texts stringlengths 40 104k | questions stringlengths 3 63 | answers dict |
|---|---|---|
Aleksandr Golovin may refer to:
Aleksandr Golovin (artist) (1863–1930), Russian artist and stage designer
Alexander Vasiliyevich Golovin (born 1949), Russian diplomat and ambassador
Aleksandr Golovin (footballer) (born 1996), Russian football player
Alexander Golovin (ice hockey) (born 1983), Russian ice hockey player
Aleksandr Golovin (wrestler) (born 1995), Russian Greco-Roman junior wrestler, silver world cup | country for sport | {
"answer_start": [
73
],
"text": [
"Russia"
]
} |
Aleksandr Golovin may refer to:
Aleksandr Golovin (artist) (1863–1930), Russian artist and stage designer
Alexander Vasiliyevich Golovin (born 1949), Russian diplomat and ambassador
Aleksandr Golovin (footballer) (born 1996), Russian football player
Alexander Golovin (ice hockey) (born 1983), Russian ice hockey player
Aleksandr Golovin (wrestler) (born 1995), Russian Greco-Roman junior wrestler, silver world cup | total goals in career | {
"answer_start": [
69
],
"text": [
"0"
]
} |
Adélard Charles Trottier (November 8, 1879 – November 29, 1955) was a physician, surgeon and politician in Ontario, Canada. He represented Essex North in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario from 1934 to 1943 as a Liberal.The son of Narcisse Trottier and Marie Savage, he was born in Lacolle, Quebec. He taught school for several years. In 1908, Trottier married Beatrice Girard. He served as president of the Medical Society of Ontario.He was one of several Liberal MPPs elected to constituencies with large French-speaking populations in 1934. Trottier was reelected in 1937.
References
External links
Adélard Charles Trottier – Ontario Legislative Assembly parliamentary history (archive) | place of birth | {
"answer_start": [
283
],
"text": [
"Lacolle"
]
} |
Adélard Charles Trottier (November 8, 1879 – November 29, 1955) was a physician, surgeon and politician in Ontario, Canada. He represented Essex North in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario from 1934 to 1943 as a Liberal.The son of Narcisse Trottier and Marie Savage, he was born in Lacolle, Quebec. He taught school for several years. In 1908, Trottier married Beatrice Girard. He served as president of the Medical Society of Ontario.He was one of several Liberal MPPs elected to constituencies with large French-speaking populations in 1934. Trottier was reelected in 1937.
References
External links
Adélard Charles Trottier – Ontario Legislative Assembly parliamentary history (archive) | country of citizenship | {
"answer_start": [
116
],
"text": [
"Canada"
]
} |
Adélard Charles Trottier (November 8, 1879 – November 29, 1955) was a physician, surgeon and politician in Ontario, Canada. He represented Essex North in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario from 1934 to 1943 as a Liberal.The son of Narcisse Trottier and Marie Savage, he was born in Lacolle, Quebec. He taught school for several years. In 1908, Trottier married Beatrice Girard. He served as president of the Medical Society of Ontario.He was one of several Liberal MPPs elected to constituencies with large French-speaking populations in 1934. Trottier was reelected in 1937.
References
External links
Adélard Charles Trottier – Ontario Legislative Assembly parliamentary history (archive) | occupation | {
"answer_start": [
70
],
"text": [
"physician"
]
} |
Adélard Charles Trottier (November 8, 1879 – November 29, 1955) was a physician, surgeon and politician in Ontario, Canada. He represented Essex North in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario from 1934 to 1943 as a Liberal.The son of Narcisse Trottier and Marie Savage, he was born in Lacolle, Quebec. He taught school for several years. In 1908, Trottier married Beatrice Girard. He served as president of the Medical Society of Ontario.He was one of several Liberal MPPs elected to constituencies with large French-speaking populations in 1934. Trottier was reelected in 1937.
References
External links
Adélard Charles Trottier – Ontario Legislative Assembly parliamentary history (archive) | family name | {
"answer_start": [
16
],
"text": [
"Trottier"
]
} |
Adélard Charles Trottier (November 8, 1879 – November 29, 1955) was a physician, surgeon and politician in Ontario, Canada. He represented Essex North in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario from 1934 to 1943 as a Liberal.The son of Narcisse Trottier and Marie Savage, he was born in Lacolle, Quebec. He taught school for several years. In 1908, Trottier married Beatrice Girard. He served as president of the Medical Society of Ontario.He was one of several Liberal MPPs elected to constituencies with large French-speaking populations in 1934. Trottier was reelected in 1937.
References
External links
Adélard Charles Trottier – Ontario Legislative Assembly parliamentary history (archive) | given name | {
"answer_start": [
0
],
"text": [
"Adélard"
]
} |
She Wants Me is a 2012 comedy film written and directed by Rob Margolies and starring Josh Gad and Kristen Ruhlin.
Plot
Sam is a writer working on a feature film. His girlfriend Sammy has been promised the lead role, but the producers want a famous actress. After some problems and the return of Sammy’s ex-boyfriend John, the relationship get complicated and they break up. Sam needs to deal with John, who becomes his friend and roommate, his lack of inspiration to write the film, his new single life and a new girlfriend who has had sex with many men, though all he really wants is Sammy back.
Cast
Casting
Margolies originally penned the role of Sam Baum for Jonah Hill, and intended Elliot Page to play Sammy Kingston. Kate Bosworth was originally attached to play the role of Kim Powers, but due to scheduling conflicts with another film, was unable to participate. Hilary Duff replaced her in October 2010.
The cameo role of Charlie Sheen was penned originally for Jeff Goldblum, but when the producers of the film mentioned an option to have Sheen participate, Margolies jumped at the chance to work with him. Sheen eventually became one of the executive producers of the film.
References
External links
She Wants Me at IMDb
She Wants Me at Rotten Tomatoes | instance of | {
"answer_start": [
30
],
"text": [
"film"
]
} |
She Wants Me is a 2012 comedy film written and directed by Rob Margolies and starring Josh Gad and Kristen Ruhlin.
Plot
Sam is a writer working on a feature film. His girlfriend Sammy has been promised the lead role, but the producers want a famous actress. After some problems and the return of Sammy’s ex-boyfriend John, the relationship get complicated and they break up. Sam needs to deal with John, who becomes his friend and roommate, his lack of inspiration to write the film, his new single life and a new girlfriend who has had sex with many men, though all he really wants is Sammy back.
Cast
Casting
Margolies originally penned the role of Sam Baum for Jonah Hill, and intended Elliot Page to play Sammy Kingston. Kate Bosworth was originally attached to play the role of Kim Powers, but due to scheduling conflicts with another film, was unable to participate. Hilary Duff replaced her in October 2010.
The cameo role of Charlie Sheen was penned originally for Jeff Goldblum, but when the producers of the film mentioned an option to have Sheen participate, Margolies jumped at the chance to work with him. Sheen eventually became one of the executive producers of the film.
References
External links
She Wants Me at IMDb
She Wants Me at Rotten Tomatoes | director | {
"answer_start": [
59
],
"text": [
"Rob Margolies"
]
} |
She Wants Me is a 2012 comedy film written and directed by Rob Margolies and starring Josh Gad and Kristen Ruhlin.
Plot
Sam is a writer working on a feature film. His girlfriend Sammy has been promised the lead role, but the producers want a famous actress. After some problems and the return of Sammy’s ex-boyfriend John, the relationship get complicated and they break up. Sam needs to deal with John, who becomes his friend and roommate, his lack of inspiration to write the film, his new single life and a new girlfriend who has had sex with many men, though all he really wants is Sammy back.
Cast
Casting
Margolies originally penned the role of Sam Baum for Jonah Hill, and intended Elliot Page to play Sammy Kingston. Kate Bosworth was originally attached to play the role of Kim Powers, but due to scheduling conflicts with another film, was unable to participate. Hilary Duff replaced her in October 2010.
The cameo role of Charlie Sheen was penned originally for Jeff Goldblum, but when the producers of the film mentioned an option to have Sheen participate, Margolies jumped at the chance to work with him. Sheen eventually became one of the executive producers of the film.
References
External links
She Wants Me at IMDb
She Wants Me at Rotten Tomatoes | screenwriter | {
"answer_start": [
59
],
"text": [
"Rob Margolies"
]
} |
She Wants Me is a 2012 comedy film written and directed by Rob Margolies and starring Josh Gad and Kristen Ruhlin.
Plot
Sam is a writer working on a feature film. His girlfriend Sammy has been promised the lead role, but the producers want a famous actress. After some problems and the return of Sammy’s ex-boyfriend John, the relationship get complicated and they break up. Sam needs to deal with John, who becomes his friend and roommate, his lack of inspiration to write the film, his new single life and a new girlfriend who has had sex with many men, though all he really wants is Sammy back.
Cast
Casting
Margolies originally penned the role of Sam Baum for Jonah Hill, and intended Elliot Page to play Sammy Kingston. Kate Bosworth was originally attached to play the role of Kim Powers, but due to scheduling conflicts with another film, was unable to participate. Hilary Duff replaced her in October 2010.
The cameo role of Charlie Sheen was penned originally for Jeff Goldblum, but when the producers of the film mentioned an option to have Sheen participate, Margolies jumped at the chance to work with him. Sheen eventually became one of the executive producers of the film.
References
External links
She Wants Me at IMDb
She Wants Me at Rotten Tomatoes | genre | {
"answer_start": [
23
],
"text": [
"comedy film"
]
} |
She Wants Me is a 2012 comedy film written and directed by Rob Margolies and starring Josh Gad and Kristen Ruhlin.
Plot
Sam is a writer working on a feature film. His girlfriend Sammy has been promised the lead role, but the producers want a famous actress. After some problems and the return of Sammy’s ex-boyfriend John, the relationship get complicated and they break up. Sam needs to deal with John, who becomes his friend and roommate, his lack of inspiration to write the film, his new single life and a new girlfriend who has had sex with many men, though all he really wants is Sammy back.
Cast
Casting
Margolies originally penned the role of Sam Baum for Jonah Hill, and intended Elliot Page to play Sammy Kingston. Kate Bosworth was originally attached to play the role of Kim Powers, but due to scheduling conflicts with another film, was unable to participate. Hilary Duff replaced her in October 2010.
The cameo role of Charlie Sheen was penned originally for Jeff Goldblum, but when the producers of the film mentioned an option to have Sheen participate, Margolies jumped at the chance to work with him. Sheen eventually became one of the executive producers of the film.
References
External links
She Wants Me at IMDb
She Wants Me at Rotten Tomatoes | cast member | {
"answer_start": [
935
],
"text": [
"Charlie Sheen"
]
} |
She Wants Me is a 2012 comedy film written and directed by Rob Margolies and starring Josh Gad and Kristen Ruhlin.
Plot
Sam is a writer working on a feature film. His girlfriend Sammy has been promised the lead role, but the producers want a famous actress. After some problems and the return of Sammy’s ex-boyfriend John, the relationship get complicated and they break up. Sam needs to deal with John, who becomes his friend and roommate, his lack of inspiration to write the film, his new single life and a new girlfriend who has had sex with many men, though all he really wants is Sammy back.
Cast
Casting
Margolies originally penned the role of Sam Baum for Jonah Hill, and intended Elliot Page to play Sammy Kingston. Kate Bosworth was originally attached to play the role of Kim Powers, but due to scheduling conflicts with another film, was unable to participate. Hilary Duff replaced her in October 2010.
The cameo role of Charlie Sheen was penned originally for Jeff Goldblum, but when the producers of the film mentioned an option to have Sheen participate, Margolies jumped at the chance to work with him. Sheen eventually became one of the executive producers of the film.
References
External links
She Wants Me at IMDb
She Wants Me at Rotten Tomatoes | title | {
"answer_start": [
0
],
"text": [
"She Wants Me"
]
} |
Kyle or Kyles may refer to:
Name
Kyle (given name), a Gaelic given name, usually masculine
Kyle (surname), a surname of Scottish origin
Kyle (musician), a hip hop artist from California
Kyle (Child's Play), played by Christine Elise
David Kyles (born 1989), American basketball player
Places
Canada
Kyle, Saskatchewan, Canada
Ireland
Kyle, County Laois
Kyle, County Wexford
Scotland
Kyle, Ayrshire, area of Scotland which stretched across parts of modern-day East Ayrshire and South Ayrshire
Kyles of Bute, the channel between Isle of Bute and the Cowal Peninsula
Kyle of Durness, the coastal inlet which divides the Cape Wrath peninsula from the Scottish mainland
Kyle of Lochalsh, Ross and Cromarty
Kyle of Lochalsh Line, a primarily single track railway line
Kyle of Sutherland, a river estuary
United States
Kyle, Indiana, an unincorporated community
Kyle, South Dakota, a census-designated place
Kyle, Texas, a city
Kyles, Missouri, a ghost town
Kyle Canyon, Nevada
Lake Kyle, Texas
Other uses
Kyle, a Scottish term for a strait
KYLE-TV, a MyNetworkTV network affiliate
Kyles Athletic, a shinty team from Tighnabruaich, Argyll, Scotland
SS Kyle, a Newfoundland steamship
Tropical Storm Kyle
See also
All pages with titles beginning with Kyle
All pages with titles containing Kyle
Keal (disambiguation)
Keel (disambiguation)
Keele (disambiguation)
Kiel (disambiguation)
Kil (disambiguation)
Kile (disambiguation)
Kill (disambiguation)
Kyhl
Kyl (disambiguation)
Kyll | different from | {
"answer_start": [
0
],
"text": [
"Kyle"
]
} |
Kyle or Kyles may refer to:
Name
Kyle (given name), a Gaelic given name, usually masculine
Kyle (surname), a surname of Scottish origin
Kyle (musician), a hip hop artist from California
Kyle (Child's Play), played by Christine Elise
David Kyles (born 1989), American basketball player
Places
Canada
Kyle, Saskatchewan, Canada
Ireland
Kyle, County Laois
Kyle, County Wexford
Scotland
Kyle, Ayrshire, area of Scotland which stretched across parts of modern-day East Ayrshire and South Ayrshire
Kyles of Bute, the channel between Isle of Bute and the Cowal Peninsula
Kyle of Durness, the coastal inlet which divides the Cape Wrath peninsula from the Scottish mainland
Kyle of Lochalsh, Ross and Cromarty
Kyle of Lochalsh Line, a primarily single track railway line
Kyle of Sutherland, a river estuary
United States
Kyle, Indiana, an unincorporated community
Kyle, South Dakota, a census-designated place
Kyle, Texas, a city
Kyles, Missouri, a ghost town
Kyle Canyon, Nevada
Lake Kyle, Texas
Other uses
Kyle, a Scottish term for a strait
KYLE-TV, a MyNetworkTV network affiliate
Kyles Athletic, a shinty team from Tighnabruaich, Argyll, Scotland
SS Kyle, a Newfoundland steamship
Tropical Storm Kyle
See also
All pages with titles beginning with Kyle
All pages with titles containing Kyle
Keal (disambiguation)
Keel (disambiguation)
Keele (disambiguation)
Kiel (disambiguation)
Kil (disambiguation)
Kile (disambiguation)
Kill (disambiguation)
Kyhl
Kyl (disambiguation)
Kyll | Commons category | {
"answer_start": [
907
],
"text": [
"Kyle, Texas"
]
} |
Kyle or Kyles may refer to:
Name
Kyle (given name), a Gaelic given name, usually masculine
Kyle (surname), a surname of Scottish origin
Kyle (musician), a hip hop artist from California
Kyle (Child's Play), played by Christine Elise
David Kyles (born 1989), American basketball player
Places
Canada
Kyle, Saskatchewan, Canada
Ireland
Kyle, County Laois
Kyle, County Wexford
Scotland
Kyle, Ayrshire, area of Scotland which stretched across parts of modern-day East Ayrshire and South Ayrshire
Kyles of Bute, the channel between Isle of Bute and the Cowal Peninsula
Kyle of Durness, the coastal inlet which divides the Cape Wrath peninsula from the Scottish mainland
Kyle of Lochalsh, Ross and Cromarty
Kyle of Lochalsh Line, a primarily single track railway line
Kyle of Sutherland, a river estuary
United States
Kyle, Indiana, an unincorporated community
Kyle, South Dakota, a census-designated place
Kyle, Texas, a city
Kyles, Missouri, a ghost town
Kyle Canyon, Nevada
Lake Kyle, Texas
Other uses
Kyle, a Scottish term for a strait
KYLE-TV, a MyNetworkTV network affiliate
Kyles Athletic, a shinty team from Tighnabruaich, Argyll, Scotland
SS Kyle, a Newfoundland steamship
Tropical Storm Kyle
See also
All pages with titles beginning with Kyle
All pages with titles containing Kyle
Keal (disambiguation)
Keel (disambiguation)
Keele (disambiguation)
Kiel (disambiguation)
Kil (disambiguation)
Kile (disambiguation)
Kill (disambiguation)
Kyhl
Kyl (disambiguation)
Kyll | country | {
"answer_start": [
295
],
"text": [
"Canada"
]
} |
Kyle or Kyles may refer to:
Name
Kyle (given name), a Gaelic given name, usually masculine
Kyle (surname), a surname of Scottish origin
Kyle (musician), a hip hop artist from California
Kyle (Child's Play), played by Christine Elise
David Kyles (born 1989), American basketball player
Places
Canada
Kyle, Saskatchewan, Canada
Ireland
Kyle, County Laois
Kyle, County Wexford
Scotland
Kyle, Ayrshire, area of Scotland which stretched across parts of modern-day East Ayrshire and South Ayrshire
Kyles of Bute, the channel between Isle of Bute and the Cowal Peninsula
Kyle of Durness, the coastal inlet which divides the Cape Wrath peninsula from the Scottish mainland
Kyle of Lochalsh, Ross and Cromarty
Kyle of Lochalsh Line, a primarily single track railway line
Kyle of Sutherland, a river estuary
United States
Kyle, Indiana, an unincorporated community
Kyle, South Dakota, a census-designated place
Kyle, Texas, a city
Kyles, Missouri, a ghost town
Kyle Canyon, Nevada
Lake Kyle, Texas
Other uses
Kyle, a Scottish term for a strait
KYLE-TV, a MyNetworkTV network affiliate
Kyles Athletic, a shinty team from Tighnabruaich, Argyll, Scotland
SS Kyle, a Newfoundland steamship
Tropical Storm Kyle
See also
All pages with titles beginning with Kyle
All pages with titles containing Kyle
Keal (disambiguation)
Keel (disambiguation)
Keele (disambiguation)
Kiel (disambiguation)
Kil (disambiguation)
Kile (disambiguation)
Kill (disambiguation)
Kyhl
Kyl (disambiguation)
Kyll | instance of | {
"answer_start": [
952
],
"text": [
"town"
]
} |
Kyle or Kyles may refer to:
Name
Kyle (given name), a Gaelic given name, usually masculine
Kyle (surname), a surname of Scottish origin
Kyle (musician), a hip hop artist from California
Kyle (Child's Play), played by Christine Elise
David Kyles (born 1989), American basketball player
Places
Canada
Kyle, Saskatchewan, Canada
Ireland
Kyle, County Laois
Kyle, County Wexford
Scotland
Kyle, Ayrshire, area of Scotland which stretched across parts of modern-day East Ayrshire and South Ayrshire
Kyles of Bute, the channel between Isle of Bute and the Cowal Peninsula
Kyle of Durness, the coastal inlet which divides the Cape Wrath peninsula from the Scottish mainland
Kyle of Lochalsh, Ross and Cromarty
Kyle of Lochalsh Line, a primarily single track railway line
Kyle of Sutherland, a river estuary
United States
Kyle, Indiana, an unincorporated community
Kyle, South Dakota, a census-designated place
Kyle, Texas, a city
Kyles, Missouri, a ghost town
Kyle Canyon, Nevada
Lake Kyle, Texas
Other uses
Kyle, a Scottish term for a strait
KYLE-TV, a MyNetworkTV network affiliate
Kyles Athletic, a shinty team from Tighnabruaich, Argyll, Scotland
SS Kyle, a Newfoundland steamship
Tropical Storm Kyle
See also
All pages with titles beginning with Kyle
All pages with titles containing Kyle
Keal (disambiguation)
Keel (disambiguation)
Keele (disambiguation)
Kiel (disambiguation)
Kil (disambiguation)
Kile (disambiguation)
Kill (disambiguation)
Kyhl
Kyl (disambiguation)
Kyll | located in the administrative territorial entity | {
"answer_start": [
308
],
"text": [
"Saskatchewan"
]
} |
Kyle or Kyles may refer to:
Name
Kyle (given name), a Gaelic given name, usually masculine
Kyle (surname), a surname of Scottish origin
Kyle (musician), a hip hop artist from California
Kyle (Child's Play), played by Christine Elise
David Kyles (born 1989), American basketball player
Places
Canada
Kyle, Saskatchewan, Canada
Ireland
Kyle, County Laois
Kyle, County Wexford
Scotland
Kyle, Ayrshire, area of Scotland which stretched across parts of modern-day East Ayrshire and South Ayrshire
Kyles of Bute, the channel between Isle of Bute and the Cowal Peninsula
Kyle of Durness, the coastal inlet which divides the Cape Wrath peninsula from the Scottish mainland
Kyle of Lochalsh, Ross and Cromarty
Kyle of Lochalsh Line, a primarily single track railway line
Kyle of Sutherland, a river estuary
United States
Kyle, Indiana, an unincorporated community
Kyle, South Dakota, a census-designated place
Kyle, Texas, a city
Kyles, Missouri, a ghost town
Kyle Canyon, Nevada
Lake Kyle, Texas
Other uses
Kyle, a Scottish term for a strait
KYLE-TV, a MyNetworkTV network affiliate
Kyles Athletic, a shinty team from Tighnabruaich, Argyll, Scotland
SS Kyle, a Newfoundland steamship
Tropical Storm Kyle
See also
All pages with titles beginning with Kyle
All pages with titles containing Kyle
Keal (disambiguation)
Keel (disambiguation)
Keele (disambiguation)
Kiel (disambiguation)
Kil (disambiguation)
Kile (disambiguation)
Kill (disambiguation)
Kyhl
Kyl (disambiguation)
Kyll | family name identical to this given name | {
"answer_start": [
0
],
"text": [
"Kyle"
]
} |
Kyle or Kyles may refer to:
Name
Kyle (given name), a Gaelic given name, usually masculine
Kyle (surname), a surname of Scottish origin
Kyle (musician), a hip hop artist from California
Kyle (Child's Play), played by Christine Elise
David Kyles (born 1989), American basketball player
Places
Canada
Kyle, Saskatchewan, Canada
Ireland
Kyle, County Laois
Kyle, County Wexford
Scotland
Kyle, Ayrshire, area of Scotland which stretched across parts of modern-day East Ayrshire and South Ayrshire
Kyles of Bute, the channel between Isle of Bute and the Cowal Peninsula
Kyle of Durness, the coastal inlet which divides the Cape Wrath peninsula from the Scottish mainland
Kyle of Lochalsh, Ross and Cromarty
Kyle of Lochalsh Line, a primarily single track railway line
Kyle of Sutherland, a river estuary
United States
Kyle, Indiana, an unincorporated community
Kyle, South Dakota, a census-designated place
Kyle, Texas, a city
Kyles, Missouri, a ghost town
Kyle Canyon, Nevada
Lake Kyle, Texas
Other uses
Kyle, a Scottish term for a strait
KYLE-TV, a MyNetworkTV network affiliate
Kyles Athletic, a shinty team from Tighnabruaich, Argyll, Scotland
SS Kyle, a Newfoundland steamship
Tropical Storm Kyle
See also
All pages with titles beginning with Kyle
All pages with titles containing Kyle
Keal (disambiguation)
Keel (disambiguation)
Keele (disambiguation)
Kiel (disambiguation)
Kil (disambiguation)
Kile (disambiguation)
Kill (disambiguation)
Kyhl
Kyl (disambiguation)
Kyll | native label | {
"answer_start": [
0
],
"text": [
"Kyle"
]
} |
Kyle or Kyles may refer to:
Name
Kyle (given name), a Gaelic given name, usually masculine
Kyle (surname), a surname of Scottish origin
Kyle (musician), a hip hop artist from California
Kyle (Child's Play), played by Christine Elise
David Kyles (born 1989), American basketball player
Places
Canada
Kyle, Saskatchewan, Canada
Ireland
Kyle, County Laois
Kyle, County Wexford
Scotland
Kyle, Ayrshire, area of Scotland which stretched across parts of modern-day East Ayrshire and South Ayrshire
Kyles of Bute, the channel between Isle of Bute and the Cowal Peninsula
Kyle of Durness, the coastal inlet which divides the Cape Wrath peninsula from the Scottish mainland
Kyle of Lochalsh, Ross and Cromarty
Kyle of Lochalsh Line, a primarily single track railway line
Kyle of Sutherland, a river estuary
United States
Kyle, Indiana, an unincorporated community
Kyle, South Dakota, a census-designated place
Kyle, Texas, a city
Kyles, Missouri, a ghost town
Kyle Canyon, Nevada
Lake Kyle, Texas
Other uses
Kyle, a Scottish term for a strait
KYLE-TV, a MyNetworkTV network affiliate
Kyles Athletic, a shinty team from Tighnabruaich, Argyll, Scotland
SS Kyle, a Newfoundland steamship
Tropical Storm Kyle
See also
All pages with titles beginning with Kyle
All pages with titles containing Kyle
Keal (disambiguation)
Keel (disambiguation)
Keele (disambiguation)
Kiel (disambiguation)
Kil (disambiguation)
Kile (disambiguation)
Kill (disambiguation)
Kyhl
Kyl (disambiguation)
Kyll | Store norske leksikon ID | {
"answer_start": [
0
],
"text": [
"Kyle"
]
} |
Kyle or Kyles may refer to:
Name
Kyle (given name), a Gaelic given name, usually masculine
Kyle (surname), a surname of Scottish origin
Kyle (musician), a hip hop artist from California
Kyle (Child's Play), played by Christine Elise
David Kyles (born 1989), American basketball player
Places
Canada
Kyle, Saskatchewan, Canada
Ireland
Kyle, County Laois
Kyle, County Wexford
Scotland
Kyle, Ayrshire, area of Scotland which stretched across parts of modern-day East Ayrshire and South Ayrshire
Kyles of Bute, the channel between Isle of Bute and the Cowal Peninsula
Kyle of Durness, the coastal inlet which divides the Cape Wrath peninsula from the Scottish mainland
Kyle of Lochalsh, Ross and Cromarty
Kyle of Lochalsh Line, a primarily single track railway line
Kyle of Sutherland, a river estuary
United States
Kyle, Indiana, an unincorporated community
Kyle, South Dakota, a census-designated place
Kyle, Texas, a city
Kyles, Missouri, a ghost town
Kyle Canyon, Nevada
Lake Kyle, Texas
Other uses
Kyle, a Scottish term for a strait
KYLE-TV, a MyNetworkTV network affiliate
Kyles Athletic, a shinty team from Tighnabruaich, Argyll, Scotland
SS Kyle, a Newfoundland steamship
Tropical Storm Kyle
See also
All pages with titles beginning with Kyle
All pages with titles containing Kyle
Keal (disambiguation)
Keel (disambiguation)
Keele (disambiguation)
Kiel (disambiguation)
Kil (disambiguation)
Kile (disambiguation)
Kill (disambiguation)
Kyhl
Kyl (disambiguation)
Kyll | Nederlandse Voornamenbank ID | {
"answer_start": [
0
],
"text": [
"Kyle"
]
} |
Kyle or Kyles may refer to:
Name
Kyle (given name), a Gaelic given name, usually masculine
Kyle (surname), a surname of Scottish origin
Kyle (musician), a hip hop artist from California
Kyle (Child's Play), played by Christine Elise
David Kyles (born 1989), American basketball player
Places
Canada
Kyle, Saskatchewan, Canada
Ireland
Kyle, County Laois
Kyle, County Wexford
Scotland
Kyle, Ayrshire, area of Scotland which stretched across parts of modern-day East Ayrshire and South Ayrshire
Kyles of Bute, the channel between Isle of Bute and the Cowal Peninsula
Kyle of Durness, the coastal inlet which divides the Cape Wrath peninsula from the Scottish mainland
Kyle of Lochalsh, Ross and Cromarty
Kyle of Lochalsh Line, a primarily single track railway line
Kyle of Sutherland, a river estuary
United States
Kyle, Indiana, an unincorporated community
Kyle, South Dakota, a census-designated place
Kyle, Texas, a city
Kyles, Missouri, a ghost town
Kyle Canyon, Nevada
Lake Kyle, Texas
Other uses
Kyle, a Scottish term for a strait
KYLE-TV, a MyNetworkTV network affiliate
Kyles Athletic, a shinty team from Tighnabruaich, Argyll, Scotland
SS Kyle, a Newfoundland steamship
Tropical Storm Kyle
See also
All pages with titles beginning with Kyle
All pages with titles containing Kyle
Keal (disambiguation)
Keel (disambiguation)
Keele (disambiguation)
Kiel (disambiguation)
Kil (disambiguation)
Kile (disambiguation)
Kill (disambiguation)
Kyhl
Kyl (disambiguation)
Kyll | part of | {
"answer_start": [
394
],
"text": [
"Ayrshire"
]
} |
Kyle or Kyles may refer to:
Name
Kyle (given name), a Gaelic given name, usually masculine
Kyle (surname), a surname of Scottish origin
Kyle (musician), a hip hop artist from California
Kyle (Child's Play), played by Christine Elise
David Kyles (born 1989), American basketball player
Places
Canada
Kyle, Saskatchewan, Canada
Ireland
Kyle, County Laois
Kyle, County Wexford
Scotland
Kyle, Ayrshire, area of Scotland which stretched across parts of modern-day East Ayrshire and South Ayrshire
Kyles of Bute, the channel between Isle of Bute and the Cowal Peninsula
Kyle of Durness, the coastal inlet which divides the Cape Wrath peninsula from the Scottish mainland
Kyle of Lochalsh, Ross and Cromarty
Kyle of Lochalsh Line, a primarily single track railway line
Kyle of Sutherland, a river estuary
United States
Kyle, Indiana, an unincorporated community
Kyle, South Dakota, a census-designated place
Kyle, Texas, a city
Kyles, Missouri, a ghost town
Kyle Canyon, Nevada
Lake Kyle, Texas
Other uses
Kyle, a Scottish term for a strait
KYLE-TV, a MyNetworkTV network affiliate
Kyles Athletic, a shinty team from Tighnabruaich, Argyll, Scotland
SS Kyle, a Newfoundland steamship
Tropical Storm Kyle
See also
All pages with titles beginning with Kyle
All pages with titles containing Kyle
Keal (disambiguation)
Keel (disambiguation)
Keele (disambiguation)
Kiel (disambiguation)
Kil (disambiguation)
Kile (disambiguation)
Kill (disambiguation)
Kyhl
Kyl (disambiguation)
Kyll | historic county | {
"answer_start": [
394
],
"text": [
"Ayrshire"
]
} |
Kyle or Kyles may refer to:
Name
Kyle (given name), a Gaelic given name, usually masculine
Kyle (surname), a surname of Scottish origin
Kyle (musician), a hip hop artist from California
Kyle (Child's Play), played by Christine Elise
David Kyles (born 1989), American basketball player
Places
Canada
Kyle, Saskatchewan, Canada
Ireland
Kyle, County Laois
Kyle, County Wexford
Scotland
Kyle, Ayrshire, area of Scotland which stretched across parts of modern-day East Ayrshire and South Ayrshire
Kyles of Bute, the channel between Isle of Bute and the Cowal Peninsula
Kyle of Durness, the coastal inlet which divides the Cape Wrath peninsula from the Scottish mainland
Kyle of Lochalsh, Ross and Cromarty
Kyle of Lochalsh Line, a primarily single track railway line
Kyle of Sutherland, a river estuary
United States
Kyle, Indiana, an unincorporated community
Kyle, South Dakota, a census-designated place
Kyle, Texas, a city
Kyles, Missouri, a ghost town
Kyle Canyon, Nevada
Lake Kyle, Texas
Other uses
Kyle, a Scottish term for a strait
KYLE-TV, a MyNetworkTV network affiliate
Kyles Athletic, a shinty team from Tighnabruaich, Argyll, Scotland
SS Kyle, a Newfoundland steamship
Tropical Storm Kyle
See also
All pages with titles beginning with Kyle
All pages with titles containing Kyle
Keal (disambiguation)
Keel (disambiguation)
Keele (disambiguation)
Kiel (disambiguation)
Kil (disambiguation)
Kile (disambiguation)
Kill (disambiguation)
Kyhl
Kyl (disambiguation)
Kyll | given name | {
"answer_start": [
0
],
"text": [
"Kyle"
]
} |
Kyle or Kyles may refer to:
Name
Kyle (given name), a Gaelic given name, usually masculine
Kyle (surname), a surname of Scottish origin
Kyle (musician), a hip hop artist from California
Kyle (Child's Play), played by Christine Elise
David Kyles (born 1989), American basketball player
Places
Canada
Kyle, Saskatchewan, Canada
Ireland
Kyle, County Laois
Kyle, County Wexford
Scotland
Kyle, Ayrshire, area of Scotland which stretched across parts of modern-day East Ayrshire and South Ayrshire
Kyles of Bute, the channel between Isle of Bute and the Cowal Peninsula
Kyle of Durness, the coastal inlet which divides the Cape Wrath peninsula from the Scottish mainland
Kyle of Lochalsh, Ross and Cromarty
Kyle of Lochalsh Line, a primarily single track railway line
Kyle of Sutherland, a river estuary
United States
Kyle, Indiana, an unincorporated community
Kyle, South Dakota, a census-designated place
Kyle, Texas, a city
Kyles, Missouri, a ghost town
Kyle Canyon, Nevada
Lake Kyle, Texas
Other uses
Kyle, a Scottish term for a strait
KYLE-TV, a MyNetworkTV network affiliate
Kyles Athletic, a shinty team from Tighnabruaich, Argyll, Scotland
SS Kyle, a Newfoundland steamship
Tropical Storm Kyle
See also
All pages with titles beginning with Kyle
All pages with titles containing Kyle
Keal (disambiguation)
Keel (disambiguation)
Keele (disambiguation)
Kiel (disambiguation)
Kil (disambiguation)
Kile (disambiguation)
Kill (disambiguation)
Kyhl
Kyl (disambiguation)
Kyll | pseudonym | {
"answer_start": [
0
],
"text": [
"Kyle"
]
} |
Kyle or Kyles may refer to:
Name
Kyle (given name), a Gaelic given name, usually masculine
Kyle (surname), a surname of Scottish origin
Kyle (musician), a hip hop artist from California
Kyle (Child's Play), played by Christine Elise
David Kyles (born 1989), American basketball player
Places
Canada
Kyle, Saskatchewan, Canada
Ireland
Kyle, County Laois
Kyle, County Wexford
Scotland
Kyle, Ayrshire, area of Scotland which stretched across parts of modern-day East Ayrshire and South Ayrshire
Kyles of Bute, the channel between Isle of Bute and the Cowal Peninsula
Kyle of Durness, the coastal inlet which divides the Cape Wrath peninsula from the Scottish mainland
Kyle of Lochalsh, Ross and Cromarty
Kyle of Lochalsh Line, a primarily single track railway line
Kyle of Sutherland, a river estuary
United States
Kyle, Indiana, an unincorporated community
Kyle, South Dakota, a census-designated place
Kyle, Texas, a city
Kyles, Missouri, a ghost town
Kyle Canyon, Nevada
Lake Kyle, Texas
Other uses
Kyle, a Scottish term for a strait
KYLE-TV, a MyNetworkTV network affiliate
Kyles Athletic, a shinty team from Tighnabruaich, Argyll, Scotland
SS Kyle, a Newfoundland steamship
Tropical Storm Kyle
See also
All pages with titles beginning with Kyle
All pages with titles containing Kyle
Keal (disambiguation)
Keel (disambiguation)
Keele (disambiguation)
Kiel (disambiguation)
Kil (disambiguation)
Kile (disambiguation)
Kill (disambiguation)
Kyhl
Kyl (disambiguation)
Kyll | Last.fm ID | {
"answer_start": [
1041
],
"text": [
"KYLE"
]
} |
Kyle or Kyles may refer to:
Name
Kyle (given name), a Gaelic given name, usually masculine
Kyle (surname), a surname of Scottish origin
Kyle (musician), a hip hop artist from California
Kyle (Child's Play), played by Christine Elise
David Kyles (born 1989), American basketball player
Places
Canada
Kyle, Saskatchewan, Canada
Ireland
Kyle, County Laois
Kyle, County Wexford
Scotland
Kyle, Ayrshire, area of Scotland which stretched across parts of modern-day East Ayrshire and South Ayrshire
Kyles of Bute, the channel between Isle of Bute and the Cowal Peninsula
Kyle of Durness, the coastal inlet which divides the Cape Wrath peninsula from the Scottish mainland
Kyle of Lochalsh, Ross and Cromarty
Kyle of Lochalsh Line, a primarily single track railway line
Kyle of Sutherland, a river estuary
United States
Kyle, Indiana, an unincorporated community
Kyle, South Dakota, a census-designated place
Kyle, Texas, a city
Kyles, Missouri, a ghost town
Kyle Canyon, Nevada
Lake Kyle, Texas
Other uses
Kyle, a Scottish term for a strait
KYLE-TV, a MyNetworkTV network affiliate
Kyles Athletic, a shinty team from Tighnabruaich, Argyll, Scotland
SS Kyle, a Newfoundland steamship
Tropical Storm Kyle
See also
All pages with titles beginning with Kyle
All pages with titles containing Kyle
Keal (disambiguation)
Keel (disambiguation)
Keele (disambiguation)
Kiel (disambiguation)
Kil (disambiguation)
Kile (disambiguation)
Kill (disambiguation)
Kyhl
Kyl (disambiguation)
Kyll | Géopatronyme ID | {
"answer_start": [
1041
],
"text": [
"KYLE"
]
} |
Kyle or Kyles may refer to:
Name
Kyle (given name), a Gaelic given name, usually masculine
Kyle (surname), a surname of Scottish origin
Kyle (musician), a hip hop artist from California
Kyle (Child's Play), played by Christine Elise
David Kyles (born 1989), American basketball player
Places
Canada
Kyle, Saskatchewan, Canada
Ireland
Kyle, County Laois
Kyle, County Wexford
Scotland
Kyle, Ayrshire, area of Scotland which stretched across parts of modern-day East Ayrshire and South Ayrshire
Kyles of Bute, the channel between Isle of Bute and the Cowal Peninsula
Kyle of Durness, the coastal inlet which divides the Cape Wrath peninsula from the Scottish mainland
Kyle of Lochalsh, Ross and Cromarty
Kyle of Lochalsh Line, a primarily single track railway line
Kyle of Sutherland, a river estuary
United States
Kyle, Indiana, an unincorporated community
Kyle, South Dakota, a census-designated place
Kyle, Texas, a city
Kyles, Missouri, a ghost town
Kyle Canyon, Nevada
Lake Kyle, Texas
Other uses
Kyle, a Scottish term for a strait
KYLE-TV, a MyNetworkTV network affiliate
Kyles Athletic, a shinty team from Tighnabruaich, Argyll, Scotland
SS Kyle, a Newfoundland steamship
Tropical Storm Kyle
See also
All pages with titles beginning with Kyle
All pages with titles containing Kyle
Keal (disambiguation)
Keel (disambiguation)
Keele (disambiguation)
Kiel (disambiguation)
Kil (disambiguation)
Kile (disambiguation)
Kill (disambiguation)
Kyhl
Kyl (disambiguation)
Kyll | Geneanet family name ID | {
"answer_start": [
1041
],
"text": [
"KYLE"
]
} |
Kyle or Kyles may refer to:
Name
Kyle (given name), a Gaelic given name, usually masculine
Kyle (surname), a surname of Scottish origin
Kyle (musician), a hip hop artist from California
Kyle (Child's Play), played by Christine Elise
David Kyles (born 1989), American basketball player
Places
Canada
Kyle, Saskatchewan, Canada
Ireland
Kyle, County Laois
Kyle, County Wexford
Scotland
Kyle, Ayrshire, area of Scotland which stretched across parts of modern-day East Ayrshire and South Ayrshire
Kyles of Bute, the channel between Isle of Bute and the Cowal Peninsula
Kyle of Durness, the coastal inlet which divides the Cape Wrath peninsula from the Scottish mainland
Kyle of Lochalsh, Ross and Cromarty
Kyle of Lochalsh Line, a primarily single track railway line
Kyle of Sutherland, a river estuary
United States
Kyle, Indiana, an unincorporated community
Kyle, South Dakota, a census-designated place
Kyle, Texas, a city
Kyles, Missouri, a ghost town
Kyle Canyon, Nevada
Lake Kyle, Texas
Other uses
Kyle, a Scottish term for a strait
KYLE-TV, a MyNetworkTV network affiliate
Kyles Athletic, a shinty team from Tighnabruaich, Argyll, Scotland
SS Kyle, a Newfoundland steamship
Tropical Storm Kyle
See also
All pages with titles beginning with Kyle
All pages with titles containing Kyle
Keal (disambiguation)
Keel (disambiguation)
Keele (disambiguation)
Kiel (disambiguation)
Kil (disambiguation)
Kile (disambiguation)
Kill (disambiguation)
Kyhl
Kyl (disambiguation)
Kyll | title | {
"answer_start": [
0
],
"text": [
"Kyle"
]
} |
Kyle or Kyles may refer to:
Name
Kyle (given name), a Gaelic given name, usually masculine
Kyle (surname), a surname of Scottish origin
Kyle (musician), a hip hop artist from California
Kyle (Child's Play), played by Christine Elise
David Kyles (born 1989), American basketball player
Places
Canada
Kyle, Saskatchewan, Canada
Ireland
Kyle, County Laois
Kyle, County Wexford
Scotland
Kyle, Ayrshire, area of Scotland which stretched across parts of modern-day East Ayrshire and South Ayrshire
Kyles of Bute, the channel between Isle of Bute and the Cowal Peninsula
Kyle of Durness, the coastal inlet which divides the Cape Wrath peninsula from the Scottish mainland
Kyle of Lochalsh, Ross and Cromarty
Kyle of Lochalsh Line, a primarily single track railway line
Kyle of Sutherland, a river estuary
United States
Kyle, Indiana, an unincorporated community
Kyle, South Dakota, a census-designated place
Kyle, Texas, a city
Kyles, Missouri, a ghost town
Kyle Canyon, Nevada
Lake Kyle, Texas
Other uses
Kyle, a Scottish term for a strait
KYLE-TV, a MyNetworkTV network affiliate
Kyles Athletic, a shinty team from Tighnabruaich, Argyll, Scotland
SS Kyle, a Newfoundland steamship
Tropical Storm Kyle
See also
All pages with titles beginning with Kyle
All pages with titles containing Kyle
Keal (disambiguation)
Keel (disambiguation)
Keele (disambiguation)
Kiel (disambiguation)
Kil (disambiguation)
Kile (disambiguation)
Kill (disambiguation)
Kyhl
Kyl (disambiguation)
Kyll | issue | {
"answer_start": [
253
],
"text": [
"1"
]
} |
Kyle or Kyles may refer to:
Name
Kyle (given name), a Gaelic given name, usually masculine
Kyle (surname), a surname of Scottish origin
Kyle (musician), a hip hop artist from California
Kyle (Child's Play), played by Christine Elise
David Kyles (born 1989), American basketball player
Places
Canada
Kyle, Saskatchewan, Canada
Ireland
Kyle, County Laois
Kyle, County Wexford
Scotland
Kyle, Ayrshire, area of Scotland which stretched across parts of modern-day East Ayrshire and South Ayrshire
Kyles of Bute, the channel between Isle of Bute and the Cowal Peninsula
Kyle of Durness, the coastal inlet which divides the Cape Wrath peninsula from the Scottish mainland
Kyle of Lochalsh, Ross and Cromarty
Kyle of Lochalsh Line, a primarily single track railway line
Kyle of Sutherland, a river estuary
United States
Kyle, Indiana, an unincorporated community
Kyle, South Dakota, a census-designated place
Kyle, Texas, a city
Kyles, Missouri, a ghost town
Kyle Canyon, Nevada
Lake Kyle, Texas
Other uses
Kyle, a Scottish term for a strait
KYLE-TV, a MyNetworkTV network affiliate
Kyles Athletic, a shinty team from Tighnabruaich, Argyll, Scotland
SS Kyle, a Newfoundland steamship
Tropical Storm Kyle
See also
All pages with titles beginning with Kyle
All pages with titles containing Kyle
Keal (disambiguation)
Keel (disambiguation)
Keele (disambiguation)
Kiel (disambiguation)
Kil (disambiguation)
Kile (disambiguation)
Kill (disambiguation)
Kyhl
Kyl (disambiguation)
Kyll | family name | {
"answer_start": [
0
],
"text": [
"Kyle"
]
} |
South East Australian Football Club (nicknamed The Suns) is a Brisbane based club competing in the Queensland Amateur Football Association 'A' competition fielding Seniors & Reserves teams. Previously they were known as the Logan City Australian Football Club (nicknamed The Cobras).
Formation
The South East Suns were officially born on 1 August 2014 after officials from the Logan City Cobras and Beenleigh Buffaloes Football Clubs had come together during 2014 to discuss the possibility of merging forces to become one club for the South East QLD region. The main concern for both parties was the lack of juniors progressing up to the senior ranks due to both clubs not having an colts side. Due to this, both clubs juniors had sort opportunities elsewhere and rarely did these players come back to their clubs at senior level. Because of this it meant that both clubs were continually competing against each other for players. Furthermore, as both clubs were located in the heart of Logan it was viewed that they should be playing a higher level of competition and their aim is to progress up the levels in the years to come whilst having an Under 19's side who would feed into their Seniors & Reserves teams and providing the opportunity for their youth players to hopefully progress to the AFL level.
Prior to announcing their new name an exhaustive consultation process was held between both the Logan & Beenleigh officials as to what their new entity would be called. All agreed that aligning themselves to AFL club Gold Coast Suns was a positive move seeing as they too were a fairly new club and only located a short drive down the road. Furthermore, they would be the only club in the Sunshine Coast, Brisbane and Gold Coast areas that had the Suns moniker and would appeal to those that followed Gold Coast and the AFL in general. After liaising with the Gold Coast Suns they gained approval to use their colours of red, gold and blue and adopting their club song.
After numerous discussions it was decided by the members of the Logan City Cobras at a Special General Meeting that in the best interests of football in Logan and surrounding areas that the Cobras would cease and the South East Suns would become their new club. After holding their own Special General Meeting the Beenleigh Buffaloes decided against ceasing as a senior club and to remain as their own club. Whilst they were disappointed they didn't join forces with the then Logan City Cobras to become one club for the South East QLD region they understood their position but they proceeded to continue on as the new entity 'South East Suns.'
A critical element of building their football club was establishing and maintaining a community connection. Its promise remains to ensure that the club will have meaningful engagement with the community and their pathway ensures that the South East Suns will become a competitive and successful club for the South East QLD region.
Not one to forgot where they came from they decided to honour both the Logan City and Beenleigh Football clubs by maintaining their history that goes back to 1973 when the Woodridge Woodpeckers were formed. Since that time numerous name changes have occurred with the Slacks Creek Cobras, Beenleigh Cobras, Logan City Cobras and finally the Beenleigh Buffaloes forming their own club in 1998. All games, club, league and life membership honours are recognised by them (for those that join the Suns) as they are a club for the South East QLD region.
The South East Suns are building a reputation as one of the most exciting football clubs in Australia. Strong values and a culture of success both on and off the field are central to achieving this goal.
History
1973–1976: Woodridge Woodpeckers (Ewing Road – Woodridge)
Guernsey : Brown & Blue
1976–1977: Slacks Creek Cobra's (Paradise Road – Slacks Creek)
Guernsey : Plain Red & Green Trims
1978–1979: Beenleigh Cobra's (Show Grounds – Beenleigh)
Guernsey : Plain Red & Green Trims
Winners Third Division Senior Premiership (1978)
1980–1990: Beenleigh Cobra's (Alexander Clarke Park – Loganholme)
Guernsey : Red with 1 Green Hoop & 2 White Hoops around the middle(1986–89),
St. Kilda's colours were used in 1990.
Winners Second Division Senior Premiership (1980 & 1985).
Reserve Grade Senior Premiership (1981).
Junior Sides Fielded in 1984
After winning premiership in BAFL we played in Gold Coast Competition (1986–1990)
1991–1997: Logan City Cobra's (Alexander Clarke Park – Loganholme)
Guernsey : Red with 1 Green Hoop & 2 White Hoops around the middle,
Returned to Brisbane Competition (1991)
Minor Premiers Second Division Senior (1991)
Winners Second Division Reserve Grade Premiership (1993).
1998 – present: Logan City Cobra's (Tansey Park – Tanah Merah )
Guernsey : Red & Green
1999: Third Division Team reintroduced to Seniors.
2002: Second Division Reserve Grand Finalists.
2003: Seniors play-off in finals for first time in 8 years losing preliminary final.
2004: Seniors loss elimination final, reserve grade lose preliminary final.
2006: Seniors and Reserves play-off in grand final, both teams finish runners-up for the season in AFLQ State Association Division 2.
2007: Club fields one side in AFLQ State Association Division 3. Team makes grand final, finishes runners-up.
2008: Club is promoted back to AFLQ State Association Division 2 (Seniors & Reserves). New era arrives at the club with the return of many former players and committee members to assist in the rebuilding phase. New modern looking guernsey is also implemented with an update to the previous Cobras logo.
2009: Seniors drastically improve from 2008 as do the Reserves who just miss out on a finals berth.
2010: Club takes another leap forward in the re-building phase. Both the Seniors & Reserves make the finals in Div 2 for the first time since 2006. The Seniors finish fifth and put in a gallant effort in the Elimination Final to only be beaten by 11 points away against Caboolture. The Reserves finish the home and away season in second but lose to Kedron in the Qualifying Final and the UQ Red Lions in the semi-final both by a heart breaking 3 points.
2011: Seniors make the Grand Final for the first time since 2006 in Division 2. They finish Minor Premiers, only to be defeated at the last hurdle by Nambour & Hinterland. Reserves finish the season in 5th and make it to the semi-finals, only to go down to Caboolture.
2012: AFL Queensland State Association Division 2 renamed to the South East Queensland Australian Football League (SEQAFL) Division 3. Seniors finish the home and away season in 5th and put in a fantastic effort in the finals to reach the Grand Final for the 2nd consecutive year. They just fall short of premiership glory by a heartbreaking 4 points. The Reserves finish in 7th spot just a couple of games short of a finals berth.
2013: The Club celebrates 40 years since first forming as the Woodridge Woodpeckers in 1973. Seniors finish in 4th spot and just go down to the Pine Rivers Swans by 17 points in the first semi final. Reserves just miss out on a finals spot by finishing in 5th.
AFL Queensland announce a major restructure to all SEQAFL competitions in September 2013. They join the newly named Queensland Amateur Football Association (QAFA) in the 'A' Division for the 2014 season.
2014: The Logan City Cobras play their final season before changing to their new entity – South East Suns.
2015: Seniors finish the home and away season in 3rd. Play-off in the grand final against the Bond University Bullsharks but finish the season runners-up. Reserves also finish the home and away season in 3rd but bow out of the finals in straight sets.
2016: Seniors finally break the 31-year drought and take out the Premiership by going through the season undefeated. They defeated the Kedron Lions by 50 points. South East Suns 15.13.103 def Kedron Lions 8.5.53. Seniors Playing Assistant Coach Christopher Mitchell was awarded Best on Ground Honours. The Reserves capped off a good year for the club by also making the Grand Final but went down to the Redcliffe Tigers by 55 points. Redcliffe Tigers 12.13.85 def South East Suns 4.6.30. Seniors Full Forward Trent McIntyre took out the League Goal Kicking Award with an amazing 114 goals for the season and Senior Coach David Sloan was awarded the Queensland Amateur Football Association (QAFA) coach of the year.
Honours
PREMIERSHIPS
Seniors – 1978, 1980, 1985 & 2016
Reserves – 1981 & 1993
300 GAMES
S. Carroll, B. McIllmurray
200 GAMES
A. Allard, G. Krieger, M. Shield, G. Booth, D. Sloan, G. Brookes, W. Thomas
100 GAMES
D. C. Marshall, B. Reader, C. Fletcher J. Gebbie, M. Sinclair, S. Reader, S. Czapp, I. Salmoni, S. Bettles, B. Cure, L. Maher, S. Allard,
M. Kennedy, M. Hartup, B. Pike, C. Welldon, G. Murphy, N. Richardson, P. Coulston, S. Mansell,
A. Hawkes, B. Truscott, G. McKenzie, S. Allender, M. Shields, B. Mudford, G. Poplett, K. Lane,
N. Grose, R. Rowett, B. Apap, F. Davidson, K. Johnson, S. Stewart, J. Tishler, D. Vincent,
B. Doherty, G. Broadstock, C. Achilles, D. Clarke, P. Cox, T. Durward, M. Hanniford, R. Hobbs,
D. Hollindale, M. Johnson, J. Kearnan, D. Mann, E. Nugent, M. Tottle, M. Zingelmann
GAMES RECORD HOLDER
Brian McIllmurray – 357 games
COMPETITION BEST & FAIREST WINNERS
Seniors: 1991 – M. Warden, 1992 – M. Johnson, 1993 & 1994 – P. Cox, 2006 – S. Stone,
2007 – G. Brookes, 2010, 2011 & 2012 – D. Milligan
Reserves: 2000 – P Coulston, 2009 & 2010 – M Kennedy, 2015 – M Giuliani
SUNS LIFE MEMBERS
J. Juett Snr, T. Buckley, D. Clarke, A. Hawkes, G. Booth, M. Shield, A. Allard, B. Carroll, S. Carroll, C. Clift, M. Carter, B. McIllmurray, R. Poppleton, D. Sloan, G. Krieger, C. Allard, K. Johnson, G. Brookes, B. Doherty, L. Matheson, K. Bentley, R. Bettles, P. Coulston, W. Thomas, C. Thomas, W. Bettles, D. Kercheval, D. C. Marshall, P. Opbroek
Premierships
SENIORS
1978
1980
1985
2016RESERVES
1981
1993
External links
South East Suns AFC Website
South East Suns AFC Facebook Page
South East Suns AFC Twitter
== Cited references == | country | {
"answer_start": [
11
],
"text": [
"Australia"
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} |
Ya Ding (Chinese: 亚丁; born 1959) is a Chinese writer and translator.
He comes from a little village in North China and after his secondary studies he went working as a farmer thanks to Down to the Countryside Movement. After Cultural Revolution, he created the first University of Beijing student revue and started to translate French authors.
Awards
1988: Prix Cazes for Le Sorgho rouge.
1988: Prix de l'Asie for Le Sorgho rouge
1988: Prix de la Découverte du Pen Club français
1989: Prix de l'Été for Les Héritiers des sept royaumes.
1991: Prix Contrepoint for Le Jeu de l'eau et du feu
Publications
1987 Le Sorgho rouge, novel
1988 Les Héritiers des sept royaumes, novel
1990 Le Jeu de l'eau et de feu, novel,
1992 Le Cercle de petit ciel, novel
1994 La Jeune Fille Tong, novel
== References == | occupation | {
"answer_start": [
57
],
"text": [
"translator"
]
} |
Ya Ding (Chinese: 亚丁; born 1959) is a Chinese writer and translator.
He comes from a little village in North China and after his secondary studies he went working as a farmer thanks to Down to the Countryside Movement. After Cultural Revolution, he created the first University of Beijing student revue and started to translate French authors.
Awards
1988: Prix Cazes for Le Sorgho rouge.
1988: Prix de l'Asie for Le Sorgho rouge
1988: Prix de la Découverte du Pen Club français
1989: Prix de l'Été for Les Héritiers des sept royaumes.
1991: Prix Contrepoint for Le Jeu de l'eau et du feu
Publications
1987 Le Sorgho rouge, novel
1988 Les Héritiers des sept royaumes, novel
1990 Le Jeu de l'eau et de feu, novel,
1992 Le Cercle de petit ciel, novel
1994 La Jeune Fille Tong, novel
== References == | award received | {
"answer_start": [
358
],
"text": [
"Prix Cazes"
]
} |
Ya Ding (Chinese: 亚丁; born 1959) is a Chinese writer and translator.
He comes from a little village in North China and after his secondary studies he went working as a farmer thanks to Down to the Countryside Movement. After Cultural Revolution, he created the first University of Beijing student revue and started to translate French authors.
Awards
1988: Prix Cazes for Le Sorgho rouge.
1988: Prix de l'Asie for Le Sorgho rouge
1988: Prix de la Découverte du Pen Club français
1989: Prix de l'Été for Les Héritiers des sept royaumes.
1991: Prix Contrepoint for Le Jeu de l'eau et du feu
Publications
1987 Le Sorgho rouge, novel
1988 Les Héritiers des sept royaumes, novel
1990 Le Jeu de l'eau et de feu, novel,
1992 Le Cercle de petit ciel, novel
1994 La Jeune Fille Tong, novel
== References == | languages spoken, written or signed | {
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Ya Ding (Chinese: 亚丁; born 1959) is a Chinese writer and translator.
He comes from a little village in North China and after his secondary studies he went working as a farmer thanks to Down to the Countryside Movement. After Cultural Revolution, he created the first University of Beijing student revue and started to translate French authors.
Awards
1988: Prix Cazes for Le Sorgho rouge.
1988: Prix de l'Asie for Le Sorgho rouge
1988: Prix de la Découverte du Pen Club français
1989: Prix de l'Été for Les Héritiers des sept royaumes.
1991: Prix Contrepoint for Le Jeu de l'eau et du feu
Publications
1987 Le Sorgho rouge, novel
1988 Les Héritiers des sept royaumes, novel
1990 Le Jeu de l'eau et de feu, novel,
1992 Le Cercle de petit ciel, novel
1994 La Jeune Fille Tong, novel
== References == | writing language | {
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328
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"text": [
"French"
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Neuhaus in der Wart (formerly Krobotdorf or Kroatdorf, Croatian: Dobra, Hungarian: Őridobra ) is a Katastralgemeinde of the municipality Mischendorf in southern Burgenland, Austria. It is part of the district Oberwart.
Data
Population: 243 (2001)
Altitude: 265 m above sea level.
Postal Code: 7503
Vehicle Registration: OWNeuhaus in der Wart was founded as a Croatian village in the sixteenth century, the time the first settlers arrived. According to tradition, the settlers came from a farmstead between Kirchfidisch and Deutsch Schützen-Eisenberg. The original name was Dobrava from which the Hungarian names Dobra and Őridobra were derived. The German name Neuhaus came from the subsequent German settlers. According to an 1852 document, the school was made of wood, it was rebuilt in 1870.
After the canonical visitation in 1760, a chapel and a nearby bell tower were built in 1836, dedicated to St. Anthony. Mayor Ferdinand Obojkovics ordered a new church built in the mid-1900s. In the course of a local government reform, the former communities Mischendorf, Kotezicken, Kleinbachselten, Großbachselten, Rohrbach an der Teich and Neuhaus were merged to the present municipality of Mischendorf.
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Neuhaus in der Wart (formerly Krobotdorf or Kroatdorf, Croatian: Dobra, Hungarian: Őridobra ) is a Katastralgemeinde of the municipality Mischendorf in southern Burgenland, Austria. It is part of the district Oberwart.
Data
Population: 243 (2001)
Altitude: 265 m above sea level.
Postal Code: 7503
Vehicle Registration: OWNeuhaus in der Wart was founded as a Croatian village in the sixteenth century, the time the first settlers arrived. According to tradition, the settlers came from a farmstead between Kirchfidisch and Deutsch Schützen-Eisenberg. The original name was Dobrava from which the Hungarian names Dobra and Őridobra were derived. The German name Neuhaus came from the subsequent German settlers. According to an 1852 document, the school was made of wood, it was rebuilt in 1870.
After the canonical visitation in 1760, a chapel and a nearby bell tower were built in 1836, dedicated to St. Anthony. Mayor Ferdinand Obojkovics ordered a new church built in the mid-1900s. In the course of a local government reform, the former communities Mischendorf, Kotezicken, Kleinbachselten, Großbachselten, Rohrbach an der Teich and Neuhaus were merged to the present municipality of Mischendorf.
Views of Neuhaus in der Wart | located in the administrative territorial entity | {
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Neuhaus in der Wart (formerly Krobotdorf or Kroatdorf, Croatian: Dobra, Hungarian: Őridobra ) is a Katastralgemeinde of the municipality Mischendorf in southern Burgenland, Austria. It is part of the district Oberwart.
Data
Population: 243 (2001)
Altitude: 265 m above sea level.
Postal Code: 7503
Vehicle Registration: OWNeuhaus in der Wart was founded as a Croatian village in the sixteenth century, the time the first settlers arrived. According to tradition, the settlers came from a farmstead between Kirchfidisch and Deutsch Schützen-Eisenberg. The original name was Dobrava from which the Hungarian names Dobra and Őridobra were derived. The German name Neuhaus came from the subsequent German settlers. According to an 1852 document, the school was made of wood, it was rebuilt in 1870.
After the canonical visitation in 1760, a chapel and a nearby bell tower were built in 1836, dedicated to St. Anthony. Mayor Ferdinand Obojkovics ordered a new church built in the mid-1900s. In the course of a local government reform, the former communities Mischendorf, Kotezicken, Kleinbachselten, Großbachselten, Rohrbach an der Teich and Neuhaus were merged to the present municipality of Mischendorf.
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Marco Garavaglia (born 3 February 1986, in Milan) is an Italian ice dancer. Early in his career, he competed with Denis Solenghi and Elena Scarpa. With his next partner Camilla Spelta, he placed 14th at the 2006 World Junior Championships and won two silver medals on the ISU Junior Grand Prix circuit. He teamed up with Alessia Aureli in 2007. They are the 2008 Italian bronze medalists.
Programs
With Spelta
Competitive highlights
With Aureli
With Spelta
References
External links
Alessia Aureli / Marco Garavaglia at the International Skating Union
Camilla Spelta / Marco Garavaglia at the International Skating Union | place of birth | {
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Marco Garavaglia (born 3 February 1986, in Milan) is an Italian ice dancer. Early in his career, he competed with Denis Solenghi and Elena Scarpa. With his next partner Camilla Spelta, he placed 14th at the 2006 World Junior Championships and won two silver medals on the ISU Junior Grand Prix circuit. He teamed up with Alessia Aureli in 2007. They are the 2008 Italian bronze medalists.
Programs
With Spelta
Competitive highlights
With Aureli
With Spelta
References
External links
Alessia Aureli / Marco Garavaglia at the International Skating Union
Camilla Spelta / Marco Garavaglia at the International Skating Union | occupation | {
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Marco Garavaglia (born 3 February 1986, in Milan) is an Italian ice dancer. Early in his career, he competed with Denis Solenghi and Elena Scarpa. With his next partner Camilla Spelta, he placed 14th at the 2006 World Junior Championships and won two silver medals on the ISU Junior Grand Prix circuit. He teamed up with Alessia Aureli in 2007. They are the 2008 Italian bronze medalists.
Programs
With Spelta
Competitive highlights
With Aureli
With Spelta
References
External links
Alessia Aureli / Marco Garavaglia at the International Skating Union
Camilla Spelta / Marco Garavaglia at the International Skating Union | given name | {
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Marco Garavaglia (born 3 February 1986, in Milan) is an Italian ice dancer. Early in his career, he competed with Denis Solenghi and Elena Scarpa. With his next partner Camilla Spelta, he placed 14th at the 2006 World Junior Championships and won two silver medals on the ISU Junior Grand Prix circuit. He teamed up with Alessia Aureli in 2007. They are the 2008 Italian bronze medalists.
Programs
With Spelta
Competitive highlights
With Aureli
With Spelta
References
External links
Alessia Aureli / Marco Garavaglia at the International Skating Union
Camilla Spelta / Marco Garavaglia at the International Skating Union | partner in business or sport | {
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Marco Garavaglia (born 3 February 1986, in Milan) is an Italian ice dancer. Early in his career, he competed with Denis Solenghi and Elena Scarpa. With his next partner Camilla Spelta, he placed 14th at the 2006 World Junior Championships and won two silver medals on the ISU Junior Grand Prix circuit. He teamed up with Alessia Aureli in 2007. They are the 2008 Italian bronze medalists.
Programs
With Spelta
Competitive highlights
With Aureli
With Spelta
References
External links
Alessia Aureli / Marco Garavaglia at the International Skating Union
Camilla Spelta / Marco Garavaglia at the International Skating Union | languages spoken, written or signed | {
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56
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Marco Garavaglia (born 3 February 1986, in Milan) is an Italian ice dancer. Early in his career, he competed with Denis Solenghi and Elena Scarpa. With his next partner Camilla Spelta, he placed 14th at the 2006 World Junior Championships and won two silver medals on the ISU Junior Grand Prix circuit. He teamed up with Alessia Aureli in 2007. They are the 2008 Italian bronze medalists.
Programs
With Spelta
Competitive highlights
With Aureli
With Spelta
References
External links
Alessia Aureli / Marco Garavaglia at the International Skating Union
Camilla Spelta / Marco Garavaglia at the International Skating Union | sports discipline competed in | {
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Drop7 is a puzzle game developed by Area/Code Entertainment, for Android and iOS.
Gameplay
The game is played with touch controls on a 7x7 square grid. In each round, the player places a disc that falls from the top of the grid. Each disc has a number 1–7, or a blank. Whenever the number of any disc matches the number of contiguous discs in a row or column, that disc disappears and also hits any blank discs it touches. When a blank is hit twice, it turns into a numbered disc. After a number of turns, the round ends and a full row of blank discs emerges from the bottom of the grid. There is no time limit, and discs may be dropped at the player's leisure. The objective is to eliminate discs and score combos for as long as possible until either the grid overflows or the grid is full and it is impossible to place another disc. If the player clears the screen of all discs, then the player is given a 70,000 point bonus.
There are three modes available – "Normal Mode" is the basic way to play. The player will drop a mixture of colored and gray discs, and the levels will come more frequently as the player goes on; "Blitz Mode" starts with the levels coming quickly, but the player won't be given gray discs to drop; "Sequence Mode" is exactly like Normal Mode, except the player (and everyone else in the world) will get the same discs in the same order every time.
Reception
IGN gave the game an overall rating of 8.5/10.In January 2009, IGN ranked Drop7 #2 on its list of The Top 25 iPhone Games.In their October 2013 issue, Edge retroactively awarded the game ten out of ten, one of only twenty-three games to achieve the highest score in the magazine's twenty-year history. In 2015 Edge ranked the game 24th on their top 100 greatest video games.
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Drop7 is a puzzle game developed by Area/Code Entertainment, for Android and iOS.
Gameplay
The game is played with touch controls on a 7x7 square grid. In each round, the player places a disc that falls from the top of the grid. Each disc has a number 1–7, or a blank. Whenever the number of any disc matches the number of contiguous discs in a row or column, that disc disappears and also hits any blank discs it touches. When a blank is hit twice, it turns into a numbered disc. After a number of turns, the round ends and a full row of blank discs emerges from the bottom of the grid. There is no time limit, and discs may be dropped at the player's leisure. The objective is to eliminate discs and score combos for as long as possible until either the grid overflows or the grid is full and it is impossible to place another disc. If the player clears the screen of all discs, then the player is given a 70,000 point bonus.
There are three modes available – "Normal Mode" is the basic way to play. The player will drop a mixture of colored and gray discs, and the levels will come more frequently as the player goes on; "Blitz Mode" starts with the levels coming quickly, but the player won't be given gray discs to drop; "Sequence Mode" is exactly like Normal Mode, except the player (and everyone else in the world) will get the same discs in the same order every time.
Reception
IGN gave the game an overall rating of 8.5/10.In January 2009, IGN ranked Drop7 #2 on its list of The Top 25 iPhone Games.In their October 2013 issue, Edge retroactively awarded the game ten out of ten, one of only twenty-three games to achieve the highest score in the magazine's twenty-year history. In 2015 Edge ranked the game 24th on their top 100 greatest video games.
== References == | operating system | {
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Drop7 is a puzzle game developed by Area/Code Entertainment, for Android and iOS.
Gameplay
The game is played with touch controls on a 7x7 square grid. In each round, the player places a disc that falls from the top of the grid. Each disc has a number 1–7, or a blank. Whenever the number of any disc matches the number of contiguous discs in a row or column, that disc disappears and also hits any blank discs it touches. When a blank is hit twice, it turns into a numbered disc. After a number of turns, the round ends and a full row of blank discs emerges from the bottom of the grid. There is no time limit, and discs may be dropped at the player's leisure. The objective is to eliminate discs and score combos for as long as possible until either the grid overflows or the grid is full and it is impossible to place another disc. If the player clears the screen of all discs, then the player is given a 70,000 point bonus.
There are three modes available – "Normal Mode" is the basic way to play. The player will drop a mixture of colored and gray discs, and the levels will come more frequently as the player goes on; "Blitz Mode" starts with the levels coming quickly, but the player won't be given gray discs to drop; "Sequence Mode" is exactly like Normal Mode, except the player (and everyone else in the world) will get the same discs in the same order every time.
Reception
IGN gave the game an overall rating of 8.5/10.In January 2009, IGN ranked Drop7 #2 on its list of The Top 25 iPhone Games.In their October 2013 issue, Edge retroactively awarded the game ten out of ten, one of only twenty-three games to achieve the highest score in the magazine's twenty-year history. In 2015 Edge ranked the game 24th on their top 100 greatest video games.
== References == | platform | {
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Drop7 is a puzzle game developed by Area/Code Entertainment, for Android and iOS.
Gameplay
The game is played with touch controls on a 7x7 square grid. In each round, the player places a disc that falls from the top of the grid. Each disc has a number 1–7, or a blank. Whenever the number of any disc matches the number of contiguous discs in a row or column, that disc disappears and also hits any blank discs it touches. When a blank is hit twice, it turns into a numbered disc. After a number of turns, the round ends and a full row of blank discs emerges from the bottom of the grid. There is no time limit, and discs may be dropped at the player's leisure. The objective is to eliminate discs and score combos for as long as possible until either the grid overflows or the grid is full and it is impossible to place another disc. If the player clears the screen of all discs, then the player is given a 70,000 point bonus.
There are three modes available – "Normal Mode" is the basic way to play. The player will drop a mixture of colored and gray discs, and the levels will come more frequently as the player goes on; "Blitz Mode" starts with the levels coming quickly, but the player won't be given gray discs to drop; "Sequence Mode" is exactly like Normal Mode, except the player (and everyone else in the world) will get the same discs in the same order every time.
Reception
IGN gave the game an overall rating of 8.5/10.In January 2009, IGN ranked Drop7 #2 on its list of The Top 25 iPhone Games.In their October 2013 issue, Edge retroactively awarded the game ten out of ten, one of only twenty-three games to achieve the highest score in the magazine's twenty-year history. In 2015 Edge ranked the game 24th on their top 100 greatest video games.
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Paul Corrigan may refer to:
Paul Corrigan (political adviser) (born 1948), Director of Strategy and Commissioning of the NHS London Strategic Health Authority
Paul Corrigan (footballer) (born 1977), Australian rules footballer for Geelong and current Essendon development coach
Paul Corrigan, American television writer and producer, see Modern Family
Paul Corrigan (actor), English actor, see List of former EastEnders characters | sport | {
"answer_start": [
200
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} |
Paul Corrigan may refer to:
Paul Corrigan (political adviser) (born 1948), Director of Strategy and Commissioning of the NHS London Strategic Health Authority
Paul Corrigan (footballer) (born 1977), Australian rules footballer for Geelong and current Essendon development coach
Paul Corrigan, American television writer and producer, see Modern Family
Paul Corrigan (actor), English actor, see List of former EastEnders characters | family name | {
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Paul Corrigan may refer to:
Paul Corrigan (political adviser) (born 1948), Director of Strategy and Commissioning of the NHS London Strategic Health Authority
Paul Corrigan (footballer) (born 1977), Australian rules footballer for Geelong and current Essendon development coach
Paul Corrigan, American television writer and producer, see Modern Family
Paul Corrigan (actor), English actor, see List of former EastEnders characters | given name | {
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Paul Corrigan may refer to:
Paul Corrigan (political adviser) (born 1948), Director of Strategy and Commissioning of the NHS London Strategic Health Authority
Paul Corrigan (footballer) (born 1977), Australian rules footballer for Geelong and current Essendon development coach
Paul Corrigan, American television writer and producer, see Modern Family
Paul Corrigan (actor), English actor, see List of former EastEnders characters | languages spoken, written or signed | {
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Paul Corrigan may refer to:
Paul Corrigan (political adviser) (born 1948), Director of Strategy and Commissioning of the NHS London Strategic Health Authority
Paul Corrigan (footballer) (born 1977), Australian rules footballer for Geelong and current Essendon development coach
Paul Corrigan, American television writer and producer, see Modern Family
Paul Corrigan (actor), English actor, see List of former EastEnders characters | occupation | {
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Frederick James Hando MBE (23 March 1888 – 17 February 1970) was a Welsh writer, artist and schoolteacher from Newport. He chronicled the history, character and folklore of Monmouthshire, which he also called Gwent, in a series of nearly 800 newspaper articles and several books published between the 1920s and 1960s.
Biography
Hando was born in Maindee, Newport, the son of a postmaster Alfred and his wife Miriam, and attended school there. He had two younger brothers, Frank and Harry. He trained at Borough Road College, London, before returning to Newport as a teacher. He served as a gunnery officer with the Royal Engineers in the First World War, where his experiences in Flanders had a profound effect on him.Hando married Alice Stanton, the daughter of a Newport builder, and the couple had two children – Margaret and John. Alice died while still young. After a number of years, Hando married again to Daisy, a staff member at his school. The couple soon had a son, Robert.
In 1925 he was appointed as the first headmaster of Hatherleigh School in Newport, where one of his pupils was Johnny Morris, later a noted radio and television presenter. Hando adopted an open and progressive teaching style and was described by Miriam Andrews, a former teacher at the school, as "a wonderful headmaster and he made the children very proud of Hatherleigh".His interest in local history was given an impetus when he was asked to provide sketches to illustrate Sir Joseph Bradney's multi-volume A History of Monmouthshire from the Coming of the Normans into Wales down to the Present Time and his first articles about Monmouthshire were published in the South Wales Argus in 1922. The then editor, William Collins agreed to an initial run of 15 articles. In total, he contributed 795 articles to the newspaper between 1922 and 13 February 1970, a few days before his death. Due to their high readership, the page of the Argus on which his articles appeared became particularly prized as advertising space. Many of his articles and drawings were republished in anthologies of his work. In his early writings, Hando was particularly interested in ley lines and the alignment of the sun with stone circles. He said that he wanted to add to what was already on the map and that by studying leys he could reach back in history far beyond Roman Britain.Hando was organist and choirmaster of Summerhill Baptist Church Newport for many years". In 1953 he was awarded the MBE for services to education and to Monmouthshire".Hando died on 17 February 1970, at St. Joseph's Nursing Home in Newport, at the age of 81. His last article, on District and Street Names, appeared in the South Wales Argus four days before his death.
Works
Hando's aim in writing his articles was set out in the preface to his The Pleasant Land of Gwent, published in 1944; "to persuade readers to see the little places of a shy county". Monmouthshire's set pieces, such as Raglan Castle and Tintern Abbey were not his focus, he wrote of lesser known sites such as the "Virtuous Well" at Trellech, "the tallest house in Monmouthshire" at Treowen, and the medieval boundary marker at Croes Llwyd. His scope was broader than buildings; in his foreword to the 1964 volume, Here and There in Monmouthshire, Edwin Morris, the then Archbishop of Wales, describes Hando's canvas as "reminiscence, folklore, local history, place names and introductions to interesting people, past and present, illustrated by his own beautiful drawings". He took a relatively early interest in conservation. In his article on Allt-y-Bela, published in Journeys in Gwent in 1951, he wrote of the house's perilous state of dilapidation, noting "unless immediate and drastic action is taken, we shall lose priceless relics". Fifty years later, in the Gwent/Monmouthshire Pevsner, the architectural historian John Newman described Allt-y-Bela as "miserably derelict". His concern for preservation extended beyond individual buildings to the wider Monmouthshire landscape. An article published in Monmouthshire Sketch Book in 1954, was entitled "The Threat to Machen Vale" and condemned plans by the Central Electricity Generating Board to construct an electricity generating station in the Vale.The vanishing folklore and customs of Monmouthshire were of particular interest to Hando. More than one article covered the Mari Lwyd, a horse's skull covered by a sheet and borne aloft on a pole, which formed part of Christmas celebrations in the county. In a number of articles, including one on The Skirrid in Monmouthshire Sketch Book, he wrote of the legends of Jack o' Kent, who was said to have caused the cleft in the Skirrid's summit by jumping to it from the Sugar Loaf, some four miles distant.Monmouthshire's pubs were another topic of abiding interest. Hando wrote of, and drank and smoked in, a large number of the country's hostelries, the Robin Hood Inn, Monmouth being a particular favourite. In his Monmouth Town Sketch Book, he recalls a visit in 1947, when he encountered "the last of the Monmouth 'cards'".Hando's Pictorial Guide to the Wye Valley and the Forest of Dean is the only one of his books which took the form of a conventional travel guide, as opposed to a collection of articles.
Legacy
After his death the Monmouthshire Local History Council set up several "Hando seats" at viewpoints in the county that he had considered to be particularly fine. Funded by public subscription, the seats were located in Dixton churchyard; at Llandegfedd Reservoir; on Lawrence Hill, Newport; at the top of the Wyndcliff, St. Arvans; and near Keeper's Pond on the Blorenge near Blaenavon. Nearly 50 years after his death, Hando and his work are still cited in 21st century controversies. His detailed chronicling of the county's history was referenced in the debate on the construction of an extension of the M4 motorway across the Gwent Levels; and the late Paul Flynn, former member of parliament for Newport West, recalled the "halcyon days" of Hando's columns in a discussion about declining journalistic standards at the South Wales Argus.From November 2017, the South Wales Argus re-published his weekly "Rambles in Gwent" column, giving readers the opportunity to again enjoy his material which captured, as Argus editor Kenneth Loveland described it, "The shy beauty of this delectable county".
Family
His daughter, Margaret, was born in April 1916. She graduated from St Anne's College, Oxford, and later married Charles Smith, later Delacourt-Smith, in 1939. Her husband became a Labour MP in 1945 and later a Government minister, and was ennobled in 1967. She was a councillor and Justice of the Peace in Windsor in the 1960s. After her husband's death, she was herself raised to the peerage in 1974 as Baroness Delacourt-Smith of Alteryn. She remarried in 1978 and died in 2010 at the age of 94. Margaret's brother, from Hando's first marriage, to Alice, was John.
Hando also had a son, Robert, from his second marriage.
Bibliography
Books by Fred Hando
(all published by R. H. Johns, Newport)
Rambles in Gwent (1924)
The Pleasant Land of Gwent (1944) With an introduction by Arthur Machen. (including limited Deluxe Edition of 220 copies, signed by the author)
Journeys in Gwent (1951) (including limited Deluxe Edition of 350 copies, signed by the author), OCLC 754992827
Pictorial Guide to the Wye Valley and the Royal Forest of Dean (1952), (Edited by W. A. Stoker)
Monmouthshire Sketch Book (1954)
Out and About in Monmouthshire (1958)
Monmouth Town (1964)
Here and There in Monmouthshire (1964)
Collections and appreciations
Collections of Hando's articles, edited by Chris Barber:
Hando's Gwent (1987) ISBN 978-0951044452
Hando's Gwent Volume 2 (1989) ISBN 978-0951044490An appreciation of Hando's work, Fred J Hando, A Proud Son of Gwent (ISBN 9781904192626), including some of his writings and drawings, was published by his relative David Hando in 2014.
Footnotes
References
Sources
Collins, William James Townsend (1945). Monmouthshire Writers: A Literary History and Anthology. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 236089162.
Hando, Fred (1922). Rambles in Gwent. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 771405583.
— (1944). The Pleasant Land of Gwent. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 2534151.
— (1951). Journeys in Gwent. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 30202753.
— (1952). Pictorial Guide to the Wye Valley and the Forest of Dean. Newport: Ernest Joyce and Co. OCLC 30164265.
— (1954). Monmouthshire Sketch Book. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 30166792.
— (1958). Out and About in Monmouthshire. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 30235598.
— (1961). "Monmouthshire Sketchbook: No.452". South Wales Argus.
— (1964a). Monmouth Town Sketch Book. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 30295655.
— (1964b). Here and There in Monmouthshire. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 30295639.
— (1987). Chris Barber (ed.). Hando's Gwent. Vol. 1. Abergavenny, Wales: Blorenge Books. ISBN 9780951044452. OCLC 18745431.
— (1989). Chris Barber (ed.). Hando's Gwent. Vol. 2. Abergavenny, Wales: Blorenge Books. ISBN 9780951044483. OCLC 650492501.
Newman, John (2000). Gwent/Monmouthshire. Pevsner Architectural Guides. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-09630-9.
Stout, Alan (2009). Creating Prehistory: Druids, Ley Hunters and Archaeologists in pre-war Britain. New York: John Wiley & Son. ISBN 9781444302929. OCLC 437133104.
Watkins, Christine Anne (2019). Gwent Folk Tales. Stroud, Gloucestershire: The History Press. ISBN 9780750991544.
External links
Whyte, John; Clevely, Ted. "Articles Published by Fred J Hando in the South Wales Argus 1953–1970". Newport Local History Society. Archived from the original on 23 March 2016.
"Hando Oak" at caerleon.net | place of birth | {
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Frederick James Hando MBE (23 March 1888 – 17 February 1970) was a Welsh writer, artist and schoolteacher from Newport. He chronicled the history, character and folklore of Monmouthshire, which he also called Gwent, in a series of nearly 800 newspaper articles and several books published between the 1920s and 1960s.
Biography
Hando was born in Maindee, Newport, the son of a postmaster Alfred and his wife Miriam, and attended school there. He had two younger brothers, Frank and Harry. He trained at Borough Road College, London, before returning to Newport as a teacher. He served as a gunnery officer with the Royal Engineers in the First World War, where his experiences in Flanders had a profound effect on him.Hando married Alice Stanton, the daughter of a Newport builder, and the couple had two children – Margaret and John. Alice died while still young. After a number of years, Hando married again to Daisy, a staff member at his school. The couple soon had a son, Robert.
In 1925 he was appointed as the first headmaster of Hatherleigh School in Newport, where one of his pupils was Johnny Morris, later a noted radio and television presenter. Hando adopted an open and progressive teaching style and was described by Miriam Andrews, a former teacher at the school, as "a wonderful headmaster and he made the children very proud of Hatherleigh".His interest in local history was given an impetus when he was asked to provide sketches to illustrate Sir Joseph Bradney's multi-volume A History of Monmouthshire from the Coming of the Normans into Wales down to the Present Time and his first articles about Monmouthshire were published in the South Wales Argus in 1922. The then editor, William Collins agreed to an initial run of 15 articles. In total, he contributed 795 articles to the newspaper between 1922 and 13 February 1970, a few days before his death. Due to their high readership, the page of the Argus on which his articles appeared became particularly prized as advertising space. Many of his articles and drawings were republished in anthologies of his work. In his early writings, Hando was particularly interested in ley lines and the alignment of the sun with stone circles. He said that he wanted to add to what was already on the map and that by studying leys he could reach back in history far beyond Roman Britain.Hando was organist and choirmaster of Summerhill Baptist Church Newport for many years". In 1953 he was awarded the MBE for services to education and to Monmouthshire".Hando died on 17 February 1970, at St. Joseph's Nursing Home in Newport, at the age of 81. His last article, on District and Street Names, appeared in the South Wales Argus four days before his death.
Works
Hando's aim in writing his articles was set out in the preface to his The Pleasant Land of Gwent, published in 1944; "to persuade readers to see the little places of a shy county". Monmouthshire's set pieces, such as Raglan Castle and Tintern Abbey were not his focus, he wrote of lesser known sites such as the "Virtuous Well" at Trellech, "the tallest house in Monmouthshire" at Treowen, and the medieval boundary marker at Croes Llwyd. His scope was broader than buildings; in his foreword to the 1964 volume, Here and There in Monmouthshire, Edwin Morris, the then Archbishop of Wales, describes Hando's canvas as "reminiscence, folklore, local history, place names and introductions to interesting people, past and present, illustrated by his own beautiful drawings". He took a relatively early interest in conservation. In his article on Allt-y-Bela, published in Journeys in Gwent in 1951, he wrote of the house's perilous state of dilapidation, noting "unless immediate and drastic action is taken, we shall lose priceless relics". Fifty years later, in the Gwent/Monmouthshire Pevsner, the architectural historian John Newman described Allt-y-Bela as "miserably derelict". His concern for preservation extended beyond individual buildings to the wider Monmouthshire landscape. An article published in Monmouthshire Sketch Book in 1954, was entitled "The Threat to Machen Vale" and condemned plans by the Central Electricity Generating Board to construct an electricity generating station in the Vale.The vanishing folklore and customs of Monmouthshire were of particular interest to Hando. More than one article covered the Mari Lwyd, a horse's skull covered by a sheet and borne aloft on a pole, which formed part of Christmas celebrations in the county. In a number of articles, including one on The Skirrid in Monmouthshire Sketch Book, he wrote of the legends of Jack o' Kent, who was said to have caused the cleft in the Skirrid's summit by jumping to it from the Sugar Loaf, some four miles distant.Monmouthshire's pubs were another topic of abiding interest. Hando wrote of, and drank and smoked in, a large number of the country's hostelries, the Robin Hood Inn, Monmouth being a particular favourite. In his Monmouth Town Sketch Book, he recalls a visit in 1947, when he encountered "the last of the Monmouth 'cards'".Hando's Pictorial Guide to the Wye Valley and the Forest of Dean is the only one of his books which took the form of a conventional travel guide, as opposed to a collection of articles.
Legacy
After his death the Monmouthshire Local History Council set up several "Hando seats" at viewpoints in the county that he had considered to be particularly fine. Funded by public subscription, the seats were located in Dixton churchyard; at Llandegfedd Reservoir; on Lawrence Hill, Newport; at the top of the Wyndcliff, St. Arvans; and near Keeper's Pond on the Blorenge near Blaenavon. Nearly 50 years after his death, Hando and his work are still cited in 21st century controversies. His detailed chronicling of the county's history was referenced in the debate on the construction of an extension of the M4 motorway across the Gwent Levels; and the late Paul Flynn, former member of parliament for Newport West, recalled the "halcyon days" of Hando's columns in a discussion about declining journalistic standards at the South Wales Argus.From November 2017, the South Wales Argus re-published his weekly "Rambles in Gwent" column, giving readers the opportunity to again enjoy his material which captured, as Argus editor Kenneth Loveland described it, "The shy beauty of this delectable county".
Family
His daughter, Margaret, was born in April 1916. She graduated from St Anne's College, Oxford, and later married Charles Smith, later Delacourt-Smith, in 1939. Her husband became a Labour MP in 1945 and later a Government minister, and was ennobled in 1967. She was a councillor and Justice of the Peace in Windsor in the 1960s. After her husband's death, she was herself raised to the peerage in 1974 as Baroness Delacourt-Smith of Alteryn. She remarried in 1978 and died in 2010 at the age of 94. Margaret's brother, from Hando's first marriage, to Alice, was John.
Hando also had a son, Robert, from his second marriage.
Bibliography
Books by Fred Hando
(all published by R. H. Johns, Newport)
Rambles in Gwent (1924)
The Pleasant Land of Gwent (1944) With an introduction by Arthur Machen. (including limited Deluxe Edition of 220 copies, signed by the author)
Journeys in Gwent (1951) (including limited Deluxe Edition of 350 copies, signed by the author), OCLC 754992827
Pictorial Guide to the Wye Valley and the Royal Forest of Dean (1952), (Edited by W. A. Stoker)
Monmouthshire Sketch Book (1954)
Out and About in Monmouthshire (1958)
Monmouth Town (1964)
Here and There in Monmouthshire (1964)
Collections and appreciations
Collections of Hando's articles, edited by Chris Barber:
Hando's Gwent (1987) ISBN 978-0951044452
Hando's Gwent Volume 2 (1989) ISBN 978-0951044490An appreciation of Hando's work, Fred J Hando, A Proud Son of Gwent (ISBN 9781904192626), including some of his writings and drawings, was published by his relative David Hando in 2014.
Footnotes
References
Sources
Collins, William James Townsend (1945). Monmouthshire Writers: A Literary History and Anthology. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 236089162.
Hando, Fred (1922). Rambles in Gwent. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 771405583.
— (1944). The Pleasant Land of Gwent. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 2534151.
— (1951). Journeys in Gwent. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 30202753.
— (1952). Pictorial Guide to the Wye Valley and the Forest of Dean. Newport: Ernest Joyce and Co. OCLC 30164265.
— (1954). Monmouthshire Sketch Book. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 30166792.
— (1958). Out and About in Monmouthshire. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 30235598.
— (1961). "Monmouthshire Sketchbook: No.452". South Wales Argus.
— (1964a). Monmouth Town Sketch Book. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 30295655.
— (1964b). Here and There in Monmouthshire. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 30295639.
— (1987). Chris Barber (ed.). Hando's Gwent. Vol. 1. Abergavenny, Wales: Blorenge Books. ISBN 9780951044452. OCLC 18745431.
— (1989). Chris Barber (ed.). Hando's Gwent. Vol. 2. Abergavenny, Wales: Blorenge Books. ISBN 9780951044483. OCLC 650492501.
Newman, John (2000). Gwent/Monmouthshire. Pevsner Architectural Guides. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-09630-9.
Stout, Alan (2009). Creating Prehistory: Druids, Ley Hunters and Archaeologists in pre-war Britain. New York: John Wiley & Son. ISBN 9781444302929. OCLC 437133104.
Watkins, Christine Anne (2019). Gwent Folk Tales. Stroud, Gloucestershire: The History Press. ISBN 9780750991544.
External links
Whyte, John; Clevely, Ted. "Articles Published by Fred J Hando in the South Wales Argus 1953–1970". Newport Local History Society. Archived from the original on 23 March 2016.
"Hando Oak" at caerleon.net | place of death | {
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348
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Frederick James Hando MBE (23 March 1888 – 17 February 1970) was a Welsh writer, artist and schoolteacher from Newport. He chronicled the history, character and folklore of Monmouthshire, which he also called Gwent, in a series of nearly 800 newspaper articles and several books published between the 1920s and 1960s.
Biography
Hando was born in Maindee, Newport, the son of a postmaster Alfred and his wife Miriam, and attended school there. He had two younger brothers, Frank and Harry. He trained at Borough Road College, London, before returning to Newport as a teacher. He served as a gunnery officer with the Royal Engineers in the First World War, where his experiences in Flanders had a profound effect on him.Hando married Alice Stanton, the daughter of a Newport builder, and the couple had two children – Margaret and John. Alice died while still young. After a number of years, Hando married again to Daisy, a staff member at his school. The couple soon had a son, Robert.
In 1925 he was appointed as the first headmaster of Hatherleigh School in Newport, where one of his pupils was Johnny Morris, later a noted radio and television presenter. Hando adopted an open and progressive teaching style and was described by Miriam Andrews, a former teacher at the school, as "a wonderful headmaster and he made the children very proud of Hatherleigh".His interest in local history was given an impetus when he was asked to provide sketches to illustrate Sir Joseph Bradney's multi-volume A History of Monmouthshire from the Coming of the Normans into Wales down to the Present Time and his first articles about Monmouthshire were published in the South Wales Argus in 1922. The then editor, William Collins agreed to an initial run of 15 articles. In total, he contributed 795 articles to the newspaper between 1922 and 13 February 1970, a few days before his death. Due to their high readership, the page of the Argus on which his articles appeared became particularly prized as advertising space. Many of his articles and drawings were republished in anthologies of his work. In his early writings, Hando was particularly interested in ley lines and the alignment of the sun with stone circles. He said that he wanted to add to what was already on the map and that by studying leys he could reach back in history far beyond Roman Britain.Hando was organist and choirmaster of Summerhill Baptist Church Newport for many years". In 1953 he was awarded the MBE for services to education and to Monmouthshire".Hando died on 17 February 1970, at St. Joseph's Nursing Home in Newport, at the age of 81. His last article, on District and Street Names, appeared in the South Wales Argus four days before his death.
Works
Hando's aim in writing his articles was set out in the preface to his The Pleasant Land of Gwent, published in 1944; "to persuade readers to see the little places of a shy county". Monmouthshire's set pieces, such as Raglan Castle and Tintern Abbey were not his focus, he wrote of lesser known sites such as the "Virtuous Well" at Trellech, "the tallest house in Monmouthshire" at Treowen, and the medieval boundary marker at Croes Llwyd. His scope was broader than buildings; in his foreword to the 1964 volume, Here and There in Monmouthshire, Edwin Morris, the then Archbishop of Wales, describes Hando's canvas as "reminiscence, folklore, local history, place names and introductions to interesting people, past and present, illustrated by his own beautiful drawings". He took a relatively early interest in conservation. In his article on Allt-y-Bela, published in Journeys in Gwent in 1951, he wrote of the house's perilous state of dilapidation, noting "unless immediate and drastic action is taken, we shall lose priceless relics". Fifty years later, in the Gwent/Monmouthshire Pevsner, the architectural historian John Newman described Allt-y-Bela as "miserably derelict". His concern for preservation extended beyond individual buildings to the wider Monmouthshire landscape. An article published in Monmouthshire Sketch Book in 1954, was entitled "The Threat to Machen Vale" and condemned plans by the Central Electricity Generating Board to construct an electricity generating station in the Vale.The vanishing folklore and customs of Monmouthshire were of particular interest to Hando. More than one article covered the Mari Lwyd, a horse's skull covered by a sheet and borne aloft on a pole, which formed part of Christmas celebrations in the county. In a number of articles, including one on The Skirrid in Monmouthshire Sketch Book, he wrote of the legends of Jack o' Kent, who was said to have caused the cleft in the Skirrid's summit by jumping to it from the Sugar Loaf, some four miles distant.Monmouthshire's pubs were another topic of abiding interest. Hando wrote of, and drank and smoked in, a large number of the country's hostelries, the Robin Hood Inn, Monmouth being a particular favourite. In his Monmouth Town Sketch Book, he recalls a visit in 1947, when he encountered "the last of the Monmouth 'cards'".Hando's Pictorial Guide to the Wye Valley and the Forest of Dean is the only one of his books which took the form of a conventional travel guide, as opposed to a collection of articles.
Legacy
After his death the Monmouthshire Local History Council set up several "Hando seats" at viewpoints in the county that he had considered to be particularly fine. Funded by public subscription, the seats were located in Dixton churchyard; at Llandegfedd Reservoir; on Lawrence Hill, Newport; at the top of the Wyndcliff, St. Arvans; and near Keeper's Pond on the Blorenge near Blaenavon. Nearly 50 years after his death, Hando and his work are still cited in 21st century controversies. His detailed chronicling of the county's history was referenced in the debate on the construction of an extension of the M4 motorway across the Gwent Levels; and the late Paul Flynn, former member of parliament for Newport West, recalled the "halcyon days" of Hando's columns in a discussion about declining journalistic standards at the South Wales Argus.From November 2017, the South Wales Argus re-published his weekly "Rambles in Gwent" column, giving readers the opportunity to again enjoy his material which captured, as Argus editor Kenneth Loveland described it, "The shy beauty of this delectable county".
Family
His daughter, Margaret, was born in April 1916. She graduated from St Anne's College, Oxford, and later married Charles Smith, later Delacourt-Smith, in 1939. Her husband became a Labour MP in 1945 and later a Government minister, and was ennobled in 1967. She was a councillor and Justice of the Peace in Windsor in the 1960s. After her husband's death, she was herself raised to the peerage in 1974 as Baroness Delacourt-Smith of Alteryn. She remarried in 1978 and died in 2010 at the age of 94. Margaret's brother, from Hando's first marriage, to Alice, was John.
Hando also had a son, Robert, from his second marriage.
Bibliography
Books by Fred Hando
(all published by R. H. Johns, Newport)
Rambles in Gwent (1924)
The Pleasant Land of Gwent (1944) With an introduction by Arthur Machen. (including limited Deluxe Edition of 220 copies, signed by the author)
Journeys in Gwent (1951) (including limited Deluxe Edition of 350 copies, signed by the author), OCLC 754992827
Pictorial Guide to the Wye Valley and the Royal Forest of Dean (1952), (Edited by W. A. Stoker)
Monmouthshire Sketch Book (1954)
Out and About in Monmouthshire (1958)
Monmouth Town (1964)
Here and There in Monmouthshire (1964)
Collections and appreciations
Collections of Hando's articles, edited by Chris Barber:
Hando's Gwent (1987) ISBN 978-0951044452
Hando's Gwent Volume 2 (1989) ISBN 978-0951044490An appreciation of Hando's work, Fred J Hando, A Proud Son of Gwent (ISBN 9781904192626), including some of his writings and drawings, was published by his relative David Hando in 2014.
Footnotes
References
Sources
Collins, William James Townsend (1945). Monmouthshire Writers: A Literary History and Anthology. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 236089162.
Hando, Fred (1922). Rambles in Gwent. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 771405583.
— (1944). The Pleasant Land of Gwent. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 2534151.
— (1951). Journeys in Gwent. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 30202753.
— (1952). Pictorial Guide to the Wye Valley and the Forest of Dean. Newport: Ernest Joyce and Co. OCLC 30164265.
— (1954). Monmouthshire Sketch Book. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 30166792.
— (1958). Out and About in Monmouthshire. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 30235598.
— (1961). "Monmouthshire Sketchbook: No.452". South Wales Argus.
— (1964a). Monmouth Town Sketch Book. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 30295655.
— (1964b). Here and There in Monmouthshire. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 30295639.
— (1987). Chris Barber (ed.). Hando's Gwent. Vol. 1. Abergavenny, Wales: Blorenge Books. ISBN 9780951044452. OCLC 18745431.
— (1989). Chris Barber (ed.). Hando's Gwent. Vol. 2. Abergavenny, Wales: Blorenge Books. ISBN 9780951044483. OCLC 650492501.
Newman, John (2000). Gwent/Monmouthshire. Pevsner Architectural Guides. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-09630-9.
Stout, Alan (2009). Creating Prehistory: Druids, Ley Hunters and Archaeologists in pre-war Britain. New York: John Wiley & Son. ISBN 9781444302929. OCLC 437133104.
Watkins, Christine Anne (2019). Gwent Folk Tales. Stroud, Gloucestershire: The History Press. ISBN 9780750991544.
External links
Whyte, John; Clevely, Ted. "Articles Published by Fred J Hando in the South Wales Argus 1953–1970". Newport Local History Society. Archived from the original on 23 March 2016.
"Hando Oak" at caerleon.net | country of citizenship | {
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} |
Frederick James Hando MBE (23 March 1888 – 17 February 1970) was a Welsh writer, artist and schoolteacher from Newport. He chronicled the history, character and folklore of Monmouthshire, which he also called Gwent, in a series of nearly 800 newspaper articles and several books published between the 1920s and 1960s.
Biography
Hando was born in Maindee, Newport, the son of a postmaster Alfred and his wife Miriam, and attended school there. He had two younger brothers, Frank and Harry. He trained at Borough Road College, London, before returning to Newport as a teacher. He served as a gunnery officer with the Royal Engineers in the First World War, where his experiences in Flanders had a profound effect on him.Hando married Alice Stanton, the daughter of a Newport builder, and the couple had two children – Margaret and John. Alice died while still young. After a number of years, Hando married again to Daisy, a staff member at his school. The couple soon had a son, Robert.
In 1925 he was appointed as the first headmaster of Hatherleigh School in Newport, where one of his pupils was Johnny Morris, later a noted radio and television presenter. Hando adopted an open and progressive teaching style and was described by Miriam Andrews, a former teacher at the school, as "a wonderful headmaster and he made the children very proud of Hatherleigh".His interest in local history was given an impetus when he was asked to provide sketches to illustrate Sir Joseph Bradney's multi-volume A History of Monmouthshire from the Coming of the Normans into Wales down to the Present Time and his first articles about Monmouthshire were published in the South Wales Argus in 1922. The then editor, William Collins agreed to an initial run of 15 articles. In total, he contributed 795 articles to the newspaper between 1922 and 13 February 1970, a few days before his death. Due to their high readership, the page of the Argus on which his articles appeared became particularly prized as advertising space. Many of his articles and drawings were republished in anthologies of his work. In his early writings, Hando was particularly interested in ley lines and the alignment of the sun with stone circles. He said that he wanted to add to what was already on the map and that by studying leys he could reach back in history far beyond Roman Britain.Hando was organist and choirmaster of Summerhill Baptist Church Newport for many years". In 1953 he was awarded the MBE for services to education and to Monmouthshire".Hando died on 17 February 1970, at St. Joseph's Nursing Home in Newport, at the age of 81. His last article, on District and Street Names, appeared in the South Wales Argus four days before his death.
Works
Hando's aim in writing his articles was set out in the preface to his The Pleasant Land of Gwent, published in 1944; "to persuade readers to see the little places of a shy county". Monmouthshire's set pieces, such as Raglan Castle and Tintern Abbey were not his focus, he wrote of lesser known sites such as the "Virtuous Well" at Trellech, "the tallest house in Monmouthshire" at Treowen, and the medieval boundary marker at Croes Llwyd. His scope was broader than buildings; in his foreword to the 1964 volume, Here and There in Monmouthshire, Edwin Morris, the then Archbishop of Wales, describes Hando's canvas as "reminiscence, folklore, local history, place names and introductions to interesting people, past and present, illustrated by his own beautiful drawings". He took a relatively early interest in conservation. In his article on Allt-y-Bela, published in Journeys in Gwent in 1951, he wrote of the house's perilous state of dilapidation, noting "unless immediate and drastic action is taken, we shall lose priceless relics". Fifty years later, in the Gwent/Monmouthshire Pevsner, the architectural historian John Newman described Allt-y-Bela as "miserably derelict". His concern for preservation extended beyond individual buildings to the wider Monmouthshire landscape. An article published in Monmouthshire Sketch Book in 1954, was entitled "The Threat to Machen Vale" and condemned plans by the Central Electricity Generating Board to construct an electricity generating station in the Vale.The vanishing folklore and customs of Monmouthshire were of particular interest to Hando. More than one article covered the Mari Lwyd, a horse's skull covered by a sheet and borne aloft on a pole, which formed part of Christmas celebrations in the county. In a number of articles, including one on The Skirrid in Monmouthshire Sketch Book, he wrote of the legends of Jack o' Kent, who was said to have caused the cleft in the Skirrid's summit by jumping to it from the Sugar Loaf, some four miles distant.Monmouthshire's pubs were another topic of abiding interest. Hando wrote of, and drank and smoked in, a large number of the country's hostelries, the Robin Hood Inn, Monmouth being a particular favourite. In his Monmouth Town Sketch Book, he recalls a visit in 1947, when he encountered "the last of the Monmouth 'cards'".Hando's Pictorial Guide to the Wye Valley and the Forest of Dean is the only one of his books which took the form of a conventional travel guide, as opposed to a collection of articles.
Legacy
After his death the Monmouthshire Local History Council set up several "Hando seats" at viewpoints in the county that he had considered to be particularly fine. Funded by public subscription, the seats were located in Dixton churchyard; at Llandegfedd Reservoir; on Lawrence Hill, Newport; at the top of the Wyndcliff, St. Arvans; and near Keeper's Pond on the Blorenge near Blaenavon. Nearly 50 years after his death, Hando and his work are still cited in 21st century controversies. His detailed chronicling of the county's history was referenced in the debate on the construction of an extension of the M4 motorway across the Gwent Levels; and the late Paul Flynn, former member of parliament for Newport West, recalled the "halcyon days" of Hando's columns in a discussion about declining journalistic standards at the South Wales Argus.From November 2017, the South Wales Argus re-published his weekly "Rambles in Gwent" column, giving readers the opportunity to again enjoy his material which captured, as Argus editor Kenneth Loveland described it, "The shy beauty of this delectable county".
Family
His daughter, Margaret, was born in April 1916. She graduated from St Anne's College, Oxford, and later married Charles Smith, later Delacourt-Smith, in 1939. Her husband became a Labour MP in 1945 and later a Government minister, and was ennobled in 1967. She was a councillor and Justice of the Peace in Windsor in the 1960s. After her husband's death, she was herself raised to the peerage in 1974 as Baroness Delacourt-Smith of Alteryn. She remarried in 1978 and died in 2010 at the age of 94. Margaret's brother, from Hando's first marriage, to Alice, was John.
Hando also had a son, Robert, from his second marriage.
Bibliography
Books by Fred Hando
(all published by R. H. Johns, Newport)
Rambles in Gwent (1924)
The Pleasant Land of Gwent (1944) With an introduction by Arthur Machen. (including limited Deluxe Edition of 220 copies, signed by the author)
Journeys in Gwent (1951) (including limited Deluxe Edition of 350 copies, signed by the author), OCLC 754992827
Pictorial Guide to the Wye Valley and the Royal Forest of Dean (1952), (Edited by W. A. Stoker)
Monmouthshire Sketch Book (1954)
Out and About in Monmouthshire (1958)
Monmouth Town (1964)
Here and There in Monmouthshire (1964)
Collections and appreciations
Collections of Hando's articles, edited by Chris Barber:
Hando's Gwent (1987) ISBN 978-0951044452
Hando's Gwent Volume 2 (1989) ISBN 978-0951044490An appreciation of Hando's work, Fred J Hando, A Proud Son of Gwent (ISBN 9781904192626), including some of his writings and drawings, was published by his relative David Hando in 2014.
Footnotes
References
Sources
Collins, William James Townsend (1945). Monmouthshire Writers: A Literary History and Anthology. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 236089162.
Hando, Fred (1922). Rambles in Gwent. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 771405583.
— (1944). The Pleasant Land of Gwent. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 2534151.
— (1951). Journeys in Gwent. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 30202753.
— (1952). Pictorial Guide to the Wye Valley and the Forest of Dean. Newport: Ernest Joyce and Co. OCLC 30164265.
— (1954). Monmouthshire Sketch Book. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 30166792.
— (1958). Out and About in Monmouthshire. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 30235598.
— (1961). "Monmouthshire Sketchbook: No.452". South Wales Argus.
— (1964a). Monmouth Town Sketch Book. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 30295655.
— (1964b). Here and There in Monmouthshire. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 30295639.
— (1987). Chris Barber (ed.). Hando's Gwent. Vol. 1. Abergavenny, Wales: Blorenge Books. ISBN 9780951044452. OCLC 18745431.
— (1989). Chris Barber (ed.). Hando's Gwent. Vol. 2. Abergavenny, Wales: Blorenge Books. ISBN 9780951044483. OCLC 650492501.
Newman, John (2000). Gwent/Monmouthshire. Pevsner Architectural Guides. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-09630-9.
Stout, Alan (2009). Creating Prehistory: Druids, Ley Hunters and Archaeologists in pre-war Britain. New York: John Wiley & Son. ISBN 9781444302929. OCLC 437133104.
Watkins, Christine Anne (2019). Gwent Folk Tales. Stroud, Gloucestershire: The History Press. ISBN 9780750991544.
External links
Whyte, John; Clevely, Ted. "Articles Published by Fred J Hando in the South Wales Argus 1953–1970". Newport Local History Society. Archived from the original on 23 March 2016.
"Hando Oak" at caerleon.net | occupation | {
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} |
Frederick James Hando MBE (23 March 1888 – 17 February 1970) was a Welsh writer, artist and schoolteacher from Newport. He chronicled the history, character and folklore of Monmouthshire, which he also called Gwent, in a series of nearly 800 newspaper articles and several books published between the 1920s and 1960s.
Biography
Hando was born in Maindee, Newport, the son of a postmaster Alfred and his wife Miriam, and attended school there. He had two younger brothers, Frank and Harry. He trained at Borough Road College, London, before returning to Newport as a teacher. He served as a gunnery officer with the Royal Engineers in the First World War, where his experiences in Flanders had a profound effect on him.Hando married Alice Stanton, the daughter of a Newport builder, and the couple had two children – Margaret and John. Alice died while still young. After a number of years, Hando married again to Daisy, a staff member at his school. The couple soon had a son, Robert.
In 1925 he was appointed as the first headmaster of Hatherleigh School in Newport, where one of his pupils was Johnny Morris, later a noted radio and television presenter. Hando adopted an open and progressive teaching style and was described by Miriam Andrews, a former teacher at the school, as "a wonderful headmaster and he made the children very proud of Hatherleigh".His interest in local history was given an impetus when he was asked to provide sketches to illustrate Sir Joseph Bradney's multi-volume A History of Monmouthshire from the Coming of the Normans into Wales down to the Present Time and his first articles about Monmouthshire were published in the South Wales Argus in 1922. The then editor, William Collins agreed to an initial run of 15 articles. In total, he contributed 795 articles to the newspaper between 1922 and 13 February 1970, a few days before his death. Due to their high readership, the page of the Argus on which his articles appeared became particularly prized as advertising space. Many of his articles and drawings were republished in anthologies of his work. In his early writings, Hando was particularly interested in ley lines and the alignment of the sun with stone circles. He said that he wanted to add to what was already on the map and that by studying leys he could reach back in history far beyond Roman Britain.Hando was organist and choirmaster of Summerhill Baptist Church Newport for many years". In 1953 he was awarded the MBE for services to education and to Monmouthshire".Hando died on 17 February 1970, at St. Joseph's Nursing Home in Newport, at the age of 81. His last article, on District and Street Names, appeared in the South Wales Argus four days before his death.
Works
Hando's aim in writing his articles was set out in the preface to his The Pleasant Land of Gwent, published in 1944; "to persuade readers to see the little places of a shy county". Monmouthshire's set pieces, such as Raglan Castle and Tintern Abbey were not his focus, he wrote of lesser known sites such as the "Virtuous Well" at Trellech, "the tallest house in Monmouthshire" at Treowen, and the medieval boundary marker at Croes Llwyd. His scope was broader than buildings; in his foreword to the 1964 volume, Here and There in Monmouthshire, Edwin Morris, the then Archbishop of Wales, describes Hando's canvas as "reminiscence, folklore, local history, place names and introductions to interesting people, past and present, illustrated by his own beautiful drawings". He took a relatively early interest in conservation. In his article on Allt-y-Bela, published in Journeys in Gwent in 1951, he wrote of the house's perilous state of dilapidation, noting "unless immediate and drastic action is taken, we shall lose priceless relics". Fifty years later, in the Gwent/Monmouthshire Pevsner, the architectural historian John Newman described Allt-y-Bela as "miserably derelict". His concern for preservation extended beyond individual buildings to the wider Monmouthshire landscape. An article published in Monmouthshire Sketch Book in 1954, was entitled "The Threat to Machen Vale" and condemned plans by the Central Electricity Generating Board to construct an electricity generating station in the Vale.The vanishing folklore and customs of Monmouthshire were of particular interest to Hando. More than one article covered the Mari Lwyd, a horse's skull covered by a sheet and borne aloft on a pole, which formed part of Christmas celebrations in the county. In a number of articles, including one on The Skirrid in Monmouthshire Sketch Book, he wrote of the legends of Jack o' Kent, who was said to have caused the cleft in the Skirrid's summit by jumping to it from the Sugar Loaf, some four miles distant.Monmouthshire's pubs were another topic of abiding interest. Hando wrote of, and drank and smoked in, a large number of the country's hostelries, the Robin Hood Inn, Monmouth being a particular favourite. In his Monmouth Town Sketch Book, he recalls a visit in 1947, when he encountered "the last of the Monmouth 'cards'".Hando's Pictorial Guide to the Wye Valley and the Forest of Dean is the only one of his books which took the form of a conventional travel guide, as opposed to a collection of articles.
Legacy
After his death the Monmouthshire Local History Council set up several "Hando seats" at viewpoints in the county that he had considered to be particularly fine. Funded by public subscription, the seats were located in Dixton churchyard; at Llandegfedd Reservoir; on Lawrence Hill, Newport; at the top of the Wyndcliff, St. Arvans; and near Keeper's Pond on the Blorenge near Blaenavon. Nearly 50 years after his death, Hando and his work are still cited in 21st century controversies. His detailed chronicling of the county's history was referenced in the debate on the construction of an extension of the M4 motorway across the Gwent Levels; and the late Paul Flynn, former member of parliament for Newport West, recalled the "halcyon days" of Hando's columns in a discussion about declining journalistic standards at the South Wales Argus.From November 2017, the South Wales Argus re-published his weekly "Rambles in Gwent" column, giving readers the opportunity to again enjoy his material which captured, as Argus editor Kenneth Loveland described it, "The shy beauty of this delectable county".
Family
His daughter, Margaret, was born in April 1916. She graduated from St Anne's College, Oxford, and later married Charles Smith, later Delacourt-Smith, in 1939. Her husband became a Labour MP in 1945 and later a Government minister, and was ennobled in 1967. She was a councillor and Justice of the Peace in Windsor in the 1960s. After her husband's death, she was herself raised to the peerage in 1974 as Baroness Delacourt-Smith of Alteryn. She remarried in 1978 and died in 2010 at the age of 94. Margaret's brother, from Hando's first marriage, to Alice, was John.
Hando also had a son, Robert, from his second marriage.
Bibliography
Books by Fred Hando
(all published by R. H. Johns, Newport)
Rambles in Gwent (1924)
The Pleasant Land of Gwent (1944) With an introduction by Arthur Machen. (including limited Deluxe Edition of 220 copies, signed by the author)
Journeys in Gwent (1951) (including limited Deluxe Edition of 350 copies, signed by the author), OCLC 754992827
Pictorial Guide to the Wye Valley and the Royal Forest of Dean (1952), (Edited by W. A. Stoker)
Monmouthshire Sketch Book (1954)
Out and About in Monmouthshire (1958)
Monmouth Town (1964)
Here and There in Monmouthshire (1964)
Collections and appreciations
Collections of Hando's articles, edited by Chris Barber:
Hando's Gwent (1987) ISBN 978-0951044452
Hando's Gwent Volume 2 (1989) ISBN 978-0951044490An appreciation of Hando's work, Fred J Hando, A Proud Son of Gwent (ISBN 9781904192626), including some of his writings and drawings, was published by his relative David Hando in 2014.
Footnotes
References
Sources
Collins, William James Townsend (1945). Monmouthshire Writers: A Literary History and Anthology. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 236089162.
Hando, Fred (1922). Rambles in Gwent. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 771405583.
— (1944). The Pleasant Land of Gwent. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 2534151.
— (1951). Journeys in Gwent. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 30202753.
— (1952). Pictorial Guide to the Wye Valley and the Forest of Dean. Newport: Ernest Joyce and Co. OCLC 30164265.
— (1954). Monmouthshire Sketch Book. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 30166792.
— (1958). Out and About in Monmouthshire. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 30235598.
— (1961). "Monmouthshire Sketchbook: No.452". South Wales Argus.
— (1964a). Monmouth Town Sketch Book. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 30295655.
— (1964b). Here and There in Monmouthshire. Newport: R. H. Johns Ltd. OCLC 30295639.
— (1987). Chris Barber (ed.). Hando's Gwent. Vol. 1. Abergavenny, Wales: Blorenge Books. ISBN 9780951044452. OCLC 18745431.
— (1989). Chris Barber (ed.). Hando's Gwent. Vol. 2. Abergavenny, Wales: Blorenge Books. ISBN 9780951044483. OCLC 650492501.
Newman, John (2000). Gwent/Monmouthshire. Pevsner Architectural Guides. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-09630-9.
Stout, Alan (2009). Creating Prehistory: Druids, Ley Hunters and Archaeologists in pre-war Britain. New York: John Wiley & Son. ISBN 9781444302929. OCLC 437133104.
Watkins, Christine Anne (2019). Gwent Folk Tales. Stroud, Gloucestershire: The History Press. ISBN 9780750991544.
External links
Whyte, John; Clevely, Ted. "Articles Published by Fred J Hando in the South Wales Argus 1953–1970". Newport Local History Society. Archived from the original on 23 March 2016.
"Hando Oak" at caerleon.net | given name | {
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Bantz is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Fred A. Bantz (1895–1982), American official in the United States Department of the Navy
Helmut Bantz (1921–2004), German gymnast and Olympic champion
Brandon Bantz (born 1987), American baseball catcher
Jeffri W. Bantz (1954–2006), American classical conductor and teacher
Bantz John Craddock (born 1949), United States Army general | different from | {
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Bantz is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Fred A. Bantz (1895–1982), American official in the United States Department of the Navy
Helmut Bantz (1921–2004), German gymnast and Olympic champion
Brandon Bantz (born 1987), American baseball catcher
Jeffri W. Bantz (1954–2006), American classical conductor and teacher
Bantz John Craddock (born 1949), United States Army general | native label | {
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Thein Htay (Burmese: သိန်းဌေး) was the former Minister for Border Affairs and Minister for Industrial Development of Myanmar (Burma). He was reassigned to the Myanmar Army in February 2013, as the head of the Directorate of Defense Industries (DDI) carrying the rank of lieutenant general.
== References == | country of citizenship | {
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Ceratomia undulosa, the waved sphinx, is a moth of the family Sphingidae. The species was first described by Francis Walker in 1856. Also known as the "Scorpion Moth" (See "Biology" Below").
Distribution
It is found in the United States, and southern Canada, east of the Rocky Mountains. Adult moths are strictly nocturnal, hiding away as dawn approaches (Fullard & Napoleone 2001).
Description
Biology
Recorded food plants of the larvae include ash (Fraxinus), privet (Ligustrum), oak (Quercus), hawthorn (Crataegus) and fringe tree (Chionanthus virginicus).
When ready, larvae dig underground to pupate.
The most common predator is the Guiana Striped Scorpion, which feasts on the moth's egg clusters. The common proximity of the two species, sometimes showing up as the moth lays her eggs, has resulted in erroneous conclusions that the moths give birth to the scorpions, and the resultant name "Scorpion Moth."
Subspecies
Ceratomia undulosa undulosa (from Prince Edward Island and Nova Scotia west to eastern Alberta and Maine to Florida west to the eastern Great Plains and south to Florida, the Gulf Coast and Texas)
Ceratomia undulosa polingi Clark, 1929 (Mexico)
References
Fullard, James H.; Napoleone, Nadia (2001). "Diel flight periodicity and the evolution of auditory defences in the Macrolepidoptera" (PDF). Animal Behaviour. 62 (2): 349–368. doi:10.1006/anbe.2001.1753. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-06-15.
External links
"Waved sphinx (Ceratomia undulosa)". Moths of North America. U.S. Geological Survey Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center. Archived December 7, 2005.
Fauske, Gerald M. (January 23, 2007). "Ceratomia undulosa (Walker 1856)". Moths of North Dakota. Department of Entomology North Dakota State University. Retrieved December 13, 2020. | taxon rank | {
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Ceratomia undulosa, the waved sphinx, is a moth of the family Sphingidae. The species was first described by Francis Walker in 1856. Also known as the "Scorpion Moth" (See "Biology" Below").
Distribution
It is found in the United States, and southern Canada, east of the Rocky Mountains. Adult moths are strictly nocturnal, hiding away as dawn approaches (Fullard & Napoleone 2001).
Description
Biology
Recorded food plants of the larvae include ash (Fraxinus), privet (Ligustrum), oak (Quercus), hawthorn (Crataegus) and fringe tree (Chionanthus virginicus).
When ready, larvae dig underground to pupate.
The most common predator is the Guiana Striped Scorpion, which feasts on the moth's egg clusters. The common proximity of the two species, sometimes showing up as the moth lays her eggs, has resulted in erroneous conclusions that the moths give birth to the scorpions, and the resultant name "Scorpion Moth."
Subspecies
Ceratomia undulosa undulosa (from Prince Edward Island and Nova Scotia west to eastern Alberta and Maine to Florida west to the eastern Great Plains and south to Florida, the Gulf Coast and Texas)
Ceratomia undulosa polingi Clark, 1929 (Mexico)
References
Fullard, James H.; Napoleone, Nadia (2001). "Diel flight periodicity and the evolution of auditory defences in the Macrolepidoptera" (PDF). Animal Behaviour. 62 (2): 349–368. doi:10.1006/anbe.2001.1753. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-06-15.
External links
"Waved sphinx (Ceratomia undulosa)". Moths of North America. U.S. Geological Survey Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center. Archived December 7, 2005.
Fauske, Gerald M. (January 23, 2007). "Ceratomia undulosa (Walker 1856)". Moths of North Dakota. Department of Entomology North Dakota State University. Retrieved December 13, 2020. | parent taxon | {
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Ceratomia undulosa, the waved sphinx, is a moth of the family Sphingidae. The species was first described by Francis Walker in 1856. Also known as the "Scorpion Moth" (See "Biology" Below").
Distribution
It is found in the United States, and southern Canada, east of the Rocky Mountains. Adult moths are strictly nocturnal, hiding away as dawn approaches (Fullard & Napoleone 2001).
Description
Biology
Recorded food plants of the larvae include ash (Fraxinus), privet (Ligustrum), oak (Quercus), hawthorn (Crataegus) and fringe tree (Chionanthus virginicus).
When ready, larvae dig underground to pupate.
The most common predator is the Guiana Striped Scorpion, which feasts on the moth's egg clusters. The common proximity of the two species, sometimes showing up as the moth lays her eggs, has resulted in erroneous conclusions that the moths give birth to the scorpions, and the resultant name "Scorpion Moth."
Subspecies
Ceratomia undulosa undulosa (from Prince Edward Island and Nova Scotia west to eastern Alberta and Maine to Florida west to the eastern Great Plains and south to Florida, the Gulf Coast and Texas)
Ceratomia undulosa polingi Clark, 1929 (Mexico)
References
Fullard, James H.; Napoleone, Nadia (2001). "Diel flight periodicity and the evolution of auditory defences in the Macrolepidoptera" (PDF). Animal Behaviour. 62 (2): 349–368. doi:10.1006/anbe.2001.1753. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-06-15.
External links
"Waved sphinx (Ceratomia undulosa)". Moths of North America. U.S. Geological Survey Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center. Archived December 7, 2005.
Fauske, Gerald M. (January 23, 2007). "Ceratomia undulosa (Walker 1856)". Moths of North Dakota. Department of Entomology North Dakota State University. Retrieved December 13, 2020. | taxon name | {
"answer_start": [
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Ceratomia undulosa, the waved sphinx, is a moth of the family Sphingidae. The species was first described by Francis Walker in 1856. Also known as the "Scorpion Moth" (See "Biology" Below").
Distribution
It is found in the United States, and southern Canada, east of the Rocky Mountains. Adult moths are strictly nocturnal, hiding away as dawn approaches (Fullard & Napoleone 2001).
Description
Biology
Recorded food plants of the larvae include ash (Fraxinus), privet (Ligustrum), oak (Quercus), hawthorn (Crataegus) and fringe tree (Chionanthus virginicus).
When ready, larvae dig underground to pupate.
The most common predator is the Guiana Striped Scorpion, which feasts on the moth's egg clusters. The common proximity of the two species, sometimes showing up as the moth lays her eggs, has resulted in erroneous conclusions that the moths give birth to the scorpions, and the resultant name "Scorpion Moth."
Subspecies
Ceratomia undulosa undulosa (from Prince Edward Island and Nova Scotia west to eastern Alberta and Maine to Florida west to the eastern Great Plains and south to Florida, the Gulf Coast and Texas)
Ceratomia undulosa polingi Clark, 1929 (Mexico)
References
Fullard, James H.; Napoleone, Nadia (2001). "Diel flight periodicity and the evolution of auditory defences in the Macrolepidoptera" (PDF). Animal Behaviour. 62 (2): 349–368. doi:10.1006/anbe.2001.1753. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-06-15.
External links
"Waved sphinx (Ceratomia undulosa)". Moths of North America. U.S. Geological Survey Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center. Archived December 7, 2005.
Fauske, Gerald M. (January 23, 2007). "Ceratomia undulosa (Walker 1856)". Moths of North Dakota. Department of Entomology North Dakota State University. Retrieved December 13, 2020. | Commons category | {
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Ceratomia undulosa, the waved sphinx, is a moth of the family Sphingidae. The species was first described by Francis Walker in 1856. Also known as the "Scorpion Moth" (See "Biology" Below").
Distribution
It is found in the United States, and southern Canada, east of the Rocky Mountains. Adult moths are strictly nocturnal, hiding away as dawn approaches (Fullard & Napoleone 2001).
Description
Biology
Recorded food plants of the larvae include ash (Fraxinus), privet (Ligustrum), oak (Quercus), hawthorn (Crataegus) and fringe tree (Chionanthus virginicus).
When ready, larvae dig underground to pupate.
The most common predator is the Guiana Striped Scorpion, which feasts on the moth's egg clusters. The common proximity of the two species, sometimes showing up as the moth lays her eggs, has resulted in erroneous conclusions that the moths give birth to the scorpions, and the resultant name "Scorpion Moth."
Subspecies
Ceratomia undulosa undulosa (from Prince Edward Island and Nova Scotia west to eastern Alberta and Maine to Florida west to the eastern Great Plains and south to Florida, the Gulf Coast and Texas)
Ceratomia undulosa polingi Clark, 1929 (Mexico)
References
Fullard, James H.; Napoleone, Nadia (2001). "Diel flight periodicity and the evolution of auditory defences in the Macrolepidoptera" (PDF). Animal Behaviour. 62 (2): 349–368. doi:10.1006/anbe.2001.1753. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-06-15.
External links
"Waved sphinx (Ceratomia undulosa)". Moths of North America. U.S. Geological Survey Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center. Archived December 7, 2005.
Fauske, Gerald M. (January 23, 2007). "Ceratomia undulosa (Walker 1856)". Moths of North Dakota. Department of Entomology North Dakota State University. Retrieved December 13, 2020. | Commons gallery | {
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"Har du glemt" (English: Have you forgotten) is a song performed by Danish pop, dance and R&B singer and songwriter Medina. It was released on 29 October 2012 as a digital download in Denmark. The song was released as the first single of the re-release of For altid. The song peaked at number 4 on the Danish Singles Chart.
Track listing
Chart performance
Weekly charts
Release history
== References == | instance of | {
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"Har du glemt" (English: Have you forgotten) is a song performed by Danish pop, dance and R&B singer and songwriter Medina. It was released on 29 October 2012 as a digital download in Denmark. The song was released as the first single of the re-release of For altid. The song peaked at number 4 on the Danish Singles Chart.
Track listing
Chart performance
Weekly charts
Release history
== References == | performer | {
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"Medina"
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"Har du glemt" (English: Have you forgotten) is a song performed by Danish pop, dance and R&B singer and songwriter Medina. It was released on 29 October 2012 as a digital download in Denmark. The song was released as the first single of the re-release of For altid. The song peaked at number 4 on the Danish Singles Chart.
Track listing
Chart performance
Weekly charts
Release history
== References == | part of | {
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"For altid"
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Stefania Biegun (11 August 1935 – 10 December 2016) was a Polish cross-country skier. She competed at the 1960, 1964 and the 1968 Winter Olympics.
Cross-country skiing results
Olympic Games
World Championships
References
External links
Stefania Biegun at Olympedia
Stefania Biegun at the Polish Olympic Committee (archived) (in Polish) | family name | {
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Stefania Biegun (11 August 1935 – 10 December 2016) was a Polish cross-country skier. She competed at the 1960, 1964 and the 1968 Winter Olympics.
Cross-country skiing results
Olympic Games
World Championships
References
External links
Stefania Biegun at Olympedia
Stefania Biegun at the Polish Olympic Committee (archived) (in Polish) | given name | {
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Stefania Biegun (11 August 1935 – 10 December 2016) was a Polish cross-country skier. She competed at the 1960, 1964 and the 1968 Winter Olympics.
Cross-country skiing results
Olympic Games
World Championships
References
External links
Stefania Biegun at Olympedia
Stefania Biegun at the Polish Olympic Committee (archived) (in Polish) | participant in | {
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Stefania Biegun (11 August 1935 – 10 December 2016) was a Polish cross-country skier. She competed at the 1960, 1964 and the 1968 Winter Olympics.
Cross-country skiing results
Olympic Games
World Championships
References
External links
Stefania Biegun at Olympedia
Stefania Biegun at the Polish Olympic Committee (archived) (in Polish) | languages spoken, written or signed | {
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Olympic Dreams could refer to two pieces of media produced related to the Olympic Games:
Olympic Dreams (film), a 2019 American film directed by Jeremy Teicher
Olympic Dreams (TV Series), a 2007–08 British television show on BBC | title | {
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Olympic Dreams could refer to two pieces of media produced related to the Olympic Games:
Olympic Dreams (film), a 2019 American film directed by Jeremy Teicher
Olympic Dreams (TV Series), a 2007–08 British television show on BBC | instance of | {
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Vincenzo de Corbis (died) was a Roman Catholic prelate who served as Bishop of Acerra (1511–1512).On 22 August 1511, Vincenzo de Corbis was appointed during the papacy of Pope Julius II as Bishop of Acerra.
He served as Bishop of Acerra until his death in 1512.
References
External links and additional sources
Cheney, David M. "Diocese of Acerra". Catholic-Hierarchy.org. Retrieved June 16, 2018. (for Chronology of Bishops) [self-published]
Chow, Gabriel. "Diocese of Acerra (Italy)". GCatholic.org. Retrieved June 16, 2018. (for Chronology of Bishops) [self-published] | place of death | {
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Vincenzo de Corbis (died) was a Roman Catholic prelate who served as Bishop of Acerra (1511–1512).On 22 August 1511, Vincenzo de Corbis was appointed during the papacy of Pope Julius II as Bishop of Acerra.
He served as Bishop of Acerra until his death in 1512.
References
External links and additional sources
Cheney, David M. "Diocese of Acerra". Catholic-Hierarchy.org. Retrieved June 16, 2018. (for Chronology of Bishops) [self-published]
Chow, Gabriel. "Diocese of Acerra (Italy)". GCatholic.org. Retrieved June 16, 2018. (for Chronology of Bishops) [self-published] | given name | {
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Kudumbapuranam (transl. Family History) is a 1988 Indian Malayalam-language drama film, written by Lohithadas and directed by Sathyan Anthikad, with Thilakan, Balachandra Menon, Ambika, K. P. A. C. Lalitha, Parvathy and Sreenivasan in major roles. The film was a remake of the 1986 Tamil film Samsaram Adhu Minsaram, directed by Visu. The film revolves around a middle-class Malayalee family and the strained relationship between father and son. The film clearly highlights the circumstances that the family goes through after their son raises questions about the division of family expenditure after he becomes an earning member of the family, disregarding the hardships his parents went through to raise him and other members of the family.
Plot
The film revolves around a middle-class family. Problems arise when the eldest son alienates his father and is expelled from their home. The film portrays the other members struggling between the two.
Sankaran Nair, is leading a happy retired life with his wife Ammini and his children Krishnanunni, Preman, Rema and Gopu. Krishnanunni is working in a bank and is married to Geetha. Preman is working as a drama artist and Rema and Gopu are studying. Sankaran Nair's close friend wished to get his son, Murali, married to Rema. When the families decide to get them married, Rema disagrees and conveys that her Malayalam lecturer, Sivan, is in love with her and she wishes to marry him. Initially, her family is against Rema's wish, later agrees seeing that Sivan is financially sound. Sankaran is still worried that he is not able to fulfill his deceased friend's wish. Although Murali is heartbroken to hear this, he suggests that Preman marries his sister Indu, thus fulfilling their wish. The marriages happen with Krishnanunni's financial aide. Geetha is now pregnant. All in the family are happy to hear about this. Sankaran Nair and Ammini are delighted about their grand-parenthood. As per the custom, Geetha moves to her parents' home during the seventh month of her pregnancy. Meanwhile, there are sparks in both Sivan-Rema's and Preman-Indu's married life. One day, Indu leaves to her place after a fight with Preman. And the same time, Rema comes to her home after differences with her mother-in-law Bhageerathiyamma and fight with Sivan. Murali does not entertain Indu's stubbornness and asks her to return to Preman's house. Rema is also stubborn and not ready to go back to Sivan's house. Krishnanunni is not really happy about this. Next day Krishnanunni gives money to his mother, which is less than the usual amount. When Ammini asks about this, he responds that since his wife is not at home, the expenditure will be comparatively less. And he also conveys that he is not happy about Rema's and Indu's stubbornness. To this, Sankaran Nair responds that he doesn't have the right to comment about his brother's wife. Krishnanunni also mentions that Preman contributes comparatively less amount of money towards the family expenses since he is only a drama artist with no permanent job to which Sankaran Nair replies that Preman spents all his earnings for his family unlike Krishnanunni who offers only a calculated amount, thus in his eyes Preman is much above than his eldest son Krishnanunni. This conversation creates a rift between Sankaran Nair and Krishnanunni. Sankaran Nair says that this family doesn't need any financial support from Krishnanunni from now. In that case, Krishnanunni wants back all the money that he have spend on the family, especially the twenty five thousand rupees that he has spent for Rema's marriage. Sankaran Nair says he will return all the money and asks Krishnanunni to move out of the house. Krishnanunni is equally headstrong and shifts to the house adjacent to his place. Preman tries to settle the dispute between his father and brother, but fails. Sankaran Nair starts working as a lorry driver to earn money. Although his health is deteriorating, he is strong-willed about his aim. One day, Geetha's uncle, Achuthan, informs Sankaran Nair that Geetha delivered a baby boy almost a week ago. Sankaran Nair and Ammini are happy to hear this, but equally sad that Krishnanunni never informed them about this. Krishnanunni, Geetha and their son comes to their new home. Kunjamma is appointed as the caretaker. Krishnanunni is struggling to manage financial stuff at his place. And Geetha mocks him about how stringent he used to be when spending money. Meanwhile, Geetha meets Sivan and learns that his mother has been hospitalised after fracturing her leg. After this, Geetha advises Rema to go back to Sivan and thus Rema and Siva are happily back together. Another instance when Geetha mocks about Krishnanunni's misery, Krishnanunni retorts that he never did all these for his own good, but for his family. Krishnanunni understands his mistake. Meanwhile, Sankaran Nair has earned enough money to return to Krishnanunni and he asks Krishnanunni to move out from his house. To this, Ammini asks Sankaran Nair how he will be able to not be with his grandchild. Sankaran Nair's heart melts and he forgives Krishnanunni. The family reunites. Geetha suggest that they better shift so that their intimacy is never abridged.
Cast
Thilakan as Sankaran Nair
Balachandra Menon as Krishnanunni, Sankaran Nair's eldest son
Sreenivasan as Preman Vadakkummuri, Sankaran Nair's second son
Ambika as Geetha, Krishnanunni's wife
K. P. A. C. Lalitha as Ammini, Sankaran Nair's wife
Parvathy as Rema, Sankaran Nair's daughter
Syama as Indu, Preman's wife
Manianpilla Raju as Murali, Indu's brother
Sreenath as Sivan, Rema's husband
Baiju as Gopu, Sankaran Nair's youngest son
Philomina as Kunjamma, servant
Oduvil Unnikrishnan as Achuthan, Geetha's uncle
Sukumari as Thrikkunnathu Bhageerathiyamma, Rama's mother-in-law
Santhakumari as Devaki Murali's and Indu's mother
Soundtrack
The music was composed by Mohan Sithara and the lyrics were written by Kaithapram.
References
External links
Kudumba Puranam at IMDb | instance of | {
"answer_start": [
82
],
"text": [
"film"
]
} |
Kudumbapuranam (transl. Family History) is a 1988 Indian Malayalam-language drama film, written by Lohithadas and directed by Sathyan Anthikad, with Thilakan, Balachandra Menon, Ambika, K. P. A. C. Lalitha, Parvathy and Sreenivasan in major roles. The film was a remake of the 1986 Tamil film Samsaram Adhu Minsaram, directed by Visu. The film revolves around a middle-class Malayalee family and the strained relationship between father and son. The film clearly highlights the circumstances that the family goes through after their son raises questions about the division of family expenditure after he becomes an earning member of the family, disregarding the hardships his parents went through to raise him and other members of the family.
Plot
The film revolves around a middle-class family. Problems arise when the eldest son alienates his father and is expelled from their home. The film portrays the other members struggling between the two.
Sankaran Nair, is leading a happy retired life with his wife Ammini and his children Krishnanunni, Preman, Rema and Gopu. Krishnanunni is working in a bank and is married to Geetha. Preman is working as a drama artist and Rema and Gopu are studying. Sankaran Nair's close friend wished to get his son, Murali, married to Rema. When the families decide to get them married, Rema disagrees and conveys that her Malayalam lecturer, Sivan, is in love with her and she wishes to marry him. Initially, her family is against Rema's wish, later agrees seeing that Sivan is financially sound. Sankaran is still worried that he is not able to fulfill his deceased friend's wish. Although Murali is heartbroken to hear this, he suggests that Preman marries his sister Indu, thus fulfilling their wish. The marriages happen with Krishnanunni's financial aide. Geetha is now pregnant. All in the family are happy to hear about this. Sankaran Nair and Ammini are delighted about their grand-parenthood. As per the custom, Geetha moves to her parents' home during the seventh month of her pregnancy. Meanwhile, there are sparks in both Sivan-Rema's and Preman-Indu's married life. One day, Indu leaves to her place after a fight with Preman. And the same time, Rema comes to her home after differences with her mother-in-law Bhageerathiyamma and fight with Sivan. Murali does not entertain Indu's stubbornness and asks her to return to Preman's house. Rema is also stubborn and not ready to go back to Sivan's house. Krishnanunni is not really happy about this. Next day Krishnanunni gives money to his mother, which is less than the usual amount. When Ammini asks about this, he responds that since his wife is not at home, the expenditure will be comparatively less. And he also conveys that he is not happy about Rema's and Indu's stubbornness. To this, Sankaran Nair responds that he doesn't have the right to comment about his brother's wife. Krishnanunni also mentions that Preman contributes comparatively less amount of money towards the family expenses since he is only a drama artist with no permanent job to which Sankaran Nair replies that Preman spents all his earnings for his family unlike Krishnanunni who offers only a calculated amount, thus in his eyes Preman is much above than his eldest son Krishnanunni. This conversation creates a rift between Sankaran Nair and Krishnanunni. Sankaran Nair says that this family doesn't need any financial support from Krishnanunni from now. In that case, Krishnanunni wants back all the money that he have spend on the family, especially the twenty five thousand rupees that he has spent for Rema's marriage. Sankaran Nair says he will return all the money and asks Krishnanunni to move out of the house. Krishnanunni is equally headstrong and shifts to the house adjacent to his place. Preman tries to settle the dispute between his father and brother, but fails. Sankaran Nair starts working as a lorry driver to earn money. Although his health is deteriorating, he is strong-willed about his aim. One day, Geetha's uncle, Achuthan, informs Sankaran Nair that Geetha delivered a baby boy almost a week ago. Sankaran Nair and Ammini are happy to hear this, but equally sad that Krishnanunni never informed them about this. Krishnanunni, Geetha and their son comes to their new home. Kunjamma is appointed as the caretaker. Krishnanunni is struggling to manage financial stuff at his place. And Geetha mocks him about how stringent he used to be when spending money. Meanwhile, Geetha meets Sivan and learns that his mother has been hospitalised after fracturing her leg. After this, Geetha advises Rema to go back to Sivan and thus Rema and Siva are happily back together. Another instance when Geetha mocks about Krishnanunni's misery, Krishnanunni retorts that he never did all these for his own good, but for his family. Krishnanunni understands his mistake. Meanwhile, Sankaran Nair has earned enough money to return to Krishnanunni and he asks Krishnanunni to move out from his house. To this, Ammini asks Sankaran Nair how he will be able to not be with his grandchild. Sankaran Nair's heart melts and he forgives Krishnanunni. The family reunites. Geetha suggest that they better shift so that their intimacy is never abridged.
Cast
Thilakan as Sankaran Nair
Balachandra Menon as Krishnanunni, Sankaran Nair's eldest son
Sreenivasan as Preman Vadakkummuri, Sankaran Nair's second son
Ambika as Geetha, Krishnanunni's wife
K. P. A. C. Lalitha as Ammini, Sankaran Nair's wife
Parvathy as Rema, Sankaran Nair's daughter
Syama as Indu, Preman's wife
Manianpilla Raju as Murali, Indu's brother
Sreenath as Sivan, Rema's husband
Baiju as Gopu, Sankaran Nair's youngest son
Philomina as Kunjamma, servant
Oduvil Unnikrishnan as Achuthan, Geetha's uncle
Sukumari as Thrikkunnathu Bhageerathiyamma, Rama's mother-in-law
Santhakumari as Devaki Murali's and Indu's mother
Soundtrack
The music was composed by Mohan Sithara and the lyrics were written by Kaithapram.
References
External links
Kudumba Puranam at IMDb | director | {
"answer_start": [
126
],
"text": [
"Sathyan Anthikad"
]
} |
Kudumbapuranam (transl. Family History) is a 1988 Indian Malayalam-language drama film, written by Lohithadas and directed by Sathyan Anthikad, with Thilakan, Balachandra Menon, Ambika, K. P. A. C. Lalitha, Parvathy and Sreenivasan in major roles. The film was a remake of the 1986 Tamil film Samsaram Adhu Minsaram, directed by Visu. The film revolves around a middle-class Malayalee family and the strained relationship between father and son. The film clearly highlights the circumstances that the family goes through after their son raises questions about the division of family expenditure after he becomes an earning member of the family, disregarding the hardships his parents went through to raise him and other members of the family.
Plot
The film revolves around a middle-class family. Problems arise when the eldest son alienates his father and is expelled from their home. The film portrays the other members struggling between the two.
Sankaran Nair, is leading a happy retired life with his wife Ammini and his children Krishnanunni, Preman, Rema and Gopu. Krishnanunni is working in a bank and is married to Geetha. Preman is working as a drama artist and Rema and Gopu are studying. Sankaran Nair's close friend wished to get his son, Murali, married to Rema. When the families decide to get them married, Rema disagrees and conveys that her Malayalam lecturer, Sivan, is in love with her and she wishes to marry him. Initially, her family is against Rema's wish, later agrees seeing that Sivan is financially sound. Sankaran is still worried that he is not able to fulfill his deceased friend's wish. Although Murali is heartbroken to hear this, he suggests that Preman marries his sister Indu, thus fulfilling their wish. The marriages happen with Krishnanunni's financial aide. Geetha is now pregnant. All in the family are happy to hear about this. Sankaran Nair and Ammini are delighted about their grand-parenthood. As per the custom, Geetha moves to her parents' home during the seventh month of her pregnancy. Meanwhile, there are sparks in both Sivan-Rema's and Preman-Indu's married life. One day, Indu leaves to her place after a fight with Preman. And the same time, Rema comes to her home after differences with her mother-in-law Bhageerathiyamma and fight with Sivan. Murali does not entertain Indu's stubbornness and asks her to return to Preman's house. Rema is also stubborn and not ready to go back to Sivan's house. Krishnanunni is not really happy about this. Next day Krishnanunni gives money to his mother, which is less than the usual amount. When Ammini asks about this, he responds that since his wife is not at home, the expenditure will be comparatively less. And he also conveys that he is not happy about Rema's and Indu's stubbornness. To this, Sankaran Nair responds that he doesn't have the right to comment about his brother's wife. Krishnanunni also mentions that Preman contributes comparatively less amount of money towards the family expenses since he is only a drama artist with no permanent job to which Sankaran Nair replies that Preman spents all his earnings for his family unlike Krishnanunni who offers only a calculated amount, thus in his eyes Preman is much above than his eldest son Krishnanunni. This conversation creates a rift between Sankaran Nair and Krishnanunni. Sankaran Nair says that this family doesn't need any financial support from Krishnanunni from now. In that case, Krishnanunni wants back all the money that he have spend on the family, especially the twenty five thousand rupees that he has spent for Rema's marriage. Sankaran Nair says he will return all the money and asks Krishnanunni to move out of the house. Krishnanunni is equally headstrong and shifts to the house adjacent to his place. Preman tries to settle the dispute between his father and brother, but fails. Sankaran Nair starts working as a lorry driver to earn money. Although his health is deteriorating, he is strong-willed about his aim. One day, Geetha's uncle, Achuthan, informs Sankaran Nair that Geetha delivered a baby boy almost a week ago. Sankaran Nair and Ammini are happy to hear this, but equally sad that Krishnanunni never informed them about this. Krishnanunni, Geetha and their son comes to their new home. Kunjamma is appointed as the caretaker. Krishnanunni is struggling to manage financial stuff at his place. And Geetha mocks him about how stringent he used to be when spending money. Meanwhile, Geetha meets Sivan and learns that his mother has been hospitalised after fracturing her leg. After this, Geetha advises Rema to go back to Sivan and thus Rema and Siva are happily back together. Another instance when Geetha mocks about Krishnanunni's misery, Krishnanunni retorts that he never did all these for his own good, but for his family. Krishnanunni understands his mistake. Meanwhile, Sankaran Nair has earned enough money to return to Krishnanunni and he asks Krishnanunni to move out from his house. To this, Ammini asks Sankaran Nair how he will be able to not be with his grandchild. Sankaran Nair's heart melts and he forgives Krishnanunni. The family reunites. Geetha suggest that they better shift so that their intimacy is never abridged.
Cast
Thilakan as Sankaran Nair
Balachandra Menon as Krishnanunni, Sankaran Nair's eldest son
Sreenivasan as Preman Vadakkummuri, Sankaran Nair's second son
Ambika as Geetha, Krishnanunni's wife
K. P. A. C. Lalitha as Ammini, Sankaran Nair's wife
Parvathy as Rema, Sankaran Nair's daughter
Syama as Indu, Preman's wife
Manianpilla Raju as Murali, Indu's brother
Sreenath as Sivan, Rema's husband
Baiju as Gopu, Sankaran Nair's youngest son
Philomina as Kunjamma, servant
Oduvil Unnikrishnan as Achuthan, Geetha's uncle
Sukumari as Thrikkunnathu Bhageerathiyamma, Rama's mother-in-law
Santhakumari as Devaki Murali's and Indu's mother
Soundtrack
The music was composed by Mohan Sithara and the lyrics were written by Kaithapram.
References
External links
Kudumba Puranam at IMDb | cast member | {
"answer_start": [
207
],
"text": [
"Parvathy"
]
} |
Kudumbapuranam (transl. Family History) is a 1988 Indian Malayalam-language drama film, written by Lohithadas and directed by Sathyan Anthikad, with Thilakan, Balachandra Menon, Ambika, K. P. A. C. Lalitha, Parvathy and Sreenivasan in major roles. The film was a remake of the 1986 Tamil film Samsaram Adhu Minsaram, directed by Visu. The film revolves around a middle-class Malayalee family and the strained relationship between father and son. The film clearly highlights the circumstances that the family goes through after their son raises questions about the division of family expenditure after he becomes an earning member of the family, disregarding the hardships his parents went through to raise him and other members of the family.
Plot
The film revolves around a middle-class family. Problems arise when the eldest son alienates his father and is expelled from their home. The film portrays the other members struggling between the two.
Sankaran Nair, is leading a happy retired life with his wife Ammini and his children Krishnanunni, Preman, Rema and Gopu. Krishnanunni is working in a bank and is married to Geetha. Preman is working as a drama artist and Rema and Gopu are studying. Sankaran Nair's close friend wished to get his son, Murali, married to Rema. When the families decide to get them married, Rema disagrees and conveys that her Malayalam lecturer, Sivan, is in love with her and she wishes to marry him. Initially, her family is against Rema's wish, later agrees seeing that Sivan is financially sound. Sankaran is still worried that he is not able to fulfill his deceased friend's wish. Although Murali is heartbroken to hear this, he suggests that Preman marries his sister Indu, thus fulfilling their wish. The marriages happen with Krishnanunni's financial aide. Geetha is now pregnant. All in the family are happy to hear about this. Sankaran Nair and Ammini are delighted about their grand-parenthood. As per the custom, Geetha moves to her parents' home during the seventh month of her pregnancy. Meanwhile, there are sparks in both Sivan-Rema's and Preman-Indu's married life. One day, Indu leaves to her place after a fight with Preman. And the same time, Rema comes to her home after differences with her mother-in-law Bhageerathiyamma and fight with Sivan. Murali does not entertain Indu's stubbornness and asks her to return to Preman's house. Rema is also stubborn and not ready to go back to Sivan's house. Krishnanunni is not really happy about this. Next day Krishnanunni gives money to his mother, which is less than the usual amount. When Ammini asks about this, he responds that since his wife is not at home, the expenditure will be comparatively less. And he also conveys that he is not happy about Rema's and Indu's stubbornness. To this, Sankaran Nair responds that he doesn't have the right to comment about his brother's wife. Krishnanunni also mentions that Preman contributes comparatively less amount of money towards the family expenses since he is only a drama artist with no permanent job to which Sankaran Nair replies that Preman spents all his earnings for his family unlike Krishnanunni who offers only a calculated amount, thus in his eyes Preman is much above than his eldest son Krishnanunni. This conversation creates a rift between Sankaran Nair and Krishnanunni. Sankaran Nair says that this family doesn't need any financial support from Krishnanunni from now. In that case, Krishnanunni wants back all the money that he have spend on the family, especially the twenty five thousand rupees that he has spent for Rema's marriage. Sankaran Nair says he will return all the money and asks Krishnanunni to move out of the house. Krishnanunni is equally headstrong and shifts to the house adjacent to his place. Preman tries to settle the dispute between his father and brother, but fails. Sankaran Nair starts working as a lorry driver to earn money. Although his health is deteriorating, he is strong-willed about his aim. One day, Geetha's uncle, Achuthan, informs Sankaran Nair that Geetha delivered a baby boy almost a week ago. Sankaran Nair and Ammini are happy to hear this, but equally sad that Krishnanunni never informed them about this. Krishnanunni, Geetha and their son comes to their new home. Kunjamma is appointed as the caretaker. Krishnanunni is struggling to manage financial stuff at his place. And Geetha mocks him about how stringent he used to be when spending money. Meanwhile, Geetha meets Sivan and learns that his mother has been hospitalised after fracturing her leg. After this, Geetha advises Rema to go back to Sivan and thus Rema and Siva are happily back together. Another instance when Geetha mocks about Krishnanunni's misery, Krishnanunni retorts that he never did all these for his own good, but for his family. Krishnanunni understands his mistake. Meanwhile, Sankaran Nair has earned enough money to return to Krishnanunni and he asks Krishnanunni to move out from his house. To this, Ammini asks Sankaran Nair how he will be able to not be with his grandchild. Sankaran Nair's heart melts and he forgives Krishnanunni. The family reunites. Geetha suggest that they better shift so that their intimacy is never abridged.
Cast
Thilakan as Sankaran Nair
Balachandra Menon as Krishnanunni, Sankaran Nair's eldest son
Sreenivasan as Preman Vadakkummuri, Sankaran Nair's second son
Ambika as Geetha, Krishnanunni's wife
K. P. A. C. Lalitha as Ammini, Sankaran Nair's wife
Parvathy as Rema, Sankaran Nair's daughter
Syama as Indu, Preman's wife
Manianpilla Raju as Murali, Indu's brother
Sreenath as Sivan, Rema's husband
Baiju as Gopu, Sankaran Nair's youngest son
Philomina as Kunjamma, servant
Oduvil Unnikrishnan as Achuthan, Geetha's uncle
Sukumari as Thrikkunnathu Bhageerathiyamma, Rama's mother-in-law
Santhakumari as Devaki Murali's and Indu's mother
Soundtrack
The music was composed by Mohan Sithara and the lyrics were written by Kaithapram.
References
External links
Kudumba Puranam at IMDb | original language of film or TV show | {
"answer_start": [
57
],
"text": [
"Malayalam"
]
} |
Kudumbapuranam (transl. Family History) is a 1988 Indian Malayalam-language drama film, written by Lohithadas and directed by Sathyan Anthikad, with Thilakan, Balachandra Menon, Ambika, K. P. A. C. Lalitha, Parvathy and Sreenivasan in major roles. The film was a remake of the 1986 Tamil film Samsaram Adhu Minsaram, directed by Visu. The film revolves around a middle-class Malayalee family and the strained relationship between father and son. The film clearly highlights the circumstances that the family goes through after their son raises questions about the division of family expenditure after he becomes an earning member of the family, disregarding the hardships his parents went through to raise him and other members of the family.
Plot
The film revolves around a middle-class family. Problems arise when the eldest son alienates his father and is expelled from their home. The film portrays the other members struggling between the two.
Sankaran Nair, is leading a happy retired life with his wife Ammini and his children Krishnanunni, Preman, Rema and Gopu. Krishnanunni is working in a bank and is married to Geetha. Preman is working as a drama artist and Rema and Gopu are studying. Sankaran Nair's close friend wished to get his son, Murali, married to Rema. When the families decide to get them married, Rema disagrees and conveys that her Malayalam lecturer, Sivan, is in love with her and she wishes to marry him. Initially, her family is against Rema's wish, later agrees seeing that Sivan is financially sound. Sankaran is still worried that he is not able to fulfill his deceased friend's wish. Although Murali is heartbroken to hear this, he suggests that Preman marries his sister Indu, thus fulfilling their wish. The marriages happen with Krishnanunni's financial aide. Geetha is now pregnant. All in the family are happy to hear about this. Sankaran Nair and Ammini are delighted about their grand-parenthood. As per the custom, Geetha moves to her parents' home during the seventh month of her pregnancy. Meanwhile, there are sparks in both Sivan-Rema's and Preman-Indu's married life. One day, Indu leaves to her place after a fight with Preman. And the same time, Rema comes to her home after differences with her mother-in-law Bhageerathiyamma and fight with Sivan. Murali does not entertain Indu's stubbornness and asks her to return to Preman's house. Rema is also stubborn and not ready to go back to Sivan's house. Krishnanunni is not really happy about this. Next day Krishnanunni gives money to his mother, which is less than the usual amount. When Ammini asks about this, he responds that since his wife is not at home, the expenditure will be comparatively less. And he also conveys that he is not happy about Rema's and Indu's stubbornness. To this, Sankaran Nair responds that he doesn't have the right to comment about his brother's wife. Krishnanunni also mentions that Preman contributes comparatively less amount of money towards the family expenses since he is only a drama artist with no permanent job to which Sankaran Nair replies that Preman spents all his earnings for his family unlike Krishnanunni who offers only a calculated amount, thus in his eyes Preman is much above than his eldest son Krishnanunni. This conversation creates a rift between Sankaran Nair and Krishnanunni. Sankaran Nair says that this family doesn't need any financial support from Krishnanunni from now. In that case, Krishnanunni wants back all the money that he have spend on the family, especially the twenty five thousand rupees that he has spent for Rema's marriage. Sankaran Nair says he will return all the money and asks Krishnanunni to move out of the house. Krishnanunni is equally headstrong and shifts to the house adjacent to his place. Preman tries to settle the dispute between his father and brother, but fails. Sankaran Nair starts working as a lorry driver to earn money. Although his health is deteriorating, he is strong-willed about his aim. One day, Geetha's uncle, Achuthan, informs Sankaran Nair that Geetha delivered a baby boy almost a week ago. Sankaran Nair and Ammini are happy to hear this, but equally sad that Krishnanunni never informed them about this. Krishnanunni, Geetha and their son comes to their new home. Kunjamma is appointed as the caretaker. Krishnanunni is struggling to manage financial stuff at his place. And Geetha mocks him about how stringent he used to be when spending money. Meanwhile, Geetha meets Sivan and learns that his mother has been hospitalised after fracturing her leg. After this, Geetha advises Rema to go back to Sivan and thus Rema and Siva are happily back together. Another instance when Geetha mocks about Krishnanunni's misery, Krishnanunni retorts that he never did all these for his own good, but for his family. Krishnanunni understands his mistake. Meanwhile, Sankaran Nair has earned enough money to return to Krishnanunni and he asks Krishnanunni to move out from his house. To this, Ammini asks Sankaran Nair how he will be able to not be with his grandchild. Sankaran Nair's heart melts and he forgives Krishnanunni. The family reunites. Geetha suggest that they better shift so that their intimacy is never abridged.
Cast
Thilakan as Sankaran Nair
Balachandra Menon as Krishnanunni, Sankaran Nair's eldest son
Sreenivasan as Preman Vadakkummuri, Sankaran Nair's second son
Ambika as Geetha, Krishnanunni's wife
K. P. A. C. Lalitha as Ammini, Sankaran Nair's wife
Parvathy as Rema, Sankaran Nair's daughter
Syama as Indu, Preman's wife
Manianpilla Raju as Murali, Indu's brother
Sreenath as Sivan, Rema's husband
Baiju as Gopu, Sankaran Nair's youngest son
Philomina as Kunjamma, servant
Oduvil Unnikrishnan as Achuthan, Geetha's uncle
Sukumari as Thrikkunnathu Bhageerathiyamma, Rama's mother-in-law
Santhakumari as Devaki Murali's and Indu's mother
Soundtrack
The music was composed by Mohan Sithara and the lyrics were written by Kaithapram.
References
External links
Kudumba Puranam at IMDb | country of origin | {
"answer_start": [
50
],
"text": [
"India"
]
} |
Images of a Woman, also known as The Tokyo Painting, is an abstract painting by the 1960s pop group the Beatles. It is believed to be the only painting produced collaboratively by the group.
History
Images of a Woman was painted over three nights in July 1966 in a Tokyo Hilton suite where all four of the Beatles (John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr) were staying as part of their tour of the Far East. The group had been placed in lockdown as a precaution by the Japanese authorities after death threats had been received. The Japanese tour promoter, Tats Nagashima, had painting materials brought in for the group to use. The band's tour photographer, Robert Whitaker, was present and was amazed by how tranquil the band members seemed as they painted: "Absolutely the best period I ever witnessed among the Beatles", Whitaker said, adding that he "never saw them calmer, more contented than at this time... They'd stop, go and do a concert, and then it was 'Let's go back to the picture!'"The resulting painting was given to a charity auction. It was originally bought by the Japanese Beatles fan club president, Tetsusaburo Shimoyama. In the mid-1990s it was sold to an art dealer in Osaka for around $191,000, and re-appeared in 2002 on the website eBay. It was put up for sale by Philip Weiss Auctions in 2012, selling in New York City for $155,250.
Description
Each of the Beatles painted one corner of the 30 × 40 inch canvas. Despite the painting's title, it does not feature any figurative depictions of a woman, consisting only of abstract designs painted using oil and watercolour against a brightly coloured background. A lamp left in the middle of the canvas left a blank circle when it was removed; the group used this space for their signatures.
== References == | instance of | {
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Zlatko Georgiev Yankov (Bulgarian: Златко Георгиев Янков; born 7 June 1966) is a Bulgarian footballer manager and former player, who played as a midfielder.
Career
Yankov was capped 79 times and scored four goals for the Bulgaria national team between 1986 and 1999. He played eight games wearing the no.6 shirt at the World Cups in 1994 and 1998, and he was also in the Bulgarian Euro 1996 squad.Levski Sofia Zlatko Yankov was the Bulgarian player who gave the last pass to Yordan Letchkov for Bulgaria's second winning goal against world champions Germany during their clash in the 1994 World Cup quarterfinals. At club level, he was part of the famous Levski team from the 1990s, which eliminated Scottish club Glasgow Rangers in 1993. His nickname is "Фара" (The Lighthouse).
Career statistics
Scores and results list Bulgaria's goal tally first, score column indicates score after each Yankov goal.
Honours
Levski Sofia
A Group: 1992–93, 1993–94, 1994–95
Bulgarian Cup: 1990–91, 1991–92, 1993–94Beşiktaş
Turkish Cup: 1997–98
Turkish Super Cup: 1998Bulgaria
FIFA World Cup: fourth place 1994
References
External links
Profile at LevskiSofia.info | country of citizenship | {
"answer_start": [
24
],
"text": [
"Bulgaria"
]
} |
Zlatko Georgiev Yankov (Bulgarian: Златко Георгиев Янков; born 7 June 1966) is a Bulgarian footballer manager and former player, who played as a midfielder.
Career
Yankov was capped 79 times and scored four goals for the Bulgaria national team between 1986 and 1999. He played eight games wearing the no.6 shirt at the World Cups in 1994 and 1998, and he was also in the Bulgarian Euro 1996 squad.Levski Sofia Zlatko Yankov was the Bulgarian player who gave the last pass to Yordan Letchkov for Bulgaria's second winning goal against world champions Germany during their clash in the 1994 World Cup quarterfinals. At club level, he was part of the famous Levski team from the 1990s, which eliminated Scottish club Glasgow Rangers in 1993. His nickname is "Фара" (The Lighthouse).
Career statistics
Scores and results list Bulgaria's goal tally first, score column indicates score after each Yankov goal.
Honours
Levski Sofia
A Group: 1992–93, 1993–94, 1994–95
Bulgarian Cup: 1990–91, 1991–92, 1993–94Beşiktaş
Turkish Cup: 1997–98
Turkish Super Cup: 1998Bulgaria
FIFA World Cup: fourth place 1994
References
External links
Profile at LevskiSofia.info | position played on team / speciality | {
"answer_start": [
145
],
"text": [
"midfielder"
]
} |
Zlatko Georgiev Yankov (Bulgarian: Златко Георгиев Янков; born 7 June 1966) is a Bulgarian footballer manager and former player, who played as a midfielder.
Career
Yankov was capped 79 times and scored four goals for the Bulgaria national team between 1986 and 1999. He played eight games wearing the no.6 shirt at the World Cups in 1994 and 1998, and he was also in the Bulgarian Euro 1996 squad.Levski Sofia Zlatko Yankov was the Bulgarian player who gave the last pass to Yordan Letchkov for Bulgaria's second winning goal against world champions Germany during their clash in the 1994 World Cup quarterfinals. At club level, he was part of the famous Levski team from the 1990s, which eliminated Scottish club Glasgow Rangers in 1993. His nickname is "Фара" (The Lighthouse).
Career statistics
Scores and results list Bulgaria's goal tally first, score column indicates score after each Yankov goal.
Honours
Levski Sofia
A Group: 1992–93, 1993–94, 1994–95
Bulgarian Cup: 1990–91, 1991–92, 1993–94Beşiktaş
Turkish Cup: 1997–98
Turkish Super Cup: 1998Bulgaria
FIFA World Cup: fourth place 1994
References
External links
Profile at LevskiSofia.info | family name | {
"answer_start": [
16
],
"text": [
"Yankov"
]
} |
Zlatko Georgiev Yankov (Bulgarian: Златко Георгиев Янков; born 7 June 1966) is a Bulgarian footballer manager and former player, who played as a midfielder.
Career
Yankov was capped 79 times and scored four goals for the Bulgaria national team between 1986 and 1999. He played eight games wearing the no.6 shirt at the World Cups in 1994 and 1998, and he was also in the Bulgarian Euro 1996 squad.Levski Sofia Zlatko Yankov was the Bulgarian player who gave the last pass to Yordan Letchkov for Bulgaria's second winning goal against world champions Germany during their clash in the 1994 World Cup quarterfinals. At club level, he was part of the famous Levski team from the 1990s, which eliminated Scottish club Glasgow Rangers in 1993. His nickname is "Фара" (The Lighthouse).
Career statistics
Scores and results list Bulgaria's goal tally first, score column indicates score after each Yankov goal.
Honours
Levski Sofia
A Group: 1992–93, 1993–94, 1994–95
Bulgarian Cup: 1990–91, 1991–92, 1993–94Beşiktaş
Turkish Cup: 1997–98
Turkish Super Cup: 1998Bulgaria
FIFA World Cup: fourth place 1994
References
External links
Profile at LevskiSofia.info | given name | {
"answer_start": [
0
],
"text": [
"Zlatko"
]
} |
Zlatko Georgiev Yankov (Bulgarian: Златко Георгиев Янков; born 7 June 1966) is a Bulgarian footballer manager and former player, who played as a midfielder.
Career
Yankov was capped 79 times and scored four goals for the Bulgaria national team between 1986 and 1999. He played eight games wearing the no.6 shirt at the World Cups in 1994 and 1998, and he was also in the Bulgarian Euro 1996 squad.Levski Sofia Zlatko Yankov was the Bulgarian player who gave the last pass to Yordan Letchkov for Bulgaria's second winning goal against world champions Germany during their clash in the 1994 World Cup quarterfinals. At club level, he was part of the famous Levski team from the 1990s, which eliminated Scottish club Glasgow Rangers in 1993. His nickname is "Фара" (The Lighthouse).
Career statistics
Scores and results list Bulgaria's goal tally first, score column indicates score after each Yankov goal.
Honours
Levski Sofia
A Group: 1992–93, 1993–94, 1994–95
Bulgarian Cup: 1990–91, 1991–92, 1993–94Beşiktaş
Turkish Cup: 1997–98
Turkish Super Cup: 1998Bulgaria
FIFA World Cup: fourth place 1994
References
External links
Profile at LevskiSofia.info | birth name | {
"answer_start": [
0
],
"text": [
"Zlatko Georgiev Yankov"
]
} |
Antony William Roland Penrose (born 9 September 1947) is a British photographer. The son of Sir Roland Penrose and Lee Miller, Penrose is director of the Lee Miller Archive and Penrose Collection at his parents' former home, Farley Farm House.
Early life and family
Antony Penrose was born on 9 September 1947 in the London Clinic, central London. He is the son of Lee Miller, a model, fine art photographer and noted war correspondent, and Sir Roland Penrose, the surrealist artist, poet and biographer of Pablo Picasso, Joan Miró, Man Ray, and Antoni Tàpies, who co-founded the Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA) in 1947.
His grandfather was Irish painter James Doyle Penrose, and his grandmother was the daughter of the philanthropist Lord Peckover. His uncle was polymath Lionel Penrose, whose children include physicist Oliver Penrose, mathematician and physicist Sir Roger Penrose, chess grandmaster Jonathan Penrose, and geneticist Shirley Hodgson.
He first lived at 11 Downshire Hill in Hampstead north London, but in 1949 his parents bought Farley Farm House, a farmhouse in the village of Chiddingly, East Sussex. His mother had depression during Penrose's childhood, so he was raised by a nanny, Patsy Murray, from a young age.
"She was a hopeless mum. She had no natural maternal instincts," Penrose has said. He had dyslexia, but nevertheless went on to attend the Royal Agricultural College.
Career
Penrose's mother was his first mentor and main inspiration. The first camera he used was a Kodak with a 120 roll film, which produced 2+1⁄4-inch square negatives. At 14, whilst on a family visit, Penrose took some of his first amateur photographs of Picasso. In 1962, he and his mother went on a photography trip to Zimbabwe – but Miller fell ill and so left it to Antony to take the pictures which she could not using her Zeiss Contax. She told him "If you drop the camera I will break your neck".In the late 1960s Penrose took pictures of famous artists including Picasso, Joan Miró and Man Ray. Penrose's first career move was in agriculture, which he interrupted to spend several years on a round-the-world trip in a Land Rover with his friends Robert Braden and Peter Comrie, cousin Dominic Penrose, and his late wife Suzanna. During this period he took many photos for Farmers Weekly magazine. Later on, Penrose was introduced to film-making, working on films such as Kings Horses and Migrate to Survive. He established Penrose Film Productions Ltd which primarily focuses on documentaries, technical films and drama shorts.
Following the death of his mother, a cache of her work was discovered in the attic of the family home by Penrose's late wife Suzanna. It contained some 60,000 negatives, prints and manuscripts, out of which he and Suzanna created the Lee Miller Archives. Penrose has since written numerous books, articles and two plays on the subject of his parents and their associates. He is most notable for his 1985 book, The Lives of Lee Miller.The discovery of Miller's work is said to have given Penrose a new perspective on his mother, who struggled with alcoholism and depression when she was alive. "She was a useless drunk... most of the time she was demanding and feckless and throwing dramas at every possible thing", he once commented.Penrose now gives lectures worldwide on photography, fine art and his parents' work to museums and photographic societies and is accredited by the National Association of Decorative and Fine Arts Societies. He is a director of the Farley Arts Trust, a registered charity, which he founded to promote arts education in schools. The trust holds the annual Farleys Yard Arts Award for GCSE and A-level work from several local comprehensive schools.
Publications
Books
The Lives of Lee Miller. Thames & Hudson, 1988. ISBN 978-0-03-005833-2.
(editor) Lee Miller's War: Photographer and Correspondent with the Allies in Europe, 1944–45. Condé Nast Books, 1992. ISBN 978-0-8212-1870-9. A book about Miller's photography during World War II.
The Home of the Surrealists: Lee Miller, Roland Penrose, and their Circle at Farley Farm. London: Frances Lincoln, 2001. ISBN 978-0-7112-2832-0.
Roland Penrose: The Friendly Surrealist. Munich, New York: Prestel, 2001. ISBN 978-3-7913-2492-0.
The Boy Who Bit Picasso. London: Thames & Hudson, 2010. ISBN 978-0-500-23873-8. A children's book about his experiences of Picasso.
Miró's Magic Animals. London: Thames & Hudson, 2016. ISBN 978-0-500-65066-0. A children's book about his experiences of Miró.
Television
He presented a documentary titled Lee Miller ou la Traversée du Mirroir, directed by Sylvan Roumette for Arte C7, France. It won Best Portrait Film at the Festival de Montreal 1996.
Films
He has 18 credits for promotional, documentary films and short features, four of which achieved cinema distribution. Titles include:
Kings Horses (1977) – associate producer
Bright Blue Sky For a Ceiling (1979)
Strange Behaviour (1980) – director
The Lives of Lee Miller (1985) – contributor
Theatre
The Angel and The Fiend: A reading for five voices set to images. First performed in 2003 at the J. Paul Getty Museum.
Portrait of Space: A reading for six voices set to images. First performed in 2010.
References
External links
Farley Farm House official site
Lee Miller official site
Roland Penrose official site | given name | {
"answer_start": [
0
],
"text": [
"Antony"
]
} |
Antony William Roland Penrose (born 9 September 1947) is a British photographer. The son of Sir Roland Penrose and Lee Miller, Penrose is director of the Lee Miller Archive and Penrose Collection at his parents' former home, Farley Farm House.
Early life and family
Antony Penrose was born on 9 September 1947 in the London Clinic, central London. He is the son of Lee Miller, a model, fine art photographer and noted war correspondent, and Sir Roland Penrose, the surrealist artist, poet and biographer of Pablo Picasso, Joan Miró, Man Ray, and Antoni Tàpies, who co-founded the Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA) in 1947.
His grandfather was Irish painter James Doyle Penrose, and his grandmother was the daughter of the philanthropist Lord Peckover. His uncle was polymath Lionel Penrose, whose children include physicist Oliver Penrose, mathematician and physicist Sir Roger Penrose, chess grandmaster Jonathan Penrose, and geneticist Shirley Hodgson.
He first lived at 11 Downshire Hill in Hampstead north London, but in 1949 his parents bought Farley Farm House, a farmhouse in the village of Chiddingly, East Sussex. His mother had depression during Penrose's childhood, so he was raised by a nanny, Patsy Murray, from a young age.
"She was a hopeless mum. She had no natural maternal instincts," Penrose has said. He had dyslexia, but nevertheless went on to attend the Royal Agricultural College.
Career
Penrose's mother was his first mentor and main inspiration. The first camera he used was a Kodak with a 120 roll film, which produced 2+1⁄4-inch square negatives. At 14, whilst on a family visit, Penrose took some of his first amateur photographs of Picasso. In 1962, he and his mother went on a photography trip to Zimbabwe – but Miller fell ill and so left it to Antony to take the pictures which she could not using her Zeiss Contax. She told him "If you drop the camera I will break your neck".In the late 1960s Penrose took pictures of famous artists including Picasso, Joan Miró and Man Ray. Penrose's first career move was in agriculture, which he interrupted to spend several years on a round-the-world trip in a Land Rover with his friends Robert Braden and Peter Comrie, cousin Dominic Penrose, and his late wife Suzanna. During this period he took many photos for Farmers Weekly magazine. Later on, Penrose was introduced to film-making, working on films such as Kings Horses and Migrate to Survive. He established Penrose Film Productions Ltd which primarily focuses on documentaries, technical films and drama shorts.
Following the death of his mother, a cache of her work was discovered in the attic of the family home by Penrose's late wife Suzanna. It contained some 60,000 negatives, prints and manuscripts, out of which he and Suzanna created the Lee Miller Archives. Penrose has since written numerous books, articles and two plays on the subject of his parents and their associates. He is most notable for his 1985 book, The Lives of Lee Miller.The discovery of Miller's work is said to have given Penrose a new perspective on his mother, who struggled with alcoholism and depression when she was alive. "She was a useless drunk... most of the time she was demanding and feckless and throwing dramas at every possible thing", he once commented.Penrose now gives lectures worldwide on photography, fine art and his parents' work to museums and photographic societies and is accredited by the National Association of Decorative and Fine Arts Societies. He is a director of the Farley Arts Trust, a registered charity, which he founded to promote arts education in schools. The trust holds the annual Farleys Yard Arts Award for GCSE and A-level work from several local comprehensive schools.
Publications
Books
The Lives of Lee Miller. Thames & Hudson, 1988. ISBN 978-0-03-005833-2.
(editor) Lee Miller's War: Photographer and Correspondent with the Allies in Europe, 1944–45. Condé Nast Books, 1992. ISBN 978-0-8212-1870-9. A book about Miller's photography during World War II.
The Home of the Surrealists: Lee Miller, Roland Penrose, and their Circle at Farley Farm. London: Frances Lincoln, 2001. ISBN 978-0-7112-2832-0.
Roland Penrose: The Friendly Surrealist. Munich, New York: Prestel, 2001. ISBN 978-3-7913-2492-0.
The Boy Who Bit Picasso. London: Thames & Hudson, 2010. ISBN 978-0-500-23873-8. A children's book about his experiences of Picasso.
Miró's Magic Animals. London: Thames & Hudson, 2016. ISBN 978-0-500-65066-0. A children's book about his experiences of Miró.
Television
He presented a documentary titled Lee Miller ou la Traversée du Mirroir, directed by Sylvan Roumette for Arte C7, France. It won Best Portrait Film at the Festival de Montreal 1996.
Films
He has 18 credits for promotional, documentary films and short features, four of which achieved cinema distribution. Titles include:
Kings Horses (1977) – associate producer
Bright Blue Sky For a Ceiling (1979)
Strange Behaviour (1980) – director
The Lives of Lee Miller (1985) – contributor
Theatre
The Angel and The Fiend: A reading for five voices set to images. First performed in 2003 at the J. Paul Getty Museum.
Portrait of Space: A reading for six voices set to images. First performed in 2010.
References
External links
Farley Farm House official site
Lee Miller official site
Roland Penrose official site | place of birth | {
"answer_start": [
318
],
"text": [
"London"
]
} |
Antony William Roland Penrose (born 9 September 1947) is a British photographer. The son of Sir Roland Penrose and Lee Miller, Penrose is director of the Lee Miller Archive and Penrose Collection at his parents' former home, Farley Farm House.
Early life and family
Antony Penrose was born on 9 September 1947 in the London Clinic, central London. He is the son of Lee Miller, a model, fine art photographer and noted war correspondent, and Sir Roland Penrose, the surrealist artist, poet and biographer of Pablo Picasso, Joan Miró, Man Ray, and Antoni Tàpies, who co-founded the Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA) in 1947.
His grandfather was Irish painter James Doyle Penrose, and his grandmother was the daughter of the philanthropist Lord Peckover. His uncle was polymath Lionel Penrose, whose children include physicist Oliver Penrose, mathematician and physicist Sir Roger Penrose, chess grandmaster Jonathan Penrose, and geneticist Shirley Hodgson.
He first lived at 11 Downshire Hill in Hampstead north London, but in 1949 his parents bought Farley Farm House, a farmhouse in the village of Chiddingly, East Sussex. His mother had depression during Penrose's childhood, so he was raised by a nanny, Patsy Murray, from a young age.
"She was a hopeless mum. She had no natural maternal instincts," Penrose has said. He had dyslexia, but nevertheless went on to attend the Royal Agricultural College.
Career
Penrose's mother was his first mentor and main inspiration. The first camera he used was a Kodak with a 120 roll film, which produced 2+1⁄4-inch square negatives. At 14, whilst on a family visit, Penrose took some of his first amateur photographs of Picasso. In 1962, he and his mother went on a photography trip to Zimbabwe – but Miller fell ill and so left it to Antony to take the pictures which she could not using her Zeiss Contax. She told him "If you drop the camera I will break your neck".In the late 1960s Penrose took pictures of famous artists including Picasso, Joan Miró and Man Ray. Penrose's first career move was in agriculture, which he interrupted to spend several years on a round-the-world trip in a Land Rover with his friends Robert Braden and Peter Comrie, cousin Dominic Penrose, and his late wife Suzanna. During this period he took many photos for Farmers Weekly magazine. Later on, Penrose was introduced to film-making, working on films such as Kings Horses and Migrate to Survive. He established Penrose Film Productions Ltd which primarily focuses on documentaries, technical films and drama shorts.
Following the death of his mother, a cache of her work was discovered in the attic of the family home by Penrose's late wife Suzanna. It contained some 60,000 negatives, prints and manuscripts, out of which he and Suzanna created the Lee Miller Archives. Penrose has since written numerous books, articles and two plays on the subject of his parents and their associates. He is most notable for his 1985 book, The Lives of Lee Miller.The discovery of Miller's work is said to have given Penrose a new perspective on his mother, who struggled with alcoholism and depression when she was alive. "She was a useless drunk... most of the time she was demanding and feckless and throwing dramas at every possible thing", he once commented.Penrose now gives lectures worldwide on photography, fine art and his parents' work to museums and photographic societies and is accredited by the National Association of Decorative and Fine Arts Societies. He is a director of the Farley Arts Trust, a registered charity, which he founded to promote arts education in schools. The trust holds the annual Farleys Yard Arts Award for GCSE and A-level work from several local comprehensive schools.
Publications
Books
The Lives of Lee Miller. Thames & Hudson, 1988. ISBN 978-0-03-005833-2.
(editor) Lee Miller's War: Photographer and Correspondent with the Allies in Europe, 1944–45. Condé Nast Books, 1992. ISBN 978-0-8212-1870-9. A book about Miller's photography during World War II.
The Home of the Surrealists: Lee Miller, Roland Penrose, and their Circle at Farley Farm. London: Frances Lincoln, 2001. ISBN 978-0-7112-2832-0.
Roland Penrose: The Friendly Surrealist. Munich, New York: Prestel, 2001. ISBN 978-3-7913-2492-0.
The Boy Who Bit Picasso. London: Thames & Hudson, 2010. ISBN 978-0-500-23873-8. A children's book about his experiences of Picasso.
Miró's Magic Animals. London: Thames & Hudson, 2016. ISBN 978-0-500-65066-0. A children's book about his experiences of Miró.
Television
He presented a documentary titled Lee Miller ou la Traversée du Mirroir, directed by Sylvan Roumette for Arte C7, France. It won Best Portrait Film at the Festival de Montreal 1996.
Films
He has 18 credits for promotional, documentary films and short features, four of which achieved cinema distribution. Titles include:
Kings Horses (1977) – associate producer
Bright Blue Sky For a Ceiling (1979)
Strange Behaviour (1980) – director
The Lives of Lee Miller (1985) – contributor
Theatre
The Angel and The Fiend: A reading for five voices set to images. First performed in 2003 at the J. Paul Getty Museum.
Portrait of Space: A reading for six voices set to images. First performed in 2010.
References
External links
Farley Farm House official site
Lee Miller official site
Roland Penrose official site | mother | {
"answer_start": [
115
],
"text": [
"Lee Miller"
]
} |
Antony William Roland Penrose (born 9 September 1947) is a British photographer. The son of Sir Roland Penrose and Lee Miller, Penrose is director of the Lee Miller Archive and Penrose Collection at his parents' former home, Farley Farm House.
Early life and family
Antony Penrose was born on 9 September 1947 in the London Clinic, central London. He is the son of Lee Miller, a model, fine art photographer and noted war correspondent, and Sir Roland Penrose, the surrealist artist, poet and biographer of Pablo Picasso, Joan Miró, Man Ray, and Antoni Tàpies, who co-founded the Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA) in 1947.
His grandfather was Irish painter James Doyle Penrose, and his grandmother was the daughter of the philanthropist Lord Peckover. His uncle was polymath Lionel Penrose, whose children include physicist Oliver Penrose, mathematician and physicist Sir Roger Penrose, chess grandmaster Jonathan Penrose, and geneticist Shirley Hodgson.
He first lived at 11 Downshire Hill in Hampstead north London, but in 1949 his parents bought Farley Farm House, a farmhouse in the village of Chiddingly, East Sussex. His mother had depression during Penrose's childhood, so he was raised by a nanny, Patsy Murray, from a young age.
"She was a hopeless mum. She had no natural maternal instincts," Penrose has said. He had dyslexia, but nevertheless went on to attend the Royal Agricultural College.
Career
Penrose's mother was his first mentor and main inspiration. The first camera he used was a Kodak with a 120 roll film, which produced 2+1⁄4-inch square negatives. At 14, whilst on a family visit, Penrose took some of his first amateur photographs of Picasso. In 1962, he and his mother went on a photography trip to Zimbabwe – but Miller fell ill and so left it to Antony to take the pictures which she could not using her Zeiss Contax. She told him "If you drop the camera I will break your neck".In the late 1960s Penrose took pictures of famous artists including Picasso, Joan Miró and Man Ray. Penrose's first career move was in agriculture, which he interrupted to spend several years on a round-the-world trip in a Land Rover with his friends Robert Braden and Peter Comrie, cousin Dominic Penrose, and his late wife Suzanna. During this period he took many photos for Farmers Weekly magazine. Later on, Penrose was introduced to film-making, working on films such as Kings Horses and Migrate to Survive. He established Penrose Film Productions Ltd which primarily focuses on documentaries, technical films and drama shorts.
Following the death of his mother, a cache of her work was discovered in the attic of the family home by Penrose's late wife Suzanna. It contained some 60,000 negatives, prints and manuscripts, out of which he and Suzanna created the Lee Miller Archives. Penrose has since written numerous books, articles and two plays on the subject of his parents and their associates. He is most notable for his 1985 book, The Lives of Lee Miller.The discovery of Miller's work is said to have given Penrose a new perspective on his mother, who struggled with alcoholism and depression when she was alive. "She was a useless drunk... most of the time she was demanding and feckless and throwing dramas at every possible thing", he once commented.Penrose now gives lectures worldwide on photography, fine art and his parents' work to museums and photographic societies and is accredited by the National Association of Decorative and Fine Arts Societies. He is a director of the Farley Arts Trust, a registered charity, which he founded to promote arts education in schools. The trust holds the annual Farleys Yard Arts Award for GCSE and A-level work from several local comprehensive schools.
Publications
Books
The Lives of Lee Miller. Thames & Hudson, 1988. ISBN 978-0-03-005833-2.
(editor) Lee Miller's War: Photographer and Correspondent with the Allies in Europe, 1944–45. Condé Nast Books, 1992. ISBN 978-0-8212-1870-9. A book about Miller's photography during World War II.
The Home of the Surrealists: Lee Miller, Roland Penrose, and their Circle at Farley Farm. London: Frances Lincoln, 2001. ISBN 978-0-7112-2832-0.
Roland Penrose: The Friendly Surrealist. Munich, New York: Prestel, 2001. ISBN 978-3-7913-2492-0.
The Boy Who Bit Picasso. London: Thames & Hudson, 2010. ISBN 978-0-500-23873-8. A children's book about his experiences of Picasso.
Miró's Magic Animals. London: Thames & Hudson, 2016. ISBN 978-0-500-65066-0. A children's book about his experiences of Miró.
Television
He presented a documentary titled Lee Miller ou la Traversée du Mirroir, directed by Sylvan Roumette for Arte C7, France. It won Best Portrait Film at the Festival de Montreal 1996.
Films
He has 18 credits for promotional, documentary films and short features, four of which achieved cinema distribution. Titles include:
Kings Horses (1977) – associate producer
Bright Blue Sky For a Ceiling (1979)
Strange Behaviour (1980) – director
The Lives of Lee Miller (1985) – contributor
Theatre
The Angel and The Fiend: A reading for five voices set to images. First performed in 2003 at the J. Paul Getty Museum.
Portrait of Space: A reading for six voices set to images. First performed in 2010.
References
External links
Farley Farm House official site
Lee Miller official site
Roland Penrose official site | field of work | {
"answer_start": [
1715
],
"text": [
"photography"
]
} |
Antony William Roland Penrose (born 9 September 1947) is a British photographer. The son of Sir Roland Penrose and Lee Miller, Penrose is director of the Lee Miller Archive and Penrose Collection at his parents' former home, Farley Farm House.
Early life and family
Antony Penrose was born on 9 September 1947 in the London Clinic, central London. He is the son of Lee Miller, a model, fine art photographer and noted war correspondent, and Sir Roland Penrose, the surrealist artist, poet and biographer of Pablo Picasso, Joan Miró, Man Ray, and Antoni Tàpies, who co-founded the Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA) in 1947.
His grandfather was Irish painter James Doyle Penrose, and his grandmother was the daughter of the philanthropist Lord Peckover. His uncle was polymath Lionel Penrose, whose children include physicist Oliver Penrose, mathematician and physicist Sir Roger Penrose, chess grandmaster Jonathan Penrose, and geneticist Shirley Hodgson.
He first lived at 11 Downshire Hill in Hampstead north London, but in 1949 his parents bought Farley Farm House, a farmhouse in the village of Chiddingly, East Sussex. His mother had depression during Penrose's childhood, so he was raised by a nanny, Patsy Murray, from a young age.
"She was a hopeless mum. She had no natural maternal instincts," Penrose has said. He had dyslexia, but nevertheless went on to attend the Royal Agricultural College.
Career
Penrose's mother was his first mentor and main inspiration. The first camera he used was a Kodak with a 120 roll film, which produced 2+1⁄4-inch square negatives. At 14, whilst on a family visit, Penrose took some of his first amateur photographs of Picasso. In 1962, he and his mother went on a photography trip to Zimbabwe – but Miller fell ill and so left it to Antony to take the pictures which she could not using her Zeiss Contax. She told him "If you drop the camera I will break your neck".In the late 1960s Penrose took pictures of famous artists including Picasso, Joan Miró and Man Ray. Penrose's first career move was in agriculture, which he interrupted to spend several years on a round-the-world trip in a Land Rover with his friends Robert Braden and Peter Comrie, cousin Dominic Penrose, and his late wife Suzanna. During this period he took many photos for Farmers Weekly magazine. Later on, Penrose was introduced to film-making, working on films such as Kings Horses and Migrate to Survive. He established Penrose Film Productions Ltd which primarily focuses on documentaries, technical films and drama shorts.
Following the death of his mother, a cache of her work was discovered in the attic of the family home by Penrose's late wife Suzanna. It contained some 60,000 negatives, prints and manuscripts, out of which he and Suzanna created the Lee Miller Archives. Penrose has since written numerous books, articles and two plays on the subject of his parents and their associates. He is most notable for his 1985 book, The Lives of Lee Miller.The discovery of Miller's work is said to have given Penrose a new perspective on his mother, who struggled with alcoholism and depression when she was alive. "She was a useless drunk... most of the time she was demanding and feckless and throwing dramas at every possible thing", he once commented.Penrose now gives lectures worldwide on photography, fine art and his parents' work to museums and photographic societies and is accredited by the National Association of Decorative and Fine Arts Societies. He is a director of the Farley Arts Trust, a registered charity, which he founded to promote arts education in schools. The trust holds the annual Farleys Yard Arts Award for GCSE and A-level work from several local comprehensive schools.
Publications
Books
The Lives of Lee Miller. Thames & Hudson, 1988. ISBN 978-0-03-005833-2.
(editor) Lee Miller's War: Photographer and Correspondent with the Allies in Europe, 1944–45. Condé Nast Books, 1992. ISBN 978-0-8212-1870-9. A book about Miller's photography during World War II.
The Home of the Surrealists: Lee Miller, Roland Penrose, and their Circle at Farley Farm. London: Frances Lincoln, 2001. ISBN 978-0-7112-2832-0.
Roland Penrose: The Friendly Surrealist. Munich, New York: Prestel, 2001. ISBN 978-3-7913-2492-0.
The Boy Who Bit Picasso. London: Thames & Hudson, 2010. ISBN 978-0-500-23873-8. A children's book about his experiences of Picasso.
Miró's Magic Animals. London: Thames & Hudson, 2016. ISBN 978-0-500-65066-0. A children's book about his experiences of Miró.
Television
He presented a documentary titled Lee Miller ou la Traversée du Mirroir, directed by Sylvan Roumette for Arte C7, France. It won Best Portrait Film at the Festival de Montreal 1996.
Films
He has 18 credits for promotional, documentary films and short features, four of which achieved cinema distribution. Titles include:
Kings Horses (1977) – associate producer
Bright Blue Sky For a Ceiling (1979)
Strange Behaviour (1980) – director
The Lives of Lee Miller (1985) – contributor
Theatre
The Angel and The Fiend: A reading for five voices set to images. First performed in 2003 at the J. Paul Getty Museum.
Portrait of Space: A reading for six voices set to images. First performed in 2010.
References
External links
Farley Farm House official site
Lee Miller official site
Roland Penrose official site | occupation | {
"answer_start": [
67
],
"text": [
"photographer"
]
} |
Antony William Roland Penrose (born 9 September 1947) is a British photographer. The son of Sir Roland Penrose and Lee Miller, Penrose is director of the Lee Miller Archive and Penrose Collection at his parents' former home, Farley Farm House.
Early life and family
Antony Penrose was born on 9 September 1947 in the London Clinic, central London. He is the son of Lee Miller, a model, fine art photographer and noted war correspondent, and Sir Roland Penrose, the surrealist artist, poet and biographer of Pablo Picasso, Joan Miró, Man Ray, and Antoni Tàpies, who co-founded the Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA) in 1947.
His grandfather was Irish painter James Doyle Penrose, and his grandmother was the daughter of the philanthropist Lord Peckover. His uncle was polymath Lionel Penrose, whose children include physicist Oliver Penrose, mathematician and physicist Sir Roger Penrose, chess grandmaster Jonathan Penrose, and geneticist Shirley Hodgson.
He first lived at 11 Downshire Hill in Hampstead north London, but in 1949 his parents bought Farley Farm House, a farmhouse in the village of Chiddingly, East Sussex. His mother had depression during Penrose's childhood, so he was raised by a nanny, Patsy Murray, from a young age.
"She was a hopeless mum. She had no natural maternal instincts," Penrose has said. He had dyslexia, but nevertheless went on to attend the Royal Agricultural College.
Career
Penrose's mother was his first mentor and main inspiration. The first camera he used was a Kodak with a 120 roll film, which produced 2+1⁄4-inch square negatives. At 14, whilst on a family visit, Penrose took some of his first amateur photographs of Picasso. In 1962, he and his mother went on a photography trip to Zimbabwe – but Miller fell ill and so left it to Antony to take the pictures which she could not using her Zeiss Contax. She told him "If you drop the camera I will break your neck".In the late 1960s Penrose took pictures of famous artists including Picasso, Joan Miró and Man Ray. Penrose's first career move was in agriculture, which he interrupted to spend several years on a round-the-world trip in a Land Rover with his friends Robert Braden and Peter Comrie, cousin Dominic Penrose, and his late wife Suzanna. During this period he took many photos for Farmers Weekly magazine. Later on, Penrose was introduced to film-making, working on films such as Kings Horses and Migrate to Survive. He established Penrose Film Productions Ltd which primarily focuses on documentaries, technical films and drama shorts.
Following the death of his mother, a cache of her work was discovered in the attic of the family home by Penrose's late wife Suzanna. It contained some 60,000 negatives, prints and manuscripts, out of which he and Suzanna created the Lee Miller Archives. Penrose has since written numerous books, articles and two plays on the subject of his parents and their associates. He is most notable for his 1985 book, The Lives of Lee Miller.The discovery of Miller's work is said to have given Penrose a new perspective on his mother, who struggled with alcoholism and depression when she was alive. "She was a useless drunk... most of the time she was demanding and feckless and throwing dramas at every possible thing", he once commented.Penrose now gives lectures worldwide on photography, fine art and his parents' work to museums and photographic societies and is accredited by the National Association of Decorative and Fine Arts Societies. He is a director of the Farley Arts Trust, a registered charity, which he founded to promote arts education in schools. The trust holds the annual Farleys Yard Arts Award for GCSE and A-level work from several local comprehensive schools.
Publications
Books
The Lives of Lee Miller. Thames & Hudson, 1988. ISBN 978-0-03-005833-2.
(editor) Lee Miller's War: Photographer and Correspondent with the Allies in Europe, 1944–45. Condé Nast Books, 1992. ISBN 978-0-8212-1870-9. A book about Miller's photography during World War II.
The Home of the Surrealists: Lee Miller, Roland Penrose, and their Circle at Farley Farm. London: Frances Lincoln, 2001. ISBN 978-0-7112-2832-0.
Roland Penrose: The Friendly Surrealist. Munich, New York: Prestel, 2001. ISBN 978-3-7913-2492-0.
The Boy Who Bit Picasso. London: Thames & Hudson, 2010. ISBN 978-0-500-23873-8. A children's book about his experiences of Picasso.
Miró's Magic Animals. London: Thames & Hudson, 2016. ISBN 978-0-500-65066-0. A children's book about his experiences of Miró.
Television
He presented a documentary titled Lee Miller ou la Traversée du Mirroir, directed by Sylvan Roumette for Arte C7, France. It won Best Portrait Film at the Festival de Montreal 1996.
Films
He has 18 credits for promotional, documentary films and short features, four of which achieved cinema distribution. Titles include:
Kings Horses (1977) – associate producer
Bright Blue Sky For a Ceiling (1979)
Strange Behaviour (1980) – director
The Lives of Lee Miller (1985) – contributor
Theatre
The Angel and The Fiend: A reading for five voices set to images. First performed in 2003 at the J. Paul Getty Museum.
Portrait of Space: A reading for six voices set to images. First performed in 2010.
References
External links
Farley Farm House official site
Lee Miller official site
Roland Penrose official site | family name | {
"answer_start": [
22
],
"text": [
"Penrose"
]
} |
Antony William Roland Penrose (born 9 September 1947) is a British photographer. The son of Sir Roland Penrose and Lee Miller, Penrose is director of the Lee Miller Archive and Penrose Collection at his parents' former home, Farley Farm House.
Early life and family
Antony Penrose was born on 9 September 1947 in the London Clinic, central London. He is the son of Lee Miller, a model, fine art photographer and noted war correspondent, and Sir Roland Penrose, the surrealist artist, poet and biographer of Pablo Picasso, Joan Miró, Man Ray, and Antoni Tàpies, who co-founded the Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA) in 1947.
His grandfather was Irish painter James Doyle Penrose, and his grandmother was the daughter of the philanthropist Lord Peckover. His uncle was polymath Lionel Penrose, whose children include physicist Oliver Penrose, mathematician and physicist Sir Roger Penrose, chess grandmaster Jonathan Penrose, and geneticist Shirley Hodgson.
He first lived at 11 Downshire Hill in Hampstead north London, but in 1949 his parents bought Farley Farm House, a farmhouse in the village of Chiddingly, East Sussex. His mother had depression during Penrose's childhood, so he was raised by a nanny, Patsy Murray, from a young age.
"She was a hopeless mum. She had no natural maternal instincts," Penrose has said. He had dyslexia, but nevertheless went on to attend the Royal Agricultural College.
Career
Penrose's mother was his first mentor and main inspiration. The first camera he used was a Kodak with a 120 roll film, which produced 2+1⁄4-inch square negatives. At 14, whilst on a family visit, Penrose took some of his first amateur photographs of Picasso. In 1962, he and his mother went on a photography trip to Zimbabwe – but Miller fell ill and so left it to Antony to take the pictures which she could not using her Zeiss Contax. She told him "If you drop the camera I will break your neck".In the late 1960s Penrose took pictures of famous artists including Picasso, Joan Miró and Man Ray. Penrose's first career move was in agriculture, which he interrupted to spend several years on a round-the-world trip in a Land Rover with his friends Robert Braden and Peter Comrie, cousin Dominic Penrose, and his late wife Suzanna. During this period he took many photos for Farmers Weekly magazine. Later on, Penrose was introduced to film-making, working on films such as Kings Horses and Migrate to Survive. He established Penrose Film Productions Ltd which primarily focuses on documentaries, technical films and drama shorts.
Following the death of his mother, a cache of her work was discovered in the attic of the family home by Penrose's late wife Suzanna. It contained some 60,000 negatives, prints and manuscripts, out of which he and Suzanna created the Lee Miller Archives. Penrose has since written numerous books, articles and two plays on the subject of his parents and their associates. He is most notable for his 1985 book, The Lives of Lee Miller.The discovery of Miller's work is said to have given Penrose a new perspective on his mother, who struggled with alcoholism and depression when she was alive. "She was a useless drunk... most of the time she was demanding and feckless and throwing dramas at every possible thing", he once commented.Penrose now gives lectures worldwide on photography, fine art and his parents' work to museums and photographic societies and is accredited by the National Association of Decorative and Fine Arts Societies. He is a director of the Farley Arts Trust, a registered charity, which he founded to promote arts education in schools. The trust holds the annual Farleys Yard Arts Award for GCSE and A-level work from several local comprehensive schools.
Publications
Books
The Lives of Lee Miller. Thames & Hudson, 1988. ISBN 978-0-03-005833-2.
(editor) Lee Miller's War: Photographer and Correspondent with the Allies in Europe, 1944–45. Condé Nast Books, 1992. ISBN 978-0-8212-1870-9. A book about Miller's photography during World War II.
The Home of the Surrealists: Lee Miller, Roland Penrose, and their Circle at Farley Farm. London: Frances Lincoln, 2001. ISBN 978-0-7112-2832-0.
Roland Penrose: The Friendly Surrealist. Munich, New York: Prestel, 2001. ISBN 978-3-7913-2492-0.
The Boy Who Bit Picasso. London: Thames & Hudson, 2010. ISBN 978-0-500-23873-8. A children's book about his experiences of Picasso.
Miró's Magic Animals. London: Thames & Hudson, 2016. ISBN 978-0-500-65066-0. A children's book about his experiences of Miró.
Television
He presented a documentary titled Lee Miller ou la Traversée du Mirroir, directed by Sylvan Roumette for Arte C7, France. It won Best Portrait Film at the Festival de Montreal 1996.
Films
He has 18 credits for promotional, documentary films and short features, four of which achieved cinema distribution. Titles include:
Kings Horses (1977) – associate producer
Bright Blue Sky For a Ceiling (1979)
Strange Behaviour (1980) – director
The Lives of Lee Miller (1985) – contributor
Theatre
The Angel and The Fiend: A reading for five voices set to images. First performed in 2003 at the J. Paul Getty Museum.
Portrait of Space: A reading for six voices set to images. First performed in 2010.
References
External links
Farley Farm House official site
Lee Miller official site
Roland Penrose official site | influenced by | {
"answer_start": [
115
],
"text": [
"Lee Miller"
]
} |
Andrew Mark Marcus (born March 29, 1985 or 1986) is a Canadian worship musician. He has released five studio albums, Salvation and Glory (2007), Emptiness Speaks Volumes (2009), Our Conversation Behind the Veil (2011), When Winter Falls Summer Springs (2013) and Constant (2016).
Background and early life
Marcus was born, Andrew Mark Marcus, on March 29, 1986, in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, as Andrew Mark Marcus, the son of Egyptian Christian immigrants, who has an older sister. He graduated from North Surrey Secondary School in 2003 or 2004 before beginning his career as a traveling worship leader at the age of 19, in 2004 or 2005. He attended college at Trinity Western University, studying business, eventually getting a youth pastors job at a new church plant in Okanagan, P.C Church, a church of the Pentecostal tradition, when he was 21-years-old in 2007. He learned pastoral theology, while he was enrolled at Christ for the Nations Bible College. He went on from Okanagan to Langley, British Columbia, where he was involved in worship at Christian Life Assembly. Marcus currently is the worship and creative arts pastor at Coquitlam Alliance Church, in Coquitlam, British Columbia.
Music history
Marcus has released four independent studio albums, the first being, Salvation and Glory in 2007. His next three releases were Emptiness Speaks Volumes, in 2009, Our Conversation Behind the Veil, in 2011, and When Winter Falls Summer Springs, in 2013. His first released with a major label, Constant, was released on July 29, 2016, from BEC Recordings.
Personal life
He got married on June 28, 2013 to his wife, Michelle.
Discography
Salvation and Glory (2007)
Emptiness Speaks Volumes (2009)
Our Conversation Behind the Veil (2011)
When Winter Falls Summer Springs (2013)
Constant (2016)
References
External links
Official website | place of birth | {
"answer_start": [
366
],
"text": [
"Vancouver"
]
} |
Andrew Mark Marcus (born March 29, 1985 or 1986) is a Canadian worship musician. He has released five studio albums, Salvation and Glory (2007), Emptiness Speaks Volumes (2009), Our Conversation Behind the Veil (2011), When Winter Falls Summer Springs (2013) and Constant (2016).
Background and early life
Marcus was born, Andrew Mark Marcus, on March 29, 1986, in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, as Andrew Mark Marcus, the son of Egyptian Christian immigrants, who has an older sister. He graduated from North Surrey Secondary School in 2003 or 2004 before beginning his career as a traveling worship leader at the age of 19, in 2004 or 2005. He attended college at Trinity Western University, studying business, eventually getting a youth pastors job at a new church plant in Okanagan, P.C Church, a church of the Pentecostal tradition, when he was 21-years-old in 2007. He learned pastoral theology, while he was enrolled at Christ for the Nations Bible College. He went on from Okanagan to Langley, British Columbia, where he was involved in worship at Christian Life Assembly. Marcus currently is the worship and creative arts pastor at Coquitlam Alliance Church, in Coquitlam, British Columbia.
Music history
Marcus has released four independent studio albums, the first being, Salvation and Glory in 2007. His next three releases were Emptiness Speaks Volumes, in 2009, Our Conversation Behind the Veil, in 2011, and When Winter Falls Summer Springs, in 2013. His first released with a major label, Constant, was released on July 29, 2016, from BEC Recordings.
Personal life
He got married on June 28, 2013 to his wife, Michelle.
Discography
Salvation and Glory (2007)
Emptiness Speaks Volumes (2009)
Our Conversation Behind the Veil (2011)
When Winter Falls Summer Springs (2013)
Constant (2016)
References
External links
Official website | country of citizenship | {
"answer_start": [
395
],
"text": [
"Canada"
]
} |
Andrew Mark Marcus (born March 29, 1985 or 1986) is a Canadian worship musician. He has released five studio albums, Salvation and Glory (2007), Emptiness Speaks Volumes (2009), Our Conversation Behind the Veil (2011), When Winter Falls Summer Springs (2013) and Constant (2016).
Background and early life
Marcus was born, Andrew Mark Marcus, on March 29, 1986, in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, as Andrew Mark Marcus, the son of Egyptian Christian immigrants, who has an older sister. He graduated from North Surrey Secondary School in 2003 or 2004 before beginning his career as a traveling worship leader at the age of 19, in 2004 or 2005. He attended college at Trinity Western University, studying business, eventually getting a youth pastors job at a new church plant in Okanagan, P.C Church, a church of the Pentecostal tradition, when he was 21-years-old in 2007. He learned pastoral theology, while he was enrolled at Christ for the Nations Bible College. He went on from Okanagan to Langley, British Columbia, where he was involved in worship at Christian Life Assembly. Marcus currently is the worship and creative arts pastor at Coquitlam Alliance Church, in Coquitlam, British Columbia.
Music history
Marcus has released four independent studio albums, the first being, Salvation and Glory in 2007. His next three releases were Emptiness Speaks Volumes, in 2009, Our Conversation Behind the Veil, in 2011, and When Winter Falls Summer Springs, in 2013. His first released with a major label, Constant, was released on July 29, 2016, from BEC Recordings.
Personal life
He got married on June 28, 2013 to his wife, Michelle.
Discography
Salvation and Glory (2007)
Emptiness Speaks Volumes (2009)
Our Conversation Behind the Veil (2011)
When Winter Falls Summer Springs (2013)
Constant (2016)
References
External links
Official website | occupation | {
"answer_start": [
71
],
"text": [
"musician"
]
} |
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