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part_xec/zulegt
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"25305998":{"pageid":25305998,"ns":0,"title":"Z\u00fclegt","extract":"Z\u00fclegt (Mongolian: \u0417\u04af\u043b\u044d\u0433\u0442 Lawn, also Zulegt, Dzulegt) is an urban-type settlement in Ikhkhet sum (district) of Dornogovi Province in south-eastern Mongolia. Z\u00fclegt is the Ikhkhet sum centre.In Z\u00fclegt is the fluorspar open pit mine.\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zyczyn
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"19830032":{"pageid":19830032,"ns":0,"title":"\u017byczyn","extract":"\u017byczyn [\u02c8\u0290\u0268t\u0361\u0282\u0268n] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Trojan\u00f3w, within Garwolin County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 26 kilometres (16 mi) south of Garwolin and 78 km (48 mi) south-east of Warsaw.\n\n\nPopulation\nThe village of \u017byczyn has a population of around 800 residents around 2018\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zvonimir_kozulj
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zvonimir_Ko\u017eulj","to":"Zvonimir Ko\u017eulj"}],"pages":{"50805756":{"pageid":50805756,"ns":0,"title":"Zvonimir Ko\u017eulj","extract":"Zvonimir Ko\u017eulj (Croatian pronunciation: [z\u028b\u01d2nimi\u02d0r k\u01d2\u0292u\u02d0\u028e]; born 15 November 1993) is a Bosnian professional footballer who plays as a midfielder.\nKo\u017eulj started his professional career at \u0160iroki Brijeg, who loaned him to Vitez in 2013 and to Branitelj in 2014. In 2016, he joined Hajduk Split. Two years later, he was transferred to Pogo\u0144 Szczecin.\nA former youth international for Bosnia and Herzegovina, Ko\u017eulj made his senior international debut in 2016.\n\n\nClub career\n\n\nEarly career\nKo\u017eulj came through Zrinjski Mostar's youth academy, which he left in 2011 to join \u0160iroki Brijeg. He made his professional debut against \u010celik Zenica on 30 March 2013 at the age of 19.In the summer of 2013, he was sent on a six-month loan to Vitez. On 24 August 2013, he scored his first professional goal. In January 2014, he was loaned to Branitelj until the end of season.\n\n\nHajduk Split\nOn 14 June 2016, Ko\u017eulj was transferred to Croatian side Hajduk Split for an undisclosed fee. He made his competitive debut for the club in UEFA Europa League qualifier against Politehnica Ia\u0219i on 14 July. Three days later, on his league debut, he scored a goal in an away win over Cibalia.\n\n\nPogo\u0144 Szczecin\nIn June 2018, Ko\u017eulj signed a three-year contract with Polish team Pogo\u0144 Szczecin. He made his official debut for the club on 20 July against Mied\u017a Legnica. On 19 October, Ko\u017eulj scored his first goal for Pogo\u0144 Szczecin in an away defeat to Jagiellonia. He was released in March 2020 from his contract.\n\n\nInternational career\nHaving been eligible to represent both Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croatia, Ko\u017eulj opted for the former, representing it on various youth levels.In May 2016, he received his first senior call-up, for friendly game against Spain and 2016 Kirin Cup. Ko\u017eulj debuted against Japan on 7 June.\n\n\nCareer statistics\n\n\nClub\nAs of match played 8 March 2020\n\n\nInternational\nAs of match played 7 June 2016\n\n\nHonours\n\u0160iroki Brijeg\nBosnian Cup: 2012\u201313\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nZvonimir Ko\u017eulj at National-Football-Teams.com \nZvonimir Ko\u017eulj \u2013 UEFA competition record (archive)"}}}}
part_xec/zvijezd
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"33466024":{"pageid":33466024,"ns":0,"title":"Zvijezd","extract":"Zvijezd is a village in the municipality of Prijepolje, Serbia. According to the 2002 census, the village has a population of 104 people.\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zynewave_podium
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zynewave_Podium","to":"Zynewave Podium"}],"pages":{"21764747":{"pageid":21764747,"ns":0,"title":"Zynewave Podium","extract":"Podium is a digital audio workstation software program that integrates audio recording, VST plugins and external MIDI and audio gear. An object based project structure allows for advanced media and device management.\nFeature highlights include hierarchic track layout, integrated sound editor, surround sound, spline curve automation, 64-bit mixing, multiprocessing and a customizable user interface.\n\n\nHistory\nPodium is the brainchild of developer Frits Nielsen, a former user interface designer and programmer with TC Electronic. Development of Podium started in 1990, and the Zynewave company was founded in 2004 with the first public release of Podium.\n\n\nPodium Free\nOn June 26, 2010, Zynewave released the Podium Free freeware edition of Podium to move to a freemium model. It has several resource limitations, but is otherwise identical to the commercial version of Podium. Latest Podium Free edition was released on March 11, 2014.\n\n\nSee also\nComparison of multitrack recording software\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nZynewave company website"}}}}
part_xec/zsolt_detre
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zsolt_Detre","to":"Zsolt Detre"}],"pages":{"39717156":{"pageid":39717156,"ns":0,"title":"Zsolt Detre","extract":"Zsolt Detre (born March 7, 1947) is a Hungarian sailor. He won the Olympic Bronze Medal in the 1980 Summer Olympics in the Flying Dutchman class along with his brother Szabolcs Detre.\n\n\nEarly life\nHis father was L\u00e1szl\u00f3 Detre (an astronomer), and his niece is Di\u00e1na Detre (a windsurfer).\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zona_de_combate
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zona_de_Combate","to":"Zona de Combate"}],"pages":{"-1":{"ns":0,"title":"Zona de Combate","missing":""}}}}
part_xec/zourma
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"18229184":{"pageid":18229184,"ns":0,"title":"Zourma","extract":"Zourma is a town in the Zabr\u00e9 Department of Boulgou Province in south-eastern Burkina Faso. As of 2005, the town has a population of 7,121.\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zoroastrian_calendar
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zoroastrian_calendar","to":"Zoroastrian calendar"}],"pages":{"206341":{"pageid":206341,"ns":0,"title":"Zoroastrian calendar","extract":"Adherents of Zoroastrianism use three distinct versions of traditional calendars for liturgical purposes, all derived from medieval Iranian calendars and ultimately based on the Babylonian calendar as used in the Achaemenid empire.\nQadimi (\"ancient\") is a traditional reckoning introduced in 1006.\nShahanshahi (\"imperial\") is a calendar reconstructed from the 10th century text Denkard.\nFasli is a term for a 1906 adaptation of the 11th century Jalali calendar following a proposal by Kharshedji Rustomji Cama made in the 1860s.\nA number of Calendar eras are in use:\n\nA tradition of counting years from the birth of Zoroaster was reported from India in the 19th century. There was a dispute between factions variously preferring an era of 389 BCE, 538 BCE, or 637 BCE.\nThe \"Yazdegerdi era\" (also Yazdegirdi) counts from the accession of the last Sassanid ruler, Yazdegerd III (16 June 632 CE). This convention was proposed by Cama in the 1860s but has since also been used in conjunctions with Qadimi or Shahanshahi reckoning. An alternative \"Magian era\" (era Magorum or Tarikh al-majus) was set at the date of Yazdegerd's death in 652.\n\"Z.E.R.\" or \"Zarathushtrian Religious Era\" is a convention introduced in 1990 by the Zarathushtrian Assembly of California set at the vernal equinox (Nowruz) of 1738 BCE (\u22121737 in the astronomical year numbering).\n\n\nHistory\n\n\nAchaemenid period\n\nThe Babylonian calendar was used in the Achaemenid Empire by the 4th century BCE for civil purposes.\nThe earliest Zoroastrian calendar (also misleadingly called \"Avestan calendar\") follows the Babylonian in relating the seventh and other days of the month to Ahura Mazda.Like all ancient calendars, the Babylonian calendar was lunisolar.\nIt used an intercalary month roughly once every six years.In the civil calendar, intercalations did not always follow a regular pattern, but during the reign of Artaxerxes II (circa 380 BCE) astronomers utilised a 19-year cycle which required the addition of a month called Addaru II in years 3, 6, 8, 11, 14 and 19, and the month Ululu II in year 17 of the cycle.\nThe first known intercalation is recorded for 309 BCE.\nThe first month of the year was called Frawardin, and the first day of Frawardin was the 'New Year's Day' or Nawruz, from which all other religious observances were reckoned \u2013 this day being, in theory, the day of the northern vernal equinox.A 365-day calendar, with months largely identical to the Egyptian calendar, was introduced shortly after the conquest of Egypt by the Achaemenid ruler Cambyses (c. 525 BCE).\nScholars are divided on whether this 365 day calendar was in fact preceded by a 360-day calendar of Zoroastrian observances.\n\n\nHellenistic period\nFollowing Alexander's invasion of Persia in 330 BCE, the Seleucid (312\u2013248 BCE) instituted the Hellenic practice of counting years from the start of a fixed era, as opposed using regnal years.\nThe regnal era of Alexander is now referred to as the Seleucid era.\nThe Parthians (150\u2013224 CE), who succeeded the Seleucids, continued the Seleucid/Hellenic tradition.\n\n\nParthian to Sassanid period\nIn 224 CE, when the Babylonian calendar was replaced by the Zoroastrian, 1 Frawardin and the New Year celebration of Nawruz had drifted to 1 October. The older custom of counting regnal years from the monarch's coronation was reinstated. At this point the calendar was realigned with the seasons by delaying the epagemonai by eight months (so that they now preceded the start of the ninth month) and adjusting the dates of the gahanbar (farming festivals) accordingly.\nThis caused confusion, since the new year now fell five days earlier than before, and some people continued to observe the old date. After 46 years (226\u2013272 CE), with 1 Frawardin now on 19 September, another calendar reform was implemented by Ardashir's grandson Hormazd I (272\u2013273 CE). During the first years after implementation of the new Gatha days, the population had not universally adopted the new dates for religious festivals, resulting in \"official\" celebrations takings place five days earlier than popular celebrations. In later years the population had observed the Gatha days, but the original five day discrepancy persisted. Hormazd's reform was to link the popular and official observance dates to form continual six-day feasts. Nawruz was an exception: the first and the sixth days of the month were celebrated as different occasions. Lesser Nawruz was observed on 1 Frawardin. 6 Frawardin became Greater Nawruz, a day of special festivity. Around the 10th century CE, the Greater Nawruz was associated with the return of the legendary king, Jamsed; in contemporary practice it is kept as the symbolic observance of Zoroaster's birthday, or Khordad Sal.Mary Boyce has argued that sometime between 399 CE and 518 CE the six-day festivals were compressed to five days. The major feasts, or gahambars, of contemporary Zoroastrian practice, are still kept as five-day observances today.\n\n\nMedieval period\n\nThe Bundahishn, a pseudo-Avestan treatise written in the early Islamic period (8th or 9th century)\nreplaces the \"Age of Alexander\" with an \"Ageo of Zoroaster\", placed \"258 years before Alexander\" (consistent with the date given by Ammianus Marcellinus).By the reign of Yazdegird III (632\u2013651 CE), the religious celebrations were again somewhat adrift with respect to their proper seasons. The calendar had continued to slip against the Julian calendar since the previous reform at the rate of one day every four years. Therefore, in 632, the new year was celebrated on 16 June. By the 9th century, the Zoroastrian theologian Zadspram had noted that the state of affairs was less than optimal, and estimated that at the time of Final Judgement the two systems would be out of sync by four years.\n\n\nCalendar eras\nThe current mainstream Zoroastrian reckoning of years' start date is on 16 June 632 CE. Yazdegird III was the last monarch of the Sasanian dynasty, and since the custom at that time was to count regnal years since the monarch ascended the throne, the reckoning of years was continued, in the absence of a Zoroastrian monarch, under Islamic rule.Zoroastrian dates are distinguished by the suffix Y.Z. for \"Yazdegirdi Era\".\nThe usage \"AY\" is also found.Isolated pockets of Asia Minor use an alternative reckoning of years which predates the Yazdegirdi Era, being based on a supposed date of the birth of Zoroaster on 3 March 389 BC. On this calendar, 22 July 2000 CE was the first day of Zoroastrian year 2390.Yet another form of reckoning is the Zarathushtrian (Zoroastrian) Religious Era (Z.E.R./ZRE), adopted in 1990 CE by the Zarathushtrian Assembly of California. This is based on the putative association of the mission of Zoroaster with the dawn of the astrological Age of Aries, calculated for this purpose to have been the northern vernal equinox of 1738 BCE. Hence the year 3738 ZRE began in 2000 CE. The Zoroastrian community, both in Iran and in diaspora, have also been said to have accepted it, the former doing so in 1993 CE. A briefing paper from the Zoroastrian Trust Funds of Europe indicates that they recognise this usage to have been pragmatically adopted by Zoroastrians in Iran, while the diaspora continues to use the YZ system.\n\n\nQadimi calendar\nThe Qadimi (also Qadmi, Kadimi, Kudmi) or \"ancient\" calendar is the traditional calendar in use since 1006 CE.In 1006 CE, the month Frawardin had returned to the correct position so that 1 Frawardin coincided with the northern vernal equinox. The religious festivals were therefore returned to their traditional months, with Nawruz once again being celebrated on 1 Frawardin.The Julian Day Number corresponding to 16 June 632 CE is 1952063.The Julian Day Number of Nowruz, the first day, of Year Y of the Yazdegirdi Era is therefore 1952063 + (Y \u2212 1) \u00d7 365.\n22 July AD 2000 was Nowruz and the first day of 1370 Y.Z. (or 3738 ZRE) according to the Qadimi reckoning.In the Julian year 1300 CE, 669 Y.Z. began on 1 January, and 670 Y.Z. on 31 December of the same year.\n\n\nShahanshahi calendar\nThe Shahanshahi calendar (also Shahenshahi, Shahenshai) or \"imperial\" calendar\nis the system described in Denkard, a 9th-century Zoroastrian text.\nIt explicitly acknowledged several methods of intercalation:\na leap-day every 4 years;\nadding ten days every 40 years;\na leap-month of 30 days once every 120 years;\n5 months once every 600 years;1,461 Zoroastrian years equal 1,460 Julian years.\nThe Denkard then states:\nThe time of six hours should be kept apart from (i.e. not to be added to) the last days of the year for many years, till (the hours) amount to (a definite period of time) ... And it is the admonition of the good faith that the rectification (of the calendar) should not be made till a month is completed (i.e. till the additional six hours every year amount to a month at the end of a hundred and twenty. years). And more than a period of five months should not be allowed (to accumulate.) [Parentheses appear as in original.]The Denkard \u2013 which was not Zoroastrian scripture but a religious manual \u2013 therefore favoured the solution of a leap-month once every 120 years, with a fall-back of adding 5 months after 600 years if this were missed. This practice was not, however, adopted by Zoroastrians living in Islamic Persia.The Parsis had knowledge of The Denkard's proposal: at some point between 1125 and 1129, the Parsi-Zoroastrians of the Indian subcontinent inserted such an embolismic month, named Aspandarmad vahizak (the month of Aspandarmad but with the suffix vahizak). That month would also be the last month intercalated: subsequent generations of Parsis neglected to insert a thirteenth month.\nAround 1720 CE, an Iranian Zoroastrian priest named Jamasp Peshotan Velati travelled from Iran to India. Upon his arrival, he discovered that there was a difference of a month between the Parsi calendar and his own calendar. Velati brought this discrepancy to the attention of the priests of Surat, but no consensus as to which calendar was correct was reached. Around 1740 CE, some influential priests argued that since their visitor had been from the ancient 'homeland', his version of the calendar must be correct, and their own must be wrong. On 6 June 1745 CE (Julian), a number of Parsis in and around Surat adopted the calendar which had continued in use in Iran, now to be identified as the Qadimi reckoning. Other Parsis continued to use the reckoning which had become traditional in India, and call their calendar Shahanshahi.Arzan Lali the author of Zoroastrian Calendar Services (ZCS) website (zcserv.com) comments that \"... adherents of other variants of the Zoroastrian calendar denigrate the Shenshai or Shahenshahi as 'royalist'.\"\n21 August 2000 CE was Nawruz, and the first day of 1370 Y.Z. (or 3738 ZRE) according to the Shahanshahi reckoning.\nBecause the one-off intercalation of 30 days happened sometime before the Nawruz of 1129 CE, we can be confident that in that Julian year, 498 YZ began on 12 February by the Qadimi reckoning, but 14 March by the recently introduced Shahanshahi.The Julian Day Number of Nawruz, the first day, of all subsequent Shahanshahi years Y of the Yazdegirdi Era is therefore 1952093 + (Y \u2212 1) \u00d7 365.\n\n\nFasli calendar\nAt the start of the 20th century, Khurshedji Cama, a Bombay Parsi, founded the \"Zarthosti Fasili Sal Mandal\", or Zoroastrian Seasonal-Year Society. In 1906, the society published its proposal for a Zoroastrian calendar which was synchronised with the seasons. This Fasli calendar, as it became known, was based on the Jalali calendar introduced in 1079 during the reign of the Seljuk Malik Shah and which had been well received in agrarian communities.The Fasli proposal had two useful features: a leap-day once every four years, and harmony with the tropical year. The leap-day, called Avardad-sal-Gah (or in Pahlavi: Ruzevahizak), would be inserted, when required, after the five existing Gatha days at the end of the year. New Year's Day would be kept on the northward vernal equinox, and if the leap-day was applied correctly, would not drift away from the spring. The Fasli society also claimed that their calendar was an accurate religious calendar, as opposed to the other two calendars, which they asserted were only political.The new calendar received little support from the Indian Zoroastrian community, since it was considered to contradict the injunctions expressed in the Denkard. In Iran, however, the Fasli calendar gained momentum following a campaign in 1930 to persuade the Iranian Zoroastrians to adopt it, under the title of the Bastani (traditional) calendar. In AD 1925, the Iranian Parliament had introduced a new Iranian calendar, which (independent of the Fasli movement) incorporated both points proposed by the Fasili Society, and since the Iranian national calendar had also retained the Zoroastrian names of the months, it was not a big step to integrate the two. The Bastani calendar was duly accepted by many of the Zoroastrians. Many orthodox Iranian Zoroastrians, especially the Sharifabadis of Yazd, continued to use the Qadimi, however.In 1906 CE, Nawruz of 1276 Y.Z. fell on 15 August for followers of the Qadimi calendar, and 14 September for those observing Shahanshahi. There was therefore a six-month gap between the Fasli and Qadimi New Year observances, and a seven-month gap to the Shahanshahi.\nSince there is exactly one Fasli year for every Gregorian year, then day one of the proleptic Fasli calendar would be 21 March (Gregorian) 631 CE, with Year 2 beginning on 21 March 632 CE. But Yazdegird III did not ascend the throne until 19 June 632 CE (Gregorian), leading to the curious quirk that the base date for the reckoning of years ends up in Year 2 of the Fasli calendar.\n\n\nFestivals in leap years\nThe Zoroastrian year, in Qadimi and Shahanshahi observance, concludes with ten days in memory of departed souls: five Mukhtad days on the last 5 days of the 12th month, and five more Mukhtad days, which are also the five-day festival of Hamaspathmaidyem, on the five Gatha days. The penultimate day of the twelfth month is Mareshpand Jashan.In a common year (non-leap year) of the Fasli observance, Mukhtad is observed 11\u201320 March, with Hamaspathmaidyem and the Gatha days 16\u201320 March. Mareshpand Jashan is on 14 March.In a leap year of the Fasli observance, Mukhtad is observed 10\u201319 March, with Hamaspathmaidyem and the Gatha days 15\u201319 March. Mareshpand Jashan is on 13 March. The leap day, 20 March, called Avardad-sal-Gah, is considered a duplication of Wahishtoisht, the fifth Gatha day, but is not reckoned as Mukhtad or Hamaspathmaidyem.\n\n\nRelationship with the Gregorian calendar\n21 March 2000 CE was Nowruz and the first day of 1370 Y.Z. (or 3738 ZRE) according to the Fasli reckoning.\nDr Ali Jafarey describes the Fasli calendar as\n... an almost tropical calendar. It is corrected by observing the leap year.Webster's online dictionary and various unreferenced sources state that the Fasli calendar follows the Gregorian, and it is shown strictly following the Gregorian calendar in the period AD 2009\u20132031 in the tables published by R. E. Kadva. The Gregorian calendar itself, however, will not keep 21 March as the date of the northern vernal equinox forever \u2013 it has a deviation of one day every 5025 years.\n\n\nRelationship with the Iranian calendar\nThe civil calendar in Iran since 31 March 1925 CE has been the Solar Hejri calendar. This is strictly tied to the actual northward equinox, rather than a mathematical approximation to it. An Iranian day is reckoned to begin at midnight. Iranian time is 3.5 hours ahead of GMT. New Year's Day is defined to be the day, as reckoned by Iranian time, when the northward equinox (the precise moment in time when northern and southern hemispheres of the earth pass through the point of the earth's orbit when they are equally illuminated by the sun) occurs on or before noon of that day, or during the 12 hours following the noon of the preceding day. This means that the pattern of leap years in the Iranian calendar is complex \u2013 usually following a 33-year cycle where the leap day is inserted every fourth year, but in year 33 instead of year 32, but with occasional 29 year cycles.From 1960 to 1995, the northward equinox always fell at such a time that New Year's Day in Iran occurred on the day called 21 March in the Western calendar. But this equivalence was not always true before March 1960, and the exact correspondence broke down again in 1996. In 1959, and at four-year intervals back to 1927, Iranian New Year's Day fell on 22 March in the Gregorian calendar. In 1996, and subsequent Gregorian leap years, Iranian New Year's Day falls on 20 March. The pattern will shift back to a matching set of leap years in 2096 CE.The sources cited above state that the Fasli calendar both follows the Gregorian and was such that New Year's Day coincided with vernal equinox. These two statements are incompatible. The Fasli calendar cannot track both the Gregorian leap years and strictly start on the vernal equinox; further, any calendar strictly tied to the 'day of the equinox' must define when the day starts and ends, which depends on longitude-A briefing paper from the Zoroastrian Trust Funds of Europe indicates that\n\n... the Irani Zoroastrian calendar does not shift and commences on 21 March. But it is important to note that all Iranians including Zoroastrians celebrate NoRuz (Nawruz) on the actual day of the northward equinox, therefore some years it can be 20 / 22 March.\n\n\nAstronomical and mystical aspects\nThe three different Zoroastrian calendar-traditions are similar with regard to the principle of the beginning of the months. They are structurally similar to the Armenian calendar and the Mayan Haab calendar, but different from the Iranian (Jalaali) calendar, the Julian calendar, and the French Revolutionary Calendar, whose epochs of the months are fixed to equinoxes/solstices, as are the signs of western astrology. The Qadimi and the Shahanshahi Zoroastrian calendar use merely five epagomenal days, similar to the French Revolutionary and the Coptic calendar, (although these last two have a sixth epagemonal day every leap year), so their year count slowly travels through the tropical year.The naming of the months recalls the time of the origination of the Zoroastrian calendar. According to Mary Boyce,\nIt seems a reasonable surmise that Nawruz, the holiest of them all, with deep doctrinal significance, was founded by Zoroaster himself.\n\n\nFuture developments\nThe Fasli calendar has become very popular outside India, especially in the West, but many Parsis believe that adding a leap day is against the rules, and they mostly continue to use the Shahanshahi calendar. There is a proposal to correct matters by restoring the leap month, but unless this happens, the Shahanshahi and Qadimi years will continue to start earlier and earlier ... the unrevised Qadimi calendar would eventually coincide with the Fasli calendar in Gregorian year 2508, the Shahanshahi New Year will next fall on 21 March in 2632.In 1992, all three calendars happened to have the first day of a month on the same day. Many Zoroastrians suggested a consolidation of the calendars: no consensus could be reached, though some took this opportunity to switch to the Fasli observance. Some priests objected on the grounds that if they were to switch, the religious implements they utilised would require re-consecration, at not insignificant expense.It has also been proposed that the Shahanshahi calendar could be brought back into harmony through the intercalation of whole months.In the UK, most Zoroastrians are Indians who follow the Shahanshahi calendar. Nevertheless, noting that Iranian Zoroastrians mostly follow the Fasli calendar, the Zoroastrian Trust Funds of Europe marks observances of both calendars.\n\n\nNaming of months and days\nZoroastrian practice divides time into years (sal or sol), months (mah), weeks, days (ruz, roz, or roj) and watches (gah or geh).\nA day is reckoned to begin at dawn, as attested by Chapter 25 of the 9th century work, the Bundahishn; morning hours before dawn are assigned to the previous calendar day. Each day is divided into five watches:\nHawan (sunrise to noon)\nRapithwin or Second Hawan (noon to 3 p.m.)\nUzerin (3 p.m. to sunset)\nAiwisruthrem (sunset to midnight)\nUshahin (midnight to sunrise)In medieval times, according to the Bundahishn, in winter there were only four periods, with Hawan extending from daybreak until Uziran, with the omission of Rapithwan.\nThe months and the days of the month in the Zoroastrian calendar are dedicated to, and named after, a divinity or divine concept. The religious importance of the calendar dedications is very significant. Not only does the calendar establish the hierarchy of the major divinities, it ensures the frequent invocation of their names since the divinities of both day and month are mentioned at every Zoroastrian act of worship.\n\n\nDay names\nThe tradition of naming the days and months after divinities was based on a similar Egyptian custom, and dates from when the calendar was set up. \"The last evidence for the use ... with Old Persian month-names ... comes from 458 BCE, ... after which the Elamite tablets cease.\" No dated West-Iranian documents from this period survive, but the fact that the Zoroastrian calendar was created at this time can be inferred from its use in a number of far-flung lands which had formerly been parts of the Achaemenid Empire.\nThe oldest (though not dateable) testimony for the existence of the day dedications comes from Yasna 16, a section of the Yasna liturgy that is \u2013 for the most part \u2013 a veneration to the 30 divinities with day-name dedications. The Siroza \u2013 a two-part Avesta text with individual dedications to the 30 calendar divinities \u2013 has the same sequence.\n\nThe quaternary dedication to Ahura Mazda was perhaps a compromise between orthodox and heterodox factions, with the 8th, 15th and 23rd day of the calendar perhaps originally having been dedicated to Apam Napat, Haoma, and Dahm\u0101n Afr\u012bn. The dedication to the Ahuric Apam Napat would almost certainly have been an issue for devotees of Aredvi Sura Anahita, whose shrine cult was enormously popular between the 4th century BCE and the 3rd century CE and who is (accretions included) a functional equal of Apam Napat. To this day these three divinities are considered 'extra-calendary' divinities inasfar as they are invoked together with the other 27, so making a list of 30 discrete entities.\n\nThe 2nd through 7th days are dedicated to the Amesha Spentas, the six 'divine sparks' through whom all subsequent creation was accomplished, and who \u2013 in present-day Zoroastrianism - are the archangels.\nDays 9 through 13 are dedications to five yazatas of the litanies (Niyayeshes): Fire (Atar), Water (Apo), Sun (Hvar), Moon (Mah), the star Sirius (Ti\u0161trya) that here perhaps represents the firmament in its entirety. Day 14 is dedicated to the soul of the Ox (Geush Urvan), linked with and representing all animal creation.\nDay 16, leading the second half of the days of the month, is dedicated to the divinity of oath, Mithra (like Apam Napat of the Ahuric triad). He is followed by those closest to him, Srao\u0161a and Ra\u0161nu, likewise judges of the soul; the representatives of which, the Fravashi(s), come next. Verethragna, R\u0101man, V\u0101ta are respectively the hypostases of victory, the breath of life, and the (other) divinity of the wind and 'space'.\nThe last group represent the more 'abstract' emanations: Religion (Daena), Recompense (Ashi), and Justice (Arshtat); Sky (Asman) and Earth (Zam); Sacred Invocation (Manthra Spenta) and Endless Light (Anaghra Raocha). \nIn present-day use, the day and month names are the Middle Persian equivalents of the divine names or the concepts, but in some cases reflect Semitic influences (for instance Ti\u0161trya appears as Tir, which Boyce (1982:31\u201333) asserts is derived from Nabu-*Tiri). The names of the 8th, 15th, and 23rd day of the month \u2013 reflecting Babylonian practice of dividing the month into four periods \u2013 can today be distinguished from one another: These three days are named Dae-pa Adar, Dae-pa Mehr, and Dae-pa Din, Middle Persian expressions meaning 'Creator of' (respectively) Atar, Mithra, and Daena.\nWhat might loosely be called weeks are the divisions of days 1\u20137, 8\u201314, 15\u201322, and 23\u201330 of each month \u2013 two weeks of seven days followed by two weeks of eight. The Gatha days at the end of the year do not belong to any such week.\n\n\nMonth names\nTwelve divinities to whom days of the month are dedicated also have months dedicated to them. The month dedicated to Ahura Mazda is a special case \u2013 that month is named after Mazda's stock epithet, \"Creator\" (Avestan Dadvah, whence Zoroastrian Middle Persian Dae), rather than after His proper name.\nSeven of the twelve month-names occur at various points in the surviving Avesta texts, but an enumeration similar to the ones for day names does not exist in scripture. Lists of month names are however known from commentaries on the Avesta texts, from various regional Zoroastrian calendars of the 3rd to 7th centuries, and from living usage. That these names have an Old Iranian origin and are not merely Middle Iranian innovations may be inferred from the fact that several regional variants reflect Old Iranian genitive singular forms, that is, they preserve an implicit \"(month) of\".\nThe month-names (with Avestan language names in parentheses), in the ordinal sequence used today, are:\n\nThe days on which day-name and month-name dedications intersect are festival days (name-day feast days) of special worship. Because Ahura Mazda has four day-name dedications, the month dedicated to Him has four intersections (the first, eighth, fifteenth and twenty-third day of the tenth month). The others have one intersection each, for example, the nineteenth day of the first month is the day of special worship of the Fravashis.\nThere is some evidence that suggests that in ancient practice Dae was the first month of the year, and Frawardin the last. In a 9th century text, Zoroaster's age at the time of his death is stated to have been 77 years and 40 days (Zadspram 23.9), but the \"40 days\" do not correspond to the difference between the traditional \"death day\" (11th of Dae) and \"birthday\" (6th of Frawardin) unless Dae had once been the first month of the year and Frawardin the last. The festival of Frawardigan is held on the last days of the year, instead of following the name-day feast of the Fravashis (nineteenth day of the month of Frawardin, and also called Frawardigan)..\n\n\nSee also\nArmenian calendar\nIranian calendar\nZoroastrian festivals in India\nZoroastrianism\nNauruz\nBah\u00e1'\u00ed calendar\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\n\n\nCalendar tables\nTable mapping Fasli calendar to a Gregorian non-leap year. During a leap year, the mapping for the last 21 days of the Fasli year must be adjusted by subtracting 1 from the March date.\nTable for 1375 YZ. This table shows how the year 1375 YZ corresponds to Gregorian dates using the three Zoroastrian calendars, with links back to 1374, 1373 and 1372 YZ.\nPerpetual Fasli calendar\nZoroastrian calendar of months and days\n\n\nCalendar calculators\nConversion tool for Gregorian dates from AD 1006 to AD 2400 (good for all dates 374 YZ to 1770 YZ). It can adjust for the fact that events between midnight and 6 a.m. on a Gregorian date fall on the previous Zoroastrian day. Shows month view, year view, moon phases and 'Chaugadiyas'.\nThe facility above is also available in Gujarati.\nA conversion tool for all three variant calendars, good for AD dates 1911\u20132030, also with ability to display Zoroastrian dates on a month-to-view page of the Gregorian calendar for 1911\u20131930.\nAnother implementation of the zanc.org calendar above.\nRozCalc \u2013 Zoroastrian Calendar Calculator\nParsical \u2013 Zoroastrian Shahenshahi calendar application\nParsi calendar (Parsi calendar)"}}}}
part_xec/zwodne
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"19021497":{"pageid":19021497,"ns":0,"title":"Zw\u00f3dne","extract":"Zw\u00f3dne [\u02c8zvudn\u025b] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Zamo\u015b\u0107, within Zamo\u015b\u0107 County, Lublin Voivodeship, in eastern Poland. It lies approximately 5 kilometres (3 mi) south of Zamo\u015b\u0107 and 80 km (50 mi) south-east of the regional capital Lublin.\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zoran_prljincevic
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zoran_Prljin\u010devi\u0107","to":"Zoran Prljin\u010devi\u0107"}],"pages":{"46284839":{"pageid":46284839,"ns":0,"title":"Zoran Prljin\u010devi\u0107","extract":"Zoran Prljin\u010devi\u0107 (Serbian Cyrillic: \u0417\u043e\u0440\u0430\u043d \u041f\u0440\u0459\u0438\u043d\u0447\u0435\u0432\u0438\u045b; 27 January 1932 \u2013 13 June 2013) was a Serbian footballer and football coach.\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links"}}}}
part_xec/zsolt_gyulay
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zsolt_Gyulay","to":"Zsolt Gyulay"}],"pages":{"4703304":{"pageid":4703304,"ns":0,"title":"Zsolt Gyulay","extract":"Zsolt Gyulai (born 12 September 1964) is a Hungarian sprint canoeist. He competed at 1988, 1992 and 1996 Olympics and won four medals: two gold (1988: K-1 500 m, K-4 1000 m) and two silver (1992: K-1 500 m, K-4 1000 m). He also won fourteen medals at the world championships: six golds (K-1 1000 m: 1989, K-4 1000 m: 1986, 1987, 1989, 1990, 1991), four silvers (K-1 500 m: 1986, K-2 500 m: 1995, K-4 1000 m: 1993, 1995), and four bronzes (K-1 500 m: 1991, K-2 200 m: 1995, K-2 500 m: 1991, K-4 500 m: 1993).\nGyulay was elected President of the Hungarian Olympic Committee (MOB) on 29 January 2022, succeeding Kriszti\u00e1n Kulcs\u00e1r. He took the position on 1 February 2022, shortly before the start of the 2022 Winter Olympics.\n\n\nAwards\nHungarian kayaker of the Year (3): 1988, 1989, 1992\nOrder of Merit of the Hungarian People's Republic \u2013 Order of Stars (1988)\n Order of Merit of the Republic of Hungary \u2013 Small Cross (1992)\nMOB Golden ring (1995)\n\n\nReferences\n\nKamber, Raymond, ed. (2008). Medal Winners \u2013 Olympic Games and World Championships (1936\u20132007) \u2013 Part 1: flatwater (now sprint). CanoeICF.com. International Canoe Federation. pp. 1\u201341 at the Wayback Machine (archived 5 January 2010). Additional archives: BCU.org.uk.\nKamber, Raymond, ed. (2008). Medal Winners \u2013 Olympic Games and World Championships (1936\u20132007) \u2013 Part 2: rest of flatwater (now sprint) and remaining canoeing disciplines. CanoeICF.com. International Canoe Federation. pp. 42\u201383 at WebCite (archived 9 November 2009). Additional archives: BCU.org.uk.\nKamber, Raymond, ed. (2008). \"Medal Winners \u2013 Olympic Games and World Championships (1936\u20132007)\" (PDF). CanoeICF.com. International Canoe Federation. pp. 1\u201383. Archived (PDF) from the original on 18 May 2018.\nZsolt Gyulay at Olympics at Sports-Reference.com (archived)\n\n\nExternal links\nZsolt Gyulay at Olympedia \nZsolt Gyulay at Olympics.com"}}}}
part_xec/zone_of_emptiness
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zone_of_Emptiness","to":"Zone of Emptiness"}],"pages":{"26673596":{"pageid":26673596,"ns":0,"title":"Zone of Emptiness","extract":"Zone of Emptiness (\u771f\u7a7a\u5730\u5e2f, Shink\u016b chitai) is a war novel by Japanese writer Hiroshi Noma, first published in 1952.\n\n\nPlot\nThe action takes place in Japan in late 1944, in a Japanese Army infantry barracks. The protagonists are two soldiers, Kitani and Soda. Kitani has spent two years in a military penitentiary for a crime he has not committed, the theft of an officer's wallet. He is actually the victim of the struggle between two cliques in the regiment he belonged to. Soda is an honest and sensitive young man who would like to be Kitani's friend and strives to reconstruct his story. The novel is told in the third person, but with two strong narrative foci on the two protagonists.\nNoma's novel is a denunciation of the corruption of the Japanese army during World War II, and it aims at providing \"the readers with a true picture of what [Noma's] country was like when it was under the yoke of [militarism]\" (from the author's preface). However, the depiction of the humiliating conditions in which Japanese soldiers were kept during the Second World War is not Noma's only purpose in writing Zone of Emptiness, as he \"tried to describe not only the Japanese army but also what is universal in the Japanese soul\". A painstaking psychological analysis of the characters is in fact another important component of the novel, where the gradual unveiling of Soda's and Kitani's past allows readers to understand the motivations of their behaviour and actions.\n\n\nTranslation\nZone of Emptiness was translated into French by Henriette de Boissel at the University of Tokyo and published by Editions Le Sycomore as Zone de vide, and subsequently translated into English by Bernard Frechtman and published in the United States in 1956 by The World Publishing Company.\n\n\nAdaptation\nZone of Emptiness was adapted into a film in 1952, directed by Satsuo Yamamoto.\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zsarolyan
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"8117352":{"pageid":8117352,"ns":0,"title":"Zsaroly\u00e1n","extract":"Zsaroly\u00e1n is a village in Szabolcs-Szatm\u00e1r-Bereg county, in the Northern Great Plain region of eastern Hungary.\n\n\nGeography\nIt covers an area of 6.39 km2 (2 sq mi) and has a population of 460 people (2002).\n\n\nHistory\nZsaroly\u00e1n \u00c1rp\u00e1dian settlement. Its name appears as early as 1181 in the border crossing of Szekeres in the form of ad lacum Sarolyan, where a lake is so named as a signpost, and from 1270 to 1772 it was mentioned in the diplomas as Sarolan. In 1328 p. Zerelyen, 1333 p. Sorollyany, written in the form Saralyan in 1380.\nHis name was written as Zorolan in 1308, when P\u00e9ter Jurk's son (Gy\u00fcgyei) filed a lawsuit against him, and he got an ancient one: Istv\u00e1n V. in 1271 and IV. With the certificates of the kings, L\u00e1szl\u00f3 proved that his father's brother, Maccabeus, had taken land from them in Zsaroly\u00e1n, a German guest, whose sons, Albert and Barnabas, later sold Szekeres and Zsaroly\u00e1n to the sons of M\u00e1rton and Benedict of the Kaplon family for 15 M. As early as the 1300s, Peter's descendants wrote themselves as Zsaroly\u00e1nians. The Zsaroly\u00e1n family continued to be the main owner until the end of the 17th century.\nA 14-15. sz\u00e1zadban a Szekeres csal\u00e1dnak volt m\u00e9g itt nagyobb birtoka.\nA 16-17. In the 16th century, several families, such as Istv\u00e1n B\u00e1thori in 1507 and the Cs\u00e1nyi, Alm\u00e1si, Ny\u00edri, Zsaroly\u00e1ni and T\u0151ke families, got property here.\nIn the 18th century, partly new owners replaced the old ones. In 1754 L\u00e1szl\u00f3 Klobusiczky was also a part-owner, and at the end of the century it was owned by the Jeney, S\u00e1m\u00e9, Veres, M\u00e1rton, Szerdahelyi, V\u00e1ry, Cs\u00e9ke, M\u00e9sz\u00e1ros, Path\u00f3 and \u00dajlaki families.\nThe whole locality was inhabited until the middle of the 19th century.\nIn 1730, Borka T\u00f3th from Zsaroly\u00e1n, the wife of J\u00e1nos S\u00e1rosi, was burned for witchcraft in the market of Nagyk\u00e1roly. This case is sung by J\u00f3zsef Gvad\u00e1nyi in The Notary Public of Peleske, where it is performed as Dorka T\u00f3ti.\nS\u00e1mely plain also belonged to the village. It was once a populated settlement. It was the ancient property of the S\u00e1mi family. The family has been known as S\u00e1melh\u00e1zi since 1421. In addition to them, the Zsaroly\u00e1n and P\u00e1tyodi families also owned part of it.\nIn 1507 it was already barren, and Istv\u00e1n B\u00e1thori received it. In 1504 the whole belonged to Mih\u00e1ly Mutnoky. In 1549 the families of Zsaroly\u00e1n, Transylvania, G\u00e1l, Fodor and R\u00e1polthy also had property here.\nIn 1750 S\u00e1ndor Nagy and Gy\u00f6rgy N\u00e1dorisp\u00e1ni received a royal donation in 1754, and L\u00e1szl\u00f3 Klobusiczky received a royal donation. Data on the settlement were available until the mid-1800s.\n\n\nEconomy\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zooillogix
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"15954824":{"pageid":15954824,"ns":0,"title":"Zooillogix","extract":"Zooillogix is a zoology blog on the ScienceBlogs network, created and edited by Andrew and Benny Bleiman. The site has been featured on ABC News, in Seed magazine, Mental Floss, FHM, and the Annals of Improbable Research, awarders of the Ig Nobel Prize. The site attracts a diverse readership from notable scientists, such as PZ Myers, to biology students to young children.\n\n\nContent\nZooillogix focuses on bizarre zoological news, covering research published in scientific journals, such as the Public Library of Science (PLoS), as well as stories reported in general news outlets. Typical items include the discovery of new species, newly documented animal behavior, zoo and aquarium industry news, and interviews with scientists and researchers. Content is written to be accessible to a non-scientific audience.\n\n\nSee also\nScienceBlogs\nZooBorns\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nZooillogix\nInterview with the Bleiman brothers"}}}}
part_xec/zygmunt_kisielewski
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zygmunt_Kisielewski","to":"Zygmunt Kisielewski"}],"pages":{"1346722":{"pageid":1346722,"ns":0,"title":"Zygmunt Kisielewski","extract":"Zygmunt Jan Kisielewski (27 March 1882 \u2013 25 April 1942) was a Polish writer, brother of Jan August and father of Stefan. During World War I (1914\u20131917) he was a combatant in the Polish Legions. He was an editor of Robotnik (The Worker) from 1918 to 1925. He also authored books on social-national and military subjects. His memoir is entitled Poranek."}}}}
part_xec/zurich_symphony_orchestra
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zurich_Symphony_Orchestra","to":"Zurich Symphony Orchestra"}],"pages":{"4432433":{"pageid":4432433,"ns":0,"title":"Zurich Symphony Orchestra","extract":"Z\u00fcrcher Symphoniker (Zurich Symphony Orchestra) is a symphony orchestra made of up 72 professional freelance musicians, based in Zurich, Switzerland. It was founded in 1981 by music director, Daniel Schweizer. performs approximately thirty-five concerts per year, with the Tonhalle as its resident concert hall. Among the soloist the orchestra has performed with are Brigitte Farner, Michiko Tsuda, Nina Karmon, Lynnette Seah, Ulrich Meldau, Raffael Gintoli, Oswaldo Souza and Michael Erni. The orchestra has toured Singapore, Germany, Italy, China and Spain. \n\n\nExternal links\nhttps://www.zuercher-symphoniker.com"}}}}
part_xec/zsaka
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"7999395":{"pageid":7999395,"ns":0,"title":"Zs\u00e1ka","extract":"Zs\u00e1ka (Romanian: Jaca) is a large village in Hajd\u00fa-Bihar county, in the Northern Great Plain region of eastern Hungary.\n\n\nGeography\nIt covers an area of 78.81 km2 (30 sq mi) and has a population of 1717 people (2001)."}}}}
part_xec/zoran_filipovic
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zoran_Filipovi\u0107","to":"Zoran Filipovi\u0107"}],"pages":{"6523116":{"pageid":6523116,"ns":0,"title":"Zoran Filipovi\u0107","extract":"Zoran Filipovi\u0107 (Serbian Cyrillic: \u0417\u043e\u0440\u0430\u043d \u0424\u0438\u043b\u0438\u043f\u043e\u0432\u0438\u045b, pronounced [z\u01d2ran fil\u01d0\u02d0po\u028bit\u0255, - f\u01d0li-]; born 6 February 1953) is a former Montenegrin football coach and former player, best known for his playing stints with Red Star Belgrade and S.L. Benfica.\n\n\nPlaying career\n\n\nClub\nFilipovi\u0107, born 6 February 1953, in Titograd, SR Montenegro, FPR Yugoslavia, made his name in Yugoslavia as a potent striker with Red Star Belgrade, during more than ten seasons at the club (5 June 1969 to 29 June 1980). He played a total of 520 games for the club scoring 302 goals. He was the Yugoslav First League top scorer in 1976\u201377 season with 21 goals. He also still holds the club record for most goals in European competitions \u2013 scoring 28 goals for Red Star in European Cup, Cup Winners' Cup and UEFA Cup.\nHis first stop abroad was a season at Club Brugge in Belgium, scoring eight goals in 21 league matches.\nIn the summer of 1981, 28-year-old Filipovi\u0107 joined the reigning Portuguese champions S.L. Benfica where over the following three seasons he scored 28 goals in 54 league matches. Zoran Filipovi\u0107 also guided the club Benfica to the 1983 UEFA Cup Final against R.S.C. Anderlecht, being the top scorer of that season's competition and scoring memorable goals for the Portuguese in the quarterfinal against AS Roma and in the semifinal against Universitatea Craiova.\nFilipovi\u0107 ended his career with Boavista FC (1984\u20131986) when he became the assistant coach at the same club.\n\n\nInternational\nFilipovi\u0107 made his debut for Yugoslavia in a May 1971 European Championship qualification match against East Germany in Leipzig, scoring a debut goal after only 11 minutes. He has earned a total of 13 caps, scoring 2 goals and his final international was a November 1977 Balkan Cup match (0-0) against Greece in Thessaloniki.\n\n\nManagerial career\nHe got his first head coaching job at S.C. Salgueiros in 1988 and stayed with the club for five seasons. He orchestrated the club's most notable moments in history by becoming Second League champion in 1989\u201390 and achieving UEFA Cup participation through best placement in club's history immediately in the next season.\nIn 1993, he moved to S.C. Beira-Mar where he coached for a season. In 1994, he returned to S.L. Benfica for a two-year spell where he was the assistant coach and interim head coach winning one Portuguese Cup in 1996, and participating in the UEFA Champions League. During 1997 he coached Boavista.\nFrom mid-1990s Zoran Filipovi\u0107 was on the FR Yugoslavia national team coaching staff as an assistant to head coach Slobodan Santra\u010d. He was part of Yugoslav coaching staff at the World Cup 1998, leaving the post together with Santra\u010d right after the tournament.\nAfter joining as their head coach for a short spell, he left to work as part of Sampdoria coaching staff. Vujadin Bo\u0161kov called him on to become his assistant during the second part of the 1998 season.\nZoran Filipovi\u0107's next stop was Vit\u00f3ria S.C. in the Portuguese league.\nHowever, Zoran Filipovi\u0107 re-joined the FR Yugoslavia national team in 1999 continuing his collaboration with Vujadin Bo\u0161kov when he took over. Filipovi\u0107 was the assistant at the Euro 2000. Following Euro 2000, he briefly coached Panionios in Greece.\nIn 2001 Zoran Filipovi\u0107 returned to coach Red Star Belgrade in Serbia until 2003 with which he won the 2001\u201302 FR Yugoslavia Cup title and is remembered for launching young players such as Nemanja Vidi\u0107, Bo\u0161ko Jankovi\u0107, Nikola \u017digi\u0107, Aleksandar Lukovi\u0107 amongst others.\nIn 2003 Zoran Filipovi\u0107 went to the United Arab Emirates when coaching Al-Shaab with which he was defeated in the Cup finals.\nAfter the Emirates experience, he became the technical director of the Football Association of Serbia and Montenegro A and u21 squads participating in the 2006 FIFA World Cup in Germany and the 2006 U21 European Championship in Portugal.\nOn 1 February 2007 he was appointed the first coach of the newly created Montenegro national team. His first game in charge was a friendly against Hungary on 24 March 2007 where they won their debut match with 2\u20131. The record in the newly formed Montenegro national team was more than positive for a team rated always as underdogs \u2013 of a total of 23 matches played, 8 victories were achieved, 8 draws and 7 defeats. The FA president Dejan Savi\u0107evi\u0107 commented when Zoran Filipovi\u0107's contract expired in January 2010 \u2013 \"Filipovi\u0107 did an enormously good job. He formed a great group of players and worked with great enthusiasm.\" Zoran Filipovi\u0107 left the Balkan newcomers in an astonishing 73rd position in the FIFA ranking when he departed from this historical role.\nOnly two months after leaving the helm of Montenegro national team he assumed a 3-month coaching job contract in Romanian club FC Ceahl\u0103ul Piatra Neam\u0163.\nIn July 2010 he was hired by South African club Golden Arrows from Durban.\nWith only three months left in the championship and with relegation imminent, Zoran Filipovi\u0107 arrived in FC Atyrau to save the team from relegation. He stayed on to sign a one-year contract for season 2012.\nIn May 2016 it was announced by Serbia that Zoran Filipovi\u0107 will return to national team football in a new role.\nAfter 5 years in the Serbia where significant achievements were attained, in December 2020 accepted a new Challenge to become the National Team Coach of Libyan Football Federation. In May 2021 before the start of the qualifications for the Arab Cup in Qatar he terminated his contract with the Libyan Football Federation in FIFA with just cause.\n\n\nHonours\n\n\nPlayer\nRed Star BelgradeYugoslav First League\nWinner (3): 1972\u201373, 1976\u201377, 1979\u201380\nYugoslav Cup\nWinner (1): 1970\u201371S.L. BenficaPrimeira Liga\nWinner (2): 1982\u201383, 1983\u201384\nTa\u00e7a de Portugal\nWinner (1): 1982\u201383\nUEFA Cup\nRunner-up (1): 1982\u201383\n\n\nManager\nS.L. Benfica (as an assistant)Ta\u00e7a de Portugal\nWinner (1): 1995\u201396S.C. SalgueirosPortuguese Second Division\nWinner (1): 1989\u201390Red Star BelgradeFR Yugoslavia Cup\nWinner (1): 2001\u201302\n\n\nIndividual\nYugoslav First League Top Goalscorer (1): 1976\u201377\nUEFA Cup Top Goalscorer (1): 1982\u201383\n\n\nTrivia\nZoran Filipovi\u0107 still has the goal record in European competitions for Red Star Belgrade \u2013 28 goals.\nZoran Filipovi\u0107 is ranked the 3\u00ba Top goalscorer for Red Star \u2013 502 games/302 goals.\nZoran Filipovi\u0107 in season 1982\u201383 he contributed to Benfica's European good campaign \u2013 12 games/8 goals (hat trick against AS Roma, and also the decisive goal against Universitatea Craiova).\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\n\n[1]\n[2]\n[3]\n[4]\nZoran Filipovi\u0107 at National-Football-Teams.com \n[5]\n[6]\n[7]\n[8]"}}}}
part_xec/zutice
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"28867492":{"pageid":28867492,"ns":0,"title":"\u017dutice","extract":"\u017dutice is a village in the municipality of Ra\u0161ka, Serbia. According to the 2002 census, the village has a population of 224 people.\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zurnazen_mustafa_pasha
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zurnazen_Mustafa_Pasha","to":"Zurnazen Mustafa Pasha"}],"pages":{"32453319":{"pageid":32453319,"ns":0,"title":"Zurnazen Mustafa Pasha","extract":"Zurnazen Mustafa Pasha was an Ottoman statesman of Albanian origin. He was Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire for 4 hours on March 5, 1656. He is sometimes excluded from the lists of Ottoman Grand Viziers. He was promoted from the in-attorney title to the rank of full grand vizier due to the influence he exerted on the sultan for Gazi H\u00fcseyin Pasha's dismissal from the office. His appointment caused an uprising in Istanbul, and he was exiled after having only held the seal for four hours.\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zoe_caldwell
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zoe_Caldwell","to":"Zoe Caldwell"}],"pages":{"5688904":{"pageid":5688904,"ns":0,"title":"Zoe Caldwell","extract":"Zoe Ada Caldwell, (14 September 1933 \u2013 16 February 2020) was an Australian actress. She was a four-time Tony Award winner, winning Best Featured Actress in a Play for Slapstick Tragedy (1966), and Best Actress in a Play for The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (1968), Medea (1982), and Master Class (1996). Her film appearances include The Purple Rose of Cairo (1985), Birth (2004), and Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close (2011).\nShe was also known for providing the voice of the Grand Councilwoman in the Lilo & Stitch franchise and in Kingdom Hearts: Birth by Sleep.\n\n\nEarly life\nCaldwell was born in Melbourne, and raised in the suburb of Balwyn. Her father, Edgar, was a plumber. Caldwell's mother often took some of the neighbourhood kids to the Elizabethan Theatre in Richmond where they could go backstage and watch rehearsals and performances.\n\n\nCareer\nCaldwell began her career in Melbourne in the 1950s and early 1960s, performing with the newly formed Union Theatre Repertory Company (later the Melbourne Theatre Company).She emigrated to England upon being invited to join the RSC at a time when Charles Laughton was attempting Lear, and Vanessa Redgrave, Eileen Atkins, Albert Finney were among the other newcomers in the company. She played Bianca in the 1959 production of Othello, starring Paul Robeson. Later she played the indomitable Helena, opposite Dame Edith Evans in a production of All's Well That Ends Well. Her career later brought her to the United States, where she was one of the original company of actors under Guthrie's direction at the Tyrone Guthrie Theatre in Minneapolis. At the Guthrie, she played parts such as Ophelia in Hamlet and Natasha in Three Sisters.A life member of the Actors Studio, Caldwell won four Tony Awards for her performances on Broadway in Tennessee Williams' Slapstick Tragedy, The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, Medea and Master Class. In the last she portrayed opera diva Maria Callas. In Stratford, Ontario she appeared often, including her role as Cleopatra in Shakespeare's Antony and Cleopatra opposite Christopher Plummer's Mark Antony in 1967.Her other credits on Broadway include Arthur Miller's The Creation of the World and Other Business in which she played Eve, a one-woman play by William Luce based on the life of Lillian Hellman and a production of Macbeth with Christopher Plummer as Macbeth and Glenda Jackson as Lady Macbeth under Caldwell's direction. Caldwell directed, Off-Broadway, a two-woman play, created by Eileen Atkins, Vita and Virginia, based on the letters between Virginia Woolf and Vita Sackville-West. Atkins played Virginia and Vanessa Redgrave played Vita. Caldwell directed the Broadway production of Othello in the late 1970s with James Earl Jones, Christopher Plummer, and Dianne Wiest. She helmed the American Shakespeare Theatre in Stratford, Connecticut for two limited-run seasons as its Artistic Director in the mid-1980s.Caldwell also performed on film, most notably as an imperious dowager in Woody Allen's The Purple Rose of Cairo. She voiced the character of the Grand Councilwoman in Disney's Lilo & Stitch, and continued voicing the character in the franchise's later films and in Lilo & Stitch: The Series, as well as in Kingdom Hearts Birth by Sleep. In 2011, she acted in Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close.\n\n\nPersonal life\nCaldwell graduated from Methodist Ladies' College, Kew and, much later, received an honorary degree from the University of Melbourne. In 1968, she married Canadian-born Broadway producer Robert Whitehead, a cousin of actor Hume Cronyn. They had two sons and were married until Whitehead's death in June 2002.\n\n\nHonours\nIn 1970, Caldwell was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire by The Queen.\n\n\nDeath\nCaldwell died in Pound Ridge, New York on 16 February 2020, aged 86, of complications from Parkinson's disease.\n\n\nFilmography\n\n\nFilm\n\n\nTelevision\n\n\nTheatre credits\n\n\nVideo games\n\n\nBibliography\nCaldwell, Zoe (2002). I Will be Cleopatra: An Actress's Journey. New York: W. W. Norton. ISBN 978-0393323603.\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nZoe Caldwell at the Internet Broadway Database \nZoe Caldwell at IMDb\nZoe Caldwell at the Internet Off-Broadway Database"}}}}
part_xec/zugokosmoceras
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"9907812":{"pageid":9907812,"ns":0,"title":"Zugokosmoceras","extract":"Zugokosmoceras is an extinct genus of cephalopods belonging to the Ammonite subclass.There are two known species of Zugokosmoceras, these are Zugokosmoceras obductum and Zugokosmoceras jason Specimens found were in Switzerland and France. Zugokosmoceras was from the Jurassic Period.\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zumpy
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"21262161":{"pageid":21262161,"ns":0,"title":"Zumpy","extract":"Zumpy [\u02c8zump\u0268] (German Sumpen) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Boron\u00f3w, within Lubliniec County, Silesian Voivodeship, in southern Poland. It lies approximately 2 kilometres (1 mi) west of Boron\u00f3w, 15 km (9 mi) east of Lubliniec, and 49 km (30 mi) north of the regional capital Katowice.\nThe village has a population of 123. \n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zygaena_trifolii
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zygaena_trifolii","to":"Zygaena trifolii"}],"pages":{"15054094":{"pageid":15054094,"ns":0,"title":"Zygaena trifolii","extract":"Zygaena trifolii, the five-spot burnet, is a moth in the family Zygaenidae. It is found from North Africa, through the western Mediterranean, Great Britain and central Europe to Ukraine. It is not found in Scandinavia.\n\nThe wingspan is 28\u201333 mm. Adults are on wing from the mid-June to the beginning of August in one generation per year.\nThe larvae feed on the leaves of Lotus uliginosus and Lotus corniculatus. The species overwinters in the larval stage and may overwinter twice.\n\n\nSubspecies\nZygaena trifolii trifolii\nZygaena trifolii barcelonensis Reiss, 1922\nZygaena trifolii caerulescens Oberthur, 1910\nZygaena trifolii decreta Verity, 1925\nZygaena trifolii duponcheliana Oberthur, 1910 \nZygaena trifolii espunnica Reiss, 1936\nZygaena trifolii hibera Verity, 1925\nZygaena trifolii lusitaniaemixta Verity, 1930\nZygaena trifolii olbiana Oberthur, 1910\nZygaena trifolii palustrella Verity, 1925\nZygaena trifolii palustris Oberthur, 1896\nZygaena trifolii pusilla Oberthur, 1910\nZygaena trifolii subsyracusia Verity, 1925\nZygaena trifolii syracusia Zeller, 1847 (the Channel Islands and the coastal regions of north-western France from Loire-Atlantique to C\u00f4tes-d\u2019Armor and Ille-et-Vilaine)\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nFive-spot burnet on UKmoths (Ian Kimber: Guide to the moths of Great Britain and Ireland)\nMoths and Butterflies of Europe and North Africa\nLepiforum.de\nschmetterling-raupe"}}}}
part_xec/zygodontomys_brunneus
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zygodontomys_brunneus","to":"Zygodontomys brunneus"}],"pages":{"12176560":{"pageid":12176560,"ns":0,"title":"Zygodontomys brunneus","extract":"Zygodontomys brunneus, also known as the brown zygodont, brown cane mouse, or Colombian cane mouse, is a rodent species in the genus Zygodontomys of tribe Oryzomyini. It is found only in Colombia.\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nLiterature cited\nDuff, A. and Lawson, A. 2004. Mammals of the World: A checklist. Yale University Press, 312 pp. ISBN 978-0-300-10398-4\nMusser, G.G. and Carleton, M.D. 2005. Superfamily Muroidea. Pp. 894\u20131531 in Wilson, D.E. and Reeder, D.M. (eds.). Mammal Species of the World: a taxonomic and geographic reference. 3rd ed. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2 vols., 2142 pp. ISBN 978-0-8018-8221-0"}}}}
part_xec/zoot_horn_rollo
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zoot_Horn_Rollo","to":"Zoot Horn Rollo"}],"pages":{"2888165":{"pageid":2888165,"ns":0,"title":"Zoot Horn Rollo","extract":"Bill Harkleroad (born January 8, 1949), known professionally as Zoot Horn Rollo, is an American guitarist. He is best known for his work with Captain Beefheart and The Magic Band. In 2003, he was ranked No. 62 in a Rolling Stone magazine list of \"the 100 greatest guitarists of all time\".\n\n\nBiography\nBorn in Hawthorne, California, Harkleroad was trained as an accordionist as a child but changed to guitar in his teens. In nearby Lancaster, California, he became involved in local bands. With a future member of the Magic Band, Mark Boston, he joined a band named B.C. & The Cavemen. The two later played in the group Blues in a Bottle along with the future Magic Band guitarist Jeff Cotton. He joined the Magic Band in 1968 after the departure of Alex St. Clair. After recording Trout Mask Replica and several further albums, he left in 1974, with several other band members, to form Mallard. His book, Lunar Notes, describes some of the tensions that contributed to the split between Captain Beefheart and the other band members.\nAfter the break up of Mallard, Harkleroad had a limited involvement with the music community as a performer. He continued his involvement in another capacity, however, as a record store manager and guitar instructor in Eugene, Oregon.\nOn November 27, 2001, he released We Saw a Bozo Under the Sea. In 2008, John French (a.k.a. Drumbo) released an album City of Refuge on which Harkleroad played guitar on all twelve tracks. In 2013, Harkleroad contributed lead guitar to a psychobilly track on the Eugene-based band Cherry Poppin' Daddies' album White Teeth, Black Thoughts.\n\n\nDiscography\nWith Captain Beefheart & His Magic Band\n\n1969 Trout Mask Replica\n1970 Lick My Decals Off, Baby\n1972 The Spotlight Kid\n1972 Clear Spot\n1974 Unconditionally GuaranteedWith Mallard\n\n1975 Mallard\n1976 In a Different ClimateSolo\n\n2001 We Saw a Bozo Under the Sea\n2014 Masks\n\n\nBibliography\nHarkleroad, Bill (1998). Lunar Notes: Zoot Horn Rollo's Captain Beefheart Experience. Interlink Publishing. ISBN 0-946719-21-7.\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nOfficial website\nHiFi Mundo interview, 1997\nGuitar Player magazine biography\nInterview in University of Oregon Voice\nMallard (band) web pages online since 1995"}}}}
part_xec/zosmotes_plumula
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zosmotes_plumula","to":"Zosmotes plumula"}],"pages":{"45353927":{"pageid":45353927,"ns":0,"title":"Zosmotes plumula","extract":"Zosmotes plumula is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae, and the only species in the genus Zosmotes. It was described by Pascoe in 1865.\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zoltan_adorjan
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zolt\u00e1n_Adorj\u00e1n","to":"Zolt\u00e1n Adorj\u00e1n"}],"pages":{"19321879":{"pageid":19321879,"ns":0,"title":"Zolt\u00e1n Adorj\u00e1n","extract":"Zolt\u00e1n Adorj\u00e1n (born 15 November 1961 in Debrecen, Hungary) is former international motorcycle speedway rider who appeared in two Speedway World Championship finals and finished third in the World Pairs Championship in 1990.\n\n\nWorld Final Appearances\n\n\nIndividual World Championship\n1985 - Bradford, Odsal Stadium - 14th - 2pts\n1989 - M\u00fcnchen, Olympiastadion - 15th - 4pts\n1990 - Bradford, Odsal Stadium - 16th - 2pts\n\n\nWorld Pairs Championship\n1988 - Bradford, Odsal Stadium (with Antal Kocso) - 6th - 25pts\n1989 - Leszno, Alfred Smoczyk Stadium (with Antal Kocso) - 6th - 22pts\n1990 - Landshut, Ellerm\u00fchle Stadium (with S\u00e1ndor Tihanyi) - 3rd - 37pts\n1993 - Vojens, Speedway Center (with Josef Petrikovics / Antal Kocso) - 7th - 10pts\n\n\nSee also\nHungary national speedway team\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zulema_arenas
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zulema_Arenas","to":"Zulema Arenas"}],"pages":{"51745096":{"pageid":51745096,"ns":0,"title":"Zulema Arenas","extract":"Zulema Arenas (born 15 November 1995) is a Peruvian long-distance runner who specialises in the 3000 metres steeplechase. She broke the South American junior record for the event at the 2014 World Junior Championships in Athletics. She improved this further to 9:53.42 minutes at 2014 Ibero-American Championships in Athletics, winning a silver medal in the process. She holds the Peruvian record with her personal best of 9:52.88 minutes.\n\n\nPersonal bests\n3000 metres steeplechase \u2013 9:52.88 min (2016)\n800 metres \u2013 2:10.85 min (2015)\n1500 metres \u2013 4:19.14 min (2016)\n3000 metres \u2013 9:37.9 min (2016)\n5000 metres \u2013 16:48.18 min (2016)\n2000 metres steeplechase \u2013 6:40.28 min\t(2012)All information from All-Athletics\n\n\nInternational competitions\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nZulema Arenas at World Athletics"}}}}
part_xec/zulfahmi_arifin
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zulfahmi_Arifin","to":"Zulfahmi Arifin"}],"pages":{"38467354":{"pageid":38467354,"ns":0,"title":"Zulfahmi Arifin","extract":"Muhammad Zulfahmi bin Mohd Arifin (born 5 October 1991) is a Singaporean professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Singapore Premier League club Hougang United and the Singapore national team. He is noted for being a technical player with set pieces and playmaking abilities. He is also capable operating at full-back and center back.\n\n\nClub career\n\n\nYoung Lions\nZulfahmi began his footballing career with Young Lions in the S.League. After two seasons with the club, he was selected in the LionsXII squad for the 2013 season of the Malaysia Super League.\n\n\nLionsXII\nZulfahmi failed to play any part in the first 6 games of the season. He was given his first start against Pahang in the MSL on 16 February 2013. Two more appearances followed until a road traffic accident in mid-April set him back a month. He managed one further start and a substitute appearance on his return as LionsXII won the 2013 Malaysia Super League.\nZulfahmi's potential was recognised as he had a run of six starts in the beginning of the 2014 campaign. Poor performances however meant that he was dropped to the bench in favour of Firdaus Kasman for the next three games. He marked his return to the starting line-up on 22 March by curling a free kick into the PKNS net to score his first LionsXII goal.\n\n\nHome United\nAfter LionsXII was disbanded, Zulfahmi went to sign for Home United for the 2016 S.League. He made 17 appearances for the protectors before leaving the club at the end of the season.\n\n\nHougang United\nZulfahmi signed for the Cheetahs ahead of the 2017 S.League season, joining former coach Phillipe Aw.\n\n\nChonburi FC\nZulfahmi's journey to Thailand happened after he made contacts with a Thai agent. Zulfahmi was on trial with second-tier Angthong FC who had wanted to start negotiations after a day. However, Zulfahmi, on the advice of his agent, traveled to Chonburi instead for a 4-day trial. After playing 60 minutes in a 2\u20133 friendly defeat to Thai Port FC, Chonburi offered him a contract which is only slightly higher than what he received at Hougang.Zulfahmi became only the third Lion to play in the Thai top tier, after Hassan Sunny and John Wilkinson. Zulfahmi made his debut in a 1\u20130 loss to Chiangrai United. He has started Chonburi's first two games of the Thai League 1, helping them to a draw and a loss.\n\n\nHougang United\nAfter spending a season with Chonburi, Zulfahmi re-signed for Hougang United FC for the 2019 Singapore Premier League season.\n\n\nSuphanburi\nAfter a year back in his native Singapore, helping Hougang to a 3rd-place finish, Zulfahmi found himself back in the Thai League 1 after an agent contacted him about Suphanburi's interest. Suphanburi's coach Adebayo Gbadebo had watched videos of Zulfahmi's previous games before expressing an interest in signing him. Zulfahmi suffered a difficult 2020, playing just 8 of Suphanburi's 15 league matches in a disrupted season, having returned to Singapore in August to be with his ailing mother, who later died from breast cancer. However, he was a fixture of Suphanburi's midfield before and after he returned to Singapore. He started their first four matches before the league's coronavirus-enforced hiatus and, following his return to Thailand, he started three of Suphanburi's last four league games and came off the bench in the other one.\n\n\nSamut Prakan City\nZulfahmi signed a 1+1\u20442-season deal with top-tier Thai team Samut Prakan City, after his contract with Thai League 1 side Suphanburi expired. He will play alongside his international teammate, goalkeeper Izwan Mahbud, 30, who joined the club in September.\n\n\nInternational career\nZulfahmi was first called up to the Singapore national team for a friendly match against Thailand on 24 August 2011. He was also part of the 2012 AFF Championship winning squad although he did not made any appearances in the competition.Zulfahmi was handed his first international start against Laos on 10 October 2013.Along with Hariss Harun, he has been identified by national coach Bernd Stange as the future of Singapore's midfield.Zulfahmi had also been part of the Singapore squad for the 2014 and 2016 AFF Championships.Zulfahmi finally got his first goal after winning 40 caps for the Lions in a 1\u20131 draw with Oman on 23 March 2019, scoring via a free-kick from about 23 yards out.\n\n\nSingapore Selection Squad\nZulfahmi was selected as part of the Singapore Selection squad for The Sultan of Selangor's Cup to be held on 6 May 2017.\n\n\nCareer statistics\n26 Sept 2021\n\n\nClub\nAs of match played 20 Nov 2021. Caps and goals may not be correct.Young Lions and LionsXII are ineligible for qualification to AFC competitions in their respective leagues.\nYoung Lions withdrew from the 2011 and 2012 Singapore Cup, and the 2011 Singapore League Cup due to participation in AFC and AFF youth competitions.\n\n\nInternational\n\n\nInternational goals\nAs of match played 24 March 2019. Singapore score listed first, score column indicates score after each Zulfahmi goal.\n\n\nHonours\n\n\nClub\nLionsXII\n\nMalaysia Super League: 2013\n\n\nInternational\nSingapore\n\nAFF Championship: 2012\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zvonimir
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"9716788":{"pageid":9716788,"ns":0,"title":"Zvonimir","extract":"Zvonimir is a Croatian male given name, used since the Middle Ages.\nDuring Yugoslavia, the name became popular in other ex-Yugoslav republics like Croatia and Slovenia.\n\n\nPeople named Zvonimir\nDemetrius Zvonimir of Croatia, Croatian king\nZvonimir Berkovi\u0107, Croatian film director, teacher and critic\nZvonimir Boban, Croatian footballer\nZvonimir Cimerman\u010di\u0107, Croatian footballer\nFerdinand Zvonimir von Habsburg, Austrian archduke\nZvonimir Janko, Croatian mathematician\nZvonimir Lon\u010dari\u0107, Croatian artist\nZvonimir Rogoz, Croatian actor\nZvonimir Serdaru\u0161i\u0107, Croatian handball player\nZvonimir Leva\u010di\u0107 - \u0160eva, Croatian TV personality\nZvonimir Soldo, Croatian footballer\nZvonimir \u0160eparovi\u0107, Croatian politician\nZvonimir Vuki\u0107, Serbian footballer\n\n\nSee also\nSlavic names\n\n\nExternal links\nhttp://www.behindthename.com/name/zvonimir"}}}}
part_xec/zork_nemesis
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zork_Nemesis","to":"Zork Nemesis"}],"pages":{"1048304":{"pageid":1048304,"ns":0,"title":"Zork Nemesis","extract":"Zork Nemesis: The Forbidden Lands is a graphic adventure game developed by Zombie LLC, published by Activision, and released in 1996 for Windows 95, MS-DOS, and Macintosh. It is the eleventh game in the Zork series, and the first title not to be marketed under the Infocom label, while featuring a darker, less comical story within the Zork setting. The story focuses on players investigating the sudden disappearance of four prominent figures and their children to the hands of a mysterious being known as the \"Nemesis\", and uncovering a sinister plot during their investigations that they must thwart. The game features performances by Lauren Koslow, W. Morgan Sheppard, Allan Kolman, Stephen Macht, Paul Anthony Stewart, Merle Kennedy, and Bruce Nozick.\nThe game received favorable reviews, despite some criticism of the puzzles and lack of relevance to the Zork setting, and won the 1996 Spotlight Award for \"Best Prerendered Art\". The MS-DOS edition of the game was later released by GOG on their website, who made it compatible for use with Windows XP, Windows Vista, Windows 7, Windows 8, and Windows 10.\n\n\nGameplay\nZork Nemesis operates from a first-person perspective and uses a simple point-and-click system. The cursor fundamentally allows for interaction with the player's surrounding, changing to symbolize what can be done; an arrow going forward or back allows for movement; arrows for side-to-side or up-and-down allow for examining locations from different viewpoints; a gold arrow allows for interaction with objects; and a hand icon allows for objects to be picked up or to symbolize where objects can be used. Each location, ranging from corridors, small rooms, and vast halls, can be viewed in panoramic 360-degree to find objects to examine and interact with, with a still screen used when zooming in to examine an object in more detail (i.e. a book). Items collected by the player are stored in a simple inventory that be cycled through the right mouse-button.\nPuzzles in the game generally require the player to find clues that will help them solve it, ranging from finding certain objects or triggering something in the right combination; a score system mostly denotes when a player has completed a section of the game's story.\n\n\nStory\n\n\nSetting\nThe game takes place in the fantasy world of Zork, with players initially solving puzzles and exploring the Temple of Agrippa, a large complex situated in a mountainous region within the Forbidden Lands. Later the player has the ability to travel and explore the following locations: Frigid River Branch Conservatory - a musical school and performance hall near to Flood Control Dam #7; Steppinthrax Monastery \u2013 an abandoned monastery in disrepair; Grey Mountains Asylum \u2013 a mental institution in the frigid, frozen peaks of the Grey Mountains; Castle Irondune - a military fort with private museum of battles, situated in the Irondune desert.\n\n\nCharacters\nMadame Sophia Hamilton (portrayed by Lauren Koslow) - An alchemist of water and copper, and head of the Frigid River Branch Conservatory, who teaches music to Alexandria.\nBishop Francois Malveaux (portrayed by W. Morgan Sheppard) - An alchemist of fire and lead, father of Alexandria, and a religious man who runs the Steppinthrax Monastery.\nDoctor Erasmus Sartorius (portrayed by Allan Kolman) - An alchemist of air and tin, and a doctor who is head of the Grey Mountains Asylum. Separated Alexandria from her birth mother during her infancy.\nGeneral Thaddeus Kaine (portrayed by Stephen Macht) - An alchemist of earth and iron, father of Lucien, and a decorated officer in charge of Castle Irondune. Responsible for separating his son from marrying Alexandria.\nLucien Kaine (portrayed by Paul Anthony Stewart) - Thaddeus' son and a skilled soldier. Despises his father's actions while growing affectionate for Alexandria, before being arrested for desertion when planning to marry her.\nAlexandria Wolfe (portrayed by Merle Kennedy) - A young woman born at the Grey Mountains Asylum, raised by Francois with no knowledge of her real parents, taught music by Sophia, and fell in love with Lucien while performing concerts. Died a mysterious death in the Temple of Agrippa.\n\"Nemesis\" (voiced by Bruce Nozick; portrayed by Paul Anthony Stewart) - A mysterious entity that took over the Temple of Agrippa, torturing Sophia, Malveaux, Sartorius and Kaine after entrapping them. The Nemesis seeks to find the fifth alchemical element so that it can grant it what it desires, and sees the player as nothing more than a problem.\nThe Player - A nameless adventurer, charged by Vice Regent Syovar the Strong to enter the Forbidden Lands and investigate the disappearance of four prominent citizens, replacing a previous agent named Karlok Bivotar who disappeared on the same mission.\n\n\nPlot\nFollowing the demise of Agent L. Bivotar, Vice Regent Syovar the Strong assigns the player with the task of continuing their investigations within the region known as the Forbidden Lands, in which Bivotar had been instructed to discover what had happened to four prominent figures of the Empire who went missing \u2013 Doctor Erasmus Sartorius, General Thaddeus Kaine, Bishop Francois Malveaux, and Madame Sophia Hamilton - while determining if rumours of a mysterious curse that had emerged from within the region were substantiated, and investigate possible illegal magic being conducted. Travelling to the Temple of Agrippa, an ancient temple within the Eastlands that Bivotar had learnt about during their investigations, the player uncovers a message left behind by the spirit of Alexandria Wolfe, a young woman who seeks help to deal with a great evil that resides within the temple.\nEntering the main building of the temple, the player uncovers information revealing that Sartorius, Kaine, Malveaux and Sophia were operating in secret as alchemists, each mastering one of the four elements: Air, Fire, Earth, and Water. The group had been seeking the mysterious fifth element called \"the Quintessence\" - , until a mysterious entity known as the Nemesis killed them. After finding each member's corresponding element, the group explain that Nemesis not only killed them but also Alexandria, Francois' daughter, and Thaddeus' son Lucien. Using their combined power, the group stop Nemesis from attacking the player, and advises them to visit their homes and seek out the elemental metals aligned to each of them. Using a special planetarium, the player travels to each member's home \u2013 Steppinthrax Monastery, Castle Irondune, Grey Mountains Asylum, and Frigid River Branch Conservatory \u2013 and find the pure samples of each metal within each alchemist's personal laboratory.\nWhilst in each of these locations, the player slowly learns more about the Alchemists' work and the identity of the Nemesis, through visions and various letters. The player learns that Sartorius sought to complete the research of his father into the Quintessence which could grant eternal life. Learning that it required mastery of the four elements and their pure metals, both of which he could not accomplish on his own, Sartorius recruited the assistance of Sophia, Francois and Thaddeus, each for their own reasons: Francois sought to avoid his death from an incurable disease; Thaddeus sought power to win a war against a rival; and Sophia sought to live forever, having fallen in love with Thaddeus. The group soon learned that they needed to create a child, who had to be born when an alignment of planets, each corresponding to each alchemical element, occurred at the same time of a solar eclipse, who would lead them to finding the fifth element.\nSartorius sourced the child, Alexandria, from one of his patients at his asylum, and left Francois in charge of raising her. Alexandria was taught a special song by Sophia, unaware it would purify her soul for a ritual the group would perform on her. However, the alchemists had not foreseen Lucien falling in love with Alexandria when he attended one of her concerts, thus Thaddeus had him arrested on a false charge of draft-dodging. Knowing the fifth element would be theirs at the next solar eclipse, the group lured Alexandria to the Agrippa Temple for sacrifice. Lucien, learning of their plan, escaped from his cell, but arrived too late to save Alexandria. Angered, Lucien killed the group in revenge, and became the Nemesis in order to find the fifth element himself, and revive Alexandria with it. When the player returns, having revived the group, the alchemists attempt to convince them to drink from a chalice, but seeing them not willing, chose to send them away, while resuming their ritual.\nLucien, knowing they must not find Alexandria's body, beseeches the player for help since they know the truth, and passes on a gold ring. Entering a hidden chamber below the temple, the player creates a special Alchemy symbol, representing Infinity, from both Lucien's and Alexandria's rings. With the rings now purified and imbued with the fifth element, representing pure love, the player quickly uses it to stop the Alchemists. The resulting power from the fifth element kills them, revives Alexandria, and destroys the temple. This ends the curse in the Forbidden Lands, and the game ends with Lucien and Alexandria walking away together to live in peace.\n\n\nProduction\nZork Nemesis employed technology Activision dubbed \"Z-Vision Surround Technology,\" which gives users a simulated 360-degree view of each location visited. It was one of the first games to employ such technology, though Zork Nemesis only allows panning in either horizontal or vertical where both panning options are available, unlike in later games such as The Journeyman Project 3: Legacy of Time or Myst III: Exile. Furthermore, details were far more difficult to make out in the panoramic scenes than in the still screens; the sequel, Zork: Grand Inquisitor, made significant improvements to the Z-Vision system. Technical director Laird Malamed felt the game suffered from time constraints, saying that once the advanced game engine was completed, the team didn't have enough time left to implement anything more than simple control panel puzzles.Like other adventure games of its time, Zork Nemesis made use of live actors. The game features a significant amount of screen-time for the actors, thanks to its use of flashbacks at key locations (or objects) and the use of monologues in which characters address the player explaining and justifying their actions.\nThe game's plot was written by Cecilia Barajas, Nick Sagan and Adam Simon and is a departure from the series usual comedic treatment in its games, by featuring a much darker and less humorous story than previous games. The budget of Zork Nemesis surpassed $3 million. The live-action scenes contributed to this cost, which ultimately rose to around USD$3.5 million. The game was heavily marketed, with an estimated $1 million spent on this aspect.\n\n\nReception\n\nThe game received \"favorable\" reviews according to the review aggregation website GameRankings. Next Generation said, \"With 3D sound and stunning graphics (the game is almost worth the price just to examine the fantastic architectural environments), this game was destined for five stars, until the puzzles \u2013 and these are what really count, to us, anyway \u2013 dragged the game back down.\"Zork Nemesis placed 10th on PC Data's monthly computer game sales chart for April 1996. It secured positions 12 and 11 the following two months, respectively. By November 1996, Zork Nemesis had sold above 100,000 units. According to Activision, strong sales of the game during the 1996 holiday shopping season contributed to high revenues in the company's third quarter, which increased 78% over the third quarter of 1995.Zork Nemesis won the 1996 Spotlight Award for \"Best Prerendered Art\" from the Game Developers Conference. It was also nominated for the 1996 \"Adventure Game of the Year\" awards of Computer Games Strategy Plus, PC Gamer, CNET Gamecenter and Computer Game Entertainment, but these went variously to The Neverhood, The Beast Within: A Gabriel Knight Mystery and The Pandora Directive. PC Gamer highlighted Nemesis's \"charm and vitality\", and called it \"graphically gorgeous\".In 2011, Adventure Gamers named Zork Nemesis the 51st-best adventure game ever released.\n\n\nSee also\nThe Space Bar\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nZork Nemesis at MobyGames\nZork Nemesis review at Adventure Classic Gaming"}}}}
part_xec/z-ro_tolerance
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Z-Ro_Tolerance","to":"Z-Ro Tolerance"}],"redirects":[{"from":"Z-Ro Tolerance","to":"Z-Ro discography","tofragment":"Studio albums"}],"pages":{"11200528":{"pageid":11200528,"ns":0,"title":"Z-Ro discography","extract":"This is the discography of rapper Z-Ro.\n\n\nAlbums\n\n\nStudio albums\n\n\nCollaborative albums\n\n\nCompilation albums\n\n\nMixtapes\n2003: A Bad Azz Mix Tape\n2003: Gangstafied\n2004: Underground Railroad, Vol. 1: Street Life (Hulled & Chopped)\n2004: Underground Railroad, Vol. 2: Thug Luv\n2005: Z-Ro and Friends\n2006: Underground Railroad, Vol. 3: Paper Stacks Hulled\n2009: No Nutt No Glory\n2009: Rodeine\n2009: My Favorite Mixtape\n2009: Relvis Presley\n2011: Mo City Playaz\n2011: The 5200 Mixtape\n2013: Tripolar EP (Released under The Mo City Don)\n\n\nSingles\n\n\nFeatured performer singles\n\n\nPromotional singles\n\n\nGuest appearances\n\n\nMusic videos\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zoianillus
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"35717056":{"pageid":35717056,"ns":0,"title":"Zoianillus","extract":"Zoianillus is a genus of ground beetles in the family Carabidae. This genus has a single species, Zoianillus acutipennis. It is found in Ecuador.\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zuruki
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"41634957":{"pageid":41634957,"ns":0,"title":"Zuruki","extract":"Zuruki (Persian: \u0632\u0648\u0631\u0648\u0643\u064a, also Romanized as Z\u016br\u016bk\u012b; also known as Z\u016br\u016bg\u012b) is a village in Baharestan Rural District, in the Central District of Nain County, Isfahan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 8, in 4 families.\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zoe_viccaji
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zoe_Viccaji","to":"Zoe Viccaji"}],"pages":{"46690209":{"pageid":46690209,"ns":0,"title":"Zoe Viccaji","extract":"Zoe Viccaji (Urdu: \u0632\u0648\u0626\u06cc \u0648\u06a9\u0627\u062c\u06cc) (born 1983) is a Pakistani singer-songwriter and actress from Karachi. She began her career as a backing vocalist at Coke Studio and later moved on to becoming one of the featured artists. Viccaji has released one studio album which received various accolades.\n\n\nEarly life\nZoe Viccaji was born in Kharian, Punjab, Pakistan, to Adi Viccaji and Lynettee Viccaji, a Parsi father and Christian mother. She was raised in Karachi, Pakistan. According to Zoe, she has been playing guitar and writing her own songs since the age of fifteen. Singer Rachel Viccaji is her younger sister.\n\n\nPersonal life\nViccaji got married on December 23, 2018, to producer and director Kamal Khan in Karachi, Pakistan. Her sister, Rachel Viccaji and fellow Coke Studio backup singer and actress Sanam Saeed, were among the bridesmaids in the traditional white wedding. The couple had another event the next day on the traditional Pakistani side of things.\n\n\nCareer\nZoe started her career at the age of seventeen by joining a local band named Ganda Bandas. A few years later she moved to the United States where she studied in Hamilton College, New York. She also worked in the stage musicals Mamma Mia! and Chicago, both alongside Sanam Saeed. After returning to Pakistan, she released her debut single \"Thinking About You\" in 2009. She joined Coke Studio in 2010 and collaborated with Strings and Bilal Khan and released the singles \"Mera Bichra Yaar\" and \"Anjane\" featuring Strings and Bilal Khan. \"Mera Bichra Yaar\" was nominated at the 11th Lux Style Awards for Song of the Year.Zoe released her debut album Dareeche in September 2014 under Universal Music India. In 2015, it won the Best Mixed Album award at the Indian Recording Arts (IRA) in India and Lux Style Award for Best Album in Pakistan. The album spawned a single \u201cPhir Mili Tanhai\u201d. Zoe stated in an interview that \u201cPhir Mili Tanhai\u201d was one of the first songs she wrote and was inspired by her real relationship. \"Phir Mili Tanhai was one of the very first songs I wrote. In fact it\u2019s a marker of the period when I turned to songwriting in the first place. I was going through my first major breakup with someone who I had been with for a very long time.\"In 2013, Zoe made a cameo appearance in the film Good Morning Karachi as Salon Bride.\n\n\nAwards & Nominations\n\n\nFilmography\n\n\nDiscography\n\n\nAlbums\n\n\nSingles\n\"Tanhaiyan\"\n\"Jhoom\"\n\"Ho Jao Aazad\"\n\"Ruk Tau Zara\"\n\"Hum Har Qadam Aagay Hon\" (All Stars Grand Finale Song)\n\"The Time Has Come\"\n\"Josh\"\n\"Yeh Dil Kiyun Mera\"\n\"Jis Nay Bhi Aana Hai, Aik Din Jaana Hai\"\n\"Thinking About You\"\n\"Alvida (Feat. Zohaib)\"\n\"Bichra Yaar (Feat. Strings)\"\n\"Bolo (Feat. Zohaib)\"\n\"Breathe in Breathe Out\"\n\"Jab Koi\"\n\"Jo Chaho\"\n\"Kaisay Yeh Hua\"\n\"Street Signs (Feat. Aamir Zaki and Maaz)\"\n\"Vamp (Feat. Omar Farooq)\"\n\"Weave a Sweet Dream\"\n\"Ishq Kinara (Feat. Sumru Agiryuruyen)\"\n\"Baray Pyar Se Samjhaen\"\n\"Ashiqi Angar (Irfan Ali Taj Feat. Zoe Viccaji)\"\n\n\nCoke Studio\nSenraan Ra Baairya - Asif Hussain Samraat Ft. Zoe Viccaji\nJaana\nRaat Gaey\nIshq Kinara (Zoe Viccaji & Sumru Agiryuriyen)\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nZoe Viccaji at IMDb\nZoe Viccaji at Patari.pk"}}}}
part_xec/zombiepox
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"40289440":{"pageid":40289440,"ns":0,"title":"Zombiepox","extract":"Zombiepox (also ZOMBIEPOX) is a cooperative board game in which players fight the spread of zombies that threaten to take over the town. It was developed by Tiltfactor Laboratory, a game research center located at Dartmouth College, New Hampshire, focusing on games and play that investigate and explain ideas.\n\n\nHistory of the game\nZombiepox is an evolution of Pox: Save the People, which was developed by Tiltfactor in coordination with the Mascoma Valley Health Initiative to stop the spread of misinformation concerning the effects of vaccination.Zombiepox is also designed to be educational and initial research showed that people's sentiments on vaccinations became more positive when faced with the fictitious disease in the game. Playing the game also appears to improve people's systems thinking abilities.\n\n\nGameplay\nDesigned as a board game for one to four players, the game centers on a town that has been infected with a disease called zombiepox. The objective is to stop the spread and help humans escape by vaccinating them. Players win the game if the disease can no longer spread and lose if too many people become full-blown zombies.\n\n\nAwards and recognition\nThe game won a Major Fun Award for Cooperation Thinking in 2012. It was also selected for display at IndieCade's 2012 Indie Game Showcase.\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nTiltfactor Laboratory website.\nDartmouth Now article about Tiltfactor's Professor Mary Flanagan"}}}}
part_xec/zydepunks
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"3706093":{"pageid":3706093,"ns":0,"title":"Zydepunks","extract":"Zydepunks (also billed as The Zydepunks) is an American band based in New Orleans, Louisiana. Founded in 2003, they play a wide variety of multicultural music, including Cajun music and zydeco, Eastern European music, and punk rock. They perform in English, French, Spanish, Yiddish, Portuguese, and German. Their instrumentation includes vocals, violins, accordions, bass guitar, and drums.\nTheir music is released on Nine Mile Records. They have performed at the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival, and throughout the United States. In November, 2009, the band performed as part of The Revival Tour. They have been reviewed by Rolling Stone magazine and USA Today.As of 2012, the band is on hiatus. Frontman Juan K\u00fcffner currently leads the Sacramento, California-based Hollow Point Stumblers, which blends musical influences in a manner reminiscent of The Zydepunks. Many of the band's members perform with frequent Zydepunks collaborators Debauche, a New Orleans Gypsy punk band, and My Graveyard Jaw, a Southern Country rock outfit.\n\n\nBand members\nJuan K\u00fcffner \u2013 lead vocals, accordion, fiddle\nEve Venema \u2013 accordion, backing vocals\nJoseph Lilly \u2013 drums, backing vocals\nScott Potts \u2013 bass, backing vocals\nDenise Bonis \u2013 violin, backing vocals\n\n\nFrequent collaborators and former members\nMichael James \u2013 guitar\nJoseph McGinty \u2013 fiddle\nVincent Schmidt \u2013 accordion\nPatrick Keenan \u2013 bass\n\n\nDiscography\n2004 \u2013 9th Ward Ramblers\n2005 \u2013 ...And The Streets Will Flow With Whiskey\n2007 \u2013 Exile Waltz\n2008 \u2013 Finisterre\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nOfficial website\nZydepunks at AllMusic \nZydepunks discography at Discogs\nZydepunks on MySpace"}}}}
part_xec/zuzana_kronerova
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zuzana_Kronerov\u00e1","to":"Zuzana Kronerov\u00e1"}],"pages":{"40653374":{"pageid":40653374,"ns":0,"title":"Zuzana Kronerov\u00e1","extract":"Zuzana Kronerov\u00e1 (born 17 April 1952) is a Slovak film, television and stage actress. She has been featured in more than twenty films to date.\n\n\nFilmography\nSelected works1981: Infidelity in a Slovak Way (originally made-for-TV; as Zlatka)\nPhoenix (as Helga)\n1982: Scrawls (as Teacher)\n1991: When the Stars Were Red (as Beta)\n2001: The Wild Bees (as Lisajov\u00e1)\n2003: Pupendo\n2005: Something Like Happiness (as Aunt)\n2008: The Country Teacher (as Mother)\nGypsy Virgin (as Phuri Daj)\n2009: T.M.A. (as Shopping assistant)\nUnknown Hour (as Sister in charge)\n2010: Surviving Life (as Milada)\nHabermann (aka Habermann's Mill; as Eli\u0161ka)\n2015: Home Care\n2016: \u010cerven\u00e1 kapit\u00e1n\n2017: Ice Mother\n2020: Shadow Country\n\n\nAwards\n\n\nSee also\nList of people surnamed Kroner\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nSources\n\"Zuzana Kronerov\u00e1 > Stageography\". Astorka Korzo \u201990 Theater (in Slovak). Divadlo Astorka Korzo \u201990. astorka.sk. Retrieved March 2, 2015.\nRen\u00e1ta \u0160matl\u00e1kov\u00e1 (ed.). \"Zuzana Kronerov\u00e1 > Filmography\". Slovak Film Database (in English and Slovak). Slovak Film Institute. sfd.sfu.sk. Retrieved March 2, 2015.\n\"Zuzana Kronerov\u00e1 > Filmography\". Czecho-Slovak Film Database (in Czech and Slovak). POMO Media Group. csfd.cz. Retrieved March 2, 2015.\n\n\nExternal links\n\nZuzana Kronerov\u00e1 at AllMovie\nZuzana Kronerov\u00e1 at FDb.cz\nZuzana Kronerov\u00e1 at IMDb\nZuzana Kronerov\u00e1 at Kinobox.cz\nZuzana Kronerov\u00e1 at Rotten Tomatoes\nZuzana Kronerov\u00e1 at the TCM Movie Database"}}}}
part_xec/zoran_simovic
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zoran_Simovi\u0107","to":"Zoran Simovi\u0107"}],"pages":{"8428351":{"pageid":8428351,"ns":0,"title":"Zoran Simovi\u0107","extract":"Zoran Simovi\u0107 (Cyrillic: \u0417\u043e\u0440\u0430\u043d \u0421\u0438\u043c\u043e\u0432\u0438\u045b; born 2 November 1954) is a former Yugoslav and Montenegrin footballer who played as a goalkeeper.Simovi\u0107 was named the Yugoslav Footballer of the Year in 1983. He also won the Turkish Footballer of the Year award for three consecutive years (1985, 1986, and 1987).\n\n\nClub career\nBorn in Mojkovac, PR Montenegro, Simovi\u0107 moved with his family to Kru\u0161evac, PR Serbia in 1965. He played for Napredak Kru\u0161evac during the 1970s, helping them gain promotion to the Yugoslav First League on two occasions (1975\u201376 and 1977\u201378). In 1980, Simovi\u0107 was transferred to Hajduk Split. He helped the club win the Yugoslav Cup in the 1983\u201384 season.In 1984, Simovi\u0107 moved abroad to Turkey and signed with Galatasaray. He spent six seasons at the club and won four trophies, including back-to-back national championships (1986\u201387 and 1987\u201388). In total, Simovi\u0107 made 192 league appearances and scored once for Galatasaray, converting a penalty kick in a 6\u20130 home win over Kahramanmara\u015fspor in April 1989.\n\n\nInternational career\nSimovi\u0107 made his debut for Yugoslavia in an October 1983 Euro qualifier against Norway and would go on to earn a total of 10 caps. He was the team's first-choice goalkeeper at UEFA Euro 1984, making his final international appearance against hosts France.\n\n\nCareer statistics\n\n\nHonours\n\n\nClub\nNapredak Kru\u0161evacYugoslav Second League: 1975\u201376, 1977\u201378Hajduk SplitYugoslav Cup: 1983\u201384Galatasaray1.Lig: 1986\u201387, 1987\u201388\nTurkish Cup: 1984\u201385\nTurkish Super Cup: 1987, 1988\n\n\nIndividual\nYugoslav Footballer of the Year: 1983\nTurkish Footballer of the Year: 1985, 1986, 1987\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nZoran Simovi\u0107 at WorldFootball.net\nZoran Simovi\u0107 at FootballDatabase.eu\nZoran Simovi\u0107 at National-Football-Teams.com"}}}}
part_xec/zoltan_magyar
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zolt\u00e1n_Magyar","to":"Zolt\u00e1n Magyar"}],"pages":{"6690613":{"pageid":6690613,"ns":0,"title":"Zolt\u00e1n Magyar","extract":"Zolt\u00e1n Magyar (born 13 December 1953) was the world's leading pommel horse gymnast in the 1970s. In this event he won two Olympic, three world, three European and two World Cup titles. Magyar had two moves named after him, the Magyar spindle (turning the body in the opposite direction from the circling legs) and the Magyar travel (crosswise circling travel down the horse).\nHe won the Olympic gold in 1976 and 1980, world championships gold in 1974, 1978 and 1979, European championships gold in 1973, 1975 and 1977; and World Cup gold in 1975 and 1978. His largest margin of victory came at the 1978 World Championships, which he won by 0.375 points. For his achievements he was named Hungarian Sportsman of the year in 1974, 1978 and 1980.\nIn major all-around competitions, Magyar was ubiquitous but less successful. In Olympic all-around finals, he placed 29th in 1972, ninth in 1976 and ninth in 1980. In world championship all-arounds, he was 15th in 1974, 12th in 1978 and 18th in 1979.\nMagyar retired after the 1980 Olympics. Since his departure, he has focused on his lifelong goal as a veterinarian. He currently operates a vet hospital and still resides in Budapest.\nIn May 2012, Magyar was inducted to the International Gymnastics Hall of Fame.\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\n\nOlympic.org: Zoltan Magyar\nHungarian Olympic Committee"}}}}
part_xec/zulema_maria_eva_menem
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zulema_Mar\u00eda_Eva_Menem","to":"Zulema Mar\u00eda Eva Menem"}],"pages":{"35658381":{"pageid":35658381,"ns":0,"title":"Zulema Mar\u00eda Eva Menem","extract":"Zulema Mar\u00eda Eva Menem (Arabic :\u0632\u0648\u0644\u064a\u0645\u0627 \u0645\u0627\u0631\u064a\u0627 \u0625\u064a\u0641\u0627 \u0645\u0646\u0639\u0645) (born 25 December, 1970) is an Argentine politician who replaced her mother in the role of First Lady after the latter separated from her father, President of Argentina Carlos Menem. Menem was born in La Rioja Province.\nTo avoid confusion with her mother Zulema F\u00e1tima Yoma, since both could be called \"Zulema Menem\", the media refers to her as Zulemita.\n\n\nBiography\nZulemita initially appeared in gossip magazines as the daughter of the President. She began to perform protocol work after her parents divorced. Zulemita accepted the first lady role. She received decorations from the kings of Spain and Sweden.\nZulemita broke her relationship with her father after his marriage to Chilean Cecilia Bolocco. This marriage affected her inheritance due to the subsequent birth of M\u00e1ximo Saul Menem.\n\n\nExternal links\n\"Menem celebr\u00f3 en el edificio donde est\u00e1 preso Massera\". lanacion.com. 26 December 1998.\n\"Una \"gran hermana\" siempre incondicional de su padre\". minutouno.com. 25 July 2007.\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zonalny_district
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zonalny_District","to":"Zonalny District"}],"pages":{"26953935":{"pageid":26953935,"ns":0,"title":"Zonalny District","extract":"Zonalny District (Russian: \u0417\u043e\u043d\u0430\u0301\u043b\u044c\u043d\u044b\u0439 \u0440\u0430\u0439\u043e\u0301\u043d) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the fifty-nine in Altai Krai, Russia. It is located in the east of the krai. The area of the district is 1,717 square kilometers (663 sq mi). Its administrative center is the rural locality (a selo) of Zonalnoye. Population: 19,676\u2009(2010 Census); 20,571\u2009(2002 Census); 20,982\u2009(1989 Census). The population of Zonalnoye accounts for 17.3% of the district's total population.\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nNotes\n\n\nSources\n\u0410\u043b\u0442\u0430\u0439\u0441\u043a\u0438\u0439 \u043a\u0440\u0430\u0435\u0432\u043e\u0439 \u0421\u043e\u0432\u0435\u0442 \u043d\u0430\u0440\u043e\u0434\u043d\u044b\u0445 \u0434\u0435\u043f\u0443\u0442\u0430\u0442\u043e\u0432. \u0417\u0430\u043a\u043e\u043d \u211628-\u0417\u0421 \u043e\u0442 1 \u043c\u0430\u0440\u0442\u0430 2008 \u0433. \u00ab\u041e\u0431 \u0430\u0434\u043c\u0438\u043d\u0438\u0441\u0442\u0440\u0430\u0442\u0438\u0432\u043d\u043e-\u0442\u0435\u0440\u0440\u0438\u0442\u043e\u0440\u0438\u0430\u043b\u044c\u043d\u043e\u043c \u0443\u0441\u0442\u0440\u043e\u0439\u0441\u0442\u0432\u0435 \u0410\u043b\u0442\u0430\u0439\u0441\u043a\u043e\u0433\u043e \u043a\u0440\u0430\u044f\u00bb, \u0432 \u0440\u0435\u0434. \u0417\u0430\u043a\u043e\u043d\u0430 \u211616-\u0417\u0421 \u043e\u0442 4 \u0430\u043f\u0440\u0435\u043b\u044f 2017 \u0433. \u00ab\u041e \u043f\u0440\u0438\u0441\u043e\u0435\u0434\u0438\u043d\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0438 \u0441\u0442\u0430\u043d\u0446\u0438\u0438 \u0416\u0435\u043b\u0435\u0437\u043d\u043e\u0434\u043e\u0440\u043e\u0436\u043d\u0430\u044f \u041a\u0430\u0437\u0430\u0440\u043c\u0430 572 \u043a\u043c \u043a \u043f\u043e\u0441\u0451\u043b\u043a\u0443 \u041e\u043a\u0442\u044f\u0431\u0440\u044c\u0441\u043a\u043e\u043c\u0443 \u041e\u043a\u0442\u044f\u0431\u0440\u044c\u0441\u043a\u043e\u0433\u043e \u0441\u0435\u043b\u044c\u0441\u043e\u0432\u0435\u0442\u0430 \u041a\u0443\u043b\u0443\u043d\u0434\u0438\u043d\u0441\u043a\u043e\u0433\u043e \u0440\u0430\u0439\u043e\u043d\u0430 \u0410\u043b\u0442\u0430\u0439\u0441\u043a\u043e\u0433\u043e \u043a\u0440\u0430\u044f \u0438 \u0432\u043d\u0435\u0441\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0438 \u0438\u0437\u043c\u0435\u043d\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0439 \u0432 \u043e\u0442\u0434\u0435\u043b\u044c\u043d\u044b\u0435 \u0437\u0430\u043a\u043e\u043d\u044b \u0410\u043b\u0442\u0430\u0439\u0441\u043a\u043e\u0433\u043e \u043a\u0440\u0430\u044f\u00bb. \u0412\u0441\u0442\u0443\u043f\u0438\u043b \u0432 \u0441\u0438\u043b\u0443 8 \u043c\u0430\u0440\u0442\u0430 2008 \u0433. \u041e\u043f\u0443\u0431\u043b\u0438\u043a\u043e\u0432\u0430\u043d: \"\u0410\u043b\u0442\u0430\u0439\u0441\u043a\u0430\u044f \u043f\u0440\u0430\u0432\u0434\u0430\", \u211667, 8 \u043c\u0430\u0440\u0442\u0430 2008 \u0433. (Altai Krai Council of People's Deputies. Law #28-ZS of March 1, 2008 On the Administrative-Territorial Structure of Altai Krai, as amended by the Law #16-ZS of April 4, 2017 On Merging the Station of Zheleznodorozhnaya Kazarma 572 km into the Settlement of Oktyabrsky in Oktyabrsky Selsoviet of Kulundinsky District of Altai Krai and on Amending Various Laws of Altai Krai. Effective as of March 8, 2008.).\n\u0410\u043b\u0442\u0430\u0439\u0441\u043a\u0438\u0439 \u043a\u0440\u0430\u0435\u0432\u043e\u0439 \u0421\u043e\u0432\u0435\u0442 \u043d\u0430\u0440\u043e\u0434\u043d\u044b\u0445 \u0434\u0435\u043f\u0443\u0442\u0430\u0442\u043e\u0432. \u0417\u0430\u043a\u043e\u043d \u2116120-\u0417\u0421 \u043e\u0442 7 \u043d\u043e\u044f\u0431\u0440\u044f 2006 \u0433. \u00ab\u041e \u0441\u0442\u0430\u0442\u0443\u0441\u0435 \u0438 \u0433\u0440\u0430\u043d\u0438\u0446\u0430\u0445 \u043c\u0443\u043d\u0438\u0446\u0438\u043f\u0430\u043b\u044c\u043d\u044b\u0445 \u0438 \u0430\u0434\u043c\u0438\u043d\u0438\u0441\u0442\u0440\u0430\u0442\u0438\u0432\u043d\u043e-\u0442\u0435\u0440\u0440\u0438\u0442\u043e\u0440\u0438\u0430\u043b\u044c\u043d\u044b\u0445 \u043e\u0431\u0440\u0430\u0437\u043e\u0432\u0430\u043d\u0438\u0439 \u0417\u043e\u043d\u0430\u043b\u044c\u043d\u043e\u0433\u043e \u0440\u0430\u0439\u043e\u043d\u0430 \u0410\u043b\u0442\u0430\u0439\u0441\u043a\u043e\u0433\u043e \u043a\u0440\u0430\u044f\u00bb, \u0432 \u0440\u0435\u0434. \u0417\u0430\u043a\u043e\u043d\u0430 \u211655-\u0417\u0421 \u043e\u0442 5 \u0438\u044e\u043b\u044f 2012 \u0433. \u00ab\u041e \u0432\u043d\u0435\u0441\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0438 \u0438\u0437\u043c\u0435\u043d\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0439 \u0432 \u043e\u0442\u0434\u0435\u043b\u044c\u043d\u044b\u0435 \u0417\u0430\u043a\u043e\u043d\u044b \u0410\u043b\u0442\u0430\u0439\u0441\u043a\u043e\u0433\u043e \u043a\u0440\u0430\u044f \u0432 \u0441\u0432\u044f\u0437\u0438 \u0441 \u043f\u0440\u0435\u043e\u0431\u0440\u0430\u0437\u043e\u0432\u0430\u043d\u0438\u0435\u043c \u043c\u0443\u043d\u0438\u0446\u0438\u043f\u0430\u043b\u044c\u043d\u044b\u0445 \u0438 \u0430\u0434\u043c\u0438\u043d\u0438\u0441\u0442\u0440\u0430\u0442\u0438\u0432\u043d\u043e-\u0442\u0435\u0440\u0440\u0438\u0442\u043e\u0440\u0438\u0430\u043b\u044c\u043d\u044b\u0445 \u043e\u0431\u0440\u0430\u0437\u043e\u0432\u0430\u043d\u0438\u0439\u00bb. \u0412\u0441\u0442\u0443\u043f\u0438\u043b \u0432 \u0441\u0438\u043b\u0443 \u0447\u0435\u0440\u0435\u0437 10 \u0434\u043d\u0435\u0439 \u0441\u043e \u0434\u043d\u044f \u043e\u0444\u0438\u0446\u0438\u0430\u043b\u044c\u043d\u043e\u0433\u043e \u043e\u043f\u0443\u0431\u043b\u0438\u043a\u043e\u0432\u0430\u043d\u0438\u044f. \u041e\u043f\u0443\u0431\u043b\u0438\u043a\u043e\u0432\u0430\u043d: \"\u0410\u043b\u0442\u0430\u0439\u0441\u043a\u0430\u044f \u043f\u0440\u0430\u0432\u0434\u0430\", \u2116362\u2013363 (\u0431\u0435\u0437 \u043f\u0440\u0438\u043b\u043e\u0436\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0439), 16 \u043d\u043e\u044f\u0431\u0440\u044f 2006 \u0433. (Altai Krai Council of People's Deputies. Law #120-ZS of November 7, 2006 On the Status and the Borders of the Municipal and the Administrative-Territorial Formations of Zonalny District of Altai Krai, as amended by the Law #55-ZS of July 5, 2012 On Amending Various Laws of Altai Krai Due to the Transformation of the Municipal and Administrative-Territorial Formations. Effective as of after 10 days from the day of the official publication.)."}}}}
part_xec/zygoballus
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"5827360":{"pageid":5827360,"ns":0,"title":"Zygoballus","extract":"Zygoballus is a genus of jumping spiders found in North and South America.\n\n\nTaxonomy and history\nThe genus was first described in 1885 by American arachnologists George and Elizabeth Peckham based on the type species Zygoballus rufipes. The name derives from a combination of the Ancient Greek word \u03b6\u03c5\u03b3\u03cc\u03bd (zygon), meaning \"yoke\", and the genus name Ballus. The etymology of Ballus is unknown, but may be related to the Greek word \u03b2\u03b1\u03bb\u03bb\u03af\u03b6\u03c9 (ballizo), meaning \"dance\" or \"jump about\".The genus Messua, based on the type species Messua desidiosa, was synonymized with Zygoballus by Eug\u00e8ne Simon in 1903. Simon argued that Messua desidiosa was a transitional species which differed \"much less from typical Zygoballus than would seem to be indicated by [the Peckham's] description.\" This synonymy was reversed by Wayne Maddison in 1996, and Messua restored as a valid genus.The genus Amerotritte, based on the type species Amerotritte lineata, was synonymized with Zygoballus in 1980 by Mar\u00eda Elena Galiano. Galiano stated that the holotype of Amerotritte lineata was actually a very young Zygoballus specimen.Zygoballus is currently classified in the subtribe Dendryphantina of the family Salticidae (jumping spiders).\n\n\nDescription\n\nSpiders of the genus Zygoballus share a strong resemblance in appearance. The cephalothorax is high and roughly square when viewed from above. It is widest at the posterior eyes, with the ocular quadrangle occupying approximately three-fifths of the cephalothorax. The cephalothorax slopes steeply behind the posterior eyes and the sides of the cephalothorax are nearly vertical. The labium is as long or longer than it is wide. The anterior (first) pair of legs are the largest, with three pairs of spines on the ventral surface of the tibia. Males have obliquely oriented chelicerae with long fangs.Many species exhibit wide variation in color, size, and markings.\n\n\nDistribution\nZygoballus is a genus from the New World, ranging from Argentina to Canada. Three species from India were originally placed in Zygoballus, but have been reassigned to other genera.\n\n\nSpecies\nAs of July 2016, the World Spider Catalog accepted the species listed below. One species, Z. quaternus, was previously recognized (prior to 2008), but is now considered a nomen dubium. Several other species are known only from single specimens. In addition to the species listed below, a 2001 phylogenetic analysis suggested that Rhetenor texanus may also belong in Zygoballus, but this has not been accepted by the World Spider Catalog.\n\nZygoballus amrishi Makhan, 2005 \u2014 Suriname\nZygoballus aschnae Makhan, 2005 \u2014 Suriname\nZygoballus concolor Bryant, 1940 \u2014 Cuba\nZygoballus electus Chickering, 1946 \u2014 Panama\nZygoballus gracilipes Crane, 1945 \u2014 Guyana, Argentina\nZygoballus incertus (Banks, 1929) \u2014 Panama\nZygoballus iridescens Banks, 1895 \u2014 USA\nZygoballus lineatus (Mello-Leit\u00e3o, 1944) \u2014 Argentina\nZygoballus maculatipes Petrunkevitch, 1925 \u2014 Panama\nZygoballus maculatus F. O. P-Cambridge, 1901 \u2014 Guatemala\nZygoballus melloleitaoi Galiano, 1980 \u2014 Argentina\nZygoballus minutus Peckham & Peckham, 1896 \u2014 Guatemala\nZygoballus nervosus (Peckham & Peckham, 1888) \u2014 USA, Canada\nZygoballus optatus Chickering, 1946 \u2014 Panama\nZygoballus remotus Peckham & Peckham, 1896 \u2014 Guatemala\nZygoballus rishwani Makhan, 2005 \u2014 Suriname\nZygoballus rufipes Peckham & Peckham, 1885 \u2014 Canada to Costa Rica\nZygoballus sexpunctatus (Hentz, 1845) \u2014 USA\nZygoballus suavis Peckham & Peckham, 1895 \u2014 Jamaica\nZygoballus tibialis F. O. P.-Cambridge, 1901 \u2014 Guatemala to Panama\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\n\nZygoballus at Bugguide.net\nZygoballus at Salticidae: Diagnostic Drawings Library"}}}}
part_xec/zvernec
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"29432635":{"pageid":29432635,"ns":0,"title":"Zv\u00ebrnec","extract":"Zv\u00ebrnec (definite Albanian form: Zv\u00ebrneci; Greek: \u03a3\u03b2\u03ad\u03c1\u03bd\u03b9\u03c4\u03c3\u03b1, romanized: Svernitsa) is a community in Vlor\u00eb County, Albania. At the 2015 local government reform it became part of the municipality Vlor\u00eb. It is situated northwest of the city of Vlor\u00eb. It is inhabited by ethnic Greeks who speak a unique northern Greek dialect, as well as Aromanians.\n\n\nHistory\nDuring classical antiquity the coastal area of the Bay of Vlor\u00eb, where the present-day villages of Zv\u00ebrnec and Nart\u00eb are located, was settled by Ancient Greeks. Since at present those two villages constitute the northernmost pockets of Modern Greek speech, scholar Hatzopoulos (1997) wonders if it is a coincidence or they are isolated relics of the ancient Balaiitai and Horikioi. The view of an uninterrupted Greek presence from antiquity is rejected by Sh. Demiraj (2010), on the grounds that it is not backed up by linguistic evidence or historic documentation, instead arguing that their ancestors consist of relatively late incoming emigrants from the Greek speaking areas of Arta. Demiraj points to anthroponymic data gathered from 16th century Ottoman tax registers, specifically those of the years 1520 and 1583, in which the defters of the village of Narta display south Albanian Orthodox anthroponomy. Moreover, the names attested lack the Greek suffix \"s\", and contain consonants unusual to modern Greek, such as /b (Bogdan, T\u00ebrbari). Also the population of the village partly consists of immigrants from neighboring Albanian villages, indicated by surnames like Bulku or Palasa, the issue regarding the use of the Greek language remains open. Kyriazis (2012) argued that those 16th century Ottoman registers provide proofs of the continuity and the differentiation of the synthesis of the population. Also, the absence of the suffix -s does not show a lack of the Greek element, as this was quite typical in Ottoman records on areas that were undoubtedly Greek-speaking. If we consider that the local Greek speech has a depth of time that reaches antiquity, then we should investigate and interpret how and when it acquired characteristics of northern vocalism.Historian Alain Ducellier identifies the Byzantine outpost of Spinaritsa with Zvernec. At 1297 Spinaritza was governed by dux Kalamanos, member of the noble Greek Strategopoulos family. Later at 1301 governor of the Spinaritza district became Andronikos Palaiologos.\n\n\nDemographics\nZv\u00ebrnec, together with nearby Nart\u00eb, is a Greek-speaking pocket in the area north of Vlor\u00eb. There are speakers of Aromanian also present in Zv\u00ebrnec.According to a 2014 state report, the total number of registered citizens that belong to the Greek minority is 900.\n\n\nLocation\nThe surrounding region is full of salt marshes. Narta Lagoon, which hosts a unique ecosystem, lies north of the village. Near the village lies the island that bears the same name, and the Byzantine monastery dedicated to the Dormition of the Mother of God. To the east of the settlement there is a lighthouse.\n\n\nNotable people\nFatos Arapi, writer and translator\n\n\nCitations\n\n\nBibliography\n\n\nExternal links\nPicture of the lighthouse"}}}}
part_xec/zowl_piran
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zowl_Piran","to":"Zowl Piran"}],"pages":{"41132004":{"pageid":41132004,"ns":0,"title":"Zowl Piran","extract":"Zowl Piran (Persian: \u0630\u0648\u0627\u0644\u067e\u064a\u0631\u0627\u0646, also Romanized as Z\u0304owl P\u012br\u0101n; also known as Dav\u0101l P\u012br\u0101n) is a village in Jirdeh Rural District, in the Central District of Shaft County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 723, in 173 families.\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zwiernik
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"19032793":{"pageid":19032793,"ns":0,"title":"Zwiernik","extract":"Zwiernik [\u02c8zvj\u025brnik] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Pilzno, within D\u0119bica County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 7 kilometres (4 mi) south-west of Pilzno, 19 km (12 mi) south-west of D\u0119bica, and 58 km (36 mi) west of the regional capital Rzesz\u00f3w.\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zweder_van_culemborg
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zweder_van_Culemborg","to":"Zweder van Culemborg"}],"pages":{"24331733":{"pageid":24331733,"ns":0,"title":"Zweder van Culemborg","extract":"Zweder van Culemborg (or Kuilenburg) (died 21 September 1433) was bishop of Utrecht during the Utrecht Schism.\n\nAfter the death of bishop Frederik III van Blankenheim in 1423, a succession-conflict had emerged between the two candidates for the bishopric's seat; Zweder van Culemborg and Rudolf van Diepholt. In order to end the conflict, pope Martin V nominated his own favourite, Rhabanus von Helmstatt to the bishopric in 1422. But Rhabanus declined the nomination, after which the pope appointed Zweder on 6 February 1425. Rudolf refused to accept this, and Zweder had to use violence to get his authority recognised. However, he was driven out of the city of Utrecht in 1426 by his opponents. As a result Rudolf was excommunicated by the pope, but he nonetheless managed to maintain himself, even though Zweder was initially supported by the duke of Guelders and Philip the Good, who was also count of Holland. But Rudolf was able to sign treaties with neighbouring rulers, after which pope Eugene IV, Martin V's successor, appointed Zweder to the titular bishopric of Caesarea Maritima and recognised Rudolf as bishop of Utrecht on 10 December 1432. Zweder complained about this at the Council of Basel, which ruled in his favor, but he died in Basel shortly after.\n\n\nSources\nThis information is partly based on De Katholieke Encyclopaedie (Amsterdam, 1938)"}}}}
part_xec/zoubeir_baya
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zoubeir_Baya","to":"Zoubeir Baya"}],"pages":{"3635808":{"pageid":3635808,"ns":0,"title":"Zoubeir Baya","extract":"Zoubeir Baya (or Beya) (Arabic: \u0632\u0628\u064a\u0631 \u0628\u064a\u0629; born 15 May 1971) is a Tunisian former professional footballer with a distinguished career as one of his country's most accomplished football exports. Baya, an attacking midfielder, displayed considerable skill and enterprise on the international scene and provided the North African nation with vast international experience.\nTwice named Tunisian Footballer of the Year, Baya suited up for his country at the 1998 World Cup in France and at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics. He was also a key member of Tunisian sides that competed at the 1998, 2000 and 2002 African Nations Cup finals. He made his international swansong at the 2002 FIFA World Cup, retiring shortly afterwards.\n\n\nCareer\nBorn in M'saken, Baya began his football career at \u00c9toile du Sahel, helping the Tunisian club win the African Cup Winners' Cup. He made his debut for Tunisia on 4 September 1994 against Guinea-Bissau where he scored his first international goal. Over the past eight years, he has become an integral player for his country, earning 81 caps and scoring 18 goals for his country.\nHis hard work at \u00c9toile du Sahel did not go unnoticed, as 2. Bundesliga club SC Freiburg signed him to a contract in 1997. In four seasons in Germany, Baya established himself as a star player and a regular starter, scoring 21 goals.\nIn 2001, Baya was on the move again, this time venturing to Turkey after signing with Be\u015fikta\u015f. Baya was instrumental in helping Tunisia qualify for its second consecutive World Cup finals. He started in all eight games during the qualification round and scored six goals, finishing as his country's top goal scorer and one of the bright spots on a team wracked by inconsistency in the previous year. After the 2002 FIFA World Cup, he returned to \u00c9toile du Sahel to play out the rest of his playing career.\nAfter completing two seasons with Etoile du Sahel he returned to home club CS M'saken for a season in the Tunisian second division before retiring.\n\n\nInternational goals\nScores and results list Tunisia's goal tally first, score column indicates score after each Baya goal.\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nZoubeir Baya at National-Football-Teams.com"}}}}
part_xec/zygocystinae
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"50108858":{"pageid":50108858,"ns":0,"title":"Zygocystinae","extract":"The Zygocystinae are a subfamily of parasites in the phylum Apicomplexa.\n\n\nTaxonomy\nThere are three genera in this subfamily: Adelphocystis, Pleurocystis and Zygocystis.\n\n\nHistory\nThis family was created by Bhatia in 1930.\n\n\nDescription\nSpecies in this subfamily infect worms of the family Lumbricidae.\nIn these genera syzygy occurs extremely early in the life cycle.\nThe oocyst is navicular or biconical and has unusual thickenings at both ends.\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zvi_sherf
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zvi_Sherf","to":"Zvi Sherf"}],"pages":{"15081072":{"pageid":15081072,"ns":0,"title":"Zvi Sherf","extract":"Zvi Sherf (Hebrew: \u05e6\u05d1\u05d9 \u05e9\u05e8\u05e3; born December 18, 1951 in Tel Aviv, Israel), known almost universally by his nickname Zvika (Hebrew: \u05e6\u05d1\u05d9\u05e7\u05d4), is an Israeli former basketball player and professional basketball coach.\n\n\nCoaching career\nSherf played basketball with the Maccabi Tel Aviv youth teams, starting at age 12. By age 16, Sherf was playing for Maccabi South Tel Aviv (the club's second side), and was sent to a coaching course, along with fellow future Israeli basketball coach Pini Gershon. By age 20, Sherf was coaching the Maccabi Tel Aviv youth teams, and by age 25, he was coaching Maccabi South Tel Aviv, leading it to his first championship.\nIn the 1980\u201381 season, when Maccabi Tel Aviv won the EuroLeague, the Israeli League and the Israeli State Cup titles, Sherf was an assistant coach to Rudy D'Amico. Sherf became Maccabi Tel Aviv's head coach in the 1983\u201384 season, and stayed in that role through the 1985\u201386 season. In 1984, (at the age of 33), he became the senior men's Israeli national basketball team head coach.\nHis first Israeli national team coaching tenure (which lasted three years), saw two EuroBasket appearances (1985, 1987) and Israel's historic 7th place finish at the 1986 FIBA World Basketball Championship. Sherf's tenure as national team head coach ended after what was perceived as a poor performance at EuroBasket 1987 (11th position), but Sherf later returned as the team's head coach for the years 1991-97. In 2005, Sherf was again appointed head coach of the Israeli national basketball team, and on January 1, 2008, he was appointed head coach of Maccabi Tel Aviv.\nSherf's coaching career includes a Saporta Cup title with Aris Thessaloniki (1992\u201393), three EuroLeague Finals appearances, 10 Israeli League championships, and six Israeli State Cup titles (all with Maccabi Tel Aviv).\nOn April 10, 2018, Sherf returned to Maccabi Rishon LeZion for a third stint, replacing Shmulik Brener. On November 26, 2018, Sherf parted ways with Rishon LeZion.\n\n\nHonors and awards\n\n\nIsraeli titles\n10\u00d7 Israeli Super League Champion: (1983\u201384, 1984\u201385, 1985\u201386, 1986\u201387, 1988\u201389, 1989\u201390, 1990\u201391, 1991\u201392, all with Maccabi Tel Aviv);\n6\u00d7 Israeli State Cup Winner: (1984\u201385, 1985\u201386, 1986\u201387, 1988\u201389, 1989\u201390, 1990\u201391, all with Maccabi Tel Aviv).\n\n\nEuropean honors and titles\nFIBA Saporta Cup Champion: (1992\u201393, with Aris Thessaloniki);\n3\u00d7 EuroLeague Finalist: (1986\u201387, 1988\u201389, 2007\u201308 with Maccabi Tel Aviv);\nEuroLeague Final Four: third-place (1990\u201391, with Maccabi Tel Aviv).\nRussian Cup Winner: (2010\u201311, with Spartak St. Petersburg)\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\n\nEuroLeague Profile\nTzahevet Profile (in Hebrew)\nZvi Sherf is the new Israeli NT Coach"}}}}
part_xec/zsolt_gombos
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zsolt_Gombos","to":"Zsolt Gombos"}],"pages":{"36395872":{"pageid":36395872,"ns":0,"title":"Zsolt Gombos","extract":"Zsolt Gombos (born 27 February 1968 in Zalaegerszeg) is a Hungarian former wrestler who competed in the 1992 Summer Olympics, in the 1996 Summer Olympics, and in the 2000 Summer Olympics.\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nZsolt Gombos at International Wrestling Database\nZsolt Gombos at Olympedia"}}}}
part_xec/zuni_fetishes
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zuni_fetishes","to":"Zuni fetishes"}],"pages":{"4122447":{"pageid":4122447,"ns":0,"title":"Zuni fetishes","extract":"Zuni fetishes are small carvings made from primarily stone but also shell, fossils, and other materials by the Zuni people. Within the Zuni community, these carvings serve ceremonial purposes for their creators and depict animals and icons integral to their culture. As a form of contemporary Native American art, they are sold with secular intentions to collectors worldwide. Prior to the establishment of a non-Native market for fetishes, Hopi, Navajo, and other Pueblo peoples, especially at Kewa Pueblo also carved and used fetishes.\n\n\nDirections and typology\nThe primary non-Native source for academic information on Zuni fetishes is the Second Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology submitted in 1881 by Frank Hamilton Cushing and posthumously published as Zuni Fetishes in 1966, with several later reprints. Cushing reports that the Zuni divided the world into six regions or directions: north, west, south, east, above, and below. At the center of each region is a great mountain peak that is a very sacred place. Yellow mountain to the north, blue mountain to the west, red mountain to the south, white mountain to the east, the multicolored mountain above, and the black mountain below.Each direction is represented by a Prey God, or guardian animal, and are listed by Cushing as follows:\n\nnorth: yellow mountain lion\nwest: black bear (represented by the color blue),\nsouth: red badger,\neast: white wolf,\nabove or the sky: multicolored eagle,\nbelow or underground: black shrew (often misnamed \"mole,\" but moles do not live in the Southwest).Each prey god is the \u201cguardian and master\u201d of their region, with the yellow mountain lion being the elder brother of all animals and the master and guardian of all regions. Each one of these regions contains an order of all the guardian animals, but the \"guardian and master\" of a particular region is the elder brother to all animals of that region. These guardians are considered as having protective and healing powers. They are held by the priests of the medicine orders as if \"in captivity\" and act as mediators between the priests and the animals they represent.A second group of fetishes, the Prey Gods of the Hunt, belonging to the Hunter Order, or Society, are given in the \u201cprayer songs of the Sa-ni-a-kia-kwe\u201d. These guardian animals are the same as the original regions with the exception of the coyote, which replaces the bear; and the wildcat (or bobcat), which replaces the red badger. Sa-ni-a-kia is the awakening of the fetish and subsequently the power of the hunter.In addition to the animals mentioned above, typical Zuni fetishes depict animals such as the wolf, badger, bear, mountain lion, eagle, mole, frog, deer, ram, and others. Contemporary carvers many produce images of exotic subjects \u2013 dinosaurs, for example \u2013 or some insects and reptiles that are customary but more integral to petroglyphs, symbolism, and the patterns of design in pottery \u2013 dragonflies, butterflies, water spiders, and lizards for example. Other animals, such as the horse, were carved in the past mainly for trade. The Zuni was not a horse culture, but their horse carvings were considered by the horse cultures to the north as having great power for the protection of their herds.\n\n\nMaterials\nHistorical, carvers used locally sourced materials or item procured by trade or pilgrimages. The most important of these materials was turquoise which the Zuni regard as the sacred stone. Jet, shell (primarily mother-of-pearl), and coral are also frequently used. These materials and their associated colors are principle in the Zuni sunface, a cultural symbol which is present in Zuni jewelry and fetishes and represents their Sun Father]]. Other materials used are travertine or \"Zuni rock\", fishrock, jasper, pipestone, marble, or organic items such as fossilized ivory, bone, and deer or elk antler. Even artificial substances such as slag glass are used. But historically the most-used stone has been serpentine, a local soft stone found abundantly in the Zuni Mountains and also in Arizona. In recent years Zuni carvings, or fetishes, have become popular collectibles and Zuni artisans have familiarized themselves with materials available from all parts of the world in order to serve the aesthetic tastes of collectors.\n\n\nSacredness\nIn Zuni cosmology and those of neighboring tribes, each animal is believed to have inherent powers or qualities that may aid the owner. The Navajo, for example, treasured and bartered for figures of horses, sheep, cattle or goats to protect their herd from disease and to ensure fertility. The Zuni hunter, or \"Prey brother,\" was required to have his fetishes (prey gods of the hunt) with a \"Keeper\" and practice a ceremony of worship when procuring a favorite or proper fetish to aid in a successful hunt. In the ceremony of the hunt the Keeper presented a clay pot containing the fetishes to the hunter. Facing in the direction appropriate to the chosen fetish the pot was sprinkled with medicine meal and a prayer was recited. The fetish was placed in a buckskin bag and carried by the hunter over his heart (Cushing, 1994:33). The fetish aids in the chase and represents \"the roar of the animal\" and is also fed on the blood of the slain prey.In addition to the Prey Gods of the Six Regions with their guardian and medicinal powers, and the Prey Gods of the Hunt that aid in the chase, Cushing names three Prey Gods of the Priesthood of the Bow, a society of which he was a member, that aid a Priest of the Bow when traveling in a region where he may be captured by the enemy. These are the mountain lion and great white bear, which belong to the \"skies\", as well as a prey god of human form adorned with \"flint knife-feather pinions and tail\". An arrowhead, \"emblematic of Sa-wa-ni-kia\", or the \"medicine of war\", on the back or side of either of these animals prevented a warrior from being taken by surprise by his enemy, and an arrowhead on the belly or feet erased the tracks of the carrier so that they could not be followed by the enemy. Unlike the Prey Gods of the Hunt these fetishes were never deposited with a keeper, but like the Prey Gods of the Hunt they were fed on the blood of the slain and their ceremony involved depositing sacred flour to the four directions and reciting a prayer, and like the Prey Gods of the Six Regions they were protective of the carrier.On the subject of feeding, within Zuni culture it is believes fetishes require periodic meals of cornmeal and ground turquoise. Fetishes may be kept in a clay pot as it is the tradition, although collectors usually like to keep theirs somewhere where they can be admired. Any but the very delicate fetishes could be carried by the owner in a pocket, pouch or bag.\nWhile the Zuni fetish carvings available for sale online are considered \"Zuni fetishes,\" carved by a variety of well-known Zuni carvers, true Zuni fetishes do not leave the village and are blessed by a spiritual leader and used by the carver himself or a special recipient.\n\n\nReligion as art\n\nZuni fetish carvings have been around for centuries. Ancient Pueblo effigies were an earlier form of a Zuni fetish carving. It has only been in recent times that the fetishes have been carved to sell, and have left the village. While the Zuni fetish carvings you see for sale on the internet are considered Zuni fetishes, carved by a variety of well known Zuni carvers, true Zuni fetishes do not leave the village and are blessed by a Shaman or Medicine Man and used by the carver himself or a special recipient.The artist's styles are as unique as the artists themselves, and there are many whose works are highly sought after by collectors. Some collectors prefer a figure that is more realistic in appearance, while others prefer the more classical styles that are intrinsic to Zuni belief. The customary Zuni perspective is that the least modification of the original material maintains, or heightens, the power of the fetish as a \"natural concretion.\" Realism in carving style is a matter relative to the beliefs of its owner, and the realism in contemporary carving is a product of collector request and demand and the intent of Zuni carvers to raise the level of their art form through participation in the world of contemporary art. The enigma, or apparent paradox relevant to Zuni belief and realism in art is resolved in the notion that carvings for sale and collection are produced without religious intent. For this reason some carvers prefer the term \"carvings\" rather than the term \"fetishes\" when referring to offerings for collectors.\nA fetish may be signed by the carver, or not. Personalization by signing a piece of art violates the historic Zuni notion of community purpose, and the signing of artwork is a concept introduced to the Zuni by Anglo collectors at the beginning of the 20th century (c. 1915). Often, though, a Zuni carver feels that their own unique style is readily identifiable and the fetish's style will be enough to identify the carver as surely as would any other mark. Most carvers are the recipients of a family practice and have learned their skill from parents, grand parents, or siblings, and have passed the art to their own children as well.\nBesides being made from various stones and other materials (each material has unique properties), the contemporary fetish may carry an offering of a smaller animal or a prayer bundle of carved arrowheads with small beads of heishe. It may be adorned with a heishe necklace, feathers, etchings representing ancient petroglyphs, or an etched or inlaid heartline. These small items, although colorful to the eye, are intended to protect and feed the fetish itself.\n\n\nNotes\n\n\nReferences\nBahti, Mark (1999, 2016) Spirit in the Stone: A Handbook of Southwest Indian Animal Carvings and Beliefs ISBN 978-1-88789-6092\nBunzel, Ruth L. (1929). The Pueblo Potter: A Study of Creative Imagination in Primitive Art. ISBN 0-486-22875-4\nCushing, Frank Hamilton (1994). Zuni Fetishes. Tenth printing. Reprint of the Second Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology, 1883. Introduction by Tom Bahti. ASIN B000TH8P4C\nFinkelstein, Harold (1994). Zuni Fetish Carvings. ISBN 0-9641042-0-2\nMcManis, Kent (1998). A Guide To Zuni Fetishes & Carvings, Volume II, The Materials and the Carvers. ISBN 1-887896-11-2\nYoung, M. Jane (1988). Signs from the Ancestors: Zuni Cultural Symbolism and Perceptions in Rock Art. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. ISBN 0-8263-1203-9\nHolmes, Jill M. (1996). \"Minerals and their Metaphysical Properties\", web.\n\n\nFurther reading\nCushing, Frank Hamilton, Mark Bahti (1999). Zuni Fetishes. Reprint of the Second Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology, 1883. Introduction by Tom Bahti. ISBN 0-88714-144-7.\nMcManis, Kent (1995). A Guide To Zuni Fetishes & Carvings. ISBN 0-918080-77-0\nMcManis, Kent (1998). A Guide To Zuni Fetishes & Carvings, Volume II, The Materials and the Carvers. ISBN 1-887896-11-2.\nRiggs, David Austin, Darlene Meader Riggs (2008). ZUNI SPIRITS: A Portfolio of Fine Zuni Fetish Carvings. Introduction by the Zuni Governor, Norman Cooeyate.\nBennett, Hal Zina (1993). ZUNI FETISHES: Using Native American Objects for Meditation, Reflection, and Insight. ISBN 0-06-250069-4"}}}}
part_xec/zohra_begum_kazi
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zohra_Begum_Kazi","to":"Zohra Begum Kazi"}],"pages":{"16208984":{"pageid":16208984,"ns":0,"title":"Zohra Begum Kazi","extract":"Zohra Begum Kazi (15 October 1912 \u2013 7 November 2007) was the first Bengali Muslim female physician. She was awarded Tamgha-e-Pakistan (1964), Begum Rokeya Padak (2002) and Ekushey Padak (2008).\n\n\nEarly life and family\nKazi was born in Rajnandgaon, Chhattisgarh, United Provinces of British India. She has been called the Florence Nightingale of Dhaka. Kazi came from Kazi family of Gopalpur in the Madaripur District in what was then Bengal. Her father, Kazi Abdus Sattar was also a physician and a politician. At the age of 32, Kazi married a lawmaker, Razuddin Bhuiyan MLC MP, the only son of the Zamindar of Hatirdia in Monohardi Upazila, Narsingdi District. She was widowed in 1963. Although she did not have any children of her own, Kazi adopted and educated many children from impoverished families throughout Bangladesh.\nHer eldest brother Kazi Ashraf Mahmud was a Hindi poet. He retired as a professor of botany, Dhaka University. Mahmud is most noted for a controversial book of correspondence between Mahatma Gandhi and himself, published privately immediately after the partition of India. Kazi's family was closely tied to Mahatma Gandhi and several prominent Indian and later Pakistani politicians of that era. Ashraf served as the secretary general of All India Students Federation when Kazi Nazrul Islam was the organizations president.\nHer youngest sister Shirin Kazi was also a physician, and a poet. She was noted as being the first Bengali female doctor to obtain a DRCOG degree in 1951. Shirin Kazi later specialized in pediatrics. She was also known for having adopted and raised several children from less fortunate families.\nAll three siblings once lived in Sevagram, the ashram established by Mahatma Gandhi in Nagpur, India. Zohra Kazi also volunteered at Mahatma Gandhi's Sevashram, (which later gave birth to the Mahatma Gandhi Institute of Medical Sciences) providing free medical care for the poor. She also served as an honorary secretary of the Kasturba Gandhi Hospital.\n\n\nEducation\nKazi obtained her MBBS degree in 1935 from Lady Hardinge Medical College for Women in Delhi. She ranked First Class First and was awarded the Viceroy of India's Medal (Freeman Freeman-Thomas, 1st Marquess of Willingdon, GCSI, GCMG, GCIE, GBE, PC (12 September 1866 \u2013 12 August 1941)).\nKazi completed her FCPS degree and received a scholarship from the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists in London and obtained DRCOG degree. She continued her studies in London and obtained FRCOG and MRCOG degrees. Upon her return to East Bengal (then renamed East Pakistan), she joined Dhaka Medical College and Hospital as a professor and Head of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology.\n\n\nCareer\nDuring her long career, Kazi held several key positions in medicine. Kazi was posthumously awarded the Ekushey Padak in February 2008 for her notable social work. During her lifetime, she also received several other distinctions and acknowledgements for her contributions, both medical and philanthropic, to society.\nOn 21 February 1952, Kazi is said to have organized emergency treatment for the wounded students of the Bengali Language Movement. During the Bangladesh Liberation War in 1971, she sought out and provided medical attention to the wounded Freedom Fighters. Throughout her life, she took an active interest in the well-being of all her patients and the children she delivered.Kazi died on 7 November 2007 at the age of 95.\n\n\nDocumentary\nA documentary film titled Zohra Kazi was recently released in Bangladesh. The film was directed by Mahbubul Alam Taru. The documentary illustrates Kazi's life and her success; her lifelong fight against illogical superstitions and backward beliefs, convincing uneducated female patients all over India and Bangladesh, the need for modern medical treatment.\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zoltan_mujahid
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zolt\u00e1n_Mujahid","to":"Zolt\u00e1n Mujahid"}],"pages":{"45469615":{"pageid":45469615,"ns":0,"title":"Zolt\u00e1n Mujahid","extract":"Zolt\u00e1n Mujahid (born 8 August 1979) is a Pakistani-Hungarian singer and music teacher. He is most notable for coming in 10th place in the first series of Megaszt\u00e1r and participating in A Dal 2015.\n\n\nPersonal life\nZolt\u00e1n Mujahid was born on 8 August 1979 in Karachi, Pakistan to Iqbal Mujahid and Kl\u00e1ra Somogyi. He has three siblings: Tam\u00e1s (Altamash), Atilla, and Aneela. In 2012, he publicly came out as gay.He first studied South Asian music in Karachi for five years, and held many high positions in local talent shows. At age eleven, he, his mom, and his siblings moved to Budapest in his mother's native country, where he learned Hungarian.During his time in primary school, he learned classical piano. In 1995, he became involved with major plays at the Pet\u0151fi Musical Studio. At age seventeen, Zolt\u00e1n began to take vocal lessons with the help of fellow teacher Zsuzsa K\u00f3sa. He graduated from Pet\u0151fi S\u00e1ndor secondary school in 2000, and was admitted to the Lauschmann Gyula Conservatory of Jazz Music, which he graduated from in 2003. He went onto the Jazz department of the Franz Liszt Academy of Music, where he graduated in 2008.\n\n\nProfessional career\nIn 2003, he was in the top 10 of the American Idol-esque show Megaszt\u00e1r, in its first season.\nIn December 2014, Mujahid was one of the names announced to partake in A Dal 2015, the Hungarian national selection for the Eurovision Song Contest, with his song Beside You. He passed through the third heat on 14 February 2015, and the first semi-final on 21 February. He progressed to the final, and on February 28, was one of the entries which the juries voted to be eligible to go to the Eurovision Song Contest 2015, but fellow contestant Boggie was chosen by the televote to go to the Eurovision.\nIn December 2016, Mujahid was announced again to be participating in A Dal, this time in A Dal 2017 with the song On My Own. He was eliminated in the second heat.\n\n\nDiscography\nEls\u0151 vallom\u00e1s (LP, 2005)\nEls\u0151 h\u00f3 (single, 2008)\nT\u00fal\u00e9l\u0151 (single, 2010)\nH\u00e1rom \u00e9v (single, 2012)\nBeside You (single, 2015)\nOn My Own (single, 2016)\n\n\nSources (in Hungarian)\nHivatalos honlap\njoyride.hu\nallmusic.hu\nblikk.hu\nbulvar.ma.hu\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zukkoke_otoko_michi
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zukkoke_Otoko_Michi","to":"Zukkoke Otoko Michi"}],"pages":{"25507351":{"pageid":25507351,"ns":0,"title":"Zukkoke Otoko Michi","extract":"\"Zukkoke Otoko Michi\" (\u30ba\u30c3\u30b3\u30b1\u7537\u9053, lit. \"Misguided Mans Way\") is the sixth single released by the Japanese boyband Kanjani8. This single marked the change of labels from Teichiku Records to Imperial Records because the group's sound hand changed from Enka to Pop. \"Zukkoke Otoko Michi\" sound was of the disco/pop variety and unsuited for the label.\n\n\nTrack listing\n\n\nRegular Edition\n\" Zukkoke Otoko Michi \"\n\" Ai ni Mukatte \"\n\" Explosion \"\n\" Zukkoke Otoko Michi <Original Karaoke> \"\n\n\nLimited Edition\n\" Zukkoke Otoko Michi \"\n\" Ai ni Mukatte \"\n\" Zukkoke Otoko Michi <Original Karaoke> \"\n\n\nCharts\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zulkifli_noordin
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zulkifli_Noordin","to":"Zulkifli Noordin"}],"pages":{"25504934":{"pageid":25504934,"ns":0,"title":"Zulkifli Noordin","extract":"Dato' Zulkifli Noordin (born 19 February 1962) is a Malaysian politician and a former Member of the Parliament of Malaysia for the Kulim\u2013Bandar Baharu constituency in Kedah. He held the seat as an Independent, although having been elected on the ticket and as a member of the People's Justice Party (PKR) but was sacked in 2010. Zulkifli was also the deputy president of right-wing Malay organisation, Perkasa.\nZulkifli was elected to the Parliament in the 2008 election. His election had been contested by the defeated UMNO candidate; however the court petition to overturn the result was eventually withdrawn. In the 2013 election, he contested the Shah Alam parliamentary seat under the Barisan Nasional ticket and was defeated.\nZulkifli is also a Sharia lawyer.\n\n\nControversies\n\n\nAllah issue\nDatuk Zulkifli Nordin was a public figure in the controversy over the use of the word 'Allah' in a Catholic publication. In response to the decision of the High Court allowing the publication Herald, Zulkifli stated \"I can't understand how any Muslim can support this judgment\". Zulkifli also called for the resignation of a Pan-Malaysian Islamic Party MP, Khalid Samad for supporting the right of Christians to use the word 'Allah'.\n\n\nDismissal from PKR\nOn 6 March 2010, Zulkifli was dismissed from PKR following the unanimous decision of a party disciplinary panel arising from Zulkifli's lodging of a police report against Khalid Samad and his public criticisms of the Chief Minister of Penang, Lim Guan Eng. Zulkifli's request to have his case heard by an all-Muslim disciplinary panel had been dismissed by the party. He immediately indicated he would remain in Parliament as an Independent. He has been vocal in criticising the federal opposition, especially the PKR, since his dismissal.\n\n\nInsulting remarks against Hindus\nIn March 2013, Zulkifli Noordin has been heavily criticised by several Hindu politicians after giving a religious sermon belittling Hinduism. A YouTube video of the speech has been circulating on social media. In his speech, he explained how he laughed at the Indian traders on why the Hindu gods could not prevent the trader's shop from being flooded. He also questioned the purity and holiness of the Ganges River, India, which is considered sacred by the Hindus, claiming that the Ganges River is filled with chicken carcasses and twigs floating. Besides that, Zulkifli also mocked the Hindu god Lord Ganesha, by questioning why the Hindus are fighting over buying the deity's statue with the trunk broken. He also questioned the holiness of the Hindu gods when he said when the broken parts of the statue can just be mended by plaster.The video clip has sparked outrage among many people from the Malaysian Hindu community. PKR vice-president and lawyer N. Surendran wants Zulkifli to be charged with Section 298A of the Penal Code for uttering words which causes disharmony, feelings of enmity, hatred or ill-will on grounds of religion. He added that Zulkifli is a close ally with Malaysian Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak, in which he described that UMNO and Barisan Nasional must take responsibility for the sacrilegious remarks and mockery of Hinduism.MIC central working committee member Datuk T. Rajagopalu told Zulkifli to 'shut up' and apologise for his insensitive remarks against the Hindus. He added that Zulkifli is unfit to be an MP, describing the lawyer as a half-baked lawyer and not a true Muslim man. MIC vice-president Datuk S.K. Devamany also demanded that Zulkifli apologise and withdraw his remarks. Aside from them, MIC central working committee member P. Kamalanathan condemned Zulkifli's remarks \"in the harshest manner possible.\" Human rights group SUARAM also rebuked Zulkifli and urged voters to reject him in the upcoming Malaysian 13th general elections. Hindu Sangam chief said that no legal action were taken against Zulkifli because he is a Muslim and vice-president of Perkasa.Zulkifli later apologised on 1 April 2013 for hurting the feelings of the Indian community. This change of sentiment was most probably due to the upcoming 13th general election.Zulkifli Nordin also states that his statement was made during his days in PAS and he was remorseful for his actions. He also added he had made a lot of mistakes during his tenure as a PAS member and also as a lawyer for Anwar Ibrahim. One of those mistake is the remarks he made to the Hindu community in Malaysia. The video resurfaced only recently after he was ousted by the Pakatan Rakyat and now he is facing attacks from his former colleague even though no PAS members made any statements during Zulkifli Nordin's tenure as a representative from PAS.\n\n\nInsensitive remarks on the passing of Karpal Singh\nOn 17 April 2014, Zulkifli Noordin commented that Allah had killed off Karpal had received swift criticisms from Barisan Nasional and Opposition MPs.\n\n\nElection results\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zygocera_baladica
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zygocera_baladica","to":"Zygocera baladica"}],"redirects":[{"from":"Zygocera baladica","to":"Toxotomimus baladicus"}],"pages":{"51165316":{"pageid":51165316,"ns":0,"title":"Toxotomimus baladicus","extract":"Toxotomimus baladicus is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Xavier Montrouzier in 1861.\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zurichsee-schifffahrtsgesellschaft
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"21865574":{"pageid":21865574,"ns":0,"title":"Z\u00fcrichsee-Schifffahrtsgesellschaft","extract":"The Z\u00fcrichsee-Schifffahrtsgesellschaft or Lake Z\u00fcrich Navigation Company (commonly abbreviated to ZSG) is a public Swiss company operating passenger ships and boats on Lake Z\u00fcrich.\nThe company operates services connecting lake-side towns between Z\u00fcrich and Rapperswil, as well as more tourist oriented cruises and boat services on the Limmat through the centre of the city of Z\u00fcrich. It is a member of the Z\u00fcrich Public Transport Network (ZVV) and transports over 1,5 million passengers every year.The ZSG is a joint stock company with a share capital of 11 million Swiss Francs (CHF). The share capital \u2013 one third is in private hands \u2013 is divided into 110,000 bearer shares, each with a nominal value of CHF 100.\n\n\nHistory\n\nSteam navigation started on Lake Z\u00fcrich in 1834, when Franz Carl Caspar and Johann Jakob L\u00e4mmlin founded a new company (Caspar und L\u00e4mmlin, Unternehmer der Dampfschiffahrt auf dem Z\u00fcrcher- und Walensee) and ordered their first ship from William Fairbairn of Manchester, England. Minerva entered service the following year. When the cuty fortifications were abolished, the then called Bausch\u00e4nzli bastion remained intact, and served from 1835 to 1883 as the landing site for the first steamboats on the lake, later provided by the Z\u00fcrichsee-Schifffahrtsgesellschaft.\n\nOver the years, various other companies started operating steam ships on the lake, and various mergers took place, until the entire fleet was taken over by the Swiss Northeastern Railway (NOB) in 1874. The NOB also owned most of the railway network around the lake, and this monopoly led to consumer resistance, and to the formation of the Z\u00fcrcher Dampfbootgesellschaft (Z\u00fcrich Steamship Company) in 1890/91. In order to operate a tram-like suburban traffic, a series of nine screw steamships was ordered.\n\nWhen the NOB became part of the Swiss Federal Railways in 1903, the Z\u00fcrcher Dampfbootgesellschaft took over its fleet of ships on Lake Z\u00fcrich. This included the large paddle steamer Helvetia. In 1909 and 1914, it ordered two further large paddle steamers, which were to become today's Stadt Z\u00fcrich and Stadt Rapperswil respectively. In 1934 the Z\u00fcrcher Dampfbootgesellschaft introduced its first successful motor ship, the Etzel, and from then on the fleet became increasingly motorized.For the Swiss National Exhibition of 1939, four sister motor ships, the Taucherli, Schwan, M\u00f6ve and Ente, were placed into service. These vessels provided a connecting service between the two exhibition sites, at Wollishofen and Z\u00fcrichhorn. The second world war brought economic difficulties, but the cross-lake services were maintained. As a consequence of the transition from steam power to motor vessels, the company changed its name to Z\u00fcrichsee Schifffahrtgesellschaft, or ZSG for short, in 1957.In 1990, the ZSG became part of the Z\u00fcrcher Verkehrsverbund (ZVV), the public transport network established in the same year, accepting the ZVVs common tickets and tariffs.In 2009 there was a centennial exhibition on board Stadt Z\u00fcrich at Z\u00fcrich-B\u00fcrkliplatz. On 12 June 2009, exactly 100 years after the maiden voyage of the steamship Stadt Z\u00fcrich, its anniversary trip with invited guests and its sistership Stadt Rapperswil was celebrated., and in 2014 for its then 100 years aged sistership.\n\n\nFleet\n\n\nCurrent fleet\nA fleet of 17 passenger ships, including two historical paddle steamers \u2013 Stadt Z\u00fcrich (built in 1909) and Stadt Rapperwil (1914) \u2013 and 15 motor vessels of various sizes is operated by the Z\u00fcrichsee-Schifffahrtsgesellschaft. ZSG's flagship MS Helvetia has a capacity of 1200 passengers. The fleet includes three small Limmat boats for round trips on the Limmat and on the lower Lake Z\u00fcrich at Z\u00fcrich.\n\n\nFormer fleet\nThe paddle steamer Helvetia, built in 1875 and last operated in 1958, was scrapped in 1964. Of the four so-called Landi-Boote built for the Swiss national exposition (\"Landi\") of 1939, Ente was sold to the BLS after the exhibition, whilst Schwan (renamed Halbinsel Au), M\u00f6ve and Taucherli (renamed Speer) continued in service until the end of the 1990s, when they were replaced by three motor ships (300 passengers each) of the Albis type \u2013 Albis, Pfannenstiel and Uetliberg \u2013 in addition to two smaller (150 passengers each) motor ships \u2013 Zimmerberg and Forch.\n\n\nOperations\n\nThe ZSG operates regular round trips from its main Z\u00fcrich landing point at B\u00fcrklipatz. In summer, trips taking 4 hours operate every hour and stop on both shores of the lower lake at Z\u00fcrichhorn, Wollishofen, Kilchberg-Bendlikon, K\u00fcsnacht-Heslibach, K\u00fcsnacht, Zollikon, Meilen, Herrliberg, R\u00fcschlikon, Thalwil, Erlenbach, Oberrieden, Horgen, Au peninsula, W\u00e4denswil, Richterswil, St\u00e4fa, M\u00e4nnedorf, Ufenau island and Rapperswil. A few trips continue through the Hurden ship canal to the upper lake, or Obersee, calling at Altendorf, Lachen and Schmerikon, and take 7 hours.\nThere also are shorter round trips from Z\u00fcrich-B\u00fcrkliplatz, with 2.5 hour trips as far as Richterswil or St\u00e4fa, and 1.5 hour trips to Erlenbach and Thalwil.\nThe company also operates services on the Limmat through the centre of Z\u00fcrich. These services operate upriver from the Landesmuseum via Limmatquai and Storchen to Lake Z\u00fcrich, stopping at B\u00fcrkliplatz, Enge and Z\u00fcrichhorn, before returning downriver to the Landesmuseum. Because of the low bridges over the Limmat in central Zurich, these services use low profile motor boats.\n\nThe ZSG employs approximatively 80 permanent members of staff, and in the main summer season (April\u2013December) five additional nautical seasonal workers, as well as seven staff in the ticket office at Z\u00fcrich B\u00fcrkliplatz. In its own ship yard at Z\u00fcrich-Wollishofen work qualified carpenters, painters, mechanics, electricians, plumbers and locksmiths.\n\n\nSee also\n\nZ\u00fcrichsee-F\u00e4hre Horgen\u2013Meilen, the main car ferry operator on Lake Z\u00fcrich\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\n\nZ\u00fcrichsee Schifffahrtsgesellschaft web site (English language subset)\nHistory of the Z\u00fcrichsee Schifffahrtsgesellschaft web site (English language subset)\nZ\u00fcrichsee Schifffahrtsgesellschaft web site (full German language version)"}}}}
part_xec/zonealarm
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"2889623":{"pageid":2889623,"ns":0,"title":"ZoneAlarm","extract":"ZoneAlarm is an internet security software company that provides consumer antivirus and firewall products. ZoneAlarm was developed by Zone Labs, whose CEOs were Kevin Nickel, Mouad Abid and Shahin and the Company was acquired in March 2004 by Check Point. ZoneAlarm's firewall security products include an inbound intrusion detection system, as well as the ability to control which programs can open outbound connections.\n\n\nTechnical description\nIn ZoneAlarm, program access is controlled by way of \"zones\", into which all network connections are divided. The \"trusted zone\" which generally includes the user's local area network can share resources such as files and printers. The \"Internet zone\" includes everything without the trusted zone. The user can grant permissions (trusted zone client, trusted zone server, Internet zone client, Internet zone server) to programs before they attempt to access the Internet (e.g. before the first use) or ZoneAlarm will ask the user to grant permissions on the first access attempt.\"True Vector Internet Monitor\", also known as \"TrueVector Security Engine\", is a Windows service that is the core of ZoneAlarm. In the processes list its Image Name is \"vsmon.exe\". This monitors internet traffic and generates alerts for disallowed access. \"Operating System Firewall\" (OSFirewall) monitors programs and generates alerts when they perform suspicious behaviors. The OSFirewall is useful in preventing rootkits and other spyware. \"SmartDefense Advisor\" is the name ZoneAlarm give to a service available in all versions that helps the user with certain types of alert, using a database of trusted program signatures to provide the user with advice on allowing or denying Internet access in response to program requests.\nThe current free version of Zonealarm has an ad for the paid version that pops up every time you turn on your computer after a short delay.\n\n\nAwards and certifications\nBoth the free and Pro editions of ZoneAlarm Firewall were designated as PCMag's Editor's Choice in 2017.\n\n\nControversies\nAs of January 2006, ZoneAlarm was reportedly sending data to the company's servers in a covert fashion. A developer dismissed allegations that ZoneAlarm was spying on its clients, saying that it was an issue related to software updates and that it would be fixed.In December 2007, a browser toolbar was shipped with ZoneAlarm as an opt-out, which was not well received. This was removed in later versions of the software.\nOn September 2, 2010, the free version of ZoneAlarm started showing a \"Global Virus Alert\" popup as a scareware tactic to get users to switch to their paid security suite. The popup was turned off by ZoneAlarm marketing team after an uproar from disgruntled users, many of whom uninstalled the software.\n\n\nSee also\nComparison of antivirus software\nComparison of firewalls\nZoneAlarm Z100G\nCheck Point GO\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nOfficial website"}}}}
part_xec/zomaria
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"25888682":{"pageid":25888682,"ns":0,"title":"Zomaria","extract":"Zomaria is a genus of moths belonging to the subfamily Olethreutinae of the family Tortricidae.\n\n\nSpecies\nZomaria andromedana (Barnes & McDunnough, 1917)\nZomaria interruptolineana (Fernald, 1882)\nZomaria rosaochreana (Kearfott, 1907)\n\n\nSee also\nList of Tortricidae genera\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nTortricid.net"}}}}
part_xec/zunil
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"2394475":{"pageid":2394475,"ns":0,"title":"Zunil","extract":"Zunil (Spanish pronunciation: [su\u02c8nil]) is a town and municipality in the Quetzaltenango department of Guatemala with a surface area of 80 square kilometres (31 sq mi). The town of Zunil is located 9 kilometres (5.6 mi) from the city of Quetzaltenango, on the bank of the Salam\u00e1 River. Zunil has an altitude of approximately 2,075 metres (6,808 ft) above mean sea level. The population of the municipality is about 14,000, 100% indigenous. The inhabitants speak K'iche' and Spanish.\nThere are thermal baths with volcanic water around the town, for example Fuentes Georginas and Almolonga.\n\n\nReligion\nZunil possesses active worship of San Sim\u00f3n (also known as Maxim\u00f3n), a life-sized mannequin representing a Maya god, sitting in a wooden throne, which is moved to a different house every year, and many people visit and leave gifts at his shrine.\n\n\nNamesakes\nA crater on Mars, which may be the source of Mars meteorites, is named after the village.\n\n\nGallery\n\n\t\t\n\t\t\n\t\t\n\n\nNotes\n\n\nReferences\nCattelan, Marino (2004). Quetzaltenango. Guatemala: Xibalb\u00e1 Publicaciones.\n\n\nExternal links\n\n Zunil travel guide from Wikivoyage\nZunil at Inforpressca\nFuentes Georginas"}}}}
part_xec/zoltan_berczik
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zolt\u00e1n_Berczik","to":"Zolt\u00e1n Berczik"}],"pages":{"25386769":{"pageid":25386769,"ns":0,"title":"Zolt\u00e1n Berczik","extract":"Zolt\u00e1n Berczik (7 August 1937 \u2013 11 January 2011) was a Hungarian table tennis player. In the late fifties he was ranked among the best European table tennis players and won, with his athletic play, the first two titles at the Table Tennis European Championships.Berczik was born in Novi Sad. He began his career as a defensive player. With the advent of topspin in the late 1950s he turned his game around to attack. He died in Budapest.\n\n\nNational success\nHe won the Hungarian championship in single continuously from 1959 to 1964. He won the double competition in 1959 with L\u00e1szl\u00f3 F\u00f6ldy, in 1960 and 1961 with Ferenc Sido, in 1962 Mikl\u00f3s P\u00e9terfy, in 1963 with J\u00e1nos Fah\u00e1zi and 1967 with Istv\u00e1n Jony. In mixed doubles he won in 1960 with Gizella Farkas and \u00c9va K\u00f3czi\u00e1n in 1967.\nHe won the team championships in 1957, 1958, 1959, 1962 and 1964 with the club Vas\u00fat\u00e9p\u00edt\u0151 T\u00f6rekv\u00e9s and in 1965, 1966, 1967 and 1969 with Bp. Vasutas SC.\n\n\nWorld Championships\nBerczik took part in World Cups five times: in 1957 he secured the silver medal with the Hungarian team. This happened again at the World Cup in 1959, where he also won the bronze medal in doubles with L\u00e1szl\u00f3 F\u00f6ldy and mixed with Gizi Farkas. At the World Cup in 1961, he was third with the team and runner-up in doubles with Ferenc Sido. In 1963 and 1965 he won no medals.\n\n\nEuropean Championships\nAt the Youth European Championship in 1955 in Stuttgart, he arrived in final in doubles, where he lost.\nHe achieved his greatest success at the European Championships in 1958 and 1960. Here he became European champion both in single and with the Hungarian team. In 1958 he won the Mixed with Gizi Farkas-Lantos, in 1960 the double competition with Ferenc Sid\u00f3. In 1964 he reached the final of the individual, which he lost to Kjell Johansson, and semi-finals in doubles.\n\n\nTrainer and author\nFrom 1969 he served as coach for the Hungarian national team. After a stay in Japan in 1985, he coached Budapest Vasutas SC. In the 1990s he wrote a series of articles for coaches on the table tennis tactics:\n\n1992: Tactics (2): establishment of tactics for a match\n1992: Tactics (3): The tactics of the offensive player\n1993: Tactics (5): Exercises for offensive players\n1993: Tactics (6): Exercises for offensive players\n1994: Tactics (7)\n1994: Tactics (8)Berczik ended his coaching career in 1996.\n\n\nSee also\nList of table tennis players\nList of World Table Tennis Championships medalists\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nITTF stats"}}}}
part_xec/zvonko_vranesic
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zvonko_Vranesic","to":"Zvonko Vranesic"}],"pages":{"7286843":{"pageid":7286843,"ns":0,"title":"Zvonko Vranesic","extract":"Zvonko Vranesic (born 4 October 1938) is a Croatian\u2013Canadian International Master of chess, and an International Master of Correspondence Chess. He is an electrical engineer, a university professor, and a developer of computer chess software.\n\n\nEarly life, immigration, education\nZvonko Vrane\u0161i\u0107 was born in Zagreb. He won the Junior Championship of Yugoslavia in 1957. He immigrated to Canada in October 1958, settling in Toronto, Ontario. He graduated in Electrical Engineering from the University of Toronto, earning bachelor and doctoral degrees. He began competing with success in Canadian chess tournaments, soon after his arrival. Vranesic won the Toronto City Championship in 1959 (with a perfect score), and repeated in 1967, 1970, and 1972. He won the Ontario Open Championship in 1959 and 1963.\n\n\nNear-misses in Canadian championships\nVranesic placed 2nd, with 8/11, in the 1961 Canadian Chess Championship, at Brockville, Ontario 1961 (Lionel Joyner won); he repeated this placing in the 1963 Canadian Chess Championship, Winnipeg, Manitoba 1963, with 11.5/15 (Daniel Yanofsky won). Vranesic placed 2nd, to GM Pal Benko, at the 1964 Canadian Open Chess Championship.He represented Canada in the Interzonal at Amsterdam 1964 (Yanofsky had qualified, but declined his place in favour of Vranesic), but placed 24th (last). However, his game was improving with opportunities to compete at high levels. He tied for first place at the Canadian Chess Championship, Pointe-Claire 1969. He earned the International Master title for this result. But he lost the Vancouver playoff match (and the right to advance to the 1970 Interzonal) to Duncan Suttles, by 1.5-0.5.\n\n\nOlympiads\nHe represented Canada at five Chess Olympiads. Here are his detailed results:\n\nIn 1964, he played at third board at 16th Chess Olympiad in Tel Aviv (+4 \u20136 =5).\nIn 1966, he played at second board at 17th Chess Olympiad in Havana (+6 \u20132 =9).\nIn 1970, he played at third board at 19th Chess Olympiad in Siegen (+7 \u20134 =5).\nIn 1972, he played at third board at 20th Chess Olympiad in Skopje (+4 \u20130 =10).\nIn 1980, he played at first reserve board at 24th Chess Olympiad in La Valletta (+4 \u20131 =3).His totals in Olympiad play for Canada are (+25 -13 =32), for 58.6 per cent.One noteworthy Olympiad win came in 1964 at Tel Aviv, when he defeated the Soviet champion GM Leonid Stein. In 1970, he scored a Grandmaster norm (a performance rating of over 2600) at Siegen; this would be his best career performance. He also served as the captain of the 1980 Canadian team, which attained Canada's second-best result to date, ninth place on tiebreak. Vranesic played chess at a high level, but was never a professional player. He earned the title of International Master of Correspondence Chess (IMC) in 1973. He has been virtually retired from serious chess competition since the mid-1990s.\n\n\nProfessor, computer chess\nDr. Zvonko Vranesic is Professor Emeritus, Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Toronto. He was co-developer of a computer chess program, Chute, which competed in Computer Chess Championships. Details of his career at the University of Toronto are given at his academic web page.\n\n\nNotable chess games\nZvonko Vranesic vs Leonid Stein, Tel Aviv Olympiad 1964, Modern Benoni Defence (A78), 1-0 Vranesic catches the Soviet champion Stein in an incorrect tactic, gains an advantage, then pursues it relentlessly.\nZvonko Vranesic vs Lawrence Day, Canadian Zonal Championship, Toronto 1972, Modern Benoni Defence (A79), 1-0 A hard grind between Toronto's top two players eventually goes to the veteran.\nDavid Levy vs Zvonko Vranesic, Lone Pine 1975, Sicilian Defence, Velimirovic Attack (B89), 0-1 The Scot Levy, a well-known chess author and master, tries the ultra-sharp Velimirovic Attack, but finds his plans dashed.\nZvonko Vranesic vs Kevin Spraggett, Canadian Zonal Championship, Montreal 1981, King's Indian Defence, Saemisch Variation (E84), 1-0 The rising star Spraggett learns that Vranesic is a guru of King's Indian formations.\nVladimir Tukmakov vs Zvonko Vranesic, Mississauga Croatia Club International 1990, Modern Benoni Defence (A73), 0-1\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zurich_wilderness_park
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Z\u00fcrich_Wilderness_Park","to":"Z\u00fcrich Wilderness Park"}],"pages":{"39456212":{"pageid":39456212,"ns":0,"title":"Z\u00fcrich Wilderness Park","extract":"Z\u00fcrich Wilderness Park (German: Wildnispark Z\u00fcrich) is a wilderness park near the city of Z\u00fcrich in Switzerland. It includes the Sihlwald forest, the largest mixed deciduous and coniferous forest in the Swiss Mittelland, and the Langenberg Wildlife Park, the oldest Swiss wildlife park. Both sites are situated in the Sihl Valley to the south of Z\u00fcrich, but are separated from each other by the town of Langnau am Albis.\n\n\nHistory\n\nThe city of Z\u00fcrich received the Sihl forest, or Sihlwald, as a gift in 1309 from the Hapsburgers and again in 1524 through the dissolution of the Fraum\u00fcnster convent. Over the following centuries, the forest provided Z\u00fcrich with timber and firewood. However, the trees have not been felled since the 1990s; this is due to the actions of forest director Andreas Speich, in order to preserve the forest's unique composition.In 1869, Langenberg Wildlife Park was founded by the city forester Carl Anton Ludwig von Orelli.On August 28, 2009, the Federal Office for the Environment (FOEN) declared the Sihl forest a \"regional nature park of national importance\". The protection of Sihl forest was established through a forest reserve agreement in 2007 and a cantonal Protection Ordinance in 2008.The Z\u00fcrich Wilderness Park was formed in 2009, by the merger of the Langenberg Wildlife Park and the Sihlwald forest. Today, the park welcomes more than half a million yearly visitors, who are encouraged to barbecue, hike, cycle, and even ride horseback through the park, as well as visit its museum and attend various outdoor events.\n\n\nSites\n\nThe Z\u00fcrich Wilderness Park comprises two disconnected sites:\n\nThe Langenberg Wildlife Park, a zoo situated in the municipality of Langnau am Albis some 12 km (7.5 mi) south of Z\u00fcrich. Langenberg is home to a zoo with 16 native or formerly native animals such as bears, beavers, elk, hare, lynxes, wild boar, wolves, European bison and Przewalski\u2019s horse.\nThe Sihlwald forest, largely situated in the municipality of Horgen but also spreading into several adjoining municipalities. It is situated on both banks of the Sihl river, although mostly on the western slopes rising up to the Albis hills. The forest covers approximately 12 square kilometres (4.6 sq mi) and is between 14 km (8.7 mi) and 21 km (13 mi) south of Z\u00fcrich. It is the only Swiss peri-urban nature reserve, and consists of mostly beech trees, some of which are up to 250 years old. The majority of the trees are about 120 years old.Both sites can be reached via rail service S4 of the Zurich S-Bahn, using Wildpark-H\u00f6fli station for the Langenberg Wildlife Park and Sihlwald station for the Sihlwald forest.\n\n\nSee also\nNature parks in Switzerland\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\n Media related to Z\u00fcrich Wilderness Park at Wikimedia Commons\nWildnispark Z\u00fcrich web site (in German)"}}}}
part_xec/zvanarka
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"44439371":{"pageid":44439371,"ns":0,"title":"Zvanarka","extract":"Zvanarka is a village in Krumovgrad Municipality, Kardzhali Province, southern Bulgaria.\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zophopetes_quaternata
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zophopetes_quaternata","to":"Zophopetes quaternata"}],"pages":{"37484332":{"pageid":37484332,"ns":0,"title":"Zophopetes quaternata","extract":"Zophopetes quaternata, the western palm nightfighter, is a butterfly in the family Hesperiidae. It is found in Senegal, the Gambia, Guinea, Ivory Coast and Ghana.The larvae feed on Phoenix reclinata.\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zuni_indian_reservation
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zuni_Indian_Reservation","to":"Zuni Indian Reservation"}],"pages":{"5182011":{"pageid":5182011,"ns":0,"title":"Zuni Indian Reservation","extract":"The Zuni Indian Reservation, also known as Pueblo of Zuni, is the homeland of the Zuni tribe of Native Americans. In Zuni language, the Zuni Pueblo people are referred to as A:shiwi, and the Zuni homeland is referred to as Halona Idiwan\u2019a meaning Middle Place.\n\n\nLocation\nThe reservation lies in the Zuni River valley and is located primarily in McKinley and Cibola counties in western New Mexico, about 150 miles (240 km) west of Albuquerque. There are also several smaller non-contiguous sections in Apache County, Arizona, northwest of the city of St. Johns.\nThe main part of the reservation borders the state of Arizona to the west and the Ramah Navajo Reservation to the east. The main reservation is surrounded by the Painted Cliffs, the Zuni Mountains, and the Cibola National Forest. The reservation's total land area is 723.343 sq mi (1,873.45 km\u00b2).\nAs noted above, the Zuni Tribe also has land holdings in Apache County, Arizona, and Catron County, New Mexico, that do not border the main reservation.\n\n\nPopulation\nThe population was reported at 7,891 inhabitants in the 2010 census. Almost all of the population lives in the reservation headquarters community of Zuni Pueblo, located near the reservation's center, or in nearby Black Rock, to its east.\n\n\nHistory and main features\nAlso on the main reservation are the Hawikuh Ruins. The ancient Zuni pueblo of Hawikuh was the largest of the Seven Cities of Cibola. It was established in the 13th century and abandoned in 1680. It was also the first pueblo seen by the Spanish explorers. The African scout Estevanico was the first non-Native to reach this area.\nThe largest town on the reservation is Zuni Pueblo, which is seat of Tribal government. Also on the reservation are the towns of Black Rock and Pescado. There is a branch campus of the University of New Mexico located in Zuni.\n\n\nTribal government\nThe Zuni Tribe is governed by an elected governor, lieutenant governor, and a six-member Tribal Council with elections being held every four years. The governor is the administrative head of the Tribal Council, which is the final decision-making body on the reservation. The council oversees finances, business decisions, taxes and contracts.\n\n\nEducation\nThe sections in Cibola and McKinley counties in New Mexico are zoned to the Zuni Public Schools. Zuni High School is the zoned high school.\n\n\nSee also\nList of Indian reservations in the United States\n\n\nBibliography\nZuni Reservation and Off-Reservation Trust Land, New Mexico/Arizona United States Census Bureau\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nOfficial site of the Zuni tribe\nOfficial site of Zuni Tourism"}}}}
part_xec/zvenyika_makonese
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zvenyika_Makonese","to":"Zvenyika Makonese"}],"pages":{"9716081":{"pageid":9716081,"ns":0,"title":"Zvenyika Makonese","extract":"Zvenyika Makonese (born 7 July 1977 in Chiredzi) is a Zimbabwean footballer. He joined Cape Town-based Santos in 2004 from Zimbabwean club Shabanie Mine. He plays as a defender and was selected for the 2006 African Cup of Nations.[1]\nIt was reported that he was set to join Stoke City at the end of the 2006\u201307 season after impressing in a trial at the club, despite interest from Wigan Athletic and several French clubs.[2] However, no such move transpired. He also had an unsuccessful trial at Ligue 1 side Stade Rennes.\nOn August 2nd, 2011 Makonese marked his return to the domestic Premiership yesterday when he signed a deal to join Shabanie Mine.\n[3].\nHe was signed with Black-Leopards in Petersburg, but was unable to play in the PSL because of a lack of documents December 2011 to March 2012.\n\n\nExternal links\nZvenyika Makonese at National-Football-Teams.com"}}}}
part_xec/zum_laichen_und_sterben_ziehen_die_lachse_den_fluss_hinauf
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zum_Laichen_und_Sterben_ziehen_die_Lachse_den_Fluss_hinauf","to":"Zum Laichen und Sterben ziehen die Lachse den Fluss hinauf"}],"pages":{"43158209":{"pageid":43158209,"ns":0,"title":"Zum Laichen und Sterben ziehen die Lachse den Fluss hinauf","extract":"\"Zum Laichen und Sterben ziehen die Lachse den Fluss hinauf\" (eng: To Mate and Die the Salmons Swim Upstream) is the debut single from German singer-songwriter Thees Uhlmann released in the summer of 2011. After Uhlmann's band Tomte went on hiatus, Uhlmann began work on material, working with Tobias Kuhn on what would become his eponymous solo album.\n\n\nProduction and lyrics\nThe song was initially released on a limited edition 7\" single sung in English. The song was later released in its German form as the lead single from the Thees Uhlmann album. The lyrics, written entirely by Uhlmann, describe a feeling of instability and longing, which are common themes throughout its parent record. Uhlmann was quoted in interviews as saying that he is unsure of where he considers his home to be. A native of Hemmoor, Uhlmann said that he does not consider it to be his home anymore. Regardless of this, the lyrics do describe a sense of nostalgia for his upbringing. The song is a dramatic piano and guitar-driven pop tune heavily influenced by the song of American rock-singer Bruce Springsteen. Following the song's release, Uhlmann has been referred to as the \"German Springsteen\" in the media, something he continues to poke fun at.\n\n\nCritical reception and chart performance\nRolling Stone gave the song a positive review, stating that the song had Uhlmann's original charm and that the lyrics were those that \"one couldn't imagine ever being sung.\" They regarded the song as one of the highlights from the album. To date, it is Uhlmann's only solo single to chart in his native Germany, peaking at No. 52 over an impressive run of seven weeks. The song was played on his tours supporting both his first and second albums. The song placed 8th in the 2011 Bundesvision Song Contest, one place below pop-band Frida Gold.\n\n\nCharts\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zsolt_makra
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zsolt_Makra","to":"Zsolt Makra"}],"pages":{"25136719":{"pageid":25136719,"ns":0,"title":"Zsolt Makra","extract":"Zsolt Makra (born 24 May 1982 in Szeged) is a Hungarian football defender playing for B\u00e9k\u00e9scsaba 1912 El\u0151re SE.\nHe had previously played with Vasas SC, R\u00e1kospalotai EAC, Gy\u0151ri ETO FC and Slovenian club NK Primorje. In 2008, he signed with Algy\u0151 SK, and after one year he moved to B\u00e9k\u00e9scsaba 1912 El\u0151re SE.\n\n\nExternal links\nHLSZ (in Hungarian)\nMLSZ (in Hungarian)\nStats from Hungarian Championship at Futball-Adatt\u00e1r\nStats from Slovenia at PrvaLiga"}}}}
part_xec/zoila_orientalis
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zoila_orientalis","to":"Zoila orientalis"}],"pages":{"27612512":{"pageid":27612512,"ns":0,"title":"Zoila orientalis","extract":"Zoila orientalis is a species of sea snail, a cowry, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Cypraeidae, the cowries.\n\n\nDescription\n\n\nDistribution\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links"}}}}
part_xec/zuo_river
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zuo_River","to":"Zuo River"}],"pages":{"25576440":{"pageid":25576440,"ns":0,"title":"Zuo River","extract":"The Zuo River (Chinese: \u5de6\u6c5f; pinyin: Zu\u01d2ji\u0101ng; lit. 'Left River',Vietnamese: T\u1ea3 Giang) is a river of Guangxi, China. It begins from the confluence of the B\u1eb1ng River and K\u1ef3 C\u00f9ng River near Longzhou and joins the You River (\"Right River\") near Nanning to form the Yong River. These rivers form part of the Pearl River system, which flows into the South China Sea near Guangzhou. The Zuo River historically was the main communication route in the area, linking the villages of the Zuo Valley to each other, to major Chinese centres to the north and east and to southern territories that are now part of Vietnam.\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nSee also\nList of rivers in China"}}}}
part_xec/zoleykha
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"35242797":{"pageid":35242797,"ns":0,"title":"Zoleykha","extract":"Zoleykha (Persian: \u0632\u0644\u064a\u062e\u0627, also Romanized as Zoleykh\u0101) is a village in Dashtabi-ye Sharqi Rural District, Dashtabi District, Buin Zahra County, Qazvin Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 387, in 98 families.\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zumbahua
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"25033058":{"pageid":25033058,"ns":0,"title":"Zumbahua","extract":"Zumbahua is a town in Pujil\u00ed Canton, Cotopaxi Province, Ecuador. At the 2001 census, Zumbahua had a population of 11,895 (5,455 men and 6,440 women) living in 2,352 households.Zumbahua residents are predominantly Quichua, of the Panzaleo group.The town has a colorful Saturday market. Houses in Zumbahua were traditionally chozas, but in recent years these have been replaced by cement and metal block houses.\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nFurther reading\nBaltazar Umajinga. \"Zumbahua\". In Identidades indias en el Ecuador contempor\u00e1neo (Jos\u00e9 Almeida Vinueza, coordinator). Editorial Abya Yala (1995), pp. 247\u2013272. ISBN 978-9978-04-164-2."}}}}
part_xec/zwischen_himmel_und_erde
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zwischen_Himmel_und_Erde","to":"Zwischen Himmel und Erde"}],"redirects":[{"from":"Zwischen Himmel und Erde","to":"Between Heaven and Earth (1957 film)"}],"pages":{"31323051":{"pageid":31323051,"ns":0,"title":"Between Heaven and Earth (1957 film)","extract":"Between Heaven and Earth (German: Zwischen Himmel und Erde) is an East German film. It was released in 1957.\n\n\nExternal links\nBetween Heaven and Earth at IMDb"}}}}
part_xec/zorry_kid
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zorry_Kid","to":"Zorry Kid"}],"pages":{"38366792":{"pageid":38366792,"ns":0,"title":"Zorry Kid","extract":"Zorry Kid is the title character of an Italian comic series created by Benito Jacovitti.\nThe comics debuted in 1968, published in the children magazine Il Corriere dei Piccoli; it was later published by the comic magazine Il Giornalino until 1990.A series of animation shorts was realized in 1969 for Carosello.The comic consists of a surreal and zany parody of Zorro.Several anthological books and collections were published over the years.\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zorodictyna
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"49245906":{"pageid":49245906,"ns":0,"title":"Zorodictyna","extract":"Zorodictyna is a genus of spiders in the family Udubidae native to Madagascar. It has been described as an intermediate genus between Zoropsidae and Dictynidae, though it is now placed in Udubidae. This genus was originally placed in the family Zoropsidae, but it has been reassigned several times since. In 1967, Lehtinen moved it to Miturgidae. In 1999, it was moved back to Zoropsidae, and in 2015, it was moved to Udubidae.\n\n\nSpecies\nAs of February 2016, the genus has two accepted species.\nZorodictyna inhonesta \u2013 Madagascar\nZorodictyna oswaldi \u2013 Madagascar\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zopo_mobile
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zopo_Mobile","to":"Zopo Mobile"}],"pages":{"-1":{"ns":0,"title":"Zopo Mobile","missing":""}}}}
part_xec/zuhur_habibullaev
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zuhur_Habibullaev","to":"Zuhur Habibullaev"}],"pages":{"27656661":{"pageid":27656661,"ns":0,"title":"Zuhur Habibullaev","extract":"Zuhur Habibullaev (Tajik: \u0417\u0443\u04b3\u0443\u0440 \u04b2\u0430\u0431\u0438\u0431\u0443\u043b\u043b\u0430\u0435\u0432, Persian: \u0638\u0647\u0648\u0631 \u062d\u0628\u06cc\u0628\u200c\u0627\u0644\u0644\u0647\u200c\u0627\u0641) (1932 \u2013 April 8, 2013) is a Tajikistani artist. Born in Dushanbe, he graduated from Olimov State art College in Dushanbe in 1953 and Mukhin High industrial-art school in St. Petersburg in 1959.\nHe is a People's Artist of the Republic of Tajikistan and Member of the Union of artists of Tajikistan and has given international exhibitions from 1960. His works are located in museums and private collections in Tajikistan, Russia, Europe and Asia.\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zygmunt_pulawski
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zygmunt_Pu\u0142awski","to":"Zygmunt Pu\u0142awski"}],"pages":{"2290422":{"pageid":2290422,"ns":0,"title":"Zygmunt Pu\u0142awski","extract":"Zygmunt Pu\u0142awski (October 24, 1901 \u2013 March 21, 1931) was a Polish aircraft designer and pilot. He invented a gull-wing aircraft design, also known as \"Pu\u0142awski wing\" and designed a series of Polish PZL fighters.\nHe was born in Lublin. In the summer of 1920, during the Soviet offensive in the Polish-Soviet War, he volunteered for a Boy Scout battalion. In late 1920 he commenced studies at Warsaw University of Technology. He was a member of the Aviation Section of the Students' Mechanical Club, where he constructed some gliders. He distinguished himself as a thorough and able student. In 1925 he graduated from the University, receiving the Engineer title, and left for practice in the Breguet works in France. After his return, he served in the national service, completing military aviation school in Bydgoszcz and becoming a pilot. From 1927 he became a main designer of the Central Aviation Workshops (CWL) at S\u0142upecka Street in Warsaw, soon reorganized into the PZL (Pa\u0144stwowe Zak\u0142ady Lotnicze - State Aviation Works).\nTo meet a requirement of the Polish military department, in 1928 Pu\u0142awski designed a modern all-metal high-wing fighter with an inline engine, PZL P.1. For the P.1, he invented a gull-wing design, giving the pilot an excellent view from his cockpit. The P.1 was flown in 1929 and met with great interest in the world. Its wing design became also known as \"Pu\u0142awski wing\" or \"Polish wing\", and was later copied in some other designs in the world. The P.1 was not produced, in a favour of Pu\u0142awski's next designs with a radial engine, preferred by the Polish Air Force. A development of the P/1 was the PZL P.6 with a radial engine, first flown in 1930. With a pilot Boles\u0142aw Orli\u0144ski, it won a National Air Races in the USA. It was named the best fighter in the world by some of military press at that time. Its improved variant, PZL P.7, was produced for the Polish Air Force (150 made). In early 1931 Pu\u0142awski designed another fighter development PZL P.8, returning to his favourite inline engine. In 1930, he was also ordered to start working upon the P.7 development, with a stronger engine and begun design work upon the PZL P.11 then.\nPu\u0142awski also flew aircraft in the Warsaw Aeroclub. He died on March 21, 1931 in a crash of his newest amphibious flying boat PZL.12 in Warsaw, at the age of 29 (the plane fell due to strong wind, after take-off). After his death, the PZL P.11 project was finished by Wsiewo\u0142od Jakimiuk, becoming the main Polish fighter during the Invasion of Poland 1939. Additionally, a faster export model PZL P.24, based entirely on Pu\u0142awski's construction features, was developed and sold to some countries.\nPu\u0142awski was one of the most talented Polish designers. Partly due to his death, Pu\u0142awski's fighters, most modern in the early 1930s, had not been replaced with modern successors before 1939, when they were already obsolete.\n\n\nA list of Pu\u0142awski's designs\n\n\nSee also\n\nStanis\u0142aw Wigura\nJerzy Drzewiecki\nJerzy D\u0105browski\nKazimierz Pu\u0142aski (not to confuse names)"}}}}
part_xec/zoom_rockman
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zoom_Rockman","to":"Zoom Rockman"}],"pages":{"49990427":{"pageid":49990427,"ns":0,"title":"Zoom Rockman","extract":"Zoom Rockman, born in 2000 (age 21\u201322), is a British cartoonist from England, whose comic strip Skanky Pigeon first appeared in The Beano when he was 12 years old. He is the youngest artist in the comic's history.\n\n\nEducation\nRockman was educated at JCoSS.\n\n\nAwards\nRockman was presented with the Achievement in Media award at the 2012 Spirit of London Awards.\n\nIn 2013, he was named to the Evening Standard's, \"hottest 25 under-25s in the capital\" list.In 2019, Rockman won an award at the Ellwood Atfield cartoonists of the year ceremony.\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zulema_jattin_corrales
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zulema_Jattin_Corrales","to":"Zulema Jattin Corrales"}],"pages":{"29524286":{"pageid":29524286,"ns":0,"title":"Zulema Jattin Corrales","extract":"Zulema del Carmen Jattin Corrales (born 31 July 1969) is a politician, and former Senator of Colombia and Chamber Representative for the Department of C\u00f3rdoba.\n\n\nCareer\nShe was elected Councilwoman for Santa Cruz de Lorica from 1990 to 1992, and went on to become the heiress to her father's political career, in 1998 when she was elected to the Chamber of Representatives of Colombia for the Liberal Party. Her father Francisco Jos\u00e9 Jattin Safar, had been a Chamber Representative from 1990 to 1996 when he lost his investiture for being linked in the Proceso 8000.In 2004 she was elected President of the Chamber of Representatives of Colombia beating her closest rival William V\u00e9lez Mesa, Representative for Antioquia. On 20 July she succeeded Alonso Acosta Osio in the Chamber, at the same time when across Congress, her ex-husband Luis Humberto G\u00f3mez Gallo, was taking office as President of the Senate. In 2006 she successfully ran for Senate.\n\n\nParapolitics scandal\n\nIn 2008 the Supreme Court of Colombia ran preliminary investigations into Jattin for links to Salvatore Mancuso and Rodrigo Tovar Pupo alias \"Jorge 40\", both paramilitary chiefs and drug traffickers extradited to the United States but could not find conclusive evidence to charge her for anything.On 11 May 2009 the Supreme Court issued a warrant for her arrest for links with paramilitarism. During her arrest, her father Francisco Jos\u00e9 Jattin, suffered a heart attack and died four days later in a hospital. Because the Supreme Court investigates all charged members of congress, Jattin renounced her seat in Congress on 13 May 2009, thus transferring the process from the Supreme Court to the Office of the Attorney General of Colombia, however the Supreme Court later ruled that all cases pertaining to congresspersons and linked by parapolitics would be prosecuted by the Supreme Court whether they had renounced their seat or not. She was replaced in Congress by Jairo Mantilla Colmenares.\nBecause of the death of her father she was allowed to attend to his funeral in Lorica with a permit from the INPEC, the defence was also granted house arrest for Jattin as she was the primary caretaker of her infant child, but she was freed seven months later after the statute of limitations had run out because the prosecution had not formally charged her after detaining her within the set time by the law. In September 2010, she was called in for questioning by the Court for calumny and slander for statements made to the press when she was arrested; she accused the Court and its members of kidnapping, and persecution among other things, she later recanted her statement, but the court choose to continue with their charge.\nI was kidnapped by what this country calls the Supreme Court of Justice (...) the Penal Court is prevaricating, politicking and persecuting (...) poisoned by personal hate and resentment.\nI voluntarily recanted and expressed that the affirmations were not true and also, I lament the harm I caused to the good name of the honourable Court.\n\n\nElectoral history\n\n\nPersonal life\nZulema del Carmen was born on 31 July 1969 in Lorica, Cordob\u00e1 to Francisco Jos\u00e9 Jattin Safar and Ema Corrales. She married on 22 June 2002 to Luis Humberto G\u00f3mez Gallo but divorced in 2003; together they had one daughter Zulema Mar\u00eda.\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zulawka_sztumska
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"\u017bu\u0142awka_Sztumska","to":"\u017bu\u0142awka Sztumska"}],"pages":{"21669689":{"pageid":21669689,"ns":0,"title":"\u017bu\u0142awka Sztumska","extract":"\u017bu\u0142awka Sztumska [\u0290u\u02c8wafka \u02c8\u0282tumska] (German Posilge) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Dzierzgo\u0144, within Sztum County, Pomeranian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 13 kilometres (8 mi) north-west of Dzierzgo\u0144, 18 km (11 mi) north-east of Sztum, and 57 km (35 mi) south-east of the regional capital Gda\u0144sk.\nThe village has a population of 560.\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zyweb
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"6351199":{"pageid":6351199,"ns":0,"title":"ZyWeb","extract":"ZyWeb is an online webpage authoring tool, created and owned by ZyNet Ltd, and is currently at version 3.1. It was an early adopter of an entirely server-based solution. ZyWeb was created to enable non-technical users to create and publish web sites without the need for any design, authoring or technical skills.\n\n\nHistory\nZyWeb has been in service since 1998. The initial development was by two British companies with a common background in the world of Acorn computers, part of the ancient history of personal computing. Xara Ltd (www.xara.com), which had grown out of Computer Concepts, brought their experience with vector graphics to provide what remains one of ZyWeb's USPs, its \"smart graphics\". ZyNet Ltd (www.zynet.net), which had grown out of Minerva Software, brought their experience as one of the earliest ISPs in the UK. Once the product was launched, the two companies joined to form a new company, known as Zy.com, and this company followed the all-too-familiar progress of so many others during the dot com bubble of the 1990s. A something-for-nothing business model drove explosive growth in the user base, with numbers in the millions at its peak. Venture capital was attracted and millions of dollars were burned before the bubble burst and Zy.com collapsed. However, unlike so many other services, ZyWeb survived this period intact. One of the original founders, ZyNet Ltd, purchased the assets from the liquidated company and continued to develop and improve the service with a more viable business model.\n\n\nTechnical Information\nZyWeb is founded on a Windows platform, using ASP/VBScript to wrap up custom COM objects, largely written in C++. When development started in 1998, the available platform was Windows NT3.51 running IIS3. This suffered from a host of serious technical problems which had to be solved by either writing replacement code (e.g. the system uses its own session manager rather than the one provided by IIS) or by delegating operations to other platforms. A Linux based accelerator sits between the Windows cluster and the Internet and this provides a range of other services which were unavailable or unusable on Windows NT3.51. All this ran on a large collection of commodity servers which grew rapidly as the userbase expanded and came to include specialist hardware such as a NetApp filer. Today, things have moved on and ZyWeb runs on a relatively small cluster of modern servers with current editions of Windows which do not suffer nearly as many problems. However an updated Linux accelerator remains in place and continues to provide important additional services, particularly email management.\n\n\nExternal links\nZyWeb.com"}}}}
part_xec/z-tube
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"26520744":{"pageid":26520744,"ns":0,"title":"Z-tube","extract":"The Z-tube is an experimental apparatus for measuring the tensile strength of a liquid.\nIt consists of a Z-shaped tube with open ends, filled with a liquid, and set on top of a spinning table. If the tube were straight, the liquid would immediately fly out one end or the other of the tube as it began to spin. By bending the ends of the tube back towards the center of rotation, a shift of the liquid away from center will result in the water level in one end of the tube rising and thus increasing the pressure in that end of the tube, and consequently returning the liquid to the center of the tube. By measuring the rotational speed and the distance from the center of rotation to the liquid level in the bent ends of the tube, the pressure reduction inside the tube can be calculated.\nNegative pressures, (i.e. less than zero absolute pressure, or in other words, tension) have been reported using water processed to remove dissolved gases. Tensile strengths up to 280 atmospheres have been reported for water in glass.\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zoetron_therapy
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zoetron_therapy","to":"Zoetron therapy"}],"pages":{"40529925":{"pageid":40529925,"ns":0,"title":"Zoetron therapy","extract":"Zoetron therapy is an ineffective cancer treatment based on a large doughnut-shaped electromagnetic device (the \"Zoetron machine\").The device was marketed by the CSCT company (standing for \"Cell Specific Cancer Treatment\", an alternative name for the therapy). It was claimed to detect cancer, and to \"destroy cancer cells without harming adjacent normal cells\". The promotion of the machine was backed by the publication of a number of misleading case reports.In 2003 the U.S. Federal Trade Commission took action against CSCT in coordination with the Canadian and Mexican authorities, alleging that the company had been falsely promoting its device as a cancer treatment online, and charging for its use in cancer clinics in Tijuana, Mexico. In 2005 criminal charges were bought against the company's officers for making false or misleading claims about the worth of the Zoetron machine.Patients being treated with the machine had been asked to pay up to US$15,000 in advance, however the treatment had no therapeutic value: on inspection the device was found to consist of weak magnets that could have no effect on cancer. Quackwatch states: \"There is no scientific evidence or reason to believe that exposure to weak magnetic fields will kill any cells or that cancer cells accumulate iron or respond differently than normal cells to a magnetic field.\"\n\n\nSee also\nList of ineffective cancer treatments\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nFTC, Canada, and Mexico Officials Crack Down on Foreign Companies That Offer Bogus Cancer Treatment \u2013 FTC press release"}}}}
part_xec/zoe_von_schildenfeld
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zo\u00eb_von_Schildenfeld","to":"Zo\u00eb von Schildenfeld"}],"pages":{"41995253":{"pageid":41995253,"ns":0,"title":"Zo\u00eb von Schildenfeld","extract":"Zoe von Schildenfeld, n\u00e9e Nicolits (1890 \u2013 17 March 1981 in Salzburg) was an Austro-Hungarian, later Austrian author.\n\n\nYouth and Education\nBorn into a wealthy family of Greek origin, Schildenfeld was sent to the best schools available for girls at that time, including the Stella Matutina Institute as well as schools in England and Switzerland. As a young girl already, she developed an interest in literature and started writing in prose and verse. With several of her works published, she applied to Vienna University, but, being female, was denied admittance, a common practice back then. She therefore studied literature and poetry with private instructors. Finally admitted to university during the Great war, she earned a master's degree and a doctorate in German and English literature.\n\n\nArchduke Eugen\nIn 1912, Schildenfels was introduced to Archduke Eugen of Austria-Teschen, hereditary Grand Master of the Teutonic Knights at a literary circle in Innsbruck. She was later made a \"Familiare\", i.e. an associated member of the lay charity organisation of the order. When Eugen had to leave Austria due to Anti-Habsburg legislation after the collapse of the monarchy, Schildenberg became custodian of his private possessions and arranged for him to receive his rightfully earned income in spite of the restrictive Austrian currency regulations at that time.\nWhen Archduke Eugen was permitted to return to Austria in 1934, it was Schildenfeld who oversaw his household. Following the Anschlu\u00df of Austria to Germany in 1938, Eugen, as an outspoken critic of the Nazi-movement was harassed by the GESTAPO and was put under de facto house arrest in a rented house at Hietzing. Only his status as a former Field-Marshal protected him from worse. With Schildenfeld at his side as confidante and lady companion, Eugen survived the Second World War and the flight to the Tyrol in 1945. The Archduke was held in high esteem by the commanders of the French occupation Force and when Schildenfeld arranged public celebrations in Innsbruck on occasion of his 90th birthday in 1953, she did so with official French support. Eugen died in 1954, in his will, he left her his private property. From 1955 on, she travelled extensively and had homes in Vienna, Salzburg, Strobl and St. Gilgen.\n\n\nPersonal life and Family\nIn 1914, on the eve of war, she married 1st Lieutenant Rudolph von Schildenfeld, a cavalry officer and later aide-de-camp to Field-Marshal Conrad von Hotzendorf, who was to survive the war, but died young in 1938 due to war wounds. They had no children.\n\n\nWorks\nBruder Baum,\nZo\u00eb Schildenfeld (1949). Christine. Roman. - Innsbruck, Wien: Tyrolia-Verl. (1949). 236 S. 8\u00b0 (Tyrolia-Volksromane.). Tyrolia-Verlag.\nZoe von Schildenfeld (1950). Von Ewigem. Gedichte u. Spr\u00fcche. - Innsbruck: Univ. Verl. Wagner 1950. 68 S. 8\u00b0. Innsbruck: Univ. Verlag Wagner.\nGedichte (private edition 1953), Basel\nZo\u00eb von Schildenfeld (co-authored with Hugo Rahner and Oskar Regele) (1963). Erzherzog Eugen, 1863-1963: ein Gedenkbuch. Innsbruck: F. Rauch.\nZo\u00eb von Schildenfeld (1967). Der grosse S\u00e4mann. Europ\u00e4ischer Verlag.\nTotenlieder\nBriefe an das Jenseits / Zoe von Schildenfeld. - Innsbruck : Rauch, \u00a91977. - 47 p. ; 21 cm. 1977\nInnumerable articles in newspapers, journals etc.\n\n\nReferences\n\"Nachlassverzeichnis - Vollanzeige\". aleph-prod-acc.obvsg.at. Retrieved 2014-02-20.\nJohannes Held (23 November 2010). \"Erzherzog Eugen von \u00d6sterreich\" (PDF). Retrieved 20 February 2014."}}}}
part_xec/zuurbekom
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"12057999":{"pageid":12057999,"ns":0,"title":"Zuurbekom","extract":"Zuurbekom is a town in the Gauteng province, South Africa. It is mainly earmarked for agricultural purposes.\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zoviyeh-ye_yek-e_sofla
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zoviyeh-ye_Yek-e_Sofla","to":"Zoviyeh-ye Yek-e Sofla"}],"pages":{"37516001":{"pageid":37516001,"ns":0,"title":"Zoviyeh-ye Yek-e Sofla","extract":"Zoviyeh-ye Yek-e Sofla (Persian: \u0632\u0648\u064a\u0647 \u064a\u0643 \u0633\u0641\u0644\u064a, also Romanized as Zov\u012byeh-ye Yek-e Sofl\u00e1; also known as Zov\u012byeh-ye P\u0101\u2019\u012bn) is a village in Shoaybiyeh-ye Sharqi Rural District, Shadravan District, Shushtar County, Khuzestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 546, in 96 families.\n\n\nReferences"}}}}
part_xec/zse
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"2705546":{"pageid":2705546,"ns":0,"title":"ZSE","extract":"ZSE may refer to:\n\nZagreb Stock Exchange in Zagreb, Croatia\nZimbabwe Stock Exchange in Harare\nPierrefonds Airport in Saint-Pierre, R\u00e9union (IATA airport code)\nSeattle Air Route Traffic Control Center, abbreviated ZSE"}}}}
part_xec/zvelgaitis
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"1843573":{"pageid":1843573,"ns":0,"title":"\u017dvelgaitis","extract":"\u017dvelgaitis (Svelgates; literally: looker-about) was a Lithuanian duke who died in 1205. He is the first Lithuanian duke whose name is known from reliable sources. The account of his expedition and death is given by Henry of Livonia, an early thirteenth-century German chronicler of Latvian history, spanning the years 1186-1227. \u017dvelgaitis is called \"rich and powerful,\" but he was not the supreme duke, as he led the army in the name of another, more powerful duke.\nIn 1205, \u017dvelgaitis led several thousand horsemen northward, from Lithuania through Riga, on the way to attack and plunder Estonia. Returning from Estonia mid-winter, with booty and Estonian slaves, his troops were caught unaware and attacked while crossing through waist-high snowdrifts. He was attacked by the Livonian and German citizens of Riga, under the leadership of Vester, ruler of Semigallians, coordinating the attack from a sleigh. \u017dvelgaitis was killed by a javelin thrown by German Theodore Schilling. 1,200 Lithuanian knights perished; the Estonian slaves were slaughtered as well, in retribution for \"past crimes\" against the Livonians. In Lithuania, the return of \u017dvelgaitis was missed, and it is said that as many as fifty wives of the Lithuanian soldiers killed themselves in grief, hoping to be all the sooner at the sides of their slain husbands.\n\n\nReferences\n(in Lithuanian) Daugirdait\u0117-Sruogien\u0117, Vanda (1966). Lietuvos istorija (6th ed.). Chicago, Illinois: TERRA. LCC 67037106.\nBaranauskas, Tomas. \"The Formation of the Lithuanian State\". Lietuvos.net. Archived from the original on 2006-10-25. Retrieved 2006-12-30.\n\n\nSee also\nList of early Lithuanian dukes"}}}}
part_xec/zygmunt_kubiak
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zygmunt_Kubiak","to":"Zygmunt Kubiak"}],"pages":{"19962473":{"pageid":19962473,"ns":0,"title":"Zygmunt Kubiak","extract":"Zygmunt Kubiak (30 April 1929, in Warsaw \u2013 19 March 2004) was a Polish writer, essayist, translator, propagator of the antique culture, and professor at the University of Warsaw.\nHis book Mitologia Grek\u00f3w i Rzymian was shortlisted for the Nike Award in 1998.\nHe translated, among others, Virgil's Aeneid, St. Augustine's Confessions, and all poems of Constantine P. Cavafy."}}}}
part_xec/zygmunt_berling
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zygmunt_Berling","to":"Zygmunt Berling"}],"pages":{"1655317":{"pageid":1655317,"ns":0,"title":"Zygmunt Berling","extract":"Zygmunt Henryk Berling (27 April 1896 \u2013 11 July 1980) was a Polish general and politician. He fought for the independence of Poland in the early 20th century. Berling was a co-founder and commander of the First Polish Army, which fought on the Eastern Front of World War II.\n\n\nMilitary career before World War II\nZygmunt Berling was born in Limanowa, then part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, on 27 April 1896. He joined the Polish Legions of J\u00f3zef Pi\u0142sudski in 1914, serving in the 2nd and 4th Legions Infantry Regiment (Pu\u0142k Piechoty Legion\u00f3w). Between the \"oath crisis\" of June 1917 and October 1918 he served in the Austro-Hungarian Army. At the end of the World War I he joined the reborn Polish Army, becoming the commander of an infantry company in the 4th Infantry Regiment. During the Polish\u2013Soviet War, he gained fame as an able commander during the Battle of Lw\u00f3w and received the Virtuti Militari medal.\nAfter the war, he remained in the military and in 1923 he was promoted to the rank of major, first serving on staff of the 15th Infantry Division of V District Corps Command in Krak\u00f3w. In 1930, he was promoted to lieutenant colonel and started his service as a commanding officer, first in the 6th Infantry Regiment and then in the 4th Infantry Regiment. Berling retired from active duty in June 1939 because of divorce problems and conflicts with his superiors.\n\n\nWorld War II\nBerling did not participate in the Polish defence effort during the Invasion of Poland in 1939. After the city of Vilnius was occupied by the Soviet Union under the terms of the Molotov\u2013Ribbentrop Pact, Berling, along with many other Polish officers, was arrested by the Soviet secret police (NKVD). He remained in prison until 1940, first in Starobilsk and later Moscow, eventually agreeing to cooperate with the Soviets.After the Sikorski\u2013Mayski agreement of 17 August 1941, Berling was nominated to be chief of staff of the recreated 5th Infantry Division, and later commander of the temporary camp for Polish soldiers in Krasnovodsk. Berling refused to leave the Soviet Union with the army led by W\u0142adys\u0142aw Anders, of which Berling was formally a member. Along with two other officers, he was tried in absentia before an Anders' Army court which sentenced them to death. The sentence was vacated by General Kazimierz Sosnkowski, the Polish commander-in-chief of forces loyal to the London government in exile.\n\nFrom 1940, Berling had been involved in efforts to create a Polish division in the Soviet Union, at first within the Soviet Red Army. In September 1942 and during the following months, he and Wanda Wasilewska appealed to Joseph Stalin for permission to establish the Polish division. On 8 April 1943, Berling proposed the establishment of a new Polish army; permission was granted after the break in Soviet-Polish diplomatic relations.In May 1943, the communist-led Polish People's Army was created in the Soviet Union. It was a new formation of Polish Armed Forces in the East. Berling was nominated to be the commander of its first unit, the 1st Tadeusz Ko\u015bciuszko Infantry Division, and was promoted to general by Stalin. He became the overall deputy commander of the Polish Army on the Eastern Front on 22 July 1944.\nOn 1 August 1944, the underground Polish Home Army, loyal to the Polish government-in-exile in London, began the 63-day long Warsaw Uprising, an attempt to free the city from the occupying German forces before the arrival of the Red Army. On 15\u201323 September, when the uprising was in its later phase, with his First Polish Army on the east bank of the Vistula River and the Praga district of Warsaw already secured, Berling led a rescue effort that involved crossing the Vistula and establishing a bridgehead on the west bank. The failed operation, possibly not fully consulted with Berling's Soviet military superiors, resulted in heavy Polish Army casualties and may have caused Berling's dismissal from his post soon thereafter. He was transferred to the War Academy in Moscow, where he remained until his return to Poland in 1947. In Poland, Berling organized and directed the Academy of General Staff (Akademia Sztabu Generalnego). He retired from the military in 1953.\n\n\nGovernment career\nZygmunt Berling held a variety of government positions after 1953. Between 1953 and 1956, he was Undersecretary of State in the Ministry of National Agriculture Industries (Ministerstwo Pa\u0144stwowych Gospodarstw Rolnych), between 1956 and 1957 he was Undersecretary of State in the Ministry of Agriculture (Ministerstwo Rolnictwa) and from 1957 to 1970 he was General Inspector of Hunting (Inspektor Generalny \u0141owiectwa) in the Ministry of Forestry (Ministerstwo Le\u015bnictwa). In 1963, he joined the Polish United Workers' Party.\nHe is buried at Pow\u0105zki Military Cemetery in Warsaw.\n\n\nAwards and decorations\n Polish People's Republic:\n Order of the Builders of People's Poland\n Grand Cross of the Order of Polonia Restituta\n Commander's Cross with Star of the Order of Polonia Restituta\n Silver Cross of the Virtuti Militari\n Order of the Cross of Grunwald (1st class)\n Order of the Cross of Grunwald (3rd class)\n Order of the Banner of Work (1st class), twice\n Order of the Banner of Work (2nd class)\n Cross of Valour\n Cross of Valour, twice\n Gold Cross of Merit\n Medal of Victory and Freedom 1945\n Cross of Independence\n Soviet Union:\n Order of Lenin, twice\n Medal \"For the Victory over Germany in the Great Patriotic War 1941\u20131945\"\n Jubilee Medal \"Twenty Years of Victory in the Great Patriotic War 1941-1945\"\n Jubilee Medal \"Thirty Years of Victory in the Great Patriotic War 1941\u20131945\"\n Order of Friendship of Peoples\n\n\nSee also\n\nPolish contribution to World War II\n\n\nNotes\n\n\nReferences\nBargie\u0142owski, Daniel (1996). Konterfekt renegata. Maciej Dybowski. ISBN 8386482214. OCLC 36400290.\nShort bio and photo of pre-war Jagiellonian University ID (in Polish)\nBiography at the Institute of National Remembrance (in Polish)"}}}}
part_xec/zuio-ji
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"15339301":{"pageid":15339301,"ns":0,"title":"Zui\u014d-ji","extract":"Zui\u014d-ji (\u745e\u61c9\u5bfa) is a S\u014dt\u014d Zen monastery in Niihama, Ehime Prefecture in Japan.\n\n\nSee also\nBuddhism in Japan\nFor an explanation of terms concerning Japanese Buddhism, Japanese Buddhist art, and Japanese Buddhist temple architecture, see the Glossary of Japanese Buddhism.\n\n\nReferences\n\"Shingon-shu Temple Zuioji.\" Shingon-shu Temple Zuioji. N.p., 2014. Web. 19 Feb. 2016. <http://www.zuiojitemple.or.jp/e_index.html>."}}}}
part_xec/zurich_thaler
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Z\u00fcrich_thaler","to":"Z\u00fcrich thaler"}],"pages":{"11245706":{"pageid":11245706,"ns":0,"title":"Z\u00fcrich thaler","extract":"The cantons of the Old Swiss Confederacy used a currency system consisting of based on the old unit of the Schilling, with the Schilling divided into 4 Rappen or 12 Haller. The Taler was a large silver coin equivalent to 72 Schilling or 2 Gulden that came into use in the 16th century. The Batzen was an intermediate coin equivalent to 2 Schilling or 1\u204418 Gulden.\nSuch Taler were minted in Z\u00fcrich during the 16th to 18th centuries, with Talers, Doppeltaler and halbe Taler, first minted in Z\u00fcrich in the 16th century. First dated coins are Guilders minted in 1512. Taler coins consisted of 27 to 28 grams of silver, with a diameter of 39 to 43 mm.\nThe currency used in the 18th century was a thaler worth 1\u204411 of a Cologne mark and a gulden worth 1\u204422 of a Cologne mark. The Gulden was divided into 40 schilling or 60 kreuzer. The French silver \u00e9cu was valued at 21\u20442 gulden. \nThe French \u00e9cu was equivalent to 4 francs of the Helvetic Republic, and afterwards to 4 Z\u00fcrich franken. This 4-franken or 40-batzen Neutaler was minted during 1806-1848.\nIn the late 18th century, silver coins were issued in denominations of 5, 10 and 20 Schilling, 1\u20442 and 1 Taler. Z\u00fcrich also minted gold half-ducats and ducats. A ten ducats coin minted in 1724, with a weight of 34.8 grams in gold, is in possession of the Swiss National Museum.\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nCoin Gyaan Website"}}}}
part_xec/zygmunt_andrzej_heinrich
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zygmunt_Andrzej_Heinrich","to":"Zygmunt Andrzej Heinrich"}],"pages":{"20375609":{"pageid":20375609,"ns":0,"title":"Zygmunt Andrzej Heinrich","extract":"Zygmunt Andrzej Heinrich (21 July 1937 in \u0141bowo, central Poland \u2013 27 May 1989 in Mount Everest) was a Polish mountaineer. He died in an avalanche on the northwest slopes of Mount Everest in 1989.\n\n\nAchievements\n\n\nTatra Mts and Alps\nZygmunt Andrzej Heinrich undertook many serious climbs including difficult new routes and first winter ascents. Among Polish climbers the team Heinrich-Chrobak was held in high prestige and Eugeniusz Chrobak is still considered one of the best Polish Himalayan climbers of all time. The Heinrich-Chrobak team was very much the Polish equivalent of the Bonington-Whillans team in Britain.\n\n\nGreat Ranges\n1971 \u2013 Kunyang Chhish (7852 m) \u2013 first ascent to the summit (along with Andrzej Zawada, Jan Stryczy\u0144ski and Ryszard Szafirski).\n1974 \u2013 Lhotse (8250 m) in winter with Andrzej Zawada, the first time anyone had gone above 8000 m in winter.\n1978 \u2013 Kanchenjunga Central (8482 m), first ascent \u2013 together with Wojciech Bra\u0144ski, Kazimierz Olech.\n1979 \u2013 Lhotse (8516 m), 4 October, ascent together with Andrzej Czok, Jerzy Kukuczka and Janusz Skorek.\n1980 \u2013 Mount Everest, participation in the winter expedition, leading the way by the Ice Fall, participated in setting up higher camps.\n1981 \u2013 Masherbrum, SW Peak (7806 m), first ascent, with Marek Malaty\u0144ski and Przemys\u0142aw Nowacki.\n1985 \u2013 Cho Oyu (8201 m), winter expedition, new route via SE Pillar, ascent with Jerzy Kukuczka (15 February, three days after the first winter ascent by the team of the same expedition, Maciej Berbeka and Maciej Pawlikowski).\n1985 \u2013 Nanga Parbat (8126 m), first ascent of the NE buttress, on summit together with Jerzy Kukuczka, Carlos Carsolio and S\u0142awomir \u0141obodzi\u0144ski.\n\n\nSources\nJ\u00f3zef Nyka: Masherbrum Southwest, Ascent and Tragedy. American Alpine Journal, 1982, pp. 271\u2013272\nAndrzej Zawada: \"Winter at 8250 m: Polish Expedition to Lhotse 1974\", Alpine Journal, 1974, pp. 28\u201335.\nAndrzej Zawada: Cho Oyu's Three-Kilometer-High Face. American Alpine Journal, 1986, pp. 6\u201313 (with 2 photographs with lines depicted)\nAAJ 1986, p. 290 (note on Nanga Parbat)\n\n\nExternal links\nAAJ, Searchable online access\nStrona po\u015bwi\u0119cona pami\u0119ci himalaisty Andrzeja Heinricha (in Polish)\nportrait on www.nyka.home.pl (in Polish)"}}}}
part_xec/zoo_zero
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zoo_z\u00e9ro","to":"Zoo z\u00e9ro"}],"pages":{"19942867":{"pageid":19942867,"ns":0,"title":"Zoo z\u00e9ro","extract":"Zoo z\u00e9ro is a 1979 French film directed by Alain Fleischer and starring Klaus Kinski.\n\n\nCast\nCatherine Jourdan - Eva\nKlaus Kinski - Yav\u00e9\nPierre Cl\u00e9menti - Ivo\nLisette Malidor - Ivy\nRufus - Yves\nPi\u00e9ral - Uwe\nAlida Valli - Yvonne\nChristine Chappey - Yvette\nAnthony Steffen - Evariste\nJacky Belhassen - Yvon\nFabien Belhassen - Yvan\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nZoo z\u00e9ro at IMDb"}}}}
part_xec/zohbarak
/tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379
{"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"37787652":{"pageid":37787652,"ns":0,"title":"Zohbarak","extract":"Zohbarak (Persian: \u0632\u0647\u0628\u0627\u0631\u0643, also Romanized as Zohb\u0101rak) is a village in Gafr and Parmon Rural District, Gafr and Parmon District, Bashagard County, Hormozgan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 135, in 31 families.\n\n\nReferences"}}}}