_id
stringlengths
77
96
datasets_id
int32
0
1.38M
wiki_id
stringlengths
2
9
start_paragraph
int32
2
1.17k
start_character
int32
0
70.3k
end_paragraph
int32
4
1.18k
end_character
int32
1
70.3k
article_title
stringlengths
1
250
section_title
stringlengths
0
1.12k
passage_text
stringlengths
1
14k
{"datasets_id": 2744, "wiki_id": "Q6575302", "sp": 14, "sc": 1235, "ep": 14, "ec": 1821}
2,744
Q6575302
14
1,235
14
1,821
Jin Kazama
Main Tekken series
The tournament's host, his great-grandfather Jinpachi Mishima, is responsible for Jin's change. During the tournament, Jin is confronted by his friendly rival, Hwoarang, but is unable to settle their score as a result of Jin's agenda. In the aftermath of the fifth Tournament as well as his ending, Jin has been revealed as the winner as he defeated Jinpachi Mishima and also as the new head of the Mishima Zaibatsu. Tekken 5 also marks the debut of Devil Jin as a playable character as well as sub-boss. If Devil Jin defeats Jinpachi rather than the regular Jin, an alternative ending
{"datasets_id": 2744, "wiki_id": "Q6575302", "sp": 14, "sc": 1821, "ep": 14, "ec": 2419}
2,744
Q6575302
14
1,821
14
2,419
Jin Kazama
Main Tekken series
is featured showing Devil Jin absorbing Jinpachi's powers. In the same game, a mini-game focusing on Jin's prologue is featured called Devil Within. It features Jin's journey to G Corporation's laboratory where he faces multiple enemies after hearing Jun's voice. During Tekken 6 Jin begins using the company for world conquest, having started a war against all the nations. Jin hosts the sixth King of Iron Fist Tournament in order to rid himself of Kazuya and his enemies. In gameplay, just as his devil form served as the Stage 8 sub-boss in Tekken 5, Jin serves as the Stage 8 sub-boss
{"datasets_id": 2744, "wiki_id": "Q6575302", "sp": 14, "sc": 2419, "ep": 14, "ec": 3009}
2,744
Q6575302
14
2,419
14
3,009
Jin Kazama
Main Tekken series
in Tekken 6 with a gimmick which activates his rage mode permanently,. Similarly, he plays as the primary antagonist in Tekken 6's "Scenario Campaign" mode and is the last story-related enemy that the player has to fight. Near the end of the Scenario Campaign, he is confronted by his half-uncle Lars Alexandersson who is rallying a faction within the Zaibatsu's Tekken Force military to take down their former leader. However, Lars fails to defeat Jin when the former reveals he has been using Lars' partner, Alisa, to observe his actions and Lars is unable to fight Alisa. Jin once again
{"datasets_id": 2744, "wiki_id": "Q6575302", "sp": 14, "sc": 3009, "ep": 14, "ec": 3563}
2,744
Q6575302
14
3,009
14
3,563
Jin Kazama
Main Tekken series
serves as the scenario's final boss against Lars and Raven. Upon his defeat, Jin explains he has been throwing the world into disarray in an effort to awaken the beast known as Azazel. Jin's ultimate goal in awakening such a monster is to fight it in a suicidal battle and both save the world from Azazel and free himself of the Devil Gene. In the end, the Devil Gene still remains inside his body, while being found by a man named Raven and his men for Jin's recovery. Alternatively, Devil Jin also appears as a hidden boss in the scenario. Jin
{"datasets_id": 2744, "wiki_id": "Q6575302", "sp": 14, "sc": 3563, "ep": 14, "ec": 4143}
2,744
Q6575302
14
3,563
14
4,143
Jin Kazama
Main Tekken series
appears in Tekken 7 as a sub-boss after the game's official launch, replacing Heihachi Mishima if the right conditions are met. However, in updated arcade version and the console ports, he is a no longer a sub-boss. In Story Mode, Jin's comatose body was found by UN and being transported safely, until the Devil Gene inside him goes awry again and destroys the UN's helicopter. While awakened in his weakened state, Jin wanders around a desert in the Middle East. Due to his weakened state while being cornered by the soldiers who pursued him, Jin's devil power is stronger than
{"datasets_id": 2744, "wiki_id": "Q6575302", "sp": 14, "sc": 4143, "ep": 18, "ec": 10}
2,744
Q6575302
14
4,143
18
10
Jin Kazama
Main Tekken series & Other games
ever. He then arrives at a marketplace and is about to be captured by the soldiers when he is saved by his half-uncle Lars and transported to another branch building of Violet System, owned by his adoptive uncle Lee Chaolan, for him to rest and regain his strength. Recovering from his coma after Heihachi's death, Jin is sent out by Lars to find and kill Kazuya as he is now the only one who can defeat his father. Playing as Devil Jin results in an encounter with Hwoarang but the battle is interrupted by multiple enemies. Other games Outside of
{"datasets_id": 2744, "wiki_id": "Q6575302", "sp": 18, "sc": 10, "ep": 18, "ec": 609}
2,744
Q6575302
18
10
18
609
Jin Kazama
Other games
his canonical appearances, Jin also appears in Tekken Card Challenge and Tekken Tag Tournament. Beating Tag Tournament as Jin results in a sequence where he tries to kill Kazuya but his body then starts shaking. In Tekken Tag Tournament 2, Jin can defeat an enemy identical to his mother, Jun Kazama, but mutates when Jun disappears. In Devil Jin's ending, the berserker demon tries to leave the planet but is stopped by Jun's spirit. He then appears in a beach where soldiers rescue him. Other appearances of him include Tekken Advance, Tekken R, Tekken Resolute, Tekken Bowl, Tekken Pachinko Slot
{"datasets_id": 2744, "wiki_id": "Q6575302", "sp": 18, "sc": 609, "ep": 18, "ec": 1198}
2,744
Q6575302
18
609
18
1,198
Jin Kazama
Other games
2nd, Tekken 3D: Prime Edition, Tekken Card Tournament, Tekken Revolution, Tekken Arena, CR Tekken and Tekken Pachinko Slot 3rd. Devil Jin's form from Blood Vengeance also appears in Tekken Tag Tournament 2. Jin is also featured in Namco × Capcom, where he joins forces with Ryu and Ken Masters from Street Fighter and seeks to defeat Devil Kazuya who was his father through the Devil Gene. Street Fighter X Tekken features Jin as a playable character, with Ling Xiaoyu as his official tag partner. They are also together in Project X Zone where he and Ryu were targeted by Seth of
{"datasets_id": 2744, "wiki_id": "Q6575302", "sp": 18, "sc": 1198, "ep": 18, "ec": 1807}
2,744
Q6575302
18
1,198
18
1,807
Jin Kazama
Other games
SIN, and they along with Virtua Fighter hero, Akira Yuki, worked together to stop him. He returned in the sequel Project X Zone 2 with Kazuya as his partner. He also appears on a promotional poster for the Namco-produced crossover fighting game Tekken X Street Fighter, along with Street Fighter's Ryu (as well as their alter egos "Devil Jin" and "Evil Ryu", respectively). Devil Jin's style of fighting and costume parts, along with his human form's Tekken 6 karate costume are available for use with custom characters in Soulcalibur V. Although he does not appear, Jin is mentioned in the crossover
{"datasets_id": 2744, "wiki_id": "Q6575302", "sp": 18, "sc": 1807, "ep": 22, "ec": 321}
2,744
Q6575302
18
1,807
22
321
Jin Kazama
Other games & In other media and merchandise
fighting game PlayStation All-Stars Battle Royale. Additionally, Jin's image appears as downloadble content in Namco's game Ace Combat: Assault Horizon. He also appears in SNK'S mobile phone game The King of Fighters: All Stars. In other media and merchandise Jin makes a brief appearance in the epilogue of the anime film Tekken: The Motion Picture as a child. His role in the series is also briefly shown in the manga Tekken Comic, and the novel Tekken: The Dark History of Mishima. He is also the protagonist of the manga Tekken: The Other Side of Battle, as well as the Western
{"datasets_id": 2744, "wiki_id": "Q6575302", "sp": 22, "sc": 321, "ep": 22, "ec": 935}
2,744
Q6575302
22
321
22
935
Jin Kazama
In other media and merchandise
comics Tekken Forever and The Tekken Saga. Titan's Tekken comics focuses on Jin's battles against Heihachi as well as his inner demon. He also appears in the CGI-animated film Tekken: Blood Vengeance, an alternate retelling of events between Tekken 5 and Tekken 6. In the film, Jin once again seeks to defeat Heihachi and Kazuya fighting both of them in the climax. With help from Alisa Bosconovitch, Jin emerges as the winner and leaves hoping his high school friend Ling Xiaoyu defeats him in the next tournament. In the 2009 live-action film Tekken, Jin is portrayed by Jon Foo. This version of
{"datasets_id": 2744, "wiki_id": "Q6575302", "sp": 22, "sc": 935, "ep": 22, "ec": 1547}
2,744
Q6575302
22
935
22
1,547
Jin Kazama
In other media and merchandise
Jin differs significantly, wherein he was never raised by Heihachi and his mother was killed during a crackdown on insurgents by the Tekken Corporation. In addition, though he is still the illegitimate son of Kazuya, and he speaks with an English accent (given that Foo is English). He enters the Iron Fist tournament to take revenge on Heihachi for his mother's death, but during the tournament, he learns that it was Kazuya who was responsible for the crackdown. He progresses through the tournament, falling in love with Christie Monteiro and forming alliances with Steve Fox, Raven and even Heihachi himself
{"datasets_id": 2744, "wiki_id": "Q6575302", "sp": 22, "sc": 1547, "ep": 26, "ec": 329}
2,744
Q6575302
22
1,547
26
329
Jin Kazama
In other media and merchandise & Reception
when Kazuya overthrows him. Eventually, Jin makes it to the final, beating Yoshimitsu and even Bryan Fury, and defeats his father in battle, yet refuses to kill him for the sake of their blood relation. Jin has been featured in action figures from both his Tekken 3 and Tekken 4 appearances. Reception Video game publications have praised Jin's character, topping various lists. In Gamest's 1997 Heroes Collection, Jin was voted as the staff's 31st favorite character (sharing the spot with three Street Fighter characters, Charlie, and Yang). In Game Informer's "Top Ten Best Fighting Game Characters" Jin was fourth with comments
{"datasets_id": 2744, "wiki_id": "Q6575302", "sp": 26, "sc": 329, "ep": 26, "ec": 908}
2,744
Q6575302
26
329
26
908
Jin Kazama
Reception
comparing him to Star Wars character Luke Skywalker. In IGN's "Franchise Players 2: Reader's Choice", Jin was one of the video game characters voted to be featured in a live-action movie with the site commenting his role in the Tekken series noting that it could be the "focal point" of any film. The staff from site did not choose as a result of the poor quality from films based on fighting games. In the book Trigger Happy, writer Steven Poole labelled Jin as an amalgam of "body-building action grunts" including popular martial arts film protagonists. Since Tekken has had
{"datasets_id": 2744, "wiki_id": "Q6575302", "sp": 26, "sc": 908, "ep": 26, "ec": 1495}
2,744
Q6575302
26
908
26
1,495
Jin Kazama
Reception
a long history of being exclusive to the PlayStation series of consoles, Jin Kazama as the protagonist is often recognized as a PlayStation mascot. In May 2012, Namco Bandai opened Tekken Museum in Osaka, Japan where there was one statue of Jin and Kazuya doing a cross-counter. Multiple reactions were made in response to Jin's special moves and their changes across the series, mostly in Tekken 4. His initial moveset was noted to be based on his relatives' techniques, with the change shown in Tekken 4 labelled as a "nice touch" by Leon Hunt in the book Kung Fu Cult Masters
{"datasets_id": 2744, "wiki_id": "Q6575302", "sp": 26, "sc": 1495, "ep": 26, "ec": 2150}
2,744
Q6575302
26
1,495
26
2,150
Jin Kazama
Reception
as it demonstrates the character's feeling towards Kazuya and Heihachi. GameSpot shared similar comments, stating that Jin was one of the most notable changed characters from Tekken 4. Other publishers such as IGN and Computer and Video Games came to regard Jin's incarnation from Tekken 4 as a character almost completely different from his original form although both shared different opinions regarding the result. While the former site found such modifications entertaining as it meant learning new moves, the latter criticized the change as it made the practice from veteran players pointless. Nevertheless, Computer and Video Games still called Jin
{"datasets_id": 2744, "wiki_id": "Q6575302", "sp": 26, "sc": 2150, "ep": 26, "ec": 2742}
2,744
Q6575302
26
2,150
26
2,742
Jin Kazama
Reception
the "top-ranked character" from Tekken 4 because of his balanced movesets. Capcom senior community manager Seth Killian has found the character too powerful to the point that his constant defeats with him led him to quit the Tekken series. In regards to Jin's Tekken 5 fighting style, GameSpy stated that now players would need to be patient playing as him, as he lost his overpowered moves. Because of such change in Tekken 5 regarding Jin's moves, the same site recommended players to use Devil Jin's incarnation in such game if they missed his original techniques. Devil Jin was once used
{"datasets_id": 2744, "wiki_id": "Q6575302", "sp": 26, "sc": 2742, "ep": 26, "ec": 3318}
2,744
Q6575302
26
2,742
26
3,318
Jin Kazama
Reception
on the cover of a Stephen King novel much to the surprise of Katsuhiro Harada. Across the series, Jin holds a close relationship with Ling Xiaoyu. This resulted in fans asking Harada if they will be in a romantical one. However, Harada refrained from confirming or denying it. According to GamesRadar, a fight between Devil Jin and Evil Ryu was written as one of the ones players wanted to see in Street Fighter X Tekken as the two are evil alter egos of the two main characters and poster boys of their respective series, also sharing similar designs and movesets to
{"datasets_id": 2744, "wiki_id": "Q6575302", "sp": 26, "sc": 3318, "ep": 26, "ec": 3905}
2,744
Q6575302
26
3,318
26
3,905
Jin Kazama
Reception
their original forms. In GamesRadar article for Street Fighter X Tekken, they stated "Following Kazuya’s fall from grace, his son Jin had to take over for him as the lead of the Tekken series in Tekken 3." Den of Geek ranked Jin as the 9th sexiest computer game character, adding "You can't argue with that hair, really." MenxXP namedd Jin as one of the "most stylish video game characters", adding "Known for his high kicks and acrobatic flips, Jin favors loose-fitting patterned track pants and a generous dose of hair product." Complex ranked Jin as the 28th "most dominant" fighting
{"datasets_id": 2744, "wiki_id": "Q6575302", "sp": 26, "sc": 3905, "ep": 26, "ec": 4526}
2,744
Q6575302
26
3,905
26
4,526
Jin Kazama
Reception
game character. In the official poll by Namco Bandai Games, Jin is currently the fifth most requested Tekken character to be added to the roster of Tekken X Street Fighter, racking up 13.02% of votes; additional 5.54% votes were also cast for Devil Jin, counted separately. GamesRadar ranked Devil Jin as the 15th "best unlockable character", commenting "Devil Jin pounds foes with the high-level Mishima fighting style, full of dragon punches, tsunami kicks, and 10-hit combos. Bad to the bone." In 2014, WhatCulture ranked him as the 11th greatest character in fighting games, calling him "the poster-boy of the Tekken
{"datasets_id": 2744, "wiki_id": "Q6575302", "sp": 26, "sc": 4526, "ep": 26, "ec": 5118}
2,744
Q6575302
26
4,526
26
5,118
Jin Kazama
Reception
franchise". In 2015, WhatCulture ranked Jin's devil tattoo as the "3rd famous video game tattoo", adding "It may look a bit ’90s’ by today’s tattoo standards, but Jin’s tribal tat on his left bicep is not just there to draw attention to his bulging guns." Prima Games ranked Jin's "Laser Scraper" as the "30th greatest fighting move in video game history". Chris Hoadley from VentureBeat named Jin as one of the "Best (and worst) fighting game clones". In 2013, 4thletter placed Jin's Tekken 3 ending at 73rd place in their list "The Top 200 Fighting Game Endings", commenting "After spiking
{"datasets_id": 2744, "wiki_id": "Q6575302", "sp": 26, "sc": 5118, "ep": 26, "ec": 5730}
2,744
Q6575302
26
5,118
26
5,730
Jin Kazama
Reception
Heihachi into the ground, Devil Jin flies off into the night. Heihachi just sits up and looks off, knowing that this is bad news". PlayStation Universe included Hwoarang and Jin Kazama among the top 5 rival pairs in Tekken Tag Tournament 2, commenting "Jin’s traditional karate style marries well with Hwoarang’s fancy footwork, and the disparity between each style – Jin’s a bit of a bruiser while Hwoarang’s style is more intricate – makes for a devastating combination of tactics when used correctly." WatchMojo ranked Jin (alongside Heihachi) as the "5th best fighting game character" and as the "top Tekken
{"datasets_id": 2744, "wiki_id": "Q6575302", "sp": 26, "sc": 5730, "ep": 26, "ec": 6335}
2,744
Q6575302
26
5,730
26
6,335
Jin Kazama
Reception
character", adding "This character got nerfed quite a bit as the series progressed, but that still wasn’t enough to keep him from topping our list. With moves inspired by his father, Kazuya, and his mother, Jun, he becomes a nearly unstoppable force." Arcade Sushi ranked Jin as the "3rd best fighting game good guy". adding "Heihachi and Kazuya Mishima just keep killing each other, so Kazuya’s son, Jin, may be the only bit of moral fortitude this family has left". While promoting Tekken 6 Namco Bandai featured various trailers with Jin as the focus. Jin's design in the trailers has received
{"datasets_id": 2744, "wiki_id": "Q6575302", "sp": 26, "sc": 6335, "ep": 26, "ec": 6934}
2,744
Q6575302
26
6,335
26
6,934
Jin Kazama
Reception
positive response by GameSpot as the character "has never looked better." However, Den of Geek's Jasper Gavin did not find Jin's role as the main antagonist in Tekken 6 appealing as he negatively compared him with both Kazuya and Heihachi whom he felt were more menacing villains. Nevertheless, upon his introduction, Gavin felt Jin was one of the best fighting games characters comparing him with iconic heroes like SNK's Terry Bogard and Kyo Kusanagi as well as Capcom's Ryu and Midway's Liu Kang. His relationship with other characters in Tekken as well as his inner conflict with the Devil Gene
{"datasets_id": 2744, "wiki_id": "Q6575302", "sp": 26, "sc": 6934, "ep": 26, "ec": 7527}
2,744
Q6575302
26
6,934
26
7,527
Jin Kazama
Reception
were felt appealing by Gavin but in the end due to how Jin decayed across the story led the writer to list him as 22nd best character in the series. On the other hand, Complex also ranked Jin as the fifth best Tekken character, commenting "A mama's boy with an axe to grind, Jin has slowly transformed from hero to anti-hero over the years." For the first Tekken live-action film, BeyondHollywood thought Jon Foo's appearance might appeal to upcoming viewers based on his similarities with Jin. DVD Verdict criticized how Jin was lacking most of his important traits, most notably his
{"datasets_id": 2744, "wiki_id": "Q6575302", "sp": 26, "sc": 7527, "ep": 26, "ec": 8140}
2,744
Q6575302
26
7,527
26
8,140
Jin Kazama
Reception
Devil Gene and commented his quest for revenge was not appealing due to his interactions with other supporting characters. DVDTalk agreed stating "struggling to create a fulfilling hero's journey for Jin as he greets a dead end on his path to revenge". Although Martial Arts and Action movies criticized Foo's acting to the point of making Jin's emotionless, his fight sequences were met with praise. Roobla also praised the fight sequences, most notably Jin's against Eddie Gordo. For the CGI film, MTV commented that the initial "games" between Jin and Kazuya based on their experimentations with other people.
{"datasets_id": 2745, "wiki_id": "Q4846235", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 6, "ec": 578}
2,745
Q4846235
2
0
6
578
Jing Ting Mountain
History
Jing Ting Mountain History Before the Jin Dynasty, the mountain was known as Zhao Ting Mountain. In 266 AD, its name was changed to Jing Ting Mountain (Jingtingshan) to avoid the name taboo of the emperor, Sima Zhao. Jing Ting Mountain and the scenery therein has been the frequent subject of poetry and artwork. The poems written by Xie Tiao (464–499) of the Southern Qi Dynasty brought it a widespread reputation. From then on, the area was visited frequently by many poets and litterateurs. The famous Chinese ancient poet Li Bai (699-762) said that "only Jing Ting Mountain can keep attracting
{"datasets_id": 2745, "wiki_id": "Q4846235", "sp": 6, "sc": 578, "ep": 6, "ec": 725}
2,745
Q4846235
6
578
6
725
Jing Ting Mountain
History
you without boredom." Over 1,000 poems were written about Jing Ting Mountain and, therefore, it is regarded as the "Mountain of Poetry" in China.
{"datasets_id": 2746, "wiki_id": "Q6149263", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 4, "ec": 578}
2,746
Q6149263
2
0
4
578
Jinichi Kawakami
Jinichi Kawakami Jinichi Kawakami (川上仁一) b. 1949, head of Banke Shinobinoden, claims to be the second last sōke and only heir to authentic ninjutsu. He says he is the 21st head of the Koga Ban family (Iga and Koga Ninjutsu), mercenary and is the honorary director of the Iga-ryu Ninja Museum. In 2011, he was specially appointed a professor at Mie University to research ninjutsu at the university's research cooperation center. Kawakami boasts no ninja bloodline of his own, but says he learned his art as a boy from a man named Masado (Masazo) Ishida, a medicine peddler claiming to be
{"datasets_id": 2746, "wiki_id": "Q6149263", "sp": 4, "sc": 578, "ep": 4, "ec": 1216}
2,746
Q6149263
4
578
4
1,216
Jinichi Kawakami
one of the last remaining ninjutsu practitioners alive. According to Japan Times, "Kawakami has something most other ninja claimants do not — an earnest combination of humility and scholarship. Not to mention some highly polished martial arts skills of his own." He is also a former trained engineer. His top student, Yasushi Kiyomoto, is the only one teaching from the Banke Shinobinoden group. Kiyomoto operates a dojo in Sagamihara-shi, Kanagawa Prefecture, but he no longer takes on new students. In 2012, Kawakami decided that he will not appoint anyone to take over as the next ninja grandmaster. He told BBC News:
{"datasets_id": 2746, "wiki_id": "Q6149263", "sp": 4, "sc": 1216, "ep": 4, "ec": 1674}
2,746
Q6149263
4
1,216
4
1,674
Jinichi Kawakami
"In the age of civil wars or during the Edo period, ninjas' abilities to spy and kill, or mix medicine may have been useful. But we now have guns, the internet and much better medicines, so the art of ninjutsu has no place in the modern age." Jinichi Kawakami and his student Yasushi Kiyomoto were first introduced to the anglophone world in the book, A Story of Life, Fate and Finding the Lost Art of Koka Ninjutsu in Japan first published in 2008.
{"datasets_id": 2747, "wiki_id": "Q6203288", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 10, "ec": 398}
2,747
Q6203288
2
0
10
398
Jitish Kallat
Education & Career
Jitish Kallat Education Jitish Kallat was born in 1974 in Mumbai, India. In 1996 he received his Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in painting from the Sir Jamsetjee Jeejebhoy School of Art in Mumbai. Career Having received his BFA in painting in 1996, Kallat had his debut solo exhibition titled "PTO" at Chemould Prescott Road. His large-format paintings and drawings already had in them the themes that would recur throughout his work until today. With the self at the centre of an unfolding narrative, these paintings were connected to ideas of time, death, cycles of life, references to the celestial,
{"datasets_id": 2747, "wiki_id": "Q6203288", "sp": 10, "sc": 398, "ep": 10, "ec": 979}
2,747
Q6203288
10
398
10
979
Jitish Kallat
Career
and familial ancestry. It was only in the next three or four years that an image of the city, otherwise seen at the margins of his paintings, began to take centre stage. In those days Kallat referred to the city street as his university, often carrying within it pointers to the perennial themes of life that have remained a subtext to his work that have taken form in diverse media. "Other indigenous painters before him had flirted with international styles such as Pop (most notably Jyothi Bhatt and Bhupen Khakhar ) and the mix and match of Postmodernism (namely Gulammohammed
{"datasets_id": 2747, "wiki_id": "Q6203288", "sp": 10, "sc": 979, "ep": 10, "ec": 1587}
2,747
Q6203288
10
979
10
1,587
Jitish Kallat
Career
Sheikh and Atul Dodiya), but no one had turned the textures and surfaces of urban India into the fracture of painting quite so successfully," noted artist, gallerist, and co-director of Nature Morte, Peter Nagy in an essay titled "Jitish Kallat: 21st Century Boy". "Parts of Kallat's canvases appear as if they had been left outdoors during the monsoon season, other sections seem blistered and scorched by the unrelenting sun. The works usually appear much older than they actually are, aged as soon as they are born, not unlike all manner of objects and people through the subcontinent. The distressed and
{"datasets_id": 2747, "wiki_id": "Q6203288", "sp": 10, "sc": 1587, "ep": 10, "ec": 2237}
2,747
Q6203288
10
1,587
10
2,237
Jitish Kallat
Career
tortured surfaces create a field in which to submerge images while the images themselves are processed and mutilated in a variety of ways. All of which combine to create works that both participate intimately with the artist's mise en scene and comment upon the unique idiosyncrasies of his home. Degradation, bastardisation, the destruction and retrieval of culture and history became Kallat's subjects through the astute handling of both subject matter and technique." Kallat’s work has also developed in response to museum collections in the case of projects such as "Field Notes, (Tomorrow was here yesterday) (2011)" at the Dr Bhau Daji
{"datasets_id": 2747, "wiki_id": "Q6203288", "sp": 10, "sc": 2237, "ep": 10, "ec": 2852}
2,747
Q6203288
10
2,237
10
2,852
Jitish Kallat
Career
Lad Museum, Mumbai, for which he was shortlisted for The Skoda Prize in 2012, or "Circa," at the Ian Potter Museum in Melbourne. Both these projects had several of his recurring preoccupations find their form and structure in conversation with the museum viewed both as an infrastructure of signs but equally a field of stimuli and meaning. Often works which begin with a private narrative or an autobiographical impulse might be materialized in a form where the self remains invisible within the space of the artwork and could often be traced back by observing several bodies of work alongside each other.
{"datasets_id": 2747, "wiki_id": "Q6203288", "sp": 10, "sc": 2852, "ep": 10, "ec": 3471}
2,747
Q6203288
10
2,852
10
3,471
Jitish Kallat
Career
The theme of time, for instance, could be rendered as date in works such as Public Notice 3, where two historical moments are overlaid like a palimpsest or in works such as Epilogue, every moon that his father saw in his lifetime becomes a labyrinth of fullness and emptiness with the image of the moon morphing with the form of a meal. Kallat is known for working with a variety of media, including painting, large-scale sculpture installations, photography, and video art. He employs a bold and vivid visual language that references both Asian and European artistic traditions, along with popular advertising
{"datasets_id": 2747, "wiki_id": "Q6203288", "sp": 10, "sc": 3471, "ep": 10, "ec": 4143}
2,747
Q6203288
10
3,471
10
4,143
Jitish Kallat
Career
imagery that fuels urban consumerism. Kallat regularly exploits images and materials chanced upon around Mumbai's sprawling metropolis, affording his works an inherent spontaneity and a handcrafted aesthetic. For instance, in 2014 the artist unveiled a series of large-scale sculptures made out of resin that were inspired by the urban environment of Mumbai. He unites these various media through themes that endure within Kallat's work, such as the relationship between the individual and the masses. He references his own personal experiences and those of Mumbai's other inhabitants. His work speaks of both the self and the collective, fluctuating between intimacy and
{"datasets_id": 2747, "wiki_id": "Q6203288", "sp": 10, "sc": 4143, "ep": 14, "ec": 77}
2,747
Q6203288
10
4,143
14
77
Jitish Kallat
Career & Work
monumentality, and characterized by contrasting themes of pain, hope and survival. Kallat's paintings address the problem of painting in an age dominated by mass media, writes art dealer and collector, Amrita Jhaveri, in A Guide to 101 Modern & Contemporary Indian Artists. "Using images from newspapers and magazines, advertising billboards, wallpaper and graffiti, his works are richly layered and replete with metaphor. Kallat has reinvented the painted surface to mimic the appearance of a television still or a computer monitor, complete with its surface striations and auras." Work Much of Kallat’s work has been based on his encounters with the multi-sensory
{"datasets_id": 2747, "wiki_id": "Q6203288", "sp": 14, "sc": 77, "ep": 14, "ec": 734}
2,747
Q6203288
14
77
14
734
Jitish Kallat
Work
environment of Bombay/Mumbai, as well as the economic, political and historical events that have contributed to its making, wrote art historian Chaitanya Sambrani. "His practice as painter has frequently highlighted a concern he shares with the founders of Indian modernism in visual and literary art. Kallat has couched his references to the “underdog” in a hyper-pop language in order to signal the ironies that attend the lives of migrant workers and menial labourers in India’s megacities: people met on “second class” train compartments, people whose labour continues to keep afloat the nation’s aspirations. In his installation and video practice, he
{"datasets_id": 2747, "wiki_id": "Q6203288", "sp": 14, "sc": 734, "ep": 14, "ec": 1474}
2,747
Q6203288
14
734
14
1,474
Jitish Kallat
Work
has often revisited archival texts and museum displays with a view to probing the production and dissemination of knowledge." In her essay, "The Mumbai Syndrome," Patricia Ellis vouches for Kallat's engagement with painting as a subversively radical activity. "His approach has little to do with representation, abstraction, or formalism, but rather a total mimesis of concept," His paintings are "not localised images constrained within borders, complications of space and perception, or even platitudes of self-defined invention. They're conceived as liminal gaps: peripheral mediations, metaphysical platforms of interconnection." Public Notice For the first in what would be termed as his Public Notice series,
{"datasets_id": 2747, "wiki_id": "Q6203288", "sp": 14, "sc": 1474, "ep": 14, "ec": 2145}
2,747
Q6203288
14
1,474
14
2,145
Jitish Kallat
Work
Kallat revisited the famous speech made by Prime Minister Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru before the stroke of midnight on 14 August 1947, to commemorate India's Independence against the British. Often recalled as the "Tryst with Destiny" speech, the historic address spoke of India's awakening into freedom after centuries of colonialism. Kallat hand-rendered the iconic text using rubber adhesive on five large acrylic mirrors before setting them aflame, thereby incinerating the words and producing mangled reflections that changed in relation to the viewer's position against the burnt glass. The 2003 piece was a political statement Kallat was making against the carnage of
{"datasets_id": 2747, "wiki_id": "Q6203288", "sp": 14, "sc": 2145, "ep": 14, "ec": 2752}
2,747
Q6203288
14
2,145
14
2,752
Jitish Kallat
Work
the Godhra Riots in February 2002. "The words are cremated... much as the content of the speech itself was distorted by the way the nation has conducted itself in the last six decades," Kallat has said about the work. Public Notice 2 Created in 2007, Kallat's Public Notice 2 is a large-scale display of letters formed out of 4,479 pieces of fibreglass bones installed on shelves against a background of saturated turmeric yellow reproducing the 1000-word speech given by Mahatma Gandhi on 11 March 1930 at the Sabarmati Ashram by the banks of the River Sabarmati in Ahmedabad a day before
{"datasets_id": 2747, "wiki_id": "Q6203288", "sp": 14, "sc": 2752, "ep": 14, "ec": 3395}
2,747
Q6203288
14
2,752
14
3,395
Jitish Kallat
Work
he along with 78 of his followers began the historic Dandi March to protest against the British-imposed tax on salt during which the virtues of Non-Violence were repeatedly insisted on by Gandhi. "The act of rehearsing a text from modern history and meditating on its relevance today is charged with a revisionary historicism: Kallat simultaneously places the text within its particular historical moment and reinvigorates it for present purposes," art historian Chaitanya Sambrani wrote in an essay titled Of Bones and Salt: Jitish Kallat's Public Notice 2. "The first activity, that of historical situation, locates the text securely in the
{"datasets_id": 2747, "wiki_id": "Q6203288", "sp": 14, "sc": 3395, "ep": 14, "ec": 4087}
2,747
Q6203288
14
3,395
14
4,087
Jitish Kallat
Work
past; the second asks us to reconsider it so as to glean an insight into present exigences and possibilities for the future." The work, according to Sambrani, represents "evidence of the past, scientifically gathered, enumerated, classified and sorted into significant units." Public Notice 3 In 2010 the artist installed his large-scale site-specific LED installation, Public Notice 3, at the Art Institute of Chicago. This installation was Kallat's first major exhibition at a US institution. The artwork links two disparate yet connected historical events, the First World Parliaments of Religions, held in September 1893, and the much later terrorist attacks on the World
{"datasets_id": 2747, "wiki_id": "Q6203288", "sp": 14, "sc": 4087, "ep": 14, "ec": 4715}
2,747
Q6203288
14
4,087
14
4,715
Jitish Kallat
Work
Trade Center and the Pentagon, in September 2001. Kallat's 2004 piece Detergent could be seen as the prototype for Public Notice 3, a text-based work in which Swami Vivekananda's speech was rendered in the same way as in Public Notice. According to Madhuvanti Ghose, "Finally, Kallat's Detergent came 'home' when as Public Notice 3 it opened on September 11, 2010, at the Art Institute of Chicago. Swami Vivekananda's evocative words calling for universal toleration and the end of bigotry and religious fanaticism were presented on the Woman's Board Grand Staircase, a space approximating the stages of the two temporary halls
{"datasets_id": 2747, "wiki_id": "Q6203288", "sp": 14, "sc": 4715, "ep": 14, "ec": 4988}
2,747
Q6203288
14
4,715
14
4,988
Jitish Kallat
Work
in which he originally spoke: the Hall of Columbus, where his opening address had been delivered; and the Hall of Washington-an area now largely occupied by the museum's Ryerson Library-where Vivekananda spok on other occasions during the World's Parliament of Religions."
{"datasets_id": 2748, "wiki_id": "Q6203348", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 6, "ec": 531}
2,748
Q6203348
2
0
6
531
Jittery Jester
Plot
Jittery Jester Plot A king, seated on the throne, says to official court jester Dapper Denver Dooley, "Make me laugh, jester." The jester does his best to comply, but his gags are old and stale, and they evoke no response from the king. The king goes to the window and sees Woody Woodpecker busy in a tree singing. Woody's antics so please the king that he laughs long and loud, and he orders Dooley to bring Woody to him, punctuating his demand by telling Dooley that should he fail, he would lose his head. The jester, now on a horse, orders
{"datasets_id": 2748, "wiki_id": "Q6203348", "sp": 6, "sc": 531, "ep": 6, "ec": 1090}
2,748
Q6203348
6
531
6
1,090
Jittery Jester
Plot
the drawbridge opened, and he starts out of the castle. A knight boat whistles for clearance, and the drawbridge quickly raises. Dooley and horse run smack into it. After a second time which lands Dooley in the moat, the horse laughs at Dooley's misfortune and earns him a sock in the jaw. The angry horse mutters, "Ooohhhh, I HATE him!" The jester again tries and finally gets near the tree where Woody's located. Dooley, knowing that his job's at stake, has no desire to take Woody to the king, and he uses all kinds of tricks and devices to try to
{"datasets_id": 2748, "wiki_id": "Q6203348", "sp": 6, "sc": 1090, "ep": 6, "ec": 1712}
2,748
Q6203348
6
1,090
6
1,712
Jittery Jester
Plot
eliminate the competition. Woody outwits the jester; some of Dooley's tactics end up harming the king, who uses the line "Tain't funny, Dooley (a parody of a catchphrase from Fibber McGee and Molly, when Molly {Marian Jordan} sometimes tells McGee {Jim Jordan}, "Tain't funny, McGee"), and we finally see Woody, in the jester's costume, before the king, with Dooley clapped in the stocks. (In the previous scene, Dooley had hit what he thought was Woody with a mace, until Woody pointed out the outraged king. Upon discovery, Dooley, as was the norm when he is finally beaten, bursts into tears.) The king
{"datasets_id": 2748, "wiki_id": "Q6203348", "sp": 6, "sc": 1712, "ep": 6, "ec": 2016}
2,748
Q6203348
6
1,712
6
2,016
Jittery Jester
Plot
says to Woody, "Make me laugh, jester." Woody more than fulfills the King's request when he throws a soft, mushy pie into Dooley's face, punctuating it with the line, "This will be a good trick, when someone invents television!" As we fade out, the king is really having a big laugh for himself.
{"datasets_id": 2749, "wiki_id": "Q14623591", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 6, "ec": 579}
2,749
Q14623591
2
0
6
579
Joachim Pease
Biography
Joachim Pease Biography Although Joachim Pease has been referred to as a native of Long Island, New York, recently unearthed records in the National Archives show that when he enlisted in the United States Navy as an Ordinary Seaman on January 12, 1862 for a three-year hitch, he listed his birthplace as Fogo Island which is probably Fogo Island, Cape Verde. He was described as twenty years old, five feet, six and a half inches tall, with black hair and eyes and a "negro" complexion. Joachim Pease enlisted in the Navy from New Bedford, Massachusetts, not New York City, as commonly
{"datasets_id": 2749, "wiki_id": "Q14623591", "sp": 6, "sc": 579, "ep": 6, "ec": 1241}
2,749
Q14623591
6
579
6
1,241
Joachim Pease
Biography
reported, and served on board USS Kearsarge during the Civil War. On June 19, 1864, off the coast of Cherbourg, France, Kearsarge battled the Confederate sloop-of-war CSS Alabama. In a report on the third division, he was described: But among those showing still higher qualifications I am pleased to name … also Robert Strahan (captain top), first captain of No. 1 gun; James H. Lee, sponger, and Joachim Pease (colored seaman), loader of same gun. The conduct of the latter in battle fully sustained his reputation as one of the best men in the ship. — D.H. Sumner, Acting Master For his conduct during this
{"datasets_id": 2749, "wiki_id": "Q14623591", "sp": 6, "sc": 1241, "ep": 10, "ec": 116}
2,749
Q14623591
6
1,241
10
116
Joachim Pease
Biography & Medal of Honor citation
Battle of Cherbourg, Pease was awarded the Medal of Honor. He left the Navy at the end of his enlistment never having received his Medal of Honor. It is on display in the National Museum of the United States Navy, located in the Washington Navy Yard, Washington, D.C. Medal of Honor citation Rank and Organization: Seaman, U.S. Navy. Born: Long Island, N.Y. Accredited To:
{"datasets_id": 2749, "wiki_id": "Q14623591", "sp": 10, "sc": 116, "ep": 10, "ec": 521}
2,749
Q14623591
10
116
10
521
Joachim Pease
Medal of Honor citation
New York. General Order No. 45 (December 31, 1864). Citation: Served as seaman on board the U.S.S. Kearsarge when she destroyed the Alabama off Cherbourg, France, 19 June 1864. Acting as loader on the No. 2 gun during this bitter engagement, Pease exhibited marked coolness and good conduct and was highly recommended by the divisional officer for gallantry under fire.
{"datasets_id": 2750, "wiki_id": "Q18878150", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 4, "ec": 603}
2,750
Q18878150
2
0
4
603
Joan Robins
Joan Robins Joan Rafferty Robins (23 November 1908 – 7 April 1994) was a British television personality and author, best known for her cookery programmes. Born in Battersea, in London, as Joan Godfrey, she was brought up in a Catholic family and was educated at a convent school in Norwich. She later attended the National Training College of Domestic Subjects, and then qualified as a domestic science teacher at Westminster College, London. However, she did not become a teacher, instead working as a receptionist, and then as a home adviser for the Gas Light and Coke Company. From 1940, Robins
{"datasets_id": 2750, "wiki_id": "Q18878150", "sp": 4, "sc": 603, "ep": 4, "ec": 1212}
2,750
Q18878150
4
603
4
1,212
Joan Robins
was seconded to the Ministry of Food as a nutritionist. Covering the South West of England, she gave demonstration and radio broadcasts, covering how to make nutritious meals using the rations available during World War II. She was also involved in setting up soup kitchens in areas which had been heavily bombed, such as Coventry and Southampton. Robins returned to the Gas Light and Coke Company in 1947, as its Chief Home Service Adviser; following nationalisation of the industry, she transferred to the North Thames Gas Board. Highly successful at promoting the use of gas appliances, she was
{"datasets_id": 2750, "wiki_id": "Q18878150", "sp": 4, "sc": 1212, "ep": 4, "ec": 1809}
2,750
Q18878150
4
1,212
4
1,809
Joan Robins
given a role with the same title at the Gas Council, and then became head of marketing for British Gas. The Times claimed that she was probably the first woman executive in the gas industry". During this period, she hosted frequent television cookery programmes, starting with Housewife in the Kitchen in 1947, then For the Housewife, for which she shared presenting duties with Philip Harben. In 1951, she worked with John Yudkin to present a series on weight loss, then next presented About the Home, which covered a wide variety of household topics, from cookery to clothing and fuel
{"datasets_id": 2750, "wiki_id": "Q18878150", "sp": 4, "sc": 1809, "ep": 4, "ec": 2426}
2,750
Q18878150
4
1,809
4
2,426
Joan Robins
use. These series led to her writing several books, including Common-Sense Slimming and Common-Sense Cooking and Eating. Robins was also interested in women's rights. She regularly appears on Women's Hour, and from 1959 to 1962 was president of the National Council of Women of Great Britain. During her presidency, she called for women to be consulted more widely on government policy, and as a result, the Women's Consultative Council was formed. She also ran a successful campaign against turnstiles being placed at the entrances to women's toilets. In a profile, The Guardian claimed that "...she is
{"datasets_id": 2750, "wiki_id": "Q18878150", "sp": 4, "sc": 2426, "ep": 4, "ec": 2984}
2,750
Q18878150
4
2,426
4
2,984
Joan Robins
no crusader about anything, and Joan Robins is so effective precisely because she has neither a sense of mission nor is she didactic. She simply uses common sense". Robins was also active in the National Board of Catholic Women, was the founding president of the Institute of Home Economics, and treasurer of the International Council of Women. She was a supporter of the Conservative Party. In the early 1970s, Robins retired to Deddington in Oxfordshire with her husband. She was also made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire.
{"datasets_id": 2751, "wiki_id": "Q29256434", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 6, "ec": 596}
2,751
Q29256434
2
0
6
596
Joannes Chrysostomus Teniers
Life
Joannes Chrysostomus Teniers Life Jean-Jacques Teniers was born in Antwerp, the son of Melchior Teniers and Maria de Backer, and was baptised there on 28 January 1653. After studying the Liberal Arts at Leuven University Teniers entered St Michael's Abbey, Antwerp, a house of the Premonstratensian Order. He was professed on 17 January 1675, ordained 13 March 1677, and elected abbot 19 May 1687. As abbot he took the motto Tene Quod Bene ("Hold on to what is good", 1 Thessalonians 5, verse 21). Teniers died in Antwerp on 30 November 1709. His portrait painted by Jan-Erasmus Quellinus is inside Tongerlo Abbey.
{"datasets_id": 2751, "wiki_id": "Q29256434", "sp": 8, "sc": 0, "ep": 10, "ec": 342}
2,751
Q29256434
8
0
10
342
Joannes Chrysostomus Teniers
Writings
Writings Teniers had some reputation as a preacher and a manuscript of his sermons for feastdays was preserved in the monastery library, as well as two volumes of his notes on the works of St Augustine. One of Teniers' poems was published in the preliminary matter of Jacobus Moons's Sedelyck Vreughde-Perck (Antwerp, Michiel Knobbaert, 1685).
{"datasets_id": 2752, "wiki_id": "Q986602", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 4, "ec": 449}
2,752
Q986602
2
0
4
449
Joaquim Pinto Correia
Joaquim Pinto Correia Joaquim Germano Pinto Machado Correia da Silva (15 June 1930 – 14 March 2011) was the 124th Governor of Macau from 5 May 1985 to 8 July 1987. As a physician, he was the first Governor of Macau who was not a military general. He advocated humanism and social welfare during his term of office, and visited Guangzhou on 22–24 February 1987. He resigned from office in May 1987, giving rise to the rumour that his resignation was related to corruption.
{"datasets_id": 2753, "wiki_id": "Q4202600", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 6, "ec": 526}
2,753
Q4202600
2
0
6
526
Job of Manyava
Birth and early years
Job of Manyava Birth and early years Saint Job was born as Ivan Knyahynytskyi in the town of Tysmenytsia (now in Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast, western Ukraine). He was educated at the monastery school in Uhniv (today's Lviv Oblast) and in Ostroh. For some time he taught at Ostrih School, where he had been invited by nobleman Konstanty Wasyl Ostrogski. In his youth he twice visited Mount Athos in Greece. Once in Ostrih he met a monk from Mount Athos, who made so big impression upon him that he left for Athos and for a long time lived in one of the Athonite
{"datasets_id": 2753, "wiki_id": "Q4202600", "sp": 6, "sc": 526, "ep": 10, "ec": 506}
2,753
Q4202600
6
526
10
506
Job of Manyava
Birth and early years & Return to Ukraine (1600)
monasteries. There, in Greece, he was tonsured a monk with the name Ezekiel. Return to Ukraine (1600) In 1598, the monk Ezekiel, together with other monks from Athos arrived in Ukraine to collect alms. In 1600-1601 he again returned to Ukraine, this time staying to build up the monastic life. After return from Greece, he reorganised a number of Orthodox monasteries in Ukraine. In 1606 blessed Job settled near Krasnopol at the foothills of the Carpathian Mountains. Soon other monks joined him, all seeking spiritual ideals. When numbers had increased, Job, not being a priest, started seeking such a monk
{"datasets_id": 2753, "wiki_id": "Q4202600", "sp": 10, "sc": 506, "ep": 10, "ec": 1113}
2,753
Q4202600
10
506
10
1,113
Job of Manyava
Return to Ukraine (1600)
who would be able to celebrate the services and liturgies. The lot fell upon deacon Theodosius (Theodosius of Maniava), who was a nephew of Job. After having been consecrated as hieromonk, Theodosius became the first hegumen of Maniava Skyt. When introducing him to the new post, Job said: "Be pastor and teacher of this flock, gathered by God. You are our hieromonk and confessor, you are worthy to be hegumen and I will help you after my strength as long as I live". In 1611 he founded Maniavskyi Skyt monastery (Skita) near the village of Maniava (today in Bohorodchanskyi Raion, Ivano-Frankivsk
{"datasets_id": 2753, "wiki_id": "Q4202600", "sp": 10, "sc": 1113, "ep": 10, "ec": 1791}
2,753
Q4202600
10
1,113
10
1,791
Job of Manyava
Return to Ukraine (1600)
Oblast). Saint Job of Maniava maintained friendly relations with Ivan Vyshenskyi, Zakhariya Zopystenskyi and other Ukrainian church activists. People turned to Saint Job of Maniava in questions regarding purity of faith (the letter of Cyril Tranquilion is known). Already a decade after the death of his companion and nephew Saint Theodosius of Maniava, Metropolitan Petro Mohyla of Kiev wrote: "Go to Pokuttya, to the Skyt, there you will find two hundred angels, who live in bodies..." The Orthodox monastery of Maniava founded by Job was closed down by Austrian authorities on 1 July 1785. The monastery in Maniava was reestablished with the collapse
{"datasets_id": 2753, "wiki_id": "Q4202600", "sp": 10, "sc": 1791, "ep": 14, "ec": 505}
2,753
Q4202600
10
1,791
14
505
Job of Manyava
Return to Ukraine (1600) & Canonization and observances
of communism in Ukraine in the 1990s. Canonization and observances Saint Job and Saint Theodosius of Maniava were canonized at the National Church Council of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Kiev Patriarchate) on 15 July 2004 in Kiev. Likewise, even earlier, in 1994, they have been also canonized by Ukrainian Orthodox Church of Moscow Patriarchate, the canonical Orthodox body in Ukraine. 24 June (Church Calendar), which equates to 7 July (civil calendar), is the feast day of Saint Job and Saint Theodosius of Manyava, as celebrated by Ukrainian Orthodox Church.
{"datasets_id": 2754, "wiki_id": "Q4939425", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 10, "ec": 408}
2,754
Q4939425
2
0
10
408
Jobbarer Boli Khela
Etymology & History
Jobbarer Boli Khela Etymology Boli means wrestler or a powerful person in Bengali, while Khela denotes a game. So, Boli Khela means game of the powerful person. History Boli Khela was introduced in the last 19th century by Kader Boxo. He was a landlord of Satkania Upazila under Madarsha Union in Chittagong district. He lived there. Every year Bengali first month he collected dues from his renter. Then he arranged a boli khela(wrestling) to give interest there. It was started in 1879. After his death, it is start 7th boishakh, first month of Bengali year & nowadays it is
{"datasets_id": 2754, "wiki_id": "Q4939425", "sp": 10, "sc": 408, "ep": 14, "ec": 144}
2,754
Q4939425
10
408
14
144
Jobbarer Boli Khela
History & Participation
called "Mokkaro Boli Khela". On other hand, early of 20th century Abdul Jabbar Saodagor, a merchant of Chittagong, arrange a boli khela. His desire was to cultivate a sport that would prepare the youth to fight against British rule which is a self-defense without weapons. It was started in 1907. Broad appeal for the sport began at the end of the First World War but subsided at the end of the Second World War. Participation The arena is either a circular or square shape, measuring at least fourteen to twenty feet across. Rather than using modern mats, Boli wrestlers
{"datasets_id": 2754, "wiki_id": "Q4939425", "sp": 14, "sc": 144, "ep": 18, "ec": 201}
2,754
Q4939425
14
144
18
201
Jobbarer Boli Khela
Participation & Rules
train and compete on dirt floors. Match started in a sandy wrestling ground. Each year, Boli Khela attracts new participates and fans because the sheer enjoyment of the sport is not only contagious for local enthusiasts but inspires tourists to Bangladesh an opportunity to get a glimpse of an exciting and unique event. Fans of many countries come every year to see Boli khela. Rules The event starts at afternoon in a festive mood with the music of 'Dabor' (one kind of folk drum)and 'Sanai' (folk flute). Each match lasts about 25–30 minutes but if both competitors agree, the length
{"datasets_id": 2754, "wiki_id": "Q4939425", "sp": 18, "sc": 201, "ep": 18, "ec": 257}
2,754
Q4939425
18
201
18
257
Jobbarer Boli Khela
Rules
of the final match may be extended up to 10–15 minutes.
{"datasets_id": 2755, "wiki_id": "Q6207195", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 6, "ec": 602}
2,755
Q6207195
2
0
6
602
Jocelyne Larocque
Playing career
Jocelyne Larocque Playing career Larocque played hockey and basketball from 2002 to 2004 at College Lorette Collegiate in Manitoba. During the 2003–04 season, she became the first female to appear in the Winnipeg High School Boys League. Larocque attended the Hockey Manitoba Program of Excellence Camp from June 25 to 27, 2004. Larocque competed for Manitoba at the 2003 Esso Women's Nationals in Saskatoon as the Manitoba team finished eighth. In January 2005, she was a member of the Manitoba team that participated at the Canadian National Women's Under-18 Championship in Salmon Arm, B.C. Manitoba finished fifth, but Larocque was
{"datasets_id": 2755, "wiki_id": "Q6207195", "sp": 6, "sc": 602, "ep": 10, "ec": 521}
2,755
Q6207195
6
602
10
521
Jocelyne Larocque
Playing career & NCAA hockey
honoured as Top Defenceman. She won the WWHL championship with the Calgary Oval X-Treme in 2005. NCAA hockey In March 2008, Larocque had one assist as UMD won their fourth NCAA national championship in a 4–0 win over the University of Wisconsin. She competed along with two other players from her hometown of Ste. Anne, Manitoba (population 1,500.) Larocque, Minnesota Golden Gophers senior captain Melanie Gagnon and Mercyhurst forward Bailey Bram were known colloquially as the Ste. Anne Three. Also in 2009, Larocque was the first Bulldog defenceman to be named to the All-American first team. After being cut from Team
{"datasets_id": 2755, "wiki_id": "Q6207195", "sp": 10, "sc": 521, "ep": 10, "ec": 1151}
2,755
Q6207195
10
521
10
1,151
Jocelyne Larocque
NCAA hockey
Canada's Olympic roster in December 2009, Larocque elected to return to UMD for the second half of the 2009–10 season, forfeiting half a season of NCAA eligibility. On March 22, 2010, Larocque and the Bulldogs earned their fifth NCAA national championship with a 3–2 triple overtime victory over Cornell University. In a February 12, 2011 game against the Ohio State Buckeyes, Larocque had a goal and three assists as the Bulldogs defeated Ohio State by a 5–1 mark. Already the all-time top-scoring defenceman in UMD history, she became UMD's 14th player and first defenceman to score 100 career points. Larocque's assist
{"datasets_id": 2755, "wiki_id": "Q6207195", "sp": 10, "sc": 1151, "ep": 10, "ec": 1736}
2,755
Q6207195
10
1,151
10
1,736
Jocelyne Larocque
NCAA hockey
on a power play goal with 40 seconds remaining was her second career four-point game. Larocque was the top-scoring defenceman in the WCHA for the 2010–11 season with six goals and 18 assists for 24 points in 26 league contests. In post-season league honours, Larocque was named to the All-WCHA first team; was voted the WCHA Defensive Player of the Year in a vote of the league's head coaches; was the top-scoring defenceman in the league with six goals, 18 assists and 24 points in 26 league contests; was named the WCHA Outstanding Student Athlete of the Year; and was named
{"datasets_id": 2755, "wiki_id": "Q6207195", "sp": 10, "sc": 1736, "ep": 14, "ec": 318}
2,755
Q6207195
10
1,736
14
318
Jocelyne Larocque
NCAA hockey & Hockey Canada
to the 2010–11 All-WCHA Academic Team. She graduated with honors from UMD in 2011 with a Bachelor of Accounting degree. She ended her college hockey career as the Bulldogs' all-time leader in scoring for defencemen with 105 points on 19 goals and 86 assists in 127 games. Hockey Canada She participated in the Canadian National Team Fall Festival that ran from August 31 to September 9, 2007. She was an Air Canada Cup women's champion in 2005–06 and 2006–07. On November 27, 2009 Larocque and Brianne Jenner were released from Hockey Canada's centralized roster to determine the roster for the Vancouver
{"datasets_id": 2755, "wiki_id": "Q6207195", "sp": 14, "sc": 318, "ep": 14, "ec": 899}
2,755
Q6207195
14
318
14
899
Jocelyne Larocque
Hockey Canada
2010 Winter Games. Despite not qualifying for the roster competing at the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, she was named to the final roster for the 2010 MLP Cup Larocque had an assist in the semi-final of the 2010 MLP Cup. In addition, she attended the Hockey Canada Strength and Conditioning Camp in Calgary from May 25 to 30, 2010. In addition, Larocque competed with Canada at the 2010 Four Nations Cup and won a gold medal. Her Olympic debut with the national team came at the 2014 Sochi Olympics where Team Canada won the gold medal. She played in the 2018
{"datasets_id": 2755, "wiki_id": "Q6207195", "sp": 14, "sc": 899, "ep": 14, "ec": 1463}
2,755
Q6207195
14
899
14
1,463
Jocelyne Larocque
Hockey Canada
Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea, winning a silver medal with Team Canada. She received attention following the gold medal game for removing her silver medal immediately after it was presented to her, prompting a later reproach from an IIHF official. She issued an apology the following day, saying in part, "In the moment, I was disappointed with the outcome of the game and my emotions got the better of me. I meant no disrespect. It has been an honour to represent my country and win a medal for Canada. I'm proud of our team and proud to be counted
{"datasets_id": 2755, "wiki_id": "Q6207195", "sp": 14, "sc": 1463, "ep": 22, "ec": 376}
2,755
Q6207195
14
1,463
22
376
Jocelyne Larocque
Hockey Canada & CWHL & Personal
among the Canadian athletes who have won medals at these games." CWHL Larocque was a member of the Calgary Inferno. In August 2013, she was traded to the Brampton Thunder for Bailey Bram. Personal Former Gophers player and captain Melanie Gagnon is Larocque's cousin. A team was named after her at the 2007 Female Atom Hockey Festival presented by the Manitoba Moose on December 29, at the MTS Centre in Winnipeg. Larocque's sister, Chantal, has competed for Canada at the ISBHF World Championships. Both were also teammates on the now-defunct Calgary Oval X-Treme.
{"datasets_id": 2756, "wiki_id": "Q16728966", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 4, "ec": 646}
2,756
Q16728966
2
0
4
646
Jodie Ferneyhough
Jodie Ferneyhough Jodie Ferneyhough is the current (as of 2008) President of the Canadian Music Publishers Association. He was Creative Director for Universal Music Publishing Canada for almost a decade until leaving the company in 2001. Ferneyhough joined UMPG-Canada in June 2001 as creative director and worked his way up to managing director. He was instrumental in the careers of such Canadian artists as k-os, Sam Roberts and Hedley. He also worked with established international acts Jann Arden, Shania Twain, and Avril Lavigne. Before joining Universal he was music publisher peermusic's creative director, and before that he worked in management,
{"datasets_id": 2756, "wiki_id": "Q16728966", "sp": 4, "sc": 646, "ep": 16, "ec": 27}
2,756
Q16728966
4
646
16
27
Jodie Ferneyhough
Beginnings & Artists & Awards
booking and as a festival and trade show coordinator. He told Billboard.biz that "I've done pretty much everything there is in the business except for work for a record label". Beginnings Ferneyhough worked as an artist manager, promoter, tour agent, product buyer and warehouse clerk, throughout his long career, before he began his career in music publishing in 1989 at peermusic. Artists He has worked with such artists as Sam Roberts, KOS, Theory of a Deadman and Mobile, as well as such established musicians as Jann Arden, Shania Twain, Daniel Lavoie and Avril Lavigne. Awards He was named Canadian Music
{"datasets_id": 2756, "wiki_id": "Q16728966", "sp": 16, "sc": 27, "ep": 20, "ec": 376}
2,756
Q16728966
16
27
20
376
Jodie Ferneyhough
Awards & Lecturer and guest speaker engagements
Publisher of the Year at the 2003 and 2005 CCMAs, as well as Publisher of the Year at the annual CMW Industry Awards in 2005. Lecturer and guest speaker engagements Ferneyhough has lectured at the Harris Institute for the Arts, the Trebas Institute, the Canadian Design Academy and at the Osgoode Law School. He has been a guest speaker and panelist at the Canadian Music Week and NxNE Festivals in Toronto, the East Coast Music Awards, the Music West Festival in Vancouver, the CMJ in New York City and Concrete Foundations in Los Angeles.
{"datasets_id": 2757, "wiki_id": "Q6209636", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 4, "ec": 247}
2,757
Q6209636
2
0
4
247
Joe Durso
Joe Durso Joseph P. Durso (June 22, 1924 – December 31, 2004) was an American sportswriter for The New York Times from 1950 until his death, most noted for his coverage of baseball. Born in New York City, he was awarded the J. G. Taylor Spink Award in 1995.
{"datasets_id": 2758, "wiki_id": "Q6209928", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 10, "ec": 266}
2,758
Q6209928
2
0
10
266
Joe Frickleton
Playing career & Coaching career
Joe Frickleton Playing career Frickleton, who played as a wing half, played youth with Clydebank Juniors, before turning professional with East Stirlingshire, where he made 107 appearances in the Scottish Football League between 1959 and 1964. He then moved to South Africa to play with Highlands Park, where he won three national championships. Coaching career After his playing days were over, Frickleton remained in South Africa, and trained as a football manager. His first job was at former club Highlands Park in 1974. After a season spent with Lusitano, Frickleton returned to Highlands Park until it was sold in 1983. He
{"datasets_id": 2758, "wiki_id": "Q6209928", "sp": 10, "sc": 266, "ep": 10, "ec": 381}
2,758
Q6209928
10
266
10
381
Joe Frickleton
Coaching career
later won four trophies with Kaizer Chiefs in 1984, before winning the Champions Cup with Orlando Pirates in 1995.
{"datasets_id": 2759, "wiki_id": "Q6210177", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 6, "ec": 560}
2,759
Q6210177
2
0
6
560
Joe Hamilton (American football)
College career
Joe Hamilton (American football) College career Hamilton accepted an athletic scholarship to attend Georgia Tech, where he played for the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team from 1996 to 1999. He set Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) career records for total offense (10,640 yards), touchdown passes (65) and total touchdowns (83). As a senior in 1999, he was recognized as a consensus first-team All-American, won the Davey O'Brien Award, and was a finalist for the Heisman Trophy, finishing as the runner-up in the Heisman voting behind Wisconsin running back Ron Dayne. In 2002, he was named as one
{"datasets_id": 2759, "wiki_id": "Q6210177", "sp": 6, "sc": 560, "ep": 10, "ec": 423}
2,759
Q6210177
6
560
10
423
Joe Hamilton (American football)
College career & Professional career
of the fifty members of the ACC 50th Anniversary Football Team. Hamilton was elected to the College Football Hall of Fame in 2014. Professional career Due to his lack of prototypical height for an NFL quarterback (standing just 5'10"/1.78 m), he fell to the 7th round of the 2000 NFL Draft before being drafted by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. In three years with the Buccaneers he only played four downs in a single regular-season game. In 2002, the Buccaneers allocated Hamilton to NFL Europe, where he led the Frankfurt Galaxy to 5-2 record in 2002 before suffering a severe
{"datasets_id": 2759, "wiki_id": "Q6210177", "sp": 10, "sc": 423, "ep": 10, "ec": 1008}
2,759
Q6210177
10
423
10
1,008
Joe Hamilton (American football)
Professional career
knee injury (torn ACL). He spent the entire 2002 NFL season on injured reserve and was released by the Buccaneers at the end of the season. He received a Super Bowl ring following the Buccaneers' victory in Super Bowl XXXVII. He signed with the Arena Football League's Orlando Predators in 2004 and guided the team to a 9-5 record and the playoffs, despite suffering another knee injury and missing two and a half games. He was then signed by the Indianapolis Colts in 2004, reuniting with former Buccaneers coach Tony Dungy, but only saw limited action in one game
{"datasets_id": 2759, "wiki_id": "Q6210177", "sp": 10, "sc": 1008, "ep": 14, "ec": 130}
2,759
Q6210177
10
1,008
14
130
Joe Hamilton (American football)
Professional career & Post-playing career
before being released during the season. He returned to the Orlando Predators where he was the starting quarterback through the 2006 season. He has a 32-15 record as the Predators' starter and led them to ArenaBowl XX in 2006, losing 69-61 to the Chicago Rush. With a win, Hamilton would have become the first player in history to own both a Super Bowl and ArenaBowl ring. In the 2006 off-season, he was released by the Orlando Predators. Post-playing career He returned to school, and received his degree in History, Technology, and Society in August 2007. " In 2008, following an
{"datasets_id": 2759, "wiki_id": "Q6210177", "sp": 14, "sc": 130, "ep": 14, "ec": 761}
2,759
Q6210177
14
130
14
761
Joe Hamilton (American football)
Post-playing career
arrest for a hit and run, DUI, open container and marijuana possession, Joe Hamilton resigned as a Georgia Tech assistant coach—less than two weeks after he was hired. In 2010, he resurrected his coaching career when he became a recruiting intern at Georgia State, which had launched its Georgia State Panthers football team that year. In June 2011, he joined the Panthers' full-time staff as running backs coach. On May 7, 2013, exactly 5 years after submitting his resignation, Hamilton was re-hired by Georgia Tech to provide assistance with recruiting for the Yellow Jackets football team. Currently Joe is the co-host
{"datasets_id": 2759, "wiki_id": "Q6210177", "sp": 14, "sc": 761, "ep": 14, "ec": 891}
2,759
Q6210177
14
761
14
891
Joe Hamilton (American football)
Post-playing career
of a radio show Hometeam and Hamilton from 9am to 12pm on the Atlanta Sports X (www.atlsportsx.com) with Brandon "Hometeam" Leak.
{"datasets_id": 2760, "wiki_id": "Q6211264", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 6, "ec": 529}
2,760
Q6211264
2
0
6
529
Joe McKee
Early career
Joe McKee Early career McKee started his career in the youth team of Dundee United in 2000 at the age of seven. He spent five years at Tannadice Park and progressed well at the club but left in 2005 due to unhappiness and joined Livingston. He settled well into life at Almondvale, as he knew youth teammate Robert Snodgrass as they went to the same school, St Mungo's Academy in Glasgow. McKee had a successful season for the under-19s in the 2008–09 season scoring 13 goals in 17 starts as they won the league title for the second consecutive season.
{"datasets_id": 2760, "wiki_id": "Q6211264", "sp": 6, "sc": 529, "ep": 6, "ec": 1086}
2,760
Q6211264
6
529
6
1,086
Joe McKee
Early career
He signed full-time for the club in October 2008, and went with the first team squad on a training tour to Italy playing against Parma Reserves. In March 2009 he was part of the squad for the Scottish Division One matches against St Johnstone and Queen of the South. In the summer of 2009, Livingston went into administration and faced demotion to the Scottish Division Three. He made his debut for Livingston on 1 August 2009 in the Scottish League Cup in a 3–0 defeat to Albion Rovers, replacing Michael Torrance in the second half. He then played in the
{"datasets_id": 2760, "wiki_id": "Q6211264", "sp": 6, "sc": 1086, "ep": 10, "ec": 446}
2,760
Q6211264
6
1,086
10
446
Joe McKee
Early career & Burnley
first league game of the season, a 2–0 win over Montrose, coming on as a second-half substitute for Anthony McParland. Burnley Burnley manager Owen Coyle brought McKee to Turf Moor in August 2009 and signed a two-year scholarship after training with the club in the summer. Burnley had to play Livingston in a pre-season friendly at Almondvale as part of the deal, and also pay a five-figure sum when he signed a professional contract. He played primarily in the youth team in his first season at the club, but did feature in six games in the Premier Reserve League scoring
{"datasets_id": 2760, "wiki_id": "Q6211264", "sp": 10, "sc": 446, "ep": 10, "ec": 994}
2,760
Q6211264
10
446
10
994
Joe McKee
Burnley
one goal against Bolton Wanderers. In the 2010–11 season he was top scorer for the youth team and also featured regularly in the reserve side. In June 2011, he signed his first professional contract with the club on a one-year deal after the end of his scholarship. He was involved with the first team in the 2011–12 pre-season games and played in his first game for the Clarets in a 0–0 draw with Oldham Athletic, coming on in the last minute for Ross Wallace. He was given the squad number 34 during pre-season. On 9 August 2011, McKee was named
{"datasets_id": 2760, "wiki_id": "Q6211264", "sp": 10, "sc": 994, "ep": 14, "ec": 309}
2,760
Q6211264
10
994
14
309
Joe McKee
Burnley & St Mirren Loan
on the bench in a 6–3 win over Burton Albion in the Football League Cup first round. However, he was an unused substitute. In April 2012, it announced that McKee was released at the end of his Contract by Burnley. St Mirren Loan On 23 August 2011, he joined Scottish Premier League side St Mirren on a four-month loan until January 2012. He made his debut for the club on 28 August 2011 in a 2–0 home defeat to Celtic, where he came on as a late substitute for Nigel Hasselbaink. Having made two appearance for St Mirren, McKee loan spell
{"datasets_id": 2760, "wiki_id": "Q6211264", "sp": 14, "sc": 309, "ep": 22, "ec": 100}
2,760
Q6211264
14
309
22
100
Joe McKee
St Mirren Loan & Bolton Wanderers & Greenock Morton
with the club ended, but manager Danny Lennon hopes that he will become a better player. Bolton Wanderers On 3 July, McKee tweeted that he had signed for Bolton Wanderers, reuniting with former Burnley manager, Owen Coyle. This was confirmed a day later by Bolton's official Twitter page and McKee was given number 35. McKee was released by then Bolton boss Dougie Freedman at the end of the 2012–13 season, having made no appearance or even on the substitute bench in his Bolton career. Greenock Morton In May 2013, McKee joined Scottish club Greenock Morton, playing in the Scottish Championship. McKee
{"datasets_id": 2760, "wiki_id": "Q6211264", "sp": 22, "sc": 100, "ep": 30, "ec": 288}
2,760
Q6211264
22
100
30
288
Joe McKee
Greenock Morton & Carlisle United & Falkirk
signed a contract extension until summer 2015 in September 2013. Carlisle United McKee left Morton on a Bosman free transfer to join English side Carlisle United. He scored his first goal for Carlisle in an EFL Trophy tie against Fleetwood Town on 9 November 2016. Falkirk On transfer deadline day, 31 January 2017, McKee signed a 6-month deal to move back north to Falkirk, teaming up with long time friend Charlie Harris who was in the U23 squad as a physio. McKee commented "It was an easy decision. To come back up north and see Charlie clinched the deal".
{"datasets_id": 2760, "wiki_id": "Q6211264", "sp": 30, "sc": 288, "ep": 38, "ec": 268}
2,760
Q6211264
30
288
38
268
Joe McKee
Falkirk & Dumbarton & International
In November 2017 he received a four-match SFA ban for 'excessive misconduct' for his part in an incident involving Dunfermline's Dean Shiels during a match between the rival clubs two months previously. Dumbarton After leaving Falkirk and spending time with Dundalk McKee signed for Scottish League One club Dumbarton in July 2019. International McKee has represented Scotland at under-16, under-17 and under-19 level. He was first called up to Scotland U19 squad in May 2011 for the two friendlies away to Denmark. He started in the first friendly on 10 May in Copenhagen, playing 70 minutes as Scotland lost 3–2.