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888291 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jonas%20Krumrey | Jonas Krumrey | Jonas Krumrey (born 25 November 2003) is a German professional footballer. He plays as a goalkeeper for 2. Liga club Liefering.
Career
His career began with TSV 1860 Rosenheim and FC Bayern München. In 2017 he went on to the Red Bull Salzburg Academy. Then he became 3rd goalkeeper of FC Liefering behind Daniel Antosch and Adam Stejskal. In the 2021-22 season he is the 2nd goalkeeper of Liefering.
His debut for FC Liefering was on August 13, 2021. He played versus SKU Amstettenas part of the Starting XI.
Career statistics
Club
References
2003 births
Living people
German footballers
FC Liefering players |
888293 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lukas%20Ibertsberger | Lukas Ibertsberger | Lukas Ibertsberger (born 6 August 2003) is an Austrian professional footballer. He plays as a right-back for 2. Liga club Liefering. He also plays for the FC Salzburg U19 team in the UEFA Youth League.
Personal life
He is the son of Robert Ibertsberger and nephew of Andreas Ibertsberger. Both were playing for the Austrian national football team.
References
2003 births
Living people
Austrian footballers
Association football defenders
Players of FC Liefering |
888296 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benjamin%20Atiabou | Benjamin Atiabou | Benjamin Atiabou (born 19 January 2004) is an Austrian professional footballer. He plays as a right-back for 2. Liga club Liefering, on loan from Red Bull Salzburg.
He also plays for FC Salzburg U19 in the UEFA Youth League.
Career
He started his career with the youth teams of SAK 1914, FC Liefering and FC Red Bull Salzburg. In 2018 he came to the Red Bull Salzburg Academy, where he played in all three youth-ranks. 2021 he went on to FC Liefering.
References
2004 births
Living people
Austrian footballers
Association football defenders
Players of FC Liefering |
888297 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shiva%20Baby | Shiva Baby | Shiva Baby is an American movie made by Emma Seligman. The main character Danielle is played by Rachel Sennott. It was shown at film festivals in 2020, and in movie theaters in 2021. It was delayed because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Molly Gordon plays Maya, Danny Deferrari plays Max, Polly Draper plays Danielle's mom Debbie, Fred Melamed plays Danielle's dad Joel, and Dianna Agron plays Max's wife Kim.
Plot
Danielle has sex with Max in exchange for money, then goes to a Jewish funeral observance with her parents, Joel and Debbie. Debbie tells her to behave inside. Neighbors who are also at the funeral compare Danielle to Maya, who was Danielle's girlfriend in high school, and who is going to law school. Max also knows Danielle's parents and goes to the funeral. Debbie tells Danielle that Max is married, shocking her.
Kim, who is Max's wife, also arrives. She has brought their baby. Danielle has to go to the bathroom to change after accidentally ripping her tights. In the bathroom mirror she takes a topless photo to send to Max, but she leaves her phone in the bathroom. She tries to avoid Max and his family, helping out around the house. Maya tries to go with her and notices Danielle staring at Max, but Maya thinks Danielle is staring at Kim, and asks her about it. Danielle doesn't want to say Kim is pretty and successful.
Danielle then talks to Kim, who tries to give Danielle a job, but Danielle is rude to Kim. Danielle's parents then talk to Kim, revealing to Danielle that Kim makes the money in their family and gives Max the money to pay Danielle without knowing about it. Kim sees Danielle wearing the same bracelet that Max gave to her, and suspects something is out of place. Max then spills coffee on Danielle while trying to hide the topless photos from Kim, and Danielle goes to clean up with Debbie, who comforts her. Maya and Danielle then go to the kitchen, because Maya wants to talk about their relationship, but Max interrupts. Maya loudly talks about their relationship. Danielle follows Max to the bathroom and tries to give him a blowjob, but he leaves. Danielle goes outside, and argues with Maya before they kiss.
Maya then finds Danielle's phone in the bathroom, and sees messages about having sex with people, which upsets her. Maya tells Danielle she has seen the phone but won't tell her where. Danielle sees Kim again, talking with her parents and other people. Danielle hints to Kim that Max is cheating, and Kim asks Danielle if she is dating anyone. Joel gets the people around Danielle to sing an old lullaby to her to comfort her about being single. Danielle is stressed out and imagines Kim singing along.
Danielle and Max decide to stop having sex, and Kim walks in to tell Max they need to go home. Danielle also wants to go home and tries to find her parents. Kim goes to find Danielle to give her back her phone. Kim asks Danielle to hold her baby so she can feed her, but Danielle doesn't want to. Max starts arguing with Kim about the baby, accidentally pushing Danielle into a vase. Danielle starts crying on the floor, and Debbie gets everyone to leave. They all get in Joel's van even though there isn't much room, and Maya and Danielle hold hands and smile.
Cast
Source:
References
2020 comedy movies
American comedy-drama movies
American LGBT movies
English-language movies
Feminist movies
LGBT comedy-drama movies
Movies about dysfunctional families
Movies set in New York City |
888307 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sukhoi%20Su-2 | Sukhoi Su-2 | The Sukhoi Su-2 was a Soviet reconnaissance and light bomber aircraft used in the early stages of World War II.In 1936 Joseph Stalin released a requirement for a multipurpose combat aircraft. Codenamed Ivanov, Pavel Sukhoi was designed aircraft under the tutelage of Andrei Tupolev. The resulting ANT-51 flew on 25 August 1937.This was considered insufficient but it was decided to re-test it with a more powerful engine. and was accepted into production as BB-1. In 1940, the aircraft engine was replaced and was renamed Su-2 .Although 910 Su-2s were built by the time production was discontinued in 1942, the aircraft was obsolete and underarmed by the start of the Great Patriotic War.However, due to a critical shortage of aircraft in early World War II, some Su-2s were used as emergency fighters. |
888308 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Watertown%20Airport%20%28disambiguation%29 | Watertown Airport (disambiguation) | Watertown Airport may refer to:
Watertown International Airport in Watertown, New York, United States (FAA: ART)
Watertown Regional Airport (formerly Watertown Municipal) in Watertown, South Dakota, United States (FAA: ATY)
Watertown Municipal Airport (Wisconsin) in Watertown, Wisconsin, United States (FAA: RYV) |
888317 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kid%20Krrish | Kid Krrish | Kid Krrish is an Indian animated television film series produced by Toonz Animation, Film Kraft Productions, and Turner International India. The first film of the series, Kid Krrish, was released on 2 October 2013 and it is also a part of the Kid Krrish film series, which itself is part of the Krrish franchise, with its three sequels: Kid Krrish: Mission Bhutan, Kid Krrish: Mystery in Mongolia and Kid Krrish: Shakalaka Africa.
Kid Krrish was planned as the first movie in the four part series of Kid Krrish films as a part of Krrish franchise.
Movies
Kid Krrish
Kid Krrish: Mission Bhutan
Kid Krrish: Mystery in Mongolia
Kid Krrish: Shakalaka Africa
Criticism
Kid Krrish got mostly good reviews.
The Financial Express gave Kid Krrish as an example of how children's television in India is getting better. They said Kid Krrish was the first big time that children's TV makers in India moved away from mythology and told stories like Bollywood instead.
References
Children's television series
2014 television series debuts
Hindi-language television series |
888328 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Repression%20%28Bardi%29 | Repression (Bardi) | Repression (also known as Repressione) is a 19th-century painted in oil (115x141 centimetres) by the italian painter Mario Bardi, created in 1966, it has been part of the permanent collection of the Museo del Novecento in Milan since 1966.
Description
The painting by Mario Bardi, belonging to the artistic movement of Magic realism, it is a work of social denunciation of the human condition. The work analyzes the exploitation of man, through iconography Bardi configures the protagonists who dominate society and the world, a feudal, pre-Enlightenment world, derided by laws and customs that are ironic when not ferocious of repression. Which still survives in a predatory way hiding behind the tempting masks of hypocrisy. Mario Bardi's message rings alive and legitimate, innervating his painting.
Bibliography
Carlo Munari, Gianni Vianello, "Arte moderna italiana: dal liberty al comportamentismo", Ed. Fratelli Conte, 1979
Related pages
Mario Bardi
Museo del Novecento
References
Other websites
Mario Bardi, Repressione (Milano, 1898), 1966, RAAM Museo del Novecento di Milano, cm 115x141, inv. n. GAM 007932)
20th-century paintings
Paintings in Milan
Paintings by Mario Bardi |
888334 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plectrohyla%20matudai | Plectrohyla matudai | Matuda's spikethumb frog (Plectrohyla matudai) is a frog that lives in Mexico, Guatemala, and Honduras. Scientists have seen it in cloud forests in Mexico between 700 and 2300 meters above sea level, in pine-oak forests in Guatemala, and in pine-oak forests in Honduras at 1370 meters above sea level.
Appearance
The adult male frog is 3.2 to 4.6 cm long from nose to rear end and the adult female frog is 3.6 to 4.9 cm long. Frogs that live in the west are larger than frogs that live in the east. For a frog, this animal has short back legs. This frog is light brown in color with dark brown or black spots. Most of these frogs have dark stripes under their eyes and above their mouths.
Tadpoles
Tadpoles live in streams where the water moves fast. They grab onto large rocks.
Threats
This frog is not in danger of dying out, but it is still in some danger. This is because human beings change the places it lives into farms or towns. Human beings also cut down the forests for lumber. The fungal disease chytridiomycosis can also make this frog sick. However, adult P. madudai frogs do not die from chytrid disease as much as other frogs do.
Name
This frog is named after Dr. Eizi Matuda. He was born in Japan in 1894. He moved to Mexico in 1922 and became head of botany at Mexico's National Institute of Forestry.
References
Frogs
Animals of North America |
888335 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/A2%20CZ%20Ellipse%20Spirit | A2 CZ Ellipse Spirit | The A2 CZ Ellipse Spirit is an ultralight aircraft made by A2 CZ in the Czech Republic. It was introduced at the 2011 air show and is still in production.
It's engine is a Rotax 912.
Aircraft |
888338 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antarctic%20University%20%28Garau%29 | Antarctic University (Garau) | Antarctic University (also known as Università Antartica ) is a 19th-century painted in oil (115x141 centimetres) by the italian painter Salvatore Garau, created in 2003, it has been part of the collection of the Museo del Novecento in Milan on public loan from the MAN Museum (Art Museum of the province of Nuoro).
Related pages
Salvatore Garau
Museo del Novecento
References
Other websites
Salvatore Garau, Università Antartica, 2003, RAAM Museo del Novecento di Milano, cm 180x200
20th-century paintings
Paintings in Milan |
888341 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Episode%20%28Bardi%29 | Episode (Bardi) | Episode (also known as Episodio) is a 19th-century painted in oil (120x140 centimetres) by the italian painter Mario Bardi, created in 1966, it has been part of the permanent collection of the Museo civico di Castelbuono (Palermo) in the department of the Modern and Contemporary Art Gallery.
Description
The painting by Mario Bardi, belonging to the artistic movement of Realism, the painting the "Episode" represents the battle between Garibaldi and Bourbon, during the famous Battle of the Volturnus 0f 1860, considered one of the most important battles of the "Italian Risorgimento" for the Italian unification.
Bardi represents the battle with a warm color and excited forms to give drama to the characters, pushed to the limit of their verisimilitude to become an emblem of the spirit of struggle and rebellion of Sicily.
Bibliography
Carlo Munari, Gianni Vianello, "Arte moderna italiana: dal liberty al comportamentismo", Ed. Fratelli Conte, 1979
Related pages
Mario Bardi
Museo del Novecento
References
Other websites
Mario Bardi, Episodio, 1966, Pinacoteca di Arte Moderna e Contemporanea, Museo civico di Castelbuono
20th-century paintings
Paintings in Palermo
Paintings by Mario Bardi |
888345 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sicilian%20landscape%20%28Bardi%29 | Sicilian landscape (Bardi) | Sicilian landscape (also known as Paesaggio Siciliano) is a 19th-century painted in oil (50x70 centimetres) by the italian painter Mario Bardi, created in 1970, it has been part of the permanent collection of the Museo civico di Bagheria (Palermo).
Description
In the painting "Sicilian landscape" by Mario Bardi, belonging to the artistic movement of Magic Realism, as in many of his landscapes from this period, color hints at perspectives and depth, revealing the anguish of a Sicily tormented by events and calamities..
Bardi is in the representation of Baroque Sicily, of its domes overloaded with decorations and yet so light as to be able to hover in the air, of the goose-breasted balconies or the palaces of the historic center that the memory of Bardi becomes more intense, surreal and almost hypnotic . The scarlet red skies attract the eye that never tires of discovering on small canvases overlaps of baroque architecture, spirals and twisted columns, sharp geometric surfaces or sweet curves, hatched with the skilful hand of the engineer-artist.
Bibliography
Nicolò D'Alessandro, Situazioni della pittura in Sicilia, 1940-1970, 1975
Related pages
Mario Bardi
References
Other websites
Mario Bardi, Paesaggio Siciliano, 1970, Museo di Bagheria, Palermo
20th-century paintings
Paintings in Palermo
Paintings by Mario Bardi |
888347 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20dockers%20%28Bardi%29 | The dockers (Bardi) | The dockers (also known as I Portuali) is a 19th-century painted in oil (110x143 centimetres) by the italian painter Mario Bardi, created in 1963, it has been part of the permanent collection of the Contemporary Civic Gallery of Suzzara (Mantova).
The work I Portuali won the Suzzara Prize in 1963.
Description
The painting by Mario Bardi, belonging to the artistic movement of Existential realism, the painting the "The Dockers" represents the two figures are motionless; even one of them has part of the head that remains outside the painting to underline its depersonalization. The port that instead has the face totally represented presents isiognomic features outlined with rapid but intense brushstrokes that emphasize the sharp profile and the gaze lost in the void. The composition is divided into squared and clear masses mindful of constructivism; as are the chromatic tones used which remain as regards the two characters close to the light tones of white and pink; while I push the setting into an indistinct atmosphere with dark tones. The brushstroke is generally large with a homogeneous color; the artist creates the chiaroscuro transitions through different overlapping layers of color..
Bibliography
Carlo Munari, Gianni Vianello, "Arte moderna italiana: dal liberty al comportamentismo", Ed. Fratelli Conte, 1979
Related pages
Mario Bardi
Suzzara Prize
References
Other websites
Mario Bardi, I Portuali, Cultural Heritage of the Italian Government
Mario Bardi, I Portuali, Beni Culturali
20th-century paintings
Paintings in Palermo
Paintings by Mario Bardi |
888348 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suzzara%20Prize | Suzzara Prize | The Suzzara prize is an artistic competition that was held in the city of Suzzara in Mantova province from 1948 to 1976 and again starting since 1989.
History
It was commissioned by the mayor of Suzzara, Tebe Mignoni. It was born thanks to Dino Villani, with the contribution of Cesare Zavattini and the support of Stefano Cairola; it was inaugurated on 22 August 1948. Villani and Zavattini thought of the competition as a symbolic exchange between cultural work and peasant work: the winning artists received products of the earth and in exchange they gave their works to the municipal collection. The intent of the promoters of the award was to encourage the encounter between the people and the artists, the latter often perceived as unattainable and unrelated to the daily feeling of ordinary people. Consequently, the jury, alongside authoritative figures (such as Orio Vergani, Alfonso Gatto, Raffaele Carrieri and Raffaele De Grada junior ), provided for the presence of a worker, an employee and a farmer.
The prize was attended by artists such as Carlo Carrà, Mario Bardi (winner in 1963), Emilio Vedova, Enrico Baj, Renato Guttuso, Domenico Cantatore, Renato Birolli, Pio Semeghini, Arturo Tosi, Ottone Rosai, Bruno Rovesti, Aligi Sassu , Ernesto Treccani, Silvano Girardello, Angelo Ferreri. When the season of neorealism was over, the prize was interrupted. Only in the year 1989 the Suzzara prize was re-proposed with its XXIX edition.
Over time, the municipality of Suzzara acquired a considerable artistic heritage, in particular of realist art and neorealist: in 1974 to exhibit the collection the municipality he created the "Civic Gallery of Contemporary Art", later renamed Galleria del Premio Suzzara.
Related pages
Carlo Carrà
Mario Bardi
Emilio Vedova
Enrico Baj
Renato Guttuso
References
External links
Premio Suzzara
50.premiosuzzara.it Official Il 50º Premio Suzzara
20th-century paintings
Performing arts trophies
Awards established in 1948
Italy history and culture |
888355 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/East%20Thrace | East Thrace | East Thrace is the European part of Turkey. Edirne is its main city. It borders Bulgaria and Greece.
References
Geography of Turkey |
888365 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/M%C3%A9tamorphose%20%28Bardi%29 | Métamorphose (Bardi) | Métamorphose (also known as Metamorfosi. Deformazione meccanica di un fiore) is a 19th-century painted in oil (80x100 centimetres) by the italian painter Mario Bardi, created in 1988, it has been part of the permanent collection of the Museo MAGA in Gallarate.
Description
In the painting by Mario Bardi, belonging to the artistic movement of Magic Realism in the foreground at the top there is a large rose seen from the front and rendered metallic by an unnatural gray color. Below a mechanical instrument is pointed towards the observer. Color is tonal; cold (gray); nuanced. The drafting is sotiile; smooth.
Bibliography
Silvio Zanella, Catalogo ragionato, Civica Galleria d'Arte Moderna di Gallarate, 1983
Related pages
Mario Bardi
References
Other websites
Metamorfosi. Deformazione meccanica di un fiore, Bardi Mario, Gallarate (VA), Museo MAGA, Lombardia Beni Culturali
20th-century paintings
Paintings in Palermo
Paintings by Mario Bardi |
888371 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yana%20Tyshchenko | Yana Tyshchenko | Yana Tyshchenko (Russian: Яна Тыщенко born 1 August 2000) is a Russian professional bicycle road racer. She is a specialist in track events.
She competed at the 2021 UCI Track Champions League, 2021 UCI Track Cycling Nations’ Cup, and 2021 UCI Track Cycling World Championships.
References
2000 births
Russian cyclists
Living people |
888374 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eukene%20Larrarte | Eukene Larrarte | Eukene Larrarte Arteaga (born September 13, 1998 in Tolosa, Spain) is a Spanish professional bicycle road racer.
Life
She initially played football, but then decided to compete in cycling and joined the local team Gipuzkoa Ogi Berri.
In 2016, Larrarte won her first Spanish championship title, when she won the team pursuit together with Ane Iriarte, Ziortza Isasi and Irene Usabiaga. In 2017 she became champion in team cycling (with Leire Olaberria),in 2018 and 2019 with Tania Calvo. In addition, she became 2019 Spanish champion in the Omnium. At the 2020 European Track Championships, she finished fourth, with Iriarte, Isasi, Usabiaga.
At the 2021 UCI Track Cycling Nations' Cup, she achieved her first international success when she finished third in the elimination race.
References
1998 births
Spanish cyclists |
888376 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sien%20Diels | Sien Diels | Sien Diels (1 August 1947- 17 October 2021) was a Flemish actress, best known for her 36 years of collaboration on the Dutch children's programme Sesame Street..
Life
Diels graduated from the Royal Conservatory of Brussels. She started her career at the Mechels Miniatuur Teater. Later she was active as a freelance actress, including with the Theater Malpertuis company. In addition, she became a teacher at the Academy of Ninove and then at the Conservatory of Mechelen, until her retirement in 2010.
In 1975 she made the switch to television and worked on the youth series Tim. From 1976 to 2012, she was one of the regular characters in Sesame Street.
In addition, she has appeared in small roles in Thuis (2003), Witse (2004), F.C. De Kampioenen (2001), Sedes & Belli (2002-2003), Flikken (2008) and Spoed (2006). She was also a regular member of the jury of the Mini-playbackshow from 1987 to 1990.
References
1947 births
2021 deaths
Actors |
888379 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portrait%20of%20Catherine%20%28Amisani%29 | Portrait of Catherine (Amisani) | Portrait of Catherine Amisani (also known as Caterina) is a 19th-century painted with measures centimeters 100x70, in oil by the italian painter Giuseppe Amisani, made in 1920 his part of the collection of Museum Uffizi in Palazzo Pitti (inventory number 00652421).
Related pages
Uffizi
Giuseppe Amisani
Bibliography
Carlo Sisi, Alberto Salvadori, Galleria d'arte moderna di Palazzo Pitti: catalogo generale, Volume 2, Galleria d'arte moderna (Florence, Italy), Ed. Sillabe, 2008, ISBN 8883474740, 9788883474743
Ettore Spalletti, Le Collezioni del Novecento, 1915-1945: presentazione antologica: Firenze, Galleria d'arte moderna di Palazzo Pitti, 30 dicembre 1986-30 giugno 1987, Ed. Centro Di, 1986
References
Other websites
Giuseppe Amisani, Ritratto di Caterina Amisani, Museo degli Uffizi, Firenze, Galleria d'Arte Moderna, Numero catalogo generale 00652421
20th-century paintings
Paintings in Milan
Paintings by Giuseppe Amisani |
888401 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/2002%20UEFA%20European%20Under-19%20Championship%20squads | 2002 UEFA European Under-19 Championship squads | Players born on or after 1 January 1983 were available to participate in the tournament. Players' age as of 21 July 2002 – the tournament's starting day. Players in bold have later been capped at full international level.
Group A
Head Coach : Josef Krejča
Head couch : Bjørn Hansen
Head Coach : Peter Polák
Head Coach : Iñaki Sáez
Group B
Head Coach : Marc Van Geersom
Head Coach: Martin Hunter
Head Coach: Uli Stielike
Head Coach : Brian Kerr
Footnotes
UEFA European Under-19 Championship squads |
888402 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/2003%20UEFA%20European%20Under-19%20Championship%20squads | 2003 UEFA European Under-19 Championship squads | Players born on or after 1 January 1984 were available to participate in the tournament. Players' age as of 16 July 2003 – the tournament's starting day. Players in bold have later been capped at full international level.
Group A
Head coach: Paolo Berrettini
Head Coach : Ralf Loose
Head coach: Egil Olsen
Head coach: Carlos Alberto Lopes Dinis
Group B
Head Coach : Paul Gludovatz
Head Coach : Michal Bílek
Head coach: Stuart Baxter
Head Coach : René Girard
Footnotes
UEFA European Under-19 Championship squads |
888405 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/2004%20UEFA%20European%20Under-19%20Championship%20squads | 2004 UEFA European Under-19 Championship squads | Players born on or after 1 January 1985 were available to participate in the tournament. Players' age as of 13 July 2004 – the tournament's starting day. Players in bold have later been capped at full international level.
Group A
Head coach: Marc Van Geersom
Head coach: Paolo Berrettini
Head coach: Pierre-André Schürmann
Head coach: Pavlo Yakovenko
Group B
Head coach: Dieter Eilts
Head coach: Andrzej Zamilski
Head coach: José Armando Ufarte
Head coach: Gündüz Tekin Onay
Footnotes
UEFA European Under-19 Championship squads |
888412 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark%20Wills | Mark Wills | Mark Wills is an American country singer. In 1999 he had his first number one song on Hot Country Songs music chart.
Early life
He was born on August 8, 1973 in Blue Ridge, Georgia.
Discography
Singles
"I Do (Cherish You)" (1998)
Sources
Country musicians from Georgia (U.S state)
People from Georgia (U.S. state) |
888419 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bruce%20Hornsby | Bruce Hornsby | Bruce Hornsby is an American singer and songwriter. In 1986 Bruce Hornsby and the Range had a number one song on music charts in the United States, Canada and the Netherlands.
Early life
Hornsby was born on November 23, 1954 in Williamsburg, Virginia.
Awards and nominations
{| class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders"
|-
! scope="col" | Award
! scope="col" | Year
! scope="col" | Nominee(s)
! scope="col" | Category
! scope="col" | Result
! scope="col" class="unsortable"|
|-
! scope="row" rowspan=3|ASCAP Pop Music Awards
| 1988
| "The Way It Is"
| rowspan=3|Most Performed Songs
|
|
|-
| 1990
| rowspan=2|"The End of the Innocence"
|
|
|-
| 1991
|
|
|-
!scope="row" rowspan=13|Grammy Awards
| 1987
| Bruce Hornsby & the Range
| Best New Artist
|
| rowspan=13|
|-
| rowspan=3|1990
| "The Valley Road"
| Best Bluegrass Recording
|
|-
| rowspan=2|"The End of the Innocence"
| Song of the Year
|
|-
| Record of the Year
|
|-
| 1991
| "Across the River"
| Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal
|
|-
| 1994
| "Barcelona Mona"
| rowspan=3|Best Pop Instrumental Performance
|
|-
| 1995
| "The Star Spangled Banner"
|
|-
|rowspan=2|1996
| "Song B"
|
|-
| "Love Me Still"
| Best Song Written for Visual Media
|
|-
| 2000
| "Song C"
| rowspan=3|Best Pop Instrumental Performance
|
|-
| 2005
| "Song F"
|
|-
| 2007
| "Song H"
|
|-
| 2009
| "Is This America?"
| Best Country Instrumental Performance
|
|-
!scope="row"|MTV Video Music Awards
| 1987
| "The Way It Is"
| Best New Artist in a Video
|
|
|-
!scope="row" rowspan=3|Pollstar Concert Industry Awards
| 1987
| rowspan=2|Bruce Hornsby & the Range
| rowspan=2|Next Major Arena Headliner
|
|
|-
| rowspan=2|1988
|
| rowspan=2|
|-
| Tour
| Small Hall Tour Of The Year
|
Sources
Living people
1954 births
Singers from Virginia |
888421 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attempted%20assassination%20of%20Asari%20Giichi | Attempted assassination of Asari Giichi | On 8 March 1974, a 22-year-old ethnically Japanese man called Yagi Tatsumi tried to kill the mayor of Shiraoi, Hokkaido, Asari Giichi (浅利義市) in the mayor's office, managing to stab him in the neck. According to Tatsumi, the murder attempt was done to protest what he considered to be the mistreatment of the indigenous Ainu people of Hokkaido. The incident occured amidst a larger of anti-Japanese terrorist attacks performed by pro-Ainu organizations like the East Asia Anti-Japan Armed Front.
Giichi survived the attempt, and Tsatsumi was stopped. However, far-left violence in Japan failed to cease. A similarly-intentioned arson attack in the September of that same year in Shiraoi.
References
Hokkaido Prefecture
History of Japan |
888422 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20country%20musicians%20from%20Florida | List of country musicians from Florida | This is a list of famous country musicians from Florida, USA.
Slim Whitman (d. 2013)
Lari White (d. 2018)
Pam Tillis (born 1957)
The following other musicians have had at least one number one song or album on country music charts: Jake Owen, Michael Ray, Chase Rice.
Sources
Florida
|Florida |
888424 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sandy%20Iannella | Sandy Iannella | Sandy Iannella (born 6 April 1987) is an Italian footballer who plays as a striker for Sassuolo. She used to play for Livorno and Torres.
Iannella was released by Cuneo. She then joined Sassuolo on 7 August.
She played on the women's u19 national team and the senior national team.
Competitions won
2 leagues: 2010, 2011
2 national cups: 2008, 2011
References
1987 births
Living people
Italian footballers |
888428 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laurie%20Carter | Laurie Carter | Laurie A. Carter is president of Lawrence University. Before becoming president of Lawrence in 2021, she was president of Shippensburg University.
Academic background
Ms. Carter graduated from Clarion State College (now Clarion University) in 1984. She majored in communications. She got a Master of Arts degree in communications from William Paterson College in 1987. In 1993, she earned her Doctor of Law degree at Rutgers University.
References
Living people |
888429 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/2022%20FIFA%20World%20Cup%20qualification | 2022 FIFA World Cup qualification | The 2022 FIFA World Cup qualification is the qualifying tournament that decides 31 out of the 32 teams that will play in the 2022 FIFA World Cup, with the hosts who qualified automatically, Qatar.
Different tournaments were held by each of FIFA's six confederations. The qualifiers started on 6 June 2019 and is planned to end in June 2022. The first match played was between Mongolia and Brunei and the first goal was scored by Norjmoogiin Tsedenbal, a Mongolian player. The qualifiers has had many delays due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Qualified teams
Qualification process
FIFA's six continental confederations have their own qualifying tournaments. All 211 associations are able to enter qualification. Qatar, qualified automatically because they are the hosts. Qatar still plays in the first two rounds of AFC qualification because it is also qualification for the 2023 AFC Asian Cup. The previous World Cup champions France will participate in qualification as normal. North Korea withdrew from qualification due to safety concerns of the COVID-19 pandemic and all the matches they played were cancelled. Saint Lucia, American Samoa and Samoa also withdrew from the qualifiers.
The amount of available World Cup slots for each confederation was discussed by the FIFA Executive Committee on 30 May 2015 in Zürich. The committee decided that the slots would be the same as 2018.
CAF (Africa): 5
AFC (Asia): 4 or 5 (not including Qatar, the hosts)
UEFA (Europe): 13
CONCACAF (North and Central America and Caribbean): 3 or 4
OFC (Oceania): 0 or 1
CONMEBOL (South America): 4 or 5
Hosts: 1
Summary of qualification
Confederation qualification
AFC
The opening two rounds was also qualification for the 2023 AFC Asian Cup. That means, Qatar, only plays in the first two rounds of qualifying.
The qualification format is:
First round: 12 teams (ranked 35–46) played home-and-away over two legs. The six winners advanced to the second round.
Second round: 40 teams (ranked 1–34, including Qatar the hosts, and the six winners from the first round) were divided into eight groups of five teams to play home-and-away round-robin matches. The seven group winners and the five best group runners-up advanced to the third round and also qualified for the 2023 AFC Asian Cup. Qatar finished as winners in their group, so the fifth-best runners-up advanced to the third round instead.
Third round: The 12 teams that advanced from the second round were divided into two groups of 6 teams to play home-and-away round-robin matches. The top two teams of each group will qualify for the World Cup. The third-placed teams of each group will advance to the fourth round.
Fourth round: The two third-placed teams in each group from the third round will play against each other in a single match to decide which team advances to the inter-confederation play-offs.
Current stage (third round)
CAF
The qualification format is:
First round: 28 teams (ranked 27–54) played home-and-away over two legs. The fourteen winners advanced to the second round.
Second round: 40 teams (teams ranked 1–26 and fourteen first round winners) were divided into ten groups of four teams to play home-and-away round-robin matches. The ten group winners advanced to the third round.
Third round: The ten teams that advanced from the second round will play home-and-away over two legs. The five winners will qualify for the World Cup.
Current stage (third round)
Qualified teams
CONCACAF
The qualification format is:
First round: CONCACAF teams ranked 6 to 35 in the July 2020 FIFA Rankings were drawn into six groups with five teams in each group and played single round-robin matches (two home and two away), the six group winners advanced to the second round.
Second round: The six first-round group winners played in two-legged home-and-away games. The three winners advanced to the final round.
Third round: The three second round winners joined the top five CONCACAF teams (Mexico, United States, Costa Rica, Jamaica and Honduras) The top three teams qualify for the World Cup, and the fourth-placed team advances to the inter-confederation play-offs.
Current stage (third round)
CONMEBOL
The qualification format is:
All ten CONMEBOL teams will play in a league of home-and-away round-robin matches. The top four teams qualify for the World Cup, and the fifth-placed team advances to the inter-confederation play-offs.
Current stage
OFC
The qualification format is:
Qualification match: A single-legged match between the two lowest-ranked OFC teams. The winner will advance to the group stage.
Group stage: 8 teams (teams ranked 1–7 and one qualification match winner) was divided into two groups of four teams to play round-robin matches in one venue. Each team will play each other once. First and second place from each group advanced the final stage.
Final stage: 4 teams will play in a semi-finals. The 2 winners play against each other in the final. The winner advances to the inter-confederation play-offs.
Current stage (qualification match)
UEFA
The qualification format is:
First round (group stage): Ten groups of either five or six teams with group winners qualifying for the World Cup finals. The four teams in the 2021 UEFA Nations League Finals (France, Belgium, Italy, and Spain) were put into the smaller groups.
Second round (play-off stage): The ten group runners-up are joined by the best two Nations League group winners, based on the Nations League overall ranking, that finished outside the top two of their qualifying group. These twelve teams were drawn into three play-off paths, playing two rounds of single-match play-offs (semi-finals with the seeded teams to host, followed by finals, with the home teams to be drawn), with the three path winners qualifying for the World Cup.
First round (group stage): Ten groups of either five or six teams. The 10 group winners qualify for the World Cup.
Second round (play-off stage): The ten group runners-up are joined by the best two Nations League group winners, that did not finish top two of their group in the first round. These twelve teams were drawn into three play-off paths, playing two rounds of single-match play-offs (semi-finals and finals). The three path winners qualify for the World Cup.
Final positions (first round)
Second round
Inter-confederation play-offs
There will be two inter-confederation play-offs to determine the final two qualification spots for the World Cup. They are scheduled to be played in Qatar on 13–14 June 2022.
AFC v CONMEBOL
CONCACAF v OFC
Goalscorers
Below are goalscorer lists for each confederations and the inter-confederation play-offs:
AFC
CAF
CONCACAF
CONMEBOL
OFC
UEFA
Inter-confederation play-offs
Notes
References
2022 FIFA World Cup |
888431 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/S%C3%A1muel%20Major | Sámuel Major | Sámuel Major (born 9 January 2002) is a Hungarian professional footballer. He plays as a midfielder for Austrian Bundeliga club FC Admira Wacker Mödling and the Hungary U21 national team. He also played for the FC Red Bull Salzburg U19 team in the 2019-20 and 2021-2022 season of the UEFA Youth League.
Career
Major started his career with Debreceni VSC. 2017 he went to FC Red Bull Salzburg Academy where he played for the U15, U16 and U18. In 2020 he went on to FC Liefering. In January 2022 he was transfered to the Austrian Bundesliga club FC Admira Wacker Mödling.
National team
He was part of the Hungarian U-17 team at the 2019 UEFA European Under-17 Championship and 2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup.
Honours
FC Liefering
Runner-up
Austrian Football First League: 2021
FC Red Bull Salzburg Academy
Austrian Youth League U18 Champion: 2019, 2021
References
2002 births
Living people
Hungarian footballers
Association football midfielders
Players of FC Liefering
Association football forwards
FC Red Bull Salzburg players |
888432 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/2021%E2%80%9322%20UEFA%20Champions%20League%20group%20stage | 2021–22 UEFA Champions League group stage | The 2021–22 UEFA Champions League group stage began on 14 September 2021 and ended on 9 December 2021. A total of 32 teams played in the group stage to decide the 16 spots in the knockout phase of the 2021–22 UEFA Champions League.
Sheriff Tiraspol made their first appearance in the group stage. They were also the first team from Moldova to play in the Champions League group stage.
Draw
The draw for the group stage was held on 26 August 2021, 18:00 CEST (19:00 TRT), in Istanbul, Turkey. The 32 teams were drawn into eight groups of four. The teams were seeded into four pots, with eight teams in each, based on:
Pot 1 contained the Champions League and Europa League title holders, and the champions of the top six associations based on their 2020 UEFA country coefficients.
Pot 2, 3 and 4 contained the remaining teams, seeded based on their 2021 UEFA club coefficients.
Teams from the same association, and due to political reasons, teams from Ukraine and Russia, could not be drawn into the same group. The following pairings were announced by UEFA after the group stage teams were confirmed:
A Chelsea and Manchester City
B Atlético Madrid and Sevilla
C Inter Milan and Juventus
D Bayern Munich and Borussia Dortmund
E Lille and Paris Saint-Germain
F Real Madrid and Barcelona
G Manchester United and Liverpool
H Porto and Benfica
I Shakhtar Donetsk and Dynamo Kyiv
J RB Leipzig and VfL Wolfsburg
K Atalanta and Milan
On each matchday, one set of four groups played their matches on Tuesday, while the other set of four groups played their matches on Wednesday, with the two sets of groups alternating between each matchday. The fixtures were decided after the draw, using a computer draw not shown to public. Each team would not play more than two home matches or two away matches in a row, and would play one home match and one away match on the first and last matchdays (Regulations Article 16.02). This arrangement was different from previous seasons, where the same two teams would play at home on the first and last matchdays.
Teams
Below are the participating teams (with their 2021 UEFA club coefficients), grouped by their seeding pot. They include:
26 teams which entered in this stage
6 winners of the play-off round (4 from Champions Path, 2 from League Path)
Notes
Format
In each group, teams played against each other home-and-away in a round-robin format. The top two teams of each group advanced to the round of 16. The third-placed teams were transferred to the Europa League knockout round play-offs, while the fourth-placed teams were eliminated from European competitions for the season.
Tiebreakers
Teams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss). If two or more teams were tied on points, the following tiebreaking criteria were applied, in the order given, to determine the rankings (see Article 17 Equality of points – group stage, Regulations of the UEFA Champions League):
Points in head-to-head matches among the tied teams;
Goal difference in head-to-head matches among the tied teams;
Goals scored in head-to-head matches among the tied teams;
If more than two teams were tied, and after applying all head-to-head criteria above, a subset of teams were still tied, all head-to-head criteria above were reapplied exclusively to this subset of teams;
Goal difference in all group matches;
Goals scored in all group matches;
Away goals scored in all group matches;
Wins in all group matches;
Away wins in all group matches;
Disciplinary points (direct red card = 3 points; double yellow card = 3 points; single yellow card = 1 point);
UEFA club coefficient.
Due to the abolition of the away goals rule, head-to-head away goals were no longer applied as a tiebreaker starting from this season. However, total away goals were still applied as a tiebreaker.
Groups
The fixtures were announced on 27 August 2021, the day after the draw. The matches were played on 14–15 September, 28–29 September, 19–20 October, 2–3 November, 23–24 November, and 7–8 December 2021. The scheduled kick-off times were 18:45 (two matches on each day) and 21:00 (remaining six matches) CET/CEST.
Times were CET/CEST, as listed by UEFA (local times, if different, are in parentheses).
Group A
Group B
Group C
Group D
Group E
Group F
Group G
Group H
Notes
References
Other websites
Fixtures and Results, 2021–22, UEFA.com
2021–22 group stages |
888439 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arab%20Belt | Arab Belt | The Arab Belt () was the Syrian Baath government's project of of the north of the Al-Hasakah Governorate to change the demographics of the Kurdish regions of Syria in favor of the Arabs.
Background
The regions in the "Arab Belt" are rich in oil deposits and good agricultural land. About 50 to 60 percent of the Syrian petroleum caves are estimated to be located in the district of Al-Malikiyah.
Planning
The Baath party came to power in 1963 in Syria and decided in 1965 to build the 350 km long and 10-15 km wide Arabian belt along the Syria–Turkey border. The Belt stretched from the Iraqi border in the east to Ras al-Ayn (Kurdish: Serê Kaniyê) in the west. After another coup within the Baath party, Hafez al-Assad succeeded in becoming the head of Syria in 1970 and began to act on the plan in 1973. The project's name was officially changed to "Plan for the establishment of state model farms in the Jazira province".
Displacement
41 Arab villages were built during the project, and all the Kurdish village names of the area were replaced by Arabic names. About 4,000 Arab families from the provinces of Al-Raqqa and Aleppo, where they had previously lost their houses by the construction of the Tabqa dam, were housed in the new villages. These Arabs are named Maghmurin (مغمورين Maġmūrīn, which is affected by flooding). As a result, about of Kurdish cultivated land were taken away and given to the newly settled Arabs. The original plan would also forcibly send about 140,000 Kurds to the southern deserts at Al-Raad. Although the government took away the Kurds' right to live in the area, the Kurds refused to move away and give up their houses. Those Kurds who had been declared foreigners were not allowed to have property, to repair houses, or to build new houses.
References
20th century in Syria
Kurdistan
Ethnic groups in Syria |
888446 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Way%20of%20the%20Dragon | The Way of the Dragon | The Way the Dragon is a 1972 Hong Kong martial arts action-comedy film written, co-produced and directed by Bruce Lee, who also stars in the lead role. The film co-stars Bruce Lee, Nora Miao, Riccardo Billi (also co-execitive producer), Paul Wei, Huang Chung-hsin, Tony Liu, Unicorn Chan, Chuck Norris, Malisa Longo, Robert Wall, Hwang In-shik, Jon T. Benn.
Bruce Lee formed his own production company, A Concord Production, with Golden Harvest founder Raymond Chow, and The Way of the Dragon was the company's first film.
References
Other websites
1972 movies
1970s action movies
Hong Kong movies
Concord Production Inc. movies
Bruce Lee |
888448 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fadew | Fadew | Fadew (Formerly FadewblogsEverhard, J. T. (April 2018). Blogger threatened over anit-Islamic article published online. American Atheist, (Second quarter), 23–24. before February 2022) is a British magazine. It was founded in 2017. It was started by entrepreneur Shoaib Rahman. The publication is run from London, England. It publishes content about religion, atheism, science, philosophy, secularism, etc. The publication was rebranded as Fadew in February 2022. Fadew is published from Bradford with the subtitle: Stories that matter.
References
External links
Official website
Official newsletter
Fadewblogs old website
Websites
Magazines of the United Kingdom
Websites established in the 2010s
Bradford
News media |
888450 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free%20Inquiry | Free Inquiry | Free Inquiry is a secular journal founded in 1980. It was founded by philosopher Paul Kurtz. The journal is published in every two months. It covers different topics about secularism and humanism.
References
1980 establishments in the United States |
888454 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hellbillies | Hellbillies | Hellbillies is a rock band from Norway. In 1993, the band got the award Spellemannprisen in the class Country-rock for the album Pela Stein.
Discography
Singles
"Gamle Bry'n" (1993)
"Blå Dag" [blue day] (2020)
Studio albums
Sylvspente Boots [boots with silver buckles] (1992)
Pela Stein (1993)
Lakafant (1995)
Drag (1996)
Sol Over Livet (1999)
Urban Twang (2001)
Niende (2004)
Spissrotgang (2007)
Leite etter Lykka (2010)
Tretten (2012)
Søvnlaus (2016)
Blå Dag (2021)
References
Norwegian musical groups
Rock bands |
888456 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plectrohyla%20acanthodes | Plectrohyla acanthodes | The thorny spikethumb frog (Plectrohyla acanthodes) is a frog that lives in Mexico and Guatemala. Scientists have seen it between 2200 and 2250 meters above sea level in Guatemala and between 1700 and 1500 meters above sea level in Mexico.
References
Frogs
Animals of North America |
888460 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ctenochasma | Ctenochasma | Ctenochasma (meaning "comb jaw") is a genus of Upper Jurassic pterosaur of the suborder Pterodactyloidea. Their fossilized remains have been found in the Solnhofen limestone of Bavaria, Germany, and a couple of other sites laid down in the late Jurassic period.
The teeth were a filter-feeding apparatus: the pterosaurs strained out algae or small invertebrates from stagnant tropical waters, as flamingoes do today. This kind of life is mirrored by another pterosaur genus, Pterodaustro, which had an active pumping mechanism to push water through its teeth.
References
Pterosaurs |
888466 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20country%20musicians%20from%20Iowa | List of country musicians from Iowa | This is a list of famous country musicians from Iowa, USA.
Don Everly (d. 2021), grew up in Iowa
The following other musicians have had at least one number one song or album on a national music chart: Sarah Darling.
The following other musicians have had 4 singles or albums on the Billboard country music charts: Shannon Brown.
Sources
Iowa
Iowa |
888467 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silvio%20Poma | Silvio Poma | Silvio Poma (Trescore Balneario, 1840 - Turate, 21 October 1932) was an Italian painter.
Biography
He participates as a volunteer in the II War of Independence and, later, he embarks on military life, but in 1866 he takes leave of the army after contracting malaria. On his return to Milan he attended the studios of Giovan Battista Lelli and Gerolamo Induno, both painter-soldiers with whom he had come into contact during the military campaign of 1859 . He made his debut at the Fine Arts Exhibition of Brera in 1869, but the first official awards came only in the middle of the following decade: in 1876 he won the Mylius prize of the Accademia di Belle Arti di Brera with a canvas of historical subject set in a large natural context of romantic taste entitled Macbeth meets in the Dunscinane wood the massacres that predict his throne; in 1877 one of his landscapes was purchased at the National Exhibition of Naples by Vittorio Emanuele II. He was buried in the Cimitero Maggiore di Milano, where his remains were later collected in a cell.
The public purchase by King Vittorio Emanuele II for his private collection will give him international fame among the royal families of the era.
Museums
Galleries of Piazza Scala, Milan
Royal Museum of the House of Savoy
Exhibition
Fine Arts Exhibition of Brera Academy, 1881
National Exhibition of Milan of 1883
Rome Exhibition of 1883
Turin Exhibition of 1884
National Exhibition of Milan of 1886
Venice Exhibition of 1887
Bologna exhibition of 1888
Bologna Exhibition of 1888, with Lierna's View of Bellagio (named as La Punta di Bellagio)
Fine Arts Exhibition of Accademia di Brera, 1869
National Exhibition of Naples, 1877
References
Elena Lissoni, Silvio Poma, online catalogue Artgate by Fondazione Cariplo, 2010, CC BY-SA (source for the first revision of this article).
Other projects
19th-century Italian painters
1840 births
1932 deaths
20th-century Italian painters |
888469 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gro%C3%9Fhabersdorf | Großhabersdorf | Großhabersdorf is a municipality in Fürth, Bavaria, Germany. As of 2006 it had a population of 4,271.
Town twinning
Święciechowa, Poland
Aixe-sur-Vienne, France
Malinska (Croatia)
References
Other websites
Official Website
Fürth (district) |
888471 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Langenzenn | Langenzenn | Langenzenn is a town in Fürth, in Bavaria, Germany. It is 15 km west of Fürth.
The town is on the river Zenn and has a population of 10.339 people (31. December 2012).
Geography
It belongs to Fürth near Nürnberg and is in the Rangau.
Neighbouring Towns:
Wilhermsdorf (6,3 km)
Großhabersdorf
Cadolzburg (7,36 km)
Veitsbronn (6,29 km)
Puschendorf (4,41 km)
Emskirchen (8,19 km)
Hagenbüchach (4,41 km)
References
Other websites
Official Website
TSV Langenzenn
Fürth (district) |
888472 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilhermsdorf | Wilhermsdorf | Wilhermsdorf is a municipality in Fürth in Bavaria in Germany. As of 2020 it has a population of 5,479. It is twinned with Feld am See in Austria and Jahnsdorf, also in Germany.
Neighboring municipalities
Wilhermsdorf borders
Emskirchen
Langenzenn
Großhabersdorf
Dietenhofen
Neuhof an der Zenn
Markt Erlbach
References
Fürth (district) |
888473 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Puschendorf | Puschendorf | Puschendorf is a municipality in Fürth in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Fürth (district) |
888474 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oberasbach | Oberasbach | Oberasbach is a municipality in Fürth, in Bavaria, Germany. It is 6 km southwest of Fürth, and 10 km west of Nuremberg (centre).
Stadtrat
The local council has 24 members.
The election in 2014 showed the following results:
9 seats (CSU)
9 seats (SPD)
3 seats (Free voters)
2 seats (The Greens)
1 seat (FDP)
Twin towns
Oberasbach is twinned with:
Niederwürschnitz, Germany
Oława, Poland
Riolo Terme, Italy
Personalities
Steffen Weinhold, (born 1986), handball player
Deniz Aytekin, (born 1978), football referee
Maurice Müller, (born 1992), soccer player
Related pages
References
Fürth (district) |
888475 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obermichelbach | Obermichelbach | Obermichelbach is a municipality in Fürth in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Fürth (district) |
888477 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ro%C3%9Ftal | Roßtal | Roßtal is a market town in Fürth, Bavaria, Germany. As of 2020 it had a population of 10,127.
References
Other websites
Fürth (district) |
888478 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seukendorf | Seukendorf | Seukendorf is a municipality in Fürth in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Fürth (district) |
888479 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stein%2C%20Bavaria | Stein, Bavaria | Stein (East Franconian: Schdah) is a town in Fürth, in Bavaria, Germany. It is 7 km south of Fürth, and 7 km southwest of Nuremberg (centre).
Geography
Stein is in the metropolitan area Nürnberg/Fürth/Erlangen in Middle Franconia, Bavaria and is a part of the district of Fürth. It is next to Nuremberg in the north-west and is on the left bank of the river Rednitz. Neighboring municipalities are Nuremberg, Rohr, Roßtal, Zirndorf and Oberasbach.
Stein is divided into 11 districts:
References
Fürth (district) |
888481 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuchenbach | Tuchenbach | Tuchenbach is a municipality in Fürth in Bavaria in Germany.
Geography
Tuchenbach is about 20 Kilometer west of Nuremberg. The closest villages are Obermichelbach, Veitsbronn, Puschendorf and the town of Herzogenaurach. The altitude is 345 Meters. The area of Tuchenbach is 6.50 km2
References
Other websites
http://www.tuchenbach.de/
http://www.sportfreunde-tuchenbach.de/
http://www.tc-tuchenbach.de/
Fürth (district) |
888482 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zirndorf | Zirndorf | Zirndorf () is a town, which is part of Fürth. It is in northern Bavaria, Germany in the Regierungsbezirk of Middle Franconia.
Neighbouring municipalities
The following towns and municipalities share borders with Zirndorf; they are listed in clockwise order, starting in the north:
Fürth
Oberasbach
Stein
Roßtal
Ammerndorf
Cadolzburg
References
Other websites
Official Website
Fürth (district) |
888483 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aichen | Aichen | Aichen is a municipality in Günzburg in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Settlements in Günzburg (district) |
888484 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aletshausen | Aletshausen | Aletshausen is a municipality in Günzburg in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Settlements in Günzburg (district) |
888485 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balzhausen | Balzhausen | Balzhausen is a municipality in Günzburg in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Settlements in Günzburg (district) |
888487 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bibertal | Bibertal | Bibertal is a municipality in Günzburg in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Other websites
Official site
Settlements in Günzburg (district) |
888488 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breitenthal | Breitenthal | Breitenthal is a municipality in Günzburg in Bavaria in Germany. The Oberrieder Weiher, a in the region Mittelschwaben popular greenbelt recreation area, is in the municipal area of Breitenthal.
References
Settlements in Günzburg (district) |
888489 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mittelschwaben | Mittelschwaben | Mittelschwaben is a part of the Bavarian administrative region Swabia. It consists of the districts Günzburg, Neu-Ulm, Unterallgäu and the district-free town Memmingen.
The name Mittelschwaben was created in the 19th century to tell apart the Bavarian parts of Oberschwaben from the Baden-Württembergian.
Borders
in the west (to the Baden-Württembergian Oberschwaben): the river Iller
in the north (to the Donauried): the southern border of the Danube-valley
in the east (to the Stauden, Reischenau and Holzwinkel, the three parts of the Augsburg-Westliche Wälder Nature Park): the rivers Mindel and Flossach
in the south (to the Allgäu): the terminal moraines of the Würm glaciation
Swabia (Bavaria) |
888490 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sennacherib | Sennacherib | Sennacherib was the king of the Neo-Assyrian Empire from 705BC until his death in 681BC. He features in the Hebrew Bible. During his time as king, he destroyed the city of Babylon in 689BC and changed the capital city to Nineveh.
7th-century BC deaths |
888493 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cooper%20Barnes | Cooper Barnes | Cooper Barnes is a British-born American actor, writer, producer, and director. He plays Ray Manchester (Captain Man) in the Nickelodeon television series, Henry Danger and reprised the role for its spinoff series Danger Force.
Biography
Barnes was born in England and grew up in the US state of Michigan, where he attended Northville High School until 1997. Later, he moved to Los Angeles, dedicating himself professionally to acting.
From 2001 he started getting small film and television roles. He has appeared in various hit series such as Californication, Cold Case - Unresolved Crimes, Good Luck Charlie, Pair of Kings, Switched at Birth - In your place, Jessie and Suburgatory. Since 2014, he has also played the main role of Captain Man (aka Ray Manchester), co-star of the Nickelodeon series, Henry Danger.
Credits
Trivia
Of all the main cast, he is the only one that worked on a previous Dan Schneider show, for he did an appearance on the episode "Terror on Cupcake Street".
He also played Vance on Disney's Kickin' It.
His favorite episodes are Tears of the Jolly Beetle, The Space Rock, Spoiler Alert, and Henry Danger: The Musical.
He is married to Liz Stewart. Together they have one daughter named Ripley.
The Shirt that Cooper wore in the episode The Danger Begins is the same shirt that he wore to the Kids Choice Awards in 2017.
He is one of only two main actors (the other is Ella Anderson) to portray another character in addition to their regular role on Henry Danger.
He has been collecting comics for 32 years.
He has no sense of smell.
He is an only child.
Links
Cooper Barnes' IMDb
Cooper Barnes' Twitter
Cooper Barnes' Facebook
Cooper Barnes' Instagram
Cooper Barnes' YouTube
Actors |
888494 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal%20Television | Universal Television | Universal Television LLC (abbreviated as UTV) is an American television production company that is a subsidiary of Universal Studio Group, a division of Comcast's NBCUniversal. It serves as the network television production arm of NBC; a predecessor of the company previously assumed such functions, and a substantial portion of the company's shows air on the network. It was formerly known as Revue Studios, Universal Pictures Television Department, Universal-International Television, Studios USA Television LLC, Universal Network Television, Universal Domestic Television, NBC Universal Television Studio, and Universal Media Studios. Re-established in 2004, both NBC Studios and the original Universal Television are predecessors of the current Universal Television, formerly known as NBC Universal Television Studio and Universal Media Studios.
Happy Tree Friends and Nirvana is the punk holding banner responsible for a majority of the Geffen sound library. As an official part of the Universal Pictures library, they are part of the company's record unit, Universal Music Group.
Shows produced
References
Other websites
NBCUniversal
Companies based in New York City
1940s establishments in New York (state)
1950s establishments in New York (state)
2000s establishments in New York (state)
Peabody Award winners |
888498 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power%20Rangers%20Super%20Samurai%2C%20The%20Movie%3A%20Clash%20of%20the%20Red%20Rangers | Power Rangers Super Samurai, The Movie: Clash of the Red Rangers | Power Rangers Super Samurai: Clash of the Red Rangers: The Movie (also known as Power Rangers: Clash of the Red Rangers) is a 2011 american movie that is the movie special of Power Rangers Super Samurai. It was directed by Jonathan Tzachor and written by James W. Bates. It aired on Nick on November 26, 2011 and on DVD on March 7, 2013.
Plot
The Samurai Rangers team up with the mysterious RPM Ranger Red to fight off dual threats from Master Xandred's Mooger army and a robotic super villain.
Cast
Alex Heartman as Jayden Shiba, the Red Samurai Ranger
Erika Fong as Mia Watanabe, the Pink Samurai Ranger
Hector David Jr. as Mike Fernandez, the Green Samurai Ranger
Najee De-Tiege as Kevin Douglas, the Blue Samurai Ranger
Brittany Anne Pirtle as Emily Stewart, the Yellow Samurai Ranger
Eka Darvile as Scott Truman, Ranger Operator Series Red
Jeremy Birchall as Antonio Garcia, the Gold Samurai Ranger
Rene Naufahu as Mentor Ji
Jeff Szusterman as Master Xandred and Octoroo
Cameron Rhodes as Professor Cog
Derek Judge as Serrator
Geoff Dolan as Sergeant Tread
John Dybvig as General Gut
Dean Young as Sharkjaw
Campbell Cooley as Narrator
2011 movies
American movies |
888499 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hacker%20T.%20Dog | Hacker T. Dog | Hacker T. Dog is a dog puppet who appears on the children’s TV channel CBBC in the United Kingdom..
British children's television series |
888507 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eddy%20Jozefzoon | Eddy Jozefzoon | Eddy Jozefzoon ( 8 December 1937 Ganzee – 3 October 2021 Paramaribo) was a Surinamese politician and adviser. He was politically active in the 1960s and 1970s.
Over the decades, he served as an advisor to Jungle commando leader Ronnie Brunswijk, Vice President Robert Ameerali, President Desi Bouterse and Vice President Ronnie Brunswijk.
Life
Eddy Jozefzoon graduated with a doctorate in philosophy. In the sixties he wrote for the government the program Logical Thinking. In the run-up to the 1969 elections, he participated in the campaign of the Progressive National Party bloc .
In the 1980s he was an advisor to Ronnie Brunswijk, the leader of the Jungle Commando.
On 27 September 2011, together with Jules Wijdenbosch and Errol Alibux, he was appointed adviser to the Bouterse I cabinet.
Eddy Jozefzoon died on 3 October 2021.
References
1937 births
2021 deaths |
888508 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marie-Louise%20Bemelmans | Marie-Louise Bemelmans | Maria Louise "Marie-Louise" Bemelmans-Videc (9 April 1947 in Brunssum – 29 August 2021 in Leiden) was a Dutch politician and professor. From 8 June 1999 to 7 June 2011, she was a member of the Senate on behalf of the Christian Democratic Appeal party. She was awarded Knight in the Order of Orange-Nassau.
Bemelmans-Videc graduated from Leiden University and Erasmus University Rotterdam. From 1992 to 2011, she was professor of public administration at Radboud University Nijmegen.
References
Other websites
Biography, Parlement.com
1947 births
2021 deaths
Christian Democratic Appeal politicians
Dutch academics
Dutch Roman Catholics
Dutch women politicians
Members of the Senate of the Netherlands
Politicians from Limburg (Netherlands) |
888509 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bubesheim | Bubesheim | Bubesheim is a municipality in Günzburg in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Settlements in Günzburg (district) |
888511 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hsu%20Mei-chu | Hsu Mei-chu | Hsu Mei-chu (born 1 August 1966) is a Taiwanese professional tennis player.
She competed at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, California.
She competed at the 1991 Taipei Open.
References
1966 births
Tennis players
Living people |
888512 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burgau | Burgau | Burgau is a town in Günzburg in Swabia, Bavaria. Burgau is on the river Mindel, and has a population of just under 10,000.
References
Other websites
History of the coat of arms of Burgau
Settlements in Günzburg (district) |
888513 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burtenbach | Burtenbach | Burtenbach is a municipality in Günzburg in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Settlements in Günzburg (district) |
888515 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deisenhausen | Deisenhausen | Deisenhausen is a municipality in Günzburg in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Settlements in Günzburg (district) |
888516 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/D%C3%BCrrlauingen | Dürrlauingen | Dürrlauingen is a municipality in Günzburg in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Settlements in Günzburg (district) |
888518 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ebershausen | Ebershausen | Ebershausen is a municipality in Günzburg in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Settlements in Günzburg (district) |
888519 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ellzee | Ellzee | Ellzee is a municipality in Günzburg in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Settlements in Günzburg (district) |
888521 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gundremmingen | Gundremmingen | Gundremmingen is a municipality in Günzburg in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Settlements in Günzburg (district) |
888522 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosa%20Mar%C3%ADa%20Flores%20Buend%C3%ADa | Rosa María Flores Buendía | Rosa María Flores Buendía is a Mexican pelotari. She competed at the 1992 Summer Olympics. and 2019 Pan American Games.
During the 1990 Basque Pelota World Championship, the 1994 Basque Pelota World Championship and the 1998 Basque Pelota World Championship she won the gold medal in the frontenis specialty with Miryam Muñoz Cadena.
In the Basque Pelota World Championship of 2006, she won the bronze medal with Ariana Yolanda Cepeda de la Mora.
References
Olympians |
888523 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haldenwang | Haldenwang | Haldenwang is a municipality in Günzburg in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Settlements in Günzburg (district) |
888524 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ichenhausen | Ichenhausen | Ichenhausen is a town in Günzburg, in Bavaria, Germany. It is on the river Günz, 9 km south of Günzburg.
References
Other websites
Jewish history of Ichenhausen (German)
Settlements in Günzburg (district) |
888525 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jettingen-Scheppach | Jettingen-Scheppach | Jettingen-Scheppach is a market community in Günzburg Landkreis in the Schwaben (Swabia) Regierungsbezirk in Bavaria. It is between Ulm and Augsburg. Its population as of 1 December 2005 was 7,044.
References
Other websites
Jettingen-Scheppach's official website
Settlements in Günzburg (district) |
888526 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kammeltal | Kammeltal | Kammeltal is a municipality in Günzburg in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Settlements in Günzburg (district) |
888527 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/K%C3%B6tz | Kötz | Kötz is a municipality in Günzburg in Bavaria in Germany.
Famous people
Dennis Chessa, footballer for Bayern Munich II
References
Settlements in Günzburg (district) |
888528 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/H%C3%BCrben%20%28Krumbach%29 | Hürben (Krumbach) | Hürben, today the eastern part of Krumbach in Bavarian Swabia, was an independent village before it was in the neighbouring town of Krumbach in the year 1902. The Kammel was in most parts of the border between Krumbach and Hürben.
Gallery
Villages in Bavaria
Settlements in Günzburg (district) |
888530 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Krumbad | Krumbad | Krumbad is a traditional spa in Swabia, Germany at the foot of Alps.
Related pages
List of oldest companies
Krumbach, Bavaria
Other websites
Homepage
Profile on Gesundes Bayern
Spa towns in Germany
Settlements in Günzburg (district) |
888531 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Landensberg | Landensberg | Landensberg is a municipality in Günzburg in Bavaria, Germany.
References
Settlements in Günzburg (district) |
888532 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leipheim | Leipheim | Leipheim is a town in Günzburg, in Bavaria, Germany. It is on the Danube, west of Günzburg, and northeast of Ulm. The village Riedheim and Weissingen are districts of Leipheim. Since 1993, Leipheim has been twinned with the Hungarian town Fonyód.
References
Settlements in Günzburg (district) |
888533 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/M%C3%BCnsterhausen | Münsterhausen | Münsterhausen is a municipality in Günzburg in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Settlements in Günzburg (district) |
888534 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neuburg%20an%20der%20Kammel | Neuburg an der Kammel | Neuburg is a municipality in Günzburg in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Settlements in Günzburg (district) |
888535 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Offingen | Offingen | Offingen is a municipality in Günzburg in Bavaria in Germany.
It has a population of 4,241 residents.
Offingen is in the Donauried between Ulm and Donauwörth on the Danube and Mindel. The Ulm–Augsburg railway line crosses the town.
References
Settlements in Günzburg (district) |
888536 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sandra%20Timmerman | Sandra Timmerman | Alexandra Lamberta Johanna (Sandra) Timmerman ( 23 March 1964 Enschede – 11 July 2021 Zwolle) was a Dutch singer and theatre performer.
Life
She sang with her family, Gert and Hermien Timmerman. Later they performed as a duo under the name Sandra & Sheila. In 1992 Timmerman posed with her sister for Playboy.
She focused more on the theatre. In 2007 she won the Concours de la Chanson of the Alliance Française. In 2009 she made her debut with her theatre show Een Nieuwe Liefde. In 2012, she had one of the leading roles in a German musical Yva about the life of Elsa 'Yva' Neuländer.
Works
Sandra Timmerman, Circuskind, Soesterberg: Aspekt B.V., 2018. ()
References
1964 births
2021 deaths |
888537 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rettenbach%2C%20Swabia | Rettenbach, Swabia | Rettenbach is a municipality in Günzburg in Bavaria in Germany. The following Gemarkungen exist: Harthausen, Remshart, Rettenbach.
References
Settlements in Günzburg (district) |
888538 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/R%C3%B6fingen | Röfingen | Röfingen is a municipality in Günzburg in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Settlements in Günzburg (district) |
888539 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thannhausen | Thannhausen | Thannhausen () is a town in Günzburg, in Bavaria, Germany. It is on the river Mindel, southeast of Günzburg, and west of Augsburg.
References
Settlements in Günzburg (district) |
888540 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ursberg | Ursberg | Ursberg is a municipality in Günzburg in Bavaria in Germany.
Nearby is Ursberg Abbey, a former Imperial Abbey of the Holy Roman Empire.
Notable residents
Theo Waigel, former Chairperson of the Christian Social Union of Bavaria party and Federal Minister of Finance of Germany.
References
Settlements in Günzburg (district) |
888543 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waldstetten%2C%20Bavaria | Waldstetten, Bavaria | Waldstetten is a municipality in Günzburg in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Settlements in Günzburg (district) |
888548 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raffaele%20Casnedi | Raffaele Casnedi | Raffaele Casnédi (September 26, 1822 – December 29, 1892) was an Italian painter and scenic designer, active mainly in Milan.
He was born to Pietro Casnedi and Angela Spaini. Despite his parent's objections, he attended the Accademia di Brera from 1840 to 1850. There he studied under Sogni and Luigi Sabatelli. In 1852, he won the Mylius prize for the fresco of The school of Leonardo painted in a lunette for the Accademia. He interned in Rome, where he befriended the landscape artist Costa. He returned to Milan, and joined the Brera in 1856, and as professor of design in 1860.
He is best known for his frescoes and religious canvases conserved at the churches (in Valmadrera, Besana, Rho, San Pietro in Novara, and Palombara). For example, in the parochial church of Santi Pietro e Paolo in Luino, he painted, among other works, the four evangelists in the spandrels of the dome. In collaboration with Giuseppe Bertini, he painted the curtain or sipario (1861–1863) at the Teatro alla Scala with The Fables Atellanae. Among the pupils at the Brera of Casnédi (as well as Bertini and Hayez) were the Scapigliatura artists: Pietro Bouvier and Francesco Didioni, and the Divisionists, Angelo Morbelli and Giovanni Sottocornola. Bartolomeo Giuliano was one of his assistants.
Sources
Treccani encyclopedia entry
Note
1822 births
1892 deaths
People from Milan
19th-century Italian painters |
888554 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indianapolis%20metropolitan%20area | Indianapolis metropolitan area | Indianapolis–Carmel–Anderson or Indianapolis metropolitan area is an 11-county metropolitan area in the U.S. state of Indiana, as defined by the Office of Management and Budget. It in Central Indiana, within the American Midwest.
Indianapolis, Indiana
Metropolitan areas of the United States |
888558 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ali%20Mabkhout | Ali Mabkhout | Ali Ahmed Mabkhout Mohsen Al Hajeri (; born 5 October 1990) is a professional association football player who plays for Al Jazira and the United Arab Emirates national team.
He used to play in the youth system, and played his first game out of the youth system for Al Jazira in 2009.
Club career
Mabkhout played in the AFC Champions League for the first time against Al Ittihad on 22 April 2009, after coming on as a substitute. On 19 May 2009, he scored his first Asian Champions League goal in the 49th minute against Esteghlal. The game ended in a 2–2 draw.
International career
In the 2015 AFC Asian Cup quarter-finals, Mabkhout scored the first goal against Japan to make it 1–0 and it was played at Stadium Australia in Sydney. He also scored in the penalty shootout against Japan. UAE ended up winning 5–4 in penalties.
On 10 October 2019, Mabkhout scored a hat-trick against Indonesia in a 5–0 win. He then became the highest goalscorer on the national team.
Career statistics
Club
International
Honours
Al Jazira
UAE Pro League: 2010–11, 2016–17, 2020–21
UAE President's Cup: 2010–11, 2011–12
Etisalat Emirates Cup: 2009–10
United Arab Emirates U23
GCC U-23 Championship: 2010
Asian Games silver medal: 2010
United Arab Emirates
Arabian Gulf Cup: 2013
AFC Asian Cup third place: 2015
Individual
UAE Pro League top scorer: 2016–17, 2020–21
Arabian Gulf Cup top scorer: 2014, 2019
AFC Asian Cup top scorer: 2015
AFC Asian Cup Team of the Tournament: 2015, 2019
References
Other websites
1990 births
Living people
Association football forwards
Footballers at the 2012 Summer Olympics
2019 AFC Asian Cup players
Emirati people |
888562 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muhammad%20Talab%20Hilal | Muhammad Talab Hilal | Muhammad Talab Hilal (; ) was a Syrian politician, officer, and government official. He was a cabinet minister in the Ba'athist government of Yusuf Zuayyin and continued to be a cabinet minister in later governments. Before that, he was governor of Hama. Before that, Hilal was the chief of police in al-Hasakah. While he was a chief of police, Hilal wrote a book on Syria's Jazira region (part of Mesopotamia). This book was important for the Syrian government's plan for the "Arab Belt" ethnic cleansing programme in Syrian Kurdistan.
Hilal completed his National, Political, and Social Study of the Province of Jazira on 13 November 1963. This book said that the Syrian government should begin the "Arab Belt" programme. Hilal wrote that the government should force Kurdish people who lived near the borders between Syria and Turkey and between Syria and Iraq to move. Then, the government could move Arab people into the area to take their lands. The Arab Belt ethnic cleansing programme began in 1973 and continued until 1976. The government accepted Hilal's plan in 1965. When Hilal's National, Political, and Social Study of the Province of Jazira became public in 1968, the Syrian government claimed that these were only Hilal's ideas. The Arab Belt programme did not begin before 1973 because the government had not yet built the . In 1975, after the dam was complete, the government moved 4000 Arabs of the Walda tribe from the valley of the Euphrates into the "Arab Belt" area.
References
Notes
References
Syrian military people
Syrian politicians |
888563 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eran%20Zahavi | Eran Zahavi | Eran Zahavi (or Zehavi, ; born 25 July 1987) is an Israeli professional footballer who plays as an attacking midfielder or as a striker. He plays on PSV Eindhoven and the Israel national team.
Zahavi won Israeli Footballer of the Year twice (2013 and 2014), and finished as the top goalscorer of the Israeli Premier League for three seasons in a row (2013–14 29 goals, 2014–15 27 goals and 2015–16 35 goals, all-time league record). In 2016, he broke the Israeli league sixty-year-old record, scoring the most goals in a single season, beating the 1954–55 record. He was named the 2017 Chinese Super League MVP, and broke the league's single-season scoring record in 2019. Zahavi has played for the national team since 2010, earning over 65 caps.
Career statistics
Club
International
Scores and results list Israel's goal tally first, score column indicates score after each Zahavi goal.
Honours
Club
Hapoel Tel Aviv
Israeli Premier League: 2009–10
Israel State Cup: 2009–10, 2010–11
Maccabi Tel Aviv
Israeli Premier League: 2012–13, 2013–14, 2014–15
Israel State Cup: 2014–15
Toto Cup: 2014–15
PSV Eindhoven
Johan Cruyff Shield: 2021
Individual
Israeli Premier League Most Assists: 2010–11
Footballer of the Year in Israel: 2013–14, 2014–15
Israeli Premier League Top Goalscorer: 2013–14, 2014–15, 2015–16
Israeli Premier League Player of the Month: December 2014
2015–16 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase Top Scorer: 7 goals
Chinese Super League MVP: 2017
Chinese Super League Top Scorer: 2017, 2019
Chinese Super League Team of the Year: 2017, 2019
References
Other websites
1987 births
Living people
Israeli Jews
Israeli footballers
Association football midfielders
Association football forwards |
888565 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xoraxane%20Roma | Xoraxane Roma | The Xoraxane pronounced Horahane), or Turkish Gypsies, is a religious umbrella term for Muslim Roma people from the Balkans, Turkey, Northern Cyprus or Crimea, but descendants live in different parts of the eorld. They converted to Sunni Islam during the Ottoman Empire to avoid paying the jizya. Some of them are Bektashi or belong to another Sufi tarika. Men are circumcised, which is a major event for them. The meaning of Xoraxane, a synonym for Muslim, means Turkish in the Romani language, regardless of the country in which they live in or their subgroup or even whether they speak Turkish. Muslim Roma who lost knowledge of their subgroup are are called only Xoraxane Roma.
Some Xoraxane have married Non-Romani people. In Bulgaria, Greece, Northern Cyprus, Turkey and Romania (Dobruja), many Xoraxane deny being Roma, speak only Turkish in there own dialect, have a strong Turkish identity by cultural assimilation into Turkish society and declare themselves as only Turks. However, some speak sldo Xoraxane Romani dialects, like in Thrace, Greece.
The Egyptians Act 1530 and the Egyptian Act of 1554 expelled Roma people from England. There were 10,000 of them who went to the Ottoman Empire and became Muslims.
Their descendants noe call themselves Egyptians.
In countries once belonging to Yugoslavia, many Xoraxane Roma hide there Romani heritage too and speak only Albanian or one of the several South Slavic languages. A few also speak Turkish.
Under the Ottoman Empire, the so-called Turkoman Muslim Gypsies, a subgroup of the Xoraxane that adopted a Turkish identity, forgot Romani, and spoke Ottoman Turkish, were settled into Bulgaria and Romania.
A group of nomadic Xoraxane went from Bulgaria to Iran under the reign of Nader Shah and became Shia Muslim. Still living in Iran, the Zargari tribe speaks their own Romani language, which is heavily influenced by words from Azerbaijanu and Farsi.
During the Greek War of Independence (1821–1829), the Crimean War (1853–1856), the Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878), the Balkan Wars (1912-1913), World War I (1914-1918), and the Treaty of Lausanne (1923), many Xoraxane and other non-Romani Muslims were expelled from Bulgaria and Greece and other parts of the Balkans and settled in Turkey.,,
In Turkey and the former Yugoslavia, some Roma Muslims came to Germany and Austria in the 1960s and the 1970s as so-called guest workers. Dome of the Romani men married German or Austrian women and had children.
In Crimea, several different groups of Muslim Roma have lived there since the time of the Crimean Khanate. Most of them speak Crimean Tatar language and consider themselves to be Crimean Tatars.
Most Muslim Roma live in these countries:
Turkey
Albania
Bulgaria
Romania (Dobruja)
Greece (Western Thrace)
Montenegro
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Kosovo
Northern Cyprus
North Macedonia
Iran
Crimea
References
Islam |
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