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The Municipal Borough of Middleton was, from 1886 to 1974, a municipal borough in the administrative county of Lancashire, England, coterminous with the town of Middleton.
Civic history
By the nineteenth century the neighbouring townships of Middleton and Tonge formed a single town. The townships, separated by the River Irk, lay in different parishes and local administration was in the hands of constables appointed by the Lord of the Manor.In 1861 a local act of parliament established Middleton and Tonge Improvement Commissioners under the Chairmanship of cotton spinner Edmund Howarth to provide public services in the area. One of its first acts was to take over responsibility for the Middleton Gas Company. In 1879 the improvement commissioners district was enlarged to take in Alkrington and parts of Hopwood and Thornham.Following a petition by the inhabitant householders of the improvement commissioners district, a charter of incorporation was granted on 21 July 1886, constituting the area as the Municipal Borough of Middleton.
The borough was enlarged in 1894 by the addition of parts of the townships of Great Heaton and Little Heaton, and the boundaries with neighbouring districts were adjusted in 1933 by a County Review Order.The borough was abolished by the Local Government Act 1972, with its area becoming part of the Metropolitan Borough of Rochdale in the new county of Greater Manchester in 1974.
Borough council
The charter created an elected town council for the borough, consisting of a mayor, six aldermen and eighteen councillors. The borough was divided into three wards, and two councillors were elected for a three-year term in each ward annually. Each ward was also represented by two alderman: half of the aldermanic bench were elected by the council every three years, and they each served for six years. The mayor was elected annually from among the council's membership.In the early years the borough council appears to have non-political, and elections were rarely contested, with an agreed panel of candidates standing unopposed. In later years the council was broadly Conservative in complexion. Following the Second World War elections were held on party political lines. The Conservative Party had an overall majority until 1957, with Labour, Liberal and Independent councilors in opposition.
In 1957 the size of the borough council was increased from twenty-four to thirty-six. The Labour Party gained control of the enlarged council, and held it until 1960. Apart from one year under no overall control, the administration of the borough alternated between the Conservatives (1960–1963 and 1969–1971) and Labour (1963–1969 and 1972–1974).
Coat of arms
The Mayor, Alderman and Burgesses of Middleton were granted armorial bearings by the College of Arms on 28 January 1877. The blazon of the arms was as follows:
Quarterly per pale nebuly gules and argent on a fesse ermine between a cross patonce of the second in the first quarter a mullet sable pierced of the field in the second a silkworm moth volant in the third and a rock in base thereon a stork in the fourth three sprigs of the cotton tree slipped and fructed all proper, and for a crest on a wreath of the colours upon a mount vert between two boars' heads erect and couped sable a tower proper suspended therefrom by a riband gules an escutcheon Or charged with a lion passant also gules.The design combined features from the arms of local families with symbols of the town's industries. The basic layout of the shield was based on the arms of Middleton of Middleton Hall: "Quarterly gules and Or in the first a cross flory argent", while the black spur-rowel came from the arms of the Assheton family. The textile industries of Middleton were depicted by the cotton sprigs and silk worm moth. According to the borough council the stork represented "the desire for the increase in population'". The crest above the shield was made up of a tower and lion from the heraldry of the Earls of Middleton between two boars' heads from the arms of another Middleton family.
The borough borrowed the Latin motto of the Middleton Earls: Fortis in Arduis or "strong in difficulties".
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Leonard Dobbin (29 September 1762 – 19 February 1844) was an Irish Liberal politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1832 to 1837.
He was the eldest son of Leonard Dobbin senior, of Mount Dobbin, Tirnascobe, County Armagh and Mary Oates, daughter of Thomas Oates, and a descendant of Adam Murray, who commanded the Williamite forces at the Siege of Derry. The Dobbins were an old Carrickfergus family, one branch of which settled in Armagh.
Dobbin was a clerk of the peace in Armagh. In the 1832 general election Dobbin was elected as Member of Parliament (MP) for Armagh City. He held the seat until 1837. Dobbin then became High Sheriff of Armagh in 1838.Dobbin gave to the city an area of parkland beside the Ballinahone River in Armagh. This is commemorated in the song Dobbin's Flowery Vale.He had no children, and his estates passed to his nephew and namesake Leonard Dobbin. On his retirement from politics, his seat in the House of Commons was successfully contested by another nephew, William Curry (1784-1843), Serjeant-at-law (Ireland), son of his sister Anne, who married William Curry senior of Aughnacloy, County Tyrone.
References
External links
Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by Leonard Dobbin | occupation | {
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Leonard Dobbin (29 September 1762 – 19 February 1844) was an Irish Liberal politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1832 to 1837.
He was the eldest son of Leonard Dobbin senior, of Mount Dobbin, Tirnascobe, County Armagh and Mary Oates, daughter of Thomas Oates, and a descendant of Adam Murray, who commanded the Williamite forces at the Siege of Derry. The Dobbins were an old Carrickfergus family, one branch of which settled in Armagh.
Dobbin was a clerk of the peace in Armagh. In the 1832 general election Dobbin was elected as Member of Parliament (MP) for Armagh City. He held the seat until 1837. Dobbin then became High Sheriff of Armagh in 1838.Dobbin gave to the city an area of parkland beside the Ballinahone River in Armagh. This is commemorated in the song Dobbin's Flowery Vale.He had no children, and his estates passed to his nephew and namesake Leonard Dobbin. On his retirement from politics, his seat in the House of Commons was successfully contested by another nephew, William Curry (1784-1843), Serjeant-at-law (Ireland), son of his sister Anne, who married William Curry senior of Aughnacloy, County Tyrone.
References
External links
Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by Leonard Dobbin | family name | {
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8
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Leonard Dobbin (29 September 1762 – 19 February 1844) was an Irish Liberal politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1832 to 1837.
He was the eldest son of Leonard Dobbin senior, of Mount Dobbin, Tirnascobe, County Armagh and Mary Oates, daughter of Thomas Oates, and a descendant of Adam Murray, who commanded the Williamite forces at the Siege of Derry. The Dobbins were an old Carrickfergus family, one branch of which settled in Armagh.
Dobbin was a clerk of the peace in Armagh. In the 1832 general election Dobbin was elected as Member of Parliament (MP) for Armagh City. He held the seat until 1837. Dobbin then became High Sheriff of Armagh in 1838.Dobbin gave to the city an area of parkland beside the Ballinahone River in Armagh. This is commemorated in the song Dobbin's Flowery Vale.He had no children, and his estates passed to his nephew and namesake Leonard Dobbin. On his retirement from politics, his seat in the House of Commons was successfully contested by another nephew, William Curry (1784-1843), Serjeant-at-law (Ireland), son of his sister Anne, who married William Curry senior of Aughnacloy, County Tyrone.
References
External links
Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by Leonard Dobbin | given name | {
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0
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Leonard Dobbin (29 September 1762 – 19 February 1844) was an Irish Liberal politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1832 to 1837.
He was the eldest son of Leonard Dobbin senior, of Mount Dobbin, Tirnascobe, County Armagh and Mary Oates, daughter of Thomas Oates, and a descendant of Adam Murray, who commanded the Williamite forces at the Siege of Derry. The Dobbins were an old Carrickfergus family, one branch of which settled in Armagh.
Dobbin was a clerk of the peace in Armagh. In the 1832 general election Dobbin was elected as Member of Parliament (MP) for Armagh City. He held the seat until 1837. Dobbin then became High Sheriff of Armagh in 1838.Dobbin gave to the city an area of parkland beside the Ballinahone River in Armagh. This is commemorated in the song Dobbin's Flowery Vale.He had no children, and his estates passed to his nephew and namesake Leonard Dobbin. On his retirement from politics, his seat in the House of Commons was successfully contested by another nephew, William Curry (1784-1843), Serjeant-at-law (Ireland), son of his sister Anne, who married William Curry senior of Aughnacloy, County Tyrone.
References
External links
Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by Leonard Dobbin | child | {
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0
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Leonard Dobbin (29 September 1762 – 19 February 1844) was an Irish Liberal politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1832 to 1837.
He was the eldest son of Leonard Dobbin senior, of Mount Dobbin, Tirnascobe, County Armagh and Mary Oates, daughter of Thomas Oates, and a descendant of Adam Murray, who commanded the Williamite forces at the Siege of Derry. The Dobbins were an old Carrickfergus family, one branch of which settled in Armagh.
Dobbin was a clerk of the peace in Armagh. In the 1832 general election Dobbin was elected as Member of Parliament (MP) for Armagh City. He held the seat until 1837. Dobbin then became High Sheriff of Armagh in 1838.Dobbin gave to the city an area of parkland beside the Ballinahone River in Armagh. This is commemorated in the song Dobbin's Flowery Vale.He had no children, and his estates passed to his nephew and namesake Leonard Dobbin. On his retirement from politics, his seat in the House of Commons was successfully contested by another nephew, William Curry (1784-1843), Serjeant-at-law (Ireland), son of his sister Anne, who married William Curry senior of Aughnacloy, County Tyrone.
References
External links
Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by Leonard Dobbin | father | {
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0
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"Leonard Dobbin"
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Leonard Dobbin (29 September 1762 – 19 February 1844) was an Irish Liberal politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1832 to 1837.
He was the eldest son of Leonard Dobbin senior, of Mount Dobbin, Tirnascobe, County Armagh and Mary Oates, daughter of Thomas Oates, and a descendant of Adam Murray, who commanded the Williamite forces at the Siege of Derry. The Dobbins were an old Carrickfergus family, one branch of which settled in Armagh.
Dobbin was a clerk of the peace in Armagh. In the 1832 general election Dobbin was elected as Member of Parliament (MP) for Armagh City. He held the seat until 1837. Dobbin then became High Sheriff of Armagh in 1838.Dobbin gave to the city an area of parkland beside the Ballinahone River in Armagh. This is commemorated in the song Dobbin's Flowery Vale.He had no children, and his estates passed to his nephew and namesake Leonard Dobbin. On his retirement from politics, his seat in the House of Commons was successfully contested by another nephew, William Curry (1784-1843), Serjeant-at-law (Ireland), son of his sister Anne, who married William Curry senior of Aughnacloy, County Tyrone.
References
External links
Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by Leonard Dobbin | spouse | {
"answer_start": [
232
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"Mary Oates"
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The Battle of Macroom was a skirmish fought on 10 May 1650, near Macroom, County Cork, in southern Ireland, during the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland. An English Parliamentarian force under Roger Boyle, (Lord Broghill), defeated an Irish Confederate force under David Roche.
Background
Boyle had taken Cork for the English Parliamentarians by inducing its English Royalist garrison to defect to the Parliamentary side, which they had served until 1648. This was a major help to Oliver Cromwell's campaign in Ireland, as it secured for him most of Munster and its port towns. The Irish and Royalist troops in the province retreated to western County Kerry, which is a natural stronghold due to its remote and mountainous terrain.
Battle
David Roche, an Irish officer, organised an offensive, out of Kerry with 1,400 men in May 1650, in an effort to relieve the Siege of Clonmel. Cromwell sent Boyle to intercept Roche's force with 1,500 infantry and 500 cavalrymen. When Roche realised that he was being pursued, he turned back. Rather than let the Irish force escape, Boyle followed them with his cavalry alone. He caught them at Macroom on 10 May. The English surprised the Irish with a cavalry charge before they could form up for battle and routed them. Several hundred Irish soldiers were killed. The Parliamentarian's losses were light. Roche's force broke up in disorder and fell back towards the mountains of Kerry.
Aftermath
The following day, Boyle besieged and took Carrigadrohid castle. His men had taken Boetius MacEgan, the Catholic Bishop of Ross prisoner and warned the garrison that they would kill him unless they surrendered. MacEgan told the garrison not to surrender and was then hanged in view of the castle walls. The garrison surrendered shortly afterwards but were allowed to march away unmolested.
Citations
References
Bagwell, Richard (1909), Ireland under the Stuarts and under the Interregnum, vol. 2, London: Longmans, Green, and Co.
Carte, Thomas (1851), The Life of James Duke of Ormond, vol. 3 (new ed.), Oxford: Oxford University Press
Further reading
Ó Siochrú, Mícheál (1999), Confederate Ireland, 1642-1649: A Constitutional and Political Analysis, Four Courts Press, ISBN 9781851824007
Wheeler, James Scott (1999), Cromwell in Ireland, St. Martin’s Press, ISBN 9780312225506 | instance of | {
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The Battle of Macroom was a skirmish fought on 10 May 1650, near Macroom, County Cork, in southern Ireland, during the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland. An English Parliamentarian force under Roger Boyle, (Lord Broghill), defeated an Irish Confederate force under David Roche.
Background
Boyle had taken Cork for the English Parliamentarians by inducing its English Royalist garrison to defect to the Parliamentary side, which they had served until 1648. This was a major help to Oliver Cromwell's campaign in Ireland, as it secured for him most of Munster and its port towns. The Irish and Royalist troops in the province retreated to western County Kerry, which is a natural stronghold due to its remote and mountainous terrain.
Battle
David Roche, an Irish officer, organised an offensive, out of Kerry with 1,400 men in May 1650, in an effort to relieve the Siege of Clonmel. Cromwell sent Boyle to intercept Roche's force with 1,500 infantry and 500 cavalrymen. When Roche realised that he was being pursued, he turned back. Rather than let the Irish force escape, Boyle followed them with his cavalry alone. He caught them at Macroom on 10 May. The English surprised the Irish with a cavalry charge before they could form up for battle and routed them. Several hundred Irish soldiers were killed. The Parliamentarian's losses were light. Roche's force broke up in disorder and fell back towards the mountains of Kerry.
Aftermath
The following day, Boyle besieged and took Carrigadrohid castle. His men had taken Boetius MacEgan, the Catholic Bishop of Ross prisoner and warned the garrison that they would kill him unless they surrendered. MacEgan told the garrison not to surrender and was then hanged in view of the castle walls. The garrison surrendered shortly afterwards but were allowed to march away unmolested.
Citations
References
Bagwell, Richard (1909), Ireland under the Stuarts and under the Interregnum, vol. 2, London: Longmans, Green, and Co.
Carte, Thomas (1851), The Life of James Duke of Ormond, vol. 3 (new ed.), Oxford: Oxford University Press
Further reading
Ó Siochrú, Mícheál (1999), Confederate Ireland, 1642-1649: A Constitutional and Political Analysis, Four Courts Press, ISBN 9781851824007
Wheeler, James Scott (1999), Cromwell in Ireland, St. Martin’s Press, ISBN 9780312225506 | location | {
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The Battle of Macroom was a skirmish fought on 10 May 1650, near Macroom, County Cork, in southern Ireland, during the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland. An English Parliamentarian force under Roger Boyle, (Lord Broghill), defeated an Irish Confederate force under David Roche.
Background
Boyle had taken Cork for the English Parliamentarians by inducing its English Royalist garrison to defect to the Parliamentary side, which they had served until 1648. This was a major help to Oliver Cromwell's campaign in Ireland, as it secured for him most of Munster and its port towns. The Irish and Royalist troops in the province retreated to western County Kerry, which is a natural stronghold due to its remote and mountainous terrain.
Battle
David Roche, an Irish officer, organised an offensive, out of Kerry with 1,400 men in May 1650, in an effort to relieve the Siege of Clonmel. Cromwell sent Boyle to intercept Roche's force with 1,500 infantry and 500 cavalrymen. When Roche realised that he was being pursued, he turned back. Rather than let the Irish force escape, Boyle followed them with his cavalry alone. He caught them at Macroom on 10 May. The English surprised the Irish with a cavalry charge before they could form up for battle and routed them. Several hundred Irish soldiers were killed. The Parliamentarian's losses were light. Roche's force broke up in disorder and fell back towards the mountains of Kerry.
Aftermath
The following day, Boyle besieged and took Carrigadrohid castle. His men had taken Boetius MacEgan, the Catholic Bishop of Ross prisoner and warned the garrison that they would kill him unless they surrendered. MacEgan told the garrison not to surrender and was then hanged in view of the castle walls. The garrison surrendered shortly afterwards but were allowed to march away unmolested.
Citations
References
Bagwell, Richard (1909), Ireland under the Stuarts and under the Interregnum, vol. 2, London: Longmans, Green, and Co.
Carte, Thomas (1851), The Life of James Duke of Ormond, vol. 3 (new ed.), Oxford: Oxford University Press
Further reading
Ó Siochrú, Mícheál (1999), Confederate Ireland, 1642-1649: A Constitutional and Political Analysis, Four Courts Press, ISBN 9781851824007
Wheeler, James Scott (1999), Cromwell in Ireland, St. Martin’s Press, ISBN 9780312225506 | part of | {
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Hickory Southwest Downtown Historic District is a national historic district located at Hickory, Catawba County, North Carolina. The district encompasses 8 contributing buildings in the central business district of Hickory. Notable buildings include the Hickory Passenger Depot (1912), Classical Revival style U.S. Post Office (1914, 1961) designed by Office of the Supervising Architect under Oscar Wenderoth, Harper Motor Company (1928), Hickory Bonded Warehouse (c. 1885), Hickory Overall Office (c. 1922), Hickory Roller Covering Office (c. 1922), and the Armory (1911-1912).It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2005.
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Hickory Southwest Downtown Historic District is a national historic district located at Hickory, Catawba County, North Carolina. The district encompasses 8 contributing buildings in the central business district of Hickory. Notable buildings include the Hickory Passenger Depot (1912), Classical Revival style U.S. Post Office (1914, 1961) designed by Office of the Supervising Architect under Oscar Wenderoth, Harper Motor Company (1928), Hickory Bonded Warehouse (c. 1885), Hickory Overall Office (c. 1922), Hickory Roller Covering Office (c. 1922), and the Armory (1911-1912).It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2005.
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Berezovik (Russian: Березовик) is a rural locality (a village) in Voskresenskoye Rural Settlement, Cherepovetsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 21 as of 2002.
Geography
Berezovik is located 74 km (46 mi) northwest of Cherepovets (the district's administrative centre) by road. Vysokoye is the nearest rural locality.
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Takaomyia johannis is a species of Hoverfly in the family Syrphidae.
Distribution
Taiwan, Thailand, Japan.
== References == | taxon rank | {
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Takaomyia johannis is a species of Hoverfly in the family Syrphidae.
Distribution
Taiwan, Thailand, Japan.
== References == | parent taxon | {
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Takaomyia johannis is a species of Hoverfly in the family Syrphidae.
Distribution
Taiwan, Thailand, Japan.
== References == | taxon name | {
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The Beardmore Glacier in Antarctica is one of the largest valley glaciers in the world, being 200 km (125 mi) long and having a width of 40 km (25 mi). It descends about 2,200 m (7,200 ft) from the Antarctic Plateau to the Ross Ice Shelf and is bordered by the Commonwealth Range of the Queen Maud Mountains on the eastern side and the Queen Alexandra Range of the Central Transantarctic Mountains on the western.
The glacier is one of the main passages through the Transantarctic Mountains to the great polar plateau beyond, and was one of the early routes to the South Pole despite its steep upward incline.
The glacier was discovered and climbed by Ernest Shackleton during his Nimrod Expedition of 1908. Although Shackleton turned back at latitude 88° 23' S, just 97.5 nautical miles (180.6 km; 112.2 mi) from the South Pole, he established the first proven route towards the pole and, in doing so, became the first person to set foot upon the polar plateau. In 1911–1912, Captain Scott and his Terra Nova Expedition team reached the South Pole by similarly climbing the Beardmore. However, they reached the pole a month after Roald Amundsen and his team, who had chosen a route up the previously unknown Axel Heiberg Glacier. It was on the way back to the Nova expedition's base camp after they left the South Pole that Edgar Evans, one of the members of Scott's chosen team to go on to the final trek to the South Pole, died around the foot of Beardmore Glacier on February 17, 1912.
Beardmore Glacier was named by Shackleton after Sir William Beardmore, a Scottish industrialist and expedition sponsor. However, Ranulph Fiennes writes that Shackleton had previously told Beardmore's wife, Elspeth, that he would name a glacier after her and it is possible that is what Shackleton actually did.In 2016, the first beetle fossils, in the form of wing-cases (elytra) of the ground beetle Antarctotrechus, around 14 to 20 million years old, were found in sediments adjacent to the glacier.
See also
List of glaciers in the Antarctic
Glaciology
Wild Icefalls
References
This article incorporates public domain material from "Beardmore Glacier". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey. | continent | {
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The Beardmore Glacier in Antarctica is one of the largest valley glaciers in the world, being 200 km (125 mi) long and having a width of 40 km (25 mi). It descends about 2,200 m (7,200 ft) from the Antarctic Plateau to the Ross Ice Shelf and is bordered by the Commonwealth Range of the Queen Maud Mountains on the eastern side and the Queen Alexandra Range of the Central Transantarctic Mountains on the western.
The glacier is one of the main passages through the Transantarctic Mountains to the great polar plateau beyond, and was one of the early routes to the South Pole despite its steep upward incline.
The glacier was discovered and climbed by Ernest Shackleton during his Nimrod Expedition of 1908. Although Shackleton turned back at latitude 88° 23' S, just 97.5 nautical miles (180.6 km; 112.2 mi) from the South Pole, he established the first proven route towards the pole and, in doing so, became the first person to set foot upon the polar plateau. In 1911–1912, Captain Scott and his Terra Nova Expedition team reached the South Pole by similarly climbing the Beardmore. However, they reached the pole a month after Roald Amundsen and his team, who had chosen a route up the previously unknown Axel Heiberg Glacier. It was on the way back to the Nova expedition's base camp after they left the South Pole that Edgar Evans, one of the members of Scott's chosen team to go on to the final trek to the South Pole, died around the foot of Beardmore Glacier on February 17, 1912.
Beardmore Glacier was named by Shackleton after Sir William Beardmore, a Scottish industrialist and expedition sponsor. However, Ranulph Fiennes writes that Shackleton had previously told Beardmore's wife, Elspeth, that he would name a glacier after her and it is possible that is what Shackleton actually did.In 2016, the first beetle fossils, in the form of wing-cases (elytra) of the ground beetle Antarctotrechus, around 14 to 20 million years old, were found in sediments adjacent to the glacier.
See also
List of glaciers in the Antarctic
Glaciology
Wild Icefalls
References
This article incorporates public domain material from "Beardmore Glacier". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey. | instance of | {
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The Beardmore Glacier in Antarctica is one of the largest valley glaciers in the world, being 200 km (125 mi) long and having a width of 40 km (25 mi). It descends about 2,200 m (7,200 ft) from the Antarctic Plateau to the Ross Ice Shelf and is bordered by the Commonwealth Range of the Queen Maud Mountains on the eastern side and the Queen Alexandra Range of the Central Transantarctic Mountains on the western.
The glacier is one of the main passages through the Transantarctic Mountains to the great polar plateau beyond, and was one of the early routes to the South Pole despite its steep upward incline.
The glacier was discovered and climbed by Ernest Shackleton during his Nimrod Expedition of 1908. Although Shackleton turned back at latitude 88° 23' S, just 97.5 nautical miles (180.6 km; 112.2 mi) from the South Pole, he established the first proven route towards the pole and, in doing so, became the first person to set foot upon the polar plateau. In 1911–1912, Captain Scott and his Terra Nova Expedition team reached the South Pole by similarly climbing the Beardmore. However, they reached the pole a month after Roald Amundsen and his team, who had chosen a route up the previously unknown Axel Heiberg Glacier. It was on the way back to the Nova expedition's base camp after they left the South Pole that Edgar Evans, one of the members of Scott's chosen team to go on to the final trek to the South Pole, died around the foot of Beardmore Glacier on February 17, 1912.
Beardmore Glacier was named by Shackleton after Sir William Beardmore, a Scottish industrialist and expedition sponsor. However, Ranulph Fiennes writes that Shackleton had previously told Beardmore's wife, Elspeth, that he would name a glacier after her and it is possible that is what Shackleton actually did.In 2016, the first beetle fossils, in the form of wing-cases (elytra) of the ground beetle Antarctotrechus, around 14 to 20 million years old, were found in sediments adjacent to the glacier.
See also
List of glaciers in the Antarctic
Glaciology
Wild Icefalls
References
This article incorporates public domain material from "Beardmore Glacier". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey. | Commons category | {
"answer_start": [
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"text": [
"Beardmore Glacier"
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The Beardmore Glacier in Antarctica is one of the largest valley glaciers in the world, being 200 km (125 mi) long and having a width of 40 km (25 mi). It descends about 2,200 m (7,200 ft) from the Antarctic Plateau to the Ross Ice Shelf and is bordered by the Commonwealth Range of the Queen Maud Mountains on the eastern side and the Queen Alexandra Range of the Central Transantarctic Mountains on the western.
The glacier is one of the main passages through the Transantarctic Mountains to the great polar plateau beyond, and was one of the early routes to the South Pole despite its steep upward incline.
The glacier was discovered and climbed by Ernest Shackleton during his Nimrod Expedition of 1908. Although Shackleton turned back at latitude 88° 23' S, just 97.5 nautical miles (180.6 km; 112.2 mi) from the South Pole, he established the first proven route towards the pole and, in doing so, became the first person to set foot upon the polar plateau. In 1911–1912, Captain Scott and his Terra Nova Expedition team reached the South Pole by similarly climbing the Beardmore. However, they reached the pole a month after Roald Amundsen and his team, who had chosen a route up the previously unknown Axel Heiberg Glacier. It was on the way back to the Nova expedition's base camp after they left the South Pole that Edgar Evans, one of the members of Scott's chosen team to go on to the final trek to the South Pole, died around the foot of Beardmore Glacier on February 17, 1912.
Beardmore Glacier was named by Shackleton after Sir William Beardmore, a Scottish industrialist and expedition sponsor. However, Ranulph Fiennes writes that Shackleton had previously told Beardmore's wife, Elspeth, that he would name a glacier after her and it is possible that is what Shackleton actually did.In 2016, the first beetle fossils, in the form of wing-cases (elytra) of the ground beetle Antarctotrechus, around 14 to 20 million years old, were found in sediments adjacent to the glacier.
See also
List of glaciers in the Antarctic
Glaciology
Wild Icefalls
References
This article incorporates public domain material from "Beardmore Glacier". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey. | terminus | {
"answer_start": [
223
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"Ross Ice Shelf"
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The Beardmore Glacier in Antarctica is one of the largest valley glaciers in the world, being 200 km (125 mi) long and having a width of 40 km (25 mi). It descends about 2,200 m (7,200 ft) from the Antarctic Plateau to the Ross Ice Shelf and is bordered by the Commonwealth Range of the Queen Maud Mountains on the eastern side and the Queen Alexandra Range of the Central Transantarctic Mountains on the western.
The glacier is one of the main passages through the Transantarctic Mountains to the great polar plateau beyond, and was one of the early routes to the South Pole despite its steep upward incline.
The glacier was discovered and climbed by Ernest Shackleton during his Nimrod Expedition of 1908. Although Shackleton turned back at latitude 88° 23' S, just 97.5 nautical miles (180.6 km; 112.2 mi) from the South Pole, he established the first proven route towards the pole and, in doing so, became the first person to set foot upon the polar plateau. In 1911–1912, Captain Scott and his Terra Nova Expedition team reached the South Pole by similarly climbing the Beardmore. However, they reached the pole a month after Roald Amundsen and his team, who had chosen a route up the previously unknown Axel Heiberg Glacier. It was on the way back to the Nova expedition's base camp after they left the South Pole that Edgar Evans, one of the members of Scott's chosen team to go on to the final trek to the South Pole, died around the foot of Beardmore Glacier on February 17, 1912.
Beardmore Glacier was named by Shackleton after Sir William Beardmore, a Scottish industrialist and expedition sponsor. However, Ranulph Fiennes writes that Shackleton had previously told Beardmore's wife, Elspeth, that he would name a glacier after her and it is possible that is what Shackleton actually did.In 2016, the first beetle fossils, in the form of wing-cases (elytra) of the ground beetle Antarctotrechus, around 14 to 20 million years old, were found in sediments adjacent to the glacier.
See also
List of glaciers in the Antarctic
Glaciology
Wild Icefalls
References
This article incorporates public domain material from "Beardmore Glacier". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey. | native label | {
"answer_start": [
4
],
"text": [
"Beardmore Glacier"
]
} |
The Beardmore Glacier in Antarctica is one of the largest valley glaciers in the world, being 200 km (125 mi) long and having a width of 40 km (25 mi). It descends about 2,200 m (7,200 ft) from the Antarctic Plateau to the Ross Ice Shelf and is bordered by the Commonwealth Range of the Queen Maud Mountains on the eastern side and the Queen Alexandra Range of the Central Transantarctic Mountains on the western.
The glacier is one of the main passages through the Transantarctic Mountains to the great polar plateau beyond, and was one of the early routes to the South Pole despite its steep upward incline.
The glacier was discovered and climbed by Ernest Shackleton during his Nimrod Expedition of 1908. Although Shackleton turned back at latitude 88° 23' S, just 97.5 nautical miles (180.6 km; 112.2 mi) from the South Pole, he established the first proven route towards the pole and, in doing so, became the first person to set foot upon the polar plateau. In 1911–1912, Captain Scott and his Terra Nova Expedition team reached the South Pole by similarly climbing the Beardmore. However, they reached the pole a month after Roald Amundsen and his team, who had chosen a route up the previously unknown Axel Heiberg Glacier. It was on the way back to the Nova expedition's base camp after they left the South Pole that Edgar Evans, one of the members of Scott's chosen team to go on to the final trek to the South Pole, died around the foot of Beardmore Glacier on February 17, 1912.
Beardmore Glacier was named by Shackleton after Sir William Beardmore, a Scottish industrialist and expedition sponsor. However, Ranulph Fiennes writes that Shackleton had previously told Beardmore's wife, Elspeth, that he would name a glacier after her and it is possible that is what Shackleton actually did.In 2016, the first beetle fossils, in the form of wing-cases (elytra) of the ground beetle Antarctotrechus, around 14 to 20 million years old, were found in sediments adjacent to the glacier.
See also
List of glaciers in the Antarctic
Glaciology
Wild Icefalls
References
This article incorporates public domain material from "Beardmore Glacier". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey. | mountain range | {
"answer_start": [
373
],
"text": [
"Transantarctic Mountains"
]
} |
James or Jim White may refer to:
Military
James White (general) (1747–1821), American pioneer; founded Knoxville, Tennessee
James White (RAF officer) (1893–1972), World War I fighter ace
Politics
Australian politics
James White (South Australian politician) (1820–1892), land agent and MHA
James White (New South Wales politician) (1828–1890), member of Legislative Assembly, then Council; racehorse owner
James Cobb White (1855–1927), New South Wales politician, member of Legislative Council, nephew of the above
James Wharton White (1857–1930), MHA in South Australia
UK politics
James White (English politician) (1809–1883), MP for Plymouth and Brighton
Martin White (politician) (James Martin White, 1857–1928), businessman and Member of Parliament for Forfar
J. D. White (James Dundas White, 1866–1951), Member of Parliament for Dunbartonshire and Glasgow Tradeston
James White (Scottish politician) (1922–2009), MP for Glasgow Pollok
James White (Irish politician) (1938–2014), Irish businessman, hotelier and politician
US politics
James White (North Carolina politician) (1749–1809), Congressman from North Carolina
James White (Maine politician) (1792–1870), Maine State Treasurer, 1842–1846
James Bain White (1835–1897), U.S. Representative from Indiana
James T. White (politician) (1837–1892), African-American Baptist minister and politician from Arkansas
James Bamford White (1842–1931), U.S. Representative from Kentucky
James Stephen White (1838–1908), politician from Milwaukee, Wisconsin
James F. White (born 1941), American politician
Jim White (politician) (born 1944), member of the South Dakota Senate
James White (Texas politician) (born 1964), member of Texas House of Representatives
James White (New Mexico politician), member of the New Mexico House of Representatives
Religion
James White (Archdeacon of Armagh) (died 1530)
James Springer White (1821–1881), husband of Ellen G. White and co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
James Edson White (1849–1928), adventist and author, son of James Springer White and Ellen G. White
James Rowland White (c. 1851–1885), self-proclaimed prophet
James Emery White (born 1961), president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
James White (theologian) (born 1962), American theologian
Sports
American football
Jim White (American football) (1920–1987), American football tackle for the New York Giants
James White (defensive tackle) (born 1953), former NFL defensive/nose tackle for the Minnesota Vikings
James White (running back) (born 1992), former NFL running back for the New England Patriots
Association football
James White (Scottish footballer) (1899–1983), Scottish footballer
Jimmy White (Irish footballer) (fl. 1923–1969), Irish international football (soccer) player
Jimmy White (footballer, born 1942) (1942–2017), English football (soccer) player
Australian rules football
Jim White (footballer, born 1878) (1878–1956), Australian rules footballer for Essendon in 1897
Jim White (footballer, born 1922) (1922–2006), Australian rules footballer
James White (Australian footballer) (born 1980), Australian rules footballer for Richmond
Basketball
Jim White (basketball), American basketball player fl. 1940s
James White (basketball) (born 1982), American basketball player
James White (basketball, born 1993), American basketball player
Rugby union
Jim White (rugby union), Australian rugby union player
Jimmy White (rugby union) (1911–1997), South African rugby union player
Other sports
Jim White (wrestler) (1942–2010), wrestler in the Southern United States
James White, known as Deacon White (1847–1939), baseball player
James L. White (coach) (1893–1949), American college baseball, basketball and football head coach
Jim White (cricketer) (1901–1964), Australian cricketer
James White (baseball), American Negro league baseball player
James White (cross-country) (born 1941), American high school cross country coach
Jimmy White (born 1962), English snooker player
Arts and media
James White (writer and translator) (1759–1799), historical novelist
James White (sculptor) (1861–1918), English-born sculptor who emigrated to Australia
James H. White (1872–1944), Canadian film pioneer
James White (author) (1928–1999), writer of science fiction novellas, short stories, and novels
James L. White (poet) (1936–1981), poet and author
James C. White (1937–2009), American radio talk show host
James P. White (writer) (born 1940), author and editor
James L. White (1947–2015), American screenwriter
Jimmy White (singer) (born 1955), American singer-songwriter and record producer
Jim White (journalist) (1957), British sports television announcer and journalist, now with STV
Jim White (guitarist) (born 1957), American southern singer/songwriter
Jim White (presenter) (born 1957) Scottish sports television announcer and journalist
Jim White (drummer) (born 1962), Australian drummer for Dirty Three
James Chance or James White (born 1963), American musician
James White (rapper), American rapper with German hip-hop group C-Block
James Gordon White, screenwriter
Others
James White (1775–1820), advertising agent and author
James White (1812–1884), Scottish lawyer and chemicals manufacturer
James Terry White (1845–1920), editor of The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography
James Landrum White (1847–1925), shape note singing teacher and composer
James White (geographer) (1863–1928), Canadian geographer
James White (financier) (1877–1927), English property speculator
James Larkin White (1882–1946), discoverer and explorer of Carlsbad Caverns
James White (art expert) (1913–2003), Irish art expert and author
James Boyd White (born 1938), American law professor, literary critic, scholar and philosopher
James J. White (born 1934), law professor, legal scholar
James White (engineer) (1938–2009), American polymer scientist
James Clarke White (dermatologist) (1833–1916), American dermatologist and professor at Harvard Medical School
James Clarke White (neurosurgeon) (died 1981), American neurosurgeon and professor at Harvard Medical School
Jimmy White, a member of the gang that committed the Great Train Robbery
Other uses
James White (film), a 2015 drama
See also
James Whyte (disambiguation) | occupation | {
"answer_start": [
5163
],
"text": [
"lawyer"
]
} |
James or Jim White may refer to:
Military
James White (general) (1747–1821), American pioneer; founded Knoxville, Tennessee
James White (RAF officer) (1893–1972), World War I fighter ace
Politics
Australian politics
James White (South Australian politician) (1820–1892), land agent and MHA
James White (New South Wales politician) (1828–1890), member of Legislative Assembly, then Council; racehorse owner
James Cobb White (1855–1927), New South Wales politician, member of Legislative Council, nephew of the above
James Wharton White (1857–1930), MHA in South Australia
UK politics
James White (English politician) (1809–1883), MP for Plymouth and Brighton
Martin White (politician) (James Martin White, 1857–1928), businessman and Member of Parliament for Forfar
J. D. White (James Dundas White, 1866–1951), Member of Parliament for Dunbartonshire and Glasgow Tradeston
James White (Scottish politician) (1922–2009), MP for Glasgow Pollok
James White (Irish politician) (1938–2014), Irish businessman, hotelier and politician
US politics
James White (North Carolina politician) (1749–1809), Congressman from North Carolina
James White (Maine politician) (1792–1870), Maine State Treasurer, 1842–1846
James Bain White (1835–1897), U.S. Representative from Indiana
James T. White (politician) (1837–1892), African-American Baptist minister and politician from Arkansas
James Bamford White (1842–1931), U.S. Representative from Kentucky
James Stephen White (1838–1908), politician from Milwaukee, Wisconsin
James F. White (born 1941), American politician
Jim White (politician) (born 1944), member of the South Dakota Senate
James White (Texas politician) (born 1964), member of Texas House of Representatives
James White (New Mexico politician), member of the New Mexico House of Representatives
Religion
James White (Archdeacon of Armagh) (died 1530)
James Springer White (1821–1881), husband of Ellen G. White and co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
James Edson White (1849–1928), adventist and author, son of James Springer White and Ellen G. White
James Rowland White (c. 1851–1885), self-proclaimed prophet
James Emery White (born 1961), president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
James White (theologian) (born 1962), American theologian
Sports
American football
Jim White (American football) (1920–1987), American football tackle for the New York Giants
James White (defensive tackle) (born 1953), former NFL defensive/nose tackle for the Minnesota Vikings
James White (running back) (born 1992), former NFL running back for the New England Patriots
Association football
James White (Scottish footballer) (1899–1983), Scottish footballer
Jimmy White (Irish footballer) (fl. 1923–1969), Irish international football (soccer) player
Jimmy White (footballer, born 1942) (1942–2017), English football (soccer) player
Australian rules football
Jim White (footballer, born 1878) (1878–1956), Australian rules footballer for Essendon in 1897
Jim White (footballer, born 1922) (1922–2006), Australian rules footballer
James White (Australian footballer) (born 1980), Australian rules footballer for Richmond
Basketball
Jim White (basketball), American basketball player fl. 1940s
James White (basketball) (born 1982), American basketball player
James White (basketball, born 1993), American basketball player
Rugby union
Jim White (rugby union), Australian rugby union player
Jimmy White (rugby union) (1911–1997), South African rugby union player
Other sports
Jim White (wrestler) (1942–2010), wrestler in the Southern United States
James White, known as Deacon White (1847–1939), baseball player
James L. White (coach) (1893–1949), American college baseball, basketball and football head coach
Jim White (cricketer) (1901–1964), Australian cricketer
James White (baseball), American Negro league baseball player
James White (cross-country) (born 1941), American high school cross country coach
Jimmy White (born 1962), English snooker player
Arts and media
James White (writer and translator) (1759–1799), historical novelist
James White (sculptor) (1861–1918), English-born sculptor who emigrated to Australia
James H. White (1872–1944), Canadian film pioneer
James White (author) (1928–1999), writer of science fiction novellas, short stories, and novels
James L. White (poet) (1936–1981), poet and author
James C. White (1937–2009), American radio talk show host
James P. White (writer) (born 1940), author and editor
James L. White (1947–2015), American screenwriter
Jimmy White (singer) (born 1955), American singer-songwriter and record producer
Jim White (journalist) (1957), British sports television announcer and journalist, now with STV
Jim White (guitarist) (born 1957), American southern singer/songwriter
Jim White (presenter) (born 1957) Scottish sports television announcer and journalist
Jim White (drummer) (born 1962), Australian drummer for Dirty Three
James Chance or James White (born 1963), American musician
James White (rapper), American rapper with German hip-hop group C-Block
James Gordon White, screenwriter
Others
James White (1775–1820), advertising agent and author
James White (1812–1884), Scottish lawyer and chemicals manufacturer
James Terry White (1845–1920), editor of The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography
James Landrum White (1847–1925), shape note singing teacher and composer
James White (geographer) (1863–1928), Canadian geographer
James White (financier) (1877–1927), English property speculator
James Larkin White (1882–1946), discoverer and explorer of Carlsbad Caverns
James White (art expert) (1913–2003), Irish art expert and author
James Boyd White (born 1938), American law professor, literary critic, scholar and philosopher
James J. White (born 1934), law professor, legal scholar
James White (engineer) (1938–2009), American polymer scientist
James Clarke White (dermatologist) (1833–1916), American dermatologist and professor at Harvard Medical School
James Clarke White (neurosurgeon) (died 1981), American neurosurgeon and professor at Harvard Medical School
Jimmy White, a member of the gang that committed the Great Train Robbery
Other uses
James White (film), a 2015 drama
See also
James Whyte (disambiguation) | genre | {
"answer_start": [
4235
],
"text": [
"science fiction"
]
} |
James or Jim White may refer to:
Military
James White (general) (1747–1821), American pioneer; founded Knoxville, Tennessee
James White (RAF officer) (1893–1972), World War I fighter ace
Politics
Australian politics
James White (South Australian politician) (1820–1892), land agent and MHA
James White (New South Wales politician) (1828–1890), member of Legislative Assembly, then Council; racehorse owner
James Cobb White (1855–1927), New South Wales politician, member of Legislative Council, nephew of the above
James Wharton White (1857–1930), MHA in South Australia
UK politics
James White (English politician) (1809–1883), MP for Plymouth and Brighton
Martin White (politician) (James Martin White, 1857–1928), businessman and Member of Parliament for Forfar
J. D. White (James Dundas White, 1866–1951), Member of Parliament for Dunbartonshire and Glasgow Tradeston
James White (Scottish politician) (1922–2009), MP for Glasgow Pollok
James White (Irish politician) (1938–2014), Irish businessman, hotelier and politician
US politics
James White (North Carolina politician) (1749–1809), Congressman from North Carolina
James White (Maine politician) (1792–1870), Maine State Treasurer, 1842–1846
James Bain White (1835–1897), U.S. Representative from Indiana
James T. White (politician) (1837–1892), African-American Baptist minister and politician from Arkansas
James Bamford White (1842–1931), U.S. Representative from Kentucky
James Stephen White (1838–1908), politician from Milwaukee, Wisconsin
James F. White (born 1941), American politician
Jim White (politician) (born 1944), member of the South Dakota Senate
James White (Texas politician) (born 1964), member of Texas House of Representatives
James White (New Mexico politician), member of the New Mexico House of Representatives
Religion
James White (Archdeacon of Armagh) (died 1530)
James Springer White (1821–1881), husband of Ellen G. White and co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
James Edson White (1849–1928), adventist and author, son of James Springer White and Ellen G. White
James Rowland White (c. 1851–1885), self-proclaimed prophet
James Emery White (born 1961), president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
James White (theologian) (born 1962), American theologian
Sports
American football
Jim White (American football) (1920–1987), American football tackle for the New York Giants
James White (defensive tackle) (born 1953), former NFL defensive/nose tackle for the Minnesota Vikings
James White (running back) (born 1992), former NFL running back for the New England Patriots
Association football
James White (Scottish footballer) (1899–1983), Scottish footballer
Jimmy White (Irish footballer) (fl. 1923–1969), Irish international football (soccer) player
Jimmy White (footballer, born 1942) (1942–2017), English football (soccer) player
Australian rules football
Jim White (footballer, born 1878) (1878–1956), Australian rules footballer for Essendon in 1897
Jim White (footballer, born 1922) (1922–2006), Australian rules footballer
James White (Australian footballer) (born 1980), Australian rules footballer for Richmond
Basketball
Jim White (basketball), American basketball player fl. 1940s
James White (basketball) (born 1982), American basketball player
James White (basketball, born 1993), American basketball player
Rugby union
Jim White (rugby union), Australian rugby union player
Jimmy White (rugby union) (1911–1997), South African rugby union player
Other sports
Jim White (wrestler) (1942–2010), wrestler in the Southern United States
James White, known as Deacon White (1847–1939), baseball player
James L. White (coach) (1893–1949), American college baseball, basketball and football head coach
Jim White (cricketer) (1901–1964), Australian cricketer
James White (baseball), American Negro league baseball player
James White (cross-country) (born 1941), American high school cross country coach
Jimmy White (born 1962), English snooker player
Arts and media
James White (writer and translator) (1759–1799), historical novelist
James White (sculptor) (1861–1918), English-born sculptor who emigrated to Australia
James H. White (1872–1944), Canadian film pioneer
James White (author) (1928–1999), writer of science fiction novellas, short stories, and novels
James L. White (poet) (1936–1981), poet and author
James C. White (1937–2009), American radio talk show host
James P. White (writer) (born 1940), author and editor
James L. White (1947–2015), American screenwriter
Jimmy White (singer) (born 1955), American singer-songwriter and record producer
Jim White (journalist) (1957), British sports television announcer and journalist, now with STV
Jim White (guitarist) (born 1957), American southern singer/songwriter
Jim White (presenter) (born 1957) Scottish sports television announcer and journalist
Jim White (drummer) (born 1962), Australian drummer for Dirty Three
James Chance or James White (born 1963), American musician
James White (rapper), American rapper with German hip-hop group C-Block
James Gordon White, screenwriter
Others
James White (1775–1820), advertising agent and author
James White (1812–1884), Scottish lawyer and chemicals manufacturer
James Terry White (1845–1920), editor of The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography
James Landrum White (1847–1925), shape note singing teacher and composer
James White (geographer) (1863–1928), Canadian geographer
James White (financier) (1877–1927), English property speculator
James Larkin White (1882–1946), discoverer and explorer of Carlsbad Caverns
James White (art expert) (1913–2003), Irish art expert and author
James Boyd White (born 1938), American law professor, literary critic, scholar and philosopher
James J. White (born 1934), law professor, legal scholar
James White (engineer) (1938–2009), American polymer scientist
James Clarke White (dermatologist) (1833–1916), American dermatologist and professor at Harvard Medical School
James Clarke White (neurosurgeon) (died 1981), American neurosurgeon and professor at Harvard Medical School
Jimmy White, a member of the gang that committed the Great Train Robbery
Other uses
James White (film), a 2015 drama
See also
James Whyte (disambiguation) | family name | {
"answer_start": [
13
],
"text": [
"White"
]
} |
James or Jim White may refer to:
Military
James White (general) (1747–1821), American pioneer; founded Knoxville, Tennessee
James White (RAF officer) (1893–1972), World War I fighter ace
Politics
Australian politics
James White (South Australian politician) (1820–1892), land agent and MHA
James White (New South Wales politician) (1828–1890), member of Legislative Assembly, then Council; racehorse owner
James Cobb White (1855–1927), New South Wales politician, member of Legislative Council, nephew of the above
James Wharton White (1857–1930), MHA in South Australia
UK politics
James White (English politician) (1809–1883), MP for Plymouth and Brighton
Martin White (politician) (James Martin White, 1857–1928), businessman and Member of Parliament for Forfar
J. D. White (James Dundas White, 1866–1951), Member of Parliament for Dunbartonshire and Glasgow Tradeston
James White (Scottish politician) (1922–2009), MP for Glasgow Pollok
James White (Irish politician) (1938–2014), Irish businessman, hotelier and politician
US politics
James White (North Carolina politician) (1749–1809), Congressman from North Carolina
James White (Maine politician) (1792–1870), Maine State Treasurer, 1842–1846
James Bain White (1835–1897), U.S. Representative from Indiana
James T. White (politician) (1837–1892), African-American Baptist minister and politician from Arkansas
James Bamford White (1842–1931), U.S. Representative from Kentucky
James Stephen White (1838–1908), politician from Milwaukee, Wisconsin
James F. White (born 1941), American politician
Jim White (politician) (born 1944), member of the South Dakota Senate
James White (Texas politician) (born 1964), member of Texas House of Representatives
James White (New Mexico politician), member of the New Mexico House of Representatives
Religion
James White (Archdeacon of Armagh) (died 1530)
James Springer White (1821–1881), husband of Ellen G. White and co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
James Edson White (1849–1928), adventist and author, son of James Springer White and Ellen G. White
James Rowland White (c. 1851–1885), self-proclaimed prophet
James Emery White (born 1961), president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
James White (theologian) (born 1962), American theologian
Sports
American football
Jim White (American football) (1920–1987), American football tackle for the New York Giants
James White (defensive tackle) (born 1953), former NFL defensive/nose tackle for the Minnesota Vikings
James White (running back) (born 1992), former NFL running back for the New England Patriots
Association football
James White (Scottish footballer) (1899–1983), Scottish footballer
Jimmy White (Irish footballer) (fl. 1923–1969), Irish international football (soccer) player
Jimmy White (footballer, born 1942) (1942–2017), English football (soccer) player
Australian rules football
Jim White (footballer, born 1878) (1878–1956), Australian rules footballer for Essendon in 1897
Jim White (footballer, born 1922) (1922–2006), Australian rules footballer
James White (Australian footballer) (born 1980), Australian rules footballer for Richmond
Basketball
Jim White (basketball), American basketball player fl. 1940s
James White (basketball) (born 1982), American basketball player
James White (basketball, born 1993), American basketball player
Rugby union
Jim White (rugby union), Australian rugby union player
Jimmy White (rugby union) (1911–1997), South African rugby union player
Other sports
Jim White (wrestler) (1942–2010), wrestler in the Southern United States
James White, known as Deacon White (1847–1939), baseball player
James L. White (coach) (1893–1949), American college baseball, basketball and football head coach
Jim White (cricketer) (1901–1964), Australian cricketer
James White (baseball), American Negro league baseball player
James White (cross-country) (born 1941), American high school cross country coach
Jimmy White (born 1962), English snooker player
Arts and media
James White (writer and translator) (1759–1799), historical novelist
James White (sculptor) (1861–1918), English-born sculptor who emigrated to Australia
James H. White (1872–1944), Canadian film pioneer
James White (author) (1928–1999), writer of science fiction novellas, short stories, and novels
James L. White (poet) (1936–1981), poet and author
James C. White (1937–2009), American radio talk show host
James P. White (writer) (born 1940), author and editor
James L. White (1947–2015), American screenwriter
Jimmy White (singer) (born 1955), American singer-songwriter and record producer
Jim White (journalist) (1957), British sports television announcer and journalist, now with STV
Jim White (guitarist) (born 1957), American southern singer/songwriter
Jim White (presenter) (born 1957) Scottish sports television announcer and journalist
Jim White (drummer) (born 1962), Australian drummer for Dirty Three
James Chance or James White (born 1963), American musician
James White (rapper), American rapper with German hip-hop group C-Block
James Gordon White, screenwriter
Others
James White (1775–1820), advertising agent and author
James White (1812–1884), Scottish lawyer and chemicals manufacturer
James Terry White (1845–1920), editor of The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography
James Landrum White (1847–1925), shape note singing teacher and composer
James White (geographer) (1863–1928), Canadian geographer
James White (financier) (1877–1927), English property speculator
James Larkin White (1882–1946), discoverer and explorer of Carlsbad Caverns
James White (art expert) (1913–2003), Irish art expert and author
James Boyd White (born 1938), American law professor, literary critic, scholar and philosopher
James J. White (born 1934), law professor, legal scholar
James White (engineer) (1938–2009), American polymer scientist
James Clarke White (dermatologist) (1833–1916), American dermatologist and professor at Harvard Medical School
James Clarke White (neurosurgeon) (died 1981), American neurosurgeon and professor at Harvard Medical School
Jimmy White, a member of the gang that committed the Great Train Robbery
Other uses
James White (film), a 2015 drama
See also
James Whyte (disambiguation) | given name | {
"answer_start": [
0
],
"text": [
"James"
]
} |
James or Jim White may refer to:
Military
James White (general) (1747–1821), American pioneer; founded Knoxville, Tennessee
James White (RAF officer) (1893–1972), World War I fighter ace
Politics
Australian politics
James White (South Australian politician) (1820–1892), land agent and MHA
James White (New South Wales politician) (1828–1890), member of Legislative Assembly, then Council; racehorse owner
James Cobb White (1855–1927), New South Wales politician, member of Legislative Council, nephew of the above
James Wharton White (1857–1930), MHA in South Australia
UK politics
James White (English politician) (1809–1883), MP for Plymouth and Brighton
Martin White (politician) (James Martin White, 1857–1928), businessman and Member of Parliament for Forfar
J. D. White (James Dundas White, 1866–1951), Member of Parliament for Dunbartonshire and Glasgow Tradeston
James White (Scottish politician) (1922–2009), MP for Glasgow Pollok
James White (Irish politician) (1938–2014), Irish businessman, hotelier and politician
US politics
James White (North Carolina politician) (1749–1809), Congressman from North Carolina
James White (Maine politician) (1792–1870), Maine State Treasurer, 1842–1846
James Bain White (1835–1897), U.S. Representative from Indiana
James T. White (politician) (1837–1892), African-American Baptist minister and politician from Arkansas
James Bamford White (1842–1931), U.S. Representative from Kentucky
James Stephen White (1838–1908), politician from Milwaukee, Wisconsin
James F. White (born 1941), American politician
Jim White (politician) (born 1944), member of the South Dakota Senate
James White (Texas politician) (born 1964), member of Texas House of Representatives
James White (New Mexico politician), member of the New Mexico House of Representatives
Religion
James White (Archdeacon of Armagh) (died 1530)
James Springer White (1821–1881), husband of Ellen G. White and co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
James Edson White (1849–1928), adventist and author, son of James Springer White and Ellen G. White
James Rowland White (c. 1851–1885), self-proclaimed prophet
James Emery White (born 1961), president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
James White (theologian) (born 1962), American theologian
Sports
American football
Jim White (American football) (1920–1987), American football tackle for the New York Giants
James White (defensive tackle) (born 1953), former NFL defensive/nose tackle for the Minnesota Vikings
James White (running back) (born 1992), former NFL running back for the New England Patriots
Association football
James White (Scottish footballer) (1899–1983), Scottish footballer
Jimmy White (Irish footballer) (fl. 1923–1969), Irish international football (soccer) player
Jimmy White (footballer, born 1942) (1942–2017), English football (soccer) player
Australian rules football
Jim White (footballer, born 1878) (1878–1956), Australian rules footballer for Essendon in 1897
Jim White (footballer, born 1922) (1922–2006), Australian rules footballer
James White (Australian footballer) (born 1980), Australian rules footballer for Richmond
Basketball
Jim White (basketball), American basketball player fl. 1940s
James White (basketball) (born 1982), American basketball player
James White (basketball, born 1993), American basketball player
Rugby union
Jim White (rugby union), Australian rugby union player
Jimmy White (rugby union) (1911–1997), South African rugby union player
Other sports
Jim White (wrestler) (1942–2010), wrestler in the Southern United States
James White, known as Deacon White (1847–1939), baseball player
James L. White (coach) (1893–1949), American college baseball, basketball and football head coach
Jim White (cricketer) (1901–1964), Australian cricketer
James White (baseball), American Negro league baseball player
James White (cross-country) (born 1941), American high school cross country coach
Jimmy White (born 1962), English snooker player
Arts and media
James White (writer and translator) (1759–1799), historical novelist
James White (sculptor) (1861–1918), English-born sculptor who emigrated to Australia
James H. White (1872–1944), Canadian film pioneer
James White (author) (1928–1999), writer of science fiction novellas, short stories, and novels
James L. White (poet) (1936–1981), poet and author
James C. White (1937–2009), American radio talk show host
James P. White (writer) (born 1940), author and editor
James L. White (1947–2015), American screenwriter
Jimmy White (singer) (born 1955), American singer-songwriter and record producer
Jim White (journalist) (1957), British sports television announcer and journalist, now with STV
Jim White (guitarist) (born 1957), American southern singer/songwriter
Jim White (presenter) (born 1957) Scottish sports television announcer and journalist
Jim White (drummer) (born 1962), Australian drummer for Dirty Three
James Chance or James White (born 1963), American musician
James White (rapper), American rapper with German hip-hop group C-Block
James Gordon White, screenwriter
Others
James White (1775–1820), advertising agent and author
James White (1812–1884), Scottish lawyer and chemicals manufacturer
James Terry White (1845–1920), editor of The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography
James Landrum White (1847–1925), shape note singing teacher and composer
James White (geographer) (1863–1928), Canadian geographer
James White (financier) (1877–1927), English property speculator
James Larkin White (1882–1946), discoverer and explorer of Carlsbad Caverns
James White (art expert) (1913–2003), Irish art expert and author
James Boyd White (born 1938), American law professor, literary critic, scholar and philosopher
James J. White (born 1934), law professor, legal scholar
James White (engineer) (1938–2009), American polymer scientist
James Clarke White (dermatologist) (1833–1916), American dermatologist and professor at Harvard Medical School
James Clarke White (neurosurgeon) (died 1981), American neurosurgeon and professor at Harvard Medical School
Jimmy White, a member of the gang that committed the Great Train Robbery
Other uses
James White (film), a 2015 drama
See also
James Whyte (disambiguation) | languages spoken, written or signed | {
"answer_start": [
599
],
"text": [
"English"
]
} |
James or Jim White may refer to:
Military
James White (general) (1747–1821), American pioneer; founded Knoxville, Tennessee
James White (RAF officer) (1893–1972), World War I fighter ace
Politics
Australian politics
James White (South Australian politician) (1820–1892), land agent and MHA
James White (New South Wales politician) (1828–1890), member of Legislative Assembly, then Council; racehorse owner
James Cobb White (1855–1927), New South Wales politician, member of Legislative Council, nephew of the above
James Wharton White (1857–1930), MHA in South Australia
UK politics
James White (English politician) (1809–1883), MP for Plymouth and Brighton
Martin White (politician) (James Martin White, 1857–1928), businessman and Member of Parliament for Forfar
J. D. White (James Dundas White, 1866–1951), Member of Parliament for Dunbartonshire and Glasgow Tradeston
James White (Scottish politician) (1922–2009), MP for Glasgow Pollok
James White (Irish politician) (1938–2014), Irish businessman, hotelier and politician
US politics
James White (North Carolina politician) (1749–1809), Congressman from North Carolina
James White (Maine politician) (1792–1870), Maine State Treasurer, 1842–1846
James Bain White (1835–1897), U.S. Representative from Indiana
James T. White (politician) (1837–1892), African-American Baptist minister and politician from Arkansas
James Bamford White (1842–1931), U.S. Representative from Kentucky
James Stephen White (1838–1908), politician from Milwaukee, Wisconsin
James F. White (born 1941), American politician
Jim White (politician) (born 1944), member of the South Dakota Senate
James White (Texas politician) (born 1964), member of Texas House of Representatives
James White (New Mexico politician), member of the New Mexico House of Representatives
Religion
James White (Archdeacon of Armagh) (died 1530)
James Springer White (1821–1881), husband of Ellen G. White and co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
James Edson White (1849–1928), adventist and author, son of James Springer White and Ellen G. White
James Rowland White (c. 1851–1885), self-proclaimed prophet
James Emery White (born 1961), president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
James White (theologian) (born 1962), American theologian
Sports
American football
Jim White (American football) (1920–1987), American football tackle for the New York Giants
James White (defensive tackle) (born 1953), former NFL defensive/nose tackle for the Minnesota Vikings
James White (running back) (born 1992), former NFL running back for the New England Patriots
Association football
James White (Scottish footballer) (1899–1983), Scottish footballer
Jimmy White (Irish footballer) (fl. 1923–1969), Irish international football (soccer) player
Jimmy White (footballer, born 1942) (1942–2017), English football (soccer) player
Australian rules football
Jim White (footballer, born 1878) (1878–1956), Australian rules footballer for Essendon in 1897
Jim White (footballer, born 1922) (1922–2006), Australian rules footballer
James White (Australian footballer) (born 1980), Australian rules footballer for Richmond
Basketball
Jim White (basketball), American basketball player fl. 1940s
James White (basketball) (born 1982), American basketball player
James White (basketball, born 1993), American basketball player
Rugby union
Jim White (rugby union), Australian rugby union player
Jimmy White (rugby union) (1911–1997), South African rugby union player
Other sports
Jim White (wrestler) (1942–2010), wrestler in the Southern United States
James White, known as Deacon White (1847–1939), baseball player
James L. White (coach) (1893–1949), American college baseball, basketball and football head coach
Jim White (cricketer) (1901–1964), Australian cricketer
James White (baseball), American Negro league baseball player
James White (cross-country) (born 1941), American high school cross country coach
Jimmy White (born 1962), English snooker player
Arts and media
James White (writer and translator) (1759–1799), historical novelist
James White (sculptor) (1861–1918), English-born sculptor who emigrated to Australia
James H. White (1872–1944), Canadian film pioneer
James White (author) (1928–1999), writer of science fiction novellas, short stories, and novels
James L. White (poet) (1936–1981), poet and author
James C. White (1937–2009), American radio talk show host
James P. White (writer) (born 1940), author and editor
James L. White (1947–2015), American screenwriter
Jimmy White (singer) (born 1955), American singer-songwriter and record producer
Jim White (journalist) (1957), British sports television announcer and journalist, now with STV
Jim White (guitarist) (born 1957), American southern singer/songwriter
Jim White (presenter) (born 1957) Scottish sports television announcer and journalist
Jim White (drummer) (born 1962), Australian drummer for Dirty Three
James Chance or James White (born 1963), American musician
James White (rapper), American rapper with German hip-hop group C-Block
James Gordon White, screenwriter
Others
James White (1775–1820), advertising agent and author
James White (1812–1884), Scottish lawyer and chemicals manufacturer
James Terry White (1845–1920), editor of The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography
James Landrum White (1847–1925), shape note singing teacher and composer
James White (geographer) (1863–1928), Canadian geographer
James White (financier) (1877–1927), English property speculator
James Larkin White (1882–1946), discoverer and explorer of Carlsbad Caverns
James White (art expert) (1913–2003), Irish art expert and author
James Boyd White (born 1938), American law professor, literary critic, scholar and philosopher
James J. White (born 1934), law professor, legal scholar
James White (engineer) (1938–2009), American polymer scientist
James Clarke White (dermatologist) (1833–1916), American dermatologist and professor at Harvard Medical School
James Clarke White (neurosurgeon) (died 1981), American neurosurgeon and professor at Harvard Medical School
Jimmy White, a member of the gang that committed the Great Train Robbery
Other uses
James White (film), a 2015 drama
See also
James Whyte (disambiguation) | name in native language | {
"answer_start": [
43
],
"text": [
"James White"
]
} |
James or Jim White may refer to:
Military
James White (general) (1747–1821), American pioneer; founded Knoxville, Tennessee
James White (RAF officer) (1893–1972), World War I fighter ace
Politics
Australian politics
James White (South Australian politician) (1820–1892), land agent and MHA
James White (New South Wales politician) (1828–1890), member of Legislative Assembly, then Council; racehorse owner
James Cobb White (1855–1927), New South Wales politician, member of Legislative Council, nephew of the above
James Wharton White (1857–1930), MHA in South Australia
UK politics
James White (English politician) (1809–1883), MP for Plymouth and Brighton
Martin White (politician) (James Martin White, 1857–1928), businessman and Member of Parliament for Forfar
J. D. White (James Dundas White, 1866–1951), Member of Parliament for Dunbartonshire and Glasgow Tradeston
James White (Scottish politician) (1922–2009), MP for Glasgow Pollok
James White (Irish politician) (1938–2014), Irish businessman, hotelier and politician
US politics
James White (North Carolina politician) (1749–1809), Congressman from North Carolina
James White (Maine politician) (1792–1870), Maine State Treasurer, 1842–1846
James Bain White (1835–1897), U.S. Representative from Indiana
James T. White (politician) (1837–1892), African-American Baptist minister and politician from Arkansas
James Bamford White (1842–1931), U.S. Representative from Kentucky
James Stephen White (1838–1908), politician from Milwaukee, Wisconsin
James F. White (born 1941), American politician
Jim White (politician) (born 1944), member of the South Dakota Senate
James White (Texas politician) (born 1964), member of Texas House of Representatives
James White (New Mexico politician), member of the New Mexico House of Representatives
Religion
James White (Archdeacon of Armagh) (died 1530)
James Springer White (1821–1881), husband of Ellen G. White and co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
James Edson White (1849–1928), adventist and author, son of James Springer White and Ellen G. White
James Rowland White (c. 1851–1885), self-proclaimed prophet
James Emery White (born 1961), president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
James White (theologian) (born 1962), American theologian
Sports
American football
Jim White (American football) (1920–1987), American football tackle for the New York Giants
James White (defensive tackle) (born 1953), former NFL defensive/nose tackle for the Minnesota Vikings
James White (running back) (born 1992), former NFL running back for the New England Patriots
Association football
James White (Scottish footballer) (1899–1983), Scottish footballer
Jimmy White (Irish footballer) (fl. 1923–1969), Irish international football (soccer) player
Jimmy White (footballer, born 1942) (1942–2017), English football (soccer) player
Australian rules football
Jim White (footballer, born 1878) (1878–1956), Australian rules footballer for Essendon in 1897
Jim White (footballer, born 1922) (1922–2006), Australian rules footballer
James White (Australian footballer) (born 1980), Australian rules footballer for Richmond
Basketball
Jim White (basketball), American basketball player fl. 1940s
James White (basketball) (born 1982), American basketball player
James White (basketball, born 1993), American basketball player
Rugby union
Jim White (rugby union), Australian rugby union player
Jimmy White (rugby union) (1911–1997), South African rugby union player
Other sports
Jim White (wrestler) (1942–2010), wrestler in the Southern United States
James White, known as Deacon White (1847–1939), baseball player
James L. White (coach) (1893–1949), American college baseball, basketball and football head coach
Jim White (cricketer) (1901–1964), Australian cricketer
James White (baseball), American Negro league baseball player
James White (cross-country) (born 1941), American high school cross country coach
Jimmy White (born 1962), English snooker player
Arts and media
James White (writer and translator) (1759–1799), historical novelist
James White (sculptor) (1861–1918), English-born sculptor who emigrated to Australia
James H. White (1872–1944), Canadian film pioneer
James White (author) (1928–1999), writer of science fiction novellas, short stories, and novels
James L. White (poet) (1936–1981), poet and author
James C. White (1937–2009), American radio talk show host
James P. White (writer) (born 1940), author and editor
James L. White (1947–2015), American screenwriter
Jimmy White (singer) (born 1955), American singer-songwriter and record producer
Jim White (journalist) (1957), British sports television announcer and journalist, now with STV
Jim White (guitarist) (born 1957), American southern singer/songwriter
Jim White (presenter) (born 1957) Scottish sports television announcer and journalist
Jim White (drummer) (born 1962), Australian drummer for Dirty Three
James Chance or James White (born 1963), American musician
James White (rapper), American rapper with German hip-hop group C-Block
James Gordon White, screenwriter
Others
James White (1775–1820), advertising agent and author
James White (1812–1884), Scottish lawyer and chemicals manufacturer
James Terry White (1845–1920), editor of The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography
James Landrum White (1847–1925), shape note singing teacher and composer
James White (geographer) (1863–1928), Canadian geographer
James White (financier) (1877–1927), English property speculator
James Larkin White (1882–1946), discoverer and explorer of Carlsbad Caverns
James White (art expert) (1913–2003), Irish art expert and author
James Boyd White (born 1938), American law professor, literary critic, scholar and philosopher
James J. White (born 1934), law professor, legal scholar
James White (engineer) (1938–2009), American polymer scientist
James Clarke White (dermatologist) (1833–1916), American dermatologist and professor at Harvard Medical School
James Clarke White (neurosurgeon) (died 1981), American neurosurgeon and professor at Harvard Medical School
Jimmy White, a member of the gang that committed the Great Train Robbery
Other uses
James White (film), a 2015 drama
See also
James Whyte (disambiguation) | native language | {
"answer_start": [
599
],
"text": [
"English"
]
} |
James or Jim White may refer to:
Military
James White (general) (1747–1821), American pioneer; founded Knoxville, Tennessee
James White (RAF officer) (1893–1972), World War I fighter ace
Politics
Australian politics
James White (South Australian politician) (1820–1892), land agent and MHA
James White (New South Wales politician) (1828–1890), member of Legislative Assembly, then Council; racehorse owner
James Cobb White (1855–1927), New South Wales politician, member of Legislative Council, nephew of the above
James Wharton White (1857–1930), MHA in South Australia
UK politics
James White (English politician) (1809–1883), MP for Plymouth and Brighton
Martin White (politician) (James Martin White, 1857–1928), businessman and Member of Parliament for Forfar
J. D. White (James Dundas White, 1866–1951), Member of Parliament for Dunbartonshire and Glasgow Tradeston
James White (Scottish politician) (1922–2009), MP for Glasgow Pollok
James White (Irish politician) (1938–2014), Irish businessman, hotelier and politician
US politics
James White (North Carolina politician) (1749–1809), Congressman from North Carolina
James White (Maine politician) (1792–1870), Maine State Treasurer, 1842–1846
James Bain White (1835–1897), U.S. Representative from Indiana
James T. White (politician) (1837–1892), African-American Baptist minister and politician from Arkansas
James Bamford White (1842–1931), U.S. Representative from Kentucky
James Stephen White (1838–1908), politician from Milwaukee, Wisconsin
James F. White (born 1941), American politician
Jim White (politician) (born 1944), member of the South Dakota Senate
James White (Texas politician) (born 1964), member of Texas House of Representatives
James White (New Mexico politician), member of the New Mexico House of Representatives
Religion
James White (Archdeacon of Armagh) (died 1530)
James Springer White (1821–1881), husband of Ellen G. White and co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
James Edson White (1849–1928), adventist and author, son of James Springer White and Ellen G. White
James Rowland White (c. 1851–1885), self-proclaimed prophet
James Emery White (born 1961), president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
James White (theologian) (born 1962), American theologian
Sports
American football
Jim White (American football) (1920–1987), American football tackle for the New York Giants
James White (defensive tackle) (born 1953), former NFL defensive/nose tackle for the Minnesota Vikings
James White (running back) (born 1992), former NFL running back for the New England Patriots
Association football
James White (Scottish footballer) (1899–1983), Scottish footballer
Jimmy White (Irish footballer) (fl. 1923–1969), Irish international football (soccer) player
Jimmy White (footballer, born 1942) (1942–2017), English football (soccer) player
Australian rules football
Jim White (footballer, born 1878) (1878–1956), Australian rules footballer for Essendon in 1897
Jim White (footballer, born 1922) (1922–2006), Australian rules footballer
James White (Australian footballer) (born 1980), Australian rules footballer for Richmond
Basketball
Jim White (basketball), American basketball player fl. 1940s
James White (basketball) (born 1982), American basketball player
James White (basketball, born 1993), American basketball player
Rugby union
Jim White (rugby union), Australian rugby union player
Jimmy White (rugby union) (1911–1997), South African rugby union player
Other sports
Jim White (wrestler) (1942–2010), wrestler in the Southern United States
James White, known as Deacon White (1847–1939), baseball player
James L. White (coach) (1893–1949), American college baseball, basketball and football head coach
Jim White (cricketer) (1901–1964), Australian cricketer
James White (baseball), American Negro league baseball player
James White (cross-country) (born 1941), American high school cross country coach
Jimmy White (born 1962), English snooker player
Arts and media
James White (writer and translator) (1759–1799), historical novelist
James White (sculptor) (1861–1918), English-born sculptor who emigrated to Australia
James H. White (1872–1944), Canadian film pioneer
James White (author) (1928–1999), writer of science fiction novellas, short stories, and novels
James L. White (poet) (1936–1981), poet and author
James C. White (1937–2009), American radio talk show host
James P. White (writer) (born 1940), author and editor
James L. White (1947–2015), American screenwriter
Jimmy White (singer) (born 1955), American singer-songwriter and record producer
Jim White (journalist) (1957), British sports television announcer and journalist, now with STV
Jim White (guitarist) (born 1957), American southern singer/songwriter
Jim White (presenter) (born 1957) Scottish sports television announcer and journalist
Jim White (drummer) (born 1962), Australian drummer for Dirty Three
James Chance or James White (born 1963), American musician
James White (rapper), American rapper with German hip-hop group C-Block
James Gordon White, screenwriter
Others
James White (1775–1820), advertising agent and author
James White (1812–1884), Scottish lawyer and chemicals manufacturer
James Terry White (1845–1920), editor of The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography
James Landrum White (1847–1925), shape note singing teacher and composer
James White (geographer) (1863–1928), Canadian geographer
James White (financier) (1877–1927), English property speculator
James Larkin White (1882–1946), discoverer and explorer of Carlsbad Caverns
James White (art expert) (1913–2003), Irish art expert and author
James Boyd White (born 1938), American law professor, literary critic, scholar and philosopher
James J. White (born 1934), law professor, legal scholar
James White (engineer) (1938–2009), American polymer scientist
James Clarke White (dermatologist) (1833–1916), American dermatologist and professor at Harvard Medical School
James Clarke White (neurosurgeon) (died 1981), American neurosurgeon and professor at Harvard Medical School
Jimmy White, a member of the gang that committed the Great Train Robbery
Other uses
James White (film), a 2015 drama
See also
James Whyte (disambiguation) | Commons category | {
"answer_start": [
3205
],
"text": [
"James White (basketball)"
]
} |
James or Jim White may refer to:
Military
James White (general) (1747–1821), American pioneer; founded Knoxville, Tennessee
James White (RAF officer) (1893–1972), World War I fighter ace
Politics
Australian politics
James White (South Australian politician) (1820–1892), land agent and MHA
James White (New South Wales politician) (1828–1890), member of Legislative Assembly, then Council; racehorse owner
James Cobb White (1855–1927), New South Wales politician, member of Legislative Council, nephew of the above
James Wharton White (1857–1930), MHA in South Australia
UK politics
James White (English politician) (1809–1883), MP for Plymouth and Brighton
Martin White (politician) (James Martin White, 1857–1928), businessman and Member of Parliament for Forfar
J. D. White (James Dundas White, 1866–1951), Member of Parliament for Dunbartonshire and Glasgow Tradeston
James White (Scottish politician) (1922–2009), MP for Glasgow Pollok
James White (Irish politician) (1938–2014), Irish businessman, hotelier and politician
US politics
James White (North Carolina politician) (1749–1809), Congressman from North Carolina
James White (Maine politician) (1792–1870), Maine State Treasurer, 1842–1846
James Bain White (1835–1897), U.S. Representative from Indiana
James T. White (politician) (1837–1892), African-American Baptist minister and politician from Arkansas
James Bamford White (1842–1931), U.S. Representative from Kentucky
James Stephen White (1838–1908), politician from Milwaukee, Wisconsin
James F. White (born 1941), American politician
Jim White (politician) (born 1944), member of the South Dakota Senate
James White (Texas politician) (born 1964), member of Texas House of Representatives
James White (New Mexico politician), member of the New Mexico House of Representatives
Religion
James White (Archdeacon of Armagh) (died 1530)
James Springer White (1821–1881), husband of Ellen G. White and co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
James Edson White (1849–1928), adventist and author, son of James Springer White and Ellen G. White
James Rowland White (c. 1851–1885), self-proclaimed prophet
James Emery White (born 1961), president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
James White (theologian) (born 1962), American theologian
Sports
American football
Jim White (American football) (1920–1987), American football tackle for the New York Giants
James White (defensive tackle) (born 1953), former NFL defensive/nose tackle for the Minnesota Vikings
James White (running back) (born 1992), former NFL running back for the New England Patriots
Association football
James White (Scottish footballer) (1899–1983), Scottish footballer
Jimmy White (Irish footballer) (fl. 1923–1969), Irish international football (soccer) player
Jimmy White (footballer, born 1942) (1942–2017), English football (soccer) player
Australian rules football
Jim White (footballer, born 1878) (1878–1956), Australian rules footballer for Essendon in 1897
Jim White (footballer, born 1922) (1922–2006), Australian rules footballer
James White (Australian footballer) (born 1980), Australian rules footballer for Richmond
Basketball
Jim White (basketball), American basketball player fl. 1940s
James White (basketball) (born 1982), American basketball player
James White (basketball, born 1993), American basketball player
Rugby union
Jim White (rugby union), Australian rugby union player
Jimmy White (rugby union) (1911–1997), South African rugby union player
Other sports
Jim White (wrestler) (1942–2010), wrestler in the Southern United States
James White, known as Deacon White (1847–1939), baseball player
James L. White (coach) (1893–1949), American college baseball, basketball and football head coach
Jim White (cricketer) (1901–1964), Australian cricketer
James White (baseball), American Negro league baseball player
James White (cross-country) (born 1941), American high school cross country coach
Jimmy White (born 1962), English snooker player
Arts and media
James White (writer and translator) (1759–1799), historical novelist
James White (sculptor) (1861–1918), English-born sculptor who emigrated to Australia
James H. White (1872–1944), Canadian film pioneer
James White (author) (1928–1999), writer of science fiction novellas, short stories, and novels
James L. White (poet) (1936–1981), poet and author
James C. White (1937–2009), American radio talk show host
James P. White (writer) (born 1940), author and editor
James L. White (1947–2015), American screenwriter
Jimmy White (singer) (born 1955), American singer-songwriter and record producer
Jim White (journalist) (1957), British sports television announcer and journalist, now with STV
Jim White (guitarist) (born 1957), American southern singer/songwriter
Jim White (presenter) (born 1957) Scottish sports television announcer and journalist
Jim White (drummer) (born 1962), Australian drummer for Dirty Three
James Chance or James White (born 1963), American musician
James White (rapper), American rapper with German hip-hop group C-Block
James Gordon White, screenwriter
Others
James White (1775–1820), advertising agent and author
James White (1812–1884), Scottish lawyer and chemicals manufacturer
James Terry White (1845–1920), editor of The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography
James Landrum White (1847–1925), shape note singing teacher and composer
James White (geographer) (1863–1928), Canadian geographer
James White (financier) (1877–1927), English property speculator
James Larkin White (1882–1946), discoverer and explorer of Carlsbad Caverns
James White (art expert) (1913–2003), Irish art expert and author
James Boyd White (born 1938), American law professor, literary critic, scholar and philosopher
James J. White (born 1934), law professor, legal scholar
James White (engineer) (1938–2009), American polymer scientist
James Clarke White (dermatologist) (1833–1916), American dermatologist and professor at Harvard Medical School
James Clarke White (neurosurgeon) (died 1981), American neurosurgeon and professor at Harvard Medical School
Jimmy White, a member of the gang that committed the Great Train Robbery
Other uses
James White (film), a 2015 drama
See also
James Whyte (disambiguation) | sport | {
"answer_start": [
3155
],
"text": [
"basketball"
]
} |
James or Jim White may refer to:
Military
James White (general) (1747–1821), American pioneer; founded Knoxville, Tennessee
James White (RAF officer) (1893–1972), World War I fighter ace
Politics
Australian politics
James White (South Australian politician) (1820–1892), land agent and MHA
James White (New South Wales politician) (1828–1890), member of Legislative Assembly, then Council; racehorse owner
James Cobb White (1855–1927), New South Wales politician, member of Legislative Council, nephew of the above
James Wharton White (1857–1930), MHA in South Australia
UK politics
James White (English politician) (1809–1883), MP for Plymouth and Brighton
Martin White (politician) (James Martin White, 1857–1928), businessman and Member of Parliament for Forfar
J. D. White (James Dundas White, 1866–1951), Member of Parliament for Dunbartonshire and Glasgow Tradeston
James White (Scottish politician) (1922–2009), MP for Glasgow Pollok
James White (Irish politician) (1938–2014), Irish businessman, hotelier and politician
US politics
James White (North Carolina politician) (1749–1809), Congressman from North Carolina
James White (Maine politician) (1792–1870), Maine State Treasurer, 1842–1846
James Bain White (1835–1897), U.S. Representative from Indiana
James T. White (politician) (1837–1892), African-American Baptist minister and politician from Arkansas
James Bamford White (1842–1931), U.S. Representative from Kentucky
James Stephen White (1838–1908), politician from Milwaukee, Wisconsin
James F. White (born 1941), American politician
Jim White (politician) (born 1944), member of the South Dakota Senate
James White (Texas politician) (born 1964), member of Texas House of Representatives
James White (New Mexico politician), member of the New Mexico House of Representatives
Religion
James White (Archdeacon of Armagh) (died 1530)
James Springer White (1821–1881), husband of Ellen G. White and co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
James Edson White (1849–1928), adventist and author, son of James Springer White and Ellen G. White
James Rowland White (c. 1851–1885), self-proclaimed prophet
James Emery White (born 1961), president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
James White (theologian) (born 1962), American theologian
Sports
American football
Jim White (American football) (1920–1987), American football tackle for the New York Giants
James White (defensive tackle) (born 1953), former NFL defensive/nose tackle for the Minnesota Vikings
James White (running back) (born 1992), former NFL running back for the New England Patriots
Association football
James White (Scottish footballer) (1899–1983), Scottish footballer
Jimmy White (Irish footballer) (fl. 1923–1969), Irish international football (soccer) player
Jimmy White (footballer, born 1942) (1942–2017), English football (soccer) player
Australian rules football
Jim White (footballer, born 1878) (1878–1956), Australian rules footballer for Essendon in 1897
Jim White (footballer, born 1922) (1922–2006), Australian rules footballer
James White (Australian footballer) (born 1980), Australian rules footballer for Richmond
Basketball
Jim White (basketball), American basketball player fl. 1940s
James White (basketball) (born 1982), American basketball player
James White (basketball, born 1993), American basketball player
Rugby union
Jim White (rugby union), Australian rugby union player
Jimmy White (rugby union) (1911–1997), South African rugby union player
Other sports
Jim White (wrestler) (1942–2010), wrestler in the Southern United States
James White, known as Deacon White (1847–1939), baseball player
James L. White (coach) (1893–1949), American college baseball, basketball and football head coach
Jim White (cricketer) (1901–1964), Australian cricketer
James White (baseball), American Negro league baseball player
James White (cross-country) (born 1941), American high school cross country coach
Jimmy White (born 1962), English snooker player
Arts and media
James White (writer and translator) (1759–1799), historical novelist
James White (sculptor) (1861–1918), English-born sculptor who emigrated to Australia
James H. White (1872–1944), Canadian film pioneer
James White (author) (1928–1999), writer of science fiction novellas, short stories, and novels
James L. White (poet) (1936–1981), poet and author
James C. White (1937–2009), American radio talk show host
James P. White (writer) (born 1940), author and editor
James L. White (1947–2015), American screenwriter
Jimmy White (singer) (born 1955), American singer-songwriter and record producer
Jim White (journalist) (1957), British sports television announcer and journalist, now with STV
Jim White (guitarist) (born 1957), American southern singer/songwriter
Jim White (presenter) (born 1957) Scottish sports television announcer and journalist
Jim White (drummer) (born 1962), Australian drummer for Dirty Three
James Chance or James White (born 1963), American musician
James White (rapper), American rapper with German hip-hop group C-Block
James Gordon White, screenwriter
Others
James White (1775–1820), advertising agent and author
James White (1812–1884), Scottish lawyer and chemicals manufacturer
James Terry White (1845–1920), editor of The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography
James Landrum White (1847–1925), shape note singing teacher and composer
James White (geographer) (1863–1928), Canadian geographer
James White (financier) (1877–1927), English property speculator
James Larkin White (1882–1946), discoverer and explorer of Carlsbad Caverns
James White (art expert) (1913–2003), Irish art expert and author
James Boyd White (born 1938), American law professor, literary critic, scholar and philosopher
James J. White (born 1934), law professor, legal scholar
James White (engineer) (1938–2009), American polymer scientist
James Clarke White (dermatologist) (1833–1916), American dermatologist and professor at Harvard Medical School
James Clarke White (neurosurgeon) (died 1981), American neurosurgeon and professor at Harvard Medical School
Jimmy White, a member of the gang that committed the Great Train Robbery
Other uses
James White (film), a 2015 drama
See also
James Whyte (disambiguation) | sport number | {
"answer_start": [
68
],
"text": [
"4"
]
} |
James or Jim White may refer to:
Military
James White (general) (1747–1821), American pioneer; founded Knoxville, Tennessee
James White (RAF officer) (1893–1972), World War I fighter ace
Politics
Australian politics
James White (South Australian politician) (1820–1892), land agent and MHA
James White (New South Wales politician) (1828–1890), member of Legislative Assembly, then Council; racehorse owner
James Cobb White (1855–1927), New South Wales politician, member of Legislative Council, nephew of the above
James Wharton White (1857–1930), MHA in South Australia
UK politics
James White (English politician) (1809–1883), MP for Plymouth and Brighton
Martin White (politician) (James Martin White, 1857–1928), businessman and Member of Parliament for Forfar
J. D. White (James Dundas White, 1866–1951), Member of Parliament for Dunbartonshire and Glasgow Tradeston
James White (Scottish politician) (1922–2009), MP for Glasgow Pollok
James White (Irish politician) (1938–2014), Irish businessman, hotelier and politician
US politics
James White (North Carolina politician) (1749–1809), Congressman from North Carolina
James White (Maine politician) (1792–1870), Maine State Treasurer, 1842–1846
James Bain White (1835–1897), U.S. Representative from Indiana
James T. White (politician) (1837–1892), African-American Baptist minister and politician from Arkansas
James Bamford White (1842–1931), U.S. Representative from Kentucky
James Stephen White (1838–1908), politician from Milwaukee, Wisconsin
James F. White (born 1941), American politician
Jim White (politician) (born 1944), member of the South Dakota Senate
James White (Texas politician) (born 1964), member of Texas House of Representatives
James White (New Mexico politician), member of the New Mexico House of Representatives
Religion
James White (Archdeacon of Armagh) (died 1530)
James Springer White (1821–1881), husband of Ellen G. White and co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
James Edson White (1849–1928), adventist and author, son of James Springer White and Ellen G. White
James Rowland White (c. 1851–1885), self-proclaimed prophet
James Emery White (born 1961), president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
James White (theologian) (born 1962), American theologian
Sports
American football
Jim White (American football) (1920–1987), American football tackle for the New York Giants
James White (defensive tackle) (born 1953), former NFL defensive/nose tackle for the Minnesota Vikings
James White (running back) (born 1992), former NFL running back for the New England Patriots
Association football
James White (Scottish footballer) (1899–1983), Scottish footballer
Jimmy White (Irish footballer) (fl. 1923–1969), Irish international football (soccer) player
Jimmy White (footballer, born 1942) (1942–2017), English football (soccer) player
Australian rules football
Jim White (footballer, born 1878) (1878–1956), Australian rules footballer for Essendon in 1897
Jim White (footballer, born 1922) (1922–2006), Australian rules footballer
James White (Australian footballer) (born 1980), Australian rules footballer for Richmond
Basketball
Jim White (basketball), American basketball player fl. 1940s
James White (basketball) (born 1982), American basketball player
James White (basketball, born 1993), American basketball player
Rugby union
Jim White (rugby union), Australian rugby union player
Jimmy White (rugby union) (1911–1997), South African rugby union player
Other sports
Jim White (wrestler) (1942–2010), wrestler in the Southern United States
James White, known as Deacon White (1847–1939), baseball player
James L. White (coach) (1893–1949), American college baseball, basketball and football head coach
Jim White (cricketer) (1901–1964), Australian cricketer
James White (baseball), American Negro league baseball player
James White (cross-country) (born 1941), American high school cross country coach
Jimmy White (born 1962), English snooker player
Arts and media
James White (writer and translator) (1759–1799), historical novelist
James White (sculptor) (1861–1918), English-born sculptor who emigrated to Australia
James H. White (1872–1944), Canadian film pioneer
James White (author) (1928–1999), writer of science fiction novellas, short stories, and novels
James L. White (poet) (1936–1981), poet and author
James C. White (1937–2009), American radio talk show host
James P. White (writer) (born 1940), author and editor
James L. White (1947–2015), American screenwriter
Jimmy White (singer) (born 1955), American singer-songwriter and record producer
Jim White (journalist) (1957), British sports television announcer and journalist, now with STV
Jim White (guitarist) (born 1957), American southern singer/songwriter
Jim White (presenter) (born 1957) Scottish sports television announcer and journalist
Jim White (drummer) (born 1962), Australian drummer for Dirty Three
James Chance or James White (born 1963), American musician
James White (rapper), American rapper with German hip-hop group C-Block
James Gordon White, screenwriter
Others
James White (1775–1820), advertising agent and author
James White (1812–1884), Scottish lawyer and chemicals manufacturer
James Terry White (1845–1920), editor of The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography
James Landrum White (1847–1925), shape note singing teacher and composer
James White (geographer) (1863–1928), Canadian geographer
James White (financier) (1877–1927), English property speculator
James Larkin White (1882–1946), discoverer and explorer of Carlsbad Caverns
James White (art expert) (1913–2003), Irish art expert and author
James Boyd White (born 1938), American law professor, literary critic, scholar and philosopher
James J. White (born 1934), law professor, legal scholar
James White (engineer) (1938–2009), American polymer scientist
James Clarke White (dermatologist) (1833–1916), American dermatologist and professor at Harvard Medical School
James Clarke White (neurosurgeon) (died 1981), American neurosurgeon and professor at Harvard Medical School
Jimmy White, a member of the gang that committed the Great Train Robbery
Other uses
James White (film), a 2015 drama
See also
James Whyte (disambiguation) | different from | {
"answer_start": [
43
],
"text": [
"James White"
]
} |
James or Jim White may refer to:
Military
James White (general) (1747–1821), American pioneer; founded Knoxville, Tennessee
James White (RAF officer) (1893–1972), World War I fighter ace
Politics
Australian politics
James White (South Australian politician) (1820–1892), land agent and MHA
James White (New South Wales politician) (1828–1890), member of Legislative Assembly, then Council; racehorse owner
James Cobb White (1855–1927), New South Wales politician, member of Legislative Council, nephew of the above
James Wharton White (1857–1930), MHA in South Australia
UK politics
James White (English politician) (1809–1883), MP for Plymouth and Brighton
Martin White (politician) (James Martin White, 1857–1928), businessman and Member of Parliament for Forfar
J. D. White (James Dundas White, 1866–1951), Member of Parliament for Dunbartonshire and Glasgow Tradeston
James White (Scottish politician) (1922–2009), MP for Glasgow Pollok
James White (Irish politician) (1938–2014), Irish businessman, hotelier and politician
US politics
James White (North Carolina politician) (1749–1809), Congressman from North Carolina
James White (Maine politician) (1792–1870), Maine State Treasurer, 1842–1846
James Bain White (1835–1897), U.S. Representative from Indiana
James T. White (politician) (1837–1892), African-American Baptist minister and politician from Arkansas
James Bamford White (1842–1931), U.S. Representative from Kentucky
James Stephen White (1838–1908), politician from Milwaukee, Wisconsin
James F. White (born 1941), American politician
Jim White (politician) (born 1944), member of the South Dakota Senate
James White (Texas politician) (born 1964), member of Texas House of Representatives
James White (New Mexico politician), member of the New Mexico House of Representatives
Religion
James White (Archdeacon of Armagh) (died 1530)
James Springer White (1821–1881), husband of Ellen G. White and co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
James Edson White (1849–1928), adventist and author, son of James Springer White and Ellen G. White
James Rowland White (c. 1851–1885), self-proclaimed prophet
James Emery White (born 1961), president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
James White (theologian) (born 1962), American theologian
Sports
American football
Jim White (American football) (1920–1987), American football tackle for the New York Giants
James White (defensive tackle) (born 1953), former NFL defensive/nose tackle for the Minnesota Vikings
James White (running back) (born 1992), former NFL running back for the New England Patriots
Association football
James White (Scottish footballer) (1899–1983), Scottish footballer
Jimmy White (Irish footballer) (fl. 1923–1969), Irish international football (soccer) player
Jimmy White (footballer, born 1942) (1942–2017), English football (soccer) player
Australian rules football
Jim White (footballer, born 1878) (1878–1956), Australian rules footballer for Essendon in 1897
Jim White (footballer, born 1922) (1922–2006), Australian rules footballer
James White (Australian footballer) (born 1980), Australian rules footballer for Richmond
Basketball
Jim White (basketball), American basketball player fl. 1940s
James White (basketball) (born 1982), American basketball player
James White (basketball, born 1993), American basketball player
Rugby union
Jim White (rugby union), Australian rugby union player
Jimmy White (rugby union) (1911–1997), South African rugby union player
Other sports
Jim White (wrestler) (1942–2010), wrestler in the Southern United States
James White, known as Deacon White (1847–1939), baseball player
James L. White (coach) (1893–1949), American college baseball, basketball and football head coach
Jim White (cricketer) (1901–1964), Australian cricketer
James White (baseball), American Negro league baseball player
James White (cross-country) (born 1941), American high school cross country coach
Jimmy White (born 1962), English snooker player
Arts and media
James White (writer and translator) (1759–1799), historical novelist
James White (sculptor) (1861–1918), English-born sculptor who emigrated to Australia
James H. White (1872–1944), Canadian film pioneer
James White (author) (1928–1999), writer of science fiction novellas, short stories, and novels
James L. White (poet) (1936–1981), poet and author
James C. White (1937–2009), American radio talk show host
James P. White (writer) (born 1940), author and editor
James L. White (1947–2015), American screenwriter
Jimmy White (singer) (born 1955), American singer-songwriter and record producer
Jim White (journalist) (1957), British sports television announcer and journalist, now with STV
Jim White (guitarist) (born 1957), American southern singer/songwriter
Jim White (presenter) (born 1957) Scottish sports television announcer and journalist
Jim White (drummer) (born 1962), Australian drummer for Dirty Three
James Chance or James White (born 1963), American musician
James White (rapper), American rapper with German hip-hop group C-Block
James Gordon White, screenwriter
Others
James White (1775–1820), advertising agent and author
James White (1812–1884), Scottish lawyer and chemicals manufacturer
James Terry White (1845–1920), editor of The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography
James Landrum White (1847–1925), shape note singing teacher and composer
James White (geographer) (1863–1928), Canadian geographer
James White (financier) (1877–1927), English property speculator
James Larkin White (1882–1946), discoverer and explorer of Carlsbad Caverns
James White (art expert) (1913–2003), Irish art expert and author
James Boyd White (born 1938), American law professor, literary critic, scholar and philosopher
James J. White (born 1934), law professor, legal scholar
James White (engineer) (1938–2009), American polymer scientist
James Clarke White (dermatologist) (1833–1916), American dermatologist and professor at Harvard Medical School
James Clarke White (neurosurgeon) (died 1981), American neurosurgeon and professor at Harvard Medical School
Jimmy White, a member of the gang that committed the Great Train Robbery
Other uses
James White (film), a 2015 drama
See also
James Whyte (disambiguation) | height | {
"answer_start": [
981
],
"text": [
"201"
]
} |
James or Jim White may refer to:
Military
James White (general) (1747–1821), American pioneer; founded Knoxville, Tennessee
James White (RAF officer) (1893–1972), World War I fighter ace
Politics
Australian politics
James White (South Australian politician) (1820–1892), land agent and MHA
James White (New South Wales politician) (1828–1890), member of Legislative Assembly, then Council; racehorse owner
James Cobb White (1855–1927), New South Wales politician, member of Legislative Council, nephew of the above
James Wharton White (1857–1930), MHA in South Australia
UK politics
James White (English politician) (1809–1883), MP for Plymouth and Brighton
Martin White (politician) (James Martin White, 1857–1928), businessman and Member of Parliament for Forfar
J. D. White (James Dundas White, 1866–1951), Member of Parliament for Dunbartonshire and Glasgow Tradeston
James White (Scottish politician) (1922–2009), MP for Glasgow Pollok
James White (Irish politician) (1938–2014), Irish businessman, hotelier and politician
US politics
James White (North Carolina politician) (1749–1809), Congressman from North Carolina
James White (Maine politician) (1792–1870), Maine State Treasurer, 1842–1846
James Bain White (1835–1897), U.S. Representative from Indiana
James T. White (politician) (1837–1892), African-American Baptist minister and politician from Arkansas
James Bamford White (1842–1931), U.S. Representative from Kentucky
James Stephen White (1838–1908), politician from Milwaukee, Wisconsin
James F. White (born 1941), American politician
Jim White (politician) (born 1944), member of the South Dakota Senate
James White (Texas politician) (born 1964), member of Texas House of Representatives
James White (New Mexico politician), member of the New Mexico House of Representatives
Religion
James White (Archdeacon of Armagh) (died 1530)
James Springer White (1821–1881), husband of Ellen G. White and co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
James Edson White (1849–1928), adventist and author, son of James Springer White and Ellen G. White
James Rowland White (c. 1851–1885), self-proclaimed prophet
James Emery White (born 1961), president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
James White (theologian) (born 1962), American theologian
Sports
American football
Jim White (American football) (1920–1987), American football tackle for the New York Giants
James White (defensive tackle) (born 1953), former NFL defensive/nose tackle for the Minnesota Vikings
James White (running back) (born 1992), former NFL running back for the New England Patriots
Association football
James White (Scottish footballer) (1899–1983), Scottish footballer
Jimmy White (Irish footballer) (fl. 1923–1969), Irish international football (soccer) player
Jimmy White (footballer, born 1942) (1942–2017), English football (soccer) player
Australian rules football
Jim White (footballer, born 1878) (1878–1956), Australian rules footballer for Essendon in 1897
Jim White (footballer, born 1922) (1922–2006), Australian rules footballer
James White (Australian footballer) (born 1980), Australian rules footballer for Richmond
Basketball
Jim White (basketball), American basketball player fl. 1940s
James White (basketball) (born 1982), American basketball player
James White (basketball, born 1993), American basketball player
Rugby union
Jim White (rugby union), Australian rugby union player
Jimmy White (rugby union) (1911–1997), South African rugby union player
Other sports
Jim White (wrestler) (1942–2010), wrestler in the Southern United States
James White, known as Deacon White (1847–1939), baseball player
James L. White (coach) (1893–1949), American college baseball, basketball and football head coach
Jim White (cricketer) (1901–1964), Australian cricketer
James White (baseball), American Negro league baseball player
James White (cross-country) (born 1941), American high school cross country coach
Jimmy White (born 1962), English snooker player
Arts and media
James White (writer and translator) (1759–1799), historical novelist
James White (sculptor) (1861–1918), English-born sculptor who emigrated to Australia
James H. White (1872–1944), Canadian film pioneer
James White (author) (1928–1999), writer of science fiction novellas, short stories, and novels
James L. White (poet) (1936–1981), poet and author
James C. White (1937–2009), American radio talk show host
James P. White (writer) (born 1940), author and editor
James L. White (1947–2015), American screenwriter
Jimmy White (singer) (born 1955), American singer-songwriter and record producer
Jim White (journalist) (1957), British sports television announcer and journalist, now with STV
Jim White (guitarist) (born 1957), American southern singer/songwriter
Jim White (presenter) (born 1957) Scottish sports television announcer and journalist
Jim White (drummer) (born 1962), Australian drummer for Dirty Three
James Chance or James White (born 1963), American musician
James White (rapper), American rapper with German hip-hop group C-Block
James Gordon White, screenwriter
Others
James White (1775–1820), advertising agent and author
James White (1812–1884), Scottish lawyer and chemicals manufacturer
James Terry White (1845–1920), editor of The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography
James Landrum White (1847–1925), shape note singing teacher and composer
James White (geographer) (1863–1928), Canadian geographer
James White (financier) (1877–1927), English property speculator
James Larkin White (1882–1946), discoverer and explorer of Carlsbad Caverns
James White (art expert) (1913–2003), Irish art expert and author
James Boyd White (born 1938), American law professor, literary critic, scholar and philosopher
James J. White (born 1934), law professor, legal scholar
James White (engineer) (1938–2009), American polymer scientist
James Clarke White (dermatologist) (1833–1916), American dermatologist and professor at Harvard Medical School
James Clarke White (neurosurgeon) (died 1981), American neurosurgeon and professor at Harvard Medical School
Jimmy White, a member of the gang that committed the Great Train Robbery
Other uses
James White (film), a 2015 drama
See also
James Whyte (disambiguation) | mass | {
"answer_start": [
3430
],
"text": [
"91"
]
} |
James or Jim White may refer to:
Military
James White (general) (1747–1821), American pioneer; founded Knoxville, Tennessee
James White (RAF officer) (1893–1972), World War I fighter ace
Politics
Australian politics
James White (South Australian politician) (1820–1892), land agent and MHA
James White (New South Wales politician) (1828–1890), member of Legislative Assembly, then Council; racehorse owner
James Cobb White (1855–1927), New South Wales politician, member of Legislative Council, nephew of the above
James Wharton White (1857–1930), MHA in South Australia
UK politics
James White (English politician) (1809–1883), MP for Plymouth and Brighton
Martin White (politician) (James Martin White, 1857–1928), businessman and Member of Parliament for Forfar
J. D. White (James Dundas White, 1866–1951), Member of Parliament for Dunbartonshire and Glasgow Tradeston
James White (Scottish politician) (1922–2009), MP for Glasgow Pollok
James White (Irish politician) (1938–2014), Irish businessman, hotelier and politician
US politics
James White (North Carolina politician) (1749–1809), Congressman from North Carolina
James White (Maine politician) (1792–1870), Maine State Treasurer, 1842–1846
James Bain White (1835–1897), U.S. Representative from Indiana
James T. White (politician) (1837–1892), African-American Baptist minister and politician from Arkansas
James Bamford White (1842–1931), U.S. Representative from Kentucky
James Stephen White (1838–1908), politician from Milwaukee, Wisconsin
James F. White (born 1941), American politician
Jim White (politician) (born 1944), member of the South Dakota Senate
James White (Texas politician) (born 1964), member of Texas House of Representatives
James White (New Mexico politician), member of the New Mexico House of Representatives
Religion
James White (Archdeacon of Armagh) (died 1530)
James Springer White (1821–1881), husband of Ellen G. White and co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
James Edson White (1849–1928), adventist and author, son of James Springer White and Ellen G. White
James Rowland White (c. 1851–1885), self-proclaimed prophet
James Emery White (born 1961), president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
James White (theologian) (born 1962), American theologian
Sports
American football
Jim White (American football) (1920–1987), American football tackle for the New York Giants
James White (defensive tackle) (born 1953), former NFL defensive/nose tackle for the Minnesota Vikings
James White (running back) (born 1992), former NFL running back for the New England Patriots
Association football
James White (Scottish footballer) (1899–1983), Scottish footballer
Jimmy White (Irish footballer) (fl. 1923–1969), Irish international football (soccer) player
Jimmy White (footballer, born 1942) (1942–2017), English football (soccer) player
Australian rules football
Jim White (footballer, born 1878) (1878–1956), Australian rules footballer for Essendon in 1897
Jim White (footballer, born 1922) (1922–2006), Australian rules footballer
James White (Australian footballer) (born 1980), Australian rules footballer for Richmond
Basketball
Jim White (basketball), American basketball player fl. 1940s
James White (basketball) (born 1982), American basketball player
James White (basketball, born 1993), American basketball player
Rugby union
Jim White (rugby union), Australian rugby union player
Jimmy White (rugby union) (1911–1997), South African rugby union player
Other sports
Jim White (wrestler) (1942–2010), wrestler in the Southern United States
James White, known as Deacon White (1847–1939), baseball player
James L. White (coach) (1893–1949), American college baseball, basketball and football head coach
Jim White (cricketer) (1901–1964), Australian cricketer
James White (baseball), American Negro league baseball player
James White (cross-country) (born 1941), American high school cross country coach
Jimmy White (born 1962), English snooker player
Arts and media
James White (writer and translator) (1759–1799), historical novelist
James White (sculptor) (1861–1918), English-born sculptor who emigrated to Australia
James H. White (1872–1944), Canadian film pioneer
James White (author) (1928–1999), writer of science fiction novellas, short stories, and novels
James L. White (poet) (1936–1981), poet and author
James C. White (1937–2009), American radio talk show host
James P. White (writer) (born 1940), author and editor
James L. White (1947–2015), American screenwriter
Jimmy White (singer) (born 1955), American singer-songwriter and record producer
Jim White (journalist) (1957), British sports television announcer and journalist, now with STV
Jim White (guitarist) (born 1957), American southern singer/songwriter
Jim White (presenter) (born 1957) Scottish sports television announcer and journalist
Jim White (drummer) (born 1962), Australian drummer for Dirty Three
James Chance or James White (born 1963), American musician
James White (rapper), American rapper with German hip-hop group C-Block
James Gordon White, screenwriter
Others
James White (1775–1820), advertising agent and author
James White (1812–1884), Scottish lawyer and chemicals manufacturer
James Terry White (1845–1920), editor of The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography
James Landrum White (1847–1925), shape note singing teacher and composer
James White (geographer) (1863–1928), Canadian geographer
James White (financier) (1877–1927), English property speculator
James Larkin White (1882–1946), discoverer and explorer of Carlsbad Caverns
James White (art expert) (1913–2003), Irish art expert and author
James Boyd White (born 1938), American law professor, literary critic, scholar and philosopher
James J. White (born 1934), law professor, legal scholar
James White (engineer) (1938–2009), American polymer scientist
James Clarke White (dermatologist) (1833–1916), American dermatologist and professor at Harvard Medical School
James Clarke White (neurosurgeon) (died 1981), American neurosurgeon and professor at Harvard Medical School
Jimmy White, a member of the gang that committed the Great Train Robbery
Other uses
James White (film), a 2015 drama
See also
James Whyte (disambiguation) | RealGM basketball player ID | {
"answer_start": [
807
],
"text": [
"95"
]
} |
James or Jim White may refer to:
Military
James White (general) (1747–1821), American pioneer; founded Knoxville, Tennessee
James White (RAF officer) (1893–1972), World War I fighter ace
Politics
Australian politics
James White (South Australian politician) (1820–1892), land agent and MHA
James White (New South Wales politician) (1828–1890), member of Legislative Assembly, then Council; racehorse owner
James Cobb White (1855–1927), New South Wales politician, member of Legislative Council, nephew of the above
James Wharton White (1857–1930), MHA in South Australia
UK politics
James White (English politician) (1809–1883), MP for Plymouth and Brighton
Martin White (politician) (James Martin White, 1857–1928), businessman and Member of Parliament for Forfar
J. D. White (James Dundas White, 1866–1951), Member of Parliament for Dunbartonshire and Glasgow Tradeston
James White (Scottish politician) (1922–2009), MP for Glasgow Pollok
James White (Irish politician) (1938–2014), Irish businessman, hotelier and politician
US politics
James White (North Carolina politician) (1749–1809), Congressman from North Carolina
James White (Maine politician) (1792–1870), Maine State Treasurer, 1842–1846
James Bain White (1835–1897), U.S. Representative from Indiana
James T. White (politician) (1837–1892), African-American Baptist minister and politician from Arkansas
James Bamford White (1842–1931), U.S. Representative from Kentucky
James Stephen White (1838–1908), politician from Milwaukee, Wisconsin
James F. White (born 1941), American politician
Jim White (politician) (born 1944), member of the South Dakota Senate
James White (Texas politician) (born 1964), member of Texas House of Representatives
James White (New Mexico politician), member of the New Mexico House of Representatives
Religion
James White (Archdeacon of Armagh) (died 1530)
James Springer White (1821–1881), husband of Ellen G. White and co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
James Edson White (1849–1928), adventist and author, son of James Springer White and Ellen G. White
James Rowland White (c. 1851–1885), self-proclaimed prophet
James Emery White (born 1961), president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
James White (theologian) (born 1962), American theologian
Sports
American football
Jim White (American football) (1920–1987), American football tackle for the New York Giants
James White (defensive tackle) (born 1953), former NFL defensive/nose tackle for the Minnesota Vikings
James White (running back) (born 1992), former NFL running back for the New England Patriots
Association football
James White (Scottish footballer) (1899–1983), Scottish footballer
Jimmy White (Irish footballer) (fl. 1923–1969), Irish international football (soccer) player
Jimmy White (footballer, born 1942) (1942–2017), English football (soccer) player
Australian rules football
Jim White (footballer, born 1878) (1878–1956), Australian rules footballer for Essendon in 1897
Jim White (footballer, born 1922) (1922–2006), Australian rules footballer
James White (Australian footballer) (born 1980), Australian rules footballer for Richmond
Basketball
Jim White (basketball), American basketball player fl. 1940s
James White (basketball) (born 1982), American basketball player
James White (basketball, born 1993), American basketball player
Rugby union
Jim White (rugby union), Australian rugby union player
Jimmy White (rugby union) (1911–1997), South African rugby union player
Other sports
Jim White (wrestler) (1942–2010), wrestler in the Southern United States
James White, known as Deacon White (1847–1939), baseball player
James L. White (coach) (1893–1949), American college baseball, basketball and football head coach
Jim White (cricketer) (1901–1964), Australian cricketer
James White (baseball), American Negro league baseball player
James White (cross-country) (born 1941), American high school cross country coach
Jimmy White (born 1962), English snooker player
Arts and media
James White (writer and translator) (1759–1799), historical novelist
James White (sculptor) (1861–1918), English-born sculptor who emigrated to Australia
James H. White (1872–1944), Canadian film pioneer
James White (author) (1928–1999), writer of science fiction novellas, short stories, and novels
James L. White (poet) (1936–1981), poet and author
James C. White (1937–2009), American radio talk show host
James P. White (writer) (born 1940), author and editor
James L. White (1947–2015), American screenwriter
Jimmy White (singer) (born 1955), American singer-songwriter and record producer
Jim White (journalist) (1957), British sports television announcer and journalist, now with STV
Jim White (guitarist) (born 1957), American southern singer/songwriter
Jim White (presenter) (born 1957) Scottish sports television announcer and journalist
Jim White (drummer) (born 1962), Australian drummer for Dirty Three
James Chance or James White (born 1963), American musician
James White (rapper), American rapper with German hip-hop group C-Block
James Gordon White, screenwriter
Others
James White (1775–1820), advertising agent and author
James White (1812–1884), Scottish lawyer and chemicals manufacturer
James Terry White (1845–1920), editor of The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography
James Landrum White (1847–1925), shape note singing teacher and composer
James White (geographer) (1863–1928), Canadian geographer
James White (financier) (1877–1927), English property speculator
James Larkin White (1882–1946), discoverer and explorer of Carlsbad Caverns
James White (art expert) (1913–2003), Irish art expert and author
James Boyd White (born 1938), American law professor, literary critic, scholar and philosopher
James J. White (born 1934), law professor, legal scholar
James White (engineer) (1938–2009), American polymer scientist
James Clarke White (dermatologist) (1833–1916), American dermatologist and professor at Harvard Medical School
James Clarke White (neurosurgeon) (died 1981), American neurosurgeon and professor at Harvard Medical School
Jimmy White, a member of the gang that committed the Great Train Robbery
Other uses
James White (film), a 2015 drama
See also
James Whyte (disambiguation) | country of citizenship | {
"answer_start": [
198
],
"text": [
"Australia"
]
} |
James or Jim White may refer to:
Military
James White (general) (1747–1821), American pioneer; founded Knoxville, Tennessee
James White (RAF officer) (1893–1972), World War I fighter ace
Politics
Australian politics
James White (South Australian politician) (1820–1892), land agent and MHA
James White (New South Wales politician) (1828–1890), member of Legislative Assembly, then Council; racehorse owner
James Cobb White (1855–1927), New South Wales politician, member of Legislative Council, nephew of the above
James Wharton White (1857–1930), MHA in South Australia
UK politics
James White (English politician) (1809–1883), MP for Plymouth and Brighton
Martin White (politician) (James Martin White, 1857–1928), businessman and Member of Parliament for Forfar
J. D. White (James Dundas White, 1866–1951), Member of Parliament for Dunbartonshire and Glasgow Tradeston
James White (Scottish politician) (1922–2009), MP for Glasgow Pollok
James White (Irish politician) (1938–2014), Irish businessman, hotelier and politician
US politics
James White (North Carolina politician) (1749–1809), Congressman from North Carolina
James White (Maine politician) (1792–1870), Maine State Treasurer, 1842–1846
James Bain White (1835–1897), U.S. Representative from Indiana
James T. White (politician) (1837–1892), African-American Baptist minister and politician from Arkansas
James Bamford White (1842–1931), U.S. Representative from Kentucky
James Stephen White (1838–1908), politician from Milwaukee, Wisconsin
James F. White (born 1941), American politician
Jim White (politician) (born 1944), member of the South Dakota Senate
James White (Texas politician) (born 1964), member of Texas House of Representatives
James White (New Mexico politician), member of the New Mexico House of Representatives
Religion
James White (Archdeacon of Armagh) (died 1530)
James Springer White (1821–1881), husband of Ellen G. White and co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
James Edson White (1849–1928), adventist and author, son of James Springer White and Ellen G. White
James Rowland White (c. 1851–1885), self-proclaimed prophet
James Emery White (born 1961), president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
James White (theologian) (born 1962), American theologian
Sports
American football
Jim White (American football) (1920–1987), American football tackle for the New York Giants
James White (defensive tackle) (born 1953), former NFL defensive/nose tackle for the Minnesota Vikings
James White (running back) (born 1992), former NFL running back for the New England Patriots
Association football
James White (Scottish footballer) (1899–1983), Scottish footballer
Jimmy White (Irish footballer) (fl. 1923–1969), Irish international football (soccer) player
Jimmy White (footballer, born 1942) (1942–2017), English football (soccer) player
Australian rules football
Jim White (footballer, born 1878) (1878–1956), Australian rules footballer for Essendon in 1897
Jim White (footballer, born 1922) (1922–2006), Australian rules footballer
James White (Australian footballer) (born 1980), Australian rules footballer for Richmond
Basketball
Jim White (basketball), American basketball player fl. 1940s
James White (basketball) (born 1982), American basketball player
James White (basketball, born 1993), American basketball player
Rugby union
Jim White (rugby union), Australian rugby union player
Jimmy White (rugby union) (1911–1997), South African rugby union player
Other sports
Jim White (wrestler) (1942–2010), wrestler in the Southern United States
James White, known as Deacon White (1847–1939), baseball player
James L. White (coach) (1893–1949), American college baseball, basketball and football head coach
Jim White (cricketer) (1901–1964), Australian cricketer
James White (baseball), American Negro league baseball player
James White (cross-country) (born 1941), American high school cross country coach
Jimmy White (born 1962), English snooker player
Arts and media
James White (writer and translator) (1759–1799), historical novelist
James White (sculptor) (1861–1918), English-born sculptor who emigrated to Australia
James H. White (1872–1944), Canadian film pioneer
James White (author) (1928–1999), writer of science fiction novellas, short stories, and novels
James L. White (poet) (1936–1981), poet and author
James C. White (1937–2009), American radio talk show host
James P. White (writer) (born 1940), author and editor
James L. White (1947–2015), American screenwriter
Jimmy White (singer) (born 1955), American singer-songwriter and record producer
Jim White (journalist) (1957), British sports television announcer and journalist, now with STV
Jim White (guitarist) (born 1957), American southern singer/songwriter
Jim White (presenter) (born 1957) Scottish sports television announcer and journalist
Jim White (drummer) (born 1962), Australian drummer for Dirty Three
James Chance or James White (born 1963), American musician
James White (rapper), American rapper with German hip-hop group C-Block
James Gordon White, screenwriter
Others
James White (1775–1820), advertising agent and author
James White (1812–1884), Scottish lawyer and chemicals manufacturer
James Terry White (1845–1920), editor of The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography
James Landrum White (1847–1925), shape note singing teacher and composer
James White (geographer) (1863–1928), Canadian geographer
James White (financier) (1877–1927), English property speculator
James Larkin White (1882–1946), discoverer and explorer of Carlsbad Caverns
James White (art expert) (1913–2003), Irish art expert and author
James Boyd White (born 1938), American law professor, literary critic, scholar and philosopher
James J. White (born 1934), law professor, legal scholar
James White (engineer) (1938–2009), American polymer scientist
James Clarke White (dermatologist) (1833–1916), American dermatologist and professor at Harvard Medical School
James Clarke White (neurosurgeon) (died 1981), American neurosurgeon and professor at Harvard Medical School
Jimmy White, a member of the gang that committed the Great Train Robbery
Other uses
James White (film), a 2015 drama
See also
James Whyte (disambiguation) | nickname | {
"answer_start": [
2669
],
"text": [
"Jimmy"
]
} |
James or Jim White may refer to:
Military
James White (general) (1747–1821), American pioneer; founded Knoxville, Tennessee
James White (RAF officer) (1893–1972), World War I fighter ace
Politics
Australian politics
James White (South Australian politician) (1820–1892), land agent and MHA
James White (New South Wales politician) (1828–1890), member of Legislative Assembly, then Council; racehorse owner
James Cobb White (1855–1927), New South Wales politician, member of Legislative Council, nephew of the above
James Wharton White (1857–1930), MHA in South Australia
UK politics
James White (English politician) (1809–1883), MP for Plymouth and Brighton
Martin White (politician) (James Martin White, 1857–1928), businessman and Member of Parliament for Forfar
J. D. White (James Dundas White, 1866–1951), Member of Parliament for Dunbartonshire and Glasgow Tradeston
James White (Scottish politician) (1922–2009), MP for Glasgow Pollok
James White (Irish politician) (1938–2014), Irish businessman, hotelier and politician
US politics
James White (North Carolina politician) (1749–1809), Congressman from North Carolina
James White (Maine politician) (1792–1870), Maine State Treasurer, 1842–1846
James Bain White (1835–1897), U.S. Representative from Indiana
James T. White (politician) (1837–1892), African-American Baptist minister and politician from Arkansas
James Bamford White (1842–1931), U.S. Representative from Kentucky
James Stephen White (1838–1908), politician from Milwaukee, Wisconsin
James F. White (born 1941), American politician
Jim White (politician) (born 1944), member of the South Dakota Senate
James White (Texas politician) (born 1964), member of Texas House of Representatives
James White (New Mexico politician), member of the New Mexico House of Representatives
Religion
James White (Archdeacon of Armagh) (died 1530)
James Springer White (1821–1881), husband of Ellen G. White and co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
James Edson White (1849–1928), adventist and author, son of James Springer White and Ellen G. White
James Rowland White (c. 1851–1885), self-proclaimed prophet
James Emery White (born 1961), president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
James White (theologian) (born 1962), American theologian
Sports
American football
Jim White (American football) (1920–1987), American football tackle for the New York Giants
James White (defensive tackle) (born 1953), former NFL defensive/nose tackle for the Minnesota Vikings
James White (running back) (born 1992), former NFL running back for the New England Patriots
Association football
James White (Scottish footballer) (1899–1983), Scottish footballer
Jimmy White (Irish footballer) (fl. 1923–1969), Irish international football (soccer) player
Jimmy White (footballer, born 1942) (1942–2017), English football (soccer) player
Australian rules football
Jim White (footballer, born 1878) (1878–1956), Australian rules footballer for Essendon in 1897
Jim White (footballer, born 1922) (1922–2006), Australian rules footballer
James White (Australian footballer) (born 1980), Australian rules footballer for Richmond
Basketball
Jim White (basketball), American basketball player fl. 1940s
James White (basketball) (born 1982), American basketball player
James White (basketball, born 1993), American basketball player
Rugby union
Jim White (rugby union), Australian rugby union player
Jimmy White (rugby union) (1911–1997), South African rugby union player
Other sports
Jim White (wrestler) (1942–2010), wrestler in the Southern United States
James White, known as Deacon White (1847–1939), baseball player
James L. White (coach) (1893–1949), American college baseball, basketball and football head coach
Jim White (cricketer) (1901–1964), Australian cricketer
James White (baseball), American Negro league baseball player
James White (cross-country) (born 1941), American high school cross country coach
Jimmy White (born 1962), English snooker player
Arts and media
James White (writer and translator) (1759–1799), historical novelist
James White (sculptor) (1861–1918), English-born sculptor who emigrated to Australia
James H. White (1872–1944), Canadian film pioneer
James White (author) (1928–1999), writer of science fiction novellas, short stories, and novels
James L. White (poet) (1936–1981), poet and author
James C. White (1937–2009), American radio talk show host
James P. White (writer) (born 1940), author and editor
James L. White (1947–2015), American screenwriter
Jimmy White (singer) (born 1955), American singer-songwriter and record producer
Jim White (journalist) (1957), British sports television announcer and journalist, now with STV
Jim White (guitarist) (born 1957), American southern singer/songwriter
Jim White (presenter) (born 1957) Scottish sports television announcer and journalist
Jim White (drummer) (born 1962), Australian drummer for Dirty Three
James Chance or James White (born 1963), American musician
James White (rapper), American rapper with German hip-hop group C-Block
James Gordon White, screenwriter
Others
James White (1775–1820), advertising agent and author
James White (1812–1884), Scottish lawyer and chemicals manufacturer
James Terry White (1845–1920), editor of The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography
James Landrum White (1847–1925), shape note singing teacher and composer
James White (geographer) (1863–1928), Canadian geographer
James White (financier) (1877–1927), English property speculator
James Larkin White (1882–1946), discoverer and explorer of Carlsbad Caverns
James White (art expert) (1913–2003), Irish art expert and author
James Boyd White (born 1938), American law professor, literary critic, scholar and philosopher
James J. White (born 1934), law professor, legal scholar
James White (engineer) (1938–2009), American polymer scientist
James Clarke White (dermatologist) (1833–1916), American dermatologist and professor at Harvard Medical School
James Clarke White (neurosurgeon) (died 1981), American neurosurgeon and professor at Harvard Medical School
Jimmy White, a member of the gang that committed the Great Train Robbery
Other uses
James White (film), a 2015 drama
See also
James Whyte (disambiguation) | place of death | {
"answer_start": [
104
],
"text": [
"Knoxville"
]
} |
James or Jim White may refer to:
Military
James White (general) (1747–1821), American pioneer; founded Knoxville, Tennessee
James White (RAF officer) (1893–1972), World War I fighter ace
Politics
Australian politics
James White (South Australian politician) (1820–1892), land agent and MHA
James White (New South Wales politician) (1828–1890), member of Legislative Assembly, then Council; racehorse owner
James Cobb White (1855–1927), New South Wales politician, member of Legislative Council, nephew of the above
James Wharton White (1857–1930), MHA in South Australia
UK politics
James White (English politician) (1809–1883), MP for Plymouth and Brighton
Martin White (politician) (James Martin White, 1857–1928), businessman and Member of Parliament for Forfar
J. D. White (James Dundas White, 1866–1951), Member of Parliament for Dunbartonshire and Glasgow Tradeston
James White (Scottish politician) (1922–2009), MP for Glasgow Pollok
James White (Irish politician) (1938–2014), Irish businessman, hotelier and politician
US politics
James White (North Carolina politician) (1749–1809), Congressman from North Carolina
James White (Maine politician) (1792–1870), Maine State Treasurer, 1842–1846
James Bain White (1835–1897), U.S. Representative from Indiana
James T. White (politician) (1837–1892), African-American Baptist minister and politician from Arkansas
James Bamford White (1842–1931), U.S. Representative from Kentucky
James Stephen White (1838–1908), politician from Milwaukee, Wisconsin
James F. White (born 1941), American politician
Jim White (politician) (born 1944), member of the South Dakota Senate
James White (Texas politician) (born 1964), member of Texas House of Representatives
James White (New Mexico politician), member of the New Mexico House of Representatives
Religion
James White (Archdeacon of Armagh) (died 1530)
James Springer White (1821–1881), husband of Ellen G. White and co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
James Edson White (1849–1928), adventist and author, son of James Springer White and Ellen G. White
James Rowland White (c. 1851–1885), self-proclaimed prophet
James Emery White (born 1961), president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
James White (theologian) (born 1962), American theologian
Sports
American football
Jim White (American football) (1920–1987), American football tackle for the New York Giants
James White (defensive tackle) (born 1953), former NFL defensive/nose tackle for the Minnesota Vikings
James White (running back) (born 1992), former NFL running back for the New England Patriots
Association football
James White (Scottish footballer) (1899–1983), Scottish footballer
Jimmy White (Irish footballer) (fl. 1923–1969), Irish international football (soccer) player
Jimmy White (footballer, born 1942) (1942–2017), English football (soccer) player
Australian rules football
Jim White (footballer, born 1878) (1878–1956), Australian rules footballer for Essendon in 1897
Jim White (footballer, born 1922) (1922–2006), Australian rules footballer
James White (Australian footballer) (born 1980), Australian rules footballer for Richmond
Basketball
Jim White (basketball), American basketball player fl. 1940s
James White (basketball) (born 1982), American basketball player
James White (basketball, born 1993), American basketball player
Rugby union
Jim White (rugby union), Australian rugby union player
Jimmy White (rugby union) (1911–1997), South African rugby union player
Other sports
Jim White (wrestler) (1942–2010), wrestler in the Southern United States
James White, known as Deacon White (1847–1939), baseball player
James L. White (coach) (1893–1949), American college baseball, basketball and football head coach
Jim White (cricketer) (1901–1964), Australian cricketer
James White (baseball), American Negro league baseball player
James White (cross-country) (born 1941), American high school cross country coach
Jimmy White (born 1962), English snooker player
Arts and media
James White (writer and translator) (1759–1799), historical novelist
James White (sculptor) (1861–1918), English-born sculptor who emigrated to Australia
James H. White (1872–1944), Canadian film pioneer
James White (author) (1928–1999), writer of science fiction novellas, short stories, and novels
James L. White (poet) (1936–1981), poet and author
James C. White (1937–2009), American radio talk show host
James P. White (writer) (born 1940), author and editor
James L. White (1947–2015), American screenwriter
Jimmy White (singer) (born 1955), American singer-songwriter and record producer
Jim White (journalist) (1957), British sports television announcer and journalist, now with STV
Jim White (guitarist) (born 1957), American southern singer/songwriter
Jim White (presenter) (born 1957) Scottish sports television announcer and journalist
Jim White (drummer) (born 1962), Australian drummer for Dirty Three
James Chance or James White (born 1963), American musician
James White (rapper), American rapper with German hip-hop group C-Block
James Gordon White, screenwriter
Others
James White (1775–1820), advertising agent and author
James White (1812–1884), Scottish lawyer and chemicals manufacturer
James Terry White (1845–1920), editor of The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography
James Landrum White (1847–1925), shape note singing teacher and composer
James White (geographer) (1863–1928), Canadian geographer
James White (financier) (1877–1927), English property speculator
James Larkin White (1882–1946), discoverer and explorer of Carlsbad Caverns
James White (art expert) (1913–2003), Irish art expert and author
James Boyd White (born 1938), American law professor, literary critic, scholar and philosopher
James J. White (born 1934), law professor, legal scholar
James White (engineer) (1938–2009), American polymer scientist
James Clarke White (dermatologist) (1833–1916), American dermatologist and professor at Harvard Medical School
James Clarke White (neurosurgeon) (died 1981), American neurosurgeon and professor at Harvard Medical School
Jimmy White, a member of the gang that committed the Great Train Robbery
Other uses
James White (film), a 2015 drama
See also
James Whyte (disambiguation) | conflict | {
"answer_start": [
164
],
"text": [
"World War I"
]
} |
James or Jim White may refer to:
Military
James White (general) (1747–1821), American pioneer; founded Knoxville, Tennessee
James White (RAF officer) (1893–1972), World War I fighter ace
Politics
Australian politics
James White (South Australian politician) (1820–1892), land agent and MHA
James White (New South Wales politician) (1828–1890), member of Legislative Assembly, then Council; racehorse owner
James Cobb White (1855–1927), New South Wales politician, member of Legislative Council, nephew of the above
James Wharton White (1857–1930), MHA in South Australia
UK politics
James White (English politician) (1809–1883), MP for Plymouth and Brighton
Martin White (politician) (James Martin White, 1857–1928), businessman and Member of Parliament for Forfar
J. D. White (James Dundas White, 1866–1951), Member of Parliament for Dunbartonshire and Glasgow Tradeston
James White (Scottish politician) (1922–2009), MP for Glasgow Pollok
James White (Irish politician) (1938–2014), Irish businessman, hotelier and politician
US politics
James White (North Carolina politician) (1749–1809), Congressman from North Carolina
James White (Maine politician) (1792–1870), Maine State Treasurer, 1842–1846
James Bain White (1835–1897), U.S. Representative from Indiana
James T. White (politician) (1837–1892), African-American Baptist minister and politician from Arkansas
James Bamford White (1842–1931), U.S. Representative from Kentucky
James Stephen White (1838–1908), politician from Milwaukee, Wisconsin
James F. White (born 1941), American politician
Jim White (politician) (born 1944), member of the South Dakota Senate
James White (Texas politician) (born 1964), member of Texas House of Representatives
James White (New Mexico politician), member of the New Mexico House of Representatives
Religion
James White (Archdeacon of Armagh) (died 1530)
James Springer White (1821–1881), husband of Ellen G. White and co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
James Edson White (1849–1928), adventist and author, son of James Springer White and Ellen G. White
James Rowland White (c. 1851–1885), self-proclaimed prophet
James Emery White (born 1961), president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
James White (theologian) (born 1962), American theologian
Sports
American football
Jim White (American football) (1920–1987), American football tackle for the New York Giants
James White (defensive tackle) (born 1953), former NFL defensive/nose tackle for the Minnesota Vikings
James White (running back) (born 1992), former NFL running back for the New England Patriots
Association football
James White (Scottish footballer) (1899–1983), Scottish footballer
Jimmy White (Irish footballer) (fl. 1923–1969), Irish international football (soccer) player
Jimmy White (footballer, born 1942) (1942–2017), English football (soccer) player
Australian rules football
Jim White (footballer, born 1878) (1878–1956), Australian rules footballer for Essendon in 1897
Jim White (footballer, born 1922) (1922–2006), Australian rules footballer
James White (Australian footballer) (born 1980), Australian rules footballer for Richmond
Basketball
Jim White (basketball), American basketball player fl. 1940s
James White (basketball) (born 1982), American basketball player
James White (basketball, born 1993), American basketball player
Rugby union
Jim White (rugby union), Australian rugby union player
Jimmy White (rugby union) (1911–1997), South African rugby union player
Other sports
Jim White (wrestler) (1942–2010), wrestler in the Southern United States
James White, known as Deacon White (1847–1939), baseball player
James L. White (coach) (1893–1949), American college baseball, basketball and football head coach
Jim White (cricketer) (1901–1964), Australian cricketer
James White (baseball), American Negro league baseball player
James White (cross-country) (born 1941), American high school cross country coach
Jimmy White (born 1962), English snooker player
Arts and media
James White (writer and translator) (1759–1799), historical novelist
James White (sculptor) (1861–1918), English-born sculptor who emigrated to Australia
James H. White (1872–1944), Canadian film pioneer
James White (author) (1928–1999), writer of science fiction novellas, short stories, and novels
James L. White (poet) (1936–1981), poet and author
James C. White (1937–2009), American radio talk show host
James P. White (writer) (born 1940), author and editor
James L. White (1947–2015), American screenwriter
Jimmy White (singer) (born 1955), American singer-songwriter and record producer
Jim White (journalist) (1957), British sports television announcer and journalist, now with STV
Jim White (guitarist) (born 1957), American southern singer/songwriter
Jim White (presenter) (born 1957) Scottish sports television announcer and journalist
Jim White (drummer) (born 1962), Australian drummer for Dirty Three
James Chance or James White (born 1963), American musician
James White (rapper), American rapper with German hip-hop group C-Block
James Gordon White, screenwriter
Others
James White (1775–1820), advertising agent and author
James White (1812–1884), Scottish lawyer and chemicals manufacturer
James Terry White (1845–1920), editor of The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography
James Landrum White (1847–1925), shape note singing teacher and composer
James White (geographer) (1863–1928), Canadian geographer
James White (financier) (1877–1927), English property speculator
James Larkin White (1882–1946), discoverer and explorer of Carlsbad Caverns
James White (art expert) (1913–2003), Irish art expert and author
James Boyd White (born 1938), American law professor, literary critic, scholar and philosopher
James J. White (born 1934), law professor, legal scholar
James White (engineer) (1938–2009), American polymer scientist
James Clarke White (dermatologist) (1833–1916), American dermatologist and professor at Harvard Medical School
James Clarke White (neurosurgeon) (died 1981), American neurosurgeon and professor at Harvard Medical School
Jimmy White, a member of the gang that committed the Great Train Robbery
Other uses
James White (film), a 2015 drama
See also
James Whyte (disambiguation) | position played on team / speciality | {
"answer_start": [
2397
],
"text": [
"defensive tackle"
]
} |
James or Jim White may refer to:
Military
James White (general) (1747–1821), American pioneer; founded Knoxville, Tennessee
James White (RAF officer) (1893–1972), World War I fighter ace
Politics
Australian politics
James White (South Australian politician) (1820–1892), land agent and MHA
James White (New South Wales politician) (1828–1890), member of Legislative Assembly, then Council; racehorse owner
James Cobb White (1855–1927), New South Wales politician, member of Legislative Council, nephew of the above
James Wharton White (1857–1930), MHA in South Australia
UK politics
James White (English politician) (1809–1883), MP for Plymouth and Brighton
Martin White (politician) (James Martin White, 1857–1928), businessman and Member of Parliament for Forfar
J. D. White (James Dundas White, 1866–1951), Member of Parliament for Dunbartonshire and Glasgow Tradeston
James White (Scottish politician) (1922–2009), MP for Glasgow Pollok
James White (Irish politician) (1938–2014), Irish businessman, hotelier and politician
US politics
James White (North Carolina politician) (1749–1809), Congressman from North Carolina
James White (Maine politician) (1792–1870), Maine State Treasurer, 1842–1846
James Bain White (1835–1897), U.S. Representative from Indiana
James T. White (politician) (1837–1892), African-American Baptist minister and politician from Arkansas
James Bamford White (1842–1931), U.S. Representative from Kentucky
James Stephen White (1838–1908), politician from Milwaukee, Wisconsin
James F. White (born 1941), American politician
Jim White (politician) (born 1944), member of the South Dakota Senate
James White (Texas politician) (born 1964), member of Texas House of Representatives
James White (New Mexico politician), member of the New Mexico House of Representatives
Religion
James White (Archdeacon of Armagh) (died 1530)
James Springer White (1821–1881), husband of Ellen G. White and co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
James Edson White (1849–1928), adventist and author, son of James Springer White and Ellen G. White
James Rowland White (c. 1851–1885), self-proclaimed prophet
James Emery White (born 1961), president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
James White (theologian) (born 1962), American theologian
Sports
American football
Jim White (American football) (1920–1987), American football tackle for the New York Giants
James White (defensive tackle) (born 1953), former NFL defensive/nose tackle for the Minnesota Vikings
James White (running back) (born 1992), former NFL running back for the New England Patriots
Association football
James White (Scottish footballer) (1899–1983), Scottish footballer
Jimmy White (Irish footballer) (fl. 1923–1969), Irish international football (soccer) player
Jimmy White (footballer, born 1942) (1942–2017), English football (soccer) player
Australian rules football
Jim White (footballer, born 1878) (1878–1956), Australian rules footballer for Essendon in 1897
Jim White (footballer, born 1922) (1922–2006), Australian rules footballer
James White (Australian footballer) (born 1980), Australian rules footballer for Richmond
Basketball
Jim White (basketball), American basketball player fl. 1940s
James White (basketball) (born 1982), American basketball player
James White (basketball, born 1993), American basketball player
Rugby union
Jim White (rugby union), Australian rugby union player
Jimmy White (rugby union) (1911–1997), South African rugby union player
Other sports
Jim White (wrestler) (1942–2010), wrestler in the Southern United States
James White, known as Deacon White (1847–1939), baseball player
James L. White (coach) (1893–1949), American college baseball, basketball and football head coach
Jim White (cricketer) (1901–1964), Australian cricketer
James White (baseball), American Negro league baseball player
James White (cross-country) (born 1941), American high school cross country coach
Jimmy White (born 1962), English snooker player
Arts and media
James White (writer and translator) (1759–1799), historical novelist
James White (sculptor) (1861–1918), English-born sculptor who emigrated to Australia
James H. White (1872–1944), Canadian film pioneer
James White (author) (1928–1999), writer of science fiction novellas, short stories, and novels
James L. White (poet) (1936–1981), poet and author
James C. White (1937–2009), American radio talk show host
James P. White (writer) (born 1940), author and editor
James L. White (1947–2015), American screenwriter
Jimmy White (singer) (born 1955), American singer-songwriter and record producer
Jim White (journalist) (1957), British sports television announcer and journalist, now with STV
Jim White (guitarist) (born 1957), American southern singer/songwriter
Jim White (presenter) (born 1957) Scottish sports television announcer and journalist
Jim White (drummer) (born 1962), Australian drummer for Dirty Three
James Chance or James White (born 1963), American musician
James White (rapper), American rapper with German hip-hop group C-Block
James Gordon White, screenwriter
Others
James White (1775–1820), advertising agent and author
James White (1812–1884), Scottish lawyer and chemicals manufacturer
James Terry White (1845–1920), editor of The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography
James Landrum White (1847–1925), shape note singing teacher and composer
James White (geographer) (1863–1928), Canadian geographer
James White (financier) (1877–1927), English property speculator
James Larkin White (1882–1946), discoverer and explorer of Carlsbad Caverns
James White (art expert) (1913–2003), Irish art expert and author
James Boyd White (born 1938), American law professor, literary critic, scholar and philosopher
James J. White (born 1934), law professor, legal scholar
James White (engineer) (1938–2009), American polymer scientist
James Clarke White (dermatologist) (1833–1916), American dermatologist and professor at Harvard Medical School
James Clarke White (neurosurgeon) (died 1981), American neurosurgeon and professor at Harvard Medical School
Jimmy White, a member of the gang that committed the Great Train Robbery
Other uses
James White (film), a 2015 drama
See also
James Whyte (disambiguation) | Dictionary of Ulster Biography ID | {
"answer_start": [
3597
],
"text": [
"1847"
]
} |
James or Jim White may refer to:
Military
James White (general) (1747–1821), American pioneer; founded Knoxville, Tennessee
James White (RAF officer) (1893–1972), World War I fighter ace
Politics
Australian politics
James White (South Australian politician) (1820–1892), land agent and MHA
James White (New South Wales politician) (1828–1890), member of Legislative Assembly, then Council; racehorse owner
James Cobb White (1855–1927), New South Wales politician, member of Legislative Council, nephew of the above
James Wharton White (1857–1930), MHA in South Australia
UK politics
James White (English politician) (1809–1883), MP for Plymouth and Brighton
Martin White (politician) (James Martin White, 1857–1928), businessman and Member of Parliament for Forfar
J. D. White (James Dundas White, 1866–1951), Member of Parliament for Dunbartonshire and Glasgow Tradeston
James White (Scottish politician) (1922–2009), MP for Glasgow Pollok
James White (Irish politician) (1938–2014), Irish businessman, hotelier and politician
US politics
James White (North Carolina politician) (1749–1809), Congressman from North Carolina
James White (Maine politician) (1792–1870), Maine State Treasurer, 1842–1846
James Bain White (1835–1897), U.S. Representative from Indiana
James T. White (politician) (1837–1892), African-American Baptist minister and politician from Arkansas
James Bamford White (1842–1931), U.S. Representative from Kentucky
James Stephen White (1838–1908), politician from Milwaukee, Wisconsin
James F. White (born 1941), American politician
Jim White (politician) (born 1944), member of the South Dakota Senate
James White (Texas politician) (born 1964), member of Texas House of Representatives
James White (New Mexico politician), member of the New Mexico House of Representatives
Religion
James White (Archdeacon of Armagh) (died 1530)
James Springer White (1821–1881), husband of Ellen G. White and co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
James Edson White (1849–1928), adventist and author, son of James Springer White and Ellen G. White
James Rowland White (c. 1851–1885), self-proclaimed prophet
James Emery White (born 1961), president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
James White (theologian) (born 1962), American theologian
Sports
American football
Jim White (American football) (1920–1987), American football tackle for the New York Giants
James White (defensive tackle) (born 1953), former NFL defensive/nose tackle for the Minnesota Vikings
James White (running back) (born 1992), former NFL running back for the New England Patriots
Association football
James White (Scottish footballer) (1899–1983), Scottish footballer
Jimmy White (Irish footballer) (fl. 1923–1969), Irish international football (soccer) player
Jimmy White (footballer, born 1942) (1942–2017), English football (soccer) player
Australian rules football
Jim White (footballer, born 1878) (1878–1956), Australian rules footballer for Essendon in 1897
Jim White (footballer, born 1922) (1922–2006), Australian rules footballer
James White (Australian footballer) (born 1980), Australian rules footballer for Richmond
Basketball
Jim White (basketball), American basketball player fl. 1940s
James White (basketball) (born 1982), American basketball player
James White (basketball, born 1993), American basketball player
Rugby union
Jim White (rugby union), Australian rugby union player
Jimmy White (rugby union) (1911–1997), South African rugby union player
Other sports
Jim White (wrestler) (1942–2010), wrestler in the Southern United States
James White, known as Deacon White (1847–1939), baseball player
James L. White (coach) (1893–1949), American college baseball, basketball and football head coach
Jim White (cricketer) (1901–1964), Australian cricketer
James White (baseball), American Negro league baseball player
James White (cross-country) (born 1941), American high school cross country coach
Jimmy White (born 1962), English snooker player
Arts and media
James White (writer and translator) (1759–1799), historical novelist
James White (sculptor) (1861–1918), English-born sculptor who emigrated to Australia
James H. White (1872–1944), Canadian film pioneer
James White (author) (1928–1999), writer of science fiction novellas, short stories, and novels
James L. White (poet) (1936–1981), poet and author
James C. White (1937–2009), American radio talk show host
James P. White (writer) (born 1940), author and editor
James L. White (1947–2015), American screenwriter
Jimmy White (singer) (born 1955), American singer-songwriter and record producer
Jim White (journalist) (1957), British sports television announcer and journalist, now with STV
Jim White (guitarist) (born 1957), American southern singer/songwriter
Jim White (presenter) (born 1957) Scottish sports television announcer and journalist
Jim White (drummer) (born 1962), Australian drummer for Dirty Three
James Chance or James White (born 1963), American musician
James White (rapper), American rapper with German hip-hop group C-Block
James Gordon White, screenwriter
Others
James White (1775–1820), advertising agent and author
James White (1812–1884), Scottish lawyer and chemicals manufacturer
James Terry White (1845–1920), editor of The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography
James Landrum White (1847–1925), shape note singing teacher and composer
James White (geographer) (1863–1928), Canadian geographer
James White (financier) (1877–1927), English property speculator
James Larkin White (1882–1946), discoverer and explorer of Carlsbad Caverns
James White (art expert) (1913–2003), Irish art expert and author
James Boyd White (born 1938), American law professor, literary critic, scholar and philosopher
James J. White (born 1934), law professor, legal scholar
James White (engineer) (1938–2009), American polymer scientist
James Clarke White (dermatologist) (1833–1916), American dermatologist and professor at Harvard Medical School
James Clarke White (neurosurgeon) (died 1981), American neurosurgeon and professor at Harvard Medical School
Jimmy White, a member of the gang that committed the Great Train Robbery
Other uses
James White (film), a 2015 drama
See also
James Whyte (disambiguation) | writing language | {
"answer_start": [
599
],
"text": [
"English"
]
} |
James or Jim White may refer to:
Military
James White (general) (1747–1821), American pioneer; founded Knoxville, Tennessee
James White (RAF officer) (1893–1972), World War I fighter ace
Politics
Australian politics
James White (South Australian politician) (1820–1892), land agent and MHA
James White (New South Wales politician) (1828–1890), member of Legislative Assembly, then Council; racehorse owner
James Cobb White (1855–1927), New South Wales politician, member of Legislative Council, nephew of the above
James Wharton White (1857–1930), MHA in South Australia
UK politics
James White (English politician) (1809–1883), MP for Plymouth and Brighton
Martin White (politician) (James Martin White, 1857–1928), businessman and Member of Parliament for Forfar
J. D. White (James Dundas White, 1866–1951), Member of Parliament for Dunbartonshire and Glasgow Tradeston
James White (Scottish politician) (1922–2009), MP for Glasgow Pollok
James White (Irish politician) (1938–2014), Irish businessman, hotelier and politician
US politics
James White (North Carolina politician) (1749–1809), Congressman from North Carolina
James White (Maine politician) (1792–1870), Maine State Treasurer, 1842–1846
James Bain White (1835–1897), U.S. Representative from Indiana
James T. White (politician) (1837–1892), African-American Baptist minister and politician from Arkansas
James Bamford White (1842–1931), U.S. Representative from Kentucky
James Stephen White (1838–1908), politician from Milwaukee, Wisconsin
James F. White (born 1941), American politician
Jim White (politician) (born 1944), member of the South Dakota Senate
James White (Texas politician) (born 1964), member of Texas House of Representatives
James White (New Mexico politician), member of the New Mexico House of Representatives
Religion
James White (Archdeacon of Armagh) (died 1530)
James Springer White (1821–1881), husband of Ellen G. White and co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
James Edson White (1849–1928), adventist and author, son of James Springer White and Ellen G. White
James Rowland White (c. 1851–1885), self-proclaimed prophet
James Emery White (born 1961), president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
James White (theologian) (born 1962), American theologian
Sports
American football
Jim White (American football) (1920–1987), American football tackle for the New York Giants
James White (defensive tackle) (born 1953), former NFL defensive/nose tackle for the Minnesota Vikings
James White (running back) (born 1992), former NFL running back for the New England Patriots
Association football
James White (Scottish footballer) (1899–1983), Scottish footballer
Jimmy White (Irish footballer) (fl. 1923–1969), Irish international football (soccer) player
Jimmy White (footballer, born 1942) (1942–2017), English football (soccer) player
Australian rules football
Jim White (footballer, born 1878) (1878–1956), Australian rules footballer for Essendon in 1897
Jim White (footballer, born 1922) (1922–2006), Australian rules footballer
James White (Australian footballer) (born 1980), Australian rules footballer for Richmond
Basketball
Jim White (basketball), American basketball player fl. 1940s
James White (basketball) (born 1982), American basketball player
James White (basketball, born 1993), American basketball player
Rugby union
Jim White (rugby union), Australian rugby union player
Jimmy White (rugby union) (1911–1997), South African rugby union player
Other sports
Jim White (wrestler) (1942–2010), wrestler in the Southern United States
James White, known as Deacon White (1847–1939), baseball player
James L. White (coach) (1893–1949), American college baseball, basketball and football head coach
Jim White (cricketer) (1901–1964), Australian cricketer
James White (baseball), American Negro league baseball player
James White (cross-country) (born 1941), American high school cross country coach
Jimmy White (born 1962), English snooker player
Arts and media
James White (writer and translator) (1759–1799), historical novelist
James White (sculptor) (1861–1918), English-born sculptor who emigrated to Australia
James H. White (1872–1944), Canadian film pioneer
James White (author) (1928–1999), writer of science fiction novellas, short stories, and novels
James L. White (poet) (1936–1981), poet and author
James C. White (1937–2009), American radio talk show host
James P. White (writer) (born 1940), author and editor
James L. White (1947–2015), American screenwriter
Jimmy White (singer) (born 1955), American singer-songwriter and record producer
Jim White (journalist) (1957), British sports television announcer and journalist, now with STV
Jim White (guitarist) (born 1957), American southern singer/songwriter
Jim White (presenter) (born 1957) Scottish sports television announcer and journalist
Jim White (drummer) (born 1962), Australian drummer for Dirty Three
James Chance or James White (born 1963), American musician
James White (rapper), American rapper with German hip-hop group C-Block
James Gordon White, screenwriter
Others
James White (1775–1820), advertising agent and author
James White (1812–1884), Scottish lawyer and chemicals manufacturer
James Terry White (1845–1920), editor of The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography
James Landrum White (1847–1925), shape note singing teacher and composer
James White (geographer) (1863–1928), Canadian geographer
James White (financier) (1877–1927), English property speculator
James Larkin White (1882–1946), discoverer and explorer of Carlsbad Caverns
James White (art expert) (1913–2003), Irish art expert and author
James Boyd White (born 1938), American law professor, literary critic, scholar and philosopher
James J. White (born 1934), law professor, legal scholar
James White (engineer) (1938–2009), American polymer scientist
James Clarke White (dermatologist) (1833–1916), American dermatologist and professor at Harvard Medical School
James Clarke White (neurosurgeon) (died 1981), American neurosurgeon and professor at Harvard Medical School
Jimmy White, a member of the gang that committed the Great Train Robbery
Other uses
James White (film), a 2015 drama
See also
James Whyte (disambiguation) | member of sports team | {
"answer_start": [
2559
],
"text": [
"New England Patriots"
]
} |
James or Jim White may refer to:
Military
James White (general) (1747–1821), American pioneer; founded Knoxville, Tennessee
James White (RAF officer) (1893–1972), World War I fighter ace
Politics
Australian politics
James White (South Australian politician) (1820–1892), land agent and MHA
James White (New South Wales politician) (1828–1890), member of Legislative Assembly, then Council; racehorse owner
James Cobb White (1855–1927), New South Wales politician, member of Legislative Council, nephew of the above
James Wharton White (1857–1930), MHA in South Australia
UK politics
James White (English politician) (1809–1883), MP for Plymouth and Brighton
Martin White (politician) (James Martin White, 1857–1928), businessman and Member of Parliament for Forfar
J. D. White (James Dundas White, 1866–1951), Member of Parliament for Dunbartonshire and Glasgow Tradeston
James White (Scottish politician) (1922–2009), MP for Glasgow Pollok
James White (Irish politician) (1938–2014), Irish businessman, hotelier and politician
US politics
James White (North Carolina politician) (1749–1809), Congressman from North Carolina
James White (Maine politician) (1792–1870), Maine State Treasurer, 1842–1846
James Bain White (1835–1897), U.S. Representative from Indiana
James T. White (politician) (1837–1892), African-American Baptist minister and politician from Arkansas
James Bamford White (1842–1931), U.S. Representative from Kentucky
James Stephen White (1838–1908), politician from Milwaukee, Wisconsin
James F. White (born 1941), American politician
Jim White (politician) (born 1944), member of the South Dakota Senate
James White (Texas politician) (born 1964), member of Texas House of Representatives
James White (New Mexico politician), member of the New Mexico House of Representatives
Religion
James White (Archdeacon of Armagh) (died 1530)
James Springer White (1821–1881), husband of Ellen G. White and co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
James Edson White (1849–1928), adventist and author, son of James Springer White and Ellen G. White
James Rowland White (c. 1851–1885), self-proclaimed prophet
James Emery White (born 1961), president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
James White (theologian) (born 1962), American theologian
Sports
American football
Jim White (American football) (1920–1987), American football tackle for the New York Giants
James White (defensive tackle) (born 1953), former NFL defensive/nose tackle for the Minnesota Vikings
James White (running back) (born 1992), former NFL running back for the New England Patriots
Association football
James White (Scottish footballer) (1899–1983), Scottish footballer
Jimmy White (Irish footballer) (fl. 1923–1969), Irish international football (soccer) player
Jimmy White (footballer, born 1942) (1942–2017), English football (soccer) player
Australian rules football
Jim White (footballer, born 1878) (1878–1956), Australian rules footballer for Essendon in 1897
Jim White (footballer, born 1922) (1922–2006), Australian rules footballer
James White (Australian footballer) (born 1980), Australian rules footballer for Richmond
Basketball
Jim White (basketball), American basketball player fl. 1940s
James White (basketball) (born 1982), American basketball player
James White (basketball, born 1993), American basketball player
Rugby union
Jim White (rugby union), Australian rugby union player
Jimmy White (rugby union) (1911–1997), South African rugby union player
Other sports
Jim White (wrestler) (1942–2010), wrestler in the Southern United States
James White, known as Deacon White (1847–1939), baseball player
James L. White (coach) (1893–1949), American college baseball, basketball and football head coach
Jim White (cricketer) (1901–1964), Australian cricketer
James White (baseball), American Negro league baseball player
James White (cross-country) (born 1941), American high school cross country coach
Jimmy White (born 1962), English snooker player
Arts and media
James White (writer and translator) (1759–1799), historical novelist
James White (sculptor) (1861–1918), English-born sculptor who emigrated to Australia
James H. White (1872–1944), Canadian film pioneer
James White (author) (1928–1999), writer of science fiction novellas, short stories, and novels
James L. White (poet) (1936–1981), poet and author
James C. White (1937–2009), American radio talk show host
James P. White (writer) (born 1940), author and editor
James L. White (1947–2015), American screenwriter
Jimmy White (singer) (born 1955), American singer-songwriter and record producer
Jim White (journalist) (1957), British sports television announcer and journalist, now with STV
Jim White (guitarist) (born 1957), American southern singer/songwriter
Jim White (presenter) (born 1957) Scottish sports television announcer and journalist
Jim White (drummer) (born 1962), Australian drummer for Dirty Three
James Chance or James White (born 1963), American musician
James White (rapper), American rapper with German hip-hop group C-Block
James Gordon White, screenwriter
Others
James White (1775–1820), advertising agent and author
James White (1812–1884), Scottish lawyer and chemicals manufacturer
James Terry White (1845–1920), editor of The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography
James Landrum White (1847–1925), shape note singing teacher and composer
James White (geographer) (1863–1928), Canadian geographer
James White (financier) (1877–1927), English property speculator
James Larkin White (1882–1946), discoverer and explorer of Carlsbad Caverns
James White (art expert) (1913–2003), Irish art expert and author
James Boyd White (born 1938), American law professor, literary critic, scholar and philosopher
James J. White (born 1934), law professor, legal scholar
James White (engineer) (1938–2009), American polymer scientist
James Clarke White (dermatologist) (1833–1916), American dermatologist and professor at Harvard Medical School
James Clarke White (neurosurgeon) (died 1981), American neurosurgeon and professor at Harvard Medical School
Jimmy White, a member of the gang that committed the Great Train Robbery
Other uses
James White (film), a 2015 drama
See also
James Whyte (disambiguation) | relative | {
"answer_start": [
408
],
"text": [
"James Cobb White"
]
} |
James or Jim White may refer to:
Military
James White (general) (1747–1821), American pioneer; founded Knoxville, Tennessee
James White (RAF officer) (1893–1972), World War I fighter ace
Politics
Australian politics
James White (South Australian politician) (1820–1892), land agent and MHA
James White (New South Wales politician) (1828–1890), member of Legislative Assembly, then Council; racehorse owner
James Cobb White (1855–1927), New South Wales politician, member of Legislative Council, nephew of the above
James Wharton White (1857–1930), MHA in South Australia
UK politics
James White (English politician) (1809–1883), MP for Plymouth and Brighton
Martin White (politician) (James Martin White, 1857–1928), businessman and Member of Parliament for Forfar
J. D. White (James Dundas White, 1866–1951), Member of Parliament for Dunbartonshire and Glasgow Tradeston
James White (Scottish politician) (1922–2009), MP for Glasgow Pollok
James White (Irish politician) (1938–2014), Irish businessman, hotelier and politician
US politics
James White (North Carolina politician) (1749–1809), Congressman from North Carolina
James White (Maine politician) (1792–1870), Maine State Treasurer, 1842–1846
James Bain White (1835–1897), U.S. Representative from Indiana
James T. White (politician) (1837–1892), African-American Baptist minister and politician from Arkansas
James Bamford White (1842–1931), U.S. Representative from Kentucky
James Stephen White (1838–1908), politician from Milwaukee, Wisconsin
James F. White (born 1941), American politician
Jim White (politician) (born 1944), member of the South Dakota Senate
James White (Texas politician) (born 1964), member of Texas House of Representatives
James White (New Mexico politician), member of the New Mexico House of Representatives
Religion
James White (Archdeacon of Armagh) (died 1530)
James Springer White (1821–1881), husband of Ellen G. White and co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
James Edson White (1849–1928), adventist and author, son of James Springer White and Ellen G. White
James Rowland White (c. 1851–1885), self-proclaimed prophet
James Emery White (born 1961), president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
James White (theologian) (born 1962), American theologian
Sports
American football
Jim White (American football) (1920–1987), American football tackle for the New York Giants
James White (defensive tackle) (born 1953), former NFL defensive/nose tackle for the Minnesota Vikings
James White (running back) (born 1992), former NFL running back for the New England Patriots
Association football
James White (Scottish footballer) (1899–1983), Scottish footballer
Jimmy White (Irish footballer) (fl. 1923–1969), Irish international football (soccer) player
Jimmy White (footballer, born 1942) (1942–2017), English football (soccer) player
Australian rules football
Jim White (footballer, born 1878) (1878–1956), Australian rules footballer for Essendon in 1897
Jim White (footballer, born 1922) (1922–2006), Australian rules footballer
James White (Australian footballer) (born 1980), Australian rules footballer for Richmond
Basketball
Jim White (basketball), American basketball player fl. 1940s
James White (basketball) (born 1982), American basketball player
James White (basketball, born 1993), American basketball player
Rugby union
Jim White (rugby union), Australian rugby union player
Jimmy White (rugby union) (1911–1997), South African rugby union player
Other sports
Jim White (wrestler) (1942–2010), wrestler in the Southern United States
James White, known as Deacon White (1847–1939), baseball player
James L. White (coach) (1893–1949), American college baseball, basketball and football head coach
Jim White (cricketer) (1901–1964), Australian cricketer
James White (baseball), American Negro league baseball player
James White (cross-country) (born 1941), American high school cross country coach
Jimmy White (born 1962), English snooker player
Arts and media
James White (writer and translator) (1759–1799), historical novelist
James White (sculptor) (1861–1918), English-born sculptor who emigrated to Australia
James H. White (1872–1944), Canadian film pioneer
James White (author) (1928–1999), writer of science fiction novellas, short stories, and novels
James L. White (poet) (1936–1981), poet and author
James C. White (1937–2009), American radio talk show host
James P. White (writer) (born 1940), author and editor
James L. White (1947–2015), American screenwriter
Jimmy White (singer) (born 1955), American singer-songwriter and record producer
Jim White (journalist) (1957), British sports television announcer and journalist, now with STV
Jim White (guitarist) (born 1957), American southern singer/songwriter
Jim White (presenter) (born 1957) Scottish sports television announcer and journalist
Jim White (drummer) (born 1962), Australian drummer for Dirty Three
James Chance or James White (born 1963), American musician
James White (rapper), American rapper with German hip-hop group C-Block
James Gordon White, screenwriter
Others
James White (1775–1820), advertising agent and author
James White (1812–1884), Scottish lawyer and chemicals manufacturer
James Terry White (1845–1920), editor of The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography
James Landrum White (1847–1925), shape note singing teacher and composer
James White (geographer) (1863–1928), Canadian geographer
James White (financier) (1877–1927), English property speculator
James Larkin White (1882–1946), discoverer and explorer of Carlsbad Caverns
James White (art expert) (1913–2003), Irish art expert and author
James Boyd White (born 1938), American law professor, literary critic, scholar and philosopher
James J. White (born 1934), law professor, legal scholar
James White (engineer) (1938–2009), American polymer scientist
James Clarke White (dermatologist) (1833–1916), American dermatologist and professor at Harvard Medical School
James Clarke White (neurosurgeon) (died 1981), American neurosurgeon and professor at Harvard Medical School
Jimmy White, a member of the gang that committed the Great Train Robbery
Other uses
James White (film), a 2015 drama
See also
James Whyte (disambiguation) | instance of | {
"answer_start": [
4178
],
"text": [
"film"
]
} |
James or Jim White may refer to:
Military
James White (general) (1747–1821), American pioneer; founded Knoxville, Tennessee
James White (RAF officer) (1893–1972), World War I fighter ace
Politics
Australian politics
James White (South Australian politician) (1820–1892), land agent and MHA
James White (New South Wales politician) (1828–1890), member of Legislative Assembly, then Council; racehorse owner
James Cobb White (1855–1927), New South Wales politician, member of Legislative Council, nephew of the above
James Wharton White (1857–1930), MHA in South Australia
UK politics
James White (English politician) (1809–1883), MP for Plymouth and Brighton
Martin White (politician) (James Martin White, 1857–1928), businessman and Member of Parliament for Forfar
J. D. White (James Dundas White, 1866–1951), Member of Parliament for Dunbartonshire and Glasgow Tradeston
James White (Scottish politician) (1922–2009), MP for Glasgow Pollok
James White (Irish politician) (1938–2014), Irish businessman, hotelier and politician
US politics
James White (North Carolina politician) (1749–1809), Congressman from North Carolina
James White (Maine politician) (1792–1870), Maine State Treasurer, 1842–1846
James Bain White (1835–1897), U.S. Representative from Indiana
James T. White (politician) (1837–1892), African-American Baptist minister and politician from Arkansas
James Bamford White (1842–1931), U.S. Representative from Kentucky
James Stephen White (1838–1908), politician from Milwaukee, Wisconsin
James F. White (born 1941), American politician
Jim White (politician) (born 1944), member of the South Dakota Senate
James White (Texas politician) (born 1964), member of Texas House of Representatives
James White (New Mexico politician), member of the New Mexico House of Representatives
Religion
James White (Archdeacon of Armagh) (died 1530)
James Springer White (1821–1881), husband of Ellen G. White and co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
James Edson White (1849–1928), adventist and author, son of James Springer White and Ellen G. White
James Rowland White (c. 1851–1885), self-proclaimed prophet
James Emery White (born 1961), president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
James White (theologian) (born 1962), American theologian
Sports
American football
Jim White (American football) (1920–1987), American football tackle for the New York Giants
James White (defensive tackle) (born 1953), former NFL defensive/nose tackle for the Minnesota Vikings
James White (running back) (born 1992), former NFL running back for the New England Patriots
Association football
James White (Scottish footballer) (1899–1983), Scottish footballer
Jimmy White (Irish footballer) (fl. 1923–1969), Irish international football (soccer) player
Jimmy White (footballer, born 1942) (1942–2017), English football (soccer) player
Australian rules football
Jim White (footballer, born 1878) (1878–1956), Australian rules footballer for Essendon in 1897
Jim White (footballer, born 1922) (1922–2006), Australian rules footballer
James White (Australian footballer) (born 1980), Australian rules footballer for Richmond
Basketball
Jim White (basketball), American basketball player fl. 1940s
James White (basketball) (born 1982), American basketball player
James White (basketball, born 1993), American basketball player
Rugby union
Jim White (rugby union), Australian rugby union player
Jimmy White (rugby union) (1911–1997), South African rugby union player
Other sports
Jim White (wrestler) (1942–2010), wrestler in the Southern United States
James White, known as Deacon White (1847–1939), baseball player
James L. White (coach) (1893–1949), American college baseball, basketball and football head coach
Jim White (cricketer) (1901–1964), Australian cricketer
James White (baseball), American Negro league baseball player
James White (cross-country) (born 1941), American high school cross country coach
Jimmy White (born 1962), English snooker player
Arts and media
James White (writer and translator) (1759–1799), historical novelist
James White (sculptor) (1861–1918), English-born sculptor who emigrated to Australia
James H. White (1872–1944), Canadian film pioneer
James White (author) (1928–1999), writer of science fiction novellas, short stories, and novels
James L. White (poet) (1936–1981), poet and author
James C. White (1937–2009), American radio talk show host
James P. White (writer) (born 1940), author and editor
James L. White (1947–2015), American screenwriter
Jimmy White (singer) (born 1955), American singer-songwriter and record producer
Jim White (journalist) (1957), British sports television announcer and journalist, now with STV
Jim White (guitarist) (born 1957), American southern singer/songwriter
Jim White (presenter) (born 1957) Scottish sports television announcer and journalist
Jim White (drummer) (born 1962), Australian drummer for Dirty Three
James Chance or James White (born 1963), American musician
James White (rapper), American rapper with German hip-hop group C-Block
James Gordon White, screenwriter
Others
James White (1775–1820), advertising agent and author
James White (1812–1884), Scottish lawyer and chemicals manufacturer
James Terry White (1845–1920), editor of The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography
James Landrum White (1847–1925), shape note singing teacher and composer
James White (geographer) (1863–1928), Canadian geographer
James White (financier) (1877–1927), English property speculator
James Larkin White (1882–1946), discoverer and explorer of Carlsbad Caverns
James White (art expert) (1913–2003), Irish art expert and author
James Boyd White (born 1938), American law professor, literary critic, scholar and philosopher
James J. White (born 1934), law professor, legal scholar
James White (engineer) (1938–2009), American polymer scientist
James Clarke White (dermatologist) (1833–1916), American dermatologist and professor at Harvard Medical School
James Clarke White (neurosurgeon) (died 1981), American neurosurgeon and professor at Harvard Medical School
Jimmy White, a member of the gang that committed the Great Train Robbery
Other uses
James White (film), a 2015 drama
See also
James Whyte (disambiguation) | original language of film or TV show | {
"answer_start": [
599
],
"text": [
"English"
]
} |
James or Jim White may refer to:
Military
James White (general) (1747–1821), American pioneer; founded Knoxville, Tennessee
James White (RAF officer) (1893–1972), World War I fighter ace
Politics
Australian politics
James White (South Australian politician) (1820–1892), land agent and MHA
James White (New South Wales politician) (1828–1890), member of Legislative Assembly, then Council; racehorse owner
James Cobb White (1855–1927), New South Wales politician, member of Legislative Council, nephew of the above
James Wharton White (1857–1930), MHA in South Australia
UK politics
James White (English politician) (1809–1883), MP for Plymouth and Brighton
Martin White (politician) (James Martin White, 1857–1928), businessman and Member of Parliament for Forfar
J. D. White (James Dundas White, 1866–1951), Member of Parliament for Dunbartonshire and Glasgow Tradeston
James White (Scottish politician) (1922–2009), MP for Glasgow Pollok
James White (Irish politician) (1938–2014), Irish businessman, hotelier and politician
US politics
James White (North Carolina politician) (1749–1809), Congressman from North Carolina
James White (Maine politician) (1792–1870), Maine State Treasurer, 1842–1846
James Bain White (1835–1897), U.S. Representative from Indiana
James T. White (politician) (1837–1892), African-American Baptist minister and politician from Arkansas
James Bamford White (1842–1931), U.S. Representative from Kentucky
James Stephen White (1838–1908), politician from Milwaukee, Wisconsin
James F. White (born 1941), American politician
Jim White (politician) (born 1944), member of the South Dakota Senate
James White (Texas politician) (born 1964), member of Texas House of Representatives
James White (New Mexico politician), member of the New Mexico House of Representatives
Religion
James White (Archdeacon of Armagh) (died 1530)
James Springer White (1821–1881), husband of Ellen G. White and co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
James Edson White (1849–1928), adventist and author, son of James Springer White and Ellen G. White
James Rowland White (c. 1851–1885), self-proclaimed prophet
James Emery White (born 1961), president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
James White (theologian) (born 1962), American theologian
Sports
American football
Jim White (American football) (1920–1987), American football tackle for the New York Giants
James White (defensive tackle) (born 1953), former NFL defensive/nose tackle for the Minnesota Vikings
James White (running back) (born 1992), former NFL running back for the New England Patriots
Association football
James White (Scottish footballer) (1899–1983), Scottish footballer
Jimmy White (Irish footballer) (fl. 1923–1969), Irish international football (soccer) player
Jimmy White (footballer, born 1942) (1942–2017), English football (soccer) player
Australian rules football
Jim White (footballer, born 1878) (1878–1956), Australian rules footballer for Essendon in 1897
Jim White (footballer, born 1922) (1922–2006), Australian rules footballer
James White (Australian footballer) (born 1980), Australian rules footballer for Richmond
Basketball
Jim White (basketball), American basketball player fl. 1940s
James White (basketball) (born 1982), American basketball player
James White (basketball, born 1993), American basketball player
Rugby union
Jim White (rugby union), Australian rugby union player
Jimmy White (rugby union) (1911–1997), South African rugby union player
Other sports
Jim White (wrestler) (1942–2010), wrestler in the Southern United States
James White, known as Deacon White (1847–1939), baseball player
James L. White (coach) (1893–1949), American college baseball, basketball and football head coach
Jim White (cricketer) (1901–1964), Australian cricketer
James White (baseball), American Negro league baseball player
James White (cross-country) (born 1941), American high school cross country coach
Jimmy White (born 1962), English snooker player
Arts and media
James White (writer and translator) (1759–1799), historical novelist
James White (sculptor) (1861–1918), English-born sculptor who emigrated to Australia
James H. White (1872–1944), Canadian film pioneer
James White (author) (1928–1999), writer of science fiction novellas, short stories, and novels
James L. White (poet) (1936–1981), poet and author
James C. White (1937–2009), American radio talk show host
James P. White (writer) (born 1940), author and editor
James L. White (1947–2015), American screenwriter
Jimmy White (singer) (born 1955), American singer-songwriter and record producer
Jim White (journalist) (1957), British sports television announcer and journalist, now with STV
Jim White (guitarist) (born 1957), American southern singer/songwriter
Jim White (presenter) (born 1957) Scottish sports television announcer and journalist
Jim White (drummer) (born 1962), Australian drummer for Dirty Three
James Chance or James White (born 1963), American musician
James White (rapper), American rapper with German hip-hop group C-Block
James Gordon White, screenwriter
Others
James White (1775–1820), advertising agent and author
James White (1812–1884), Scottish lawyer and chemicals manufacturer
James Terry White (1845–1920), editor of The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography
James Landrum White (1847–1925), shape note singing teacher and composer
James White (geographer) (1863–1928), Canadian geographer
James White (financier) (1877–1927), English property speculator
James Larkin White (1882–1946), discoverer and explorer of Carlsbad Caverns
James White (art expert) (1913–2003), Irish art expert and author
James Boyd White (born 1938), American law professor, literary critic, scholar and philosopher
James J. White (born 1934), law professor, legal scholar
James White (engineer) (1938–2009), American polymer scientist
James Clarke White (dermatologist) (1833–1916), American dermatologist and professor at Harvard Medical School
James Clarke White (neurosurgeon) (died 1981), American neurosurgeon and professor at Harvard Medical School
Jimmy White, a member of the gang that committed the Great Train Robbery
Other uses
James White (film), a 2015 drama
See also
James Whyte (disambiguation) | narrative location | {
"answer_start": [
1730
],
"text": [
"Mexico"
]
} |
James or Jim White may refer to:
Military
James White (general) (1747–1821), American pioneer; founded Knoxville, Tennessee
James White (RAF officer) (1893–1972), World War I fighter ace
Politics
Australian politics
James White (South Australian politician) (1820–1892), land agent and MHA
James White (New South Wales politician) (1828–1890), member of Legislative Assembly, then Council; racehorse owner
James Cobb White (1855–1927), New South Wales politician, member of Legislative Council, nephew of the above
James Wharton White (1857–1930), MHA in South Australia
UK politics
James White (English politician) (1809–1883), MP for Plymouth and Brighton
Martin White (politician) (James Martin White, 1857–1928), businessman and Member of Parliament for Forfar
J. D. White (James Dundas White, 1866–1951), Member of Parliament for Dunbartonshire and Glasgow Tradeston
James White (Scottish politician) (1922–2009), MP for Glasgow Pollok
James White (Irish politician) (1938–2014), Irish businessman, hotelier and politician
US politics
James White (North Carolina politician) (1749–1809), Congressman from North Carolina
James White (Maine politician) (1792–1870), Maine State Treasurer, 1842–1846
James Bain White (1835–1897), U.S. Representative from Indiana
James T. White (politician) (1837–1892), African-American Baptist minister and politician from Arkansas
James Bamford White (1842–1931), U.S. Representative from Kentucky
James Stephen White (1838–1908), politician from Milwaukee, Wisconsin
James F. White (born 1941), American politician
Jim White (politician) (born 1944), member of the South Dakota Senate
James White (Texas politician) (born 1964), member of Texas House of Representatives
James White (New Mexico politician), member of the New Mexico House of Representatives
Religion
James White (Archdeacon of Armagh) (died 1530)
James Springer White (1821–1881), husband of Ellen G. White and co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
James Edson White (1849–1928), adventist and author, son of James Springer White and Ellen G. White
James Rowland White (c. 1851–1885), self-proclaimed prophet
James Emery White (born 1961), president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
James White (theologian) (born 1962), American theologian
Sports
American football
Jim White (American football) (1920–1987), American football tackle for the New York Giants
James White (defensive tackle) (born 1953), former NFL defensive/nose tackle for the Minnesota Vikings
James White (running back) (born 1992), former NFL running back for the New England Patriots
Association football
James White (Scottish footballer) (1899–1983), Scottish footballer
Jimmy White (Irish footballer) (fl. 1923–1969), Irish international football (soccer) player
Jimmy White (footballer, born 1942) (1942–2017), English football (soccer) player
Australian rules football
Jim White (footballer, born 1878) (1878–1956), Australian rules footballer for Essendon in 1897
Jim White (footballer, born 1922) (1922–2006), Australian rules footballer
James White (Australian footballer) (born 1980), Australian rules footballer for Richmond
Basketball
Jim White (basketball), American basketball player fl. 1940s
James White (basketball) (born 1982), American basketball player
James White (basketball, born 1993), American basketball player
Rugby union
Jim White (rugby union), Australian rugby union player
Jimmy White (rugby union) (1911–1997), South African rugby union player
Other sports
Jim White (wrestler) (1942–2010), wrestler in the Southern United States
James White, known as Deacon White (1847–1939), baseball player
James L. White (coach) (1893–1949), American college baseball, basketball and football head coach
Jim White (cricketer) (1901–1964), Australian cricketer
James White (baseball), American Negro league baseball player
James White (cross-country) (born 1941), American high school cross country coach
Jimmy White (born 1962), English snooker player
Arts and media
James White (writer and translator) (1759–1799), historical novelist
James White (sculptor) (1861–1918), English-born sculptor who emigrated to Australia
James H. White (1872–1944), Canadian film pioneer
James White (author) (1928–1999), writer of science fiction novellas, short stories, and novels
James L. White (poet) (1936–1981), poet and author
James C. White (1937–2009), American radio talk show host
James P. White (writer) (born 1940), author and editor
James L. White (1947–2015), American screenwriter
Jimmy White (singer) (born 1955), American singer-songwriter and record producer
Jim White (journalist) (1957), British sports television announcer and journalist, now with STV
Jim White (guitarist) (born 1957), American southern singer/songwriter
Jim White (presenter) (born 1957) Scottish sports television announcer and journalist
Jim White (drummer) (born 1962), Australian drummer for Dirty Three
James Chance or James White (born 1963), American musician
James White (rapper), American rapper with German hip-hop group C-Block
James Gordon White, screenwriter
Others
James White (1775–1820), advertising agent and author
James White (1812–1884), Scottish lawyer and chemicals manufacturer
James Terry White (1845–1920), editor of The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography
James Landrum White (1847–1925), shape note singing teacher and composer
James White (geographer) (1863–1928), Canadian geographer
James White (financier) (1877–1927), English property speculator
James Larkin White (1882–1946), discoverer and explorer of Carlsbad Caverns
James White (art expert) (1913–2003), Irish art expert and author
James Boyd White (born 1938), American law professor, literary critic, scholar and philosopher
James J. White (born 1934), law professor, legal scholar
James White (engineer) (1938–2009), American polymer scientist
James Clarke White (dermatologist) (1833–1916), American dermatologist and professor at Harvard Medical School
James Clarke White (neurosurgeon) (died 1981), American neurosurgeon and professor at Harvard Medical School
Jimmy White, a member of the gang that committed the Great Train Robbery
Other uses
James White (film), a 2015 drama
See also
James Whyte (disambiguation) | title | {
"answer_start": [
43
],
"text": [
"James White"
]
} |
James or Jim White may refer to:
Military
James White (general) (1747–1821), American pioneer; founded Knoxville, Tennessee
James White (RAF officer) (1893–1972), World War I fighter ace
Politics
Australian politics
James White (South Australian politician) (1820–1892), land agent and MHA
James White (New South Wales politician) (1828–1890), member of Legislative Assembly, then Council; racehorse owner
James Cobb White (1855–1927), New South Wales politician, member of Legislative Council, nephew of the above
James Wharton White (1857–1930), MHA in South Australia
UK politics
James White (English politician) (1809–1883), MP for Plymouth and Brighton
Martin White (politician) (James Martin White, 1857–1928), businessman and Member of Parliament for Forfar
J. D. White (James Dundas White, 1866–1951), Member of Parliament for Dunbartonshire and Glasgow Tradeston
James White (Scottish politician) (1922–2009), MP for Glasgow Pollok
James White (Irish politician) (1938–2014), Irish businessman, hotelier and politician
US politics
James White (North Carolina politician) (1749–1809), Congressman from North Carolina
James White (Maine politician) (1792–1870), Maine State Treasurer, 1842–1846
James Bain White (1835–1897), U.S. Representative from Indiana
James T. White (politician) (1837–1892), African-American Baptist minister and politician from Arkansas
James Bamford White (1842–1931), U.S. Representative from Kentucky
James Stephen White (1838–1908), politician from Milwaukee, Wisconsin
James F. White (born 1941), American politician
Jim White (politician) (born 1944), member of the South Dakota Senate
James White (Texas politician) (born 1964), member of Texas House of Representatives
James White (New Mexico politician), member of the New Mexico House of Representatives
Religion
James White (Archdeacon of Armagh) (died 1530)
James Springer White (1821–1881), husband of Ellen G. White and co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
James Edson White (1849–1928), adventist and author, son of James Springer White and Ellen G. White
James Rowland White (c. 1851–1885), self-proclaimed prophet
James Emery White (born 1961), president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
James White (theologian) (born 1962), American theologian
Sports
American football
Jim White (American football) (1920–1987), American football tackle for the New York Giants
James White (defensive tackle) (born 1953), former NFL defensive/nose tackle for the Minnesota Vikings
James White (running back) (born 1992), former NFL running back for the New England Patriots
Association football
James White (Scottish footballer) (1899–1983), Scottish footballer
Jimmy White (Irish footballer) (fl. 1923–1969), Irish international football (soccer) player
Jimmy White (footballer, born 1942) (1942–2017), English football (soccer) player
Australian rules football
Jim White (footballer, born 1878) (1878–1956), Australian rules footballer for Essendon in 1897
Jim White (footballer, born 1922) (1922–2006), Australian rules footballer
James White (Australian footballer) (born 1980), Australian rules footballer for Richmond
Basketball
Jim White (basketball), American basketball player fl. 1940s
James White (basketball) (born 1982), American basketball player
James White (basketball, born 1993), American basketball player
Rugby union
Jim White (rugby union), Australian rugby union player
Jimmy White (rugby union) (1911–1997), South African rugby union player
Other sports
Jim White (wrestler) (1942–2010), wrestler in the Southern United States
James White, known as Deacon White (1847–1939), baseball player
James L. White (coach) (1893–1949), American college baseball, basketball and football head coach
Jim White (cricketer) (1901–1964), Australian cricketer
James White (baseball), American Negro league baseball player
James White (cross-country) (born 1941), American high school cross country coach
Jimmy White (born 1962), English snooker player
Arts and media
James White (writer and translator) (1759–1799), historical novelist
James White (sculptor) (1861–1918), English-born sculptor who emigrated to Australia
James H. White (1872–1944), Canadian film pioneer
James White (author) (1928–1999), writer of science fiction novellas, short stories, and novels
James L. White (poet) (1936–1981), poet and author
James C. White (1937–2009), American radio talk show host
James P. White (writer) (born 1940), author and editor
James L. White (1947–2015), American screenwriter
Jimmy White (singer) (born 1955), American singer-songwriter and record producer
Jim White (journalist) (1957), British sports television announcer and journalist, now with STV
Jim White (guitarist) (born 1957), American southern singer/songwriter
Jim White (presenter) (born 1957) Scottish sports television announcer and journalist
Jim White (drummer) (born 1962), Australian drummer for Dirty Three
James Chance or James White (born 1963), American musician
James White (rapper), American rapper with German hip-hop group C-Block
James Gordon White, screenwriter
Others
James White (1775–1820), advertising agent and author
James White (1812–1884), Scottish lawyer and chemicals manufacturer
James Terry White (1845–1920), editor of The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography
James Landrum White (1847–1925), shape note singing teacher and composer
James White (geographer) (1863–1928), Canadian geographer
James White (financier) (1877–1927), English property speculator
James Larkin White (1882–1946), discoverer and explorer of Carlsbad Caverns
James White (art expert) (1913–2003), Irish art expert and author
James Boyd White (born 1938), American law professor, literary critic, scholar and philosopher
James J. White (born 1934), law professor, legal scholar
James White (engineer) (1938–2009), American polymer scientist
James Clarke White (dermatologist) (1833–1916), American dermatologist and professor at Harvard Medical School
James Clarke White (neurosurgeon) (died 1981), American neurosurgeon and professor at Harvard Medical School
Jimmy White, a member of the gang that committed the Great Train Robbery
Other uses
James White (film), a 2015 drama
See also
James Whyte (disambiguation) | duration | {
"answer_start": [
427
],
"text": [
"85"
]
} |
James or Jim White may refer to:
Military
James White (general) (1747–1821), American pioneer; founded Knoxville, Tennessee
James White (RAF officer) (1893–1972), World War I fighter ace
Politics
Australian politics
James White (South Australian politician) (1820–1892), land agent and MHA
James White (New South Wales politician) (1828–1890), member of Legislative Assembly, then Council; racehorse owner
James Cobb White (1855–1927), New South Wales politician, member of Legislative Council, nephew of the above
James Wharton White (1857–1930), MHA in South Australia
UK politics
James White (English politician) (1809–1883), MP for Plymouth and Brighton
Martin White (politician) (James Martin White, 1857–1928), businessman and Member of Parliament for Forfar
J. D. White (James Dundas White, 1866–1951), Member of Parliament for Dunbartonshire and Glasgow Tradeston
James White (Scottish politician) (1922–2009), MP for Glasgow Pollok
James White (Irish politician) (1938–2014), Irish businessman, hotelier and politician
US politics
James White (North Carolina politician) (1749–1809), Congressman from North Carolina
James White (Maine politician) (1792–1870), Maine State Treasurer, 1842–1846
James Bain White (1835–1897), U.S. Representative from Indiana
James T. White (politician) (1837–1892), African-American Baptist minister and politician from Arkansas
James Bamford White (1842–1931), U.S. Representative from Kentucky
James Stephen White (1838–1908), politician from Milwaukee, Wisconsin
James F. White (born 1941), American politician
Jim White (politician) (born 1944), member of the South Dakota Senate
James White (Texas politician) (born 1964), member of Texas House of Representatives
James White (New Mexico politician), member of the New Mexico House of Representatives
Religion
James White (Archdeacon of Armagh) (died 1530)
James Springer White (1821–1881), husband of Ellen G. White and co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
James Edson White (1849–1928), adventist and author, son of James Springer White and Ellen G. White
James Rowland White (c. 1851–1885), self-proclaimed prophet
James Emery White (born 1961), president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
James White (theologian) (born 1962), American theologian
Sports
American football
Jim White (American football) (1920–1987), American football tackle for the New York Giants
James White (defensive tackle) (born 1953), former NFL defensive/nose tackle for the Minnesota Vikings
James White (running back) (born 1992), former NFL running back for the New England Patriots
Association football
James White (Scottish footballer) (1899–1983), Scottish footballer
Jimmy White (Irish footballer) (fl. 1923–1969), Irish international football (soccer) player
Jimmy White (footballer, born 1942) (1942–2017), English football (soccer) player
Australian rules football
Jim White (footballer, born 1878) (1878–1956), Australian rules footballer for Essendon in 1897
Jim White (footballer, born 1922) (1922–2006), Australian rules footballer
James White (Australian footballer) (born 1980), Australian rules footballer for Richmond
Basketball
Jim White (basketball), American basketball player fl. 1940s
James White (basketball) (born 1982), American basketball player
James White (basketball, born 1993), American basketball player
Rugby union
Jim White (rugby union), Australian rugby union player
Jimmy White (rugby union) (1911–1997), South African rugby union player
Other sports
Jim White (wrestler) (1942–2010), wrestler in the Southern United States
James White, known as Deacon White (1847–1939), baseball player
James L. White (coach) (1893–1949), American college baseball, basketball and football head coach
Jim White (cricketer) (1901–1964), Australian cricketer
James White (baseball), American Negro league baseball player
James White (cross-country) (born 1941), American high school cross country coach
Jimmy White (born 1962), English snooker player
Arts and media
James White (writer and translator) (1759–1799), historical novelist
James White (sculptor) (1861–1918), English-born sculptor who emigrated to Australia
James H. White (1872–1944), Canadian film pioneer
James White (author) (1928–1999), writer of science fiction novellas, short stories, and novels
James L. White (poet) (1936–1981), poet and author
James C. White (1937–2009), American radio talk show host
James P. White (writer) (born 1940), author and editor
James L. White (1947–2015), American screenwriter
Jimmy White (singer) (born 1955), American singer-songwriter and record producer
Jim White (journalist) (1957), British sports television announcer and journalist, now with STV
Jim White (guitarist) (born 1957), American southern singer/songwriter
Jim White (presenter) (born 1957) Scottish sports television announcer and journalist
Jim White (drummer) (born 1962), Australian drummer for Dirty Three
James Chance or James White (born 1963), American musician
James White (rapper), American rapper with German hip-hop group C-Block
James Gordon White, screenwriter
Others
James White (1775–1820), advertising agent and author
James White (1812–1884), Scottish lawyer and chemicals manufacturer
James Terry White (1845–1920), editor of The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography
James Landrum White (1847–1925), shape note singing teacher and composer
James White (geographer) (1863–1928), Canadian geographer
James White (financier) (1877–1927), English property speculator
James Larkin White (1882–1946), discoverer and explorer of Carlsbad Caverns
James White (art expert) (1913–2003), Irish art expert and author
James Boyd White (born 1938), American law professor, literary critic, scholar and philosopher
James J. White (born 1934), law professor, legal scholar
James White (engineer) (1938–2009), American polymer scientist
James Clarke White (dermatologist) (1833–1916), American dermatologist and professor at Harvard Medical School
James Clarke White (neurosurgeon) (died 1981), American neurosurgeon and professor at Harvard Medical School
Jimmy White, a member of the gang that committed the Great Train Robbery
Other uses
James White (film), a 2015 drama
See also
James Whyte (disambiguation) | Kijkwijzer rating | {
"answer_start": [
5144
],
"text": [
"12"
]
} |
James or Jim White may refer to:
Military
James White (general) (1747–1821), American pioneer; founded Knoxville, Tennessee
James White (RAF officer) (1893–1972), World War I fighter ace
Politics
Australian politics
James White (South Australian politician) (1820–1892), land agent and MHA
James White (New South Wales politician) (1828–1890), member of Legislative Assembly, then Council; racehorse owner
James Cobb White (1855–1927), New South Wales politician, member of Legislative Council, nephew of the above
James Wharton White (1857–1930), MHA in South Australia
UK politics
James White (English politician) (1809–1883), MP for Plymouth and Brighton
Martin White (politician) (James Martin White, 1857–1928), businessman and Member of Parliament for Forfar
J. D. White (James Dundas White, 1866–1951), Member of Parliament for Dunbartonshire and Glasgow Tradeston
James White (Scottish politician) (1922–2009), MP for Glasgow Pollok
James White (Irish politician) (1938–2014), Irish businessman, hotelier and politician
US politics
James White (North Carolina politician) (1749–1809), Congressman from North Carolina
James White (Maine politician) (1792–1870), Maine State Treasurer, 1842–1846
James Bain White (1835–1897), U.S. Representative from Indiana
James T. White (politician) (1837–1892), African-American Baptist minister and politician from Arkansas
James Bamford White (1842–1931), U.S. Representative from Kentucky
James Stephen White (1838–1908), politician from Milwaukee, Wisconsin
James F. White (born 1941), American politician
Jim White (politician) (born 1944), member of the South Dakota Senate
James White (Texas politician) (born 1964), member of Texas House of Representatives
James White (New Mexico politician), member of the New Mexico House of Representatives
Religion
James White (Archdeacon of Armagh) (died 1530)
James Springer White (1821–1881), husband of Ellen G. White and co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
James Edson White (1849–1928), adventist and author, son of James Springer White and Ellen G. White
James Rowland White (c. 1851–1885), self-proclaimed prophet
James Emery White (born 1961), president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
James White (theologian) (born 1962), American theologian
Sports
American football
Jim White (American football) (1920–1987), American football tackle for the New York Giants
James White (defensive tackle) (born 1953), former NFL defensive/nose tackle for the Minnesota Vikings
James White (running back) (born 1992), former NFL running back for the New England Patriots
Association football
James White (Scottish footballer) (1899–1983), Scottish footballer
Jimmy White (Irish footballer) (fl. 1923–1969), Irish international football (soccer) player
Jimmy White (footballer, born 1942) (1942–2017), English football (soccer) player
Australian rules football
Jim White (footballer, born 1878) (1878–1956), Australian rules footballer for Essendon in 1897
Jim White (footballer, born 1922) (1922–2006), Australian rules footballer
James White (Australian footballer) (born 1980), Australian rules footballer for Richmond
Basketball
Jim White (basketball), American basketball player fl. 1940s
James White (basketball) (born 1982), American basketball player
James White (basketball, born 1993), American basketball player
Rugby union
Jim White (rugby union), Australian rugby union player
Jimmy White (rugby union) (1911–1997), South African rugby union player
Other sports
Jim White (wrestler) (1942–2010), wrestler in the Southern United States
James White, known as Deacon White (1847–1939), baseball player
James L. White (coach) (1893–1949), American college baseball, basketball and football head coach
Jim White (cricketer) (1901–1964), Australian cricketer
James White (baseball), American Negro league baseball player
James White (cross-country) (born 1941), American high school cross country coach
Jimmy White (born 1962), English snooker player
Arts and media
James White (writer and translator) (1759–1799), historical novelist
James White (sculptor) (1861–1918), English-born sculptor who emigrated to Australia
James H. White (1872–1944), Canadian film pioneer
James White (author) (1928–1999), writer of science fiction novellas, short stories, and novels
James L. White (poet) (1936–1981), poet and author
James C. White (1937–2009), American radio talk show host
James P. White (writer) (born 1940), author and editor
James L. White (1947–2015), American screenwriter
Jimmy White (singer) (born 1955), American singer-songwriter and record producer
Jim White (journalist) (1957), British sports television announcer and journalist, now with STV
Jim White (guitarist) (born 1957), American southern singer/songwriter
Jim White (presenter) (born 1957) Scottish sports television announcer and journalist
Jim White (drummer) (born 1962), Australian drummer for Dirty Three
James Chance or James White (born 1963), American musician
James White (rapper), American rapper with German hip-hop group C-Block
James Gordon White, screenwriter
Others
James White (1775–1820), advertising agent and author
James White (1812–1884), Scottish lawyer and chemicals manufacturer
James Terry White (1845–1920), editor of The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography
James Landrum White (1847–1925), shape note singing teacher and composer
James White (geographer) (1863–1928), Canadian geographer
James White (financier) (1877–1927), English property speculator
James Larkin White (1882–1946), discoverer and explorer of Carlsbad Caverns
James White (art expert) (1913–2003), Irish art expert and author
James Boyd White (born 1938), American law professor, literary critic, scholar and philosopher
James J. White (born 1934), law professor, legal scholar
James White (engineer) (1938–2009), American polymer scientist
James Clarke White (dermatologist) (1833–1916), American dermatologist and professor at Harvard Medical School
James Clarke White (neurosurgeon) (died 1981), American neurosurgeon and professor at Harvard Medical School
Jimmy White, a member of the gang that committed the Great Train Robbery
Other uses
James White (film), a 2015 drama
See also
James Whyte (disambiguation) | work location | {
"answer_start": [
231
],
"text": [
"South Australia"
]
} |
James or Jim White may refer to:
Military
James White (general) (1747–1821), American pioneer; founded Knoxville, Tennessee
James White (RAF officer) (1893–1972), World War I fighter ace
Politics
Australian politics
James White (South Australian politician) (1820–1892), land agent and MHA
James White (New South Wales politician) (1828–1890), member of Legislative Assembly, then Council; racehorse owner
James Cobb White (1855–1927), New South Wales politician, member of Legislative Council, nephew of the above
James Wharton White (1857–1930), MHA in South Australia
UK politics
James White (English politician) (1809–1883), MP for Plymouth and Brighton
Martin White (politician) (James Martin White, 1857–1928), businessman and Member of Parliament for Forfar
J. D. White (James Dundas White, 1866–1951), Member of Parliament for Dunbartonshire and Glasgow Tradeston
James White (Scottish politician) (1922–2009), MP for Glasgow Pollok
James White (Irish politician) (1938–2014), Irish businessman, hotelier and politician
US politics
James White (North Carolina politician) (1749–1809), Congressman from North Carolina
James White (Maine politician) (1792–1870), Maine State Treasurer, 1842–1846
James Bain White (1835–1897), U.S. Representative from Indiana
James T. White (politician) (1837–1892), African-American Baptist minister and politician from Arkansas
James Bamford White (1842–1931), U.S. Representative from Kentucky
James Stephen White (1838–1908), politician from Milwaukee, Wisconsin
James F. White (born 1941), American politician
Jim White (politician) (born 1944), member of the South Dakota Senate
James White (Texas politician) (born 1964), member of Texas House of Representatives
James White (New Mexico politician), member of the New Mexico House of Representatives
Religion
James White (Archdeacon of Armagh) (died 1530)
James Springer White (1821–1881), husband of Ellen G. White and co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
James Edson White (1849–1928), adventist and author, son of James Springer White and Ellen G. White
James Rowland White (c. 1851–1885), self-proclaimed prophet
James Emery White (born 1961), president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
James White (theologian) (born 1962), American theologian
Sports
American football
Jim White (American football) (1920–1987), American football tackle for the New York Giants
James White (defensive tackle) (born 1953), former NFL defensive/nose tackle for the Minnesota Vikings
James White (running back) (born 1992), former NFL running back for the New England Patriots
Association football
James White (Scottish footballer) (1899–1983), Scottish footballer
Jimmy White (Irish footballer) (fl. 1923–1969), Irish international football (soccer) player
Jimmy White (footballer, born 1942) (1942–2017), English football (soccer) player
Australian rules football
Jim White (footballer, born 1878) (1878–1956), Australian rules footballer for Essendon in 1897
Jim White (footballer, born 1922) (1922–2006), Australian rules footballer
James White (Australian footballer) (born 1980), Australian rules footballer for Richmond
Basketball
Jim White (basketball), American basketball player fl. 1940s
James White (basketball) (born 1982), American basketball player
James White (basketball, born 1993), American basketball player
Rugby union
Jim White (rugby union), Australian rugby union player
Jimmy White (rugby union) (1911–1997), South African rugby union player
Other sports
Jim White (wrestler) (1942–2010), wrestler in the Southern United States
James White, known as Deacon White (1847–1939), baseball player
James L. White (coach) (1893–1949), American college baseball, basketball and football head coach
Jim White (cricketer) (1901–1964), Australian cricketer
James White (baseball), American Negro league baseball player
James White (cross-country) (born 1941), American high school cross country coach
Jimmy White (born 1962), English snooker player
Arts and media
James White (writer and translator) (1759–1799), historical novelist
James White (sculptor) (1861–1918), English-born sculptor who emigrated to Australia
James H. White (1872–1944), Canadian film pioneer
James White (author) (1928–1999), writer of science fiction novellas, short stories, and novels
James L. White (poet) (1936–1981), poet and author
James C. White (1937–2009), American radio talk show host
James P. White (writer) (born 1940), author and editor
James L. White (1947–2015), American screenwriter
Jimmy White (singer) (born 1955), American singer-songwriter and record producer
Jim White (journalist) (1957), British sports television announcer and journalist, now with STV
Jim White (guitarist) (born 1957), American southern singer/songwriter
Jim White (presenter) (born 1957) Scottish sports television announcer and journalist
Jim White (drummer) (born 1962), Australian drummer for Dirty Three
James Chance or James White (born 1963), American musician
James White (rapper), American rapper with German hip-hop group C-Block
James Gordon White, screenwriter
Others
James White (1775–1820), advertising agent and author
James White (1812–1884), Scottish lawyer and chemicals manufacturer
James Terry White (1845–1920), editor of The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography
James Landrum White (1847–1925), shape note singing teacher and composer
James White (geographer) (1863–1928), Canadian geographer
James White (financier) (1877–1927), English property speculator
James Larkin White (1882–1946), discoverer and explorer of Carlsbad Caverns
James White (art expert) (1913–2003), Irish art expert and author
James Boyd White (born 1938), American law professor, literary critic, scholar and philosopher
James J. White (born 1934), law professor, legal scholar
James White (engineer) (1938–2009), American polymer scientist
James Clarke White (dermatologist) (1833–1916), American dermatologist and professor at Harvard Medical School
James Clarke White (neurosurgeon) (died 1981), American neurosurgeon and professor at Harvard Medical School
Jimmy White, a member of the gang that committed the Great Train Robbery
Other uses
James White (film), a 2015 drama
See also
James Whyte (disambiguation) | father | {
"answer_start": [
43
],
"text": [
"James White"
]
} |
James or Jim White may refer to:
Military
James White (general) (1747–1821), American pioneer; founded Knoxville, Tennessee
James White (RAF officer) (1893–1972), World War I fighter ace
Politics
Australian politics
James White (South Australian politician) (1820–1892), land agent and MHA
James White (New South Wales politician) (1828–1890), member of Legislative Assembly, then Council; racehorse owner
James Cobb White (1855–1927), New South Wales politician, member of Legislative Council, nephew of the above
James Wharton White (1857–1930), MHA in South Australia
UK politics
James White (English politician) (1809–1883), MP for Plymouth and Brighton
Martin White (politician) (James Martin White, 1857–1928), businessman and Member of Parliament for Forfar
J. D. White (James Dundas White, 1866–1951), Member of Parliament for Dunbartonshire and Glasgow Tradeston
James White (Scottish politician) (1922–2009), MP for Glasgow Pollok
James White (Irish politician) (1938–2014), Irish businessman, hotelier and politician
US politics
James White (North Carolina politician) (1749–1809), Congressman from North Carolina
James White (Maine politician) (1792–1870), Maine State Treasurer, 1842–1846
James Bain White (1835–1897), U.S. Representative from Indiana
James T. White (politician) (1837–1892), African-American Baptist minister and politician from Arkansas
James Bamford White (1842–1931), U.S. Representative from Kentucky
James Stephen White (1838–1908), politician from Milwaukee, Wisconsin
James F. White (born 1941), American politician
Jim White (politician) (born 1944), member of the South Dakota Senate
James White (Texas politician) (born 1964), member of Texas House of Representatives
James White (New Mexico politician), member of the New Mexico House of Representatives
Religion
James White (Archdeacon of Armagh) (died 1530)
James Springer White (1821–1881), husband of Ellen G. White and co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
James Edson White (1849–1928), adventist and author, son of James Springer White and Ellen G. White
James Rowland White (c. 1851–1885), self-proclaimed prophet
James Emery White (born 1961), president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
James White (theologian) (born 1962), American theologian
Sports
American football
Jim White (American football) (1920–1987), American football tackle for the New York Giants
James White (defensive tackle) (born 1953), former NFL defensive/nose tackle for the Minnesota Vikings
James White (running back) (born 1992), former NFL running back for the New England Patriots
Association football
James White (Scottish footballer) (1899–1983), Scottish footballer
Jimmy White (Irish footballer) (fl. 1923–1969), Irish international football (soccer) player
Jimmy White (footballer, born 1942) (1942–2017), English football (soccer) player
Australian rules football
Jim White (footballer, born 1878) (1878–1956), Australian rules footballer for Essendon in 1897
Jim White (footballer, born 1922) (1922–2006), Australian rules footballer
James White (Australian footballer) (born 1980), Australian rules footballer for Richmond
Basketball
Jim White (basketball), American basketball player fl. 1940s
James White (basketball) (born 1982), American basketball player
James White (basketball, born 1993), American basketball player
Rugby union
Jim White (rugby union), Australian rugby union player
Jimmy White (rugby union) (1911–1997), South African rugby union player
Other sports
Jim White (wrestler) (1942–2010), wrestler in the Southern United States
James White, known as Deacon White (1847–1939), baseball player
James L. White (coach) (1893–1949), American college baseball, basketball and football head coach
Jim White (cricketer) (1901–1964), Australian cricketer
James White (baseball), American Negro league baseball player
James White (cross-country) (born 1941), American high school cross country coach
Jimmy White (born 1962), English snooker player
Arts and media
James White (writer and translator) (1759–1799), historical novelist
James White (sculptor) (1861–1918), English-born sculptor who emigrated to Australia
James H. White (1872–1944), Canadian film pioneer
James White (author) (1928–1999), writer of science fiction novellas, short stories, and novels
James L. White (poet) (1936–1981), poet and author
James C. White (1937–2009), American radio talk show host
James P. White (writer) (born 1940), author and editor
James L. White (1947–2015), American screenwriter
Jimmy White (singer) (born 1955), American singer-songwriter and record producer
Jim White (journalist) (1957), British sports television announcer and journalist, now with STV
Jim White (guitarist) (born 1957), American southern singer/songwriter
Jim White (presenter) (born 1957) Scottish sports television announcer and journalist
Jim White (drummer) (born 1962), Australian drummer for Dirty Three
James Chance or James White (born 1963), American musician
James White (rapper), American rapper with German hip-hop group C-Block
James Gordon White, screenwriter
Others
James White (1775–1820), advertising agent and author
James White (1812–1884), Scottish lawyer and chemicals manufacturer
James Terry White (1845–1920), editor of The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography
James Landrum White (1847–1925), shape note singing teacher and composer
James White (geographer) (1863–1928), Canadian geographer
James White (financier) (1877–1927), English property speculator
James Larkin White (1882–1946), discoverer and explorer of Carlsbad Caverns
James White (art expert) (1913–2003), Irish art expert and author
James Boyd White (born 1938), American law professor, literary critic, scholar and philosopher
James J. White (born 1934), law professor, legal scholar
James White (engineer) (1938–2009), American polymer scientist
James Clarke White (dermatologist) (1833–1916), American dermatologist and professor at Harvard Medical School
James Clarke White (neurosurgeon) (died 1981), American neurosurgeon and professor at Harvard Medical School
Jimmy White, a member of the gang that committed the Great Train Robbery
Other uses
James White (film), a 2015 drama
See also
James Whyte (disambiguation) | child | {
"answer_start": [
43
],
"text": [
"James White"
]
} |
Cammeringham Priory was a priory in Cammeringham, Lincolnshire, England.
It was an Alien house granted by 1126 to the abbey of L'Essay in the diocese of Coutances, by Robert de Haya, with the advice of his wife Muriel, and also to the Premonstratensian abbey of Blanchelande in Normandy. A dispute arose between the two abbeys, which was settled in favour of Blanchelande in 1192, by William Bishop of Coutances.
Within the historical county of Lincolnshire there were no fewer than nine Premonstratensian houses. Other than Cammeringham Priory these were: Barlings Abbey, Hagnaby Abbey, Newbo Abbey, Newsham Abbey, Orford Priory (women), Stixwould Priory, Tupholme Abbey and West Ravendale Priory.
The advowson of the priory passed first to Alice, countess of Lancaster, and from her to Hugh le Despenser, 1st in 1325. Shortly afterwards it reverted to the King. In 1396 the abbot of Blanchelande sold all his rights in the house to the Cistercian abbot of Hulton in Staffordshire.
At the Dissolution of the Monasteries it was granted to Robert Tyrwhitt.
Cammeringham Manor House, built around 1730, retains the now blocked-up cellars of the priory, though there is no visible evidence above ground level.
== References == | historic county | {
"answer_start": [
51
],
"text": [
"Lincolnshire"
]
} |
Major-General Ralph Younger (12 July 1904 – 2 August 1985) was a British Army officer.
Military career
Younger was commissioned into the 7th Queen's Own Hussars in 1925. He served as commanding officer of the 3rd Carabiniers in Burma in 1942 during the Second World War.Younger was appointed second in command of the 255th Indian Tank Brigade in August 1944, then promoted to command the brigade in May 1945, commanding it until November.After the war he became commander of 30th Independent Armoured Brigade in March 1949, commander of 7th Armoured Brigade in December 1950 and Commandant of the Royal Armoured Corps Centre at Bovington Camp in November 1953. His last appointment was as General Officer Commanding 49th (West Riding) Armoured Division in December 1954 before retiring in March 1958.He was colonel of the 7th Queen's Own Hussars from 1952 to 1958 of the Queen's Own Hussars from 1958 to 1962 and of the Royal Scots Dragoon Guards from 1971 to 1975.
Family
In 1932 he married Mary Cynthia Mills; after they divorced he married Greta Mary Turnbull in 1938; they had a son and a daughter.
References
External links
Generals of World War II | spouse | {
"answer_start": [
1046
],
"text": [
"Greta Mary Turnbull"
]
} |
Major-General Ralph Younger (12 July 1904 – 2 August 1985) was a British Army officer.
Military career
Younger was commissioned into the 7th Queen's Own Hussars in 1925. He served as commanding officer of the 3rd Carabiniers in Burma in 1942 during the Second World War.Younger was appointed second in command of the 255th Indian Tank Brigade in August 1944, then promoted to command the brigade in May 1945, commanding it until November.After the war he became commander of 30th Independent Armoured Brigade in March 1949, commander of 7th Armoured Brigade in December 1950 and Commandant of the Royal Armoured Corps Centre at Bovington Camp in November 1953. His last appointment was as General Officer Commanding 49th (West Riding) Armoured Division in December 1954 before retiring in March 1958.He was colonel of the 7th Queen's Own Hussars from 1952 to 1958 of the Queen's Own Hussars from 1958 to 1962 and of the Royal Scots Dragoon Guards from 1971 to 1975.
Family
In 1932 he married Mary Cynthia Mills; after they divorced he married Greta Mary Turnbull in 1938; they had a son and a daughter.
References
External links
Generals of World War II | conflict | {
"answer_start": [
1145
],
"text": [
"World War II"
]
} |
Major-General Ralph Younger (12 July 1904 – 2 August 1985) was a British Army officer.
Military career
Younger was commissioned into the 7th Queen's Own Hussars in 1925. He served as commanding officer of the 3rd Carabiniers in Burma in 1942 during the Second World War.Younger was appointed second in command of the 255th Indian Tank Brigade in August 1944, then promoted to command the brigade in May 1945, commanding it until November.After the war he became commander of 30th Independent Armoured Brigade in March 1949, commander of 7th Armoured Brigade in December 1950 and Commandant of the Royal Armoured Corps Centre at Bovington Camp in November 1953. His last appointment was as General Officer Commanding 49th (West Riding) Armoured Division in December 1954 before retiring in March 1958.He was colonel of the 7th Queen's Own Hussars from 1952 to 1958 of the Queen's Own Hussars from 1958 to 1962 and of the Royal Scots Dragoon Guards from 1971 to 1975.
Family
In 1932 he married Mary Cynthia Mills; after they divorced he married Greta Mary Turnbull in 1938; they had a son and a daughter.
References
External links
Generals of World War II | family name | {
"answer_start": [
20
],
"text": [
"Younger"
]
} |
Major-General Ralph Younger (12 July 1904 – 2 August 1985) was a British Army officer.
Military career
Younger was commissioned into the 7th Queen's Own Hussars in 1925. He served as commanding officer of the 3rd Carabiniers in Burma in 1942 during the Second World War.Younger was appointed second in command of the 255th Indian Tank Brigade in August 1944, then promoted to command the brigade in May 1945, commanding it until November.After the war he became commander of 30th Independent Armoured Brigade in March 1949, commander of 7th Armoured Brigade in December 1950 and Commandant of the Royal Armoured Corps Centre at Bovington Camp in November 1953. His last appointment was as General Officer Commanding 49th (West Riding) Armoured Division in December 1954 before retiring in March 1958.He was colonel of the 7th Queen's Own Hussars from 1952 to 1958 of the Queen's Own Hussars from 1958 to 1962 and of the Royal Scots Dragoon Guards from 1971 to 1975.
Family
In 1932 he married Mary Cynthia Mills; after they divorced he married Greta Mary Turnbull in 1938; they had a son and a daughter.
References
External links
Generals of World War II | given name | {
"answer_start": [
14
],
"text": [
"Ralph"
]
} |
Charnois (French pronunciation: [ʃaʁnwa]) is a commune in the Ardennes department in northern France.
The Pointe de Givet National Nature Reserve is partly located on the commune.
Population
See also
Communes of the Ardennes department
== References == | country | {
"answer_start": [
95
],
"text": [
"France"
]
} |
Charnois (French pronunciation: [ʃaʁnwa]) is a commune in the Ardennes department in northern France.
The Pointe de Givet National Nature Reserve is partly located on the commune.
Population
See also
Communes of the Ardennes department
== References == | located in the administrative territorial entity | {
"answer_start": [
63
],
"text": [
"Ardennes"
]
} |
Charnois (French pronunciation: [ʃaʁnwa]) is a commune in the Ardennes department in northern France.
The Pointe de Givet National Nature Reserve is partly located on the commune.
Population
See also
Communes of the Ardennes department
== References == | Commons category | {
"answer_start": [
0
],
"text": [
"Charnois"
]
} |
Charnois (French pronunciation: [ʃaʁnwa]) is a commune in the Ardennes department in northern France.
The Pointe de Givet National Nature Reserve is partly located on the commune.
Population
See also
Communes of the Ardennes department
== References == | official name | {
"answer_start": [
0
],
"text": [
"Charnois"
]
} |
Education and Literacy Department is a department of the Government of Sindh, Pakistan.
The primary objective of the department is to look after the educational affairs within the province and co-ordinate with Federal Government and donor agencies regarding promotion of education in the province. The department plays supervisory role of Primary education and manages Secondary education, Technical Education, incentive programs and development schemes. Government of Sindh has bifurcated Education and Literacy Department into two separate departments College Education Department and School Education Department on 6 October 2016 hence having two different Secretaries of the departments.
Facts
There are 327 public sector Colleges are functioning under the College Education Department of Sindh and 42,900 Primary Schools, 2,429 Elementary Schools and 2,065 High Schools under the department.
Autonomous Bodies
Reform Support Unit
Reform Support Unit was established to build the institutional capability of the Department of Education.
Girls Stipend
The Education & Literacy Department initiated distribution of stipends to female students in rural area to increase literacy rate, under the Sindh Structural Adjustment Credit a program of World Bank.
Sindh Textbook Board
Production and publication of textbooks and supplementary reading material relating to textbooks.
Bureau of Curriculum
Bureau of Curriculum & Extension Wing is responsible for curriculum development.
Sindh Education Foundation
The Sindh Education Foundation is an autonomous body to encourage and promote education in the private sector operating on non-profit basis.
Provincial institute of Teacher Education
Provincial institute of Teacher Education was established in 1995 with help of Asian Development Bank, as a teacher education institute.
Sindh Teachers Education Development Authority
Sindh Teachers Education Development Authority oversee and regulate the teacher training activities and to maintain the standards of the trainings and the training providers.
Sindh Basic Education Program
SBEP is a program of the department and USAID under which 120 schools will be constructed by USAID in Sindh's under developed areas. The program is valued around $155 million.
See also
Education in Pakistan
References
External links
Education and Literacy Department
Bureau of Curriculum
Sindh Education Foundation
Reform Support Unit | country | {
"answer_start": [
78
],
"text": [
"Pakistan"
]
} |
Events in the year 2001 in Brazil.
Incumbents
Federal government
President: Fernando Henrique Cardoso
Vice President: Marco Maciel
Governors
Acre: Jorge Viana
Alagoas: Ronaldo Lessa
Amapa: João Capiberibe
Amazonas: Amazonino Mendes
Bahia: César Borges
Ceará: Tasso Jereissati
Espírito Santo: José Ignácio Ferreira
Goiás: Marconi Perillo
Maranhão: Roseana Sarney
Mato Grosso: Dante de Oliveira then Rogério Salles
Mato Grosso do Sul: José Orcírio Miranda dos Santos
Minas Gerais: Itamar Franco
Pará: Almir Gabriel
Paraíba: José Maranhão
Paraná: Jaime Lerner
Pernambuco: Jarbas Vasconcelos
Piauí:
till 6 November: Mão Santa
9 November-19 November: Kléber Eulálio
from 19 November: Hugo Napoleão
Rio de Janeiro: Anthony Garotinho
Rio Grande do Norte: Garibaldi Alves Filho
Rio Grande do Sul: Olívio Dutra
Rondônia: José de Abreu Bianco
Roraima: Neudo Ribeiro Campos
Santa Catarina: Esperidião Amin
São Paulo: Mário Covas (till 6 March); Geraldo Alckmin (from 6 March)
Sergipe: Albano Franco
Tocantins: José Wilson Siqueira Campos
Vice governors
Acre: Edison Simão Cadaxo
Alagoas: Geraldo Costa Sampaio
Amapá: Maria Dalva de Souza Figueiredo
Amazonas: Samuel Assayag Hanan
Bahia: Otto Alencar
Ceará: Benedito Clayton Veras Alcântara
Espírito Santo: Celso José Vasconcelos
Goiás: Alcides Rodrigues Filho
Maranhão: José Reinaldo Carneiro Tavares
Mato Grosso: José Rogério Sales
Mato Grosso do Sul: Moacir Kohl
Minas Gerais: Newton Cardoso
Pará: Hildegardo de Figueiredo Nunes
Paraíba: Antônio Roberto de Sousa Paulino
Paraná: Emília de Sales Belinati
Pernambuco: José Mendonça Bezerra Filho
Piauí: Osmar Ribeiro de Almeida Júnior (till 6 November); Felipe Mendes de Oliveira (from 19 November)
Rio de Janeiro: Benedita da Silva
Rio Grande do Norte: Fernando Freire
Rio Grande do Sul: Miguel Soldatelli Rossetto
Rondônia: Miguel de Souza
Roraima: Francisco Flamarion Portela
Santa Catarina: Paulo Roberto Bauer
São Paulo: Geraldo Alckmin (till 6 March); vacant (from 6 March)
Sergipe: Benedito de Figueiredo
Tocantins: João Lisboa da Cruz
Events
December 3 – An airline, Transbrasil was all regular flights cease operation on without license.
Births
June 18 – Gabriel Martinelli, footballer
Deaths
March 6 – Mário Covas, then Governor of São Paulo (b. 1930)
August 10 – Jorge Amado, Brazil's best known modern writer (b. 1912)
October 9 – Roberto de Oliveira Campos, economist (b. 1917)
December 29 – Cássia Eller, musician (b. 1962)
See also
2001 in Brazilian football
2001 in Brazilian television
List of Brazilian films of 2001
== References == | country | {
"answer_start": [
27
],
"text": [
"Brazil"
]
} |
Events in the year 2001 in Brazil.
Incumbents
Federal government
President: Fernando Henrique Cardoso
Vice President: Marco Maciel
Governors
Acre: Jorge Viana
Alagoas: Ronaldo Lessa
Amapa: João Capiberibe
Amazonas: Amazonino Mendes
Bahia: César Borges
Ceará: Tasso Jereissati
Espírito Santo: José Ignácio Ferreira
Goiás: Marconi Perillo
Maranhão: Roseana Sarney
Mato Grosso: Dante de Oliveira then Rogério Salles
Mato Grosso do Sul: José Orcírio Miranda dos Santos
Minas Gerais: Itamar Franco
Pará: Almir Gabriel
Paraíba: José Maranhão
Paraná: Jaime Lerner
Pernambuco: Jarbas Vasconcelos
Piauí:
till 6 November: Mão Santa
9 November-19 November: Kléber Eulálio
from 19 November: Hugo Napoleão
Rio de Janeiro: Anthony Garotinho
Rio Grande do Norte: Garibaldi Alves Filho
Rio Grande do Sul: Olívio Dutra
Rondônia: José de Abreu Bianco
Roraima: Neudo Ribeiro Campos
Santa Catarina: Esperidião Amin
São Paulo: Mário Covas (till 6 March); Geraldo Alckmin (from 6 March)
Sergipe: Albano Franco
Tocantins: José Wilson Siqueira Campos
Vice governors
Acre: Edison Simão Cadaxo
Alagoas: Geraldo Costa Sampaio
Amapá: Maria Dalva de Souza Figueiredo
Amazonas: Samuel Assayag Hanan
Bahia: Otto Alencar
Ceará: Benedito Clayton Veras Alcântara
Espírito Santo: Celso José Vasconcelos
Goiás: Alcides Rodrigues Filho
Maranhão: José Reinaldo Carneiro Tavares
Mato Grosso: José Rogério Sales
Mato Grosso do Sul: Moacir Kohl
Minas Gerais: Newton Cardoso
Pará: Hildegardo de Figueiredo Nunes
Paraíba: Antônio Roberto de Sousa Paulino
Paraná: Emília de Sales Belinati
Pernambuco: José Mendonça Bezerra Filho
Piauí: Osmar Ribeiro de Almeida Júnior (till 6 November); Felipe Mendes de Oliveira (from 19 November)
Rio de Janeiro: Benedita da Silva
Rio Grande do Norte: Fernando Freire
Rio Grande do Sul: Miguel Soldatelli Rossetto
Rondônia: Miguel de Souza
Roraima: Francisco Flamarion Portela
Santa Catarina: Paulo Roberto Bauer
São Paulo: Geraldo Alckmin (till 6 March); vacant (from 6 March)
Sergipe: Benedito de Figueiredo
Tocantins: João Lisboa da Cruz
Events
December 3 – An airline, Transbrasil was all regular flights cease operation on without license.
Births
June 18 – Gabriel Martinelli, footballer
Deaths
March 6 – Mário Covas, then Governor of São Paulo (b. 1930)
August 10 – Jorge Amado, Brazil's best known modern writer (b. 1912)
October 9 – Roberto de Oliveira Campos, economist (b. 1917)
December 29 – Cássia Eller, musician (b. 1962)
See also
2001 in Brazilian football
2001 in Brazilian television
List of Brazilian films of 2001
== References == | Commons category | {
"answer_start": [
19
],
"text": [
"2001 in Brazil"
]
} |
Sunwook Kim (born 1988 in Seoul) is a South Korean pianist living in London. He came to international recognition when he won the prestigious Leeds International Piano Competition in 2006.
Early life
Kim was born in Seoul, South Korea on 22 April 1988. He began studying the piano at the age of three. He gave his debut recital aged ten and this was followed by his concerto debut two years later.
He won the Leeds International Piano Competition aged just 18, becoming the competition's youngest winner for 40 years, as well as its first Asian winner. Kim's performance of Brahms Piano Concerto in D minor with The Hallé and Sir Mark Elder in the competition's final won unanimous praise from the press, and led to concerto engagements with UK's finest orchestras as well as various recitals around Europe.
At the time of the competition, Kim was a student at the Korea National University of Arts under Daejin Kim. He had also previously won the IX Ettlingen Competition and the XVIII Concours Clara Haskil. He was awarded the Artist of the Year prizes from the Daewon Cultural Foundation (2005) and Kumho Asiana Group (2007).
He has received MA degree for conducting from Royal Academy of Music in 2013.
Career
He has established a reputation as one of the finest pianists of his generation, appearing as a concerto soloist in the subscription series of some of the world's leading orchestras, including the London Symphony Orchestra (John Eliot Gardiner, Daniel Harding), Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra (Myung-Whun Chung), Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra (Marek Janowski), Tokyo Philharmonic, NDR Symphony Orchestra, Finnish Radio Symphony, (Sakari Oramo, Andrew Manze, Tugan Sokhiev), Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie Bremen (Paavo Järvi), Philharmonia Orchestra (Vladimir Ashkenazy, Juraj Valčuha, Edward Gardner), London Philharmonic (Vassily Sinaisky), Orchestre philharmonique de Radio France (Myung-Whun Chung, Kwamé Ryan), NHK Symphony (Karl-Heinz Steffens), Hamburger Symphoniker (Guy Braunstein), Hallé Orchestra (Mark Elder), the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra(Kirill Karabits), BBC National Orchestra of Wales, BBC Philharmonic, Royal Scottish National Orchestra, Lausanne Chamber Orchestra and the Aspen Festival Orchestra.
In 2013, Kim made his debut at the BBC Proms with Bournemouth Symphony (Kiril Karabits) performing Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 3. The same year he was selected by the Beethoven-Haus Bonn to become the first beneficiary of its new Mentoring Programme, a status which grants him exclusive access to the house's unique collections and resources.
He has performed chamber music with musicians including Guy Braunstein, Augustin Hadelich, Jian Wang (cellist), Alisa Weilerstein, Nobuko Imai. Recitals to date include the Wigmore Hall in London, regular appearances in the "Piano 4 Etoiles" series at Salle Pleyel, Kioi Hall in Tokyo, Symphony Hall Osaka, Brussels Klara Festival, Brussels Summer Festival, Beethoven-Haus and Beethovenfest in Bonn, Klavier-Festival Ruhr and Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Festspiele.
Recordings
2020 - Brahms: Piano Concerto No.1(Live) (With Myung-whun Chung, Staatskapelle Dresden) & Six Piano Pieces op.118
2017 – Beethoven Piano Sonatas - No. 8 in c minor, Op. 13 (Pathetique), No. 14 in c# minor, Op. 27-2 (Moonlight), Piano Sonata - No. 23 in f minor, op. 57 (Appassionata) - Accentus Music
2016 – Brahms & Franck – Brahms: Piano Sonata No. 3 in F minor, op. 5, Franck, C: Prélude, Choral et Fugue (Franck) – Accentus Music
2015 – Beethoven Piano Sonatas - No. 21 in C major, Op. 53 (Waldstein), No. 29 in B♭ major, Op. 106 (Hammerklavier) - Accentus Music
2014 – Unsuk Chin: Piano Concerto (With Myung-whun Chung, Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra) - Deutsche Grammophon
2013 – Beethoven Piano Concerto No. 5 in E flat major, Op. 73 'Emperor' (With Myung-whun Chung, Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra) - Deutsche Grammophon
International Awards
2004 Ettlingen Competition (Germany) - First prize
2005 Clara Haskil International Piano Competition (Switzerland) - First prize
2006 Leeds International Piano Competition (UK) - First prizeThe CD featuring Unsuk Chin's Piano Concerto won awards from BBC Music Magazine and International Classical Music Awards.
Reviews
"Kim's deep feelings for Franck are obvious in the breadth and emotional resonance he brings to the Prelude, Chorale and Fugue[...] especially striking is the pristine clarity he invests in the score's often murky textures[...] there can be little doubt that Kim will be back to share with us his evolving love of this fantastically challenging music." Gramophone Magazine, 2016 - Brahms & Franck recording
"The Waldstein is altogether quite impressive, with its dazzling opening movement thrown off with apparent ease, the slow introduction to the final admirably sustained, and the controversial blurred pedal effects of the concluding rondo itself intelligently handled." - BBC Music Magazine, 2015 - Beethoven Piano Sonatas recording
"The swell of suspended harmonies was perfectly controlled, the chords perfectly struck and voiced, and Kim always kept the sense of restless searching at just the right level of intensity". George Hall, The Guardian, 2014 - City of London Festival
"Kim repaid the investment by allowing every voice in this concerto to speak, shirking grand gestures and playing with absorbing concentration and nuance." - Neil Fisher, The Times, 2013 - BBC Proms debut at Royal Albert Hall
"The finale benefited from his energetic attack and immaculate fingerwork, while some historically informed touches gave individuality to Karabits's astute management of the orchestral accompaniment." - George Hall, The Guardian, 2013 - BBC Proms debut at Royal Albert Hall
"[Kim] gave a simply astonishing performance. It is rare to hear a performer so aware of the possibilities for intimacy in the Albert Hall's massive acoustic: Kim placed pianissimos always on the edge of disappearance so that the audience almost had to strain to hear; the effect was spellbinding, particularly in the simple but shattering cadenzas of the second movement." Bachtrack., 2013 - BBC Proms debut at Royal Albert Hall
"Virtuosity was kept firmly in check in the finale, Kim's lightness of touch and finesse never less than compelling." 2010 - performance with Philharmonia Orchestra and Vladimir Ashkenazy
References
British Broadcasting Corporation
Concours Clara Haskil prizewinners
Ettlingen Competition prizewinners
Daewon Cultural Foundation
External links
Official website
Askonas Holt Management
Sunwook Kim winning the 2006 Leeds Piano Competition | place of birth | {
"answer_start": [
26
],
"text": [
"Seoul"
]
} |
Sunwook Kim (born 1988 in Seoul) is a South Korean pianist living in London. He came to international recognition when he won the prestigious Leeds International Piano Competition in 2006.
Early life
Kim was born in Seoul, South Korea on 22 April 1988. He began studying the piano at the age of three. He gave his debut recital aged ten and this was followed by his concerto debut two years later.
He won the Leeds International Piano Competition aged just 18, becoming the competition's youngest winner for 40 years, as well as its first Asian winner. Kim's performance of Brahms Piano Concerto in D minor with The Hallé and Sir Mark Elder in the competition's final won unanimous praise from the press, and led to concerto engagements with UK's finest orchestras as well as various recitals around Europe.
At the time of the competition, Kim was a student at the Korea National University of Arts under Daejin Kim. He had also previously won the IX Ettlingen Competition and the XVIII Concours Clara Haskil. He was awarded the Artist of the Year prizes from the Daewon Cultural Foundation (2005) and Kumho Asiana Group (2007).
He has received MA degree for conducting from Royal Academy of Music in 2013.
Career
He has established a reputation as one of the finest pianists of his generation, appearing as a concerto soloist in the subscription series of some of the world's leading orchestras, including the London Symphony Orchestra (John Eliot Gardiner, Daniel Harding), Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra (Myung-Whun Chung), Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra (Marek Janowski), Tokyo Philharmonic, NDR Symphony Orchestra, Finnish Radio Symphony, (Sakari Oramo, Andrew Manze, Tugan Sokhiev), Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie Bremen (Paavo Järvi), Philharmonia Orchestra (Vladimir Ashkenazy, Juraj Valčuha, Edward Gardner), London Philharmonic (Vassily Sinaisky), Orchestre philharmonique de Radio France (Myung-Whun Chung, Kwamé Ryan), NHK Symphony (Karl-Heinz Steffens), Hamburger Symphoniker (Guy Braunstein), Hallé Orchestra (Mark Elder), the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra(Kirill Karabits), BBC National Orchestra of Wales, BBC Philharmonic, Royal Scottish National Orchestra, Lausanne Chamber Orchestra and the Aspen Festival Orchestra.
In 2013, Kim made his debut at the BBC Proms with Bournemouth Symphony (Kiril Karabits) performing Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 3. The same year he was selected by the Beethoven-Haus Bonn to become the first beneficiary of its new Mentoring Programme, a status which grants him exclusive access to the house's unique collections and resources.
He has performed chamber music with musicians including Guy Braunstein, Augustin Hadelich, Jian Wang (cellist), Alisa Weilerstein, Nobuko Imai. Recitals to date include the Wigmore Hall in London, regular appearances in the "Piano 4 Etoiles" series at Salle Pleyel, Kioi Hall in Tokyo, Symphony Hall Osaka, Brussels Klara Festival, Brussels Summer Festival, Beethoven-Haus and Beethovenfest in Bonn, Klavier-Festival Ruhr and Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Festspiele.
Recordings
2020 - Brahms: Piano Concerto No.1(Live) (With Myung-whun Chung, Staatskapelle Dresden) & Six Piano Pieces op.118
2017 – Beethoven Piano Sonatas - No. 8 in c minor, Op. 13 (Pathetique), No. 14 in c# minor, Op. 27-2 (Moonlight), Piano Sonata - No. 23 in f minor, op. 57 (Appassionata) - Accentus Music
2016 – Brahms & Franck – Brahms: Piano Sonata No. 3 in F minor, op. 5, Franck, C: Prélude, Choral et Fugue (Franck) – Accentus Music
2015 – Beethoven Piano Sonatas - No. 21 in C major, Op. 53 (Waldstein), No. 29 in B♭ major, Op. 106 (Hammerklavier) - Accentus Music
2014 – Unsuk Chin: Piano Concerto (With Myung-whun Chung, Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra) - Deutsche Grammophon
2013 – Beethoven Piano Concerto No. 5 in E flat major, Op. 73 'Emperor' (With Myung-whun Chung, Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra) - Deutsche Grammophon
International Awards
2004 Ettlingen Competition (Germany) - First prize
2005 Clara Haskil International Piano Competition (Switzerland) - First prize
2006 Leeds International Piano Competition (UK) - First prizeThe CD featuring Unsuk Chin's Piano Concerto won awards from BBC Music Magazine and International Classical Music Awards.
Reviews
"Kim's deep feelings for Franck are obvious in the breadth and emotional resonance he brings to the Prelude, Chorale and Fugue[...] especially striking is the pristine clarity he invests in the score's often murky textures[...] there can be little doubt that Kim will be back to share with us his evolving love of this fantastically challenging music." Gramophone Magazine, 2016 - Brahms & Franck recording
"The Waldstein is altogether quite impressive, with its dazzling opening movement thrown off with apparent ease, the slow introduction to the final admirably sustained, and the controversial blurred pedal effects of the concluding rondo itself intelligently handled." - BBC Music Magazine, 2015 - Beethoven Piano Sonatas recording
"The swell of suspended harmonies was perfectly controlled, the chords perfectly struck and voiced, and Kim always kept the sense of restless searching at just the right level of intensity". George Hall, The Guardian, 2014 - City of London Festival
"Kim repaid the investment by allowing every voice in this concerto to speak, shirking grand gestures and playing with absorbing concentration and nuance." - Neil Fisher, The Times, 2013 - BBC Proms debut at Royal Albert Hall
"The finale benefited from his energetic attack and immaculate fingerwork, while some historically informed touches gave individuality to Karabits's astute management of the orchestral accompaniment." - George Hall, The Guardian, 2013 - BBC Proms debut at Royal Albert Hall
"[Kim] gave a simply astonishing performance. It is rare to hear a performer so aware of the possibilities for intimacy in the Albert Hall's massive acoustic: Kim placed pianissimos always on the edge of disappearance so that the audience almost had to strain to hear; the effect was spellbinding, particularly in the simple but shattering cadenzas of the second movement." Bachtrack., 2013 - BBC Proms debut at Royal Albert Hall
"Virtuosity was kept firmly in check in the finale, Kim's lightness of touch and finesse never less than compelling." 2010 - performance with Philharmonia Orchestra and Vladimir Ashkenazy
References
British Broadcasting Corporation
Concours Clara Haskil prizewinners
Ettlingen Competition prizewinners
Daewon Cultural Foundation
External links
Official website
Askonas Holt Management
Sunwook Kim winning the 2006 Leeds Piano Competition | country of citizenship | {
"answer_start": [
38
],
"text": [
"South Korea"
]
} |
Sunwook Kim (born 1988 in Seoul) is a South Korean pianist living in London. He came to international recognition when he won the prestigious Leeds International Piano Competition in 2006.
Early life
Kim was born in Seoul, South Korea on 22 April 1988. He began studying the piano at the age of three. He gave his debut recital aged ten and this was followed by his concerto debut two years later.
He won the Leeds International Piano Competition aged just 18, becoming the competition's youngest winner for 40 years, as well as its first Asian winner. Kim's performance of Brahms Piano Concerto in D minor with The Hallé and Sir Mark Elder in the competition's final won unanimous praise from the press, and led to concerto engagements with UK's finest orchestras as well as various recitals around Europe.
At the time of the competition, Kim was a student at the Korea National University of Arts under Daejin Kim. He had also previously won the IX Ettlingen Competition and the XVIII Concours Clara Haskil. He was awarded the Artist of the Year prizes from the Daewon Cultural Foundation (2005) and Kumho Asiana Group (2007).
He has received MA degree for conducting from Royal Academy of Music in 2013.
Career
He has established a reputation as one of the finest pianists of his generation, appearing as a concerto soloist in the subscription series of some of the world's leading orchestras, including the London Symphony Orchestra (John Eliot Gardiner, Daniel Harding), Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra (Myung-Whun Chung), Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra (Marek Janowski), Tokyo Philharmonic, NDR Symphony Orchestra, Finnish Radio Symphony, (Sakari Oramo, Andrew Manze, Tugan Sokhiev), Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie Bremen (Paavo Järvi), Philharmonia Orchestra (Vladimir Ashkenazy, Juraj Valčuha, Edward Gardner), London Philharmonic (Vassily Sinaisky), Orchestre philharmonique de Radio France (Myung-Whun Chung, Kwamé Ryan), NHK Symphony (Karl-Heinz Steffens), Hamburger Symphoniker (Guy Braunstein), Hallé Orchestra (Mark Elder), the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra(Kirill Karabits), BBC National Orchestra of Wales, BBC Philharmonic, Royal Scottish National Orchestra, Lausanne Chamber Orchestra and the Aspen Festival Orchestra.
In 2013, Kim made his debut at the BBC Proms with Bournemouth Symphony (Kiril Karabits) performing Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 3. The same year he was selected by the Beethoven-Haus Bonn to become the first beneficiary of its new Mentoring Programme, a status which grants him exclusive access to the house's unique collections and resources.
He has performed chamber music with musicians including Guy Braunstein, Augustin Hadelich, Jian Wang (cellist), Alisa Weilerstein, Nobuko Imai. Recitals to date include the Wigmore Hall in London, regular appearances in the "Piano 4 Etoiles" series at Salle Pleyel, Kioi Hall in Tokyo, Symphony Hall Osaka, Brussels Klara Festival, Brussels Summer Festival, Beethoven-Haus and Beethovenfest in Bonn, Klavier-Festival Ruhr and Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Festspiele.
Recordings
2020 - Brahms: Piano Concerto No.1(Live) (With Myung-whun Chung, Staatskapelle Dresden) & Six Piano Pieces op.118
2017 – Beethoven Piano Sonatas - No. 8 in c minor, Op. 13 (Pathetique), No. 14 in c# minor, Op. 27-2 (Moonlight), Piano Sonata - No. 23 in f minor, op. 57 (Appassionata) - Accentus Music
2016 – Brahms & Franck – Brahms: Piano Sonata No. 3 in F minor, op. 5, Franck, C: Prélude, Choral et Fugue (Franck) – Accentus Music
2015 – Beethoven Piano Sonatas - No. 21 in C major, Op. 53 (Waldstein), No. 29 in B♭ major, Op. 106 (Hammerklavier) - Accentus Music
2014 – Unsuk Chin: Piano Concerto (With Myung-whun Chung, Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra) - Deutsche Grammophon
2013 – Beethoven Piano Concerto No. 5 in E flat major, Op. 73 'Emperor' (With Myung-whun Chung, Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra) - Deutsche Grammophon
International Awards
2004 Ettlingen Competition (Germany) - First prize
2005 Clara Haskil International Piano Competition (Switzerland) - First prize
2006 Leeds International Piano Competition (UK) - First prizeThe CD featuring Unsuk Chin's Piano Concerto won awards from BBC Music Magazine and International Classical Music Awards.
Reviews
"Kim's deep feelings for Franck are obvious in the breadth and emotional resonance he brings to the Prelude, Chorale and Fugue[...] especially striking is the pristine clarity he invests in the score's often murky textures[...] there can be little doubt that Kim will be back to share with us his evolving love of this fantastically challenging music." Gramophone Magazine, 2016 - Brahms & Franck recording
"The Waldstein is altogether quite impressive, with its dazzling opening movement thrown off with apparent ease, the slow introduction to the final admirably sustained, and the controversial blurred pedal effects of the concluding rondo itself intelligently handled." - BBC Music Magazine, 2015 - Beethoven Piano Sonatas recording
"The swell of suspended harmonies was perfectly controlled, the chords perfectly struck and voiced, and Kim always kept the sense of restless searching at just the right level of intensity". George Hall, The Guardian, 2014 - City of London Festival
"Kim repaid the investment by allowing every voice in this concerto to speak, shirking grand gestures and playing with absorbing concentration and nuance." - Neil Fisher, The Times, 2013 - BBC Proms debut at Royal Albert Hall
"The finale benefited from his energetic attack and immaculate fingerwork, while some historically informed touches gave individuality to Karabits's astute management of the orchestral accompaniment." - George Hall, The Guardian, 2013 - BBC Proms debut at Royal Albert Hall
"[Kim] gave a simply astonishing performance. It is rare to hear a performer so aware of the possibilities for intimacy in the Albert Hall's massive acoustic: Kim placed pianissimos always on the edge of disappearance so that the audience almost had to strain to hear; the effect was spellbinding, particularly in the simple but shattering cadenzas of the second movement." Bachtrack., 2013 - BBC Proms debut at Royal Albert Hall
"Virtuosity was kept firmly in check in the finale, Kim's lightness of touch and finesse never less than compelling." 2010 - performance with Philharmonia Orchestra and Vladimir Ashkenazy
References
British Broadcasting Corporation
Concours Clara Haskil prizewinners
Ettlingen Competition prizewinners
Daewon Cultural Foundation
External links
Official website
Askonas Holt Management
Sunwook Kim winning the 2006 Leeds Piano Competition | educated at | {
"answer_start": [
866
],
"text": [
"Korea National University of Arts"
]
} |
Sunwook Kim (born 1988 in Seoul) is a South Korean pianist living in London. He came to international recognition when he won the prestigious Leeds International Piano Competition in 2006.
Early life
Kim was born in Seoul, South Korea on 22 April 1988. He began studying the piano at the age of three. He gave his debut recital aged ten and this was followed by his concerto debut two years later.
He won the Leeds International Piano Competition aged just 18, becoming the competition's youngest winner for 40 years, as well as its first Asian winner. Kim's performance of Brahms Piano Concerto in D minor with The Hallé and Sir Mark Elder in the competition's final won unanimous praise from the press, and led to concerto engagements with UK's finest orchestras as well as various recitals around Europe.
At the time of the competition, Kim was a student at the Korea National University of Arts under Daejin Kim. He had also previously won the IX Ettlingen Competition and the XVIII Concours Clara Haskil. He was awarded the Artist of the Year prizes from the Daewon Cultural Foundation (2005) and Kumho Asiana Group (2007).
He has received MA degree for conducting from Royal Academy of Music in 2013.
Career
He has established a reputation as one of the finest pianists of his generation, appearing as a concerto soloist in the subscription series of some of the world's leading orchestras, including the London Symphony Orchestra (John Eliot Gardiner, Daniel Harding), Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra (Myung-Whun Chung), Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra (Marek Janowski), Tokyo Philharmonic, NDR Symphony Orchestra, Finnish Radio Symphony, (Sakari Oramo, Andrew Manze, Tugan Sokhiev), Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie Bremen (Paavo Järvi), Philharmonia Orchestra (Vladimir Ashkenazy, Juraj Valčuha, Edward Gardner), London Philharmonic (Vassily Sinaisky), Orchestre philharmonique de Radio France (Myung-Whun Chung, Kwamé Ryan), NHK Symphony (Karl-Heinz Steffens), Hamburger Symphoniker (Guy Braunstein), Hallé Orchestra (Mark Elder), the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra(Kirill Karabits), BBC National Orchestra of Wales, BBC Philharmonic, Royal Scottish National Orchestra, Lausanne Chamber Orchestra and the Aspen Festival Orchestra.
In 2013, Kim made his debut at the BBC Proms with Bournemouth Symphony (Kiril Karabits) performing Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 3. The same year he was selected by the Beethoven-Haus Bonn to become the first beneficiary of its new Mentoring Programme, a status which grants him exclusive access to the house's unique collections and resources.
He has performed chamber music with musicians including Guy Braunstein, Augustin Hadelich, Jian Wang (cellist), Alisa Weilerstein, Nobuko Imai. Recitals to date include the Wigmore Hall in London, regular appearances in the "Piano 4 Etoiles" series at Salle Pleyel, Kioi Hall in Tokyo, Symphony Hall Osaka, Brussels Klara Festival, Brussels Summer Festival, Beethoven-Haus and Beethovenfest in Bonn, Klavier-Festival Ruhr and Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Festspiele.
Recordings
2020 - Brahms: Piano Concerto No.1(Live) (With Myung-whun Chung, Staatskapelle Dresden) & Six Piano Pieces op.118
2017 – Beethoven Piano Sonatas - No. 8 in c minor, Op. 13 (Pathetique), No. 14 in c# minor, Op. 27-2 (Moonlight), Piano Sonata - No. 23 in f minor, op. 57 (Appassionata) - Accentus Music
2016 – Brahms & Franck – Brahms: Piano Sonata No. 3 in F minor, op. 5, Franck, C: Prélude, Choral et Fugue (Franck) – Accentus Music
2015 – Beethoven Piano Sonatas - No. 21 in C major, Op. 53 (Waldstein), No. 29 in B♭ major, Op. 106 (Hammerklavier) - Accentus Music
2014 – Unsuk Chin: Piano Concerto (With Myung-whun Chung, Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra) - Deutsche Grammophon
2013 – Beethoven Piano Concerto No. 5 in E flat major, Op. 73 'Emperor' (With Myung-whun Chung, Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra) - Deutsche Grammophon
International Awards
2004 Ettlingen Competition (Germany) - First prize
2005 Clara Haskil International Piano Competition (Switzerland) - First prize
2006 Leeds International Piano Competition (UK) - First prizeThe CD featuring Unsuk Chin's Piano Concerto won awards from BBC Music Magazine and International Classical Music Awards.
Reviews
"Kim's deep feelings for Franck are obvious in the breadth and emotional resonance he brings to the Prelude, Chorale and Fugue[...] especially striking is the pristine clarity he invests in the score's often murky textures[...] there can be little doubt that Kim will be back to share with us his evolving love of this fantastically challenging music." Gramophone Magazine, 2016 - Brahms & Franck recording
"The Waldstein is altogether quite impressive, with its dazzling opening movement thrown off with apparent ease, the slow introduction to the final admirably sustained, and the controversial blurred pedal effects of the concluding rondo itself intelligently handled." - BBC Music Magazine, 2015 - Beethoven Piano Sonatas recording
"The swell of suspended harmonies was perfectly controlled, the chords perfectly struck and voiced, and Kim always kept the sense of restless searching at just the right level of intensity". George Hall, The Guardian, 2014 - City of London Festival
"Kim repaid the investment by allowing every voice in this concerto to speak, shirking grand gestures and playing with absorbing concentration and nuance." - Neil Fisher, The Times, 2013 - BBC Proms debut at Royal Albert Hall
"The finale benefited from his energetic attack and immaculate fingerwork, while some historically informed touches gave individuality to Karabits's astute management of the orchestral accompaniment." - George Hall, The Guardian, 2013 - BBC Proms debut at Royal Albert Hall
"[Kim] gave a simply astonishing performance. It is rare to hear a performer so aware of the possibilities for intimacy in the Albert Hall's massive acoustic: Kim placed pianissimos always on the edge of disappearance so that the audience almost had to strain to hear; the effect was spellbinding, particularly in the simple but shattering cadenzas of the second movement." Bachtrack., 2013 - BBC Proms debut at Royal Albert Hall
"Virtuosity was kept firmly in check in the finale, Kim's lightness of touch and finesse never less than compelling." 2010 - performance with Philharmonia Orchestra and Vladimir Ashkenazy
References
British Broadcasting Corporation
Concours Clara Haskil prizewinners
Ettlingen Competition prizewinners
Daewon Cultural Foundation
External links
Official website
Askonas Holt Management
Sunwook Kim winning the 2006 Leeds Piano Competition | native language | {
"answer_start": [
44
],
"text": [
"Korean"
]
} |
Sunwook Kim (born 1988 in Seoul) is a South Korean pianist living in London. He came to international recognition when he won the prestigious Leeds International Piano Competition in 2006.
Early life
Kim was born in Seoul, South Korea on 22 April 1988. He began studying the piano at the age of three. He gave his debut recital aged ten and this was followed by his concerto debut two years later.
He won the Leeds International Piano Competition aged just 18, becoming the competition's youngest winner for 40 years, as well as its first Asian winner. Kim's performance of Brahms Piano Concerto in D minor with The Hallé and Sir Mark Elder in the competition's final won unanimous praise from the press, and led to concerto engagements with UK's finest orchestras as well as various recitals around Europe.
At the time of the competition, Kim was a student at the Korea National University of Arts under Daejin Kim. He had also previously won the IX Ettlingen Competition and the XVIII Concours Clara Haskil. He was awarded the Artist of the Year prizes from the Daewon Cultural Foundation (2005) and Kumho Asiana Group (2007).
He has received MA degree for conducting from Royal Academy of Music in 2013.
Career
He has established a reputation as one of the finest pianists of his generation, appearing as a concerto soloist in the subscription series of some of the world's leading orchestras, including the London Symphony Orchestra (John Eliot Gardiner, Daniel Harding), Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra (Myung-Whun Chung), Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra (Marek Janowski), Tokyo Philharmonic, NDR Symphony Orchestra, Finnish Radio Symphony, (Sakari Oramo, Andrew Manze, Tugan Sokhiev), Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie Bremen (Paavo Järvi), Philharmonia Orchestra (Vladimir Ashkenazy, Juraj Valčuha, Edward Gardner), London Philharmonic (Vassily Sinaisky), Orchestre philharmonique de Radio France (Myung-Whun Chung, Kwamé Ryan), NHK Symphony (Karl-Heinz Steffens), Hamburger Symphoniker (Guy Braunstein), Hallé Orchestra (Mark Elder), the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra(Kirill Karabits), BBC National Orchestra of Wales, BBC Philharmonic, Royal Scottish National Orchestra, Lausanne Chamber Orchestra and the Aspen Festival Orchestra.
In 2013, Kim made his debut at the BBC Proms with Bournemouth Symphony (Kiril Karabits) performing Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 3. The same year he was selected by the Beethoven-Haus Bonn to become the first beneficiary of its new Mentoring Programme, a status which grants him exclusive access to the house's unique collections and resources.
He has performed chamber music with musicians including Guy Braunstein, Augustin Hadelich, Jian Wang (cellist), Alisa Weilerstein, Nobuko Imai. Recitals to date include the Wigmore Hall in London, regular appearances in the "Piano 4 Etoiles" series at Salle Pleyel, Kioi Hall in Tokyo, Symphony Hall Osaka, Brussels Klara Festival, Brussels Summer Festival, Beethoven-Haus and Beethovenfest in Bonn, Klavier-Festival Ruhr and Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Festspiele.
Recordings
2020 - Brahms: Piano Concerto No.1(Live) (With Myung-whun Chung, Staatskapelle Dresden) & Six Piano Pieces op.118
2017 – Beethoven Piano Sonatas - No. 8 in c minor, Op. 13 (Pathetique), No. 14 in c# minor, Op. 27-2 (Moonlight), Piano Sonata - No. 23 in f minor, op. 57 (Appassionata) - Accentus Music
2016 – Brahms & Franck – Brahms: Piano Sonata No. 3 in F minor, op. 5, Franck, C: Prélude, Choral et Fugue (Franck) – Accentus Music
2015 – Beethoven Piano Sonatas - No. 21 in C major, Op. 53 (Waldstein), No. 29 in B♭ major, Op. 106 (Hammerklavier) - Accentus Music
2014 – Unsuk Chin: Piano Concerto (With Myung-whun Chung, Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra) - Deutsche Grammophon
2013 – Beethoven Piano Concerto No. 5 in E flat major, Op. 73 'Emperor' (With Myung-whun Chung, Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra) - Deutsche Grammophon
International Awards
2004 Ettlingen Competition (Germany) - First prize
2005 Clara Haskil International Piano Competition (Switzerland) - First prize
2006 Leeds International Piano Competition (UK) - First prizeThe CD featuring Unsuk Chin's Piano Concerto won awards from BBC Music Magazine and International Classical Music Awards.
Reviews
"Kim's deep feelings for Franck are obvious in the breadth and emotional resonance he brings to the Prelude, Chorale and Fugue[...] especially striking is the pristine clarity he invests in the score's often murky textures[...] there can be little doubt that Kim will be back to share with us his evolving love of this fantastically challenging music." Gramophone Magazine, 2016 - Brahms & Franck recording
"The Waldstein is altogether quite impressive, with its dazzling opening movement thrown off with apparent ease, the slow introduction to the final admirably sustained, and the controversial blurred pedal effects of the concluding rondo itself intelligently handled." - BBC Music Magazine, 2015 - Beethoven Piano Sonatas recording
"The swell of suspended harmonies was perfectly controlled, the chords perfectly struck and voiced, and Kim always kept the sense of restless searching at just the right level of intensity". George Hall, The Guardian, 2014 - City of London Festival
"Kim repaid the investment by allowing every voice in this concerto to speak, shirking grand gestures and playing with absorbing concentration and nuance." - Neil Fisher, The Times, 2013 - BBC Proms debut at Royal Albert Hall
"The finale benefited from his energetic attack and immaculate fingerwork, while some historically informed touches gave individuality to Karabits's astute management of the orchestral accompaniment." - George Hall, The Guardian, 2013 - BBC Proms debut at Royal Albert Hall
"[Kim] gave a simply astonishing performance. It is rare to hear a performer so aware of the possibilities for intimacy in the Albert Hall's massive acoustic: Kim placed pianissimos always on the edge of disappearance so that the audience almost had to strain to hear; the effect was spellbinding, particularly in the simple but shattering cadenzas of the second movement." Bachtrack., 2013 - BBC Proms debut at Royal Albert Hall
"Virtuosity was kept firmly in check in the finale, Kim's lightness of touch and finesse never less than compelling." 2010 - performance with Philharmonia Orchestra and Vladimir Ashkenazy
References
British Broadcasting Corporation
Concours Clara Haskil prizewinners
Ettlingen Competition prizewinners
Daewon Cultural Foundation
External links
Official website
Askonas Holt Management
Sunwook Kim winning the 2006 Leeds Piano Competition | occupation | {
"answer_start": [
51
],
"text": [
"pianist"
]
} |
Sunwook Kim (born 1988 in Seoul) is a South Korean pianist living in London. He came to international recognition when he won the prestigious Leeds International Piano Competition in 2006.
Early life
Kim was born in Seoul, South Korea on 22 April 1988. He began studying the piano at the age of three. He gave his debut recital aged ten and this was followed by his concerto debut two years later.
He won the Leeds International Piano Competition aged just 18, becoming the competition's youngest winner for 40 years, as well as its first Asian winner. Kim's performance of Brahms Piano Concerto in D minor with The Hallé and Sir Mark Elder in the competition's final won unanimous praise from the press, and led to concerto engagements with UK's finest orchestras as well as various recitals around Europe.
At the time of the competition, Kim was a student at the Korea National University of Arts under Daejin Kim. He had also previously won the IX Ettlingen Competition and the XVIII Concours Clara Haskil. He was awarded the Artist of the Year prizes from the Daewon Cultural Foundation (2005) and Kumho Asiana Group (2007).
He has received MA degree for conducting from Royal Academy of Music in 2013.
Career
He has established a reputation as one of the finest pianists of his generation, appearing as a concerto soloist in the subscription series of some of the world's leading orchestras, including the London Symphony Orchestra (John Eliot Gardiner, Daniel Harding), Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra (Myung-Whun Chung), Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra (Marek Janowski), Tokyo Philharmonic, NDR Symphony Orchestra, Finnish Radio Symphony, (Sakari Oramo, Andrew Manze, Tugan Sokhiev), Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie Bremen (Paavo Järvi), Philharmonia Orchestra (Vladimir Ashkenazy, Juraj Valčuha, Edward Gardner), London Philharmonic (Vassily Sinaisky), Orchestre philharmonique de Radio France (Myung-Whun Chung, Kwamé Ryan), NHK Symphony (Karl-Heinz Steffens), Hamburger Symphoniker (Guy Braunstein), Hallé Orchestra (Mark Elder), the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra(Kirill Karabits), BBC National Orchestra of Wales, BBC Philharmonic, Royal Scottish National Orchestra, Lausanne Chamber Orchestra and the Aspen Festival Orchestra.
In 2013, Kim made his debut at the BBC Proms with Bournemouth Symphony (Kiril Karabits) performing Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 3. The same year he was selected by the Beethoven-Haus Bonn to become the first beneficiary of its new Mentoring Programme, a status which grants him exclusive access to the house's unique collections and resources.
He has performed chamber music with musicians including Guy Braunstein, Augustin Hadelich, Jian Wang (cellist), Alisa Weilerstein, Nobuko Imai. Recitals to date include the Wigmore Hall in London, regular appearances in the "Piano 4 Etoiles" series at Salle Pleyel, Kioi Hall in Tokyo, Symphony Hall Osaka, Brussels Klara Festival, Brussels Summer Festival, Beethoven-Haus and Beethovenfest in Bonn, Klavier-Festival Ruhr and Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Festspiele.
Recordings
2020 - Brahms: Piano Concerto No.1(Live) (With Myung-whun Chung, Staatskapelle Dresden) & Six Piano Pieces op.118
2017 – Beethoven Piano Sonatas - No. 8 in c minor, Op. 13 (Pathetique), No. 14 in c# minor, Op. 27-2 (Moonlight), Piano Sonata - No. 23 in f minor, op. 57 (Appassionata) - Accentus Music
2016 – Brahms & Franck – Brahms: Piano Sonata No. 3 in F minor, op. 5, Franck, C: Prélude, Choral et Fugue (Franck) – Accentus Music
2015 – Beethoven Piano Sonatas - No. 21 in C major, Op. 53 (Waldstein), No. 29 in B♭ major, Op. 106 (Hammerklavier) - Accentus Music
2014 – Unsuk Chin: Piano Concerto (With Myung-whun Chung, Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra) - Deutsche Grammophon
2013 – Beethoven Piano Concerto No. 5 in E flat major, Op. 73 'Emperor' (With Myung-whun Chung, Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra) - Deutsche Grammophon
International Awards
2004 Ettlingen Competition (Germany) - First prize
2005 Clara Haskil International Piano Competition (Switzerland) - First prize
2006 Leeds International Piano Competition (UK) - First prizeThe CD featuring Unsuk Chin's Piano Concerto won awards from BBC Music Magazine and International Classical Music Awards.
Reviews
"Kim's deep feelings for Franck are obvious in the breadth and emotional resonance he brings to the Prelude, Chorale and Fugue[...] especially striking is the pristine clarity he invests in the score's often murky textures[...] there can be little doubt that Kim will be back to share with us his evolving love of this fantastically challenging music." Gramophone Magazine, 2016 - Brahms & Franck recording
"The Waldstein is altogether quite impressive, with its dazzling opening movement thrown off with apparent ease, the slow introduction to the final admirably sustained, and the controversial blurred pedal effects of the concluding rondo itself intelligently handled." - BBC Music Magazine, 2015 - Beethoven Piano Sonatas recording
"The swell of suspended harmonies was perfectly controlled, the chords perfectly struck and voiced, and Kim always kept the sense of restless searching at just the right level of intensity". George Hall, The Guardian, 2014 - City of London Festival
"Kim repaid the investment by allowing every voice in this concerto to speak, shirking grand gestures and playing with absorbing concentration and nuance." - Neil Fisher, The Times, 2013 - BBC Proms debut at Royal Albert Hall
"The finale benefited from his energetic attack and immaculate fingerwork, while some historically informed touches gave individuality to Karabits's astute management of the orchestral accompaniment." - George Hall, The Guardian, 2013 - BBC Proms debut at Royal Albert Hall
"[Kim] gave a simply astonishing performance. It is rare to hear a performer so aware of the possibilities for intimacy in the Albert Hall's massive acoustic: Kim placed pianissimos always on the edge of disappearance so that the audience almost had to strain to hear; the effect was spellbinding, particularly in the simple but shattering cadenzas of the second movement." Bachtrack., 2013 - BBC Proms debut at Royal Albert Hall
"Virtuosity was kept firmly in check in the finale, Kim's lightness of touch and finesse never less than compelling." 2010 - performance with Philharmonia Orchestra and Vladimir Ashkenazy
References
British Broadcasting Corporation
Concours Clara Haskil prizewinners
Ettlingen Competition prizewinners
Daewon Cultural Foundation
External links
Official website
Askonas Holt Management
Sunwook Kim winning the 2006 Leeds Piano Competition | family name | {
"answer_start": [
8
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"text": [
"Kim"
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} |
Sunwook Kim (born 1988 in Seoul) is a South Korean pianist living in London. He came to international recognition when he won the prestigious Leeds International Piano Competition in 2006.
Early life
Kim was born in Seoul, South Korea on 22 April 1988. He began studying the piano at the age of three. He gave his debut recital aged ten and this was followed by his concerto debut two years later.
He won the Leeds International Piano Competition aged just 18, becoming the competition's youngest winner for 40 years, as well as its first Asian winner. Kim's performance of Brahms Piano Concerto in D minor with The Hallé and Sir Mark Elder in the competition's final won unanimous praise from the press, and led to concerto engagements with UK's finest orchestras as well as various recitals around Europe.
At the time of the competition, Kim was a student at the Korea National University of Arts under Daejin Kim. He had also previously won the IX Ettlingen Competition and the XVIII Concours Clara Haskil. He was awarded the Artist of the Year prizes from the Daewon Cultural Foundation (2005) and Kumho Asiana Group (2007).
He has received MA degree for conducting from Royal Academy of Music in 2013.
Career
He has established a reputation as one of the finest pianists of his generation, appearing as a concerto soloist in the subscription series of some of the world's leading orchestras, including the London Symphony Orchestra (John Eliot Gardiner, Daniel Harding), Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra (Myung-Whun Chung), Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra (Marek Janowski), Tokyo Philharmonic, NDR Symphony Orchestra, Finnish Radio Symphony, (Sakari Oramo, Andrew Manze, Tugan Sokhiev), Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie Bremen (Paavo Järvi), Philharmonia Orchestra (Vladimir Ashkenazy, Juraj Valčuha, Edward Gardner), London Philharmonic (Vassily Sinaisky), Orchestre philharmonique de Radio France (Myung-Whun Chung, Kwamé Ryan), NHK Symphony (Karl-Heinz Steffens), Hamburger Symphoniker (Guy Braunstein), Hallé Orchestra (Mark Elder), the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra(Kirill Karabits), BBC National Orchestra of Wales, BBC Philharmonic, Royal Scottish National Orchestra, Lausanne Chamber Orchestra and the Aspen Festival Orchestra.
In 2013, Kim made his debut at the BBC Proms with Bournemouth Symphony (Kiril Karabits) performing Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 3. The same year he was selected by the Beethoven-Haus Bonn to become the first beneficiary of its new Mentoring Programme, a status which grants him exclusive access to the house's unique collections and resources.
He has performed chamber music with musicians including Guy Braunstein, Augustin Hadelich, Jian Wang (cellist), Alisa Weilerstein, Nobuko Imai. Recitals to date include the Wigmore Hall in London, regular appearances in the "Piano 4 Etoiles" series at Salle Pleyel, Kioi Hall in Tokyo, Symphony Hall Osaka, Brussels Klara Festival, Brussels Summer Festival, Beethoven-Haus and Beethovenfest in Bonn, Klavier-Festival Ruhr and Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Festspiele.
Recordings
2020 - Brahms: Piano Concerto No.1(Live) (With Myung-whun Chung, Staatskapelle Dresden) & Six Piano Pieces op.118
2017 – Beethoven Piano Sonatas - No. 8 in c minor, Op. 13 (Pathetique), No. 14 in c# minor, Op. 27-2 (Moonlight), Piano Sonata - No. 23 in f minor, op. 57 (Appassionata) - Accentus Music
2016 – Brahms & Franck – Brahms: Piano Sonata No. 3 in F minor, op. 5, Franck, C: Prélude, Choral et Fugue (Franck) – Accentus Music
2015 – Beethoven Piano Sonatas - No. 21 in C major, Op. 53 (Waldstein), No. 29 in B♭ major, Op. 106 (Hammerklavier) - Accentus Music
2014 – Unsuk Chin: Piano Concerto (With Myung-whun Chung, Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra) - Deutsche Grammophon
2013 – Beethoven Piano Concerto No. 5 in E flat major, Op. 73 'Emperor' (With Myung-whun Chung, Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra) - Deutsche Grammophon
International Awards
2004 Ettlingen Competition (Germany) - First prize
2005 Clara Haskil International Piano Competition (Switzerland) - First prize
2006 Leeds International Piano Competition (UK) - First prizeThe CD featuring Unsuk Chin's Piano Concerto won awards from BBC Music Magazine and International Classical Music Awards.
Reviews
"Kim's deep feelings for Franck are obvious in the breadth and emotional resonance he brings to the Prelude, Chorale and Fugue[...] especially striking is the pristine clarity he invests in the score's often murky textures[...] there can be little doubt that Kim will be back to share with us his evolving love of this fantastically challenging music." Gramophone Magazine, 2016 - Brahms & Franck recording
"The Waldstein is altogether quite impressive, with its dazzling opening movement thrown off with apparent ease, the slow introduction to the final admirably sustained, and the controversial blurred pedal effects of the concluding rondo itself intelligently handled." - BBC Music Magazine, 2015 - Beethoven Piano Sonatas recording
"The swell of suspended harmonies was perfectly controlled, the chords perfectly struck and voiced, and Kim always kept the sense of restless searching at just the right level of intensity". George Hall, The Guardian, 2014 - City of London Festival
"Kim repaid the investment by allowing every voice in this concerto to speak, shirking grand gestures and playing with absorbing concentration and nuance." - Neil Fisher, The Times, 2013 - BBC Proms debut at Royal Albert Hall
"The finale benefited from his energetic attack and immaculate fingerwork, while some historically informed touches gave individuality to Karabits's astute management of the orchestral accompaniment." - George Hall, The Guardian, 2013 - BBC Proms debut at Royal Albert Hall
"[Kim] gave a simply astonishing performance. It is rare to hear a performer so aware of the possibilities for intimacy in the Albert Hall's massive acoustic: Kim placed pianissimos always on the edge of disappearance so that the audience almost had to strain to hear; the effect was spellbinding, particularly in the simple but shattering cadenzas of the second movement." Bachtrack., 2013 - BBC Proms debut at Royal Albert Hall
"Virtuosity was kept firmly in check in the finale, Kim's lightness of touch and finesse never less than compelling." 2010 - performance with Philharmonia Orchestra and Vladimir Ashkenazy
References
British Broadcasting Corporation
Concours Clara Haskil prizewinners
Ettlingen Competition prizewinners
Daewon Cultural Foundation
External links
Official website
Askonas Holt Management
Sunwook Kim winning the 2006 Leeds Piano Competition | instrument | {
"answer_start": [
276
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"text": [
"piano"
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} |
Sunwook Kim (born 1988 in Seoul) is a South Korean pianist living in London. He came to international recognition when he won the prestigious Leeds International Piano Competition in 2006.
Early life
Kim was born in Seoul, South Korea on 22 April 1988. He began studying the piano at the age of three. He gave his debut recital aged ten and this was followed by his concerto debut two years later.
He won the Leeds International Piano Competition aged just 18, becoming the competition's youngest winner for 40 years, as well as its first Asian winner. Kim's performance of Brahms Piano Concerto in D minor with The Hallé and Sir Mark Elder in the competition's final won unanimous praise from the press, and led to concerto engagements with UK's finest orchestras as well as various recitals around Europe.
At the time of the competition, Kim was a student at the Korea National University of Arts under Daejin Kim. He had also previously won the IX Ettlingen Competition and the XVIII Concours Clara Haskil. He was awarded the Artist of the Year prizes from the Daewon Cultural Foundation (2005) and Kumho Asiana Group (2007).
He has received MA degree for conducting from Royal Academy of Music in 2013.
Career
He has established a reputation as one of the finest pianists of his generation, appearing as a concerto soloist in the subscription series of some of the world's leading orchestras, including the London Symphony Orchestra (John Eliot Gardiner, Daniel Harding), Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra (Myung-Whun Chung), Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra (Marek Janowski), Tokyo Philharmonic, NDR Symphony Orchestra, Finnish Radio Symphony, (Sakari Oramo, Andrew Manze, Tugan Sokhiev), Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie Bremen (Paavo Järvi), Philharmonia Orchestra (Vladimir Ashkenazy, Juraj Valčuha, Edward Gardner), London Philharmonic (Vassily Sinaisky), Orchestre philharmonique de Radio France (Myung-Whun Chung, Kwamé Ryan), NHK Symphony (Karl-Heinz Steffens), Hamburger Symphoniker (Guy Braunstein), Hallé Orchestra (Mark Elder), the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra(Kirill Karabits), BBC National Orchestra of Wales, BBC Philharmonic, Royal Scottish National Orchestra, Lausanne Chamber Orchestra and the Aspen Festival Orchestra.
In 2013, Kim made his debut at the BBC Proms with Bournemouth Symphony (Kiril Karabits) performing Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 3. The same year he was selected by the Beethoven-Haus Bonn to become the first beneficiary of its new Mentoring Programme, a status which grants him exclusive access to the house's unique collections and resources.
He has performed chamber music with musicians including Guy Braunstein, Augustin Hadelich, Jian Wang (cellist), Alisa Weilerstein, Nobuko Imai. Recitals to date include the Wigmore Hall in London, regular appearances in the "Piano 4 Etoiles" series at Salle Pleyel, Kioi Hall in Tokyo, Symphony Hall Osaka, Brussels Klara Festival, Brussels Summer Festival, Beethoven-Haus and Beethovenfest in Bonn, Klavier-Festival Ruhr and Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Festspiele.
Recordings
2020 - Brahms: Piano Concerto No.1(Live) (With Myung-whun Chung, Staatskapelle Dresden) & Six Piano Pieces op.118
2017 – Beethoven Piano Sonatas - No. 8 in c minor, Op. 13 (Pathetique), No. 14 in c# minor, Op. 27-2 (Moonlight), Piano Sonata - No. 23 in f minor, op. 57 (Appassionata) - Accentus Music
2016 – Brahms & Franck – Brahms: Piano Sonata No. 3 in F minor, op. 5, Franck, C: Prélude, Choral et Fugue (Franck) – Accentus Music
2015 – Beethoven Piano Sonatas - No. 21 in C major, Op. 53 (Waldstein), No. 29 in B♭ major, Op. 106 (Hammerklavier) - Accentus Music
2014 – Unsuk Chin: Piano Concerto (With Myung-whun Chung, Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra) - Deutsche Grammophon
2013 – Beethoven Piano Concerto No. 5 in E flat major, Op. 73 'Emperor' (With Myung-whun Chung, Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra) - Deutsche Grammophon
International Awards
2004 Ettlingen Competition (Germany) - First prize
2005 Clara Haskil International Piano Competition (Switzerland) - First prize
2006 Leeds International Piano Competition (UK) - First prizeThe CD featuring Unsuk Chin's Piano Concerto won awards from BBC Music Magazine and International Classical Music Awards.
Reviews
"Kim's deep feelings for Franck are obvious in the breadth and emotional resonance he brings to the Prelude, Chorale and Fugue[...] especially striking is the pristine clarity he invests in the score's often murky textures[...] there can be little doubt that Kim will be back to share with us his evolving love of this fantastically challenging music." Gramophone Magazine, 2016 - Brahms & Franck recording
"The Waldstein is altogether quite impressive, with its dazzling opening movement thrown off with apparent ease, the slow introduction to the final admirably sustained, and the controversial blurred pedal effects of the concluding rondo itself intelligently handled." - BBC Music Magazine, 2015 - Beethoven Piano Sonatas recording
"The swell of suspended harmonies was perfectly controlled, the chords perfectly struck and voiced, and Kim always kept the sense of restless searching at just the right level of intensity". George Hall, The Guardian, 2014 - City of London Festival
"Kim repaid the investment by allowing every voice in this concerto to speak, shirking grand gestures and playing with absorbing concentration and nuance." - Neil Fisher, The Times, 2013 - BBC Proms debut at Royal Albert Hall
"The finale benefited from his energetic attack and immaculate fingerwork, while some historically informed touches gave individuality to Karabits's astute management of the orchestral accompaniment." - George Hall, The Guardian, 2013 - BBC Proms debut at Royal Albert Hall
"[Kim] gave a simply astonishing performance. It is rare to hear a performer so aware of the possibilities for intimacy in the Albert Hall's massive acoustic: Kim placed pianissimos always on the edge of disappearance so that the audience almost had to strain to hear; the effect was spellbinding, particularly in the simple but shattering cadenzas of the second movement." Bachtrack., 2013 - BBC Proms debut at Royal Albert Hall
"Virtuosity was kept firmly in check in the finale, Kim's lightness of touch and finesse never less than compelling." 2010 - performance with Philharmonia Orchestra and Vladimir Ashkenazy
References
British Broadcasting Corporation
Concours Clara Haskil prizewinners
Ettlingen Competition prizewinners
Daewon Cultural Foundation
External links
Official website
Askonas Holt Management
Sunwook Kim winning the 2006 Leeds Piano Competition | languages spoken, written or signed | {
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Peter Donalek from the MWH Global, Chicago, IL was named Fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) in 2014 for contributions to grid-connected pumped storage hydro systems.
References
External links
IEEE Explore Bio | given name | {
"answer_start": [
0
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"text": [
"Peter"
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Mare Island Lighthouse was a lighthouse in California, United States, on the north shore of San Pablo Bay at the entrance to Carquinez Strait, California.
History
Mare Island Light was built in 1873, deactivated in 1917, and demolished in the 1930s. The lighthouse was designed by Paul J. Pelz, who also designed Mare Island's sister stations, Point Fermin Light in San Pedro CA, East Brother Island Light in Richmond, California, Point Hueneme Light in California (replaced in 1940), Hereford Inlet Light in North Wildwood, New Jersey, and Point Adams Light in Washington State (burned down by the Lighthouse Service in 1912), all in essentially the same style.The United States Lighthouse Board later realized that a light positioned offshore near the junction of the strait and river would better serve navigation in the area. The Carquinez Strait Light opened in 1909 to replace this light in purpose, but in an offshore location, between the two channels.A Navy Direction Finding Station was later erected on the site in 1942, run by U.S. Navy radio operators stationed at Naval Radio Station, Mare Island. The station was closed in 1945 after World War II ended and a Navy Radio Beacon was installed.
Gallery
See also
List of lighthouses in the United States
References
External links
U.S. Naval High Frequency Direction Finding Sites during World War I and World War II. Part 2
"Historic Light Station Information and Photography: California". United States Coast Guard Historian's Office. Archived from the original on 2017-05-01. | instance of | {
"answer_start": [
29
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"text": [
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Mare Island Lighthouse was a lighthouse in California, United States, on the north shore of San Pablo Bay at the entrance to Carquinez Strait, California.
History
Mare Island Light was built in 1873, deactivated in 1917, and demolished in the 1930s. The lighthouse was designed by Paul J. Pelz, who also designed Mare Island's sister stations, Point Fermin Light in San Pedro CA, East Brother Island Light in Richmond, California, Point Hueneme Light in California (replaced in 1940), Hereford Inlet Light in North Wildwood, New Jersey, and Point Adams Light in Washington State (burned down by the Lighthouse Service in 1912), all in essentially the same style.The United States Lighthouse Board later realized that a light positioned offshore near the junction of the strait and river would better serve navigation in the area. The Carquinez Strait Light opened in 1909 to replace this light in purpose, but in an offshore location, between the two channels.A Navy Direction Finding Station was later erected on the site in 1942, run by U.S. Navy radio operators stationed at Naval Radio Station, Mare Island. The station was closed in 1945 after World War II ended and a Navy Radio Beacon was installed.
Gallery
See also
List of lighthouses in the United States
References
External links
U.S. Naval High Frequency Direction Finding Sites during World War I and World War II. Part 2
"Historic Light Station Information and Photography: California". United States Coast Guard Historian's Office. Archived from the original on 2017-05-01. | architect | {
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Mare Island Lighthouse was a lighthouse in California, United States, on the north shore of San Pablo Bay at the entrance to Carquinez Strait, California.
History
Mare Island Light was built in 1873, deactivated in 1917, and demolished in the 1930s. The lighthouse was designed by Paul J. Pelz, who also designed Mare Island's sister stations, Point Fermin Light in San Pedro CA, East Brother Island Light in Richmond, California, Point Hueneme Light in California (replaced in 1940), Hereford Inlet Light in North Wildwood, New Jersey, and Point Adams Light in Washington State (burned down by the Lighthouse Service in 1912), all in essentially the same style.The United States Lighthouse Board later realized that a light positioned offshore near the junction of the strait and river would better serve navigation in the area. The Carquinez Strait Light opened in 1909 to replace this light in purpose, but in an offshore location, between the two channels.A Navy Direction Finding Station was later erected on the site in 1942, run by U.S. Navy radio operators stationed at Naval Radio Station, Mare Island. The station was closed in 1945 after World War II ended and a Navy Radio Beacon was installed.
Gallery
See also
List of lighthouses in the United States
References
External links
U.S. Naval High Frequency Direction Finding Sites during World War I and World War II. Part 2
"Historic Light Station Information and Photography: California". United States Coast Guard Historian's Office. Archived from the original on 2017-05-01. | Commons category | {
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Mare Island Lighthouse was a lighthouse in California, United States, on the north shore of San Pablo Bay at the entrance to Carquinez Strait, California.
History
Mare Island Light was built in 1873, deactivated in 1917, and demolished in the 1930s. The lighthouse was designed by Paul J. Pelz, who also designed Mare Island's sister stations, Point Fermin Light in San Pedro CA, East Brother Island Light in Richmond, California, Point Hueneme Light in California (replaced in 1940), Hereford Inlet Light in North Wildwood, New Jersey, and Point Adams Light in Washington State (burned down by the Lighthouse Service in 1912), all in essentially the same style.The United States Lighthouse Board later realized that a light positioned offshore near the junction of the strait and river would better serve navigation in the area. The Carquinez Strait Light opened in 1909 to replace this light in purpose, but in an offshore location, between the two channels.A Navy Direction Finding Station was later erected on the site in 1942, run by U.S. Navy radio operators stationed at Naval Radio Station, Mare Island. The station was closed in 1945 after World War II ended and a Navy Radio Beacon was installed.
Gallery
See also
List of lighthouses in the United States
References
External links
U.S. Naval High Frequency Direction Finding Sites during World War I and World War II. Part 2
"Historic Light Station Information and Photography: California". United States Coast Guard Historian's Office. Archived from the original on 2017-05-01. | located in/on physical feature | {
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Mare Island Lighthouse was a lighthouse in California, United States, on the north shore of San Pablo Bay at the entrance to Carquinez Strait, California.
History
Mare Island Light was built in 1873, deactivated in 1917, and demolished in the 1930s. The lighthouse was designed by Paul J. Pelz, who also designed Mare Island's sister stations, Point Fermin Light in San Pedro CA, East Brother Island Light in Richmond, California, Point Hueneme Light in California (replaced in 1940), Hereford Inlet Light in North Wildwood, New Jersey, and Point Adams Light in Washington State (burned down by the Lighthouse Service in 1912), all in essentially the same style.The United States Lighthouse Board later realized that a light positioned offshore near the junction of the strait and river would better serve navigation in the area. The Carquinez Strait Light opened in 1909 to replace this light in purpose, but in an offshore location, between the two channels.A Navy Direction Finding Station was later erected on the site in 1942, run by U.S. Navy radio operators stationed at Naval Radio Station, Mare Island. The station was closed in 1945 after World War II ended and a Navy Radio Beacon was installed.
Gallery
See also
List of lighthouses in the United States
References
External links
U.S. Naval High Frequency Direction Finding Sites during World War I and World War II. Part 2
"Historic Light Station Information and Photography: California". United States Coast Guard Historian's Office. Archived from the original on 2017-05-01. | focal height | {
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Philippines's 10th senatorial district, officially the Tenth Senatorial District of the Philippine Islands (Spanish: Décimo Distrito Senatorial de las Islas Filipinas), was one of the twelve senatorial districts of the Philippines in existence between 1916 and 1935. It elected two members to the Senate of the Philippines, the upper chamber of the bicameral Philippine Legislature under the Insular Government of the Philippine Islands for each of the 4th to 10th legislatures. The district was created under the 1916 Jones Law from the central Visayas province of Cebu.The district was represented by a total of five senators throughout its existence. It was abolished in 1935 when a unicameral National Assembly was installed under a new constitution following the passage of the Tydings–McDuffie Act which established the Commonwealth of the Philippines. Since the 1941 elections when the Senate was restored after a constitutional plebiscite, all twenty-four members of the upper house have been elected countrywide at-large. It was last represented by Sergio Osmeña and Manuel Briones of the Nacionalista Demócrata Pro-Independencia.
List of senators
See also
Senatorial districts of the Philippines
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Philippines's 10th senatorial district, officially the Tenth Senatorial District of the Philippine Islands (Spanish: Décimo Distrito Senatorial de las Islas Filipinas), was one of the twelve senatorial districts of the Philippines in existence between 1916 and 1935. It elected two members to the Senate of the Philippines, the upper chamber of the bicameral Philippine Legislature under the Insular Government of the Philippine Islands for each of the 4th to 10th legislatures. The district was created under the 1916 Jones Law from the central Visayas province of Cebu.The district was represented by a total of five senators throughout its existence. It was abolished in 1935 when a unicameral National Assembly was installed under a new constitution following the passage of the Tydings–McDuffie Act which established the Commonwealth of the Philippines. Since the 1941 elections when the Senate was restored after a constitutional plebiscite, all twenty-four members of the upper house have been elected countrywide at-large. It was last represented by Sergio Osmeña and Manuel Briones of the Nacionalista Demócrata Pro-Independencia.
List of senators
See also
Senatorial districts of the Philippines
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Edward Weir (born 1910, date of death unknown) was an Irish footballer who played for several clubs in the Scottish Football League. He was also a dual Irish international and played for both Ireland teams – the IFA XI and the FAI XI. After retiring as a player he managed Dundalk.
Playing career
Club
Weir was raised in Scotland and began playing football with his local church side, St Joseph's in Bonnybridge, before joining Camelon Juniors where he developed his skills as a left half. He spent three seasons with Falkirk but was largely a bit-part player. He then joined St Bernard's of Scottish Division Two, initially on loan.During the 1937–38 season, he was spotted by a Dublin football fan, Matt Murtagh. Murtagh subsequently recommended him to both the IFA and the FAI. Before the following season he was transferred to Clyde and helped them win the Scottish Cup in 1939. Weir put in a man of the match performance as Clyde beat Rangers 4–1 in the third round;
They went on to defeat Motherwell 4–0 in the final.
International
When Weir played international football during 1939 there were, in effect, two Ireland teams, chosen by two rival associations. Both associations, the Northern Ireland – based IFA and the Irish Free State – based FAI claimed jurisdiction over the whole of Ireland and selected players from the whole island. As a result, several notable Irish players from this era, including Weir, played for both teams.
Weir made his international debut with the IFA XI on 15 March 1939 in a 3–1 away defeat against Wales. This was his one and only appearance for the IFA XI.
Weir also made three appearances for the FAI XI, all in 1939. Four days after playing for the IFA XI, he made his debut for the FAI XI on 19 March in a 2–2 draw with Hungary at the Mardyke. He then went on a European tour with the FAI XI and played in the team's last two internationals before the Second World War. The first of these was a return game against Hungary on 18 May which again finished as a 2–2 draw. He made his last appearance for the FAI XI on 23 May in a 1–1 draw with Germany.
While at Clyde, Weir also played for a Scotland XI in a 3–2 win against an Eire XI at Dalymount Park in an unofficial international match in April 1940. He had earlier been selected for an Edinburgh select team which played against Glasgow as part of the George VI coronation celebrations in 1937 as a St Bernard's player.
Coaching career
In 1948 Weir joined Dundalk as a player-coach but only played a few pre-season friendlies. However, he went on to manage Dundalk for two seasons, guiding them victory in both the FAI Cup and the Dublin City Cup in 1949.
He is largely credited with bringing a new level of professionalism to Dundalk, employing Scottish backroom staff and recruiting four Scottish players.
Honours
Player
Clyde
Scottish Cup: 1938–39
Glasgow Cup:
Runner-up: 1938–39St Bernard's
Rosebery Charity Cup: 1930–31Runner-up: 1935–36
Manager
Dundalk
FAI Cup: 1948–49
Dublin City Cup: 1948–49
Dublin and Belfast Cup:
Runner-up: 1948–49
References
External links
Northern Ireland's Footballing Greats
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Bărboieni is a village in Nisporeni District, Moldova.
Notable people
Vadim Cojocaru
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Bărboieni is a village in Nisporeni District, Moldova.
Notable people
Vadim Cojocaru
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Bărboieni is a village in Nisporeni District, Moldova.
Notable people
Vadim Cojocaru
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Bărboieni is a village in Nisporeni District, Moldova.
Notable people
Vadim Cojocaru
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Bărboieni is a village in Nisporeni District, Moldova.
Notable people
Vadim Cojocaru
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Princess Lover! (プリンセスラバー!, Purinsesu Rabā!) is a Japanese visual novel and the first title developed by Ricotta. It was first released as an eroge for Microsoft Windows on June 27, 2008, in both limited and regular editions, which was followed by an all-ages release for the PlayStation 2 on January 28, 2010. The gameplay in Princess Lover! follows a linear plot line which offers pre-determined scenarios and courses of interaction, and its story focuses on the appeal of the four female main characters.
Princess Lover! has received several transitions to other media. The game was first adapted into three light novels written by Utsusemi and illustrated by Hyūma Kitsuhi. It was then followed by two manga adaptations: the first, illustrated by Naoha Yuigi, began serialization in Media Factory's Media Factory Mobile! service on March 20, 2009; and the second, illustrated by Yū Midorigi, began its serialization in the manga magazine Comic Valkyrie on July 27, 2009. An anime adaptation produced by the animation studio GoHands also began its broadcast in Japan on July 5, 2009, and it was later followed by other networks in the same month. An Internet radio show has also been produced to promote the anime adaptation, and began its broadcast on July 3, 2009. A two-part adult OVA series was released in late 2010.
Gameplay
The gameplay in Princess Lover! requires little interaction from the player, as most of the duration of the game is only spent on reading the text that appears on the lower portion of the screen, representing either dialogue between characters, or the inner thoughts of the protagonist. Every so often, the player will come to a "decision point", where he or she is given the chance to choose from multiple options. The time between these points varies and can occur anywhere from a minute to much longer. Text progression pauses at these points and depending on the choices that the player makes, the plot will progress in a specific direction. There are four main plot lines in the game that the player will have the chance to experience, one for each of the heroines in the story. To view all of the plot lines, the player will have to replay the game multiple times and make different decisions to progress the plot in an alternate direction.
Plot
Arima Teppei lost his parents in a traffic accident. His grandfather Isshin adopted him and ordered him to succeed the head of Arima Group Corporation. At Shuuhou Gakuen, a high school only for wealthy students, Teppei's new life as a celebrity starts.
Characters
Main characters
Teppei Arima (有馬 哲平, Arima Teppei)
Voiced by: Takuma Terashima (anime, PS2 game) / Akira Ishida (OVA)
The main protagonist. Prior to the series, Teppei grew up in a happy family with his mother and father, a noodle shop owner. Coming back from school one day he learns that his parents were killed in an automobile accident. He is then picked up by his grandfather, Isshin Arima, who is the owner of the Arima Financial Combine, a very wealthy and perhaps the most powerful industrial group in Japan. Isshin then adopts Teppei with the aim of making him the successor to the Arima corporation (in place of his now-deceased daughter and Teppei's mother) and Teppei is enrolled in the most prestigious private school in Japan. He is a good swordsman and excels at quick drawing techniques.Charlotte Hazelrink (シャルロット・ヘイゼルリンク, Sharotto Heizerurinku)
Voiced by: Kazane (Windows game) / Ryōka Yuzuki (anime) / Aya Endō (PS2 game)
One of the four main heroines of the series, Charlotte is the princess of the fictional Hazelrink Principality. She and Teppei first meet when he saves her from some thugs. She likes to tease Teppei and has a cheery nature.
Aside from this, she is in love with Teppei and, in the anime, even asks Teppei to not forget about her. She also has very big breasts which attract Teppei's attention. She is a childhood friend of Sylvia van Hossen and is a little jealous of Sylvia for being named as Teppei's fiancée. She has a butler who is very protective of her and who will often go to great lengths to protect her. She also has a fiancée in the anime; despite this she does not want to give up on Teppei.Sylvia van Hossen (シルヴィア・ファン・ホッセン, Shiruvia Fan Hossen)
Voiced by: Suzune Kusunoki (Windows game, OVA) / Megumi Toyoguchi (anime) / Erika Harumi (PS2 game)
One of the four main heroines of the series, Sylvie is a noble of the fictional Flemish Principality of Eastern Europe. While she grew up in Flemish, she has not spent much of her mature life in that nation and attends school in Japan. She is the elder of the two daughters of Vincent van Hossen, the head of the van Hossen family and is very skilled in fencing. She first meets Teppei when they spar in the garden during a party. Both of them are surprised when they are told that their marriage has been arranged. When they next sparred, Sylvia won the showdown by the merest fraction of a second. She is a bit reserved but enjoys her bouts with Teppei and is trying to understand him as a friend first, before they are married. Maria, her younger sister, wants her to marry Teppei. Sylvia is the best friend of Charlotte, the Princess of Hazelrink. She is also the captain of the Flemish military unit called the Horse Riders. She is a hard woman with high standards and initially has a tendency to be outwardly repulsed by Teppei. She has difficulty expressing her feelings around him and is better with actions than words. She loved her late mother very dearly but was unable to cry at her funeral. Her feelings for Teppei are similar to those she has for her mother's memory. In the 9th episode she admits to Seika that she could not understand her feelings towards Teppei and in the 11th episode shows her true feelings to Teppei with a kiss.In the game her route concludes with Teppei and Sylvia getting married and Sylvia pregnant with Teppei's baby. The game ends with her saying she is extremely happy and thanking Teppei for everything.Seika Hōjōin (鳳条院 聖華, Hōjōin Seika)
Voiced by: Fūri Samoto (Windows game) / Emiri Katō (anime) / Eri Kitamura (PS2 game)
The daughter of the Hōjōin family whose company are rivals to Arima. Although she is initially neutral towards Teppei, once she finds out he is an Arima, she immediately dislikes him due to her family's longstanding antipathy for Teppei's grandfather (Many years previously, Teppei's grandfather was a workaholic and his lonely grandmother had an affair with Seika's grandfather which resulted in Isshin throwing his wife out of their house and his cutting ties with the Hōjōin. More recently, he refused to sell Seika's fashions in any of his group's stores). Seika has a loud and forthright nature. She is the 'Club Representative' of the 'Society Club' and reserves the right to limit membership to those students who satisfy her conditions to join the school's most elegant and exclusive club. Outside of school, she is a very popular model and one of the most gifted young fashion designers in all of Japan. Despite her initial dislike for Teppei, she falls in love with him due to his tenacious nature. However, she is uncertain how Teppei will react and is mostly quiet about it.Yū Fujikura (藤倉 優, Fujikura Yū)
Voiced by: Ayaka Kimura (Windows game, OVA) / Yuki Matsuoka (anime) / Yuka Inokuchi (PS2 game)
A maid of the Arima household who sometimes councils Teppei. She had been in an orphanage from a very young age until Isshin Arima took her into his care and brought her up to be an admirable maid. She has sworn to serve the Arima family to show her gratitude. She feels privileged to have been assigned as the maid-in-charge of serving Teppei, the next heir to the Arima Group. In addition to her household duties, Yuu is also an expert at computers and is able to type and work at almost superhuman speed. She thinks of Isshin Arima as a parent and develops tender feelings for Teppei, but feels that she is too low in class to be with him. Of all the girls, she is the most tender and nurturing and Teppei compares Yuu to his mother.
Supporting characters
Isshin Arima (有馬 一心, Arima Isshin)
Voiced by: Kyōnosuke Hiruma (Windows game) / Norio Wakamoto (anime & PS2 game)
The owner of the wealthy Arima corporation and grandfather of Teppei. He adopts Teppei when his daughter (Teppei's mother) and son-in-law were killed. Having learned his lesson with his daughter, Isshin allows Teppei to do as he wishes within broad guidelines rather than what Isshin wants him to do so that Teppei does not run away like his mother did. Isshin has an excellent memory despite his advanced age and, not having been a part of his childhood, wants to get to know Teppei better. He was an entrepreneur during World War II and made his fortune in the aftermath of the war. His company extends into many areas including automotive and metal industries.Kanae Kobayashi
Voiced by: Asako Dodo
Teppei's mother. She was the heir to the Arima Group Corporation before she died even though she had had little contact with her father for years prior to the story. She fell in love with Kobayashi, Isshin was inflexible. Due to her strong headed nature and despite her father's disapproval, she ran away and eloped.Mr. Kobayashi
Voiced by: Kanemitsu Nobuaki
Teppei's father and a skilled swordsman but also a lazy man. The only thing that he feared was the wrath of his wife. He and Kanae died together. Teppei believes Kanae fell in love with his father because he and Isshin have similar personalities.Maria van Hossen (マリア・ファン・ホッセン, Maria Fan Hossen)
Voiced by: Mio Ōkawa (Windows game, OVA) / Kaya Miyake (anime) / Maki Kobayashi (PS2 game)
The younger of the two van Hossen sisters. She is lovely and energetic. She loves her father Vincent and loves to cling to him all the time. She has called Teppei 'Onii-chan' since their first meeting because he is engaged to marry her elder sister Sylvia.Vincent van Hossen (Binsento Fan Hossen)
Voiced by: Takehito Koyasu (anime & PS2 game)
The father of Maria and Sylvia. He is a respectable figure in society and a supporter of the Arima Group. Teppei's grandfather, Isshin Arima, places great trust in Vincent and thus he chose his daughter, Sylvia, to be Teppei's fiancée. Vincent is calm and collected no matter the situation.Alfred (アルフレッド, Arufureddo)
Voiced by: Yosuke Akimoto (anime & PS2 game)
One of the butlers of the Hazelrink family. He has served Charlotte, Princess of Hazelrink since she was a baby and has sworn by his life to protect her. His devotion runs so deeply that he is overly protective of Charlotte. Alfred is a very good fist-fighter and an expert of martial arts. He is so vigorous that Teppei believes he will live to see 100. His name is a reference to Alfred Pennyworth, Bruce Wayne's butler from the Batman Series.
Others
Hartmann Bezelheim
Charlotte's fiance, Hartmann is also the most successful businessman in Charlotte's nation and one of the chief traders with the Arima company. In the anime, he serves as the primary villain. He hates Arima and wants to kill Teppei for vengeance. Despite his engagement to Charlotte, he is having an affair with Josephine. He wears glasses and has a tendency to make flashy entrances.Josephine
The secretary of Charlotte's fiance. She is a busty red-haired woman who is absolutely loyal to Hartmann and jealous of Charlotte's position as Hartmann's future wife.Ayano Kaneko (金子 綾乃, Kaneko Ayano)
Voiced by: Soyogi Tōno (Windows game) / Nozomi Sasaki (anime) / Tae Okajima (PS2 game)
One of the members of Seika Houjouin's posse. She is promoted to one of the main heroines in the sequel of the Princess Lover Series, Princess Lover! Eternal Love For My Lady.Haruhiko Nezu (根津 晴彦, Nezu Haruhiko)
Voiced by: Ichigo Miruku (Windows game) / Minoru Shiraishi (anime & PS2 game)
A vain classmate of Teppei's. He has great respect for Teppei and calls him Teppei-sama.Erika Takezono (竹園 エリカ, Takezono Erika)
Voiced by: Nazuna Gogyō (Windows game) / Kaoru Mizuhara (anime) / Ryōko Ono (PS2 game)
Another one of the members of Houjouin Seika's posse.Mr. Todomura
He is from the Arima Group Commissions Department.
Development
Princess Lover! is the first title developed by the visual novel developer Ricotta. The project is notable as the development team comprises a limited number of credited members. Scenario for the game was provided by Shōta Onoue who has previously worked on titles such as Tactics' Tenshi no Himegodo. Art direction and character designs were done by Kei Komori who is known for his work in various dōjin titles. Komori later went on to create Ricotta's second title Walkure Romanze: Shōjo Kishi Monogatari.
Release history
Princess Lover! was first released to the public on June 27, 2008, as a limited edition collected in a DVD playable only on Microsoft Windows. The limited edition included the game itself, and it also included a maxi single entitled "Songs From Princess Lover!". It was later followed by an all-ages consumer console release published by Comfort and released for the PlayStation 2 on January 28, 2010. The PlayStation 2 version entitled Princess Lover!: Eternal Love For My Lady will contain remastered graphics, and additional scenarios for Ayano Kaneko, a supporting female character being promoted to a heroine.
Adaptations
Books and publications
Princess Lover! was first adapted into a series of light novels written by Utsusemi and illustrated by Hyūma Kitsuhi. The first of the novels, titled Princess Lover! Silvia van Hossen's Romance (プリンセスラバー! シルヴィア=ファン・ホッセンの恋路, Purinsesu Rabaa! Shiruvia Fan Hossen no Koiji), was released on November 29, 2008. The second of the novels, titled Princess Lover! Charlotte Hazelrink's Romance (プリンセスラバー! シャルロット=ヘイゼルリンクの恋路, Purinsesu Rabaa! Sharurotto Heizerurinku no Koiji), was released on May 30, 2009. Both of these light novels were published by Kill Time Communication and released in regular and limited editions. The limited editions included the book itself and a telephone card; the second novel also received a version with a poster included instead. The regular editions of did not contain the aforementioned extras. A third light novel series, titled Princess Lover! Silvia van Hossen's Romance 2 and also written by Utsusemi and illustrated by Kitsuhi, began serialization in Kill Time Communication's Nijiken Dream Magazine on June 17, 2009.
A 135-page visual fan book for Princess Lover! was published by Max on December 2, 2008. The book contained illustrations and computer graphics used in the visual novel and various publications, introduction and explanations of the story and characters, production design and sketches, and interview with the development team, and also a short story entitled "Little Princess!"
Manga
There have been three manga adaptations based on Princess Lover! The first manga series was illustrated by Japanese artist Naoha Yuigi, and it was first serialized on Media Factory's Media Factory Mobile! service for mobile phones on March 20, 2009. A second manga series, Princess Lover! Pure My Heart, was also serialized in Kill Time Communication's Comic Valkyrie. The manga, which began serialization while the first was still ongoing, was illustrated by Yū Midorigi and received assistance from Utsusemi, the author of the light novel adaptations. The third manga, Princess Lover! Eternal Love For My Lady illustrated by Shu, was serialized in ASCII Media Works's Dengeki Moeo magazine from October 2009 to October 2010 issues. The three manga were collected in one volume each.
Anime
The anime adaptation of Princess Lover! was first formally announced in March 2009 via its official website. The anime was produced by GoHands as the animation studio's first production, and it was directed by Hiromitsu Kanazawa and written by Makoto Nakamura. It was first exhibited as a video in a public showing in Akihabara on June 21, 2009, and again at Television Kanagawa's Tvk Anime Matsuri 2009 exhibition in Nippon Seinenkan in Shinjuku, on June 27, 2009. Both events featured a public showing of the anime's first episode along with Umineko no Naku Koro ni, in addition to various other anime for the Tvk Anime Matsuri event. The anime began its televised broadcast in Japan on July 5, 2009, on the Chiba TV and TV Kanagawa broadcasting networks, ending on September 20, 2009. They also released an uncensored version in the webcast section.
In May 2021, Princess Lover! was one of five anime titles (along with KonoSuba, That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime, Zombie Land Saga, and Nekopara) that were given a limited ban by the Russian government for their depiction of reincarnation.
OVA
On September 24, 2010, a 2-part Princess Lover! adult OVA was animated by Hoods Entertainment under the name "Public Enemies". It features Sylvia as the main heroine and contains an original story with various erotic scenes. It was released on DVD by the adult anime label.
References
External links
Ricotta's official visual novel website (in Japanese)
Comfort's official PlayStation 2 visual novel website (in Japanese)
Anime official website (in Japanese)
Princess Lover! (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
Princess Lover! at The Visual Novel Database | based on | {
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Princess Lover! (プリンセスラバー!, Purinsesu Rabā!) is a Japanese visual novel and the first title developed by Ricotta. It was first released as an eroge for Microsoft Windows on June 27, 2008, in both limited and regular editions, which was followed by an all-ages release for the PlayStation 2 on January 28, 2010. The gameplay in Princess Lover! follows a linear plot line which offers pre-determined scenarios and courses of interaction, and its story focuses on the appeal of the four female main characters.
Princess Lover! has received several transitions to other media. The game was first adapted into three light novels written by Utsusemi and illustrated by Hyūma Kitsuhi. It was then followed by two manga adaptations: the first, illustrated by Naoha Yuigi, began serialization in Media Factory's Media Factory Mobile! service on March 20, 2009; and the second, illustrated by Yū Midorigi, began its serialization in the manga magazine Comic Valkyrie on July 27, 2009. An anime adaptation produced by the animation studio GoHands also began its broadcast in Japan on July 5, 2009, and it was later followed by other networks in the same month. An Internet radio show has also been produced to promote the anime adaptation, and began its broadcast on July 3, 2009. A two-part adult OVA series was released in late 2010.
Gameplay
The gameplay in Princess Lover! requires little interaction from the player, as most of the duration of the game is only spent on reading the text that appears on the lower portion of the screen, representing either dialogue between characters, or the inner thoughts of the protagonist. Every so often, the player will come to a "decision point", where he or she is given the chance to choose from multiple options. The time between these points varies and can occur anywhere from a minute to much longer. Text progression pauses at these points and depending on the choices that the player makes, the plot will progress in a specific direction. There are four main plot lines in the game that the player will have the chance to experience, one for each of the heroines in the story. To view all of the plot lines, the player will have to replay the game multiple times and make different decisions to progress the plot in an alternate direction.
Plot
Arima Teppei lost his parents in a traffic accident. His grandfather Isshin adopted him and ordered him to succeed the head of Arima Group Corporation. At Shuuhou Gakuen, a high school only for wealthy students, Teppei's new life as a celebrity starts.
Characters
Main characters
Teppei Arima (有馬 哲平, Arima Teppei)
Voiced by: Takuma Terashima (anime, PS2 game) / Akira Ishida (OVA)
The main protagonist. Prior to the series, Teppei grew up in a happy family with his mother and father, a noodle shop owner. Coming back from school one day he learns that his parents were killed in an automobile accident. He is then picked up by his grandfather, Isshin Arima, who is the owner of the Arima Financial Combine, a very wealthy and perhaps the most powerful industrial group in Japan. Isshin then adopts Teppei with the aim of making him the successor to the Arima corporation (in place of his now-deceased daughter and Teppei's mother) and Teppei is enrolled in the most prestigious private school in Japan. He is a good swordsman and excels at quick drawing techniques.Charlotte Hazelrink (シャルロット・ヘイゼルリンク, Sharotto Heizerurinku)
Voiced by: Kazane (Windows game) / Ryōka Yuzuki (anime) / Aya Endō (PS2 game)
One of the four main heroines of the series, Charlotte is the princess of the fictional Hazelrink Principality. She and Teppei first meet when he saves her from some thugs. She likes to tease Teppei and has a cheery nature.
Aside from this, she is in love with Teppei and, in the anime, even asks Teppei to not forget about her. She also has very big breasts which attract Teppei's attention. She is a childhood friend of Sylvia van Hossen and is a little jealous of Sylvia for being named as Teppei's fiancée. She has a butler who is very protective of her and who will often go to great lengths to protect her. She also has a fiancée in the anime; despite this she does not want to give up on Teppei.Sylvia van Hossen (シルヴィア・ファン・ホッセン, Shiruvia Fan Hossen)
Voiced by: Suzune Kusunoki (Windows game, OVA) / Megumi Toyoguchi (anime) / Erika Harumi (PS2 game)
One of the four main heroines of the series, Sylvie is a noble of the fictional Flemish Principality of Eastern Europe. While she grew up in Flemish, she has not spent much of her mature life in that nation and attends school in Japan. She is the elder of the two daughters of Vincent van Hossen, the head of the van Hossen family and is very skilled in fencing. She first meets Teppei when they spar in the garden during a party. Both of them are surprised when they are told that their marriage has been arranged. When they next sparred, Sylvia won the showdown by the merest fraction of a second. She is a bit reserved but enjoys her bouts with Teppei and is trying to understand him as a friend first, before they are married. Maria, her younger sister, wants her to marry Teppei. Sylvia is the best friend of Charlotte, the Princess of Hazelrink. She is also the captain of the Flemish military unit called the Horse Riders. She is a hard woman with high standards and initially has a tendency to be outwardly repulsed by Teppei. She has difficulty expressing her feelings around him and is better with actions than words. She loved her late mother very dearly but was unable to cry at her funeral. Her feelings for Teppei are similar to those she has for her mother's memory. In the 9th episode she admits to Seika that she could not understand her feelings towards Teppei and in the 11th episode shows her true feelings to Teppei with a kiss.In the game her route concludes with Teppei and Sylvia getting married and Sylvia pregnant with Teppei's baby. The game ends with her saying she is extremely happy and thanking Teppei for everything.Seika Hōjōin (鳳条院 聖華, Hōjōin Seika)
Voiced by: Fūri Samoto (Windows game) / Emiri Katō (anime) / Eri Kitamura (PS2 game)
The daughter of the Hōjōin family whose company are rivals to Arima. Although she is initially neutral towards Teppei, once she finds out he is an Arima, she immediately dislikes him due to her family's longstanding antipathy for Teppei's grandfather (Many years previously, Teppei's grandfather was a workaholic and his lonely grandmother had an affair with Seika's grandfather which resulted in Isshin throwing his wife out of their house and his cutting ties with the Hōjōin. More recently, he refused to sell Seika's fashions in any of his group's stores). Seika has a loud and forthright nature. She is the 'Club Representative' of the 'Society Club' and reserves the right to limit membership to those students who satisfy her conditions to join the school's most elegant and exclusive club. Outside of school, she is a very popular model and one of the most gifted young fashion designers in all of Japan. Despite her initial dislike for Teppei, she falls in love with him due to his tenacious nature. However, she is uncertain how Teppei will react and is mostly quiet about it.Yū Fujikura (藤倉 優, Fujikura Yū)
Voiced by: Ayaka Kimura (Windows game, OVA) / Yuki Matsuoka (anime) / Yuka Inokuchi (PS2 game)
A maid of the Arima household who sometimes councils Teppei. She had been in an orphanage from a very young age until Isshin Arima took her into his care and brought her up to be an admirable maid. She has sworn to serve the Arima family to show her gratitude. She feels privileged to have been assigned as the maid-in-charge of serving Teppei, the next heir to the Arima Group. In addition to her household duties, Yuu is also an expert at computers and is able to type and work at almost superhuman speed. She thinks of Isshin Arima as a parent and develops tender feelings for Teppei, but feels that she is too low in class to be with him. Of all the girls, she is the most tender and nurturing and Teppei compares Yuu to his mother.
Supporting characters
Isshin Arima (有馬 一心, Arima Isshin)
Voiced by: Kyōnosuke Hiruma (Windows game) / Norio Wakamoto (anime & PS2 game)
The owner of the wealthy Arima corporation and grandfather of Teppei. He adopts Teppei when his daughter (Teppei's mother) and son-in-law were killed. Having learned his lesson with his daughter, Isshin allows Teppei to do as he wishes within broad guidelines rather than what Isshin wants him to do so that Teppei does not run away like his mother did. Isshin has an excellent memory despite his advanced age and, not having been a part of his childhood, wants to get to know Teppei better. He was an entrepreneur during World War II and made his fortune in the aftermath of the war. His company extends into many areas including automotive and metal industries.Kanae Kobayashi
Voiced by: Asako Dodo
Teppei's mother. She was the heir to the Arima Group Corporation before she died even though she had had little contact with her father for years prior to the story. She fell in love with Kobayashi, Isshin was inflexible. Due to her strong headed nature and despite her father's disapproval, she ran away and eloped.Mr. Kobayashi
Voiced by: Kanemitsu Nobuaki
Teppei's father and a skilled swordsman but also a lazy man. The only thing that he feared was the wrath of his wife. He and Kanae died together. Teppei believes Kanae fell in love with his father because he and Isshin have similar personalities.Maria van Hossen (マリア・ファン・ホッセン, Maria Fan Hossen)
Voiced by: Mio Ōkawa (Windows game, OVA) / Kaya Miyake (anime) / Maki Kobayashi (PS2 game)
The younger of the two van Hossen sisters. She is lovely and energetic. She loves her father Vincent and loves to cling to him all the time. She has called Teppei 'Onii-chan' since their first meeting because he is engaged to marry her elder sister Sylvia.Vincent van Hossen (Binsento Fan Hossen)
Voiced by: Takehito Koyasu (anime & PS2 game)
The father of Maria and Sylvia. He is a respectable figure in society and a supporter of the Arima Group. Teppei's grandfather, Isshin Arima, places great trust in Vincent and thus he chose his daughter, Sylvia, to be Teppei's fiancée. Vincent is calm and collected no matter the situation.Alfred (アルフレッド, Arufureddo)
Voiced by: Yosuke Akimoto (anime & PS2 game)
One of the butlers of the Hazelrink family. He has served Charlotte, Princess of Hazelrink since she was a baby and has sworn by his life to protect her. His devotion runs so deeply that he is overly protective of Charlotte. Alfred is a very good fist-fighter and an expert of martial arts. He is so vigorous that Teppei believes he will live to see 100. His name is a reference to Alfred Pennyworth, Bruce Wayne's butler from the Batman Series.
Others
Hartmann Bezelheim
Charlotte's fiance, Hartmann is also the most successful businessman in Charlotte's nation and one of the chief traders with the Arima company. In the anime, he serves as the primary villain. He hates Arima and wants to kill Teppei for vengeance. Despite his engagement to Charlotte, he is having an affair with Josephine. He wears glasses and has a tendency to make flashy entrances.Josephine
The secretary of Charlotte's fiance. She is a busty red-haired woman who is absolutely loyal to Hartmann and jealous of Charlotte's position as Hartmann's future wife.Ayano Kaneko (金子 綾乃, Kaneko Ayano)
Voiced by: Soyogi Tōno (Windows game) / Nozomi Sasaki (anime) / Tae Okajima (PS2 game)
One of the members of Seika Houjouin's posse. She is promoted to one of the main heroines in the sequel of the Princess Lover Series, Princess Lover! Eternal Love For My Lady.Haruhiko Nezu (根津 晴彦, Nezu Haruhiko)
Voiced by: Ichigo Miruku (Windows game) / Minoru Shiraishi (anime & PS2 game)
A vain classmate of Teppei's. He has great respect for Teppei and calls him Teppei-sama.Erika Takezono (竹園 エリカ, Takezono Erika)
Voiced by: Nazuna Gogyō (Windows game) / Kaoru Mizuhara (anime) / Ryōko Ono (PS2 game)
Another one of the members of Houjouin Seika's posse.Mr. Todomura
He is from the Arima Group Commissions Department.
Development
Princess Lover! is the first title developed by the visual novel developer Ricotta. The project is notable as the development team comprises a limited number of credited members. Scenario for the game was provided by Shōta Onoue who has previously worked on titles such as Tactics' Tenshi no Himegodo. Art direction and character designs were done by Kei Komori who is known for his work in various dōjin titles. Komori later went on to create Ricotta's second title Walkure Romanze: Shōjo Kishi Monogatari.
Release history
Princess Lover! was first released to the public on June 27, 2008, as a limited edition collected in a DVD playable only on Microsoft Windows. The limited edition included the game itself, and it also included a maxi single entitled "Songs From Princess Lover!". It was later followed by an all-ages consumer console release published by Comfort and released for the PlayStation 2 on January 28, 2010. The PlayStation 2 version entitled Princess Lover!: Eternal Love For My Lady will contain remastered graphics, and additional scenarios for Ayano Kaneko, a supporting female character being promoted to a heroine.
Adaptations
Books and publications
Princess Lover! was first adapted into a series of light novels written by Utsusemi and illustrated by Hyūma Kitsuhi. The first of the novels, titled Princess Lover! Silvia van Hossen's Romance (プリンセスラバー! シルヴィア=ファン・ホッセンの恋路, Purinsesu Rabaa! Shiruvia Fan Hossen no Koiji), was released on November 29, 2008. The second of the novels, titled Princess Lover! Charlotte Hazelrink's Romance (プリンセスラバー! シャルロット=ヘイゼルリンクの恋路, Purinsesu Rabaa! Sharurotto Heizerurinku no Koiji), was released on May 30, 2009. Both of these light novels were published by Kill Time Communication and released in regular and limited editions. The limited editions included the book itself and a telephone card; the second novel also received a version with a poster included instead. The regular editions of did not contain the aforementioned extras. A third light novel series, titled Princess Lover! Silvia van Hossen's Romance 2 and also written by Utsusemi and illustrated by Kitsuhi, began serialization in Kill Time Communication's Nijiken Dream Magazine on June 17, 2009.
A 135-page visual fan book for Princess Lover! was published by Max on December 2, 2008. The book contained illustrations and computer graphics used in the visual novel and various publications, introduction and explanations of the story and characters, production design and sketches, and interview with the development team, and also a short story entitled "Little Princess!"
Manga
There have been three manga adaptations based on Princess Lover! The first manga series was illustrated by Japanese artist Naoha Yuigi, and it was first serialized on Media Factory's Media Factory Mobile! service for mobile phones on March 20, 2009. A second manga series, Princess Lover! Pure My Heart, was also serialized in Kill Time Communication's Comic Valkyrie. The manga, which began serialization while the first was still ongoing, was illustrated by Yū Midorigi and received assistance from Utsusemi, the author of the light novel adaptations. The third manga, Princess Lover! Eternal Love For My Lady illustrated by Shu, was serialized in ASCII Media Works's Dengeki Moeo magazine from October 2009 to October 2010 issues. The three manga were collected in one volume each.
Anime
The anime adaptation of Princess Lover! was first formally announced in March 2009 via its official website. The anime was produced by GoHands as the animation studio's first production, and it was directed by Hiromitsu Kanazawa and written by Makoto Nakamura. It was first exhibited as a video in a public showing in Akihabara on June 21, 2009, and again at Television Kanagawa's Tvk Anime Matsuri 2009 exhibition in Nippon Seinenkan in Shinjuku, on June 27, 2009. Both events featured a public showing of the anime's first episode along with Umineko no Naku Koro ni, in addition to various other anime for the Tvk Anime Matsuri event. The anime began its televised broadcast in Japan on July 5, 2009, on the Chiba TV and TV Kanagawa broadcasting networks, ending on September 20, 2009. They also released an uncensored version in the webcast section.
In May 2021, Princess Lover! was one of five anime titles (along with KonoSuba, That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime, Zombie Land Saga, and Nekopara) that were given a limited ban by the Russian government for their depiction of reincarnation.
OVA
On September 24, 2010, a 2-part Princess Lover! adult OVA was animated by Hoods Entertainment under the name "Public Enemies". It features Sylvia as the main heroine and contains an original story with various erotic scenes. It was released on DVD by the adult anime label.
References
External links
Ricotta's official visual novel website (in Japanese)
Comfort's official PlayStation 2 visual novel website (in Japanese)
Anime official website (in Japanese)
Princess Lover! (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
Princess Lover! at The Visual Novel Database | original language of film or TV show | {
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Princess Lover! (プリンセスラバー!, Purinsesu Rabā!) is a Japanese visual novel and the first title developed by Ricotta. It was first released as an eroge for Microsoft Windows on June 27, 2008, in both limited and regular editions, which was followed by an all-ages release for the PlayStation 2 on January 28, 2010. The gameplay in Princess Lover! follows a linear plot line which offers pre-determined scenarios and courses of interaction, and its story focuses on the appeal of the four female main characters.
Princess Lover! has received several transitions to other media. The game was first adapted into three light novels written by Utsusemi and illustrated by Hyūma Kitsuhi. It was then followed by two manga adaptations: the first, illustrated by Naoha Yuigi, began serialization in Media Factory's Media Factory Mobile! service on March 20, 2009; and the second, illustrated by Yū Midorigi, began its serialization in the manga magazine Comic Valkyrie on July 27, 2009. An anime adaptation produced by the animation studio GoHands also began its broadcast in Japan on July 5, 2009, and it was later followed by other networks in the same month. An Internet radio show has also been produced to promote the anime adaptation, and began its broadcast on July 3, 2009. A two-part adult OVA series was released in late 2010.
Gameplay
The gameplay in Princess Lover! requires little interaction from the player, as most of the duration of the game is only spent on reading the text that appears on the lower portion of the screen, representing either dialogue between characters, or the inner thoughts of the protagonist. Every so often, the player will come to a "decision point", where he or she is given the chance to choose from multiple options. The time between these points varies and can occur anywhere from a minute to much longer. Text progression pauses at these points and depending on the choices that the player makes, the plot will progress in a specific direction. There are four main plot lines in the game that the player will have the chance to experience, one for each of the heroines in the story. To view all of the plot lines, the player will have to replay the game multiple times and make different decisions to progress the plot in an alternate direction.
Plot
Arima Teppei lost his parents in a traffic accident. His grandfather Isshin adopted him and ordered him to succeed the head of Arima Group Corporation. At Shuuhou Gakuen, a high school only for wealthy students, Teppei's new life as a celebrity starts.
Characters
Main characters
Teppei Arima (有馬 哲平, Arima Teppei)
Voiced by: Takuma Terashima (anime, PS2 game) / Akira Ishida (OVA)
The main protagonist. Prior to the series, Teppei grew up in a happy family with his mother and father, a noodle shop owner. Coming back from school one day he learns that his parents were killed in an automobile accident. He is then picked up by his grandfather, Isshin Arima, who is the owner of the Arima Financial Combine, a very wealthy and perhaps the most powerful industrial group in Japan. Isshin then adopts Teppei with the aim of making him the successor to the Arima corporation (in place of his now-deceased daughter and Teppei's mother) and Teppei is enrolled in the most prestigious private school in Japan. He is a good swordsman and excels at quick drawing techniques.Charlotte Hazelrink (シャルロット・ヘイゼルリンク, Sharotto Heizerurinku)
Voiced by: Kazane (Windows game) / Ryōka Yuzuki (anime) / Aya Endō (PS2 game)
One of the four main heroines of the series, Charlotte is the princess of the fictional Hazelrink Principality. She and Teppei first meet when he saves her from some thugs. She likes to tease Teppei and has a cheery nature.
Aside from this, she is in love with Teppei and, in the anime, even asks Teppei to not forget about her. She also has very big breasts which attract Teppei's attention. She is a childhood friend of Sylvia van Hossen and is a little jealous of Sylvia for being named as Teppei's fiancée. She has a butler who is very protective of her and who will often go to great lengths to protect her. She also has a fiancée in the anime; despite this she does not want to give up on Teppei.Sylvia van Hossen (シルヴィア・ファン・ホッセン, Shiruvia Fan Hossen)
Voiced by: Suzune Kusunoki (Windows game, OVA) / Megumi Toyoguchi (anime) / Erika Harumi (PS2 game)
One of the four main heroines of the series, Sylvie is a noble of the fictional Flemish Principality of Eastern Europe. While she grew up in Flemish, she has not spent much of her mature life in that nation and attends school in Japan. She is the elder of the two daughters of Vincent van Hossen, the head of the van Hossen family and is very skilled in fencing. She first meets Teppei when they spar in the garden during a party. Both of them are surprised when they are told that their marriage has been arranged. When they next sparred, Sylvia won the showdown by the merest fraction of a second. She is a bit reserved but enjoys her bouts with Teppei and is trying to understand him as a friend first, before they are married. Maria, her younger sister, wants her to marry Teppei. Sylvia is the best friend of Charlotte, the Princess of Hazelrink. She is also the captain of the Flemish military unit called the Horse Riders. She is a hard woman with high standards and initially has a tendency to be outwardly repulsed by Teppei. She has difficulty expressing her feelings around him and is better with actions than words. She loved her late mother very dearly but was unable to cry at her funeral. Her feelings for Teppei are similar to those she has for her mother's memory. In the 9th episode she admits to Seika that she could not understand her feelings towards Teppei and in the 11th episode shows her true feelings to Teppei with a kiss.In the game her route concludes with Teppei and Sylvia getting married and Sylvia pregnant with Teppei's baby. The game ends with her saying she is extremely happy and thanking Teppei for everything.Seika Hōjōin (鳳条院 聖華, Hōjōin Seika)
Voiced by: Fūri Samoto (Windows game) / Emiri Katō (anime) / Eri Kitamura (PS2 game)
The daughter of the Hōjōin family whose company are rivals to Arima. Although she is initially neutral towards Teppei, once she finds out he is an Arima, she immediately dislikes him due to her family's longstanding antipathy for Teppei's grandfather (Many years previously, Teppei's grandfather was a workaholic and his lonely grandmother had an affair with Seika's grandfather which resulted in Isshin throwing his wife out of their house and his cutting ties with the Hōjōin. More recently, he refused to sell Seika's fashions in any of his group's stores). Seika has a loud and forthright nature. She is the 'Club Representative' of the 'Society Club' and reserves the right to limit membership to those students who satisfy her conditions to join the school's most elegant and exclusive club. Outside of school, she is a very popular model and one of the most gifted young fashion designers in all of Japan. Despite her initial dislike for Teppei, she falls in love with him due to his tenacious nature. However, she is uncertain how Teppei will react and is mostly quiet about it.Yū Fujikura (藤倉 優, Fujikura Yū)
Voiced by: Ayaka Kimura (Windows game, OVA) / Yuki Matsuoka (anime) / Yuka Inokuchi (PS2 game)
A maid of the Arima household who sometimes councils Teppei. She had been in an orphanage from a very young age until Isshin Arima took her into his care and brought her up to be an admirable maid. She has sworn to serve the Arima family to show her gratitude. She feels privileged to have been assigned as the maid-in-charge of serving Teppei, the next heir to the Arima Group. In addition to her household duties, Yuu is also an expert at computers and is able to type and work at almost superhuman speed. She thinks of Isshin Arima as a parent and develops tender feelings for Teppei, but feels that she is too low in class to be with him. Of all the girls, she is the most tender and nurturing and Teppei compares Yuu to his mother.
Supporting characters
Isshin Arima (有馬 一心, Arima Isshin)
Voiced by: Kyōnosuke Hiruma (Windows game) / Norio Wakamoto (anime & PS2 game)
The owner of the wealthy Arima corporation and grandfather of Teppei. He adopts Teppei when his daughter (Teppei's mother) and son-in-law were killed. Having learned his lesson with his daughter, Isshin allows Teppei to do as he wishes within broad guidelines rather than what Isshin wants him to do so that Teppei does not run away like his mother did. Isshin has an excellent memory despite his advanced age and, not having been a part of his childhood, wants to get to know Teppei better. He was an entrepreneur during World War II and made his fortune in the aftermath of the war. His company extends into many areas including automotive and metal industries.Kanae Kobayashi
Voiced by: Asako Dodo
Teppei's mother. She was the heir to the Arima Group Corporation before she died even though she had had little contact with her father for years prior to the story. She fell in love with Kobayashi, Isshin was inflexible. Due to her strong headed nature and despite her father's disapproval, she ran away and eloped.Mr. Kobayashi
Voiced by: Kanemitsu Nobuaki
Teppei's father and a skilled swordsman but also a lazy man. The only thing that he feared was the wrath of his wife. He and Kanae died together. Teppei believes Kanae fell in love with his father because he and Isshin have similar personalities.Maria van Hossen (マリア・ファン・ホッセン, Maria Fan Hossen)
Voiced by: Mio Ōkawa (Windows game, OVA) / Kaya Miyake (anime) / Maki Kobayashi (PS2 game)
The younger of the two van Hossen sisters. She is lovely and energetic. She loves her father Vincent and loves to cling to him all the time. She has called Teppei 'Onii-chan' since their first meeting because he is engaged to marry her elder sister Sylvia.Vincent van Hossen (Binsento Fan Hossen)
Voiced by: Takehito Koyasu (anime & PS2 game)
The father of Maria and Sylvia. He is a respectable figure in society and a supporter of the Arima Group. Teppei's grandfather, Isshin Arima, places great trust in Vincent and thus he chose his daughter, Sylvia, to be Teppei's fiancée. Vincent is calm and collected no matter the situation.Alfred (アルフレッド, Arufureddo)
Voiced by: Yosuke Akimoto (anime & PS2 game)
One of the butlers of the Hazelrink family. He has served Charlotte, Princess of Hazelrink since she was a baby and has sworn by his life to protect her. His devotion runs so deeply that he is overly protective of Charlotte. Alfred is a very good fist-fighter and an expert of martial arts. He is so vigorous that Teppei believes he will live to see 100. His name is a reference to Alfred Pennyworth, Bruce Wayne's butler from the Batman Series.
Others
Hartmann Bezelheim
Charlotte's fiance, Hartmann is also the most successful businessman in Charlotte's nation and one of the chief traders with the Arima company. In the anime, he serves as the primary villain. He hates Arima and wants to kill Teppei for vengeance. Despite his engagement to Charlotte, he is having an affair with Josephine. He wears glasses and has a tendency to make flashy entrances.Josephine
The secretary of Charlotte's fiance. She is a busty red-haired woman who is absolutely loyal to Hartmann and jealous of Charlotte's position as Hartmann's future wife.Ayano Kaneko (金子 綾乃, Kaneko Ayano)
Voiced by: Soyogi Tōno (Windows game) / Nozomi Sasaki (anime) / Tae Okajima (PS2 game)
One of the members of Seika Houjouin's posse. She is promoted to one of the main heroines in the sequel of the Princess Lover Series, Princess Lover! Eternal Love For My Lady.Haruhiko Nezu (根津 晴彦, Nezu Haruhiko)
Voiced by: Ichigo Miruku (Windows game) / Minoru Shiraishi (anime & PS2 game)
A vain classmate of Teppei's. He has great respect for Teppei and calls him Teppei-sama.Erika Takezono (竹園 エリカ, Takezono Erika)
Voiced by: Nazuna Gogyō (Windows game) / Kaoru Mizuhara (anime) / Ryōko Ono (PS2 game)
Another one of the members of Houjouin Seika's posse.Mr. Todomura
He is from the Arima Group Commissions Department.
Development
Princess Lover! is the first title developed by the visual novel developer Ricotta. The project is notable as the development team comprises a limited number of credited members. Scenario for the game was provided by Shōta Onoue who has previously worked on titles such as Tactics' Tenshi no Himegodo. Art direction and character designs were done by Kei Komori who is known for his work in various dōjin titles. Komori later went on to create Ricotta's second title Walkure Romanze: Shōjo Kishi Monogatari.
Release history
Princess Lover! was first released to the public on June 27, 2008, as a limited edition collected in a DVD playable only on Microsoft Windows. The limited edition included the game itself, and it also included a maxi single entitled "Songs From Princess Lover!". It was later followed by an all-ages consumer console release published by Comfort and released for the PlayStation 2 on January 28, 2010. The PlayStation 2 version entitled Princess Lover!: Eternal Love For My Lady will contain remastered graphics, and additional scenarios for Ayano Kaneko, a supporting female character being promoted to a heroine.
Adaptations
Books and publications
Princess Lover! was first adapted into a series of light novels written by Utsusemi and illustrated by Hyūma Kitsuhi. The first of the novels, titled Princess Lover! Silvia van Hossen's Romance (プリンセスラバー! シルヴィア=ファン・ホッセンの恋路, Purinsesu Rabaa! Shiruvia Fan Hossen no Koiji), was released on November 29, 2008. The second of the novels, titled Princess Lover! Charlotte Hazelrink's Romance (プリンセスラバー! シャルロット=ヘイゼルリンクの恋路, Purinsesu Rabaa! Sharurotto Heizerurinku no Koiji), was released on May 30, 2009. Both of these light novels were published by Kill Time Communication and released in regular and limited editions. The limited editions included the book itself and a telephone card; the second novel also received a version with a poster included instead. The regular editions of did not contain the aforementioned extras. A third light novel series, titled Princess Lover! Silvia van Hossen's Romance 2 and also written by Utsusemi and illustrated by Kitsuhi, began serialization in Kill Time Communication's Nijiken Dream Magazine on June 17, 2009.
A 135-page visual fan book for Princess Lover! was published by Max on December 2, 2008. The book contained illustrations and computer graphics used in the visual novel and various publications, introduction and explanations of the story and characters, production design and sketches, and interview with the development team, and also a short story entitled "Little Princess!"
Manga
There have been three manga adaptations based on Princess Lover! The first manga series was illustrated by Japanese artist Naoha Yuigi, and it was first serialized on Media Factory's Media Factory Mobile! service for mobile phones on March 20, 2009. A second manga series, Princess Lover! Pure My Heart, was also serialized in Kill Time Communication's Comic Valkyrie. The manga, which began serialization while the first was still ongoing, was illustrated by Yū Midorigi and received assistance from Utsusemi, the author of the light novel adaptations. The third manga, Princess Lover! Eternal Love For My Lady illustrated by Shu, was serialized in ASCII Media Works's Dengeki Moeo magazine from October 2009 to October 2010 issues. The three manga were collected in one volume each.
Anime
The anime adaptation of Princess Lover! was first formally announced in March 2009 via its official website. The anime was produced by GoHands as the animation studio's first production, and it was directed by Hiromitsu Kanazawa and written by Makoto Nakamura. It was first exhibited as a video in a public showing in Akihabara on June 21, 2009, and again at Television Kanagawa's Tvk Anime Matsuri 2009 exhibition in Nippon Seinenkan in Shinjuku, on June 27, 2009. Both events featured a public showing of the anime's first episode along with Umineko no Naku Koro ni, in addition to various other anime for the Tvk Anime Matsuri event. The anime began its televised broadcast in Japan on July 5, 2009, on the Chiba TV and TV Kanagawa broadcasting networks, ending on September 20, 2009. They also released an uncensored version in the webcast section.
In May 2021, Princess Lover! was one of five anime titles (along with KonoSuba, That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime, Zombie Land Saga, and Nekopara) that were given a limited ban by the Russian government for their depiction of reincarnation.
OVA
On September 24, 2010, a 2-part Princess Lover! adult OVA was animated by Hoods Entertainment under the name "Public Enemies". It features Sylvia as the main heroine and contains an original story with various erotic scenes. It was released on DVD by the adult anime label.
References
External links
Ricotta's official visual novel website (in Japanese)
Comfort's official PlayStation 2 visual novel website (in Japanese)
Anime official website (in Japanese)
Princess Lover! (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
Princess Lover! at The Visual Novel Database | country of origin | {
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Princess Lover! (プリンセスラバー!, Purinsesu Rabā!) is a Japanese visual novel and the first title developed by Ricotta. It was first released as an eroge for Microsoft Windows on June 27, 2008, in both limited and regular editions, which was followed by an all-ages release for the PlayStation 2 on January 28, 2010. The gameplay in Princess Lover! follows a linear plot line which offers pre-determined scenarios and courses of interaction, and its story focuses on the appeal of the four female main characters.
Princess Lover! has received several transitions to other media. The game was first adapted into three light novels written by Utsusemi and illustrated by Hyūma Kitsuhi. It was then followed by two manga adaptations: the first, illustrated by Naoha Yuigi, began serialization in Media Factory's Media Factory Mobile! service on March 20, 2009; and the second, illustrated by Yū Midorigi, began its serialization in the manga magazine Comic Valkyrie on July 27, 2009. An anime adaptation produced by the animation studio GoHands also began its broadcast in Japan on July 5, 2009, and it was later followed by other networks in the same month. An Internet radio show has also been produced to promote the anime adaptation, and began its broadcast on July 3, 2009. A two-part adult OVA series was released in late 2010.
Gameplay
The gameplay in Princess Lover! requires little interaction from the player, as most of the duration of the game is only spent on reading the text that appears on the lower portion of the screen, representing either dialogue between characters, or the inner thoughts of the protagonist. Every so often, the player will come to a "decision point", where he or she is given the chance to choose from multiple options. The time between these points varies and can occur anywhere from a minute to much longer. Text progression pauses at these points and depending on the choices that the player makes, the plot will progress in a specific direction. There are four main plot lines in the game that the player will have the chance to experience, one for each of the heroines in the story. To view all of the plot lines, the player will have to replay the game multiple times and make different decisions to progress the plot in an alternate direction.
Plot
Arima Teppei lost his parents in a traffic accident. His grandfather Isshin adopted him and ordered him to succeed the head of Arima Group Corporation. At Shuuhou Gakuen, a high school only for wealthy students, Teppei's new life as a celebrity starts.
Characters
Main characters
Teppei Arima (有馬 哲平, Arima Teppei)
Voiced by: Takuma Terashima (anime, PS2 game) / Akira Ishida (OVA)
The main protagonist. Prior to the series, Teppei grew up in a happy family with his mother and father, a noodle shop owner. Coming back from school one day he learns that his parents were killed in an automobile accident. He is then picked up by his grandfather, Isshin Arima, who is the owner of the Arima Financial Combine, a very wealthy and perhaps the most powerful industrial group in Japan. Isshin then adopts Teppei with the aim of making him the successor to the Arima corporation (in place of his now-deceased daughter and Teppei's mother) and Teppei is enrolled in the most prestigious private school in Japan. He is a good swordsman and excels at quick drawing techniques.Charlotte Hazelrink (シャルロット・ヘイゼルリンク, Sharotto Heizerurinku)
Voiced by: Kazane (Windows game) / Ryōka Yuzuki (anime) / Aya Endō (PS2 game)
One of the four main heroines of the series, Charlotte is the princess of the fictional Hazelrink Principality. She and Teppei first meet when he saves her from some thugs. She likes to tease Teppei and has a cheery nature.
Aside from this, she is in love with Teppei and, in the anime, even asks Teppei to not forget about her. She also has very big breasts which attract Teppei's attention. She is a childhood friend of Sylvia van Hossen and is a little jealous of Sylvia for being named as Teppei's fiancée. She has a butler who is very protective of her and who will often go to great lengths to protect her. She also has a fiancée in the anime; despite this she does not want to give up on Teppei.Sylvia van Hossen (シルヴィア・ファン・ホッセン, Shiruvia Fan Hossen)
Voiced by: Suzune Kusunoki (Windows game, OVA) / Megumi Toyoguchi (anime) / Erika Harumi (PS2 game)
One of the four main heroines of the series, Sylvie is a noble of the fictional Flemish Principality of Eastern Europe. While she grew up in Flemish, she has not spent much of her mature life in that nation and attends school in Japan. She is the elder of the two daughters of Vincent van Hossen, the head of the van Hossen family and is very skilled in fencing. She first meets Teppei when they spar in the garden during a party. Both of them are surprised when they are told that their marriage has been arranged. When they next sparred, Sylvia won the showdown by the merest fraction of a second. She is a bit reserved but enjoys her bouts with Teppei and is trying to understand him as a friend first, before they are married. Maria, her younger sister, wants her to marry Teppei. Sylvia is the best friend of Charlotte, the Princess of Hazelrink. She is also the captain of the Flemish military unit called the Horse Riders. She is a hard woman with high standards and initially has a tendency to be outwardly repulsed by Teppei. She has difficulty expressing her feelings around him and is better with actions than words. She loved her late mother very dearly but was unable to cry at her funeral. Her feelings for Teppei are similar to those she has for her mother's memory. In the 9th episode she admits to Seika that she could not understand her feelings towards Teppei and in the 11th episode shows her true feelings to Teppei with a kiss.In the game her route concludes with Teppei and Sylvia getting married and Sylvia pregnant with Teppei's baby. The game ends with her saying she is extremely happy and thanking Teppei for everything.Seika Hōjōin (鳳条院 聖華, Hōjōin Seika)
Voiced by: Fūri Samoto (Windows game) / Emiri Katō (anime) / Eri Kitamura (PS2 game)
The daughter of the Hōjōin family whose company are rivals to Arima. Although she is initially neutral towards Teppei, once she finds out he is an Arima, she immediately dislikes him due to her family's longstanding antipathy for Teppei's grandfather (Many years previously, Teppei's grandfather was a workaholic and his lonely grandmother had an affair with Seika's grandfather which resulted in Isshin throwing his wife out of their house and his cutting ties with the Hōjōin. More recently, he refused to sell Seika's fashions in any of his group's stores). Seika has a loud and forthright nature. She is the 'Club Representative' of the 'Society Club' and reserves the right to limit membership to those students who satisfy her conditions to join the school's most elegant and exclusive club. Outside of school, she is a very popular model and one of the most gifted young fashion designers in all of Japan. Despite her initial dislike for Teppei, she falls in love with him due to his tenacious nature. However, she is uncertain how Teppei will react and is mostly quiet about it.Yū Fujikura (藤倉 優, Fujikura Yū)
Voiced by: Ayaka Kimura (Windows game, OVA) / Yuki Matsuoka (anime) / Yuka Inokuchi (PS2 game)
A maid of the Arima household who sometimes councils Teppei. She had been in an orphanage from a very young age until Isshin Arima took her into his care and brought her up to be an admirable maid. She has sworn to serve the Arima family to show her gratitude. She feels privileged to have been assigned as the maid-in-charge of serving Teppei, the next heir to the Arima Group. In addition to her household duties, Yuu is also an expert at computers and is able to type and work at almost superhuman speed. She thinks of Isshin Arima as a parent and develops tender feelings for Teppei, but feels that she is too low in class to be with him. Of all the girls, she is the most tender and nurturing and Teppei compares Yuu to his mother.
Supporting characters
Isshin Arima (有馬 一心, Arima Isshin)
Voiced by: Kyōnosuke Hiruma (Windows game) / Norio Wakamoto (anime & PS2 game)
The owner of the wealthy Arima corporation and grandfather of Teppei. He adopts Teppei when his daughter (Teppei's mother) and son-in-law were killed. Having learned his lesson with his daughter, Isshin allows Teppei to do as he wishes within broad guidelines rather than what Isshin wants him to do so that Teppei does not run away like his mother did. Isshin has an excellent memory despite his advanced age and, not having been a part of his childhood, wants to get to know Teppei better. He was an entrepreneur during World War II and made his fortune in the aftermath of the war. His company extends into many areas including automotive and metal industries.Kanae Kobayashi
Voiced by: Asako Dodo
Teppei's mother. She was the heir to the Arima Group Corporation before she died even though she had had little contact with her father for years prior to the story. She fell in love with Kobayashi, Isshin was inflexible. Due to her strong headed nature and despite her father's disapproval, she ran away and eloped.Mr. Kobayashi
Voiced by: Kanemitsu Nobuaki
Teppei's father and a skilled swordsman but also a lazy man. The only thing that he feared was the wrath of his wife. He and Kanae died together. Teppei believes Kanae fell in love with his father because he and Isshin have similar personalities.Maria van Hossen (マリア・ファン・ホッセン, Maria Fan Hossen)
Voiced by: Mio Ōkawa (Windows game, OVA) / Kaya Miyake (anime) / Maki Kobayashi (PS2 game)
The younger of the two van Hossen sisters. She is lovely and energetic. She loves her father Vincent and loves to cling to him all the time. She has called Teppei 'Onii-chan' since their first meeting because he is engaged to marry her elder sister Sylvia.Vincent van Hossen (Binsento Fan Hossen)
Voiced by: Takehito Koyasu (anime & PS2 game)
The father of Maria and Sylvia. He is a respectable figure in society and a supporter of the Arima Group. Teppei's grandfather, Isshin Arima, places great trust in Vincent and thus he chose his daughter, Sylvia, to be Teppei's fiancée. Vincent is calm and collected no matter the situation.Alfred (アルフレッド, Arufureddo)
Voiced by: Yosuke Akimoto (anime & PS2 game)
One of the butlers of the Hazelrink family. He has served Charlotte, Princess of Hazelrink since she was a baby and has sworn by his life to protect her. His devotion runs so deeply that he is overly protective of Charlotte. Alfred is a very good fist-fighter and an expert of martial arts. He is so vigorous that Teppei believes he will live to see 100. His name is a reference to Alfred Pennyworth, Bruce Wayne's butler from the Batman Series.
Others
Hartmann Bezelheim
Charlotte's fiance, Hartmann is also the most successful businessman in Charlotte's nation and one of the chief traders with the Arima company. In the anime, he serves as the primary villain. He hates Arima and wants to kill Teppei for vengeance. Despite his engagement to Charlotte, he is having an affair with Josephine. He wears glasses and has a tendency to make flashy entrances.Josephine
The secretary of Charlotte's fiance. She is a busty red-haired woman who is absolutely loyal to Hartmann and jealous of Charlotte's position as Hartmann's future wife.Ayano Kaneko (金子 綾乃, Kaneko Ayano)
Voiced by: Soyogi Tōno (Windows game) / Nozomi Sasaki (anime) / Tae Okajima (PS2 game)
One of the members of Seika Houjouin's posse. She is promoted to one of the main heroines in the sequel of the Princess Lover Series, Princess Lover! Eternal Love For My Lady.Haruhiko Nezu (根津 晴彦, Nezu Haruhiko)
Voiced by: Ichigo Miruku (Windows game) / Minoru Shiraishi (anime & PS2 game)
A vain classmate of Teppei's. He has great respect for Teppei and calls him Teppei-sama.Erika Takezono (竹園 エリカ, Takezono Erika)
Voiced by: Nazuna Gogyō (Windows game) / Kaoru Mizuhara (anime) / Ryōko Ono (PS2 game)
Another one of the members of Houjouin Seika's posse.Mr. Todomura
He is from the Arima Group Commissions Department.
Development
Princess Lover! is the first title developed by the visual novel developer Ricotta. The project is notable as the development team comprises a limited number of credited members. Scenario for the game was provided by Shōta Onoue who has previously worked on titles such as Tactics' Tenshi no Himegodo. Art direction and character designs were done by Kei Komori who is known for his work in various dōjin titles. Komori later went on to create Ricotta's second title Walkure Romanze: Shōjo Kishi Monogatari.
Release history
Princess Lover! was first released to the public on June 27, 2008, as a limited edition collected in a DVD playable only on Microsoft Windows. The limited edition included the game itself, and it also included a maxi single entitled "Songs From Princess Lover!". It was later followed by an all-ages consumer console release published by Comfort and released for the PlayStation 2 on January 28, 2010. The PlayStation 2 version entitled Princess Lover!: Eternal Love For My Lady will contain remastered graphics, and additional scenarios for Ayano Kaneko, a supporting female character being promoted to a heroine.
Adaptations
Books and publications
Princess Lover! was first adapted into a series of light novels written by Utsusemi and illustrated by Hyūma Kitsuhi. The first of the novels, titled Princess Lover! Silvia van Hossen's Romance (プリンセスラバー! シルヴィア=ファン・ホッセンの恋路, Purinsesu Rabaa! Shiruvia Fan Hossen no Koiji), was released on November 29, 2008. The second of the novels, titled Princess Lover! Charlotte Hazelrink's Romance (プリンセスラバー! シャルロット=ヘイゼルリンクの恋路, Purinsesu Rabaa! Sharurotto Heizerurinku no Koiji), was released on May 30, 2009. Both of these light novels were published by Kill Time Communication and released in regular and limited editions. The limited editions included the book itself and a telephone card; the second novel also received a version with a poster included instead. The regular editions of did not contain the aforementioned extras. A third light novel series, titled Princess Lover! Silvia van Hossen's Romance 2 and also written by Utsusemi and illustrated by Kitsuhi, began serialization in Kill Time Communication's Nijiken Dream Magazine on June 17, 2009.
A 135-page visual fan book for Princess Lover! was published by Max on December 2, 2008. The book contained illustrations and computer graphics used in the visual novel and various publications, introduction and explanations of the story and characters, production design and sketches, and interview with the development team, and also a short story entitled "Little Princess!"
Manga
There have been three manga adaptations based on Princess Lover! The first manga series was illustrated by Japanese artist Naoha Yuigi, and it was first serialized on Media Factory's Media Factory Mobile! service for mobile phones on March 20, 2009. A second manga series, Princess Lover! Pure My Heart, was also serialized in Kill Time Communication's Comic Valkyrie. The manga, which began serialization while the first was still ongoing, was illustrated by Yū Midorigi and received assistance from Utsusemi, the author of the light novel adaptations. The third manga, Princess Lover! Eternal Love For My Lady illustrated by Shu, was serialized in ASCII Media Works's Dengeki Moeo magazine from October 2009 to October 2010 issues. The three manga were collected in one volume each.
Anime
The anime adaptation of Princess Lover! was first formally announced in March 2009 via its official website. The anime was produced by GoHands as the animation studio's first production, and it was directed by Hiromitsu Kanazawa and written by Makoto Nakamura. It was first exhibited as a video in a public showing in Akihabara on June 21, 2009, and again at Television Kanagawa's Tvk Anime Matsuri 2009 exhibition in Nippon Seinenkan in Shinjuku, on June 27, 2009. Both events featured a public showing of the anime's first episode along with Umineko no Naku Koro ni, in addition to various other anime for the Tvk Anime Matsuri event. The anime began its televised broadcast in Japan on July 5, 2009, on the Chiba TV and TV Kanagawa broadcasting networks, ending on September 20, 2009. They also released an uncensored version in the webcast section.
In May 2021, Princess Lover! was one of five anime titles (along with KonoSuba, That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime, Zombie Land Saga, and Nekopara) that were given a limited ban by the Russian government for their depiction of reincarnation.
OVA
On September 24, 2010, a 2-part Princess Lover! adult OVA was animated by Hoods Entertainment under the name "Public Enemies". It features Sylvia as the main heroine and contains an original story with various erotic scenes. It was released on DVD by the adult anime label.
References
External links
Ricotta's official visual novel website (in Japanese)
Comfort's official PlayStation 2 visual novel website (in Japanese)
Anime official website (in Japanese)
Princess Lover! (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
Princess Lover! at The Visual Novel Database | genre | {
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Princess Lover! (プリンセスラバー!, Purinsesu Rabā!) is a Japanese visual novel and the first title developed by Ricotta. It was first released as an eroge for Microsoft Windows on June 27, 2008, in both limited and regular editions, which was followed by an all-ages release for the PlayStation 2 on January 28, 2010. The gameplay in Princess Lover! follows a linear plot line which offers pre-determined scenarios and courses of interaction, and its story focuses on the appeal of the four female main characters.
Princess Lover! has received several transitions to other media. The game was first adapted into three light novels written by Utsusemi and illustrated by Hyūma Kitsuhi. It was then followed by two manga adaptations: the first, illustrated by Naoha Yuigi, began serialization in Media Factory's Media Factory Mobile! service on March 20, 2009; and the second, illustrated by Yū Midorigi, began its serialization in the manga magazine Comic Valkyrie on July 27, 2009. An anime adaptation produced by the animation studio GoHands also began its broadcast in Japan on July 5, 2009, and it was later followed by other networks in the same month. An Internet radio show has also been produced to promote the anime adaptation, and began its broadcast on July 3, 2009. A two-part adult OVA series was released in late 2010.
Gameplay
The gameplay in Princess Lover! requires little interaction from the player, as most of the duration of the game is only spent on reading the text that appears on the lower portion of the screen, representing either dialogue between characters, or the inner thoughts of the protagonist. Every so often, the player will come to a "decision point", where he or she is given the chance to choose from multiple options. The time between these points varies and can occur anywhere from a minute to much longer. Text progression pauses at these points and depending on the choices that the player makes, the plot will progress in a specific direction. There are four main plot lines in the game that the player will have the chance to experience, one for each of the heroines in the story. To view all of the plot lines, the player will have to replay the game multiple times and make different decisions to progress the plot in an alternate direction.
Plot
Arima Teppei lost his parents in a traffic accident. His grandfather Isshin adopted him and ordered him to succeed the head of Arima Group Corporation. At Shuuhou Gakuen, a high school only for wealthy students, Teppei's new life as a celebrity starts.
Characters
Main characters
Teppei Arima (有馬 哲平, Arima Teppei)
Voiced by: Takuma Terashima (anime, PS2 game) / Akira Ishida (OVA)
The main protagonist. Prior to the series, Teppei grew up in a happy family with his mother and father, a noodle shop owner. Coming back from school one day he learns that his parents were killed in an automobile accident. He is then picked up by his grandfather, Isshin Arima, who is the owner of the Arima Financial Combine, a very wealthy and perhaps the most powerful industrial group in Japan. Isshin then adopts Teppei with the aim of making him the successor to the Arima corporation (in place of his now-deceased daughter and Teppei's mother) and Teppei is enrolled in the most prestigious private school in Japan. He is a good swordsman and excels at quick drawing techniques.Charlotte Hazelrink (シャルロット・ヘイゼルリンク, Sharotto Heizerurinku)
Voiced by: Kazane (Windows game) / Ryōka Yuzuki (anime) / Aya Endō (PS2 game)
One of the four main heroines of the series, Charlotte is the princess of the fictional Hazelrink Principality. She and Teppei first meet when he saves her from some thugs. She likes to tease Teppei and has a cheery nature.
Aside from this, she is in love with Teppei and, in the anime, even asks Teppei to not forget about her. She also has very big breasts which attract Teppei's attention. She is a childhood friend of Sylvia van Hossen and is a little jealous of Sylvia for being named as Teppei's fiancée. She has a butler who is very protective of her and who will often go to great lengths to protect her. She also has a fiancée in the anime; despite this she does not want to give up on Teppei.Sylvia van Hossen (シルヴィア・ファン・ホッセン, Shiruvia Fan Hossen)
Voiced by: Suzune Kusunoki (Windows game, OVA) / Megumi Toyoguchi (anime) / Erika Harumi (PS2 game)
One of the four main heroines of the series, Sylvie is a noble of the fictional Flemish Principality of Eastern Europe. While she grew up in Flemish, she has not spent much of her mature life in that nation and attends school in Japan. She is the elder of the two daughters of Vincent van Hossen, the head of the van Hossen family and is very skilled in fencing. She first meets Teppei when they spar in the garden during a party. Both of them are surprised when they are told that their marriage has been arranged. When they next sparred, Sylvia won the showdown by the merest fraction of a second. She is a bit reserved but enjoys her bouts with Teppei and is trying to understand him as a friend first, before they are married. Maria, her younger sister, wants her to marry Teppei. Sylvia is the best friend of Charlotte, the Princess of Hazelrink. She is also the captain of the Flemish military unit called the Horse Riders. She is a hard woman with high standards and initially has a tendency to be outwardly repulsed by Teppei. She has difficulty expressing her feelings around him and is better with actions than words. She loved her late mother very dearly but was unable to cry at her funeral. Her feelings for Teppei are similar to those she has for her mother's memory. In the 9th episode she admits to Seika that she could not understand her feelings towards Teppei and in the 11th episode shows her true feelings to Teppei with a kiss.In the game her route concludes with Teppei and Sylvia getting married and Sylvia pregnant with Teppei's baby. The game ends with her saying she is extremely happy and thanking Teppei for everything.Seika Hōjōin (鳳条院 聖華, Hōjōin Seika)
Voiced by: Fūri Samoto (Windows game) / Emiri Katō (anime) / Eri Kitamura (PS2 game)
The daughter of the Hōjōin family whose company are rivals to Arima. Although she is initially neutral towards Teppei, once she finds out he is an Arima, she immediately dislikes him due to her family's longstanding antipathy for Teppei's grandfather (Many years previously, Teppei's grandfather was a workaholic and his lonely grandmother had an affair with Seika's grandfather which resulted in Isshin throwing his wife out of their house and his cutting ties with the Hōjōin. More recently, he refused to sell Seika's fashions in any of his group's stores). Seika has a loud and forthright nature. She is the 'Club Representative' of the 'Society Club' and reserves the right to limit membership to those students who satisfy her conditions to join the school's most elegant and exclusive club. Outside of school, she is a very popular model and one of the most gifted young fashion designers in all of Japan. Despite her initial dislike for Teppei, she falls in love with him due to his tenacious nature. However, she is uncertain how Teppei will react and is mostly quiet about it.Yū Fujikura (藤倉 優, Fujikura Yū)
Voiced by: Ayaka Kimura (Windows game, OVA) / Yuki Matsuoka (anime) / Yuka Inokuchi (PS2 game)
A maid of the Arima household who sometimes councils Teppei. She had been in an orphanage from a very young age until Isshin Arima took her into his care and brought her up to be an admirable maid. She has sworn to serve the Arima family to show her gratitude. She feels privileged to have been assigned as the maid-in-charge of serving Teppei, the next heir to the Arima Group. In addition to her household duties, Yuu is also an expert at computers and is able to type and work at almost superhuman speed. She thinks of Isshin Arima as a parent and develops tender feelings for Teppei, but feels that she is too low in class to be with him. Of all the girls, she is the most tender and nurturing and Teppei compares Yuu to his mother.
Supporting characters
Isshin Arima (有馬 一心, Arima Isshin)
Voiced by: Kyōnosuke Hiruma (Windows game) / Norio Wakamoto (anime & PS2 game)
The owner of the wealthy Arima corporation and grandfather of Teppei. He adopts Teppei when his daughter (Teppei's mother) and son-in-law were killed. Having learned his lesson with his daughter, Isshin allows Teppei to do as he wishes within broad guidelines rather than what Isshin wants him to do so that Teppei does not run away like his mother did. Isshin has an excellent memory despite his advanced age and, not having been a part of his childhood, wants to get to know Teppei better. He was an entrepreneur during World War II and made his fortune in the aftermath of the war. His company extends into many areas including automotive and metal industries.Kanae Kobayashi
Voiced by: Asako Dodo
Teppei's mother. She was the heir to the Arima Group Corporation before she died even though she had had little contact with her father for years prior to the story. She fell in love with Kobayashi, Isshin was inflexible. Due to her strong headed nature and despite her father's disapproval, she ran away and eloped.Mr. Kobayashi
Voiced by: Kanemitsu Nobuaki
Teppei's father and a skilled swordsman but also a lazy man. The only thing that he feared was the wrath of his wife. He and Kanae died together. Teppei believes Kanae fell in love with his father because he and Isshin have similar personalities.Maria van Hossen (マリア・ファン・ホッセン, Maria Fan Hossen)
Voiced by: Mio Ōkawa (Windows game, OVA) / Kaya Miyake (anime) / Maki Kobayashi (PS2 game)
The younger of the two van Hossen sisters. She is lovely and energetic. She loves her father Vincent and loves to cling to him all the time. She has called Teppei 'Onii-chan' since their first meeting because he is engaged to marry her elder sister Sylvia.Vincent van Hossen (Binsento Fan Hossen)
Voiced by: Takehito Koyasu (anime & PS2 game)
The father of Maria and Sylvia. He is a respectable figure in society and a supporter of the Arima Group. Teppei's grandfather, Isshin Arima, places great trust in Vincent and thus he chose his daughter, Sylvia, to be Teppei's fiancée. Vincent is calm and collected no matter the situation.Alfred (アルフレッド, Arufureddo)
Voiced by: Yosuke Akimoto (anime & PS2 game)
One of the butlers of the Hazelrink family. He has served Charlotte, Princess of Hazelrink since she was a baby and has sworn by his life to protect her. His devotion runs so deeply that he is overly protective of Charlotte. Alfred is a very good fist-fighter and an expert of martial arts. He is so vigorous that Teppei believes he will live to see 100. His name is a reference to Alfred Pennyworth, Bruce Wayne's butler from the Batman Series.
Others
Hartmann Bezelheim
Charlotte's fiance, Hartmann is also the most successful businessman in Charlotte's nation and one of the chief traders with the Arima company. In the anime, he serves as the primary villain. He hates Arima and wants to kill Teppei for vengeance. Despite his engagement to Charlotte, he is having an affair with Josephine. He wears glasses and has a tendency to make flashy entrances.Josephine
The secretary of Charlotte's fiance. She is a busty red-haired woman who is absolutely loyal to Hartmann and jealous of Charlotte's position as Hartmann's future wife.Ayano Kaneko (金子 綾乃, Kaneko Ayano)
Voiced by: Soyogi Tōno (Windows game) / Nozomi Sasaki (anime) / Tae Okajima (PS2 game)
One of the members of Seika Houjouin's posse. She is promoted to one of the main heroines in the sequel of the Princess Lover Series, Princess Lover! Eternal Love For My Lady.Haruhiko Nezu (根津 晴彦, Nezu Haruhiko)
Voiced by: Ichigo Miruku (Windows game) / Minoru Shiraishi (anime & PS2 game)
A vain classmate of Teppei's. He has great respect for Teppei and calls him Teppei-sama.Erika Takezono (竹園 エリカ, Takezono Erika)
Voiced by: Nazuna Gogyō (Windows game) / Kaoru Mizuhara (anime) / Ryōko Ono (PS2 game)
Another one of the members of Houjouin Seika's posse.Mr. Todomura
He is from the Arima Group Commissions Department.
Development
Princess Lover! is the first title developed by the visual novel developer Ricotta. The project is notable as the development team comprises a limited number of credited members. Scenario for the game was provided by Shōta Onoue who has previously worked on titles such as Tactics' Tenshi no Himegodo. Art direction and character designs were done by Kei Komori who is known for his work in various dōjin titles. Komori later went on to create Ricotta's second title Walkure Romanze: Shōjo Kishi Monogatari.
Release history
Princess Lover! was first released to the public on June 27, 2008, as a limited edition collected in a DVD playable only on Microsoft Windows. The limited edition included the game itself, and it also included a maxi single entitled "Songs From Princess Lover!". It was later followed by an all-ages consumer console release published by Comfort and released for the PlayStation 2 on January 28, 2010. The PlayStation 2 version entitled Princess Lover!: Eternal Love For My Lady will contain remastered graphics, and additional scenarios for Ayano Kaneko, a supporting female character being promoted to a heroine.
Adaptations
Books and publications
Princess Lover! was first adapted into a series of light novels written by Utsusemi and illustrated by Hyūma Kitsuhi. The first of the novels, titled Princess Lover! Silvia van Hossen's Romance (プリンセスラバー! シルヴィア=ファン・ホッセンの恋路, Purinsesu Rabaa! Shiruvia Fan Hossen no Koiji), was released on November 29, 2008. The second of the novels, titled Princess Lover! Charlotte Hazelrink's Romance (プリンセスラバー! シャルロット=ヘイゼルリンクの恋路, Purinsesu Rabaa! Sharurotto Heizerurinku no Koiji), was released on May 30, 2009. Both of these light novels were published by Kill Time Communication and released in regular and limited editions. The limited editions included the book itself and a telephone card; the second novel also received a version with a poster included instead. The regular editions of did not contain the aforementioned extras. A third light novel series, titled Princess Lover! Silvia van Hossen's Romance 2 and also written by Utsusemi and illustrated by Kitsuhi, began serialization in Kill Time Communication's Nijiken Dream Magazine on June 17, 2009.
A 135-page visual fan book for Princess Lover! was published by Max on December 2, 2008. The book contained illustrations and computer graphics used in the visual novel and various publications, introduction and explanations of the story and characters, production design and sketches, and interview with the development team, and also a short story entitled "Little Princess!"
Manga
There have been three manga adaptations based on Princess Lover! The first manga series was illustrated by Japanese artist Naoha Yuigi, and it was first serialized on Media Factory's Media Factory Mobile! service for mobile phones on March 20, 2009. A second manga series, Princess Lover! Pure My Heart, was also serialized in Kill Time Communication's Comic Valkyrie. The manga, which began serialization while the first was still ongoing, was illustrated by Yū Midorigi and received assistance from Utsusemi, the author of the light novel adaptations. The third manga, Princess Lover! Eternal Love For My Lady illustrated by Shu, was serialized in ASCII Media Works's Dengeki Moeo magazine from October 2009 to October 2010 issues. The three manga were collected in one volume each.
Anime
The anime adaptation of Princess Lover! was first formally announced in March 2009 via its official website. The anime was produced by GoHands as the animation studio's first production, and it was directed by Hiromitsu Kanazawa and written by Makoto Nakamura. It was first exhibited as a video in a public showing in Akihabara on June 21, 2009, and again at Television Kanagawa's Tvk Anime Matsuri 2009 exhibition in Nippon Seinenkan in Shinjuku, on June 27, 2009. Both events featured a public showing of the anime's first episode along with Umineko no Naku Koro ni, in addition to various other anime for the Tvk Anime Matsuri event. The anime began its televised broadcast in Japan on July 5, 2009, on the Chiba TV and TV Kanagawa broadcasting networks, ending on September 20, 2009. They also released an uncensored version in the webcast section.
In May 2021, Princess Lover! was one of five anime titles (along with KonoSuba, That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime, Zombie Land Saga, and Nekopara) that were given a limited ban by the Russian government for their depiction of reincarnation.
OVA
On September 24, 2010, a 2-part Princess Lover! adult OVA was animated by Hoods Entertainment under the name "Public Enemies". It features Sylvia as the main heroine and contains an original story with various erotic scenes. It was released on DVD by the adult anime label.
References
External links
Ricotta's official visual novel website (in Japanese)
Comfort's official PlayStation 2 visual novel website (in Japanese)
Anime official website (in Japanese)
Princess Lover! (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
Princess Lover! at The Visual Novel Database | developer | {
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"text": [
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Princess Lover! (プリンセスラバー!, Purinsesu Rabā!) is a Japanese visual novel and the first title developed by Ricotta. It was first released as an eroge for Microsoft Windows on June 27, 2008, in both limited and regular editions, which was followed by an all-ages release for the PlayStation 2 on January 28, 2010. The gameplay in Princess Lover! follows a linear plot line which offers pre-determined scenarios and courses of interaction, and its story focuses on the appeal of the four female main characters.
Princess Lover! has received several transitions to other media. The game was first adapted into three light novels written by Utsusemi and illustrated by Hyūma Kitsuhi. It was then followed by two manga adaptations: the first, illustrated by Naoha Yuigi, began serialization in Media Factory's Media Factory Mobile! service on March 20, 2009; and the second, illustrated by Yū Midorigi, began its serialization in the manga magazine Comic Valkyrie on July 27, 2009. An anime adaptation produced by the animation studio GoHands also began its broadcast in Japan on July 5, 2009, and it was later followed by other networks in the same month. An Internet radio show has also been produced to promote the anime adaptation, and began its broadcast on July 3, 2009. A two-part adult OVA series was released in late 2010.
Gameplay
The gameplay in Princess Lover! requires little interaction from the player, as most of the duration of the game is only spent on reading the text that appears on the lower portion of the screen, representing either dialogue between characters, or the inner thoughts of the protagonist. Every so often, the player will come to a "decision point", where he or she is given the chance to choose from multiple options. The time between these points varies and can occur anywhere from a minute to much longer. Text progression pauses at these points and depending on the choices that the player makes, the plot will progress in a specific direction. There are four main plot lines in the game that the player will have the chance to experience, one for each of the heroines in the story. To view all of the plot lines, the player will have to replay the game multiple times and make different decisions to progress the plot in an alternate direction.
Plot
Arima Teppei lost his parents in a traffic accident. His grandfather Isshin adopted him and ordered him to succeed the head of Arima Group Corporation. At Shuuhou Gakuen, a high school only for wealthy students, Teppei's new life as a celebrity starts.
Characters
Main characters
Teppei Arima (有馬 哲平, Arima Teppei)
Voiced by: Takuma Terashima (anime, PS2 game) / Akira Ishida (OVA)
The main protagonist. Prior to the series, Teppei grew up in a happy family with his mother and father, a noodle shop owner. Coming back from school one day he learns that his parents were killed in an automobile accident. He is then picked up by his grandfather, Isshin Arima, who is the owner of the Arima Financial Combine, a very wealthy and perhaps the most powerful industrial group in Japan. Isshin then adopts Teppei with the aim of making him the successor to the Arima corporation (in place of his now-deceased daughter and Teppei's mother) and Teppei is enrolled in the most prestigious private school in Japan. He is a good swordsman and excels at quick drawing techniques.Charlotte Hazelrink (シャルロット・ヘイゼルリンク, Sharotto Heizerurinku)
Voiced by: Kazane (Windows game) / Ryōka Yuzuki (anime) / Aya Endō (PS2 game)
One of the four main heroines of the series, Charlotte is the princess of the fictional Hazelrink Principality. She and Teppei first meet when he saves her from some thugs. She likes to tease Teppei and has a cheery nature.
Aside from this, she is in love with Teppei and, in the anime, even asks Teppei to not forget about her. She also has very big breasts which attract Teppei's attention. She is a childhood friend of Sylvia van Hossen and is a little jealous of Sylvia for being named as Teppei's fiancée. She has a butler who is very protective of her and who will often go to great lengths to protect her. She also has a fiancée in the anime; despite this she does not want to give up on Teppei.Sylvia van Hossen (シルヴィア・ファン・ホッセン, Shiruvia Fan Hossen)
Voiced by: Suzune Kusunoki (Windows game, OVA) / Megumi Toyoguchi (anime) / Erika Harumi (PS2 game)
One of the four main heroines of the series, Sylvie is a noble of the fictional Flemish Principality of Eastern Europe. While she grew up in Flemish, she has not spent much of her mature life in that nation and attends school in Japan. She is the elder of the two daughters of Vincent van Hossen, the head of the van Hossen family and is very skilled in fencing. She first meets Teppei when they spar in the garden during a party. Both of them are surprised when they are told that their marriage has been arranged. When they next sparred, Sylvia won the showdown by the merest fraction of a second. She is a bit reserved but enjoys her bouts with Teppei and is trying to understand him as a friend first, before they are married. Maria, her younger sister, wants her to marry Teppei. Sylvia is the best friend of Charlotte, the Princess of Hazelrink. She is also the captain of the Flemish military unit called the Horse Riders. She is a hard woman with high standards and initially has a tendency to be outwardly repulsed by Teppei. She has difficulty expressing her feelings around him and is better with actions than words. She loved her late mother very dearly but was unable to cry at her funeral. Her feelings for Teppei are similar to those she has for her mother's memory. In the 9th episode she admits to Seika that she could not understand her feelings towards Teppei and in the 11th episode shows her true feelings to Teppei with a kiss.In the game her route concludes with Teppei and Sylvia getting married and Sylvia pregnant with Teppei's baby. The game ends with her saying she is extremely happy and thanking Teppei for everything.Seika Hōjōin (鳳条院 聖華, Hōjōin Seika)
Voiced by: Fūri Samoto (Windows game) / Emiri Katō (anime) / Eri Kitamura (PS2 game)
The daughter of the Hōjōin family whose company are rivals to Arima. Although she is initially neutral towards Teppei, once she finds out he is an Arima, she immediately dislikes him due to her family's longstanding antipathy for Teppei's grandfather (Many years previously, Teppei's grandfather was a workaholic and his lonely grandmother had an affair with Seika's grandfather which resulted in Isshin throwing his wife out of their house and his cutting ties with the Hōjōin. More recently, he refused to sell Seika's fashions in any of his group's stores). Seika has a loud and forthright nature. She is the 'Club Representative' of the 'Society Club' and reserves the right to limit membership to those students who satisfy her conditions to join the school's most elegant and exclusive club. Outside of school, she is a very popular model and one of the most gifted young fashion designers in all of Japan. Despite her initial dislike for Teppei, she falls in love with him due to his tenacious nature. However, she is uncertain how Teppei will react and is mostly quiet about it.Yū Fujikura (藤倉 優, Fujikura Yū)
Voiced by: Ayaka Kimura (Windows game, OVA) / Yuki Matsuoka (anime) / Yuka Inokuchi (PS2 game)
A maid of the Arima household who sometimes councils Teppei. She had been in an orphanage from a very young age until Isshin Arima took her into his care and brought her up to be an admirable maid. She has sworn to serve the Arima family to show her gratitude. She feels privileged to have been assigned as the maid-in-charge of serving Teppei, the next heir to the Arima Group. In addition to her household duties, Yuu is also an expert at computers and is able to type and work at almost superhuman speed. She thinks of Isshin Arima as a parent and develops tender feelings for Teppei, but feels that she is too low in class to be with him. Of all the girls, she is the most tender and nurturing and Teppei compares Yuu to his mother.
Supporting characters
Isshin Arima (有馬 一心, Arima Isshin)
Voiced by: Kyōnosuke Hiruma (Windows game) / Norio Wakamoto (anime & PS2 game)
The owner of the wealthy Arima corporation and grandfather of Teppei. He adopts Teppei when his daughter (Teppei's mother) and son-in-law were killed. Having learned his lesson with his daughter, Isshin allows Teppei to do as he wishes within broad guidelines rather than what Isshin wants him to do so that Teppei does not run away like his mother did. Isshin has an excellent memory despite his advanced age and, not having been a part of his childhood, wants to get to know Teppei better. He was an entrepreneur during World War II and made his fortune in the aftermath of the war. His company extends into many areas including automotive and metal industries.Kanae Kobayashi
Voiced by: Asako Dodo
Teppei's mother. She was the heir to the Arima Group Corporation before she died even though she had had little contact with her father for years prior to the story. She fell in love with Kobayashi, Isshin was inflexible. Due to her strong headed nature and despite her father's disapproval, she ran away and eloped.Mr. Kobayashi
Voiced by: Kanemitsu Nobuaki
Teppei's father and a skilled swordsman but also a lazy man. The only thing that he feared was the wrath of his wife. He and Kanae died together. Teppei believes Kanae fell in love with his father because he and Isshin have similar personalities.Maria van Hossen (マリア・ファン・ホッセン, Maria Fan Hossen)
Voiced by: Mio Ōkawa (Windows game, OVA) / Kaya Miyake (anime) / Maki Kobayashi (PS2 game)
The younger of the two van Hossen sisters. She is lovely and energetic. She loves her father Vincent and loves to cling to him all the time. She has called Teppei 'Onii-chan' since their first meeting because he is engaged to marry her elder sister Sylvia.Vincent van Hossen (Binsento Fan Hossen)
Voiced by: Takehito Koyasu (anime & PS2 game)
The father of Maria and Sylvia. He is a respectable figure in society and a supporter of the Arima Group. Teppei's grandfather, Isshin Arima, places great trust in Vincent and thus he chose his daughter, Sylvia, to be Teppei's fiancée. Vincent is calm and collected no matter the situation.Alfred (アルフレッド, Arufureddo)
Voiced by: Yosuke Akimoto (anime & PS2 game)
One of the butlers of the Hazelrink family. He has served Charlotte, Princess of Hazelrink since she was a baby and has sworn by his life to protect her. His devotion runs so deeply that he is overly protective of Charlotte. Alfred is a very good fist-fighter and an expert of martial arts. He is so vigorous that Teppei believes he will live to see 100. His name is a reference to Alfred Pennyworth, Bruce Wayne's butler from the Batman Series.
Others
Hartmann Bezelheim
Charlotte's fiance, Hartmann is also the most successful businessman in Charlotte's nation and one of the chief traders with the Arima company. In the anime, he serves as the primary villain. He hates Arima and wants to kill Teppei for vengeance. Despite his engagement to Charlotte, he is having an affair with Josephine. He wears glasses and has a tendency to make flashy entrances.Josephine
The secretary of Charlotte's fiance. She is a busty red-haired woman who is absolutely loyal to Hartmann and jealous of Charlotte's position as Hartmann's future wife.Ayano Kaneko (金子 綾乃, Kaneko Ayano)
Voiced by: Soyogi Tōno (Windows game) / Nozomi Sasaki (anime) / Tae Okajima (PS2 game)
One of the members of Seika Houjouin's posse. She is promoted to one of the main heroines in the sequel of the Princess Lover Series, Princess Lover! Eternal Love For My Lady.Haruhiko Nezu (根津 晴彦, Nezu Haruhiko)
Voiced by: Ichigo Miruku (Windows game) / Minoru Shiraishi (anime & PS2 game)
A vain classmate of Teppei's. He has great respect for Teppei and calls him Teppei-sama.Erika Takezono (竹園 エリカ, Takezono Erika)
Voiced by: Nazuna Gogyō (Windows game) / Kaoru Mizuhara (anime) / Ryōko Ono (PS2 game)
Another one of the members of Houjouin Seika's posse.Mr. Todomura
He is from the Arima Group Commissions Department.
Development
Princess Lover! is the first title developed by the visual novel developer Ricotta. The project is notable as the development team comprises a limited number of credited members. Scenario for the game was provided by Shōta Onoue who has previously worked on titles such as Tactics' Tenshi no Himegodo. Art direction and character designs were done by Kei Komori who is known for his work in various dōjin titles. Komori later went on to create Ricotta's second title Walkure Romanze: Shōjo Kishi Monogatari.
Release history
Princess Lover! was first released to the public on June 27, 2008, as a limited edition collected in a DVD playable only on Microsoft Windows. The limited edition included the game itself, and it also included a maxi single entitled "Songs From Princess Lover!". It was later followed by an all-ages consumer console release published by Comfort and released for the PlayStation 2 on January 28, 2010. The PlayStation 2 version entitled Princess Lover!: Eternal Love For My Lady will contain remastered graphics, and additional scenarios for Ayano Kaneko, a supporting female character being promoted to a heroine.
Adaptations
Books and publications
Princess Lover! was first adapted into a series of light novels written by Utsusemi and illustrated by Hyūma Kitsuhi. The first of the novels, titled Princess Lover! Silvia van Hossen's Romance (プリンセスラバー! シルヴィア=ファン・ホッセンの恋路, Purinsesu Rabaa! Shiruvia Fan Hossen no Koiji), was released on November 29, 2008. The second of the novels, titled Princess Lover! Charlotte Hazelrink's Romance (プリンセスラバー! シャルロット=ヘイゼルリンクの恋路, Purinsesu Rabaa! Sharurotto Heizerurinku no Koiji), was released on May 30, 2009. Both of these light novels were published by Kill Time Communication and released in regular and limited editions. The limited editions included the book itself and a telephone card; the second novel also received a version with a poster included instead. The regular editions of did not contain the aforementioned extras. A third light novel series, titled Princess Lover! Silvia van Hossen's Romance 2 and also written by Utsusemi and illustrated by Kitsuhi, began serialization in Kill Time Communication's Nijiken Dream Magazine on June 17, 2009.
A 135-page visual fan book for Princess Lover! was published by Max on December 2, 2008. The book contained illustrations and computer graphics used in the visual novel and various publications, introduction and explanations of the story and characters, production design and sketches, and interview with the development team, and also a short story entitled "Little Princess!"
Manga
There have been three manga adaptations based on Princess Lover! The first manga series was illustrated by Japanese artist Naoha Yuigi, and it was first serialized on Media Factory's Media Factory Mobile! service for mobile phones on March 20, 2009. A second manga series, Princess Lover! Pure My Heart, was also serialized in Kill Time Communication's Comic Valkyrie. The manga, which began serialization while the first was still ongoing, was illustrated by Yū Midorigi and received assistance from Utsusemi, the author of the light novel adaptations. The third manga, Princess Lover! Eternal Love For My Lady illustrated by Shu, was serialized in ASCII Media Works's Dengeki Moeo magazine from October 2009 to October 2010 issues. The three manga were collected in one volume each.
Anime
The anime adaptation of Princess Lover! was first formally announced in March 2009 via its official website. The anime was produced by GoHands as the animation studio's first production, and it was directed by Hiromitsu Kanazawa and written by Makoto Nakamura. It was first exhibited as a video in a public showing in Akihabara on June 21, 2009, and again at Television Kanagawa's Tvk Anime Matsuri 2009 exhibition in Nippon Seinenkan in Shinjuku, on June 27, 2009. Both events featured a public showing of the anime's first episode along with Umineko no Naku Koro ni, in addition to various other anime for the Tvk Anime Matsuri event. The anime began its televised broadcast in Japan on July 5, 2009, on the Chiba TV and TV Kanagawa broadcasting networks, ending on September 20, 2009. They also released an uncensored version in the webcast section.
In May 2021, Princess Lover! was one of five anime titles (along with KonoSuba, That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime, Zombie Land Saga, and Nekopara) that were given a limited ban by the Russian government for their depiction of reincarnation.
OVA
On September 24, 2010, a 2-part Princess Lover! adult OVA was animated by Hoods Entertainment under the name "Public Enemies". It features Sylvia as the main heroine and contains an original story with various erotic scenes. It was released on DVD by the adult anime label.
References
External links
Ricotta's official visual novel website (in Japanese)
Comfort's official PlayStation 2 visual novel website (in Japanese)
Anime official website (in Japanese)
Princess Lover! (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
Princess Lover! at The Visual Novel Database | platform | {
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Princess Lover! (プリンセスラバー!, Purinsesu Rabā!) is a Japanese visual novel and the first title developed by Ricotta. It was first released as an eroge for Microsoft Windows on June 27, 2008, in both limited and regular editions, which was followed by an all-ages release for the PlayStation 2 on January 28, 2010. The gameplay in Princess Lover! follows a linear plot line which offers pre-determined scenarios and courses of interaction, and its story focuses on the appeal of the four female main characters.
Princess Lover! has received several transitions to other media. The game was first adapted into three light novels written by Utsusemi and illustrated by Hyūma Kitsuhi. It was then followed by two manga adaptations: the first, illustrated by Naoha Yuigi, began serialization in Media Factory's Media Factory Mobile! service on March 20, 2009; and the second, illustrated by Yū Midorigi, began its serialization in the manga magazine Comic Valkyrie on July 27, 2009. An anime adaptation produced by the animation studio GoHands also began its broadcast in Japan on July 5, 2009, and it was later followed by other networks in the same month. An Internet radio show has also been produced to promote the anime adaptation, and began its broadcast on July 3, 2009. A two-part adult OVA series was released in late 2010.
Gameplay
The gameplay in Princess Lover! requires little interaction from the player, as most of the duration of the game is only spent on reading the text that appears on the lower portion of the screen, representing either dialogue between characters, or the inner thoughts of the protagonist. Every so often, the player will come to a "decision point", where he or she is given the chance to choose from multiple options. The time between these points varies and can occur anywhere from a minute to much longer. Text progression pauses at these points and depending on the choices that the player makes, the plot will progress in a specific direction. There are four main plot lines in the game that the player will have the chance to experience, one for each of the heroines in the story. To view all of the plot lines, the player will have to replay the game multiple times and make different decisions to progress the plot in an alternate direction.
Plot
Arima Teppei lost his parents in a traffic accident. His grandfather Isshin adopted him and ordered him to succeed the head of Arima Group Corporation. At Shuuhou Gakuen, a high school only for wealthy students, Teppei's new life as a celebrity starts.
Characters
Main characters
Teppei Arima (有馬 哲平, Arima Teppei)
Voiced by: Takuma Terashima (anime, PS2 game) / Akira Ishida (OVA)
The main protagonist. Prior to the series, Teppei grew up in a happy family with his mother and father, a noodle shop owner. Coming back from school one day he learns that his parents were killed in an automobile accident. He is then picked up by his grandfather, Isshin Arima, who is the owner of the Arima Financial Combine, a very wealthy and perhaps the most powerful industrial group in Japan. Isshin then adopts Teppei with the aim of making him the successor to the Arima corporation (in place of his now-deceased daughter and Teppei's mother) and Teppei is enrolled in the most prestigious private school in Japan. He is a good swordsman and excels at quick drawing techniques.Charlotte Hazelrink (シャルロット・ヘイゼルリンク, Sharotto Heizerurinku)
Voiced by: Kazane (Windows game) / Ryōka Yuzuki (anime) / Aya Endō (PS2 game)
One of the four main heroines of the series, Charlotte is the princess of the fictional Hazelrink Principality. She and Teppei first meet when he saves her from some thugs. She likes to tease Teppei and has a cheery nature.
Aside from this, she is in love with Teppei and, in the anime, even asks Teppei to not forget about her. She also has very big breasts which attract Teppei's attention. She is a childhood friend of Sylvia van Hossen and is a little jealous of Sylvia for being named as Teppei's fiancée. She has a butler who is very protective of her and who will often go to great lengths to protect her. She also has a fiancée in the anime; despite this she does not want to give up on Teppei.Sylvia van Hossen (シルヴィア・ファン・ホッセン, Shiruvia Fan Hossen)
Voiced by: Suzune Kusunoki (Windows game, OVA) / Megumi Toyoguchi (anime) / Erika Harumi (PS2 game)
One of the four main heroines of the series, Sylvie is a noble of the fictional Flemish Principality of Eastern Europe. While she grew up in Flemish, she has not spent much of her mature life in that nation and attends school in Japan. She is the elder of the two daughters of Vincent van Hossen, the head of the van Hossen family and is very skilled in fencing. She first meets Teppei when they spar in the garden during a party. Both of them are surprised when they are told that their marriage has been arranged. When they next sparred, Sylvia won the showdown by the merest fraction of a second. She is a bit reserved but enjoys her bouts with Teppei and is trying to understand him as a friend first, before they are married. Maria, her younger sister, wants her to marry Teppei. Sylvia is the best friend of Charlotte, the Princess of Hazelrink. She is also the captain of the Flemish military unit called the Horse Riders. She is a hard woman with high standards and initially has a tendency to be outwardly repulsed by Teppei. She has difficulty expressing her feelings around him and is better with actions than words. She loved her late mother very dearly but was unable to cry at her funeral. Her feelings for Teppei are similar to those she has for her mother's memory. In the 9th episode she admits to Seika that she could not understand her feelings towards Teppei and in the 11th episode shows her true feelings to Teppei with a kiss.In the game her route concludes with Teppei and Sylvia getting married and Sylvia pregnant with Teppei's baby. The game ends with her saying she is extremely happy and thanking Teppei for everything.Seika Hōjōin (鳳条院 聖華, Hōjōin Seika)
Voiced by: Fūri Samoto (Windows game) / Emiri Katō (anime) / Eri Kitamura (PS2 game)
The daughter of the Hōjōin family whose company are rivals to Arima. Although she is initially neutral towards Teppei, once she finds out he is an Arima, she immediately dislikes him due to her family's longstanding antipathy for Teppei's grandfather (Many years previously, Teppei's grandfather was a workaholic and his lonely grandmother had an affair with Seika's grandfather which resulted in Isshin throwing his wife out of their house and his cutting ties with the Hōjōin. More recently, he refused to sell Seika's fashions in any of his group's stores). Seika has a loud and forthright nature. She is the 'Club Representative' of the 'Society Club' and reserves the right to limit membership to those students who satisfy her conditions to join the school's most elegant and exclusive club. Outside of school, she is a very popular model and one of the most gifted young fashion designers in all of Japan. Despite her initial dislike for Teppei, she falls in love with him due to his tenacious nature. However, she is uncertain how Teppei will react and is mostly quiet about it.Yū Fujikura (藤倉 優, Fujikura Yū)
Voiced by: Ayaka Kimura (Windows game, OVA) / Yuki Matsuoka (anime) / Yuka Inokuchi (PS2 game)
A maid of the Arima household who sometimes councils Teppei. She had been in an orphanage from a very young age until Isshin Arima took her into his care and brought her up to be an admirable maid. She has sworn to serve the Arima family to show her gratitude. She feels privileged to have been assigned as the maid-in-charge of serving Teppei, the next heir to the Arima Group. In addition to her household duties, Yuu is also an expert at computers and is able to type and work at almost superhuman speed. She thinks of Isshin Arima as a parent and develops tender feelings for Teppei, but feels that she is too low in class to be with him. Of all the girls, she is the most tender and nurturing and Teppei compares Yuu to his mother.
Supporting characters
Isshin Arima (有馬 一心, Arima Isshin)
Voiced by: Kyōnosuke Hiruma (Windows game) / Norio Wakamoto (anime & PS2 game)
The owner of the wealthy Arima corporation and grandfather of Teppei. He adopts Teppei when his daughter (Teppei's mother) and son-in-law were killed. Having learned his lesson with his daughter, Isshin allows Teppei to do as he wishes within broad guidelines rather than what Isshin wants him to do so that Teppei does not run away like his mother did. Isshin has an excellent memory despite his advanced age and, not having been a part of his childhood, wants to get to know Teppei better. He was an entrepreneur during World War II and made his fortune in the aftermath of the war. His company extends into many areas including automotive and metal industries.Kanae Kobayashi
Voiced by: Asako Dodo
Teppei's mother. She was the heir to the Arima Group Corporation before she died even though she had had little contact with her father for years prior to the story. She fell in love with Kobayashi, Isshin was inflexible. Due to her strong headed nature and despite her father's disapproval, she ran away and eloped.Mr. Kobayashi
Voiced by: Kanemitsu Nobuaki
Teppei's father and a skilled swordsman but also a lazy man. The only thing that he feared was the wrath of his wife. He and Kanae died together. Teppei believes Kanae fell in love with his father because he and Isshin have similar personalities.Maria van Hossen (マリア・ファン・ホッセン, Maria Fan Hossen)
Voiced by: Mio Ōkawa (Windows game, OVA) / Kaya Miyake (anime) / Maki Kobayashi (PS2 game)
The younger of the two van Hossen sisters. She is lovely and energetic. She loves her father Vincent and loves to cling to him all the time. She has called Teppei 'Onii-chan' since their first meeting because he is engaged to marry her elder sister Sylvia.Vincent van Hossen (Binsento Fan Hossen)
Voiced by: Takehito Koyasu (anime & PS2 game)
The father of Maria and Sylvia. He is a respectable figure in society and a supporter of the Arima Group. Teppei's grandfather, Isshin Arima, places great trust in Vincent and thus he chose his daughter, Sylvia, to be Teppei's fiancée. Vincent is calm and collected no matter the situation.Alfred (アルフレッド, Arufureddo)
Voiced by: Yosuke Akimoto (anime & PS2 game)
One of the butlers of the Hazelrink family. He has served Charlotte, Princess of Hazelrink since she was a baby and has sworn by his life to protect her. His devotion runs so deeply that he is overly protective of Charlotte. Alfred is a very good fist-fighter and an expert of martial arts. He is so vigorous that Teppei believes he will live to see 100. His name is a reference to Alfred Pennyworth, Bruce Wayne's butler from the Batman Series.
Others
Hartmann Bezelheim
Charlotte's fiance, Hartmann is also the most successful businessman in Charlotte's nation and one of the chief traders with the Arima company. In the anime, he serves as the primary villain. He hates Arima and wants to kill Teppei for vengeance. Despite his engagement to Charlotte, he is having an affair with Josephine. He wears glasses and has a tendency to make flashy entrances.Josephine
The secretary of Charlotte's fiance. She is a busty red-haired woman who is absolutely loyal to Hartmann and jealous of Charlotte's position as Hartmann's future wife.Ayano Kaneko (金子 綾乃, Kaneko Ayano)
Voiced by: Soyogi Tōno (Windows game) / Nozomi Sasaki (anime) / Tae Okajima (PS2 game)
One of the members of Seika Houjouin's posse. She is promoted to one of the main heroines in the sequel of the Princess Lover Series, Princess Lover! Eternal Love For My Lady.Haruhiko Nezu (根津 晴彦, Nezu Haruhiko)
Voiced by: Ichigo Miruku (Windows game) / Minoru Shiraishi (anime & PS2 game)
A vain classmate of Teppei's. He has great respect for Teppei and calls him Teppei-sama.Erika Takezono (竹園 エリカ, Takezono Erika)
Voiced by: Nazuna Gogyō (Windows game) / Kaoru Mizuhara (anime) / Ryōko Ono (PS2 game)
Another one of the members of Houjouin Seika's posse.Mr. Todomura
He is from the Arima Group Commissions Department.
Development
Princess Lover! is the first title developed by the visual novel developer Ricotta. The project is notable as the development team comprises a limited number of credited members. Scenario for the game was provided by Shōta Onoue who has previously worked on titles such as Tactics' Tenshi no Himegodo. Art direction and character designs were done by Kei Komori who is known for his work in various dōjin titles. Komori later went on to create Ricotta's second title Walkure Romanze: Shōjo Kishi Monogatari.
Release history
Princess Lover! was first released to the public on June 27, 2008, as a limited edition collected in a DVD playable only on Microsoft Windows. The limited edition included the game itself, and it also included a maxi single entitled "Songs From Princess Lover!". It was later followed by an all-ages consumer console release published by Comfort and released for the PlayStation 2 on January 28, 2010. The PlayStation 2 version entitled Princess Lover!: Eternal Love For My Lady will contain remastered graphics, and additional scenarios for Ayano Kaneko, a supporting female character being promoted to a heroine.
Adaptations
Books and publications
Princess Lover! was first adapted into a series of light novels written by Utsusemi and illustrated by Hyūma Kitsuhi. The first of the novels, titled Princess Lover! Silvia van Hossen's Romance (プリンセスラバー! シルヴィア=ファン・ホッセンの恋路, Purinsesu Rabaa! Shiruvia Fan Hossen no Koiji), was released on November 29, 2008. The second of the novels, titled Princess Lover! Charlotte Hazelrink's Romance (プリンセスラバー! シャルロット=ヘイゼルリンクの恋路, Purinsesu Rabaa! Sharurotto Heizerurinku no Koiji), was released on May 30, 2009. Both of these light novels were published by Kill Time Communication and released in regular and limited editions. The limited editions included the book itself and a telephone card; the second novel also received a version with a poster included instead. The regular editions of did not contain the aforementioned extras. A third light novel series, titled Princess Lover! Silvia van Hossen's Romance 2 and also written by Utsusemi and illustrated by Kitsuhi, began serialization in Kill Time Communication's Nijiken Dream Magazine on June 17, 2009.
A 135-page visual fan book for Princess Lover! was published by Max on December 2, 2008. The book contained illustrations and computer graphics used in the visual novel and various publications, introduction and explanations of the story and characters, production design and sketches, and interview with the development team, and also a short story entitled "Little Princess!"
Manga
There have been three manga adaptations based on Princess Lover! The first manga series was illustrated by Japanese artist Naoha Yuigi, and it was first serialized on Media Factory's Media Factory Mobile! service for mobile phones on March 20, 2009. A second manga series, Princess Lover! Pure My Heart, was also serialized in Kill Time Communication's Comic Valkyrie. The manga, which began serialization while the first was still ongoing, was illustrated by Yū Midorigi and received assistance from Utsusemi, the author of the light novel adaptations. The third manga, Princess Lover! Eternal Love For My Lady illustrated by Shu, was serialized in ASCII Media Works's Dengeki Moeo magazine from October 2009 to October 2010 issues. The three manga were collected in one volume each.
Anime
The anime adaptation of Princess Lover! was first formally announced in March 2009 via its official website. The anime was produced by GoHands as the animation studio's first production, and it was directed by Hiromitsu Kanazawa and written by Makoto Nakamura. It was first exhibited as a video in a public showing in Akihabara on June 21, 2009, and again at Television Kanagawa's Tvk Anime Matsuri 2009 exhibition in Nippon Seinenkan in Shinjuku, on June 27, 2009. Both events featured a public showing of the anime's first episode along with Umineko no Naku Koro ni, in addition to various other anime for the Tvk Anime Matsuri event. The anime began its televised broadcast in Japan on July 5, 2009, on the Chiba TV and TV Kanagawa broadcasting networks, ending on September 20, 2009. They also released an uncensored version in the webcast section.
In May 2021, Princess Lover! was one of five anime titles (along with KonoSuba, That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime, Zombie Land Saga, and Nekopara) that were given a limited ban by the Russian government for their depiction of reincarnation.
OVA
On September 24, 2010, a 2-part Princess Lover! adult OVA was animated by Hoods Entertainment under the name "Public Enemies". It features Sylvia as the main heroine and contains an original story with various erotic scenes. It was released on DVD by the adult anime label.
References
External links
Ricotta's official visual novel website (in Japanese)
Comfort's official PlayStation 2 visual novel website (in Japanese)
Anime official website (in Japanese)
Princess Lover! (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
Princess Lover! at The Visual Novel Database | language of work or name | {
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Princess Lover! (プリンセスラバー!, Purinsesu Rabā!) is a Japanese visual novel and the first title developed by Ricotta. It was first released as an eroge for Microsoft Windows on June 27, 2008, in both limited and regular editions, which was followed by an all-ages release for the PlayStation 2 on January 28, 2010. The gameplay in Princess Lover! follows a linear plot line which offers pre-determined scenarios and courses of interaction, and its story focuses on the appeal of the four female main characters.
Princess Lover! has received several transitions to other media. The game was first adapted into three light novels written by Utsusemi and illustrated by Hyūma Kitsuhi. It was then followed by two manga adaptations: the first, illustrated by Naoha Yuigi, began serialization in Media Factory's Media Factory Mobile! service on March 20, 2009; and the second, illustrated by Yū Midorigi, began its serialization in the manga magazine Comic Valkyrie on July 27, 2009. An anime adaptation produced by the animation studio GoHands also began its broadcast in Japan on July 5, 2009, and it was later followed by other networks in the same month. An Internet radio show has also been produced to promote the anime adaptation, and began its broadcast on July 3, 2009. A two-part adult OVA series was released in late 2010.
Gameplay
The gameplay in Princess Lover! requires little interaction from the player, as most of the duration of the game is only spent on reading the text that appears on the lower portion of the screen, representing either dialogue between characters, or the inner thoughts of the protagonist. Every so often, the player will come to a "decision point", where he or she is given the chance to choose from multiple options. The time between these points varies and can occur anywhere from a minute to much longer. Text progression pauses at these points and depending on the choices that the player makes, the plot will progress in a specific direction. There are four main plot lines in the game that the player will have the chance to experience, one for each of the heroines in the story. To view all of the plot lines, the player will have to replay the game multiple times and make different decisions to progress the plot in an alternate direction.
Plot
Arima Teppei lost his parents in a traffic accident. His grandfather Isshin adopted him and ordered him to succeed the head of Arima Group Corporation. At Shuuhou Gakuen, a high school only for wealthy students, Teppei's new life as a celebrity starts.
Characters
Main characters
Teppei Arima (有馬 哲平, Arima Teppei)
Voiced by: Takuma Terashima (anime, PS2 game) / Akira Ishida (OVA)
The main protagonist. Prior to the series, Teppei grew up in a happy family with his mother and father, a noodle shop owner. Coming back from school one day he learns that his parents were killed in an automobile accident. He is then picked up by his grandfather, Isshin Arima, who is the owner of the Arima Financial Combine, a very wealthy and perhaps the most powerful industrial group in Japan. Isshin then adopts Teppei with the aim of making him the successor to the Arima corporation (in place of his now-deceased daughter and Teppei's mother) and Teppei is enrolled in the most prestigious private school in Japan. He is a good swordsman and excels at quick drawing techniques.Charlotte Hazelrink (シャルロット・ヘイゼルリンク, Sharotto Heizerurinku)
Voiced by: Kazane (Windows game) / Ryōka Yuzuki (anime) / Aya Endō (PS2 game)
One of the four main heroines of the series, Charlotte is the princess of the fictional Hazelrink Principality. She and Teppei first meet when he saves her from some thugs. She likes to tease Teppei and has a cheery nature.
Aside from this, she is in love with Teppei and, in the anime, even asks Teppei to not forget about her. She also has very big breasts which attract Teppei's attention. She is a childhood friend of Sylvia van Hossen and is a little jealous of Sylvia for being named as Teppei's fiancée. She has a butler who is very protective of her and who will often go to great lengths to protect her. She also has a fiancée in the anime; despite this she does not want to give up on Teppei.Sylvia van Hossen (シルヴィア・ファン・ホッセン, Shiruvia Fan Hossen)
Voiced by: Suzune Kusunoki (Windows game, OVA) / Megumi Toyoguchi (anime) / Erika Harumi (PS2 game)
One of the four main heroines of the series, Sylvie is a noble of the fictional Flemish Principality of Eastern Europe. While she grew up in Flemish, she has not spent much of her mature life in that nation and attends school in Japan. She is the elder of the two daughters of Vincent van Hossen, the head of the van Hossen family and is very skilled in fencing. She first meets Teppei when they spar in the garden during a party. Both of them are surprised when they are told that their marriage has been arranged. When they next sparred, Sylvia won the showdown by the merest fraction of a second. She is a bit reserved but enjoys her bouts with Teppei and is trying to understand him as a friend first, before they are married. Maria, her younger sister, wants her to marry Teppei. Sylvia is the best friend of Charlotte, the Princess of Hazelrink. She is also the captain of the Flemish military unit called the Horse Riders. She is a hard woman with high standards and initially has a tendency to be outwardly repulsed by Teppei. She has difficulty expressing her feelings around him and is better with actions than words. She loved her late mother very dearly but was unable to cry at her funeral. Her feelings for Teppei are similar to those she has for her mother's memory. In the 9th episode she admits to Seika that she could not understand her feelings towards Teppei and in the 11th episode shows her true feelings to Teppei with a kiss.In the game her route concludes with Teppei and Sylvia getting married and Sylvia pregnant with Teppei's baby. The game ends with her saying she is extremely happy and thanking Teppei for everything.Seika Hōjōin (鳳条院 聖華, Hōjōin Seika)
Voiced by: Fūri Samoto (Windows game) / Emiri Katō (anime) / Eri Kitamura (PS2 game)
The daughter of the Hōjōin family whose company are rivals to Arima. Although she is initially neutral towards Teppei, once she finds out he is an Arima, she immediately dislikes him due to her family's longstanding antipathy for Teppei's grandfather (Many years previously, Teppei's grandfather was a workaholic and his lonely grandmother had an affair with Seika's grandfather which resulted in Isshin throwing his wife out of their house and his cutting ties with the Hōjōin. More recently, he refused to sell Seika's fashions in any of his group's stores). Seika has a loud and forthright nature. She is the 'Club Representative' of the 'Society Club' and reserves the right to limit membership to those students who satisfy her conditions to join the school's most elegant and exclusive club. Outside of school, she is a very popular model and one of the most gifted young fashion designers in all of Japan. Despite her initial dislike for Teppei, she falls in love with him due to his tenacious nature. However, she is uncertain how Teppei will react and is mostly quiet about it.Yū Fujikura (藤倉 優, Fujikura Yū)
Voiced by: Ayaka Kimura (Windows game, OVA) / Yuki Matsuoka (anime) / Yuka Inokuchi (PS2 game)
A maid of the Arima household who sometimes councils Teppei. She had been in an orphanage from a very young age until Isshin Arima took her into his care and brought her up to be an admirable maid. She has sworn to serve the Arima family to show her gratitude. She feels privileged to have been assigned as the maid-in-charge of serving Teppei, the next heir to the Arima Group. In addition to her household duties, Yuu is also an expert at computers and is able to type and work at almost superhuman speed. She thinks of Isshin Arima as a parent and develops tender feelings for Teppei, but feels that she is too low in class to be with him. Of all the girls, she is the most tender and nurturing and Teppei compares Yuu to his mother.
Supporting characters
Isshin Arima (有馬 一心, Arima Isshin)
Voiced by: Kyōnosuke Hiruma (Windows game) / Norio Wakamoto (anime & PS2 game)
The owner of the wealthy Arima corporation and grandfather of Teppei. He adopts Teppei when his daughter (Teppei's mother) and son-in-law were killed. Having learned his lesson with his daughter, Isshin allows Teppei to do as he wishes within broad guidelines rather than what Isshin wants him to do so that Teppei does not run away like his mother did. Isshin has an excellent memory despite his advanced age and, not having been a part of his childhood, wants to get to know Teppei better. He was an entrepreneur during World War II and made his fortune in the aftermath of the war. His company extends into many areas including automotive and metal industries.Kanae Kobayashi
Voiced by: Asako Dodo
Teppei's mother. She was the heir to the Arima Group Corporation before she died even though she had had little contact with her father for years prior to the story. She fell in love with Kobayashi, Isshin was inflexible. Due to her strong headed nature and despite her father's disapproval, she ran away and eloped.Mr. Kobayashi
Voiced by: Kanemitsu Nobuaki
Teppei's father and a skilled swordsman but also a lazy man. The only thing that he feared was the wrath of his wife. He and Kanae died together. Teppei believes Kanae fell in love with his father because he and Isshin have similar personalities.Maria van Hossen (マリア・ファン・ホッセン, Maria Fan Hossen)
Voiced by: Mio Ōkawa (Windows game, OVA) / Kaya Miyake (anime) / Maki Kobayashi (PS2 game)
The younger of the two van Hossen sisters. She is lovely and energetic. She loves her father Vincent and loves to cling to him all the time. She has called Teppei 'Onii-chan' since their first meeting because he is engaged to marry her elder sister Sylvia.Vincent van Hossen (Binsento Fan Hossen)
Voiced by: Takehito Koyasu (anime & PS2 game)
The father of Maria and Sylvia. He is a respectable figure in society and a supporter of the Arima Group. Teppei's grandfather, Isshin Arima, places great trust in Vincent and thus he chose his daughter, Sylvia, to be Teppei's fiancée. Vincent is calm and collected no matter the situation.Alfred (アルフレッド, Arufureddo)
Voiced by: Yosuke Akimoto (anime & PS2 game)
One of the butlers of the Hazelrink family. He has served Charlotte, Princess of Hazelrink since she was a baby and has sworn by his life to protect her. His devotion runs so deeply that he is overly protective of Charlotte. Alfred is a very good fist-fighter and an expert of martial arts. He is so vigorous that Teppei believes he will live to see 100. His name is a reference to Alfred Pennyworth, Bruce Wayne's butler from the Batman Series.
Others
Hartmann Bezelheim
Charlotte's fiance, Hartmann is also the most successful businessman in Charlotte's nation and one of the chief traders with the Arima company. In the anime, he serves as the primary villain. He hates Arima and wants to kill Teppei for vengeance. Despite his engagement to Charlotte, he is having an affair with Josephine. He wears glasses and has a tendency to make flashy entrances.Josephine
The secretary of Charlotte's fiance. She is a busty red-haired woman who is absolutely loyal to Hartmann and jealous of Charlotte's position as Hartmann's future wife.Ayano Kaneko (金子 綾乃, Kaneko Ayano)
Voiced by: Soyogi Tōno (Windows game) / Nozomi Sasaki (anime) / Tae Okajima (PS2 game)
One of the members of Seika Houjouin's posse. She is promoted to one of the main heroines in the sequel of the Princess Lover Series, Princess Lover! Eternal Love For My Lady.Haruhiko Nezu (根津 晴彦, Nezu Haruhiko)
Voiced by: Ichigo Miruku (Windows game) / Minoru Shiraishi (anime & PS2 game)
A vain classmate of Teppei's. He has great respect for Teppei and calls him Teppei-sama.Erika Takezono (竹園 エリカ, Takezono Erika)
Voiced by: Nazuna Gogyō (Windows game) / Kaoru Mizuhara (anime) / Ryōko Ono (PS2 game)
Another one of the members of Houjouin Seika's posse.Mr. Todomura
He is from the Arima Group Commissions Department.
Development
Princess Lover! is the first title developed by the visual novel developer Ricotta. The project is notable as the development team comprises a limited number of credited members. Scenario for the game was provided by Shōta Onoue who has previously worked on titles such as Tactics' Tenshi no Himegodo. Art direction and character designs were done by Kei Komori who is known for his work in various dōjin titles. Komori later went on to create Ricotta's second title Walkure Romanze: Shōjo Kishi Monogatari.
Release history
Princess Lover! was first released to the public on June 27, 2008, as a limited edition collected in a DVD playable only on Microsoft Windows. The limited edition included the game itself, and it also included a maxi single entitled "Songs From Princess Lover!". It was later followed by an all-ages consumer console release published by Comfort and released for the PlayStation 2 on January 28, 2010. The PlayStation 2 version entitled Princess Lover!: Eternal Love For My Lady will contain remastered graphics, and additional scenarios for Ayano Kaneko, a supporting female character being promoted to a heroine.
Adaptations
Books and publications
Princess Lover! was first adapted into a series of light novels written by Utsusemi and illustrated by Hyūma Kitsuhi. The first of the novels, titled Princess Lover! Silvia van Hossen's Romance (プリンセスラバー! シルヴィア=ファン・ホッセンの恋路, Purinsesu Rabaa! Shiruvia Fan Hossen no Koiji), was released on November 29, 2008. The second of the novels, titled Princess Lover! Charlotte Hazelrink's Romance (プリンセスラバー! シャルロット=ヘイゼルリンクの恋路, Purinsesu Rabaa! Sharurotto Heizerurinku no Koiji), was released on May 30, 2009. Both of these light novels were published by Kill Time Communication and released in regular and limited editions. The limited editions included the book itself and a telephone card; the second novel also received a version with a poster included instead. The regular editions of did not contain the aforementioned extras. A third light novel series, titled Princess Lover! Silvia van Hossen's Romance 2 and also written by Utsusemi and illustrated by Kitsuhi, began serialization in Kill Time Communication's Nijiken Dream Magazine on June 17, 2009.
A 135-page visual fan book for Princess Lover! was published by Max on December 2, 2008. The book contained illustrations and computer graphics used in the visual novel and various publications, introduction and explanations of the story and characters, production design and sketches, and interview with the development team, and also a short story entitled "Little Princess!"
Manga
There have been three manga adaptations based on Princess Lover! The first manga series was illustrated by Japanese artist Naoha Yuigi, and it was first serialized on Media Factory's Media Factory Mobile! service for mobile phones on March 20, 2009. A second manga series, Princess Lover! Pure My Heart, was also serialized in Kill Time Communication's Comic Valkyrie. The manga, which began serialization while the first was still ongoing, was illustrated by Yū Midorigi and received assistance from Utsusemi, the author of the light novel adaptations. The third manga, Princess Lover! Eternal Love For My Lady illustrated by Shu, was serialized in ASCII Media Works's Dengeki Moeo magazine from October 2009 to October 2010 issues. The three manga were collected in one volume each.
Anime
The anime adaptation of Princess Lover! was first formally announced in March 2009 via its official website. The anime was produced by GoHands as the animation studio's first production, and it was directed by Hiromitsu Kanazawa and written by Makoto Nakamura. It was first exhibited as a video in a public showing in Akihabara on June 21, 2009, and again at Television Kanagawa's Tvk Anime Matsuri 2009 exhibition in Nippon Seinenkan in Shinjuku, on June 27, 2009. Both events featured a public showing of the anime's first episode along with Umineko no Naku Koro ni, in addition to various other anime for the Tvk Anime Matsuri event. The anime began its televised broadcast in Japan on July 5, 2009, on the Chiba TV and TV Kanagawa broadcasting networks, ending on September 20, 2009. They also released an uncensored version in the webcast section.
In May 2021, Princess Lover! was one of five anime titles (along with KonoSuba, That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime, Zombie Land Saga, and Nekopara) that were given a limited ban by the Russian government for their depiction of reincarnation.
OVA
On September 24, 2010, a 2-part Princess Lover! adult OVA was animated by Hoods Entertainment under the name "Public Enemies". It features Sylvia as the main heroine and contains an original story with various erotic scenes. It was released on DVD by the adult anime label.
References
External links
Ricotta's official visual novel website (in Japanese)
Comfort's official PlayStation 2 visual novel website (in Japanese)
Anime official website (in Japanese)
Princess Lover! (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
Princess Lover! at The Visual Novel Database | said to be the same as | {
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Princess Lover! (プリンセスラバー!, Purinsesu Rabā!) is a Japanese visual novel and the first title developed by Ricotta. It was first released as an eroge for Microsoft Windows on June 27, 2008, in both limited and regular editions, which was followed by an all-ages release for the PlayStation 2 on January 28, 2010. The gameplay in Princess Lover! follows a linear plot line which offers pre-determined scenarios and courses of interaction, and its story focuses on the appeal of the four female main characters.
Princess Lover! has received several transitions to other media. The game was first adapted into three light novels written by Utsusemi and illustrated by Hyūma Kitsuhi. It was then followed by two manga adaptations: the first, illustrated by Naoha Yuigi, began serialization in Media Factory's Media Factory Mobile! service on March 20, 2009; and the second, illustrated by Yū Midorigi, began its serialization in the manga magazine Comic Valkyrie on July 27, 2009. An anime adaptation produced by the animation studio GoHands also began its broadcast in Japan on July 5, 2009, and it was later followed by other networks in the same month. An Internet radio show has also been produced to promote the anime adaptation, and began its broadcast on July 3, 2009. A two-part adult OVA series was released in late 2010.
Gameplay
The gameplay in Princess Lover! requires little interaction from the player, as most of the duration of the game is only spent on reading the text that appears on the lower portion of the screen, representing either dialogue between characters, or the inner thoughts of the protagonist. Every so often, the player will come to a "decision point", where he or she is given the chance to choose from multiple options. The time between these points varies and can occur anywhere from a minute to much longer. Text progression pauses at these points and depending on the choices that the player makes, the plot will progress in a specific direction. There are four main plot lines in the game that the player will have the chance to experience, one for each of the heroines in the story. To view all of the plot lines, the player will have to replay the game multiple times and make different decisions to progress the plot in an alternate direction.
Plot
Arima Teppei lost his parents in a traffic accident. His grandfather Isshin adopted him and ordered him to succeed the head of Arima Group Corporation. At Shuuhou Gakuen, a high school only for wealthy students, Teppei's new life as a celebrity starts.
Characters
Main characters
Teppei Arima (有馬 哲平, Arima Teppei)
Voiced by: Takuma Terashima (anime, PS2 game) / Akira Ishida (OVA)
The main protagonist. Prior to the series, Teppei grew up in a happy family with his mother and father, a noodle shop owner. Coming back from school one day he learns that his parents were killed in an automobile accident. He is then picked up by his grandfather, Isshin Arima, who is the owner of the Arima Financial Combine, a very wealthy and perhaps the most powerful industrial group in Japan. Isshin then adopts Teppei with the aim of making him the successor to the Arima corporation (in place of his now-deceased daughter and Teppei's mother) and Teppei is enrolled in the most prestigious private school in Japan. He is a good swordsman and excels at quick drawing techniques.Charlotte Hazelrink (シャルロット・ヘイゼルリンク, Sharotto Heizerurinku)
Voiced by: Kazane (Windows game) / Ryōka Yuzuki (anime) / Aya Endō (PS2 game)
One of the four main heroines of the series, Charlotte is the princess of the fictional Hazelrink Principality. She and Teppei first meet when he saves her from some thugs. She likes to tease Teppei and has a cheery nature.
Aside from this, she is in love with Teppei and, in the anime, even asks Teppei to not forget about her. She also has very big breasts which attract Teppei's attention. She is a childhood friend of Sylvia van Hossen and is a little jealous of Sylvia for being named as Teppei's fiancée. She has a butler who is very protective of her and who will often go to great lengths to protect her. She also has a fiancée in the anime; despite this she does not want to give up on Teppei.Sylvia van Hossen (シルヴィア・ファン・ホッセン, Shiruvia Fan Hossen)
Voiced by: Suzune Kusunoki (Windows game, OVA) / Megumi Toyoguchi (anime) / Erika Harumi (PS2 game)
One of the four main heroines of the series, Sylvie is a noble of the fictional Flemish Principality of Eastern Europe. While she grew up in Flemish, she has not spent much of her mature life in that nation and attends school in Japan. She is the elder of the two daughters of Vincent van Hossen, the head of the van Hossen family and is very skilled in fencing. She first meets Teppei when they spar in the garden during a party. Both of them are surprised when they are told that their marriage has been arranged. When they next sparred, Sylvia won the showdown by the merest fraction of a second. She is a bit reserved but enjoys her bouts with Teppei and is trying to understand him as a friend first, before they are married. Maria, her younger sister, wants her to marry Teppei. Sylvia is the best friend of Charlotte, the Princess of Hazelrink. She is also the captain of the Flemish military unit called the Horse Riders. She is a hard woman with high standards and initially has a tendency to be outwardly repulsed by Teppei. She has difficulty expressing her feelings around him and is better with actions than words. She loved her late mother very dearly but was unable to cry at her funeral. Her feelings for Teppei are similar to those she has for her mother's memory. In the 9th episode she admits to Seika that she could not understand her feelings towards Teppei and in the 11th episode shows her true feelings to Teppei with a kiss.In the game her route concludes with Teppei and Sylvia getting married and Sylvia pregnant with Teppei's baby. The game ends with her saying she is extremely happy and thanking Teppei for everything.Seika Hōjōin (鳳条院 聖華, Hōjōin Seika)
Voiced by: Fūri Samoto (Windows game) / Emiri Katō (anime) / Eri Kitamura (PS2 game)
The daughter of the Hōjōin family whose company are rivals to Arima. Although she is initially neutral towards Teppei, once she finds out he is an Arima, she immediately dislikes him due to her family's longstanding antipathy for Teppei's grandfather (Many years previously, Teppei's grandfather was a workaholic and his lonely grandmother had an affair with Seika's grandfather which resulted in Isshin throwing his wife out of their house and his cutting ties with the Hōjōin. More recently, he refused to sell Seika's fashions in any of his group's stores). Seika has a loud and forthright nature. She is the 'Club Representative' of the 'Society Club' and reserves the right to limit membership to those students who satisfy her conditions to join the school's most elegant and exclusive club. Outside of school, she is a very popular model and one of the most gifted young fashion designers in all of Japan. Despite her initial dislike for Teppei, she falls in love with him due to his tenacious nature. However, she is uncertain how Teppei will react and is mostly quiet about it.Yū Fujikura (藤倉 優, Fujikura Yū)
Voiced by: Ayaka Kimura (Windows game, OVA) / Yuki Matsuoka (anime) / Yuka Inokuchi (PS2 game)
A maid of the Arima household who sometimes councils Teppei. She had been in an orphanage from a very young age until Isshin Arima took her into his care and brought her up to be an admirable maid. She has sworn to serve the Arima family to show her gratitude. She feels privileged to have been assigned as the maid-in-charge of serving Teppei, the next heir to the Arima Group. In addition to her household duties, Yuu is also an expert at computers and is able to type and work at almost superhuman speed. She thinks of Isshin Arima as a parent and develops tender feelings for Teppei, but feels that she is too low in class to be with him. Of all the girls, she is the most tender and nurturing and Teppei compares Yuu to his mother.
Supporting characters
Isshin Arima (有馬 一心, Arima Isshin)
Voiced by: Kyōnosuke Hiruma (Windows game) / Norio Wakamoto (anime & PS2 game)
The owner of the wealthy Arima corporation and grandfather of Teppei. He adopts Teppei when his daughter (Teppei's mother) and son-in-law were killed. Having learned his lesson with his daughter, Isshin allows Teppei to do as he wishes within broad guidelines rather than what Isshin wants him to do so that Teppei does not run away like his mother did. Isshin has an excellent memory despite his advanced age and, not having been a part of his childhood, wants to get to know Teppei better. He was an entrepreneur during World War II and made his fortune in the aftermath of the war. His company extends into many areas including automotive and metal industries.Kanae Kobayashi
Voiced by: Asako Dodo
Teppei's mother. She was the heir to the Arima Group Corporation before she died even though she had had little contact with her father for years prior to the story. She fell in love with Kobayashi, Isshin was inflexible. Due to her strong headed nature and despite her father's disapproval, she ran away and eloped.Mr. Kobayashi
Voiced by: Kanemitsu Nobuaki
Teppei's father and a skilled swordsman but also a lazy man. The only thing that he feared was the wrath of his wife. He and Kanae died together. Teppei believes Kanae fell in love with his father because he and Isshin have similar personalities.Maria van Hossen (マリア・ファン・ホッセン, Maria Fan Hossen)
Voiced by: Mio Ōkawa (Windows game, OVA) / Kaya Miyake (anime) / Maki Kobayashi (PS2 game)
The younger of the two van Hossen sisters. She is lovely and energetic. She loves her father Vincent and loves to cling to him all the time. She has called Teppei 'Onii-chan' since their first meeting because he is engaged to marry her elder sister Sylvia.Vincent van Hossen (Binsento Fan Hossen)
Voiced by: Takehito Koyasu (anime & PS2 game)
The father of Maria and Sylvia. He is a respectable figure in society and a supporter of the Arima Group. Teppei's grandfather, Isshin Arima, places great trust in Vincent and thus he chose his daughter, Sylvia, to be Teppei's fiancée. Vincent is calm and collected no matter the situation.Alfred (アルフレッド, Arufureddo)
Voiced by: Yosuke Akimoto (anime & PS2 game)
One of the butlers of the Hazelrink family. He has served Charlotte, Princess of Hazelrink since she was a baby and has sworn by his life to protect her. His devotion runs so deeply that he is overly protective of Charlotte. Alfred is a very good fist-fighter and an expert of martial arts. He is so vigorous that Teppei believes he will live to see 100. His name is a reference to Alfred Pennyworth, Bruce Wayne's butler from the Batman Series.
Others
Hartmann Bezelheim
Charlotte's fiance, Hartmann is also the most successful businessman in Charlotte's nation and one of the chief traders with the Arima company. In the anime, he serves as the primary villain. He hates Arima and wants to kill Teppei for vengeance. Despite his engagement to Charlotte, he is having an affair with Josephine. He wears glasses and has a tendency to make flashy entrances.Josephine
The secretary of Charlotte's fiance. She is a busty red-haired woman who is absolutely loyal to Hartmann and jealous of Charlotte's position as Hartmann's future wife.Ayano Kaneko (金子 綾乃, Kaneko Ayano)
Voiced by: Soyogi Tōno (Windows game) / Nozomi Sasaki (anime) / Tae Okajima (PS2 game)
One of the members of Seika Houjouin's posse. She is promoted to one of the main heroines in the sequel of the Princess Lover Series, Princess Lover! Eternal Love For My Lady.Haruhiko Nezu (根津 晴彦, Nezu Haruhiko)
Voiced by: Ichigo Miruku (Windows game) / Minoru Shiraishi (anime & PS2 game)
A vain classmate of Teppei's. He has great respect for Teppei and calls him Teppei-sama.Erika Takezono (竹園 エリカ, Takezono Erika)
Voiced by: Nazuna Gogyō (Windows game) / Kaoru Mizuhara (anime) / Ryōko Ono (PS2 game)
Another one of the members of Houjouin Seika's posse.Mr. Todomura
He is from the Arima Group Commissions Department.
Development
Princess Lover! is the first title developed by the visual novel developer Ricotta. The project is notable as the development team comprises a limited number of credited members. Scenario for the game was provided by Shōta Onoue who has previously worked on titles such as Tactics' Tenshi no Himegodo. Art direction and character designs were done by Kei Komori who is known for his work in various dōjin titles. Komori later went on to create Ricotta's second title Walkure Romanze: Shōjo Kishi Monogatari.
Release history
Princess Lover! was first released to the public on June 27, 2008, as a limited edition collected in a DVD playable only on Microsoft Windows. The limited edition included the game itself, and it also included a maxi single entitled "Songs From Princess Lover!". It was later followed by an all-ages consumer console release published by Comfort and released for the PlayStation 2 on January 28, 2010. The PlayStation 2 version entitled Princess Lover!: Eternal Love For My Lady will contain remastered graphics, and additional scenarios for Ayano Kaneko, a supporting female character being promoted to a heroine.
Adaptations
Books and publications
Princess Lover! was first adapted into a series of light novels written by Utsusemi and illustrated by Hyūma Kitsuhi. The first of the novels, titled Princess Lover! Silvia van Hossen's Romance (プリンセスラバー! シルヴィア=ファン・ホッセンの恋路, Purinsesu Rabaa! Shiruvia Fan Hossen no Koiji), was released on November 29, 2008. The second of the novels, titled Princess Lover! Charlotte Hazelrink's Romance (プリンセスラバー! シャルロット=ヘイゼルリンクの恋路, Purinsesu Rabaa! Sharurotto Heizerurinku no Koiji), was released on May 30, 2009. Both of these light novels were published by Kill Time Communication and released in regular and limited editions. The limited editions included the book itself and a telephone card; the second novel also received a version with a poster included instead. The regular editions of did not contain the aforementioned extras. A third light novel series, titled Princess Lover! Silvia van Hossen's Romance 2 and also written by Utsusemi and illustrated by Kitsuhi, began serialization in Kill Time Communication's Nijiken Dream Magazine on June 17, 2009.
A 135-page visual fan book for Princess Lover! was published by Max on December 2, 2008. The book contained illustrations and computer graphics used in the visual novel and various publications, introduction and explanations of the story and characters, production design and sketches, and interview with the development team, and also a short story entitled "Little Princess!"
Manga
There have been three manga adaptations based on Princess Lover! The first manga series was illustrated by Japanese artist Naoha Yuigi, and it was first serialized on Media Factory's Media Factory Mobile! service for mobile phones on March 20, 2009. A second manga series, Princess Lover! Pure My Heart, was also serialized in Kill Time Communication's Comic Valkyrie. The manga, which began serialization while the first was still ongoing, was illustrated by Yū Midorigi and received assistance from Utsusemi, the author of the light novel adaptations. The third manga, Princess Lover! Eternal Love For My Lady illustrated by Shu, was serialized in ASCII Media Works's Dengeki Moeo magazine from October 2009 to October 2010 issues. The three manga were collected in one volume each.
Anime
The anime adaptation of Princess Lover! was first formally announced in March 2009 via its official website. The anime was produced by GoHands as the animation studio's first production, and it was directed by Hiromitsu Kanazawa and written by Makoto Nakamura. It was first exhibited as a video in a public showing in Akihabara on June 21, 2009, and again at Television Kanagawa's Tvk Anime Matsuri 2009 exhibition in Nippon Seinenkan in Shinjuku, on June 27, 2009. Both events featured a public showing of the anime's first episode along with Umineko no Naku Koro ni, in addition to various other anime for the Tvk Anime Matsuri event. The anime began its televised broadcast in Japan on July 5, 2009, on the Chiba TV and TV Kanagawa broadcasting networks, ending on September 20, 2009. They also released an uncensored version in the webcast section.
In May 2021, Princess Lover! was one of five anime titles (along with KonoSuba, That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime, Zombie Land Saga, and Nekopara) that were given a limited ban by the Russian government for their depiction of reincarnation.
OVA
On September 24, 2010, a 2-part Princess Lover! adult OVA was animated by Hoods Entertainment under the name "Public Enemies". It features Sylvia as the main heroine and contains an original story with various erotic scenes. It was released on DVD by the adult anime label.
References
External links
Ricotta's official visual novel website (in Japanese)
Comfort's official PlayStation 2 visual novel website (in Japanese)
Anime official website (in Japanese)
Princess Lover! (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
Princess Lover! at The Visual Novel Database | voice actor | {
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Princess Lover! (プリンセスラバー!, Purinsesu Rabā!) is a Japanese visual novel and the first title developed by Ricotta. It was first released as an eroge for Microsoft Windows on June 27, 2008, in both limited and regular editions, which was followed by an all-ages release for the PlayStation 2 on January 28, 2010. The gameplay in Princess Lover! follows a linear plot line which offers pre-determined scenarios and courses of interaction, and its story focuses on the appeal of the four female main characters.
Princess Lover! has received several transitions to other media. The game was first adapted into three light novels written by Utsusemi and illustrated by Hyūma Kitsuhi. It was then followed by two manga adaptations: the first, illustrated by Naoha Yuigi, began serialization in Media Factory's Media Factory Mobile! service on March 20, 2009; and the second, illustrated by Yū Midorigi, began its serialization in the manga magazine Comic Valkyrie on July 27, 2009. An anime adaptation produced by the animation studio GoHands also began its broadcast in Japan on July 5, 2009, and it was later followed by other networks in the same month. An Internet radio show has also been produced to promote the anime adaptation, and began its broadcast on July 3, 2009. A two-part adult OVA series was released in late 2010.
Gameplay
The gameplay in Princess Lover! requires little interaction from the player, as most of the duration of the game is only spent on reading the text that appears on the lower portion of the screen, representing either dialogue between characters, or the inner thoughts of the protagonist. Every so often, the player will come to a "decision point", where he or she is given the chance to choose from multiple options. The time between these points varies and can occur anywhere from a minute to much longer. Text progression pauses at these points and depending on the choices that the player makes, the plot will progress in a specific direction. There are four main plot lines in the game that the player will have the chance to experience, one for each of the heroines in the story. To view all of the plot lines, the player will have to replay the game multiple times and make different decisions to progress the plot in an alternate direction.
Plot
Arima Teppei lost his parents in a traffic accident. His grandfather Isshin adopted him and ordered him to succeed the head of Arima Group Corporation. At Shuuhou Gakuen, a high school only for wealthy students, Teppei's new life as a celebrity starts.
Characters
Main characters
Teppei Arima (有馬 哲平, Arima Teppei)
Voiced by: Takuma Terashima (anime, PS2 game) / Akira Ishida (OVA)
The main protagonist. Prior to the series, Teppei grew up in a happy family with his mother and father, a noodle shop owner. Coming back from school one day he learns that his parents were killed in an automobile accident. He is then picked up by his grandfather, Isshin Arima, who is the owner of the Arima Financial Combine, a very wealthy and perhaps the most powerful industrial group in Japan. Isshin then adopts Teppei with the aim of making him the successor to the Arima corporation (in place of his now-deceased daughter and Teppei's mother) and Teppei is enrolled in the most prestigious private school in Japan. He is a good swordsman and excels at quick drawing techniques.Charlotte Hazelrink (シャルロット・ヘイゼルリンク, Sharotto Heizerurinku)
Voiced by: Kazane (Windows game) / Ryōka Yuzuki (anime) / Aya Endō (PS2 game)
One of the four main heroines of the series, Charlotte is the princess of the fictional Hazelrink Principality. She and Teppei first meet when he saves her from some thugs. She likes to tease Teppei and has a cheery nature.
Aside from this, she is in love with Teppei and, in the anime, even asks Teppei to not forget about her. She also has very big breasts which attract Teppei's attention. She is a childhood friend of Sylvia van Hossen and is a little jealous of Sylvia for being named as Teppei's fiancée. She has a butler who is very protective of her and who will often go to great lengths to protect her. She also has a fiancée in the anime; despite this she does not want to give up on Teppei.Sylvia van Hossen (シルヴィア・ファン・ホッセン, Shiruvia Fan Hossen)
Voiced by: Suzune Kusunoki (Windows game, OVA) / Megumi Toyoguchi (anime) / Erika Harumi (PS2 game)
One of the four main heroines of the series, Sylvie is a noble of the fictional Flemish Principality of Eastern Europe. While she grew up in Flemish, she has not spent much of her mature life in that nation and attends school in Japan. She is the elder of the two daughters of Vincent van Hossen, the head of the van Hossen family and is very skilled in fencing. She first meets Teppei when they spar in the garden during a party. Both of them are surprised when they are told that their marriage has been arranged. When they next sparred, Sylvia won the showdown by the merest fraction of a second. She is a bit reserved but enjoys her bouts with Teppei and is trying to understand him as a friend first, before they are married. Maria, her younger sister, wants her to marry Teppei. Sylvia is the best friend of Charlotte, the Princess of Hazelrink. She is also the captain of the Flemish military unit called the Horse Riders. She is a hard woman with high standards and initially has a tendency to be outwardly repulsed by Teppei. She has difficulty expressing her feelings around him and is better with actions than words. She loved her late mother very dearly but was unable to cry at her funeral. Her feelings for Teppei are similar to those she has for her mother's memory. In the 9th episode she admits to Seika that she could not understand her feelings towards Teppei and in the 11th episode shows her true feelings to Teppei with a kiss.In the game her route concludes with Teppei and Sylvia getting married and Sylvia pregnant with Teppei's baby. The game ends with her saying she is extremely happy and thanking Teppei for everything.Seika Hōjōin (鳳条院 聖華, Hōjōin Seika)
Voiced by: Fūri Samoto (Windows game) / Emiri Katō (anime) / Eri Kitamura (PS2 game)
The daughter of the Hōjōin family whose company are rivals to Arima. Although she is initially neutral towards Teppei, once she finds out he is an Arima, she immediately dislikes him due to her family's longstanding antipathy for Teppei's grandfather (Many years previously, Teppei's grandfather was a workaholic and his lonely grandmother had an affair with Seika's grandfather which resulted in Isshin throwing his wife out of their house and his cutting ties with the Hōjōin. More recently, he refused to sell Seika's fashions in any of his group's stores). Seika has a loud and forthright nature. She is the 'Club Representative' of the 'Society Club' and reserves the right to limit membership to those students who satisfy her conditions to join the school's most elegant and exclusive club. Outside of school, she is a very popular model and one of the most gifted young fashion designers in all of Japan. Despite her initial dislike for Teppei, she falls in love with him due to his tenacious nature. However, she is uncertain how Teppei will react and is mostly quiet about it.Yū Fujikura (藤倉 優, Fujikura Yū)
Voiced by: Ayaka Kimura (Windows game, OVA) / Yuki Matsuoka (anime) / Yuka Inokuchi (PS2 game)
A maid of the Arima household who sometimes councils Teppei. She had been in an orphanage from a very young age until Isshin Arima took her into his care and brought her up to be an admirable maid. She has sworn to serve the Arima family to show her gratitude. She feels privileged to have been assigned as the maid-in-charge of serving Teppei, the next heir to the Arima Group. In addition to her household duties, Yuu is also an expert at computers and is able to type and work at almost superhuman speed. She thinks of Isshin Arima as a parent and develops tender feelings for Teppei, but feels that she is too low in class to be with him. Of all the girls, she is the most tender and nurturing and Teppei compares Yuu to his mother.
Supporting characters
Isshin Arima (有馬 一心, Arima Isshin)
Voiced by: Kyōnosuke Hiruma (Windows game) / Norio Wakamoto (anime & PS2 game)
The owner of the wealthy Arima corporation and grandfather of Teppei. He adopts Teppei when his daughter (Teppei's mother) and son-in-law were killed. Having learned his lesson with his daughter, Isshin allows Teppei to do as he wishes within broad guidelines rather than what Isshin wants him to do so that Teppei does not run away like his mother did. Isshin has an excellent memory despite his advanced age and, not having been a part of his childhood, wants to get to know Teppei better. He was an entrepreneur during World War II and made his fortune in the aftermath of the war. His company extends into many areas including automotive and metal industries.Kanae Kobayashi
Voiced by: Asako Dodo
Teppei's mother. She was the heir to the Arima Group Corporation before she died even though she had had little contact with her father for years prior to the story. She fell in love with Kobayashi, Isshin was inflexible. Due to her strong headed nature and despite her father's disapproval, she ran away and eloped.Mr. Kobayashi
Voiced by: Kanemitsu Nobuaki
Teppei's father and a skilled swordsman but also a lazy man. The only thing that he feared was the wrath of his wife. He and Kanae died together. Teppei believes Kanae fell in love with his father because he and Isshin have similar personalities.Maria van Hossen (マリア・ファン・ホッセン, Maria Fan Hossen)
Voiced by: Mio Ōkawa (Windows game, OVA) / Kaya Miyake (anime) / Maki Kobayashi (PS2 game)
The younger of the two van Hossen sisters. She is lovely and energetic. She loves her father Vincent and loves to cling to him all the time. She has called Teppei 'Onii-chan' since their first meeting because he is engaged to marry her elder sister Sylvia.Vincent van Hossen (Binsento Fan Hossen)
Voiced by: Takehito Koyasu (anime & PS2 game)
The father of Maria and Sylvia. He is a respectable figure in society and a supporter of the Arima Group. Teppei's grandfather, Isshin Arima, places great trust in Vincent and thus he chose his daughter, Sylvia, to be Teppei's fiancée. Vincent is calm and collected no matter the situation.Alfred (アルフレッド, Arufureddo)
Voiced by: Yosuke Akimoto (anime & PS2 game)
One of the butlers of the Hazelrink family. He has served Charlotte, Princess of Hazelrink since she was a baby and has sworn by his life to protect her. His devotion runs so deeply that he is overly protective of Charlotte. Alfred is a very good fist-fighter and an expert of martial arts. He is so vigorous that Teppei believes he will live to see 100. His name is a reference to Alfred Pennyworth, Bruce Wayne's butler from the Batman Series.
Others
Hartmann Bezelheim
Charlotte's fiance, Hartmann is also the most successful businessman in Charlotte's nation and one of the chief traders with the Arima company. In the anime, he serves as the primary villain. He hates Arima and wants to kill Teppei for vengeance. Despite his engagement to Charlotte, he is having an affair with Josephine. He wears glasses and has a tendency to make flashy entrances.Josephine
The secretary of Charlotte's fiance. She is a busty red-haired woman who is absolutely loyal to Hartmann and jealous of Charlotte's position as Hartmann's future wife.Ayano Kaneko (金子 綾乃, Kaneko Ayano)
Voiced by: Soyogi Tōno (Windows game) / Nozomi Sasaki (anime) / Tae Okajima (PS2 game)
One of the members of Seika Houjouin's posse. She is promoted to one of the main heroines in the sequel of the Princess Lover Series, Princess Lover! Eternal Love For My Lady.Haruhiko Nezu (根津 晴彦, Nezu Haruhiko)
Voiced by: Ichigo Miruku (Windows game) / Minoru Shiraishi (anime & PS2 game)
A vain classmate of Teppei's. He has great respect for Teppei and calls him Teppei-sama.Erika Takezono (竹園 エリカ, Takezono Erika)
Voiced by: Nazuna Gogyō (Windows game) / Kaoru Mizuhara (anime) / Ryōko Ono (PS2 game)
Another one of the members of Houjouin Seika's posse.Mr. Todomura
He is from the Arima Group Commissions Department.
Development
Princess Lover! is the first title developed by the visual novel developer Ricotta. The project is notable as the development team comprises a limited number of credited members. Scenario for the game was provided by Shōta Onoue who has previously worked on titles such as Tactics' Tenshi no Himegodo. Art direction and character designs were done by Kei Komori who is known for his work in various dōjin titles. Komori later went on to create Ricotta's second title Walkure Romanze: Shōjo Kishi Monogatari.
Release history
Princess Lover! was first released to the public on June 27, 2008, as a limited edition collected in a DVD playable only on Microsoft Windows. The limited edition included the game itself, and it also included a maxi single entitled "Songs From Princess Lover!". It was later followed by an all-ages consumer console release published by Comfort and released for the PlayStation 2 on January 28, 2010. The PlayStation 2 version entitled Princess Lover!: Eternal Love For My Lady will contain remastered graphics, and additional scenarios for Ayano Kaneko, a supporting female character being promoted to a heroine.
Adaptations
Books and publications
Princess Lover! was first adapted into a series of light novels written by Utsusemi and illustrated by Hyūma Kitsuhi. The first of the novels, titled Princess Lover! Silvia van Hossen's Romance (プリンセスラバー! シルヴィア=ファン・ホッセンの恋路, Purinsesu Rabaa! Shiruvia Fan Hossen no Koiji), was released on November 29, 2008. The second of the novels, titled Princess Lover! Charlotte Hazelrink's Romance (プリンセスラバー! シャルロット=ヘイゼルリンクの恋路, Purinsesu Rabaa! Sharurotto Heizerurinku no Koiji), was released on May 30, 2009. Both of these light novels were published by Kill Time Communication and released in regular and limited editions. The limited editions included the book itself and a telephone card; the second novel also received a version with a poster included instead. The regular editions of did not contain the aforementioned extras. A third light novel series, titled Princess Lover! Silvia van Hossen's Romance 2 and also written by Utsusemi and illustrated by Kitsuhi, began serialization in Kill Time Communication's Nijiken Dream Magazine on June 17, 2009.
A 135-page visual fan book for Princess Lover! was published by Max on December 2, 2008. The book contained illustrations and computer graphics used in the visual novel and various publications, introduction and explanations of the story and characters, production design and sketches, and interview with the development team, and also a short story entitled "Little Princess!"
Manga
There have been three manga adaptations based on Princess Lover! The first manga series was illustrated by Japanese artist Naoha Yuigi, and it was first serialized on Media Factory's Media Factory Mobile! service for mobile phones on March 20, 2009. A second manga series, Princess Lover! Pure My Heart, was also serialized in Kill Time Communication's Comic Valkyrie. The manga, which began serialization while the first was still ongoing, was illustrated by Yū Midorigi and received assistance from Utsusemi, the author of the light novel adaptations. The third manga, Princess Lover! Eternal Love For My Lady illustrated by Shu, was serialized in ASCII Media Works's Dengeki Moeo magazine from October 2009 to October 2010 issues. The three manga were collected in one volume each.
Anime
The anime adaptation of Princess Lover! was first formally announced in March 2009 via its official website. The anime was produced by GoHands as the animation studio's first production, and it was directed by Hiromitsu Kanazawa and written by Makoto Nakamura. It was first exhibited as a video in a public showing in Akihabara on June 21, 2009, and again at Television Kanagawa's Tvk Anime Matsuri 2009 exhibition in Nippon Seinenkan in Shinjuku, on June 27, 2009. Both events featured a public showing of the anime's first episode along with Umineko no Naku Koro ni, in addition to various other anime for the Tvk Anime Matsuri event. The anime began its televised broadcast in Japan on July 5, 2009, on the Chiba TV and TV Kanagawa broadcasting networks, ending on September 20, 2009. They also released an uncensored version in the webcast section.
In May 2021, Princess Lover! was one of five anime titles (along with KonoSuba, That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime, Zombie Land Saga, and Nekopara) that were given a limited ban by the Russian government for their depiction of reincarnation.
OVA
On September 24, 2010, a 2-part Princess Lover! adult OVA was animated by Hoods Entertainment under the name "Public Enemies". It features Sylvia as the main heroine and contains an original story with various erotic scenes. It was released on DVD by the adult anime label.
References
External links
Ricotta's official visual novel website (in Japanese)
Comfort's official PlayStation 2 visual novel website (in Japanese)
Anime official website (in Japanese)
Princess Lover! (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
Princess Lover! at The Visual Novel Database | derivative work | {
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Stenoma zobeida is a moth in the family Depressariidae. It was described by Edward Meyrick in 1931. It is found in Mexico and Panama.
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Stenoma zobeida is a moth in the family Depressariidae. It was described by Edward Meyrick in 1931. It is found in Mexico and Panama.
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} |
Subsets and Splits
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