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896727 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nanto%2C%20Toyama | Nanto, Toyama | is a city in Toyama Prefecture, Japan.
Geography
Surrounding municipalities
Toyama Prefecture
Oyabe
Tonami
Toyama
Ishikawa Prefecture
Hakusan
Kanazawa
Gifu Prefecture
Hida
Shirakawa
Population
From Japanese census data,
References
External links
Official website
Cities in Japan
Settlements in Toyama Prefecture |
896729 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dominik%20Szoboszlai | Dominik Szoboszlai | Dominik Szoboszlai ( born 25 October 2000) is a Hungarian footballer He plays as a midfielder for club RB Leipzig in the German Bundesliga and the Hungary national team.
Club career
He played for the youth youth of Videoton, Főnix-GOLD, Újpest Dosza and MTK Budapest. 2016 he went to Austria and played for the Red Bull Academy.
Liefering
Szoboszlai made his professional debut in the 2017–18 season with the Liefering in the second division against Kapfenberg on 21 July 2017. He scored his first professional goal against FC Blau-Weiß Linz on 4 August 2017.
Red Bull Salzburg
He made his debut for FC Red Bull Salzburg against Austria Wien on 27 May 2018. He substituted Enock Mwepu in the 57th minute. He scored his first goal for the club in 6–0 Austrian Cup win against SC Eglo Schwarz His first league goal he scored against Wacker Innsbruck on 17 March 2019. On 17 September 2019 he made his Champions League debut and scored his first goal in this competition against Genk in a 6–2 victory.
RB Leipzig
On 17 December 2020he signed a four-and-a-half-year contract with RB Leipzig. With a price of €20 million, Szoboszlai became the most expensive Hungarian player in history. Due to an injury he could not play in the 2020–21 season. He debuted on 7 August 2021 in a German Cup game against SV Sandhausen where he entered the pitch in the 78th minute and scored three minutes later. On 20 August, he scored his first two goals in Bundesliga in a 4–0 win over VfB Stuttgart.
International career
Szoboszlai was the captain of Hungary U17 team during the 2017 UEFA European Under-17 Championship in Croatia. There he scored two goals and his team finished 6th in this tournament. He also was the captain of Hungary U19 team during the 2019 UEFA European Under-19 Championship campaign. He made his debut for U-21 team against Germany U21 on 1 September 2017. He made his debut for the senior squad on 21 March 2019 in a Euro 2020 qualifier against Slovakia as a 54th-minute substitute for László Kleinheisler. He scored his first international goal against the same opponent, Slovakia, in the same UEFA Euro 2020 run in a free kick at home.
He scored in yet another free kick in the 2020–21 UEFA Nations League B against Turkey, where Hungary emerged victoriously 1–0 away against Turkey in Sivas.
Career statistics
Club
International
Scores and results list Hungary's goal tally first, score column indicates score after each Szoboszlai goal.
Honours
Red Bull Salzburg
Austrian Bundesliga: 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021
Austrian Cup: 2018, 2019, 2021
Individual
Austrian Football Second League Team of the Season: 2017–18
Austrian Football Bundesliga Player of the Season: 2019–20
Hungarian Sportsman of The Year: 2020
Bundesliga Rookie of The Month: August 2021, October 2021, November 2021
References
2000 births
Living people
Hungarian footballers
Association football midfielders
Players of FC Liefering
FC Red Bull Salzburg players |
896731 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rejuvenation | Rejuvenation | Rejuvenation is the reversal of ageing.
Approach
Ageing is the accumulation of cellular and molecular damage on the body. If this damage can be repaired, it is rejuvenation.
The SENS Research Foundation founded by Aubrey de Grey classified seven types of damages that lead to ageing. The organization also proposed strategies for repairing these (Strategies for engineered negligible senescence).
References
Medicine |
896740 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caisis | Caisis | Caisis is an ope-source patience management application. It was initially released in 2012 under GNU General Public License V2 license for Windows platform.
History
The software was started from a project at the Department of Urology in Memorial Sloan–Kettering Cancer Center and later developed at BioDigital.
References
Software |
896742 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oyabe%2C%20Toyama | Oyabe, Toyama | is a city in Toyama Prefecture, Japan.
Geography
Surrounding municipalities
Toyama Prefecture
Nanto
Takaoka
Tonami
Ishikawa Prefecture
Kanazawa
Tsubata
Population
From Japanese census data,
References
Other websites
Official website
Cities in Toyama Prefecture |
896744 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duje%20Caleta-Car | Duje Caleta-Car | Duje Ćaleta-Car ( born 17 September 1996) is a Croatian professional footballer He plays as a centre-back for Ligue 1 club Marseille and the Croatia national team. He was a member of the Croatian squad which ended as runners-up to France in the 2018 FIFA World Cup.
Club career
He started with his local club HNK Šibenik. Then he went on to FC Pasching in Austria. Ćaleta-Car joined FC Liefering in 2014 on loan from Red Bull Salzburg.. He made his Austrian Football First League debut with FC Liefering on 25 July 2014 against FAC Team für Wien.
Red Bull Salzburg
From 2015 till 2028 he played for FC Red Bull Salzburg 84 matches with four goals in the Austrian Bundesliga. 2017-18 he was part of the team which reached the Europa-League semifinals.
Olympique de Marseille
On 20 July 2018 Ćaleta-Car went to Olympique de Marseille on a five-year deal for a transfer fee of €19 million. Upon his arrival, Ćaleta-Car was given the squad shirt number 15. On 29 September 2019 he scored his first goal for Marseille, the equalizer in a 1–1 draw with Rennes.
International career
He played for Croatia U17, U18, U19 and U21 national football team. In October 2015, Ćaleta-Car received a first call-up for the senior national team for the Euro 2016 qualifying matches against Bulgaria and Malta. He was in the first 27 players team called for the Euro 2016 but was dropped.
In May 2018, he was named in Croatia's preliminary 32-man squad for the 2018 World Cup in Russia. On 3 June he made his international debut in a friendly match against Brazil, coming on as a substitute for Vedran Ćorluka in the 52nd minute.
Ćaleta-Car was selected in the 23-man squad that travelled to the 2018 FIFA World Cup in Russia. He made his World Cup debut in Croatia's final group game, a 2–1 win over Iceland. Croatia finish second in the tournament.
Personal life
He is married and father of a son.
Career statistics
Club
International
Scores and results list Croatia's goal tally first, score column indicates score after each Ćaleta-Car goal.
Honours
Club
Red Bull Salzburg
Austrian Bundesliga:2015, 2016, 2017, 2018
Austrian Cup: 2015, 2016, 2017
International
Croatia
FIFA World Cup runner-up: 2018
References
1996 births
Living people
Croatian footballers
Association football defenders
Players of FC Liefering
FC Red Bull Salzburg players |
896747 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/DHIS | DHIS | District Health Information Software (DHIS) is an open-source software to compile reports and do analysis of health related data.
History
It was developed by Health Information Systems Programme with the coordination of the Department of Informatics at the University of Oslo. It is globally supported by a number of organizations including NORAD, PEPFAR, The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, UNICEF and the University of Oslo.
Software |
896748 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gapo | Gapo | Gapo is a social networking platform which is headquerted at Hanoi, Vietnam. It also offers its user to pay online and access various public services.
History
It was established in 2019 by Hà Trung Kiên and Duong Vi Khoa.
References
Software |
896749 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bolt%20%28web%20browser%29 | Bolt (web browser) | Bolt was a mobile web browser for smartphones and feature phones that runs on Java ME. It was developed by Bitstream Inc. and released in 2009. However, it was discontinued at the end of 2011.
Web browsers |
896751 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/UC%20Browser | UC Browser | UC Browser is a mobile web browser. It was banned in India in 2020 for privacy issues and also banned in China in 2021 due to complaints of showing deceptive medical advertisements.
History
UC Browser was originally developed for Java ME smartphones in 2004 by UCWeb which is a subsidiary of the Alibaba Group. It is now available for Android, iOS, BlackBerry OS, Java ME, Symbian, Windows Phone, and Microsoft Windows platform.
References
Web browsers
Microsoft Windows software |
896761 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compulsive%20hoarding | Compulsive hoarding | Compulsive hoarding (also known as a hoarding disorder) is a psychiatric health issue (ICD-11, 2018). It refers to higher than usual difficulty discarding one's own possessions or materials, even when they're of no special value. This usually happens in residences (homes, rental property and townhouses) where there are too many items and not enough room, cabinets, or containers in which to store things. Also, those who hoard do not want to get rid of the items. That is especially true with old unneeded items.
Hoarding vs. collections
Hoarding isn't the same as collecting. The difference between the two is collectors are more likely to get possessions and valuable material in a targeted, organized and intentional way. Those who hoard often have an obsession and hardly any active planning. The mere sight of the objects may cause this. The objects do not really have any consistent theme. Collectors of objects have narrow focus on particular (or same/similar) topics. One of the signs of hoarding problems is heavy, disorganized clutter.
Related psychiatric health and finance problems
Hoarding is usually, though not always, connected to depression, intellectual disability (having IQ levels 70 and below), borderline intelligence (IQ levels from 71 to 85), anxiety disorders, autism spectrum disorders, attention deficit hyperactivity disorders (ADHD) and obsessive compulsive disorder.
Other reasons for which someone may hoard include:
Not deciding on where (or how) to throw away materials
Social isolation from other people
Not wanting others to touch their things
Hoarding dangers
Hoarding can sometimes lead to places being condemned. Property tenants are then removed when health department officials, building inspectors or the fire marshals become involved. Hoarding may also increase fire risk and attract insects (including cockroaches, ants, centipedes, maggots and spiders).
References
Anxiety disorders |
896770 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jackson%20Hole%20Aerial%20Tram | Jackson Hole Aerial Tram | Jackson Hole Aerial Tram (also known as Jackson Hole Musical Tram) is an aerial tramway located at Jackson Hole Mountain Resort in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. The tram takes people to the top of the Rendezvous Mountain at the resort, located just north of downtown Jackson, Wyoming.
Wyoming |
896776 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avtandil%20Jorbenadze | Avtandil Jorbenadze | Avtandil Jorbenadze is a Georgian doctor, politician. former State Minister of Georgia. He was minister before Rose Revolution in Georgia. He also held position of health minister.
References
East, R. and Thomas, R. (2003). Profiles of People in Power:The World's Government Leaders, page 190. Routledge. , 9781857431261.
Government ministers of Georgia (country)
KGB officers
1951 births
Living people
20th-century politicians from Georgia (country)
21st-century politicians from Georgia (country) |
896782 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazi%20concentration%20camp%20badge | Nazi concentration camp badge | Nazi concentration camp badges were colored pieces of fabric used by the Nazis to identify concentration camp prisoners during World War II.
Prisoners had to sew these badges onto their uniform jackets and pants. The badges used a color coding system to show why each prisoner had been sent to the camp. Different colors and shapes had different meanings. The prisoners were required to wear these badges of shame.
The badges helped guards assign tasks to the prisoners. If a prisoner's badge marked them as an escape suspect, the SS would not allow them to work outside the camp fence. If a prisoner had an F on their badge (meaning they were French), guards could force them to help translate instructions to new prisoners from France. If a guard looked at a prisoner and saw a green badge, the guard knew right away that the person was a convicted criminal. Guards often assigned these "green triangles" to be kapos. These were prisoners who were assigned to help the SS run the camps. Many kapos used abuse and violence to control other prisoners.
Some historical monuments use images of these identification badges to symbolize the victims of the concentration camps.
Today, some people use a pink triangle emblem to symbolize gay rights.
Badge coding system
Different camps used different systems of badges. In the later stages of World War II, the use of badges became less common in some camps. The following description is based on the badge coding system used in the Dachau concentration camp. This camp had one of the more detailed coding systems.
Most badges were inverted triangles. (This meant the widest part of the triangle was at the top of the shape, not the bottom.) The Nazis chose this shape because it looked like triangular road hazard signs that are common in Germany.
Single triangles
Single triangles of different colors identified different types of prisoners.
Black triangles
The Nazis made many different types of prisoners wear black triangles. The black triangle identified people who the Nazis called 'asocial' () or 'work-shy' (). These included alcoholics, drug addicts, homeless people, beggars, people with disabilities, prostitutes, lesbians, pacifists, and people who refused to be conscripted into the German armed forces.
Black triangles also marked Roma and Sinti people. They wore the black triangle with a Z on it (for , meaning Gypsy). Romani men were later assigned a brown triangle. However, Romani women always wore black triangles. The Nazis believed many stereotypes about Romani women. They thought these women were petty criminals (prostitutes, kidnappers, and fortune tellers). For this reason, the Nazis never stopped calling Romani women "asocial." Many of these women were forcibly sterilized.
The Nazis also used the black triangle to identify people with mental illnesses and "mentally disabled" people. Written on their badges was the word , which means "stupid." This category included people with autism. (At that time, autism was called Asperger's Syndrome, named after Austrian pediatrician Hans Asperger, who was involved with the Nazis). People with schizophrenia and epilepsy also wore black triangles. Instead of being sent to concentration camps, many people in this group were forcibly sterilized, shot, or gassed in psychiatric institutions as part of the T4 Euthanasia Program.
Other people with disabilities, like diabetes, also had to wear the black triangle. (The Nazis thought that diabetes was a 'Jewish disease.' There was no evidence for this claim. Instead, it was a result of antisemitism in medicine, science, and culture.)
Red triangles
Red triangles identified political prisoners. These included:
Social democrats
Liberals
Socialists
Communists
Anarchists
Trade unionists
Freemasons
Non-Jews who helped Jewish people
Green triangles
Green triangles identified convicts and criminals (who often worked as kapos).
Blue triangles
Blue triangles identified foreign forced laborers and emigrants from Nazi-controlled countries. This category included apatrides (stateless people, who were not citizens of any country). Spanish refugees from Francoist Spain belonged to this category. Because these people did not support the dictatorship of Francisco Franco, the Spanish government cancelled their citizenship.
Purple triangles
Purple triangles identified the Nazis' religious enemies. Over 99% of these people were Jehovah's Witnesses. Members of other small pacifist religious groups also wore purple triangles.
Pink triangles
Pink triangles usually identified homosexual men and others who the Nazis called homosexual (like bisexual men and transgender women). The Nazis also used pink triangles to identify sexual offenders, paedophiles, and zoophiles. The Nazis forcibly sterilized many people in this group.
Uninverted red triangles
Uninverted red triangles identified several groups of people:
Enemy prisoners of war (called , meaning 'special detainee')
Spies and traitors (called , meaning 'activities detainee')
Military deserters or criminals (, meaning 'service member')
Double triangles
The Nazis used double-triangle badges to identify Jewish prisoners. These badges were made of two overlapping triangles. These two triangles formed a Star of David, a Jewish symbol.
A red inverted triangle superimposed upon a yellow one represented a Jewish political prisoner.
A green inverted triangle superimposed upon a yellow one represented a Jewish habitual criminal.
A purple inverted triangle superimposed upon a yellow one represented a Jehovah's Witness of Jewish descent.
A pink inverted triangle superimposed upon a yellow one represented a Jewish "sexual offender", usually a gay or bisexual man.
A black inverted triangle superimposed upon a yellow one represented 'asocial' and 'work-shy' Jews.
A voided black inverted triangle superimposed over a yellow triangle represented a Jew convicted of miscegenation and labelled as a (race defiler).
A yellow inverted triangle superimposed over a black triangle represented an Aryan woman convicted of miscegenation and labelled as a (race defiler).
People who wore inverted pink, green, voided black, and yellow double badges were usually convicted by criminal courts before they were sent to concentration camps.
Some double-triangle badges identified non-Jews. For example, at Mauthausen, Spanish Republicans had to wear a blue inverted triangle superimposed upon a red one.
Distinguishing marks
In addition to color-coding, non-German prisoners were marked by the first letter of the German name for their home country or ethnic group. Red triangle with a letter, for example:
B identified Belgians ()
E stood for English ()
F identified French people ()
H stood for people from Holland ()
I identified Italians ()
J marked Yugoslavs ()
N identified Norwegians ()
P identified Poles ()
S marked Spanish Republicans ()
T identified Czechs ()
U marked Hungarians ()
Z (next to a black triangle) marked Roma people ()
Polish emigrant laborers originally wore a purple diamond with a yellow backing. A letter P (for Polen) was cut out of the purple cloth to show the yellow backing beneath.
Furthermore, repeat offenders (, meaning recidivists) had to wear bars over their stars or triangles. Different colors represented different crimes:
A political prisoner would have a red bar over their star or triangle.
A professional criminal would have a green bar.
A foreign forced laborer would not have a blue bar (because they would be imprisoned until the end of the war. However, these people might have a different coloured bar if they belonged to another category of prisoners.
A Jehovah's Witness would have a purple bar.
A homosexual or sex offender would have a pink bar.
An asocial would have a black bar.
Roma and Sinti would usually be incarcerated in special sub-camps until they died, so they usually did not receive a repeat stripe.
Later in the war (late 1944), to save cloth, Jewish prisoners wore a yellow bar over a regular point-down triangle to indicate their status. For instance, regular Jews would wear a yellow bar over a red triangle, while Jewish criminals would wear a yellow bar over a green triangle.
Table of camp inmate markings
Postwar use
Triangles appear on many postwar memorials to the Nazis' victims. These shapes represent the identification patches used in the camps. Sometimes, plain or colored triangles represent all categories of inmates. Often, inverted red triangles represent all victims of the concentration camps, including also the non-Jewish victims like Slavs, Poles, communists, homosexuals, Roma and Sinti, people with disabilities, Soviet POWs, and Jehovah's Witnesses.
Some Holocaust memorials use more specific triangles. An inverted pink triangle symbolizes gay victims. A yellow and/or non-inverted triangle generally stands for Jewish victims. Some monuments also include badges with nationality letters.
2020 Trump campaign
In June 2020, Donald Trump was running for re-election. His campaign posted an advertisement on Facebook which said that "Dangerous MOBS of far-left groups are running through our streets and causing absolute mayhem." The ads identified these groups as "ANTIFA" and used an image of a downward-pointing red triangle. These ads appeared on the Facebook pages of Donald Trump, the Trump campaign, and Vice President Mike Pence. Many observers compared the graphic to the symbol used by the Nazis for identifying political prisoners such as communists, social democrats and socialists. Many noted that there were 88 ads. Neo-Nazis use the number 88 as an abbreviation for the Nazi salute Heil Hitler. (The letter H is the eighth in the alphabet, so 88 stands for "HH.")
Facebook removed the campaign ads that used the red triangle symbol, saying that its use in this context violated their policy against "organized hate". The Trump campaign's communications director wrote that "The red triangle is a common Antifa symbol used in an ad about Antifa." However, the historian Mark Bray, who wrote Antifa: The Anti-Fascist Handbook, disagreed. He said that the symbol Antifa in the United States does not use this symbol.
References
Informational notes
Citations
Bibliography
Richard Plant (1988). The Pink Triangle: The Nazi War Against Homosexuals. Owl Books. .
Camp badge chart at historyplace.com.
Additional camp badge chart .
Other websites
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Classification system in Nazi concentration camps.
Stars, triangles and markings. Jewish Virtual Library.
Gay Prisoners in Concentration Camps as Compared with Jehovah's Witnesses and Political Prisoners. Ruediger Lautmann.
The Holocaust
Nazi concentration camps
Holocaust victims |
896796 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birth%20weight | Birth weight | Birth weight is the weight of a baby at birth. The average birth weight in babies of Europeans is ; the range of normal weights is from . On average, babies of south Asian and Chinese people weigh about . The birth weight of a baby is important. Babies with a low birth weight are 100 times more likely to die compared to babies with a normal one. The rates of babies with low birth weight have changed: In 1970, 7.9% had a low birth weight, in 1980, this dropped to 6.8%, in 2006, it slightly increased to 8.3% in 2006; and the current level is at 8.2%, for the year 2016. The prevalence of low birth weight has trended slightly upward from 2012 to present day.
Studies have tried to link birth weight with other conditions that occur in later life, such as diabetes, obesity, tobacco smoking, and intelligence. Low birth weight is associated neonatal infection and infant mortality.
Causes
Babies born early usually have a low bith weight. This is also the case, for babies who are small; very often, both of these factors can be found together.
Other causes of a low bith weight are that the mother had health problems, there were some genetic factors, or problems in the placenta.
Babies who are large usually have a high birth weight. Babies who are large for their age also have a higher risk of dying as infants.
Things that influence birth weight
Genetics
To some extent, birth weight is heritable: If their parents had a low birth weight the babies may also have one. (This is the same for a high birth weight). The heritability of birth weight ranges from 25-40 %. There is a complex relationship between a baby's genes and the maternal environment that the child is developing in. Foetal genes influence how the fetus grows in the womb, and the genes of the mother influence how the environment affects the growing fetus.
Health of the mother
The health of the mother during pregnancy can affect birth weight. The fact that the mother is sick during the pregnancy, or that she has a chronic condition can affect birth weight. Usually, this will lead to a lower bith weight. For example, celiac disease confers an odds ratio of low birth weight of approximately 1.8. Certain drugs, such as those used to treat high blood pressure or epilepsy can also have this effect. Other factors that affect birth weight are that if the mother is going to give birth to twins, which is called multiple births in English. Another factor that affects birth weight is the age of the mother: Girls 15 or younger, or women over 35 have a higher risk of having a child with a low birth weight.
Stress
Stressful events have significant effects on birth weight. Mothers who are exposed to stressful events during their pregnancy have a higher risk to give birth to babies with a low birth weight. This is especially true if the events happen during the first or the second trimester. Reserchers also found that stressful events that happen before conception can also have a negative effect. The same is true for women who were exposed to situations of abuse.
Environment
The environment the woman lives in can also determine the weight of the baby. One of these factors is secondhand smoke
Environmental factors, including exposure of the mother to secondhand smoke can be a factor in determining the birth weight of child. In 2014, 13% of children exposed to smoke were born with low birth weight compared with 7.5% of those children born to nonsmokers. Children born to mothers who smoked or were exposed to secondhand smoke are more likely to develop health problems earlier in life such as neurodevelopmental delays. When mothers actively smoke during pregnancy, their child is at a higher risk of being born with a low birth weight. Smoking can also be a stress management tool used by expecting mothers. There is some support for lower socioeconomic status of the parents being a determinant of low birth weight, but there is conflicting evidence, as socioeconomic status is tied to many other factors.
Neonatal care
Most babies admitted to the intensive care unit are born before 37 weeks of pregnancy or have low birth weight which is less than 5.5 pounds. They could also have a medical condition that requires special care. In the United States nearly half a million babies are born preterm. Because of this, many of these babies also have low birth weights. There are four levels of care in the neonatal care units. Intensive Care, High Dependency Care, Low Dependency, and Transitional Care are the four levels:
Intensive Care: For babies with serious problems. This includes babies born three months early and have extremely low birth weight.
High Dependency Care: For babies with less serious problems, but who still may not to be looked after or babies that are recovering from a critical illness.
Low Dependency Care: For babies that do not need a continuous supervision.
Transitional Care: For babies that still need medical treatment, but are well enough to be called for at their mother’s bedside.
Influence on the first few years of life
Children born with an very low birth weight can have significant problems during the first few years of life. They may have trouble gaining weight, obtaining adequate nutrition, and supporting a strong immune system. They also have higher risks of dying, behavior problems, and mental deficiencies. Low birth weight babies are more likely to develop the following conditions after birth compared to normal birth weight babies:
Breathing problems (infant respiratory distress syndrome)
Bleeding in the brain (intraventricular hemorrhage)
Patent ductus arteriosus (PDA)
Necrotizing enterocolitis
Retinopathy of prematurity
Jaundice
Infections
See also
Infant mortality
References
Further reading
Other websites
Fetal Growth Restriction at eMedicine
Pregnancy and childbirth
Pages with unreviewed translations |
896797 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fifth%20%28unit%29 | Fifth (unit) | A fifth is a unit of volume which was used for beverages, in the United States. It was called fifth, because it was the fifth part of a US liquid gallon. This means, that it held . In Europe, it was soon replaced by a bottle size of 750ml, which is one of the common sizes for bottles of wine, sparkling wines, but also of many liquors. The size of 750ml is sometimes called metric fifth, because it uses the metric system.
Units of volume |
896798 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/2022%20Hunga%20Tonga%20eruption%20and%20tsunami | 2022 Hunga Tonga eruption and tsunami | A very large eruption of Hunga Tonga–Hunga Haʻapai, a volcanic island of Tonga in the Pacific Ocean. It began on 14 January 2022. Hunga Tonga is north of Tongatapu, the country's main island.
The eruption caused tsunamis in Tonga, Fiji, American Samoa and parts of the Pacific Ocean. Warnings were issued in Fiji, Samoa, Vanuatu, New Zealand, Australia, Japan, Russia, the United States, Canada, Mexico, Chile and Ecuador.
Damaging tsunami waves were reported in New Zealand, the United States, Chile and Peru. It is the largest volcanic eruption of the 21st century to date.
References
2022 disasters
21st century in Oceania
January 2022 events
Tsunamis
Tonga |
896800 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hunga%20Tonga | Hunga Tonga | Hunga Tonga–Hunga Haapai is a volcanic island in Tonga. It is about south of the submarine volcano of Fonuafoou and north of Tongatapu, the country's main island
The volcano is part of the highly active Tonga–Kermadec Islands volcanic arc.
References
Tonga |
896801 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anwar%20Raslan | Anwar Raslan | Anwar Raslan () (born 3 February 1963) is a former Syrian colonel. He led a unit of Syria's General Intelligence Directorate.
In January 2022, he was convicted of crimes against humanity in a German court with. The specific charges against him were 4,000 counts of torture, 58 counts of murder, and rape and sexual coercion. His case was the first international war crimes case against a member of the Syrian government during the presidency of Bashar al-Assad.
References
Living people
1963 births
Syrian military people
People convicted of murder |
896802 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norman%20Podhoretz | Norman Podhoretz | Norman Podhoretz (; born January 16, 1930) is an American magazine editor, writer, and conservative political commentator. He was born in New York City. His views are seen as "paleo-neoconservative". He is a writer for Commentary magazine. He was the publication's editor-in-chief from 1960 to 1995.
Podhoretz studied at Columbia University and Clare College, Cambridge. He married Midge Decter in 1956. They have two childen.
References
1930 births
Living people
American editors
American political writers
American political commentators
American conservatives
Journalists from New York City |
896803 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Midge%20Decter | Midge Decter | Midge Rosenthal Decter (born July 25, 1927) is an American journalist and author. She was born in Saint Paul, Minnesota. She wrote for Commentary magazine. She also wrote articles for First Things, The Atlantic, National Review, The New Republic, The Weekly Standard, and the American Spectator.
Decter studied at the University of Minnesota and New York University. She married Norman Podhoretz in 1956. They have two children.
References
1927 births
Living people
American political writers
American conservatives
Journalists from Minnesota
Writers from Saint Paul, Minnesota |
896805 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fran%C3%A7oise%20Forton | Françoise Forton | Françoise Forton (8 July 1957 – 16 January 2022) was a Brazilian actress. She was born in Rio de Janeiro. Her career began in 1969. She was known for her telenovela roles. She appeared in Estúpido Cupido and Tieta.
Forton died on 16 January 2022 at a hospital in Rio de Janeiro from cancer, aged 64.
References
1957 births
2022 deaths
Cancer deaths in Brazil
Brazilian movie actors
Brazilian television actors
Brazilian stage actors
People from Rio de Janeiro |
896806 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nino%20Cerruti | Nino Cerruti | Nino Cerruti (25 September 1930 – 15 January 2022) was an Italian fashion designer. He also started the brand Cerruti. Soon after his father's death he ran a textile mill. He showed his first fashion collection in 1957. He was born in Biella, Italy.
Cerruti died from problems caused by hip surgery on 15 January 2022 in Vercelli, Italy at the age of 91.
References
1930 births
2022 deaths
Italian fashion designers
Deaths from surgical complications |
896808 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mar%C3%ADa%20Cristina%20Sangri%20Aguilar | María Cristina Sangri Aguilar | María Cristina Sangri Aguilar (1 January 1941 – 15 January 2022) was a Mexican politician. She was a member of the Institutional Revolutionary Party. She was on the Chamber of Deputies from 1985 to 1991. She was born in Chetumal, Mexico.
Sangri Aguilar died in Chetumal on 15 January 2022, at the age of 81.
References
1941 births
2022 deaths
Mexican politicians |
896809 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ramazan%20Rragami | Ramazan Rragami | Ramazan Rragami (3 April 1944 – 15 January 2022) was an Albanian football player and coach. He played for the Albania national team between 1965 until 1973, making twenty appearances. He also played for KF Vllaznia Shkodër, FK Partizani Tirana and KF Skënderbeu Korçë. His career began in 1960 and he retired in 2000. He was born in Shkodër, Austria.
Rragami died on 15 January 2022, at the age of 77.
References
1944 births
2022 deaths
Albanian footballers
Football managers |
896810 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexa%20McDonough | Alexa McDonough | Alexa Ann McDonough ( Shaw; August 11, 1944 – January 15, 2022) was a Canadian politician. She was born in Ottawa, Ontario. She was a member of the Nova Scotia House of Assembly between 1981 until 1995. She was a member of the Parliament of Canada between 1997 until 2007. McDonough was the Leader of the New Democratic Party between 1995 until 2003.
McDonough died on January 15, 2022 in Halifax, Nova Scotia from problems caused by Alzheimer's disease at the age of 77.
References
1944 births
2022 deaths
Deaths from Alzheimer's disease
Politicians from Ontario
People from Ottawa
People from Nova Scotia |
896811 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yuri%20Zhuravlyov%20%28mathematician%29 | Yuri Zhuravlyov (mathematician) | Yuri Ivanovich Zhuravlyov (; 14 January 1935 – 14 January 2022) was a Russian mathematician. Zhuravlev was a full member of the Russian Academy of Sciences since 1992. He was also the Editor-in-Chief of the international journal Pattern Recognition and Image Analysis.
Zhuravlyov died in Moscow, Russia on 14 January 2022, on his 87th birthday.
References
1935 births
2022 deaths
Russian mathematicians
Russian educators
Editors |
896812 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dave%20Wolverton | Dave Wolverton | John David Wolverton (May 15, 1957 – January 14, 2022), better known by his pen names Dave Wolverton and David Farland, was an American author, editor, and educator. He wrote many genres but was known best for his science fiction and fantasy works. He was known for his Runelords series.
In 1987, he won the Writers of the Future contest, and has been nominated for a Nebula Award and a Hugo Award.
Wolverton died on January 14, 2022 after falling at his home in St. George, Utah at the age of 64.
References
1957 births
2022 deaths
American novelists
Educators from Oregon
Writers from Oregon
Writers from Utah
Accidental deaths from falls in the United States |
896813 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monroe%2C%20Oregon | Monroe, Oregon | Monroe is a city in Benton County, Oregon, United States. The population was 651 at the 2018 census.
References
Cities in Oregon |
896815 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anastasia%20Voznesenskaya | Anastasia Voznesenskaya | Anastasia Valentinovna Voznesenskaya (; 27 July 1943 – 14 January 2022) was a Russian actress. She was awarded People's Artist of the Russian Federation in 1997. Her career began in 1965. Her best known role was in Major Whirlwind.
In late December 2021, Voznesenskaya tested positive for COVID-19. She died from the virus in Moscow on 14 January 2022, at the age of 78.
References
1943 births
2022 deaths
Deaths from the COVID-19 pandemic in Russia
Russian movie actors
Russian television actors
Russian stage actors
Actors from Moscow |
896816 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter%20Seabrook | Peter Seabrook | Peter John Seabrook MBE (2 November 1935 – 14 January 2022) was a British gardening writer and television broadcaster. He presented the show Gardeners' World. He wrote a gardening column in The Sun newspaper for over 40 years.
Seabrook died of a heart attack at his home in Chelmsford, Essex on 14 January 2022, at the age of 86.
References
1935 births
2022 deaths
Deaths from myocardial infarction
British television presenters
Writers from Essex |
896817 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Sainsbury%2C%20Baron%20Sainsbury%20of%20Preston%20Candover | John Sainsbury, Baron Sainsbury of Preston Candover | John Davan Sainsbury, Baron Sainsbury of Preston Candover, (2 November 1927 – 14 January 2022) was a British businessman and politician. He was the President of Sainsbury's. He was a member of the House of Lords as a life peer and member of the Conservative Party.
He became a Knight of the Garter in 1992.
Sainsbury died on 14 January 2022, at the age of 94.
References
1927 births
2022 deaths
Conservative Party (UK) people
British businesspeople |
896818 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sobibor%20extermination%20camp | Sobibor extermination camp | Sobibor (, Polish: ) was a German extermination camp during World War II. It opened in May 1942 and closed on 14 October 1943. The camp was part of Operation Reinhard, Adolf Hitler's secret plan to kill all of the Jews in Nazi-occupied Poland. Sobibor was located in the forest near the village of Sobibór, in the General Government region of central Poland.
Sobibor was an extermination camp, not a concentration camp. This meant the camp's only purpose was to murder Jews. The vast majority of prisoners were gassed within hours of arrival. People who were not killed immediately were forced to work in the camp. Few survived more than a few months. In total, some 170,000 to 250,000 people were murdered at Sobibor. Only three other camps (Belzec, Treblinka, and Auschwitz) killed more people than Sobibor.
The camp closed after a prisoner revolt, which took place on 14 October 1943. The plan for the revolt had two phases. In the first phase, teams of prisoners were to discreetly assassinate each of the SS officers who ran the camp. In the second phase, all 600 prisoners would assemble for evening roll call and would walk to freedom out the front gate. However, the plan was disrupted after only 11 of the SS officers had been killed. The prisoners had to escape by climbing over barbed wire fences and running through a field of landmines while the SS tried to shoot them with machine guns. About 300 prisoners made it out of the camp. Of these, 58 are known to have survived the war.
After the revolt, the Nazis demolished the camp and planted it over with pine trees. Sobibor got little attention in the first decades after World War II. It was rarely mentioned in popular or scholarly accounts of the Holocaust. It became better known after it was portrayed in the TV miniseries Holocaust (1978) and the film Escape from Sobibor (1987).
The Sobibor Museum now stands at the site of the camp. Archaeologists continue to investigate the site.
Background
Operation Reinhard
Sobibor was one of four extermination camps established as part of Operation Reinhard, the deadliest phase of the Holocaust. In September of 1939, the Nazis invaded and occupied Poland. After that, all across Europe, the Nazis began deporting Jews from ghettos and sending them to forced labour camps.
Building Sobibor
The first group of workers who built Sobibor were mostly local people from neighbouring villages and towns. The Nazis had ordered the Jewish council in nearby Włodawa to send 150 Jews to help build the camp. Historians do not know if these were forced labourers. Building Sobibor was a very difficult job. Workers were constantly harassed as they worked, and were shot if they showed signs of exhaustion. Most were murdered once construction was completed. However, two escaped back to Włodawa, where they tried to warn the Jewish council about the camp and its purpose. The council did not believe these warnings.
By summer of 1942, Sobibor had been completely built and was ready to open. After the camp opened, a steady stream of prisoners began to arrive.
The Nazis were constantly expanding and renovating Sobibor. After only a few months, the wooden walls of the camp's gas chambers had absorbed too much sweat, urine, blood, and excrement to be cleanable. Thus, the gas chambers were demolished in the summer of 1942, and new larger ones were built made out of brick. Later that summer, the SS also started a beautification project to make parts of the camp look nicer. They built new structures and landscaped part of the camp to make it look like a village in Tyrol, Austria. When Sobibor ceased operations in mid-1943, the SS were part way through the construction of a munitions depot known as Lager IV.
Experiments with poison gas
In December 1941, SS officials at Chełmno did the first experiments to find ways of killing Jews using poison gases. At first, the Nazis used carbon monoxide gas to kill prisoners in vans. To get the carbon monoxide gas, they used a gasoline engine. They would connect the engine's exhaust pipe to pipes that led to the van's gas chamber. Carbon monoxide poisoning would kill all of the prisoners in the van.
At the Wansee Conference on 20 January 1942, Reinhard Heydrich announced a plan for systematically murdering the Jews through a network of extermination camps. Operation Reinhard was based on this plan. In the same month, the Nazis did the first mass gassings at Auschwitz concentration camp.
In mid-April 1942, shortly before the camp opened, the Nazis did more experiments with poison gas. In one experiment, the SS murdered thirty to forty Jewish women brought from the labour camp at Krychów.
Eventually, permanent gas chambers were built at Sobibor. These were similar to the ones at Belzec, but without any furnaces.
Layout
Sobibor was surrounded by double barbed wire fences which were thatched with pine branches in order to block the view inside. At its southeast corner, it had two side-by-side gates. One was for trains; the other was for foot traffic and vehicles. The site was divided into five compounds: the Vorlager and four Lagers numbered I-IV.
The Vorlager
The Vorlager (front compound) contained living quarters and recreational buildings for the camp personnel. The SS officers lived in cottages with colorful names such as Lustiger Floh (the Merry Flea), Schwalbennest (the Swallow's Nest), and Gottes Heimat (God's Own Home). They also had a canteen, a bowling alley, a hair salon, and a dentist's office, all staffed by Jewish prisoners. Trawniki men (Soviet prisoners of war who agreed to help the Nazis) had their own separate barracks and recreational buildings, including a hair salon and a canteen.
The Nazis paid great attention to the appearance of the Vorlager. It was neatly landscaped, with lawns and gardens, outdoor terraces, gravel-lined paths, and professionally painted signs. Its beautiful appearance helped hide the camp's purpose from new prisoners, who arrived on the ramp next to the Vorlager. Survivor Jules Schelvis recalled that when he arrived at Sobibor, he felt reassured by the Vorlager's "Tyrolean cottage-like barracks with their bright little curtains and geraniums on the windowsills".
Lager I
Lager I contained barracks and workshops for the prisoners. There were workshops for sign-painting and carpentry; a tailor's workshop; a bakery; and a mechanics shop. A person could only reach Lager I by passing through the Vorlager. The Nazis built a water-filled trench on Lager I's western boundary to make it impossible for prisoners to escape there.
Lager II
Lager II was a larger compound with several purposes. The camp's administration building was in a subsection called the "Erbhof". This building was constructed before World War II; before the Nazi occupation, the local Polish forestry service had used it. The Nazis adapted this building to include living space for some SS officers; storage for things stolen from victims' luggage; and a pharmacy. The medications in the pharmacy were also taken from victims' luggage. A small farm was also located in the Erbhof. There, Jewish prisoners raised chickens, pigs, geese, fruits and vegetables for the SS officers to eat.
When prisoners first arrived at Sobibor, the SS prepared them for murder in Lager II, outside the Erbhof. This part of Lager II included the sorting barracks and other buildings used for storing items taken from the victims, including clothes, food, hair, gold, and other valuables. At the east end was a yard where guards took luggage from new arrivals and forced them to undress. This area was beautified with flower beds to hide the camp's purpose from newcomers. The yard led into a narrow path called the Himmelstrasse (road to heaven) or the Schlauch (tube), which led straight to the gas chambers in Lager III. The Himmelstrasse was covered on both sides by fences woven with pine branches.
Lager III
Lager III was the extermination area. It was kept separate from the rest of the camp, set back in a clearing in the forest and surrounded by its own thatched fence. Prisoners from Lager I were not allowed near Lager III, and were killed if the Nazis suspected that they had seen inside. Because few people who saw Lager III survived, there is little eyewitness testimony about this part of the camp. Historians know little about Lager III, except that it contained gas chambers, mass graves, and special separate housing for the Sonderkommando prisoners who worked there.
Lager IV was added in July 1943. Because it was north of the other camps, Lager IV was also called the Nordlager ('north camp'). It was located in a heavily wooded area. The Nazis wanted to develop the area as a munitions depot for processing weapons taken from captured Red Army soldiers. However, it was still being built when Sobibor closed after the prisoners' revolt.
Prisoner life in the camp
Because Sobibor was an extermination camp, very few prisoners actually lived there. While survivors of Auschwitz use the term "selected" to mean being selected for murder, at Sobibor being "selected" meant being selected to live, at least temporarily. Around 600 slave labourers were 'selected' to live and were forced to help the Nazis run the camp. Most of these slave labourers died within a few months because of the terrible conditions in the camp.
Work
Prisoners worked from 6:00 am to 6:00 pm, with a short lunch break in the middle. Sundays were supposed to be half days, but sometimes prisoners had to work all day.
The prisoner population included many labourers with specialized skills, such as goldsmithing, painting, gardening, or tailoring. The Nazis thought these prisoners were especially valuable, so they often let them live and gave them special privileges. Officially, these prisoners were allowed to live so they could do jobs that were needed in the camps. In reality, SS officers often used the prisoners' labor to benefit themselves. For example, they let Dutch Jewish painter Max van Dam live and said he would work as a sign painter. However, the SS also forced him to paint landscapes, portraits, and hagiographic images of Hitler. Similarly, Shlomo Szmajzner was placed in charge of the machine shop in order to conceal his work making gold jewelry for SS officers.
Prisoners without specialized skills did a variety of other jobs. Many worked in the Lager II sorting barracks, where they were forced to sort through luggage left behind by victims of the gas chamber. They put aside valuable items for the SS to take, and also repackaged some of these items as "charity gifts" for German civilians. The SS would also make these workers serve in the railway brigade which greeted new prisoners. This considered a relatively good job, because famished workers could often find food in the victims' luggage.
Younger prisoners commonly worked as putzers. Their job was to do cleaning and meet the needs of SS officers and the Trawniki men. Young male prisoners were often forced to work as the "barbers" who cut women's hair on their way to the gas chamber. The Nazis often assigned young men to this job in order to humiliate them the naked women whose hair they were cutting. Armed Trawniki men supervised the process in order to ensure that barbers did not respond to victims' questions or pleas.
When construction of Lager IV began in the summer of 1943, the Nazis assembled a forest commando who worked there cutting timber for heat, cooking, and cremation pyres.
The Sonderkommando
In Lager III, a special unit of Jewish prisoners called the Sonderkommando was forced to assist in the extermination process. They had to remove victims' dead bodies from the gas chamber, search their body cavities for valuables, and cremate their corpses. They also had to scrub blood and excrement from the gas chambers.
The Sonderkommando were direct witnesses to genocide. For this reason, the Nazis did not allow them to interact with other prisoners. Regularly, the SS would kill the entire unit and replace them with a new group of Sonderkommando. Since no workers from Lager III survived, nothing is known about their lives or experiences.
Resistance
Prisoners struggled with the fact that they had participated in mass murder, even though they were forced to do so and did not directly kill anyone. Many committed suicide. Others endured, finding ways to resist. Many prisoners found symbolic ways to resist the Nazis, like praying for the dead, performing Jewish religious rites, and singing songs of resistance. Other prisoners found small ways to hurt the Nazi war effort. For example, while working in the sorting shed, Saartje Wijnberg would secretly damage fine items of clothing to prevent them from being sent to Germany. Another survivor, Esther Terner, said she would sometimes find an unattended pot of soup in the Nazis' canteen. Any time this happened, "We spit in it and washed our hands in it… Don't ask me what else we did to that soup… And they ate it."
Social relations
It was difficult for prisoners to form personal relationships. Because people died so quickly at Sobibor, the camp's population was constantly changing. Also, prisoners often distrusted each other. Differences in nationality and language worsened this distrust. Many prisoners were especially suspicious of Dutch Jews because they spoke little Yiddish and had assimilated manners. German Jews faced the same suspicion as the Dutch. Many prisoners also suspected that German Jews would really be loyal to Germany, not to their fellow prisoners.
When social groups did form, they were generally based on family ties or shared nationality. They were completely closed off to outsiders. Chaim Engel was shunned by fellow Polish Jews after he began a romantic relationship with Dutch-born Saartje Wijnberg. Many prisoners from Western Europe were not trusted with important information about what was happening in the camp.
Prisoners constantly expected death. For this reason, most of them adopted a day-at-a-time outlook. Crying was rare and prisoners often spent their evenings enjoying whatever of life was left. After the war, Leon Feldhendler, who helped organize the Sobibor revolt, said: “The Jews only had one goal: carpe diem, and in this they simply went wild.” Prisoners sang and danced in the evenings. Frequently, they had sexual or romantic relations. In some situations, prisoners may have traded sex for food or items. In other situations, especially between female prisoners and kapos, the relations were probably coerced. However, others were driven by genuine bonds. Two couples that met in Sobibor were married after the war.
The Nazis allowed and even encouraged an atmosphere of merriment. They even forced prisoners to join a choir by threatening to kill them if they refused. Many prisoners thought the Nazis were trying to prevent them from resisting or thinking about escape.
Social status
Prisoners had different levels of social status in the camp. A person's social status was mostly based on how useful they were to the Germans. There were three categories of prisoners:
Artisans. Their specialized skills made them very important to the Nazis. Artisans were at the top of the prisoner hierarchy and got special privileges from the SS.
Privileged workers. These prisoners had special jobs where they could be a little more comfortable than regular workers.
The regular "drones." Most prisoners fell into this category. They did not do skilled jobs that were important to the Nazis. The Nazis viewed them as expendable (easily replaced). If the SS killed one of these prisoners, they could immediately replace that person with another prisoner. Their lives were entirely at the mercy of the SS.
Kapos also had a high social status in the camp. These were prisoners (usually criminals) chosen by the Nazis to help run the camp. Kapos did many different supervisory tasks. They also kept other prisoners under control, using whips, threats, and abuse. Prisoners were not asked if they wanted to be kapos; the Nazis simply chosen them, killing anyone who refused.
The kapos responded in many different ways to the pressures of their job. For example, Oberkapo Moses Sturm was nicknamed "Mad Moisz" for his unpredictable temperament. He would beat prisoners horrifically without provocation and then later apologize hysterically. He talked constantly of escape. Sometimes he just berated the other prisoners for not resisting the Nazis; at other times, he tried to formulate escape plans. Sturm was executed after a lower-ranking kapo named Herbert Naftaniel betrayed him. Naftaniel, nicknamed "Berliner", was promoted to Oberkapo and became a notorious figure in the camp. He viewed himself as German rather than Jewish. He terrorized other prisoners until just before the revolt. Then a group of prisoners beat him to death with the permission of SS-Oberscharfuhrer Karl Frenzel.
Although there were many divisions within the prisoner population, people found ways to support each other. Sick and injured prisoners were secretly given food, medicine and sanitary supplies stolen from the camp pharmacy. Healthy prisoners were expected to cover for sick prisoners, who would otherwise be killed. Kurt Ticho, a camp nurse, falsified his records so that sick prisoners could take more than the allowed three-day recovery period. Members of the railway brigade tried to warn new arrivals that they were going to be murdered, though few people believed them.
The most successful act of solidarity in the camp was the revolt on 14 October 1943. The revolt was planned so that all of the prisoners in the camp would have at least some chance of escape.
Notes
References
Further reading
Other websites
Stichting Sobibor, the Dutch Sobibor Foundation
Collection of interviews , from NIOD
Sobibor Museum
Nooit Voltooid Verleden Archaeological and testimonial documents
Sobibor entry at the Holocaust Research Project
Kurt Ticho testimony
Toivi Blatt testimony
Esther Raab testimony
1943 disestablishments in Europe
The Holocaust |
896820 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sean%20Rice | Sean Rice | Sean Rice (July 20, 1972 – January 14, 2022) was a Canadian pair skater. He also competed in the fours discipline. With Jodeyne Higgins. He was a two-time (1993, 1995) Canadian pairs bronze medallist and four-time (1993–1996) Canadian fours champion. Rice was born in Oakville, Ontario.
Rice died on January 14, 2022, at the age of 49.
References
1972 births
2022 deaths
Sportspeople from Ontario |
896821 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alice%20von%20Hildebrand | Alice von Hildebrand | Alice Marie von Hildebrand, GCSG (11 March 1923 – 14 January 2022) was a Belgian-born American Catholic philosopher, theologian, author, and professor. She was born in Brussels, Belgium. She taught at Hunter College. Von Hildebrand retired in 1984. She made more than 80 appearances on EWTN television programming.
Von Hildebrand died from a short-illness on 14 January 2022, at her home in New Rochelle, New York, at the age of 98.
References
1923 births
2022 deaths
Belgian philosophers
Belgian academics
Naturalized citizens of the United States
American philosophers
American theologians
American academics
Writers from Brussels |
896822 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ron%20Goulart | Ron Goulart | Ron Goulart (; January 13, 1933 – January 14, 2022) was an American popular culture historian and science fiction author.
In the early 1970s, Goulart wrote some scripts for Marvel Comics. In the early 1990s, he wrote Marvel's TekWar comics series.
Goulart died on January 14, 2022 in New Haven, Connecticut, one day after his 89th birthday.
References
1933 births
2022 deaths
American historians
American science fiction writers
American comics writers
Writers from New Haven, Connecticut
Writers from Berkeley, California |
896823 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dallas%20Frazier | Dallas Frazier | Dallas Frazier (October 27, 1939 – January 14, 2022) was an American country musician and singer-songwriter. Frazier was born in Spiro, Oklahoma. His career lasted from 1954 until 1988. His best known songs were "Elvira", "There Goes My Everything", and "Alley Oop". In 1966, he was nominated for a Grammy Award.
Frazier died on January 14, 2022 in Gallatin, Tennessee from problems caused by multiple strokes, aged 82.
References
1939 births
2022 deaths
Deaths from stroke
American country singers
American country musicians
American singer-songwriters
Musicians from Oklahoma
Singers from Oklahoma
Writers from Oklahoma
People from Bakersfield, California
Singers from Nashville, Tennessee
Writers from Nashville, Tennessee
Musicians from Nashville, Tennessee |
896825 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ra%C3%BAl%20Vilches | Raúl Vilches | Raúl Vilches More (2 October 1954 – 13 January 2022) was a Cuban volleyball player. He competed in the 1976 Summer Olympics and in the 1980 Summer Olympics. In 1976 he was part of the Cuban team which won the bronze medal in the Olympic event. He was born in Havana, Cuba.
Vilches died from cancer in Colombia on 13 January 2022, at the age of 67.
References
1954 births
2022 deaths
Cuban volleyball players
Olympic bronze medalists
People from Havana
Deaths from cancer |
896826 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baubau | Baubau | Baubau is a city in Southeast Sulawesi province, Indonesia. The population of the city was 136,991 in 2010.
References
Cities in Indonesia |
896828 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Junior%20Siavii | Junior Siavii | Saousoalii Poe Siavii, Jr. ( ; November 14, 1978 – January 13, 2022) was an American football defensive tackle in the National Football League for the Kansas City Chiefs, Dallas Cowboys, and Seattle Seahawks. His career began in 2004 and he retired in 2010.
In August 2019, he was arrested for charges related to illegal firearms in Kansas City, Missouri. Three months later, he was indicted for conspiracy and drug-trafficking charges. On July 31, 2020, he was arrested on charges of 2nd degree burglary.
Siavii died while waiting for his trial at a prison in Leavenworth, Kansas on January 13, 2022 at the age of 43.
References
1978 births
2022 deaths
American football defensive tackles
Kansas City Chiefs players
Dallas Cowboys players
Seattle Seahawks players
People who died in prison custody in the United States |
896831 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Troy%20Pickard | Troy Pickard | Troy Pickard ( 1973 – 13 January 2022) was an Australian politician. He was the mayor of the City of Joondalup from 2006 to 2017. He was President of the Western Australian Local Government Association from 2010 to 2015 and president of the Australian Local Government Association from 2014 to 2016.
Pickard died suddenly on 13 January 2022, at the age of 48.
References
1973 births
2022 deaths
Politicians from Western Australia
Mayors |
896832 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Israel%20S.%20Dresner | Israel S. Dresner | Israel Seymour Dresner (April 22, 1929 – January 13, 2022) was an American Reform rabbi. He was president of the Education Fund for Israeli Civil Rights and Peace. He was an important person in the Civil Rights Movement and a close friend to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.. Dresner was once called "the most arrested rabbi in America."
In December 2021, Dresner announced that he was diagnosed with terminal colon cancer. He died from the disease on January 13, 2022 in New York City, at the age of 92.
References
1929 births
2022 deaths
Deaths from colorectal cancer
American rabbis
American civil rights activists
People from New York City |
896833 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marktoberdorf | Marktoberdorf | Marktoberdorf () is the capital of Ostallgäu in Swabia.
Marktoberdorf is near Kempten, Füssen, known for the castle Neuschwanstein, Bad Wörishofen, and Schongau. The nearest larger city is Kaufbeuren, eleven kilometers away.
Gallery
Other websites
References
Ostallgäu |
896835 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mauerstetten | Mauerstetten | Mauerstetten is a municipality in Ostallgäu in the southwest of Bavaria in Germany.
References
Other websites
Official site (in German)
Ostallgäu |
896836 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean-Jacques%20Beineix | Jean-Jacques Beineix | Jean-Jacques Beineix (; 8 October 1946 – 13 January 2022) was a French movie director, producer and screenwriter. He was born in Paris, France. His career began in 1977. His best known movies were Diva, Moon in the Gutter, Betty Blue, Roselyne et les lions and Mortel Transfert.
Beineix died on 13 January 2022 at his home in Paris from a long-illness, aged 75.
References
1946 births
2022 deaths
French movie directors
French movie producers
French screenwriters |
896837 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aminata%20Tour%C3%A9%20%28Guinean%20politician%29 | Aminata Touré (Guinean politician) | Aminata Touré (12 December 1952 – 12 January 2022) was a Guinean politician. She was mayor of Kaloum from 2018 until her death in 2022.
Touré died in Morocco from a long illness, on 12 January 2022, at the age of 69.
References
1952 births
2022 deaths
Guinean politicians
Mayors |
896838 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nesselwang | Nesselwang | Nesselwang is a municipality in Ostallgäu in Bavaria in Germany. It is a frequently photographed market town and tourist resort at the foot of the Alps in Allgäu. It contains the market (Nesselwang) as well as 17 surrounding hamlets (Gschwend, Hörich, Reichenbach, Bayerstetten, Wank, Hertingen, Attlesee, Schneidbach, Hammerschmiede, Lachen, Niederhöfen, Rindegg, Thal, Schicken, Schneidbach, Voglen and Widdumhof).
References
Ostallgäu |
896839 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oberg%C3%BCnzburg | Obergünzburg | Obergünzburg (Swabian: Obergenzburg) is a municipality in Ostallgäu in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Ostallgäu |
896840 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oberostendorf | Oberostendorf | Oberostendorf is a municipality in Ostallgäu in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Ostallgäu |
896842 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Osterzell | Osterzell | Osterzell is a municipality in Ostallgäu in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Ostallgäu |
896843 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pforzen | Pforzen | Pforzen is a municipality in Ostallgäu in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Ostallgäu |
896844 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mohamed%20B%C3%A9avogui | Mohamed Béavogui | Mohamed Béavogui (born 15 August 1953) is a Guinean politician. He is the interim prime minister of Guinea since 6 October 2021.
From 1982 to 1986, he worked in Nigeria, before being hired as a consultant by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations.
On 6 October 2021, a month after the 2021 Guinean coup d'état, he was named transitional prime minister of Guinea by interim president Mamady Doumbouya.
References
1953 births
Living people
Prime Ministers of Guinea |
896845 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pfronten | Pfronten | Pfronten (Swabian: Pfronte) is a municipality in Ostallgäu in Bavaria in Germany.
Geography
Pfronten is one of a total of 45 towns, markets and municipalities in Ostallgäu.
Pfronten is on the northern edge of the Allgäu Alps. The Vils flows through the municipal territory. It is at an altitude of 853 m above sea level. NN at the foot of Edelsberg, Kienberg, Breitenberg and Falkenstein. The highest point of the municipality is the peak of the Aggenstein (1986 m above sea level) on the Tyrolean border, which belongs to the Tannheim Mountains.
On the German side, neighbouring communities of Pfronten are Füssen, Eisenberg and the market of Nesselwang. In Austria, the small town of Vils and the Tannheim valley with the communities of Grän, Tannheim, Schattwald, Zöblen, Nesselwängle and Jungholz are nearby.
The municipal territory has the districts of Bergpfronten and Steinachpfronten.
The settlements Berg, Dorf, Halden, Heitler, Kappel, Kreuzegg, Meilingen, Ösch, Rehbichel, Ried, Röfleuten, Steinach and Weißbach belong to Pfronten.
Further reading
Johann B. Doser: Pfronten in Vergangenheit und Gegenwart – Ein Beitr. zur Heimatkunde. Pfronten-Ried 1925
Simone Haf, Alison Feller: Pfrontener Impressionen. Horb am Neckar 2002.
Ludwig Holzner: Geschichte der Gemeinde Pfronten. herausgegeben von der Gemeinde Pfronten 1956
Anton H. Konrad, Annemarie Schröppel, Adolf Schröppel: Pfronten (Schwäbische Kunstdenkmale, 34). Weissenhorn 1986
Pfrontener Bilderbogen 86. Pfronten 1986.
Annemarie Schröppel, Adolf Schröppel: Alt-Pfrontener Photoalbum. Pfronten 1984
Annemarie Schröppel: Pfrontener Kirchen und Kapellen und ihre Pfarrer. Pfronten 2002
Thaddäus Steiner/Bertold Pölcher/Gemeinde Pfronten (Hrsg.): Pfrontener Flurnamen. Pfronten 2010
References
Other websites
Ostallgäu |
896846 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rettenbach%20am%20Auerberg | Rettenbach am Auerberg | Rettenbach am Auerberg is a municipality in Ostallgäu in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Other websites
www.rettenbach-am-auerberg.de/
Ostallgäu |
896847 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adi%20Andojo%20Soetjipto | Adi Andojo Soetjipto | Adi Andojo Soetjipto (11 April 1932 – 12 January 2022) was an Indonesian politician, lawyer and educator. He was an associate justice of the Supreme Court of Indonesia from 1981 until his retirement in 1997. Soetjipto was nominated twice for the position by the People's Representative Council in 1979 and 1980.
Soetjipto died in Jakarta, Indonesia on 12 January 2022, at the age of 89.
References
1932 births
2022 deaths
Indonesian politicians
Indonesian educators
Lawyers
Judges |
896848 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rieden%2C%20Swabia | Rieden, Swabia | Rieden is a municipality in Ostallgäu in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Ostallgäu |
896849 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rieden%20am%20Forggensee | Rieden am Forggensee | Rieden am Forggensee is a municipality in Ostallgäu in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Ostallgäu |
896850 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jules%20Wright%20%28politician%29 | Jules Wright (politician) | Jules Winslow Wright (August 21, 1933 – January 11, 2022) was an American businessman and politician. He was born in Nenana, Alaska. He was a member of the Alaska House of Representatives between 1967 until 1969. Wright was a member of the Republican Party.
Wright died on January 11, 2022 in Wasilla, Alaska at the age of 88.
References
1933 births
2022 deaths
State legislators of the United States
Politicians from Alaska
Businesspeople from Alaska
US Republican Party politicians |
896851 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ji%C5%99%C3%AD%20Patera | Jiří Patera | Jiří Patera (10 October 1936 – 3 January 2022) was a Czech-born Canadian mathematician and academic. He taught at the Université de Montréal. He was known for his work in group theory, Lie groups, and cryptography.
Patera died in Montreal on 3 January 2022, at the age of 85.
References
1936 births
2022 deaths
Naturalized citizens of Canada
Czech academics
Czech mathematicians
Canadian mathematicians
Canadian academics
Czech writers
Writers from Montreal |
896852 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean-Pierre%20Defontaine | Jean-Pierre Defontaine | Jean-Pierre Defontaine (4 February 1937 – 1 January 2022) was a French politician. He was a member of the Radical Party of the Left. He was a member of the National Assembly from 1978 to 2007. He was President of the club RC Lens from 1976 to 1979. He was born in Mametz, France. He was Mayor of Hénin-sur-Cojeul between 1983 until 1996.
Defontaine died in Hénin-sur-Cojeul on 1 January 2022, at the age of 82.
References
1937 births
2022 deaths
French mayors |
896853 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ronsberg | Ronsberg | Ronsberg is a municipality in Ostallgäu in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Ostallgäu |
896854 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ro%C3%9Fhaupten | Roßhaupten | Roßhaupten is a municipality in Ostallgäu in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Ostallgäu |
896855 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/R%C3%BCckholz | Rückholz | Rückholz is a municipality in Ostallgäu in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Ostallgäu |
896856 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruderatshofen | Ruderatshofen | Ruderatshofen is a municipality in Ostallgäu in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Ostallgäu |
896857 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marina%20Squerciati | Marina Squerciati | Marina Teresa Squerciati (born April 30, 1984) is an American actress. She is known for her role in Chicago P.D. as Officer Kim Burgess. Squerciati was born in New York City. She played guest roles in The Good Wife, Damages, Blue Bloods and Law & Order: Special Victims Unit in 2010 and 2011. She also played Alessandra Steele in Gossip Girl.
Squerciati lives in Near West Side, Chicago. Her half-sister is actress Maggie Wheeler.
References
1984 births
Living people
American movie actors
American television actors
American stage actors
American voice actors
Actors from New York City
Actors from Chicago |
896858 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schwangau | Schwangau | Schwangau is a municipality in Ostallgäu in Bavaria, Germany. The village is 4 km from Füssen and 1.5 km from Hohenschwangau.
Gallery
References
Ostallgäu |
896859 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicago%20P.D.%20%28TV%20series%29 | Chicago P.D. (TV series) | Chicago P.D. is an American police action drama television series created by Dick Wolf and Matt Olmstead. It is part of Wolf Entertainment's Chicago franchise. The series premiered on NBC on January 8, 2014. It is about detectives and police officers who work for the Chicago Police Department.
References
2014 American television series debuts
Television series set in Chicago, Illinois
Chicago (franchise) |
896860 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicago%20%28franchise%29 | Chicago (franchise) | The Chicago franchise (also called One Chicago) is a media series of American television programs created by Derek Haas, Michael Brandt and Dick Wolf. These shows broadcast on NBC. They are about public services in Chicago, Illinois.
The Chicago franchise has had strong ratings. The shows are Chicago Fire, Chicago P.D., Chicago Med and Chicago Justice.
References |
896861 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seeg | Seeg | Seeg is a municipality in Ostallgäu in Bavaria in Germany.
Gallery
References
Ostallgäu |
896862 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/St%C3%B6tten | Stötten | Stötten is a municipality in Ostallgäu in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Ostallgäu |
896863 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicago%20Fire%20%28TV%20series%29 | Chicago Fire (TV series) | Chicago Fire is an American drama television series created by Michael Brandt and Derek Haas with Dick Wolf as an executive producer. It is the first show of Wolf Entertainment's Chicago franchise. The series premiered on NBC on October 10, 2012.
On February 27, 2020, NBC renewed the series for its 9th, 10th, and 11th season.
References
2012 American television series debuts
Chicago (franchise)
Television series set in Chicago, Illinois |
896865 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/St%C3%B6ttwang | Stöttwang | Stöttwang is a municipality in Ostallgäu in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Ostallgäu |
896867 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unterthingau | Unterthingau | Unterthingau is a municipality in Ostallgäu in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Ostallgäu |
896868 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicago%20Med | Chicago Med | Chicago Med is an American medical drama television series created by Dick Wolf and Matt Olmstead. It is the third show of Wolf Entertainment's Chicago franchise. The series premiered on NBC on November 17, 2015. Chicago Med is about the lives of emergency department doctors and nurses of the fictional Gaffney Chicago Medical Center.
On February 27, 2020, NBC renewed the series for a sixth, seventh and eighth season.
References
2015 American television series debuts
American medical television series
Chicago (franchise)
Television series set in Chicago, Illinois |
896869 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Untrasried | Untrasried | Untrasried is a municipality in Ostallgäu in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Ostallgäu |
896870 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waal%2C%20Bavaria | Waal, Bavaria | Waal is a municipality in Ostallgäu in Bavaria in Germany. The town has a municipal association with Buchloe.
References
Ostallgäu |
896871 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicago%20Justice | Chicago Justice | Chicago Justice is an American legal drama television series that aired on NBC from March 1 to May 14, 2017. The series was created by Dick Wolf and was the fourth show of the Chicago franchise. The show was about the prosecutors and investigators at the Cook County State's Attorney's Office.
On May 22, 2017, NBC canceled the series after one season, making it the first series in the Chicago franchise to end.
References
2017 American television series endings
2017 television series debuts
Television series set in Chicago, Illinois
Chicago (franchise) |
896872 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wald%20%28Allg%C3%A4u%29 | Wald (Allgäu) | Wald is a municipality in Ostallgäu in Bavaria in Germany.
The village Wald is in the Allgäu region. Wald belongs to the administrative community Seeg and is in Bavarian Swabia.
Wald includes many surrounding hamlets: Barnstein, Bergers, Birngschwend, Geigers, Gemmels, houses, Herring, Hofen, Holzmanns, Kaltenbrunn, Kaufmanns, Kippach, Klosterhof, Neupolz, Öbele, Ofen, Stechele, Wetzlers, Wies, Wimberg.
Sights
Other websites
(PDF; 1,05 MB)
References
Ostallgäu |
896874 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jason%20Beghe | Jason Beghe | Jason Deneen Beghe (; born March 12, 1960) is an American actor. He is known for his role as Hank Voight in the NBC TV series Chicago P.D. He starred in the 1988 George A. Romero movie Monkey Shines.
His great-grandfather was Charles S. Deneen, a two-term governor of Illinois and one-term U.S. Senator in the late 1920s.
References
1960 births
Living people
American movie actors
American television actors
American stage actors
American voice actors
Actors from New York City |
896875 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haus%20der%20Bayerischen%20Geschichte | Haus der Bayerischen Geschichte | The Haus der Bayerischen Geschichte (German for: House of Bavarian History) or HdBG was established in 1983 as an rule of Bavaria, Germany and, since 1993, has had its permanent headquarters at Augsburg. On 6 October 1998 it was incorporated into the Bavarian State Ministry for Science, Research and Art (Bayerisches Staatsministerium für Wissenschaft, Forschung und Kunst). The German historian Claus Grimm was director from 1983 until 2007.
Sources
Ulla-Britta Vollhardt: Geschichtspolitik in Bayern. Das Haus der Bayerischen Geschichte: Idee – Debatte – Institutionalisierung. Utz, München 2003, .
Other websites
Official website of the Haus der Bayerischen Geschichte
Photo archive of the Haus der Bayerischen Geschichte
Bavarias towns and villages. History - Coats of arms - Links.
Castles in Bavaria. History - Architecture - Photographs - Plans
Abbeys in Bavaria. History - Photographs - Writing
History of Bavaria |
896877 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Westendorf%20%28Allg%C3%A4u%29 | Westendorf (Allgäu) | Westendorf is a municipality in Ostallgäu in Bavaria in Germany.
The municipality of Westendorf, which has the villages of Dösingen and Westendorf, is in the Allgäu region, about eleven kilometres east of Kaufbeuren, in the northern part of Ostallgäu.
References
Other websites
(PDF; 1,05 MB)
Ostallgäu |
896879 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aicha%20vorm%20Wald | Aicha vorm Wald | Aicha vorm Wald () is a municipality in Passau in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Passau (district) |
896881 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aidenbach | Aidenbach | Aidenbach () is a municipality in Passau in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Passau (district) |
896882 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franco%20Cavallo | Franco Cavallo | Franco Cavallo (26 September 1932 – 9 January 2022) was an Italian competitive sailor. He won a bronze medal in the Star class at the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City in team with Camillo Gargano. He was born in Naples, Italy.
Cavallo died in Naples on 9 January 2022, at the age of 89.
References
1932 births
2022 deaths
Italian Olympians
Olympic bronze medalists
Sailors
People from Naples |
896883 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aldersbach | Aldersbach | Aldersbach () is a municipality in Passau in Bavaria in Germany.
Geography
Geographic setting
Aldersbach is in the Donau-Wald region in the Vils valley, about ten kilometers south west of Vilshofen an der Donau, 30 km west of Passau, 25 km north of Pfarrkirchen and 15 km south of Osterhofen. A stream, the Aldersbach (Bach = stream), flows through the town. The region surrounded by Aldersbach and Fürstenzell is often known as Klosterwinkel (Abbey Corner).
Structure
Aldersbach is made up of 52 communities:
Adenberg
Aldersbach
Am Käserberg
Ammerreuth
Atzenberg
Beiglöd
Duschlöd
Eck
Edelsbrunn
Eggerting
Freundorf
Gainstorf
Galgenberg
Grüneröd
Gumperting
Haag
Haidach
Haideck
Haidenburg
Harreröd
Heinrichsdorf
Hiendlöd
Hinteröd
Hirt
Holzhausen
Holzhäuser
Hütter
Karglöd
Kramersepp
Kriestorf
Maierhof
Meiering
Moos
Neustift
Niederöd
Ölat
Pörndorf
Reit
Reuth
Röslöd
Sankt Peter
Schwaig
Schwarzholz
Seier
Stocköd
Uttigkofen
Vogler
Walchsing
Weidfeld
Weng
Wetzstein
Wifling
These are assigned to the sub-districts of Pörndorf, Walchsing, Aldersbach and Haidenburg.
Neighboring towns and villages (district in parentheses)
Johanniskirchen (Landkreis Rottal-Inn)
Roßbach (Landkreis Rottal-Inn)
Osterhofen (Landkreis Deggendorf)
Künzing (Landkreis Deggendorf)
Vilshofen an der Donau (Landkreis Passau)
Aidenbach (Landkreis Passau)
Literature
Lübbers, Bernhard, Art. Aldersbach, in: Hans-Michael Körner/ Alois Schmid (Hrsg.): Handbuch der historischen Stätten, Bayern I: Altbayern und Schwaben (Kröners Taschenausgabe 324) Stuttgart 2006, S. 10–11.
References
Other websites
Schloss Haidenburg
(PDF; 1,24 MB)
Passau (district) |
896884 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bad%20F%C3%BCssing | Bad Füssing | Bad Füssing is a municipality in Passau in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Passau (district)
Spa towns in Germany |
896885 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bad%20Griesbach | Bad Griesbach | Bad Griesbach im Rottal (), or just Bad Griesbach, is a town in Passau in Bavaria in Germany.
Twin towns and cities
Bad Griesbach (Rottal) is twinned with:
Friesach, Austria
References
Passau (district)
Spa towns in Germany |
896886 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beutelsbach | Beutelsbach | Beutelsbach () is a municipality in Passau in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Passau (district) |
896887 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breitenberg%2C%20Lower%20Bavaria | Breitenberg, Lower Bavaria | Breitenberg is a municipality in Passau in Bavaria in Germany. It is on the border with Austria, and is the easternmost municipality of Bavaria.
References
Passau (district) |
896889 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/B%C3%BCchlberg | Büchlberg | Büchlberg is a municipality in Passau in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Passau (district) |
896890 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eging%20am%20See | Eging am See | Eging am See is a municipality in Passau in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Passau (district) |
896891 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/F%C3%BCrstenstein | Fürstenstein | Fürstenstein is a municipality in Passau in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Passau (district) |
896893 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pakistani%20American | Pakistani American | Pakistani Americans are Americans of Pakistani ancestry.
Ethnic groups in the United States |
896894 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malaysian%20American | Malaysian American | Malaysian Americans are Americans of Malaysian ancestry.
Ethnic groups in the United States |
896895 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thai%20Americans | Thai Americans | Thai Americans are Americans of Thai ancestry.
Ethnic groups in the United States |
896896 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nepalese%20Americans | Nepalese Americans | Nepalese Americans are Americans of Nepalese ancestry.
Ethnic groups in the United States |
896897 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ronald%20Stewart | Ronald Stewart | Ronald Alexander Stewart (April 13, 1927January 10, 2022) was a Canadian businessman and politician. He was a Member of Parliament (MP) from 1979 to 1988. He was a member of the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada. Stewart was born in Beeton, Ontario.
Stewart died on January 10, 2022 at his home in Barrie, Ontario at the age of 94.
References
1927 births
2022 deaths
Canadian businesspeople
Politicians from Ontario |
896898 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sri%20Lankan%20Americans | Sri Lankan Americans | Sri Lankan Americans are Americans of Sri Lankan ancestry.
Ethnic groups in the United States |
896899 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/F%C3%BCrstenzell | Fürstenzell | Fürstenzell () is a municipality in Passau in Bavaria in Germany. Fürstenzell is the birthplace of past Bayern Munich defender Klaus Augenthaler.
References
Passau (district) |
896900 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haarbach | Haarbach | Haarbach () is a municipality in Passau in Bavaria in Germany.
Villages
References
Passau (district) |
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