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Southern Wisconsin Regional Airport
[ [ "Southern Wisconsin Regional Airport", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Wisconsin" ] ]
airport in Rock County, Wisconsin, USA
and 2 helicopters. Southern Wisconsin AirFest The Southern Wisconsin AirFest was an annual air show that hosted North American jet teams, such as the Blue Angels, the Thunderbirds and the Masters of Disaster. The event was discontinued following the 2012 season. Headliners 2003: The U.S. Air Force Thunderbirds were sch...
[ "JVL", "KJVL" ]
Southern Wisconsin Regional Airport
[ [ "Southern Wisconsin Regional Airport", "country", "United States" ], [ "Southern Wisconsin Regional Airport", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Wisconsin" ] ]
airport in Rock County, Wisconsin, USA
East Demo Team and Codename: Mary's Lamb 2008: Canadian Armed Forces Snowbirds 2009: U.S. Navy Blue Angels 2010: U.S. Air Force Thunderbirds and Canadian Armed Forces Snowbirds 2011: VFA-122 Super Hornet West Coast Demo Team 2012: United States Army Golden Knights Parachute Team and Black Diamond Jet Team Past schedule...
[ "JVL", "KJVL" ]
Southern Wisconsin Regional Airport
[ [ "Southern Wisconsin Regional Airport", "instance of", "Airport" ], [ "Southern Wisconsin Regional Airport", "country", "United States" ], [ "Southern Wisconsin Regional Airport", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Wisconsin" ] ]
airport in Rock County, Wisconsin, USA
Base Sites History’s Legacy, Air Force History and Museums Program, United States Air Force, Washington DC, 2004. Manning, Thomas A. (2005), History of Air Education and Training Command, 1942-2002. Office of History and Research, Headquarters, AETC, Randolph AFB, Texas ASIN: B000NYX3PC 1943 Glider Program Studies, USA...
[ "JVL", "KJVL" ]
Karina Habšudová
[ [ "Karina Habšudová", "occupation", "Tennis player" ], [ "Karina Habšudová", "sport", "Tennis" ] ]
Slovak tennis player
Karina Habšudová (; born 2 August 1973) is a Slovak former professional tennis player. She has been ranked as high as 10 in the world (1997). Together with Karol Kučera, she won the Hopman Cup in 1998. Her best performance at a Grand Slam tournament came when she got to the quarterfinals of the 1996 French Open, defeat...
[ "Karina Habsudova" ]
Karina Habšudová
[ [ "Karina Habšudová", "occupation", "Tennis player" ], [ "Karina Habšudová", "place of birth", "Bojnice" ], [ "Karina Habšudová", "sport", "Tennis" ] ]
Slovak tennis player
in Bojnice, Czechoslovakia, Habšudová originally trained as a gymnast but at the age of ten, she switched to tennis under the encouragement of her mother, herself a former amateur tennis player. By the age of fourteen, she had already become the top junior player in Czechoslovakia. In 1990, she was crowned ITF Junior W...
[ "Karina Habsudova" ]
Karina Habšudová
[ [ "Karina Habšudová", "country of citizenship", "Slovakia" ], [ "Karina Habšudová", "country for sport", "Slovakia" ] ]
Slovak tennis player
1997 after reaching the final of the Generali Ladies Linz, becoming the first woman representing Slovakia to do so. Though she continued to play on the tour until 2003, she never again matched the same success of her breakthrough season, with later highlights including winning the Hopman Cup in 1998 and her only WTA si...
[ "Karina Habsudova" ]
Karina Habšudová
[ [ "Karina Habšudová", "country of citizenship", "Slovakia" ], [ "Karina Habšudová", "place of birth", "Bojnice" ], [ "Karina Habšudová", "sport", "Tennis" ], [ "Karina Habšudová", "country for sport", "Slovakia" ] ]
Slovak tennis player
three children together. WTA career finals Singles: 5 (1–4) ITF Finals Singles (6–5) Doubles (3–0) Head-to-head record against other players in the top 10 Players who have been ranked world No. 1 are in boldface. Dominique Monami 4–1 Nadia Petrova 0–2 Venus Williams 0–1 Martina Hingis 4–3 Elena Dementieva 0–3 Steffi Gr...
[ "Karina Habsudova" ]
Informed Decision
[ [ "Informed Decision", "instance of", "Horse" ], [ "Informed Decision", "father", "Monarchos" ], [ "Informed Decision", "sex or gender", "Female" ], [ "Informed Decision", "animal breed", "Thoroughbred" ] ]
American Thoroughbred racehorse
Informed Decision (foaled February 5, 2005 in Kentucky) is an American Thoroughbred racehorse who won the 2009 Breeders' Cup Filly & Mare Sprint on her way to being named the American Champion Female Sprint Horse. Background Informed Decision is a gray mare who was bred by Charles Kidder and Nancy Cole in Kentucky. She...
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Informed Decision
[ [ "Informed Decision", "instance of", "Horse" ], [ "Informed Decision", "sex or gender", "Female" ] ]
American Thoroughbred racehorse
Mare Sprint, where she was the second betting choice behind defending champion Ventura. Informed Decision got the early jump on her rival, then withstood Ventura's late charge to win by over a length. For her performances in 2009, Informed Decision was voted the Eclipse Award as the American Champion Female Sprint Hors...
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Holcombe Ward
[ [ "Holcombe Ward", "occupation", "Tennis player" ], [ "Holcombe Ward", "educated at", "Harvard University" ], [ "Holcombe Ward", "sport", "Tennis" ] ]
US tennis player
Holcombe Ward (November 23, 1878 – January 23, 1967) was an American tennis player who was active during the last years of the 19th century and the first decade of the 20th. He won the US National Championships singles title in 1904 and additionally won six doubles titles at the Grand Slam event. Biography Ward is best...
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Holcombe Ward
[ [ "Holcombe Ward", "sport", "Tennis" ] ]
US tennis player
Club Championships, after a walkover in the final against compatriot Beals Wright. Ward was a member of the USA Davis Cup Team in 1900, 1902, 1905 and 1906. In 1900 and 1902 he played the doubles match in the challenge round which the US team won against the British Isles. In total Ward played 14 Davis Cup matches in s...
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Abel Ferreira
[ [ "Abel Ferreira", "member of sports team", "Sporting CP" ], [ "Abel Ferreira", "member of sports team", "F.C. Penafiel" ], [ "Abel Ferreira", "member of sports team", "S.C. Braga" ], [ "Abel Ferreira", "place of birth", "Penafiel" ] ]
Portuguese football player/manager
Abel Fernando Moreira Ferreira (born 22 December 1978), known simply as Abel as a player, is a Portuguese retired footballer who played as a right back, and the current manager of Greek club PAOK FC. Playing career Abel was born in Penafiel, Porto District. After emerging through hometown club F.C. Penafiel's youth ran...
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Abel Ferreira
[ [ "Abel Ferreira", "member of sports team", "F.C. Penafiel" ], [ "Abel Ferreira", "country of citizenship", "Portugal" ], [ "Abel Ferreira", "place of birth", "Penafiel" ], [ "Abel Ferreira", "sport", "Association football" ] ]
Portuguese football player/manager
Simão at the helm of Braga's first team. In his first full season in charge he led them to the fourth place, with the subsequent qualification to the UEFA Europa League's third qualifying round. PAOK FC paid a reported €2 million to acquire Ferreira's services on 30 June 2019, after former manager Răzvan Lucescu left f...
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Nokia 6600
[ [ "Nokia 6600", "manufacturer", "Nokia" ], [ "Nokia 6600", "operating system", "Symbian" ] ]
smartphone model
The Nokia 6600 is a smartphone introduced on June 16, 2003 by Nokia, costing approximately €600 when released in October 2003. It was Nokia's high-end model of the 6xxx Classic Business Series. At the time of release, it was the most advanced product ever launched by Nokia, and it runs on Symbian OS 7.0s (Series 60 2nd...
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Nokia 6600
[ [ "Nokia 6600", "manufacturer", "Nokia" ] ]
smartphone model
and has proved to be a durable product. By many users it is considered as the trend setter phone which proved to be a bright milestone for its manufacturer. The phone was intended to replace the popular 6310i as the predominant business class model in the Nokia range. It should not be confused with the newer Nokia 6600...
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Nokia 6600
[ [ "Nokia 6600", "manufacturer", "Nokia" ], [ "Nokia 6600", "operating system", "Symbian" ] ]
smartphone model
with Nokia 1200, Nokia 5230, Samsung E1100), making it one of the most successful phones to date. Features Integrated (VGA 640x480) camera Video recorder with audio support (records up to 95 KB - from 9 to 27 seconds - with built-in recorder application) also Streaming video and audio Wireless connectivity with Bluetoo...
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Nokia 6600
[ [ "Nokia 6600", "manufacturer", "Nokia" ], [ "Nokia 6600", "operating system", "Symbian" ] ]
smartphone model
running at 104 MHz 176x208 (65,536 colours) TFT display 5-way joystick navigation HSCSD and GPRS, for internet/WAP access Although the initial batches of the Nokia 6600 were not stable, later system software upgrades corrected the situation. The phone has the capacity to support the installation of a wide range of thir...
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Pearson syndrome
[ [ "Pearson syndrome", "subclass of", "Mitochondrial disease" ], [ "Pearson syndrome", "symptoms", "Anemia" ], [ "Pearson syndrome", "symptoms", "Anemia" ] ]
mitochondrial metabolism disease
Pearson syndrome is a mitochondrial disease characterized by sideroblastic anemia and exocrine pancreas dysfunction. Other clinical features are failure to thrive, pancreatic fibrosis with insulin-dependent diabetes and exocrine pancreatic deficiency, muscle and neurologic impairment, and, frequently, early death. It i...
[ "Pearson marrow-pancreas syndrome", "Pearson's marrow/pancreas syndrome", "Sideroblastic Anemia With Marrow Cell Vacuolization and Exocrine Pancreatic Dysfunction", "Sideroblastic anemia with marrow cell vacuolization and exocrine pancreatic dysfunction (formerly)", "Pearson's syndrome" ]
Pearson syndrome
[ [ "Pearson syndrome", "subclass of", "Mitochondrial disease" ], [ "Pearson syndrome", "symptoms", "Anemia" ], [ "Pearson syndrome", "symptoms", "Anemia" ] ]
mitochondrial metabolism disease
it were discovered a decade later. Presentation Pearson syndrome is a very rare mitochondrial disorder that is characterized by health conditions such as sideroblastic anemia, liver disease, and exocrine pancreas deficiency. Genetics Pearson syndrome is a mitochondrial disease caused by a deletion in mitochondrial DNA ...
[ "Pearson marrow-pancreas syndrome", "Pearson's marrow/pancreas syndrome", "Sideroblastic Anemia With Marrow Cell Vacuolization and Exocrine Pancreatic Dysfunction", "Sideroblastic anemia with marrow cell vacuolization and exocrine pancreatic dysfunction (formerly)", "Pearson's syndrome" ]
Pearson syndrome
[ [ "Pearson syndrome", "subclass of", "Mitochondrial disease" ] ]
mitochondrial metabolism disease
the deletion of 4977 bp. This deletion has been labeled as m.8470_13446del4977. Diagnosing Pearson syndrome utilizes leukocyte DNA with the Southern Blot analysis. This type of mitochondrial DNA deletion are normally more abundant and easily isolated in the blood than in any other tissue type. Mitochondrial disease Pea...
[ "Pearson marrow-pancreas syndrome", "Pearson's marrow/pancreas syndrome", "Sideroblastic Anemia With Marrow Cell Vacuolization and Exocrine Pancreatic Dysfunction", "Sideroblastic anemia with marrow cell vacuolization and exocrine pancreatic dysfunction (formerly)", "Pearson's syndrome" ]
Pearson syndrome
[ [ "Pearson syndrome", "symptoms", "Anemia" ], [ "Pearson syndrome", "symptoms", "Anemia" ] ]
mitochondrial metabolism disease
itself with severe reticulocyto-penic anemia. With the pancreas not functioning properly, this leads to high levels of fats in the liver. PMPS can also lead to diabetes and scarring of the pancreas. Pathophysiology Defining features Blood. With Pearson syndrome, the bone marrow fails to produce white blood cells called...
[ "Pearson marrow-pancreas syndrome", "Pearson's marrow/pancreas syndrome", "Sideroblastic Anemia With Marrow Cell Vacuolization and Exocrine Pancreatic Dysfunction", "Sideroblastic anemia with marrow cell vacuolization and exocrine pancreatic dysfunction (formerly)", "Pearson's syndrome" ]
Pearson syndrome
[ [ "Pearson syndrome", "symptoms", "Anemia" ], [ "Pearson syndrome", "symptoms", "Anemia" ] ]
mitochondrial metabolism disease
to malabsorption. Infants with this condition generally do not grow or gain weight. Diagnosis Treatment Currently there are no approved therapies for Pearson Syndrome and patients reply on supportive care. Minovia Therapeutics is the first company to conduct a designated clinical trial for treating patients affected by...
[ "Pearson marrow-pancreas syndrome", "Pearson's marrow/pancreas syndrome", "Sideroblastic Anemia With Marrow Cell Vacuolization and Exocrine Pancreatic Dysfunction", "Sideroblastic anemia with marrow cell vacuolization and exocrine pancreatic dysfunction (formerly)", "Pearson's syndrome" ]
49ers–Cowboys rivalry
[ [ "49ers–Cowboys rivalry", "participating team", "San Francisco 49ers" ], [ "49ers–Cowboys rivalry", "participating team", "Dallas Cowboys" ] ]
National Football League rivalry
The 49ers–Cowboys rivalry is a National Football League (NFL) rivalry between the San Francisco 49ers and the Dallas Cowboys. The Cowboys lead the series 18-17-1. It is one of the great inter-division rivalry games in the NFL. The two teams do not play every year; instead, they play once every three years due to the NF...
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David Steelman
[ [ "David Steelman", "educated at", "University of Missouri" ], [ "David Steelman", "occupation", "Politician" ] ]
American politician
David Steelman is an American politician from the state of Missouri. David Steelman earned a B.A. in economics from the University of Missouri, and graduated first in his class from the University of Missouri Law School in 1978. He is the son of the late Dorman L. Steelman, who served in the Missouri House of Represent...
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David Steelman
[ [ "David Steelman", "country of citizenship", "United States" ] ]
American politician
representative is 24). He was re-elected in 1980 and 1982, and was chosen by his colleagues to serve as minority floor leader. Steelman did not seek re-election in 1984, returning to the practice of law in his native Rolla, Missouri. Steelman's House colleague William L. Webster was elected Attorney General in 1984 and...
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Asparagus litoralis
[ [ "Asparagus litoralis", "taxon rank", "Species" ] ]
species of plant
Asparagus litoralis, common name coastal asparagus, is an evergreen perennial plant species belonging to the genus Asparagus in the monocot family Asparagaceae. A. litoralis can be found in England, Ukraine (known as Kholodok pryberezhny), Russia (known as Sparzha pribrezhnaya), Bulgaria (known as Asperja) and Turkey (...
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Hasui Kawase
[ [ "Hasui Kawase", "student of", "Kiyokata Kaburagi" ], [ "Hasui Kawase", "student of", "Okada Saburōsuke" ], [ "Hasui Kawase", "movement", "Shin-hanga" ] ]
Japanese artist (1883-1957)
[[File:Brooklyn Museum - Untitled - Kawase Hasui.jpg|thumb|"The Pine Island in Night Rain" from The Mitsubishi Mansion in Fukagawa" by Hasui Kawase, 1920]] was a Japanese artist. He was one of the most prominent print designers of the shin-hanga ("new prints") movement. Life From youth Hasui dreamed of an art career, b...
[ "Bunjiro Kasawe", "Bunjirō Kawase", "Hasui Kasawe", "Kawase Hasui", "Hasui", "Kasawe Bunjirô" ]
Hasui Kawase
[ [ "Hasui Kawase", "country of citizenship", "Japan" ], [ "Hasui Kawase", "work location", "Japan" ] ]
Japanese artist (1883-1957)
Two years later he again applied as a student to Kaburagi, who this time accepted him. After seeing an exhibition of Shinsui Itō's Eight Views of Lake Biwa Hasui approached Shinsui's publisher Shōzaburō Watanabe, who had Hasui make three experimental prints that Watanabe published in August 1918. The series Twelve View...
[ "Bunjiro Kasawe", "Bunjirō Kawase", "Hasui Kasawe", "Kawase Hasui", "Hasui", "Kasawe Bunjirô" ]
Hasui Kawase
[ [ "Hasui Kawase", "student of", "Kiyokata Kaburagi" ] ]
Japanese artist (1883-1957)
the finished woodblocks for the yet-undistributed prints and Hasui's sketchbooks. Hasui travelled the Hokuriku, San'in, and San'yō regions later in 1923 and upon his return in February 1924 developed his sketches into his third Souvenirs of Travel series. Kawase studied ukiyo-e and Japanese style painting at the studio...
[ "Bunjiro Kasawe", "Bunjirō Kawase", "Hasui Kasawe", "Kawase Hasui", "Hasui", "Kasawe Bunjirô" ]
Hasui Kawase
[ [ "Hasui Kawase", "country of citizenship", "Japan" ], [ "Hasui Kawase", "work location", "Japan" ], [ "Hasui Kawase", "movement", "Shin-hanga" ], [ "Hasui Kawase", "relative", "Kanagaki Robun" ] ]
Japanese artist (1883-1957)
publisher and advocate of the shin-hanga movement. His works became widely known in the West through American connoisseur Robert O. Muller (1911–2003). In 1956, he was named a Living National Treasure in Japan. Hasui's younger brother Kasuke moved to London in 1916 to work as an accountant for Okura and Co, he married ...
[ "Bunjiro Kasawe", "Bunjirō Kawase", "Hasui Kasawe", "Kawase Hasui", "Hasui", "Kasawe Bunjirô" ]
Hasui Kawase
[ [ "Hasui Kawase", "country of citizenship", "Japan" ], [ "Hasui Kawase", "work location", "Japan" ] ]
Japanese artist (1883-1957)
almost exclusively on landscape and townscape prints based on sketches he made in Tokyo and during travels around Japan. However, his prints are not merely meishō (famous places) prints that are typical of earlier ukiyo-e masters such as Hiroshige and Katsushika Hokusai (1760-1849). Kawase's prints feature locales that...
[ "Bunjiro Kasawe", "Bunjirō Kawase", "Hasui Kasawe", "Kawase Hasui", "Hasui", "Kasawe Bunjirô" ]
Hasui Kawase
[ [ "Hasui Kawase", "country of citizenship", "Japan" ], [ "Hasui Kawase", "occupation", "Printmaker" ], [ "Hasui Kawase", "work location", "Japan" ], [ "Hasui Kawase", "movement", "Shin-hanga" ] ]
Japanese artist (1883-1957)
in prints of Hiroshige's age. Kawase left a large body of woodblock prints and watercolors: many of the watercolors are linked to the woodblock prints. He also produced oil paintings, traditional hanging scrolls and a few byōbu (folding screens). In the West, Kawase is mainly known as a Japanese woodblock printmaker. H...
[ "Bunjiro Kasawe", "Bunjirō Kawase", "Hasui Kasawe", "Kawase Hasui", "Hasui", "Kasawe Bunjirô" ]
Hasui Kawase
[ [ "Hasui Kawase", "country of citizenship", "Japan" ], [ "Hasui Kawase", "work location", "Japan" ], [ "Hasui Kawase", "has works in the collection", "Minneapolis Institute of Art" ] ]
Japanese artist (1883-1957)
(1957; Kawase's final work) About dating of the prints: Many of them are reprinted 1960 after Kawase's death. (In Japan, it is unusual to number the prints, e.g. "5th of 100".) Representation of work in Public Collections The Temple Honmonji, Ikegami (1931) woodblock print, Los Angeles County Museum of Art Early Summer...
[ "Bunjiro Kasawe", "Bunjirō Kawase", "Hasui Kasawe", "Kawase Hasui", "Hasui", "Kasawe Bunjirô" ]
Down Under
[ [ "Down Under", "country of origin", "Australia" ], [ "Down Under", "narrative location", "Australia" ] ]
2016 film by Abe Forsythe
The term Down Under is a colloquialism which is variously construed to refer to Australia and New Zealand. The term comes from the fact that these countries are in the Southern Hemisphere, "below" many other countries, on the usual arrangement of a map or globe which places cardinal north at the top. The term has been ...
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Down Under
[ [ "Down Under", "country of origin", "Australia" ], [ "Down Under", "narrative location", "Australia" ] ]
2016 film by Abe Forsythe
Tszyu was nicknamed "The Thunder from Down Under", as is Australian snooker player Neil Robertson. When the then Miss Australia Jennifer Hawkins was crowned as Miss Universe 2004 in Quito, Ecuador, she was called by the same nickname by host Billy Bush. According to Roger Ebert's tongue-in-cheek Glossary of Movie Terms...
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Rivière des Envies
[ [ "Rivière des Envies", "country", "Canada" ], [ "Rivière des Envies", "instance of", "River" ], [ "Rivière des Envies", "drainage basin", "Batiscanie" ] ]
river in Canada
Rivière des Envies (River of cravings, in a direct translation) is located in Canada, in the province of Quebec, in the Mauricie administrative region, in the Batiscanie. Rivière des Envies course from the outlet of Lac-de-la-Traverse, located in row St-Joseph, Sainte-Thècle. This lake is fed by the outlet of Lake Aylw...
[ "Riviere des Envies" ]
Rivière des Envies
[ [ "Rivière des Envies", "instance of", "River" ] ]
river in Canada
and Saint-Séverin), • MRC of Shawinigan (for Lac-à-la-Tortue), • MRC des Chenaux (for Saint-Stanislas (Les Chenaux)). Although the territory of the municipality of Saint-Adelphe is in the center of the arc formed by the course of the "River des Envies", this place is excluded from this watershed but a little area at th...
[ "Riviere des Envies" ]
Rivière des Envies
[ [ "Rivière des Envies", "instance of", "River" ], [ "Rivière des Envies", "mouth of the watercourse", "Batiscan River" ] ]
river in Canada
Batiscan river at the southern edge of the village of Saint-Stanislas (Les Chenaux). The course of the river is especially cravings in agriculture. The river runs through a forest especially between Sainte-Thècle and Saint-Tite; downstream from Saint-Tite, the river passes through a few small areas of forest. The river...
[ "Riviere des Envies" ]
Rivière des Envies
[ [ "Rivière des Envies", "instance of", "River" ] ]
river in Canada
marshes (Grands marais, in French), Rivière des Envies is taking a very winding course. This area was conducive for beavers and moose that probably attracted aboriginals in prehistory. Major tributaries The main tributaries of the "Rivière des Envies" are (from the head): Left Bank: • Discharge of Lake-aux-Chicots (in ...
[ "Riviere des Envies" ]
Rivière des Envies
[ [ "Rivière des Envies", "instance of", "River" ] ]
river in Canada
Bourdais Creek (Saint-Tite) • Stream of Fools (ruisseau des fous) (Saint-Tite), • Second Dick Creek (Saint-Tite). Right bank: • Archange Creek (Saint-Tite), taking its source at Lake Archange, • Eric Creek (Saint-Tite), which flows into the "River des Envies" slightly upstream from the mouth of the Little Mekinac North...
[ "Riviere des Envies" ]
Rivière des Envies
[ [ "Rivière des Envies", "instance of", "River" ], [ "Rivière des Envies", "tributary", "Rivière à la Tortue" ] ]
river in Canada
à la tortue) at (Saint-Stanislas (Les Chenaux)). The most important tributaries of the "rivière des Envies" (carvings river) are the Little Mékinac North River and "Rivière à la tortue" (Tortoise river). Major lakes The main lakes flowing into the tributaries of the river (or directly) are grouped by municipality: Sain...
[ "Riviere des Envies" ]
Rivière des Envies
[ [ "Rivière des Envies", "instance of", "River" ] ]
river in Canada
lake Kapibouska. Likely caused by a series of beaver dams, Lake Kapibouska is now gone. The watershed of the "River des Envies" also includes about half of the space covered by a large wetland located southeast of Lac-à-la-Tortue. Toponymy The first known mention of the name "Rivière des Envies" (Carvings River) is a d...
[ "Riviere des Envies" ]
Rivière des Envies
[ [ "Rivière des Envies", "instance of", "River" ] ]
river in Canada
floods can also be caused by prolonged heavy rains. Major floods have occurred: Fall between 1924 and 1926, when there were heavy rains for a week. Many of the bridges over the "river-des-Envies" were swept from Sainte-Thècle up to Saint-Stanislas. The village of Saint-Tite and area meander upstream, suffered flood; In...
[ "Riviere des Envies" ]
Rivière des Envies
[ [ "Rivière des Envies", "instance of", "River" ] ]
river in Canada
the mouth. Saint-Stanislas (Les Chenaux) 1. Road Bridge 352 (situated at the southern boundary of the village of Saint-Stanislas (Les Chenaux), at the mouth of the river. 2. Jesuit mill, near upstream of the existing bridge road 352. 3. Marchand Road Bridge, which connects the south shore to road 159 (on the north side...
[ "Riviere des Envies" ]
Rivière des Envies
[ [ "Rivière des Envies", "instance of", "River" ] ]
river in Canada
The railway arrived in Saint-Tite in 1884. 12. Du Moulin Street Bridge (Mill Street Bridge) in the village of Saint-Tite. This bridge is about by water from the railway bridge, due to the sinuosity of the river (or 1.5 kilometres in a direct line). An iron bridge was built on Du Moulin Street in 1923 and replaced in 19...
[ "Riviere des Envies" ]
Rivière des Envies
[ [ "Rivière des Envies", "instance of", "River" ] ]
river in Canada
Road of North Upper Lake bridge (Haut du Lac Nord), at the North-West of Saint-Tite village. This bridge is in a direct line from Le Bourdais Street Bridge. The tributary Little Mékinac North River (Petite Rivière Mékinac Nord) taking its source at Lake Roberge in Saint-Tite, empties into the "Rivière des Envies" downs...
[ "Riviere des Envies" ]
Rivière des Envies
[ [ "Rivière des Envies", "instance of", "River" ] ]
river in Canada
He noted: "And the first bridge over the Rivière des Envies at the top of the third portage, was more than two miles above the city center of Saint-Tite. And they built a bridge over the Little Mékinac North River before erecting one near at the first chapel of Saint-Tite." 15. Germain Road Bridge, in Saint-Tite. This ...
[ "Riviere des Envies" ]
Broadkill River
[ [ "Broadkill River", "instance of", "River" ], [ "Broadkill River", "country", "United States" ], [ "Broadkill River", "mouth of the watercourse", "Delaware Bay" ] ]
river in the United States of America
The Broadkill River is a river flowing to Delaware Bay in southern Delaware in the United States. It is long and drains an area of on the Atlantic Coastal Plain. The Broadkill flows for its entire length in eastern Sussex County. It issues from Wagamons Pond in the town of Milton; the pond is fed by two tributaries kno...
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Broadkill River
[ [ "Broadkill River", "instance of", "River" ], [ "Broadkill River", "country", "United States" ] ]
river in the United States of America
distance inland for approximately before flowing into the bay, approximately northwest of Lewes. The United States Coast Guard maintains a station near the mouth of the Broadkill. The mouth is connected to Rehoboth Bay by the Lewes and Rehoboth Canal, which forms part of the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway. In the 19th ...
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Maschsee
[ [ "Maschsee", "country", "Germany" ], [ "Maschsee", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Hanover" ], [ "Maschsee", "basin country", "Germany" ] ]
Artificial lake situated south of the city centre of Hanover in Germany
The Maschsee is an artificial lake situated south of the city centre of Hanover in Germany. Spanning an area of 78 hectares, it is the largest body of water within the capital of Lower Saxony. The lake is a popular recreation area as well as a venue for numerous water sports. Name The name of the lake stems from the so...
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Maschsee
[ [ "Maschsee", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Hanover" ] ]
Artificial lake situated south of the city centre of Hanover in Germany
lake in the wide river valley of the River Leine near Hanover during the late 19th century. This tied in with the by-then necessary dyking of the River Leine and the River Ihme, which would regularly flood the city after snow melted in the Harz Mountains in spring. The creation of a lake could reduce the threat of high...
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Maschsee
[ [ "Maschsee", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Hanover" ] ]
Artificial lake situated south of the city centre of Hanover in Germany
In September 1925 the newly elected city mayor Arthur Menge commissioned Otto Franzius, a water engineer and professor at the Hanover Technical College (now Leibniz University Hannover), to work out the details of the construction of a lake together with the city's building authorities. Franzius was to be responsible f...
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Maschsee
[ [ "Maschsee", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Hanover" ] ]
Artificial lake situated south of the city centre of Hanover in Germany
burning in 1933. The landmark was eventually demolished in 1935 during the course of the lake's construction. Job creation In the 1930s, the era of the Great Depression, the city of Hanover lacked the necessary finance for the commencement of the Maschsee project, even though the project had already been planned some t...
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Maschsee
[ [ "Maschsee", "inception", "1936" ] ]
Artificial lake situated south of the city centre of Hanover in Germany
1,650 people had been involved to excavate roughly 780,000 square metres of earth to create the lake basin. With the Maschsee project fully completed by early 1936, the official opening took place on 21 May 1936. Hundreds of thousands of Hanoverians and guests looked on from the edge of the lake as the event began with...
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Maschsee
[ [ "Maschsee", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Hanover" ] ]
Artificial lake situated south of the city centre of Hanover in Germany
created, in an attempt to confuse Allied bomber pilots of their whereabouts during air raids on Hanover. Water supply The water level loses a maximum of 1.3 centimetres per day through evaporation and water seepage, which equates to 10,000 cubic metres of water. In order to maintain a constant level, a pump station at ...
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Maschsee
[ [ "Maschsee", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Hanover" ] ]
Artificial lake situated south of the city centre of Hanover in Germany
The Hanover city administration therefore decided in 1960 to build the new pump station at the Ricklingen Ponds, in order to supply the lake with groundwater. The old pumping house is only active today if the oxygen content of the water is too low, as this water is supplied to the lake through an open-air three-stage c...
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Maschsee
[ [ "Maschsee", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Hanover" ] ]
Artificial lake situated south of the city centre of Hanover in Germany
public bathing area though since 2009 over half of the bathing area is only accessible to members of the private Aspria club. Exercising With its proximity to the centre of Hanover, the Maschsee is a popular recreation area for the city's walkers and joggers. In 2005 a 6 km long route around the lake was mapped out by ...
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Maschsee
[ [ "Maschsee", "inception", "1936" ] ]
Artificial lake situated south of the city centre of Hanover in Germany
Calder (1972) as well as the bronze Olympic torchbearer that stands atop an stone column and "Putto on the Fish" that were both created by Hermann Scheuernstuhl (1936). Other sculptures on the eastern side are the "Menschenpaar" by Georg Kolbe (1936–37) and two lion sculptures created by Arno Breker (1938). In 1948 Eri...
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Maschsee
[ [ "Maschsee", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Hanover" ] ]
Artificial lake situated south of the city centre of Hanover in Germany
Kestner Society Art Gallery. A light art project was held around the lake at the start of 2009 under the title "New Moon on the Lake". The display consisted of 22 illuminated pieces that had been created by international artists, which formed the opening of the 2009 Garden Project in Hanover. Accessibility The Maschsee...
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Maschsee
[ [ "Maschsee", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Hanover" ] ]
Artificial lake situated south of the city centre of Hanover in Germany
NDR and ZDF. The lake is directly accessible by using the bus stops at the AWD Arena and the Sprengel Museum. Additional bus and tram stops such as the Aegidientorplatz, Schlägerstraße, Geibelstraße, Altenbekener Damm and Döhren Tower also lie in relatively close proximity to the lake. Numerous foot and cycle paths lea...
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Patricia Fara
[ [ "Patricia Fara", "educated at", "University of Oxford" ], [ "Patricia Fara", "occupation", "Historian" ], [ "Patricia Fara", "given name", "Patricia" ], [ "Patricia Fara", "employer", "University of Cambridge" ], [ "Patricia Fara", "place of ...
British historian
Patricia Fara is a historian of science at the University of Cambridge. She is a graduate of the University of Oxford and did her PhD at the University of London. She is a former Fellow of Darwin College and is an Emeritus Fellow of Clare College where she was previously Director of Studies in the History and Philosoph...
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Patricia Fara
[ [ "Patricia Fara", "given name", "Patricia" ] ]
British historian
Darwin: Sex, Science, and Serendipity (2012). Her most recent book is A Lab of One's Own: Science and Suffrage in the First World War" (2017).Bruton, Elizabeth (2018) 'When Suffragettes kicked open the lab door' Nature 10 January 2018 In 2013, Fara published an article in Nature (journal), stressing the fact that biogr...
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Patricia Fara
[ [ "Patricia Fara", "given name", "Patricia" ], [ "Patricia Fara", "place of birth", "Oxford" ] ]
British historian
Patricia (2002) Scientists Anonymous: Great Stories of Women in Science. Totem Books. Fara, Patricia (2004) Pandora's Breeches: Women, Science and Power in the Enlightenment Pimlico Books Fara, Patricia (2005) Fatal Attraction: Magnetic Mysteries of the Enlightenment Icon Books Fara, Patricia (2009) Science: A Four Tho...
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South Main Street Historic District
[ [ "South Main Street Historic District", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Missouri" ] ]
building in Missouri, United States
the National Register of Historic Places South Main and South Elm Streets Historic District, Henderson, Kentucky, listed on the National Register of Historic Places South Main Street Historic District (Versailles, Kentucky), listed on the National Register of Historic Places South Main Street Historic District (Walton,...
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No Average Angel
[ [ "No Average Angel", "instance of", "Album" ], [ "No Average Angel", "record label", "785 Records" ] ]
album by Tiffany Giardina
No Average Angel is the second studio album by American singer Tiffany Giardina. The album was released on January 20, 2009 through 785 Records and sold 2,400 copies in its first week. The singles, "Hurry Up and Save Me" and "No Average Angel" were also included on the Another Cinderella Story soundtrack. Composition R...
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No Average Angel
[ [ "No Average Angel", "instance of", "Album" ] ]
album by Tiffany Giardina
story, experience and vibe to it. I'm so excited for this album to come out. I really got involved in every aspect, from the writing to the artwork. It's very personal for me, and I couldn't be happier with it." She stated that her role-model is Audrey Hepburn. The closest song from the album for Giardina is "Falling D...
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No Average Angel
[ [ "No Average Angel", "instance of", "Album" ] ]
album by Tiffany Giardina
from Artist Direct, gave the album 3 out of 5 stars and wrote "On her debut album, the 15-year-old, New York City-reared songstress exudes bucketfuls of sass, tossing her long, curly tendrils and singing in a high pitch that will magnetically attract rebellious tweeners to her music." and "Giardina will certainly appea...
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No Average Angel
[ [ "No Average Angel", "instance of", "Album" ] ]
album by Tiffany Giardina
whose music has been featured in Another Cinderella Story and Disney's Tinker Bell, sounds like any other Disney-produced teen pop star. It is true that Giardina is not signed to the Disney label, however, it is hard not to notice the similarities between her resonance and those of Disney productions like Miley Cyrus. ...
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No Average Angel
[ [ "No Average Angel", "instance of", "Album" ] ]
album by Tiffany Giardina
the songs off the album. A TV commercial aired on Nickelodeon and Disney Channel to promote the album which features a male announcer. She also performed songs from the album at the 2009 Bamboozle in New Jersey. Singles The first single off the album was "Hurry Up and Save Me" and the second was "No Average Angel". Bot...
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No Average Angel
[ [ "No Average Angel", "instance of", "Album" ] ]
album by Tiffany Giardina
videos were directed by Andrew Bennett. Both singles were also on a miniature EP, also called "No Average Angel". It was only available for a limited edition. It was released November 25, 2008 only at FYE. Track listing Notes Song lengths, writing credits and producing credits taken from the No Average Angel liner note...
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Roopam Sharma
[ [ "Roopam Sharma", "instance of", "Human" ], [ "Roopam Sharma", "country of citizenship", "India" ] ]
Indian computer scientist
Roopam Sharma, (born 24 May 1995) is an Indian scientist. He is best known for his work on Manovue, a technology which enables the visually impaired to read printed text. His research interests include Wearable Computing, Mobile Application Development, Human Centered Design, Computer Vision, AI and Cognitive Science. ...
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Roopam Sharma
[ [ "Roopam Sharma", "educated at", "Manav Rachna University" ], [ "Roopam Sharma", "place of birth", "Faridabad" ], [ "Roopam Sharma", "country of citizenship", "India" ] ]
Indian computer scientist
part of Asia's 21 Young Leaders Initiative in Manila. Early life, education and research Roopam was born on May 24, 1995 in Faridabad, Haryana, India to Nirmal and Krishna Dutt Sharma. He has a brother Rahul and a sister Priyanka. Roopam comes from a very humble, middle-class family. He is an alumnus of Ryan Internatio...
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Roopam Sharma
[ [ "Roopam Sharma", "educated at", "Manav Rachna University" ] ]
Indian computer scientist
that engineering was one career where he would not starve. Roopam began his research and innovation journey during his sophomore year of undergraduate school at Manav Rachna University with a belief that students who worked in research and development in college got better job opportunities but destiny had other plans ...
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Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire
[ [ "Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire", "country", "Holy Roman Empire" ] ]
abdication of Emperor Francis II on 6 August 1806
The dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire occurred de facto on 6 August 1806, when the final Holy Roman Emperor, Francis II of the House of Habsburg-Lorraine, abdicated his title and released all imperial states and officials from their oaths and obligations to the empire. Since the Middle Ages, the Holy Roman Empire ha...
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Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire
[ [ "Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire", "country", "Holy Roman Empire" ] ]
abdication of Emperor Francis II on 6 August 1806
formal borders to all of Christian Europe and beyond. The formation of the first modern sovereign territorial states in the 16th and 17th centuries, which brought with it the idea that jurisdiction corresponded to actual territory governed, threatened the universal nature of the Holy Roman Empire. The Holy Roman Empire...
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Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire
[ [ "Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire", "participant", "Napoleon" ], [ "Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire", "country", "Holy Roman Empire" ] ]
abdication of Emperor Francis II on 6 August 1806
hereditary, could not exercise effective central control. Even then, most contemporaries believed that the empire could be revived and restored to glory. The Holy Roman Empire did not experience its true terminal decline before its involvement in the French Revolutionary Wars and the Napoleonic Wars. Although the empir...
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Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire
[ [ "Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire", "participant", "Napoleon" ], [ "Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire", "country", "Holy Roman Empire" ] ]
abdication of Emperor Francis II on 6 August 1806
Austria while also illustrating that the Holy Roman title outranked them both. Austria's defeat at the Battle of Austerlitz in December 1805 and the secession of a large number of Francis II's German vassals in July 1806 to form the Confederation of the Rhine, a French satellite state, effectively meant the end of the ...
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Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire
[ [ "Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire", "country", "Holy Roman Empire" ] ]
abdication of Emperor Francis II on 6 August 1806
plot by their local authorities. In Germany, the dissolution was widely compared to the ancient and semi-legendary Fall of Troy and some associated the end of what they perceived to be the Roman Empire with the end times and the apocalypse. Background Ideology of the Holy Roman Empire The defining characteristic of the...
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Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire
[ [ "Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire", "country", "Holy Roman Empire" ] ]
abdication of Emperor Francis II on 6 August 1806
that they were the sole genuine emperors in Europe and although they had formally recognized the rulers of Russia as emperors in 1606 and the sultans of the Ottoman Empire as emperors in 1721, these recognitions were conditional on the fact that the Holy Roman Emperor was always pre-eminent. The pre-eminence of the emp...
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Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire
[ [ "Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire", "country", "Holy Roman Empire" ] ]
abdication of Emperor Francis II on 6 August 1806
on the emperor's own crown lands (though there were large crown lands in the 18th and 19th centuries) but on the emperor's role as the highest secular ruler in the world and a champion and advocate of the Catholic Church. The lack of a defined capital and consistent crown lands reinforced the idea that the imperial tit...
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Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire
[ [ "Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire", "country", "Holy Roman Empire" ] ]
abdication of Emperor Francis II on 6 August 1806
when the possibility of permanent peace with the Ottoman Empire, widely seen as the mortal enemies of Christian Europe, was accepted through the 1699 Peace of Karlowitz. Both the Papacy and the Holy Roman Empire continued to claim their traditional rights of universal jurisdiction into the early modern period, that it ...
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Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire
[ [ "Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire", "country", "Holy Roman Empire" ] ]
abdication of Emperor Francis II on 6 August 1806
always its influence and its place in the recognized world order that gave the Holy Roman Empire its true power, rather than the actual extent of its territorial domains. One of the greatest threats to the traditional (and theoretical) universal jurisdiction accorded to the Holy Roman Emperor and the Pope throughout th...
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Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire
[ [ "Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire", "country", "Holy Roman Empire" ] ]
abdication of Emperor Francis II on 6 August 1806
represented "universal antagonists", claiming that jurisdiction over all the world was theirs by right through their connection to Ancient Rome and their role as earthly representatives of Jesus Christ. Ambitious emperors, such as Charles V (1519–1556) and Ferdinand II (1619–1637), who sought to combine universal juris...
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Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire
[ [ "Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire", "country", "Holy Roman Empire" ] ]
abdication of Emperor Francis II on 6 August 1806
"sick" in some capacity, for instance the bookseller and publisher Johann Heinrich Zedler mentions the "state illnesses of the Holy Roman Empire" in his 1745 Grosses Universal-Lexicon. This view dates back to at least the Peace of Westphalia at the conclusion of the Thirty Years' War in 1648, where the empire was expli...
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Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire
[ [ "Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire", "country", "Holy Roman Empire" ] ]
abdication of Emperor Francis II on 6 August 1806
Furthermore, many publicists within the empire did not see its nature as a "irregular" monarchy as something negative and were unconcerned with forming a new political or social order, but rather sought to augment the already present structures to create a better future. The Peace of Westphalia had explicitly designate...
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Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire
[ [ "Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire", "participant", "Napoleon" ], [ "Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire", "country", "Holy Roman Empire" ] ]
abdication of Emperor Francis II on 6 August 1806
imperial circles represented successful venues for resolving inter-imperial conflicts. The Reichstag also worked as a place where weaker imperial princes could work to convince their more powerful counterparts to remain at peace and resolve their differences. Wars with France and Napoleon Austrian war effort and respon...
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Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire
[ [ "Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire", "country", "Holy Roman Empire" ] ]
abdication of Emperor Francis II on 6 August 1806
Germany with it. Despite the empire's mounting difficulties in the face of the wars with France, there was no large-scale popular unrest within its borders. Instead, the explanation for the end of the Holy Roman Empire lies in the realm of high politics. The empire's defeat in the Revolutionary Wars was the most decisi...
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Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire
[ [ "Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire", "country", "Holy Roman Empire" ] ]
abdication of Emperor Francis II on 6 August 1806
that much of the wider empire (including influential figures such as the King of Prussia and the Archbishop-Elector of Mainz), however unwilling, joined the conflict on the side of the Habsburgs proves that imperial ideals were still alive by the late 18th century. The key point in which fortunes shifted was Prussia's ...
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Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire
[ [ "Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire", "participant", "Napoleon" ], [ "Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire", "country", "Holy Roman Empire" ] ]
abdication of Emperor Francis II on 6 August 1806
history and raising doubts whether Emperor Francis II would be able to work together with his Reichstag. Although the Austrian regime spent much time and resources attempting to make the new arrangement work, the general verdict at the time was that the reorganization had essentially killed the empire. Reaction to Napo...
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Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire
[ [ "Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire", "participant", "Napoleon" ] ]
abdication of Emperor Francis II on 6 August 1806
imperial title (instead of a royal one) was not. In the empire, Napoleon's title raised fears that it might inspire the Russian Emperor to insist that he was equal to the Holy Roman Emperor and might encourage other monarchs, such as George III of the United Kingdom, to also proclaim themselves emperors. The Habsburg d...
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Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire
[ [ "Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire", "participant", "Napoleon" ], [ "Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire", "country", "Holy Roman Empire" ] ]
abdication of Emperor Francis II on 6 August 1806
with distaste, Austrian officials immediately realized that if they were to refuse to accept him as an emperor, war with France would be renewed. Instead, the focus became on how to accept Napoleon as an emperor while still maintaining the pre-eminence of their own emperor and empire. France had officially accepted par...
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Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire
[ [ "Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire", "country", "Holy Roman Empire" ] ]
abdication of Emperor Francis II on 6 August 1806
Hungary), regardless of their current position within or outside the Holy Roman Empire. "Austria" in this sense referred to the dynasty (often officially called the "House of Austria" instead of the "House of Habsburg"), not the geographical location. The title of Holy Roman Emperor remained pre-eminent to both "Empero...
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Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire
[ [ "Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire", "participant", "Napoleon" ] ]
abdication of Emperor Francis II on 6 August 1806
seen as more or less royal titles (as they were hereditary) and in the minds of the Austrians, there still remained only one true empire and one true emperor in Europe. To illustrate this, Francis II's official imperial title read "elected Roman Emperor, ever Augustus, hereditary Emperor of Austria", placing the Austri...
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Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire
[ [ "Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire", "participant", "Napoleon" ] ]
abdication of Emperor Francis II on 6 August 1806
to Francis. George III of the United Kingdom recognized the new title in October and although Russian Emperor Alexander I objected to Francis "lowering himself to the level of the usurper Napoleon", he recognized the title in November. The only significant objections to Francis II's title were raised by Sweden, who thr...
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Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire
[ [ "Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire", "participant", "Napoleon" ], [ "Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire", "country", "Holy Roman Empire" ] ]
abdication of Emperor Francis II on 6 August 1806
Napoleon in the Peace of Pressburg (26 December). These created deliberate ambiguities in the imperial constitution. Bavaria, Baden and Württemberg were granted plénitude de la souveraineté (full sovereignty) while remaining a part of the Conféderation Germanique (Germanic Confederation), a novel name for the Holy Roma...
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Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire
[ [ "Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire", "participant", "Napoleon" ] ]
abdication of Emperor Francis II on 6 August 1806
Imperial Knights, who had survived the attack on their rights in Rittersturm of 1803–04, were subject to a second attack and a spate of annexations by those states allied to Napoleon in November–December 1805. In response, the knights' corporation (corpus equestre) dissolved itself on 20 January 1806. With the dissolut...
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Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire
[ [ "Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire", "participant", "Napoleon" ] ]
abdication of Emperor Francis II on 6 August 1806
independent course between the demands of the empire and Napoleon. In April 1806, Napoleon sought a treaty whereby the three states would ally themselves to France in perpetuity while forswearing participation in future Reichskriege (imperial war efforts) and submitting to a commission de méditation under his presidenc...
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Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire
[ [ "Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire", "participant", "Napoleon" ], [ "Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire", "country", "Holy Roman Empire" ] ]
abdication of Emperor Francis II on 6 August 1806
and thirteen other minor German princes formed the Confederation of the Rhine, effectively a French satellite state. On 1 August, the Reichstag was informed by a French envoy that Napoleon no longer recognized the existence of the Holy Roman Empire and on the same day, nine of the princes who had formed the Confederati...
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Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire
[ [ "Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire", "participant", "Napoleon" ] ]
abdication of Emperor Francis II on 6 August 1806
the title "Emperor of the French" in 1804 and the Austrian defeat at the Battle of Austerlitz in 1805, the Habsburg Monarchy began contemplating whether the imperial title and the empire as a whole were worth defending. Many of the states nominally serving the Holy Roman Emperor, such as Baden, Württemberg and Bavaria,...
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Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire
[ [ "Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire", "participant", "Napoleon" ] ]
abdication of Emperor Francis II on 6 August 1806
with Napoleon and France. One concern held by the Habsburg Monarchy was that Napoleon might aspire to claim the title of Holy Roman Emperor. Napoleon was attracted to Charlemagne's legacy; replicas of Charlemagne's crown and sword had been made for (but not used during) Napoleon's coronation as Emperor of the French an...
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