ; Robert McKim as 'Ladyfingers' Hilgard ; Gertrude Claire as Mother Hilgard ; Robert Gordon as Eric Hilgard ; Jack Hoxie as Joe La Barge | [
"'Blue Blazes' Rawden — Cast\n\nWilliam S. Hart as Blue Blazes Rawden ; Maude George as Babette DuFresne ; Robert McKim as 'Ladyfingers' Hilgard ; Gertrude Claire as Mother Hilgard ; Robert Gordon as Eric Hilgard ; Jack Hoxie as Joe La Barge",
"'Blue Blazes' Rawden\n\n'Blue Blazes' Rawden is a 1918 American silen... |
'Blue_Blazes'_Rawden_13455834 | Describe the content of the article about ''Blue Blazes' Rawden'. | 'Blue Blazes' Rawden is a 1918 American silent drama film directed by William S. Hart and written by J.G. Hawks. The film stars William S. Hart, Maude George, Robert McKim, Gertrude Claire, Robert Gordon, and Jack Hoxie. The film was released on February 1, 1918, by Paramount Pictures. The film has been preserved and i... | [
"'Blue Blazes' Rawden — Cast\n\nWilliam S. Hart as Blue Blazes Rawden ; Maude George as Babette DuFresne ; Robert McKim as 'Ladyfingers' Hilgard ; Gertrude Claire as Mother Hilgard ; Robert Gordon as Eric Hilgard ; Jack Hoxie as Joe La Barge",
"'Blue Blazes' Rawden\n\n'Blue Blazes' Rawden is a 1918 American silen... |
'Blue_Blazes'_Rawden_13455838 | Reconstruct the content about 'Reviews and reception' from the article on ''Blue Blazes' Rawden'. | A reviewer in Photoplay (1918) said that "Hart gives the best exhibition of his acting ability that I have ever yet seen". They also noted that the story "has no actual ending", but rather "is something of a slice of life...its interest lies in the struggle that goes on in the heart of the naturally ferocious, brutal R... | [
"'Blue Blazes' Rawden — Cast\n\nWilliam S. Hart as Blue Blazes Rawden ; Maude George as Babette DuFresne ; Robert McKim as 'Ladyfingers' Hilgard ; Gertrude Claire as Mother Hilgard ; Robert Gordon as Eric Hilgard ; Jack Hoxie as Joe La Barge",
"'Blue Blazes' Rawden\n\n'Blue Blazes' Rawden is a 1918 American silen... |
'Blue_Blazes'_Rawden_13455835 | Based on the article about ''Blue Blazes' Rawden', describe the 'Plot' section. | "Tough lumberjack Blue Blazes Rawden takes up residence at the hotel of the equally tough Englishman, Ladyfingers Hilgard. Because Blue Blazes beats him at cards and steals the heart of his woman, Babette Du Fresne, Hilgard challenges Blue Blazes to a gunfight and is killed. Hilgard's mother and brother Eric soon visit... | [
"'Blue Blazes' Rawden — Cast\n\nWilliam S. Hart as Blue Blazes Rawden ; Maude George as Babette DuFresne ; Robert McKim as 'Ladyfingers' Hilgard ; Gertrude Claire as Mother Hilgard ; Robert Gordon as Eric Hilgard ; Jack Hoxie as Joe La Barge",
"'Blue Blazes' Rawden\n\n'Blue Blazes' Rawden is a 1918 American silen... |
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